OCR Text |
Show Our Phone Numbers Sun To Shine iH Sunny through Saturd. y With chance of rain near zero. Some patches of fog. Details, weather map. Page B-- 9. c w 1 K3 j News Tips Home Delivfiy 0 Infoi mation Sports Scores Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 31 E. 1st South 521-440- 0 524-2S1- SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH VOL. 372 NO. 151 56 PAGES 1 0 THE WEST'S MOUNTAIN NEWSPAPER FIRST 5 524-444- S 521-353- 5 28, 19 69 NaiiNx. L 1 NOVEMBER FRIDAY, 524-444- n UlhLlii v - gist Jet'rey Wan.er sanl rs samples appear medium ch.r-toa- l biown gray, sn cv.itiast to tire dark gray of the moon rocks gathered four mortis ago T e f.rst muon nuk' rue fiom tie Sea ct Tranquillity, on tne right hand side ot me lace of the moon Apollo 12 s rocks came fiom the Ocean of Stoims, on the lett ot the moon s tace. Ore rock, a eiystallme c hur.k tnat delighted geologists when they peered ino the SPACE V: HCLS-TOCENTER. Geologists found the moon 'till is fail of puzzles and surprises when they opened the first rock box filled by Apollo 12s astronauts and discovered stones bigger a. id lighter colored than those rerarned by Apollo 11. (LTD 'rA Today they open the second box from Apoho 12, a more c awfully collected selection believed to contain 12 to 15 individually wraps! reck'. to see what Mirpri-e- v t' contains. Tie f rt Wednesday vj earth-lookin- ias w s opened mgnt, and geolo e.glied pounds. 'n thing from Apollo 11. Ju W tA ls :Tr-- v; . f Deseret News Photos by Howard C. Vooe Eyeing the huge roast turkey for their Thanksgiving feast are John, Laurie and Mark McKay and President David O. McKay. moon pleted a rocket and artillery into the Green Beret Bu Prang in opening d Holiday Joyful For Pres, f.ldfay President David 0. McKay of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints and Mrs. observed Thanksgiving Thursday the McKay did a turkey dinner with Utahns most way the family Joining the McKays for turkey and all the trimmings were their son and daughter-in-law- . Loan Rate On Homes At 8.12 Pet. At Helsinki Talks HELSINKI session Embassy, the envoys agreed to meet again next Tuesday at the Soviet Embassy. Today's session was fifth private discussion board's tepott shows insurance companies charged an average 8.48 per cent and mottgage companies were right behind at 8 45 per cent on their new home loam. The life INSIDE THE full-scal- e A news blackout By joint began. meetings i far tho rrrAmjQt t.vo sides are saying nothing () - IS. SIX! ION filv, Regional I1) 19 19 B 15. f. 2il TV" Highlights 9 Obituaries Weather Map Trash Maps - 9 10 Action Ads C SF.CTION 13 Noting Americans City, Regional Theater - -- - SUCTION . Spurts Financial 1 3 4, 5 6 . Comics Dty, Regional 7, 8 ft United Press Intemational 1 Music Our Man Jones They he Yotir Schools beyond announcing ing times. the meet- It was understood that th delegates decided to recess for a long weekend in order to allow sufficient preparation for the next session. The layover gives them more time aiso to report back io thmr home governments. The American team, headed by Gerard C. Smith, feels that th talks have been marked so far by a good atmosphere and apparent Kremlin seriousness U.w,.ngton, Secretary of State William P. Rogers savs 1" he U S. delegates told hint earlier this week that their preliminary exchanges were the best of any discussions they have had vveh the Soviet Union. Soviet sources hete have indicated that the Russians are ab-- r satisfied with the talks. But the government-controlle- d Soviet press has expressed no strong support for SALT and has been blaming militarists for th? arms buildup. defenders ments reported today: Guerrillas ambushed the Seventy-thre- column of South Vietnan ese militiamen 72 miles southwest of Saigon Thursday, killing 38 and wounding 12 the latest m a series of successful Viet Cong attacks in the Mekorg losses No guerrJl. wet reported. The U.S. Navy said it was turmrg over its base at My Tho in the Mekorg Delta to the South Vietnamese Satui-dathe f.rst American naval base given to the government. iltu. FLA. Nixon (LTD BISCAYNE. President today named astronaut d Collins, a member o: America's firet team . as assistant secretary of state for public affairs. die o! Ann ounrement appointment was made at the vacation White House where Nixon and his famdv are spending a long weekend. moon-landui- The that g President is certain Michael will Collins make a further contribution to the nation m his new position." said press secretary Ronald Ziegler Collins. 