OCR Text |
Show A Fair Fair th?ou'T1 Details, weather map on Page VOL. 3 72 NO. 1 dJLi IL Wednesday. Daytime highs near 70. Lows tonight in the upper 30s. Our Phene Numbers ERET MEW 'N' Warm ind wanner 4 B-l- l. News Tips Home Delivery 10c PAGES 8 6 MOUNTAIN THE WEST'S FIRST -5- 24-2840 Information -- 5244445 --524444S Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 0 6 -5- 21-4400 NEWSPAPER OCTOBER TUESDAY, 7, 1969 (T lo) rC - The UnitGENEVA (AP) ed States and the Soviet Union presented today a draft treaty to ban nuclear arms and other weapons of mass destruction from the seabed. two The superpowers agreed on a compromise joint draft after seven months of bargaining and submitted it to the disarmament conference. It was the first treaty agreement since last U.S.-Sovie- t, IT nonproliferation pact. The draft of the treaty which the Soviet Union put before the conference on March 18 called for a ban on all types of weapons and military installations from the seabed. The United States refused to accept this because it would ban such defensive devices as submarine tracking stations. The Russians two nations are convinced that this treaty constitutes a step towards the exclusion of the seabed, the ocean floor and the subsoil thereof from the arms race, and are determined to continue negotiations concerning further measures leading to this end. by the United States May 22 in which the ban would be restricted to nuclear arms and weapons of mass destruction. In return, the United States dropped its proposal that the ban come into force at the three-mil- e limit and accepted limit. This the Soviet was favored also by most other delegations at the conference. The United States also agreed to a Soviet paragraph in the preamble saying the years nuclear gave way on this point and accepted the provision of a draft submitted VERIFICATION Sold Guns , General Tells Panel vestigations subcommittee. The witness also conceded he failed to pay income tax on the gun transactions and acknowledged $6,800 in gun sale income during the past five years. But he said he never considered it a real business just a hobby and still was doubtful it was fair to tax him on the income. You buy some, you sell Turner said of his some, trading. Chairman S u bcoromittee Ribicoff A. Abraham that the police announced chiefs of Chicago and Kansas would Mo., testify City, Wednesday. Turner insisted both chiefs gave him the guns for his personal use and said he never pretended they were for Army purposes. He also claimed that a ledger book in which he kept track of his gun dealings had been stolen. The former Army provost marshal acknowledged that f . , BAR James F. Leonard explained that the treaty would automatically bar such devices as nuclear mines anchored to or placed on the seabed. It would not apply to submarines anchored to the seabed or resting on it, he said. Nor would it interfere with facilities and installations used for research or Chief U.S. Delegate 4 ,.t. 4 - - ' v 43? f X v' Jg D i? .,4 ' 8 -- ' v 'x h & Y-v .U . YaY 4-- commeidal exploitation, providing they could not also be used for storing, testing or using weapons of mass de- 'J struction. UPI Telephoto Retired Maj. Gen. Carl C Turner appears before the Senate Investigations panel. he failed to mention the theft te the subcommittee when it subpoenaed his gun records last monih. Instead, he said, he drew up a new ledger and ac knowledged receiving more than $2,000 See GENERAL on Page 4 Turner A-- Looting, Violence Flore In Vegas Negro Section , .... -- could recall. There had been come over there. There are some earlier racial unrest at about 30.000 Negroes among schools. , the 250,000 residents of greatThe trouble developed Suner Las Vegas. the predominently Negro West Some fires broke out SunSide of this casino city, but day night after two Negro polgenerally the turbulence of.. icemen stopped a black cab day but the crowd was disthe past two nights had driver for a traffic check and persed. A crowd gathered again a crowd gathered. abated. said this did not Monday and, as the violence Authorities Authorities listed more than intensified, more than 150 trigger the disturbances, how100 arrests Monday night. 42 and ever. police officers n j ur i e s o n e of them There were no racial over- sheriffs deputies with shotserious and property damage tones in the beginning, Gragguns sealed off the of in the tens of thousands son said. But after it got area, sweeping through it redollars. whitey wasn't wel going, peatedly. Young blacks roamed the area, hurling rocks and firebombs, shattering windows, looting a few stores and overturning cars. As the violence spread. LAS VEGAS, NEV. (AP) -S- outbreaks of violence persisted early today on 1 Mayor Oran Gragson imposed a 7 p.m. to 6 a.nt. curfew, de- clared a state of emergency and asked Gev. Paul Laxalt to mobolize the National Guard. The Guardsmen assembled at their armories, but were not deployed. The two nights of violence were the worst city officials Today's Thought Praise is warming and desirable ichat the human race lives on like bread. Phyllis ilcGinley - Art (AP) Linkletter says parents should learn the truth about drugs, alcohol and narcotics and get this information to their children in a rememberable, sensible, nonpanic way. Repetitively. Today, in private, graveside services at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, the Linkletter family buries daughter Diane, 20, whose death plunge Satur- a day he blames on LSD tiger in her bloodstream. From the fifth grade up, the children entertainer said, should be grounded as