Show QUOTE WEATHER be partly Skies UNQUOTE OGDEN: If life had a second edition how would correct the proofs John Clare in a letter to a friend I ry ri 1 1 No 231 i — ' - - ' r 'w fxti iff y j 1 1 ii jft i n ti ii j VJV ' - -- UPI Teephefe Protest w Bombings Follow Explosion at Franco Residence MADRID (UPI) — of the storv Flash flood from Hacha River killed estimated 90— (UPI Telephoto) Sma Ipox Sea re Men s Off icia Is I To Report On Projec ror Campaign NEW YORK (UPD-He- alth of- ficials today pursued their excampaign to vaccinate strike at the Marshall Space hundreds of persons who may have Flight Center apparently resumed contacted a boy afreworkers when after today flicted with small pox while he turning to their jobs briefly was in this country on Aug 11 walked off again James William Orr a missionA spokesman for the flight censon flew into Idlewild airary's ter heart of much of the nation's port with his family from Brazil missile and space development on that day'-Th- efive took a taxi-ca- b to Grand Central Terminal "Although the federal district waited several hours and then court has enjoined the strike vir- traveled to Toronto on a train tually all the Local 558 Interna- that evening tional Brotherhood of Electrical The US Public Health Service Workers members expected to re- ( PHS ) announced that all 74 persume work failed to appear sons on the plane that brought the at construction sites Orrs to this country had been lo"The few members who did re- cated and inoculated port had not begun work at 10 James entered a Toronto hospiam with an ailment tal two "A majority of other skills in- doctors days ago was smallpox confirmed volved in the strike did report to life was not in said his work sites although some of those They s reporting started to work most of danger HUNT EVEYONE them have by now left construction sites" But authorities here mindful The Marshall spokesman was of the contagious nature of the asked if operations at the space disease embarked on a hunt for center were again at a standstill everyone who may have contactHe replied: "It would appear so" ed him here This included passengers on the plane and the DOESN'T KNOW said he did not train customs and airline perThe spokesman know what would be the next step sonnel at the airport a taxicab in the space agency's efforts to driver a luggage porter "and all end the strike that started last those who may have been in the main waiting room Tuesday in a dispute over non- terminal's was there while James union electricians The highly contagious disease Officials of the space agency which may bring death to as many indicated last week they would 35 of as each 100 victims was last consider terminating the contracts of private firms unable to con- reported in this country in 1947 James entered Riverdale Isotinue work because of the walkout lation Hospital in Toronto Saturby their employes is in no danger accordand Earlier today it appeared the day to doctors "Clinically the boy strike was at an end with the al ing but there is most 1500 workers complying has the disease with a federal court order direct no need for panic or alarm We do not anticipate an epidemic" ing them to return to work The spokesman at the space said Dr Matthew B Dymond center said no picket lines were Ontario's minister of health — (The boy's missionary father on the gates and that the first crews were arriving as scheduled James Robert Orr said his son and "we assume they all will probably contacted the disease in the interior of Brazil where the But thenit turned out family qf five had been on a mismost of the 150 striking electri sion until they flew to New York cians were not on the job he via Argentine Airlines Aug 11' The father has been quarantined said and even most of the more than 1200 building trades work- at a Toronto home The mother ers were either idle on the site or Mrs Mary Orr and the ether two children—Joseph 13 and Dor-had left HUNTSVILLE Ala (AP) — A haustive : that -- SO YOU'LL KNOW Here's History Dctf a On Smallpox Effect By United Press International The Disease: Highly contagious spread by coming in contact with the victim or something he recently handled The mortality rate is about 35 per cent of those who are stricken - The Symptoms: Starts like "influenza but after about 'four days a rash develops' The rash—pox—is first 'filled with ": liquid : turns to pus The Duration: Incubation period of about 14 days The disease affects the victim for an average of three to four weeks Severe cases last longer The Treatment: No specific measures against smallpox but : antibiotics usually are given 'to keep down infection The Vaccination: A live cow ipox virus is injected under the skin It sets up antibodies in the inoculated persons to fight any smallpox virus that enters the body Vaccinations if properly given give protection for an average of three years The History: Epidemics as recently- - as the turn of the century in America have generally been controlled by mass vaccina tion An outbreak reported in Europe early this year was traced to travelers from Pakistan The last "imported" threat in this a i ns t Threat 9—are in quarantine at the j toms of the disease and urged family home in Three Hills Al anyone developing them to report to a doctor or local health berta Officials here took every possible precaution Emergency