39, had expressed Nguyen civilians Lt. William L. Calley Jr.s defense attorney said today on the publicity unleashed alleged Song My massacre impaired his may have client's rights. George W. Latimer, a former Utah Supreme Court justice, said he was planning a series of motions to that point, to he filed in court probably next week. He said he ultimately-- plans to plead Calley innocent to the charges involving the killing of Vietnamese civilians, but in to leave the space piogtam shortly after his histone Apollo 11 trip to the mooa last July. In his new job. he will coordinate State Department pai ticipation in public disunions on foreign affairs. Tne job. which pays $33,000 per year, was downgraded some tin.e ago when the news bureau, now headed by Robeit McCloskey, was given separate status. Secretary of State William P. Ro?ers recommended Collins hv the job and tne President discussed it with Collins during the Whit' House dina desire 5, Mounting I os labor problems Italy, France and Brit- ain today, with economic exports predicting the possible downfall of London as one of the woilds major seaports if longshoremen's strike there continues. Thousands converged of metalwoikers Rome to demand more pay. French students organized a march to protest educational cutbacks and in Britain, 200.000 teachers threatened to close clown schools for the rest of the year. Sinking metalwoikeis from as far away as Turin and Milan agreed to a police appeal to move their demon- stration out of the heart of 1 Rome and to march along the Tiber River to a rally at the Piazza Del Popolo to prevent traflic jams and possible violence downtown. In Britain. Mrs. Barb.ua Castle, the minister of productivity, appealed to striking longshoremen Thursday night to lift their strike at London's Tilbury container terminal. The dockworkers struck first for higher wages, won thore demands but then held out for more pay for other British longshoremen. Two corporations representing Britain's nine biggest shipping lines said they would move to Belgium if the strike at Tilbury was not settlpd suon. Economic experts saw this could rum London as a major pou. s VI Officials of Butain's two largest teacher unions predated many schools would be dosed until the fust of next yeat in a strike for more pay. More than 100 schools have been shutting down each dav in w ildcat strikes. In Fiance, the National Students Union defied a police ban on mass demonstrations in Paris by calling maiches to protest the government austerity program, which has left ot the Soi bonne's faculty letteis with a fraction of its professors. The piogram a'so includes a plan to cut the medical schools freshman ilass fiom 26.000 to 6 000 thiough tough examinations 200 than More youths matched thiough Paris' PLue d'Opeia Thuisday night, ur.g- - the meantime everybody seems to believe he is the culprit. a I think it requires in Latimer said, motion, view of the publicity that has been unleashed. Chuban-Delin.i- I knew it was fishy as soon I wrote it. the Tribune quoted Arthur Dunn. 27, of suburban Fore-- t Park. "There were 12S of ire enemy reported killed an.' three weapons caponly tured," he said That does.i t " quite jibe s nationwide television to accuse the Communist-led Genera! Contedpr.i-tioi- i of Labor on of trying suhvei-sio- n through labor agitation. He was refining to power vvorkeis who cut electricity and gas pressure twice in the l.mt in their two weeks demands for U"s work and more pay. Todays Thought PREY'S OFFICER The newspaper said Dunn recently discharged from the service, had been a second lieutenant and press ofneer of be 11th Brigade. an In with interview WVEC-Tat Hampton. Va.. Col. Henderson said, "Lp until two weeks ago. 1 would have sworn that it could not hapien without my knowing about it. ' But when I suit seeing TV bioadcasts and hearing speaK about this subject who were themselves I begin to wonder. said Henderson, now attached to the Armed Forces Staff College at Not folk. Va. soldieis have Ametkan -been accused of killing rr.iiv as 567 civibans at tn vil.ige. Lt William L CalLv laces a vourtmaiti.il oi ct'atgcs of killing 109 of 'hem David Mitchell is S.Sgt been ihatged wun assault wit it intent to murdc. s eyevvi-nesst'- J-- - 1 VI ft is- ti j,fitunitv to thi hum In rant t xf it ft onjc EUut - ! ( xi as Interna irg the Communist tionrtle and chanting Police arrested nine oi them. went wears fashionable 'street that is. duster' maxi-ma- Model repoit as soon as he wrote it, the Chicago Tribune said today in a copyrighted store. Apollo II astsonauts the While Houre said Premier Jacques the Hits Publicity zone. U.v Van Vy branded The army information officer who wrote the first news Pinkville" accounts of the operation the GI name for Song My says he thought something was wrong with the da broadcasts had assured them of good treatment. The shelling oi Bu Prang was one of 32 overnight salvos against allied targets. Headquarters repotted generally light fighting across the war Nov. cer- was Fisirr from a Viet Cong-helvillage turned themselves in to U.S. troops 77 miles noithwest of Saigon. They said they had been frightened by U.S. shells tailing so near their village but felt safe in seeking asylum because allied propagan- ner ago. the commander of 11th Brigade was reports as totally untrue. Astro Collins Gains Public Affairs Post KEY field against former president N'go Dinh Diem, is to begin an investigation Monday. Six days ago Defense Minister Gen. d a magnetic n military sources said number of Americans killed and wounded in Vietnam has surpassed 300,000 level. Oifiual figures issued Thursday said that as of last Saturday. 