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Show Chance Of Snow Our Phone Numbers Partly cloudy with chance of snow in the mountains. Continued cold. Daytime highs in the 40s. Lov.l tonight 20 to 25. Details, weather map on Page News Tips 0 Home Delivery 0 Information 5 8 Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South B-- VOL. 524-284- 524-444- 524-444- Ill 521-353- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 8. NO. 3 7 2 524-440- 44 PAGES 10c WEST'S MOUNTAIN THE FIRST NEWSPAPER MONDAY, OCTOBER W?L bin Y 71 w L. lx 7 - 13, 1969 sEhi First Step Ns In Building A Vfntinn wiwiivii MOSCOW (UPI) Soviet Union put AP Kari Shanks, 7, of Littleton, a Denver suburb, is Autumn Snowdrifts Pile Up In Colorado By Associated Pi ess Drifts 12 feet DENVER deep piled up today in parts of Colorado and Wyoming hit by the second autumn snowstorm in eight days. Colorado Highway patrolmen reported five dead in weather-cause- d traffic acci- State dents. Nearly 60 persons stranded In high country were rescued in the two states, including 38 Girl Scouts in camps near Denver and Fort Collins. Snowfall already up to 39 and Inches since Saturday made highway continuing, Denvers travel hazardous. International AirStapleton port was closed periodically because of snow on the ways. Two teen-ag- e boys who run- be- came lost while hunting near Pueblo were found in serious condition by a search party of 20. Both were expected to survive. Power and telephone service weie disrupted in a wide area. Travelers were warned of from hazardous conditions blowing and drifting snow over most of the east slopes of the Rockies, the Northern Plains and southward into Kansas. Up to seven inches of snow fell in portions of Nebraska Con-lis- Jr. quoted k Turner as saying. Conlisk, who said he refused Turners request, told Sei.ate former the investigators Army provost marshal made the request after learning an By Tear Gas BELFAST, NORTHERN - IRELAND (UPI) British troops fired volleys of tear gas bombs Sunday night and early today in pushing back 1,000 militant Protestants who hurled bricks in tv 0 attempts to march on a Roman Catholic neighborhood. fighting broke out in the Shankhill Road area, where a night of disorders Saturday left three dead and 66 injured. No injuries were reported in the violence Sunday and this morning. The Sniper? fired spoiadically at the troops. The soldiers had orders to fire if fired upon, but none pf the snipers could be located. The crowd of Protestants chanted Soldiers out! and British army go home! They referred to the 600 paratroops flown in Sunday to nut down the demonstrations. k 1 Beyond the snow belt, torrential rains fell along a cold front from south and east Texas to Minnesota. The heavy rains caused extensive flooding in Missouri and promised more of the same from eastern Oklahoma to central Illinois. Rainfall totals reached 10 inches in Oklahoma, 9 inches inches in in Illinois and 8 Missouri. NEWS SECTION A 6 7, 18 10 National, Foreign City, Regional investigation cf the matter was being made. Conlisk also strongly denied the contention by Turner during testimony last week that Chicago police gave him the guns for his personal collection, not for Army use. Conlisk also said Turner did not tell him when he got the last of four batches of guns last November that he had since retired from the Army. Conlisks testimony before the Senate permanent gation subcommittee ed sharply w ith statements by Turner when he testified last investiconflict- Tuesday. Mob Halted and Kansas and freezing temperatures were in effect for the Northern Plains and into the high plains of Kansas and Nebraska as well as New Mexico and parts of Oklahoma. INSIDE THE Gun Receipt Conflict Told -CWASHINGTON (UPI) hicago's police superintendent testified today that retired Maj. Gen. Carl C. Turner pleaded with him to destroy receipts the general signed for confiscated guns which he sold later for personal profit. Theyre out to get me, Superintendent James B. Wire Photo dwarfed by pile of snow on backyard picnic table. 39 INCHES AND GROWING Turner insisted that Conlisk knew the guns weie for Turner's personal collection. Conlisk denied it and said Turner solicited the guns by claiming he needed them for an Army museum at Ft. Gordon, Ga. The guns were given to Gen, Turner as custodian for the United States Army, Conlisk said. At no time in any of the conversations witn Gen. Turner did I say, or imply that the weapons he selected were for his private use, Conlisk testified. It was my explicit understanding, as reflected in the receipt Gen. Turner signed, that these weapons were too be turned over to the United States Army for official purposes. Conlisk said he first learned something might be amiss when Internal Revenue Service investigators questioned him last September about 397 guns which Turner got from the Chicago police departments collection of weapons confiscated from rioters and criminals. Normally, Coniisk said, coifiscated guns are destroyed in blast furnaces. 