inIn its initial stages the disease oculation stations were set up :at resembles influenza About the eight locations The PHS station fourth day a rash appears This at the airport and a vaccination lasts about two or three weeks center in Manhattan remained and becomes pustulous The incuj bation period of the disease is open around the clock Authorities requested all per- about two weeks A vaccination sons who might have- been near administered witbin4he4ast three the boy to report for vaccination years should be effective they By early today more than 800 had said The highly contagious nature of responded They continued 'to trickle in through the hours of smallpox was stressed While authe morning thorities said they did not want "Authorities were particularly to create panic they said "Anyconcerned about the taxi driver one who was in the waiting room who transported the Orr family (at Grand Central Terminal) at from the airport to the train sta- any time between noon and 8:30 tion All but three of the city's pm Saturday Aug 11 should get 101 cab companies had been con- vaccinated Members of their tacted by Sunday night families should also get Officials publicized the synip- othy j - 1 Time-bomb- Giant Rocket WASHINGTON The (UPI) Defense Department today ordered development of a new space booster rocket believed to be twice as powerful as those used by Russia to orbit its cosmonauts The department said it would be able to carry out "a wide range of manned and unmanned space missions during this dej cade" The booster is called Titan III Corp was named as prime contractor for the "workhorse" - launch vehicle Development work : is expected to cost between $500 million and $1 Martin-Mariet- ta j billion One of the major uses of the Titan III will be to orbit the:? Air Force DyriaSoar a manned space craft A winged craft designed to land on earth bases in the same manner 'as an airplane the Dyna'i (UPI) — A scientist said here today the July 9 US high altitude nuclear test explosion in the Pacific may have produced another radiation belt around the earth similar to the Van Allen belt Dr James Warwick of the high altitude observatory of the National Center for Atmospheric Research here said the belt was positioned in space where it passed close to the Johnston Island site of the July explosion He said it contained the same kind of "high energy electrons" of the Van Allen belt Warwick said he could not give an opinion on whether the new belt would be a hazard to manned space exploration or would slow up the US Mercury program But he said he thought there were plenty of scientists qualified to do so "The data indicates that the belt appeared immediately fol- - N RUSSIA Today's newspaper blasts— two in Madrid and one in Barcelona-w- ere similar to the bomb explosion touched off Sunday near the wall of Generalissimo Francisco Franco's summer home in San Sebastian s In Madrid exploded offices of the the at dawn before Spanish Union newspaper Pueblo and the Roman Catholic newspaper Ya Later in the morning a small device went off at the entrance to Barcelon's Lavanguar-di- a No casualties were reported Informed sources said the three time were all small home-mad- e bombs Damage was limited to a few shattered windows A second unexploded device was Sound near the scene of the explosion at Franco's summer residence in coastal San Sebastian Several windows in the home were broken by the force of the explosion about 400 yards from the palace wall Franco was reported fishing off the- - coast at the time His Avife Carmen was in the Ayete Palace but was not injured The announcement of the plastic bomb explosion near Franco's summer home was made by the government hours after it happened It was the first time such an incident has occurred near a residence used by Franco although a series of similar explosions have been set off in Spain since a rash of strikes began last spring time-bomb- r i Blast Four - The Pentagon said the Titain III with a first stage producing more than two million pounds of thrust would be able to hurl pay-j loads of 5000 to 25000 pounds into ' j space The booster Russia has been using is believed to have about one million pounds thrust" The largest payload the Russians have claimed to have orbited is 14000 pounds The announcement came on the heels of a charge- by Sen Barry Goldwater that civilian "whiz kids" in the Pentagon were "deterring the military from getting into space" i Goldwater a brigadier general in the Air Force Reserve took issue with statements attributed to Pentagon officials that there was little military significance in the Soviet twin manned space r flights ' Such statements he told the Senate demonstrate "the naviete of civilians in the Pentagon" who are holding back military operations ia outer space - R-Ar- iz UPPSALA Sweden (AP) The Russians set off another nuclear test blast today in the atmosphere over the Novaya Zemlya region1 in northern Russia Swedish scientists re-spor- ted '! The explosion was recorded at Uppsala simultaneously University-- Seismological Institution and at the Stockholm Geodesy Institute at 4:02 ' amy lowing the July 9 explosion over Johnston Island" Warwick said "Our data come from two Pacific stations on a monthly basis I saw them for the first time last week "However observations of effects similar to what we saw came from the