thoroughly in the dangers of putting chemicals into their systems as they are in walking across a superhighway with their eyes shut. The television star and businessman, already a lecturer to college and other groups on tiie permissiveness of this society, said: I intend now to step that up and give it much more point. I think my daughter's death is going to be paid for many, many times by the kinds of things I can say and get done, using this as an example." Diane, youngest of five Linkletter children, plunged from the kitchen window of a sixth-floo- r apartment where she had lived about eight months. By phone, from se ' V N , Wirt Pnotc Stalemate Firm Despite Flurry Of Peace Rumors WASHINGTON (UPI) -flurry of hopeful rumors and reports, there have been no new developments on the diplomatic or military fronts to indicate a possible Desute a breakthrough in the search for peace in Vietnam, high officials said today. President Nixon and his top aides still are hopeful of some sign Hanoi will respond to of U.S. gradual reduction forces by showing a willingness to reciprocate at the con- -. ference table or on tiie battlefield. But Administration officials said there is now no evidence to spark or hope for progress. These officials specifically denied recurrent reports some headway has been im je in secret contacts wth the Commu nists outside the Paris conference. They also profess to have no knowledge of any developments which could have led Senate Leader Republican Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania to there are some say that which happening might break the long standing Meanwhile, Gen. Earle G. chairman of the Wheeler, Joint Chiefs of Staff, made it clear in a statement in Saigon today Nixon may be fortunate indeed if he is able to achieve his present objective of getting some 200,000 Americans out of Vietnam by the end of stalemate. Their comments gave the impression Scott, seeking to persuade Congress and the public to refrain from criticizing Nixon, was expressing his hope9 rather than reflecting any hard facts. observers believe Many Scott merely caused the President more trouble by holding out hopes Administration officials acknowledged they could not support. Wheeler, sent to Vietnam to assess the progress of the training program under which South Vietnamese are supposed to take over more combat, said American forces would have to remain in South Vietnam for some time to come. He cautioned against undue haste In trying to turn the load over to the forces under the command of the Saigon government. things 1970. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird told the AFL-CIconvention today the Nixon Administration is on the path to ending the Vietnam War in the shortest possible time without abandoning our basic objective. Laird said he could promise io miraculous end to the war but added: We are now embarked on a dual course thflt we believe has the best prospect for ending American combat involvement. He told tiie labor convention in Atlantic City the dual approach would consist of ertitinuing the Paris peace talks and of giving the South Vietnamese more and more for military, responsibility economic and political phases of the war. R O ON MEAT PRICES NEW MONSOON RAINS DRENCH S. VIETNAM Boycott Leader Accuses Solons DA NANG, VIETNAM (AP) Hundreds of villagers were evacuated and military operations were curtailed today as record monsoon rains drenched South Vietnams northern provinces for the seventh consecutive day. Several military airfields were closed, their terminals crowded with allied servicemen waiting to catch flights to various bases. Flooded nrc paddies spilled muddy water over country roads, m. k .g many impassable. Sampans were sailing in many streets in the outskirts of Hue, the old imperial capital. The Perfume River, which runs through the city, was flooding over its banks in low sectors. By today, Hue had received more than 32 inches of rain including a record 21.5 inches in a period. - WASHINGTON (AP) The housewife leader ot a burgeoning meat boycott tangled with a House subcommittee today on just how to go about pinning the blame for the price rise. Mrs. Ross DeLorenzo of the Levittown, N.Y., said housewife is angry, confused and helpless in the face of all the statistics the experts throw around, Inside The News SECTION National, Foreign Theater Womens Pages Editorial Pages Our Man Jones Music City, Regional SECTION A 10 1, 2. 11 12-l- City. Regional Srmics. 1-- B 7, 9, IV 0bituasries a 16, 17 17 17 18 idtlo 8 io . U Weather Map Action Ads SECTION C Hockey 11 11-1- 1-- 8 refusing to let experts testify and said the hearing list was heavy with cattle organization representatives and from cattlecongressmen raising states. Monagan appeared dumbfounded by the assault and said the main purpose of the three-dahearing is to find out why choice beef went up cents a pound in the three-mont- h period last ending June. Monagan turned to the committees staff administrator, Louis I. Freed, who angrily denied any group had complained to him about getting a chance to be heard. That exchange was hardly over before Mrs. DeLorenzo found at least one committee member, livestockman Rep. John T. Meyers, had some protests of his own. Ill tell you who youre hurting, he told the boycott leader. You're hurting the farmer out there who raises this beef. You're not hurting the chain stores. Today your boycott is by Next choice, Myers said. week you may not have that choice because the meat wont be there. 10 pillars of decency journalists. He knows community . . . none personally. 