1-- Theater Womens Pages Editorial Pages Our Man Jones 12-1- 5 16, 17 17 17 Music SECTION B 1, 3, 7, 8 2 City, Regional Comics Financial 4, 5 6 TV Highlight? Obituaries Weather Map Action Ads SECTION 8 .8 7 Court Will Rule On Soyuz 8 with two experienced cosmonauts aboard Objectors Moscow observers said the mechanics of the Russian program may become clearer Tuesday when the three spaceships begin the first joint space maneuvers. The Russians gave almost WASHINGTON (UPI) -The newly convened Supreme Court announced today it will rule this term on two major cases involving the selective service rights of conscientious objectors to the Vietnam war. The eight justices also agreed to decide whether states may impose a .ceiling on welfare payments to needy families. The court, now presided over by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, indicated some of the fields it would rule on by a series of brief orders accepting and rejecting appeals for hearings of lower court decisions. DRAFT APPEAL Among those accepted was the governments appeal of a ruling by U.S. District Judge Charles E. Wyzanski in Boston that a conscientious objector to the Vietnam war cannot be drafted for service there. Wyzanskis decision overruled the jury conviction of John H. Sisson Jr., a Harvard graduate, for refusing to be inducted solely because of his conscientious opposition to the Vietnam war. The Wyzanski draft ruling pealed it on grounds the opinion was erroneous. OBJECTOR The court also accepted for a hearing the claim of a Los Angeles draftee, Elliott Ashton Welsh II, who refused to for induction on report of conscientious objection even though he is not religious in the generally accepted sense of the word. Arguments before the court will be scheduled this fall or winter and decisions will be handed down later. In the welfare case, the justices agreed to rule on a Maryland lawr which imposed a $250 - month - maximum on e grants to families with COURT on Page A-- 4 Sports City, Regional 7 8 Koreans Clash - SEOUL (UPI) South Korean troops fought a battle with three Communist North Korean infiltrators Sunday in the central part of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and killed two of the invaders. de-Se- Anatoly Filipehenko Vladislav Volkov The Tass news agency said that in addition to space the three ships research surface and oceans. It indicated the geological - geographic wmrk would be concentrated on seeking clues to new mineral wealth in the vast, barely Viktor Gorbatko roared aloft at 1:28 p.m. Moscow time (4 :28 a.m. MDT) to join Soyuz 6, launched Saturday with two men. and Soyuz 7, which went up Sunday with three men aboard. e television covof their space first alerage though they ran tapes cf the events soon after launching the instead of televising launches live. American-typ- would be used to compile geo- logical maps of the earths AP, UPI Report WASHINGTON President Nixon, refusing to bow to the planned Oct. 15 Vietnam moratorium demonstration, said today that to allow government policy to be made in the streets would destroy the and democratic process invite anarchy. He said he cannot abandon his present policies in Vietnam merely because of a public demonstration. He spoke out in a letter to a Georgetown University student, Randy J. Dicks, who - had written to challenge Nixons news conference statement that he would under no circumstances be affected by the protest demonstration. Nixon said he is convinced that we are on the road to peace and that the course of action he is following is the right one. "On Oct. 15, I understand, many will be simply saying: I am for peace. I ardently join with all Americans in working toward that goal, Nixon said. the tobacco - To industrys dismay, broadcasters served notice today they plan to continue antismoking commercials even after radio and television advertising of cigarettes ends next September. The disclosure by Vincent T. Wasilew'ski, president of the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB), marked a potentially serious setback to a careful year-lonlobbying strategy by cigarette makers. The strategy climaxed July 22 when Joseph F. Cullman g III, president of the Tobacco Institute, told a Senate subcommittee that cigarette makers would voluntarily stop all broadcast advertising next September. Observers believe the voluntary move had three aims to preclude even harsher government restrictions on cigarette advertising, to give tobacco firms i $220 million financial windfall for use in diversification, and to squelch commercials warning that cigarettes can kih. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has A-- PARIS (UPI) police fought sharp street clashes today on the western fringes of Paris with hundreds of shopkeepers rioting against government tax policies. First police reports said about 15 persons, half of them policemen, were injured in the fighting which erupted when shopkeepers and artisans staged a march on the state-ru- n headquarters on President Kennedy Avenue, and rar. into police roadblocks. Baton-swingin- g 1 Police reinforcements moved in, and paddy wagons rumbled through the evening traffic to the riot area. The rally, advertised by posters as a meeting of wrath heard shopkeepper association spokesmen denounce alleg-- d French heavy taxation crushing the 2 5 million small store owners and artisans. - " with-draw- unconditionally. He said the administration is already well aware that this sentiment is widespread and therefore, there is nothing new we can learn from the demonstrations. The question is whether, m the absence of any new evi ordered all stations which broadcast cigarette ads to also air the antismoking mesCigarette industry sages. leaders have privately condemned the health commercials as a prime factor in a slight drop in per capita cigarette consumption last vear. Some said broadcast advertising was no longer worth the cost since it reaped commercials knocking Ihe product. But Wasilewski, in a letter E. Moss, to Sen. Frank --- Congress' leading anticigarette crusader, said broadcasters had decided that the loss of despite cigarette advertising, antismoking messages will . . . continue to be aired, for at least four more years. There was ro immediate public reaction from the cigarette industry. But one executive privately raised the possibility that tobacco backers might demand that the FCC require a reverse of the presand ent fairness doctrine, require broadcasters airing to messages antismoking counter them with commercials on the pleasures of smoking. dence or any new arguments, we should be turned aside from a carefully considered course, the President said. Senate Republicans today challenged opponents of administration Vietnam policy to direct some of their energies to criticizing Hanoi, rather than the White House. Senate GOP Leader Hugh Scott led a parade of proadministration speakers to the to criticize floor Senate Wednesdays scheduled na- See DISUNITY on Page A4 Flights Of B52s Raid Border Area paris shopkeepers clash with police -- He added that the administration is already well aware that many Americans are deeply concerned about the war, that some consider U.S. participation immoral, that n many want U.S. troops immediately and - SAIGON (UPI) Eight flights of B52s bombed along the Cambodian border Sunday night and today despite reports President Nixon had ordered a cutback in their raids in response to the lull in Com- munist atacks. Official sources said Sunday the President ordered a 10 per cent reduction in Stratofort strikes to show the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese that he was wilting to reciprocate in scaling down the fighting. The eight raids into three Antismoking Ads May Continue WASHINGTON (UPI) explored regions of the Soviet Union. The cosmonauts put into orbit today were space veter-Se- e 7 RUSS on Page 2 Nixon Won't Bow To Protest created controversy and surprise when it was handed down last April. The Justice appromptly Department grounds C The third manned spacecraft into earth orbit today and now has a record seven men circling the earth in three Soyuz space vehicles first stage of a project to build the first permanent space station. Informed space sources said no permanent space station will be established now but that a linkup is planned between two of the spacecraft and probably will include experiments in the first space welding. However, all seven cosmonauts are scheduled to return in their own ships, the sources said. a In a speech prepared for delivery today to Texas broadcasters at Lubbock, Tex., Wasilewski elaborated broadcasters bitterness at suddenly losing their $220 million a vear in cigarette advertising revenues. perhaps to the benefit of newspapers and magazines. Vast expenditures would be made for promotional programs employing such devices as coupons, piemiums, contests, point of sale promotion and samples as well as n 0 nbroadcast advcrtLii.g." Wasilewski said. In none of these is there a requirement to prevent the antismoking point of view. along the border compared with an average of six B52 strikes daily in the first 12 days of October. This is the area where U.S. military officials say the Communists are training for more attacks. The officials said today the lull could continue another month befoie the guerrillas are ready. He (the enemy) could and should be in very good shape, particularly if he holds off anprovinces other 30 dav s befoie launchwinter-sprinoffening his sive." one U.S. command officer said. g Militaiy 18 spokesmen overnight shelling attacks but said ground fight4S ing remained light, with in four killed fights guerrillas north against of Saigon no American Sunday deaths. American strength troop figures began to reflect the 35,000-masecond cutback as 4.100 Gls left the war zone last week, dropping the American commitment to 505,600, with moie scheduled to leave this week. n Todays Thought In life, as in chess, forethought tn ns. Charles Buxton |