National Bureau of Standards station in Peru and it's my understanding they saw earlier in July what we did" " Warwick said the new radiation belt is just at the lower edge of the inner Van Allen belt and could last for months or poibly as long as five years SIGNALS DETECT He said it was detected by y emission of signals "The new belt is very closely restricted to the geomagnetic equator which is tipped at an angle of about 11 degrees from the geographic equator ard crosses it roughly in the Johnston Island radio-frequenc- He said the signals were received from stations at Bagio near Manila and at Honolulu "The significance is that our Bagio station was at a much lower geomagnetic latitude' than is our Honolulu station so that we observed greater intensification of signals at Bagio than at Hono lulu" he said "This radiation belt is made up of very energetic electrons and the Van Allen belt also has en ergetic electrons so that in that particular range of high energy electrons! it is very similar to the Van AUen belt" As far' as the hazards to space ktravel the new belt may present Warwick said he was ' not com petent" to make a prediction v: ' Uppsala scientists set the strength of the explosion at 12 megatons while Prof Arne Bjerhammar of the Stockholm institute estimated it to be around 10 megatons A megaton is equivalent to a million tons of TNT Today's ' explosion was the fourth to be recorded here in the current series which the Russians started Aug 5 and continued Aug 7 and Aug 10 all over Novaya Zemlya I N D (ONE SECTION EX 16 PAGES) 12 Amusements-Movie- s 11 Bridgt Comics Editorial Obituaries Sports 10 Women' 11 4 13 8 Television-Radi- o Pest Log y A i BERLIN (UPI)—A crowd of jeering West Berliners today hurled hundreds of stones at a Soviet bus carrying Russian soldiers to the Sovjet war memorial in West Berlin i n a new protest ft against the Red shooting of a young East German refu- gee About 500 demonstrators defying stepped up security precautions by West Berlin police waylaid the bus and attacked it with stones minutes after it passed safely through the US Checkpoint Charlie on the East-WeBerlin border The new violence broke out as the East German Communists claimed they shot down a Western military aircraft Saturday when it flew over East German territory in a "deliberate provocation" DENIES LOSS In Bonn however the West Tania Verstak of Australia beams in her new role as German Defense Ministry denied 'Miss International' of 1962 Miss Verstak won the that the plane had been shot down coveted title Saturday night at Long Beach Calif The West German ministry said after competing with a raft of beauties from around the Communist report was an exthe globe— (UPI Telephoto) aggerated account of an aerial border incident which took place last Saturday when a West German navy plane was shot at by Communist interceptors but escaped to the West It was the third consecutive day that a Soviet army bus was stoned by West Berliners embittered by the Communist police killing a 'elugee on the communist wall last Friday An ejevvitness reported that almost every one of the 500 West' GENEVA (UPI) — The United provided a treaty based on the in the crowd threw one-oBerliners to-could neutral proposals States and the Soviet Union produce two stones at the bus and tiations- aimed at reaching a i possible clandestine nuclear tests shattered almost every window m treaty banning all nuclear tests and not "a theoretical possibility lrIhe sides of the bus also were US chief disarmament nego- -' of inspection" We shower of rocks Kuznetsov said the Soviet Union ue"T tiator Arthur H Dean and Soviet U1URC ouuucj a msiH-iuii- g nui Fircf TVinntv PnrPi'cm Minictpr- w nrpniwd tn pnfpr intn nir nt ri- j: there was no — United with States the Kuznetsov negotiations Vasily vtion today cf the disarmament con- - "in the hope of achieving positive ciemonH Anotner Soviet "bus stoned Sunference — said they will meet to results'" He did not however give night by West Berliners restudy chances of drawing up a any indication that the Russians day to East Berlin today withturned treaty based on the eight neutral would be prepared to reconsider out incident ' their repeated rejection of the in- nations' compromise plan Mayor Willy Brandt had warned No date was set for their first ternational on - site inspection that alerted West Berlin police measures considered essential by meeting would crush further But observers believed this will the West demonstrations by West Berbe within a few days because liners who that the complain both sides appear anxious to should Americans have intervened break the existing nuclear test to save the fallen refugee ban deadlock Wore the United NEWS DISPATCH Nations General Assembly meet20 The New in York Communist East German ing Sept Defense Ministry mentioned the INDIAN PROPOSAL plane incident for the first time Earlier today India urged the Alexandria va itipd in a dispatch by the official United States and Russia to be- - More than 500 searchers swarmed today ADN news agency The West Gergin negotiations on a treaty to ban over w00ded areas of this Wash- - man Defense Ministry had anSll nUClGar t6StS incirm cuhiirh fnHov in q coornh nounced Saturday night that the India's proposal for bilateral for two girls who dis plane had returned safely to the negotiations vas backed