57. said he Linkletter, doesnt have all the answers., but Ive been as good a parent as I could possibly be, I think. We've been a very close family. Weve done everything you do according to the book taken vacations together, gone on pack trips together, traveled extensively all over the world. "Weve been a good Christian family. My wife and I have tried to set a good example by being a good example. We have tried to keep our children up to date on what the dangerous things are. but perhaps we did not bear down as hard as we should have. Diane, of all the children, was always the most daring. She was the most emotionally up and down. She was either on top of the mountain, or in the valley of despair over trivial things. She was the one who would dare to sneak out at night, and be willing to accept the punishment for it. If she came in later than she was supposed to come in, as she did frequently, she got a tongue lashing and took it in good spirits. Of course, becoming an SEE LINKLETTER, Page A4 Mrs. DeLorenzo said she is convinced the farmer is not getting the extra money but ' wants to know who is. . She said the meat boycott she started on Long Island succeeded in bringing prices down 20 to 30 cents a pound in some local stores without a decrease in corresponding wholesale prices. and she was not convinced the subcommittee was interested in answering the housewifes questions. She accused Chairman John S. of Monagan, y family secret. All of a sudden theyre comLig out and telling me . . . his voice choked and halted . . . In Theyll join me publicizing these evils? Yes, he said. Many are lawyers, bankers, V lt KONG (UPI) -Communist China asked the Soviet Union today to help defuse their potentially explosive border dispute, Peking clusion with his wife Lois and son Robert. 24, in their Lake Tahoe cabin, Linkletter said: Since this has happened to Diane, you cannot imagine the number of people who have called, wired, written me important people, well known, who have daughters in sanitariums, sons in sanitarchildren who have iums, killed themselves. They have hushed this up as a terrible , , A U.S. Air Force man sits on each wing of this Soviet-buiMIG17 fighter plane as it it, rolled out onto the taxi strip for its return flight by Cuban A.F. pilots who arrived in Florida today to return the plane. Lt. Eduardo Guerra Jiminez, who left his family behind when he skimmed the plane at 40 feet when he defected to seek asylum in the United States, is being kept in seclusion at his own request. linkletier: 'Tell Truth About Drugs LOS ANGELES ii t Cuban Mila Ready Fop Hefurn HONG Ho Chi Minh. f v , ,v " Sino-Sovi- cattered t?'' TT ak Peking Acts To Defuse Radio reported. The Red Chinese proposed a military pullback in key disputed areas and agreed to resumption of formal border talks in Peking by vice foreign ministers of the two countries, Peking said. Time of the talks was not stated. The broadcast statement was a major step toward easborder dising the pute which has led to a series of sharp clashes during the past year along the Usurri River in the Far East north of Vladivostok and on the border of Sinkiang Province, site of Chinas nuclear installations. Peking said its proposal was an outgrowth of the Peking visit by Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin last month when he was flying home from the Hanoi funeral of North Vietnamese President , SfcaaamwiHiihiiw'ylMiitM Russ Dispute turned it over to investigators, '' - '''' ".Vs To soothe fears expressed which by some countries claim sovereignty beyond the etired - Nv.v. RIGHT limit, the draft stressed that nothing in this treaty shall be interpreted as supporting or prejudicing the position of any state party with respects to rights or claims which such state party may assert . . . related to waters off its coasts, or to the seabed and ocean floor. ' 3: States ratifying the treaty would have the right to verify the activities of other participating countries on the ocean the floor, beyond limit, but without interfering with such activities or otherwise infringing rights recognized under international law, including the freedoms of the high seas. Yes, h I ( ''v The treaty would come into force after ratification by the United States, the Soviet Union and 20 other nations. WAS JUST A HOBBY' WASHINGTON (UPI) -RMaj. Gen. Carl C. Turner, formerly the Army's top police official, admitted today he sold at least $2,000 worth of confiscated guns he got from civilian police departments and pocketed the proceeds. But Turner, a balding little man with a tiny mustache and strong voice, insisted he did nothing wrong. Those were my guns! he told members of a Senate In- Y n 0 Jobless Rise Is Price Of Inflation War WASHINGTON (UPI) Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy told Congress today that the administration's fight against inflation is going to put people out of work. But he refused to say how much more unemployment the administration would tolerate. If he cited any specific level, he said, it wouid be shouted all over the rooftops and become a complete embarrassment. Nixon Administration economists say that a cooling of the economy may be indicated by the sharpest increase, in unemployment in nine years. The jobless level rose of 1 per cent between August and September. Kennedy, testifying before a subcommittee of the joint e Economic Committee, was asked by Sen. rJtuart Symington, Are we planning for a recession as a way to handle five-tent- House-Senat- inflation? the Treasury chief No, i plied softly. We are watching these things to make sure that does not happen. |