39,572 GIs had died and 258,778 had been wounded a total 308 short of tiie 300,000 mark. e waves. The earth's My on March 18, 19CS. Now. Col. Oren K. Hendei-sosays he is nut so sure. Neither are members of the South Vietnamese Senate and Assembly. A joint committee headed by Sen. Tran Van Don. a leader of the 1963 coup U.S. at earths eauh's magnetic tain his troops did not slay Vietnamese villagers at Song the Bu Prang, it was the heaviest overnight shelling in 11 days and one of the heaviest of the bombardments that daily begun 31 days ago. No one was killed. In two other major develop- get a subsurface and a roll ol foil Until two weeks former army. Viet-name- the through magnetic wake like one snip another's through passing to forces, the Apollo 12 expen-meshould Mp scientists deduce information on the elects ical properties of the moon. Tliis. in linn, could tell somethin alxmt the moon's internal temperatures and contribute to a better understanding of its origin. Py United Press International Strikes Plague 3 Nations 13 17 .. on how the talks are going prevailed again today as if has since the A Editorial Pages be- Conference sources estimated after todays meeting that the negotiator still have another week or two of discussions ahead before ending the preliminary round at Helsinki. The next stage is supposed to be negotiations. NEWS - the tween the two sides since t.,e Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) opened Nov. 17. ot the On scale. Philadelphia. Pa., had an average effective rate of 7.07 per cent. ... U.S. After a at the U.S. the other end ..18. - Moscow. The San Ftanusco-Oakland- . Calif., area also had ? high rate of 8 97 per cent. National. Foreign City, Regional Women's Pages Let's Play Chess (AP) and Soviet negotiators wound up two weeks of secret arms curb talks today in ..hat was described as a favorable atmosphere despite a smattering of caustic comments from average effective mortgage rate for new homes rose to 8.12 per cent in October, continuing an upward spiral for the 11th straight month. The Federal Home and Loan Bank Board reported the bad new s for home buyers and the construction industry Thursday. There was a wide range in rates charged across the country with the highest average of 9.13 per cent in Seattle. Wash. This was a jump of about l1 2 per cent over a year earlier. SECTION grandchildren. President McKay said being with his grandchildren. Mark, 16; John, 12, and Laurie. 7. is a great joy. He said, This is the way it should N on holidays. The Church leader is happy, hearty and healthy, his family said. Word's' Favorable' The WASHINGTON (AP) Dr. and Mrs. Edward R. McKay, and three ond month of tf offensive along the Cambodian border. For the U.S. and South slicing reacts Officer Has Doubts On Massacre The base 40 miles southwest of Saigon will serve as a maintenance headquarters for government boots in the Delta, now almost exclusively turned over to the Saigon mortar, barrage camp at the sec- to sample s aped like a comet by a steady flow- - of gases from the sun with the magnetic forces compressed on the side of the earth facing the sun and extended like a tan millions of miles long on the other side. By seeing how the moon orkirg satisiactor iy . One of the instruments is a magnetometer and it repotted Thursday that the moon was samples. the second box contwo tained three core tubes of which were driven an estimated 24 to 30 inches into the g i' w A-- beret Lamp - 1 For pictures and additional moon story see Page first Apollo 12 sample box. was seven inches long and SAIGON (UP1) North Vietnamese troops today com- cargo of lunar samples. Apollo 12s explorers left a n u c e a r powered science station behind on the Ocean ot Storms. It has five experiments and all were reported r said. 4,04 - Warn-- In addition to the individual lv documented wrapped Attack On a' fe- U'Ca to 'rap solar pattults tut study in Switzerland Besides returning a pnre-les- s four than Tins t by far the large t returned. compared to any- Long , Heavy lT more w I Maxi Could Trip You Up NEW YuRK is a The maxireat (AP) escalati dogging menu re to the female populaioi.' So Says the Greater New York Safetv Cu.m ul speaking out on fashion's current fad lady-trippin- stieet-svveep- u g. Mis. Maijotie B. May. tne council s me of home saV'v. warned fashioi able m fans Thut'day of these pitfalls- a s Maxes can easily ti.p the nearer on and cuibs ent lakhes u c'lU.a-tui- s The floor-le- r T and ; i bus. e.evator and revolving d o.s Maxis have a tendency to become if tie wearer svveepeis and subway dusters forgets m hit her hems. "Today's women lucre not yet le i.ieu' how saul to walk gracetully in the maxi cli thes Mis. Muv. Titey have little understa hug o: how to hit the long suit or co.d for g'aeetul stepping tot satety. Having lay ei s ot heavy, wet and duty tab tic slopping agamst one's ankles on a ra.ir. clay or m snowy, slushy weather tan be not but definitely deMai's only uncomfortable trom tne well groomed look the wearer t iav be striving to achieve " c ime New Yura depai n ei t slot es ,av e already posted sigt s at e calatois wain.rg maxicoated shoppers to no.st their hens. ii tor ' |