by the appeared from their homes Sun- West after it strayed over the United Arab Republic and both day Iron Curtain and was shot at and immediately expressed sides "There's absolutely no trace of damaged by a Communist jet readiness to take part The East German Defense MinChief Indian delegate Arthur them whatsoever" Alexandria Posaid the incident took place Lall said they represented ''the lice Sgt Robert Harlow said istry Saturday at 1:22 pm near the best hepe" of breaking the two "Things don't look good" German city of Eisenach Police said they were begin- East week stalemate following Soviet The ministry announcement carrejection of the modified US pro- ning to fear foul play but specu- ried by the East German news lated hopefully the girls Rita posals for a nuclear test ban service ADN said a West German Dean said he was "profoundly Ohlgren and Maria Teresa Morley Bundeswehr jet entered East Gerinterested" in the proposal and may have just wandered away many at about 10000 feet in what ready to confer with Kuznetsov from their homes it called a planned deliberate air Harlow said about 500 police- provocation men and 100 Marines were searchThe Communist announcement Killed in Quake ing the Brookville section "foot by said an East German jet was sent MANILA (AP) — Earthquake foot" up to determine the intruder's jarred Panay Island and felled a "We're checking drainage dit- nationality and ordered the plane coconut tree The falling tree hit ches woods and playgrounds" he to land The intruder did not land a boy and killed him the only said "But we haven't turned up as ordered and was promptly shot a thing" down the announcement said casualty t "y 1 st ill a f Sm & UP FROM DOWN UNDER oviets Agree Ban Talks 0 - I anti-Americ- j 17-nati-on J : anti-Americ- an Hunt Spreads For 2 Girls area" eels Shoot Soar is expected to fly in the j mid 1960s ?y BIG PAYLOADS Colo hk1 ' Of 'Incident' f s US Orders New Belt of Radiation Linked to Pacific Shot Work on BOULDER ' &m?i gTrVK ir 5 CENTS Riots Break In Wake I exploded at offices of three newspapers in Madrid and Barcelona today and Spanish authorities rushed police reinforcements to guard premises of the nation's main newspapers FLOOD BRINGS DISASTER Crews Fail j News Plants Li 4-77- 11 flavin! y — In Spain Hit by Blasts This Jeep and a pile of debris on the doorstep of a house in Florencia Colombia tell only a minor part EXport AUGUST 20 1962 y ' - £3 ill Press International MONDAY EVENING JLl':r U: f j Unitmd OGDEN UTAH ' 2 m s Associated-Pres- VOL LXxv j will cloudy Tuesday with little change in temperature low 53 high 96 UTAH: Mostly clear through Tuesday low 55 high 93 (See weather map page 3) 9 12 6 NAMES IN THE NEWS a Ices Fi na l Appea Spy Dr Robert A Soblen's lawprepared what could be the Soviet spy's last legal maneuver in trying to evade his return to the United States and life in prison ' Soblen's legal team which seeks a writ of -- habeas corpus to block Britain's - deportation order goes before the country's high court Wednesday: Soblen 61 now in Brixton Prison jumped $100000 bail in Jew York June 25 and fled to Israel to escape his life sentence for wartime espionage He was expelled but wounded himself on an airliner bound for New York and had to be taken from the plane for hospitalization in London MANEUVER: yers in London : HOSPITALIZED: Sarah Churchill 47 actress daughter of Sir Winston Churchill was taken to a nursing home in Brighton England after a court postponed a hearing - against her on drunk and disorderly charges She was charged with being drunk and disgreen-- orderly oh the "beach front SatintlayIThe eyed actress married Lord Audley- last April 26 in Gibraltar They came to Brighton recently HONORED: Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy was today named an honorary citizen of Ravello Italy a distinction that escaped such illustrious guests of the past as King Victor Emmanuel III composer Richard Wagner and actress Greta Garbo Mayor Lorenzo Mansi said the Avould be officially honored American first-lad- a week from Tuesday for her charm and natural dignity— and in the hope she will return Mrs Kennedy in a setting of old world charm Saturday night accepted an award as "the most elegant woman of 196V' FINAL GAME: Former President Dwight D Eisenhower got up early today to play what was probably the last golf game of his Scottish va- cation He arose at 6:30 am and was out on Turnberry Golf Course for the fourth time in hours later four days Eisenhower then left to pay a courtesy call on the provost (mayor) of the town of May- bole Mrs Sara Dunn before leaving Tuesday He also hoped to visit Adm Sir Frederick who commanded a squadron during the Normany landings " one-and-a-h- CHECK-UP- : Former President Herbert Hoov n er today entered New York's Columbia-Presbyteria- Medical Center for his annual checkup A spokesman for the nation's 31st president said Hoover who was 38 on Aug 10 "might return"4o his hotel "suite Tuesday) but a hospital' spokesman said" he may remain in the hospital for two or three days RECOVERING: Sir Winshsn Churchill will go home Tuesday from the London hospital where he has spent nearly two months recovering from a broken thighbone his wife said today "He's coming home tomorrow—before lunch' Lady Churchill told newsmen at the hospital statesman spent his 53rd where the day r |