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Show 1 . , I'. .; .I"'.-'-- T ' '' ' "J " i ' A J 1 v' Telephone FR 3-50- 5 ISO W, 4th N. j 757 N State AC ' ! ' , , r .ii.. i -- ' A . .. . .: -- : ; j.' r i " - "A- . A ':' ' v- 1 J A 3 (Q) vf ' . fro D laws lot the state of Idaho." Incorporators listed themselves as Marion G. Jungert, Max L. Mc Crery, Angus B. Fugate, Robert John Forde Teed and Ernest C. House! Jr., all of Lewiston. Fugate mailed in the articles to Williams, enclosing a $20 money order to cover Costs. Williams said if the articles were found to be in non-prof- I proper Tax Board Calls With Meeting p County Group h The secretary of state said for filing. this was not the first time that Williams said he felt the state separation of the Northern panwould resist any attempt by the handle counties from the rest of 10 counties to secede. Gov. Rob- Idaho has been proposed. He re ert E. Smylie labeled the pro- called that years ago formation posal a "publicity gimmick" of a state .of ."Columbia" had and Atty. Gen. Allan G.; Shep-ar- d been proposed but added it nev said, "I think it's probably er got" off the ground. Williams created in the spirit'"'" of fun and is a former governor of Idaho. games . At this time I don't "In the first place," Williams know whether it would, be" nec- said of the proposal, "I think essary to resist it or not."' - it's ridiculous." - . ... - ' 1 i ., SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) An estimated 60,000 pounds of a , -- I Orville Gunther, tax commis meeting sion chairman, in a letter to the Utah State Tax Of Utah County Commission Chair, and" the Committee Commisman G. Marion Hinckley, head Front County Jvasatch Wasatch Assessors and sioners regards of the seven-count- y asked that the hew Front committee, building Ing the proposed to clear up any depreciation schedule for the meeting be held counties has been called .for "misunderstandings" which Monday 10 a.m. in .Salt Lake Jtave arisen. The committee has asked for a delay m using the City. new. schedule. be-twe- en ? " v " : r"- $ s ':" $ - , . &-- f. " r v Vivl , i A - f - . a .' . ; "If ; newspaper reports are correct, it would appear, that un-11- onio. , fit rrdh - lf I : . S. Protests - J' k-- : a great deal of misunderstand- ing and lack of knowledge ex ists both as to the purpose and mechanics of the equalization the relationships program-an- d between the tax commission and the county assessors," Mr. i Gunther said. "We think the I SAIGON, South Viet Nam public welfare is not served, (UPI) Reliable sources said to- thereby. Certainly your com day that the Nov. 1 coup against mittee should learn all the facts President Ngo Dinh Diem before exercising such serious caught U.S. military command judgment." Asks Delay er Gen. PaulD. Harkins by sur prise despite warnings from his The committee of counties, subordinates organized Oct. 19, has agreed i The U.S. Military Assistance to employ Lionel Thatcher, an Cbmmand formally denied the economics professor at the Unireport that Harkins had ignored versity of Wisconsin, to conwarnings. It said the coup lead- duct a study of the new depreers maintained strict secrecy ciation schedule. In the mean the time of their attack. time, the committee asked Gov. fThe sources said Harkins also Clyde to delay the: implementa "sent a paragraph in a report to tion of the schedule set for 1964. The new schedule will raise Washington from the military land Central Intelhgence Agency home valuations in the seven-counarea with older homes XCIA) here saying he did not receiving big boosts. The seven believe a coup was imminent. counties involved are Utah, Salt flThey said that after the be- Lake, Tooele, Cache, Box Elder, ginning of the coup, Harkins Weber and Davis. tasked to have the paragraph deMr. Gunther said in his letter leted from the report. j1 that he .understands the seven- Denies Report r The Military. Assistance Com county 'committee will meet tnand denied that any such par again Triursday; , He said he that the group would de agraph was included in the re hoped cide at that time to meet with port originally and thus no de- the tax commission. letion was 'made. Outlines Background V It issued this statement on the In detailing the background COUD to the controversy, Mr. Gunther "The Revolutionary Military said that between the Committee (which staged the commissionmeetings the and assessors coup) advised the Military As- of the Wasatch Front counties sistance Command headquarters Nov. 30, 1962 and ended Fof the coup at 1:45 p.m., on began 1963. During these meet8, iNov. 1, which was approximate- - July he said, the assessors ings, 3y the time of then initial at agreed upon certain adjusttt4ck. ments to the depreVAt the time, they regretted ciation schedule now use. in the inot having been able to take He said the commission reMilitary Assistance Command commended that the adjust- Iheiadauarters into their confi (See TAX BOARD Page 4) dence, "but considered absolute f secrecy paramount to tne sue- chemical high explosive erupted with a thunderous roar today at the Atomic Energy Commis sion s Medina, rex., nuclear weapons plant, shattering windows 10 miles away in San An-- iThere was no' radiation dan ger,, officials emphasized. Officials reported three men superficially" injured. They were able to walk away from the blast. Residents of the area fled. ' :a. on W ;- kT t' y- - & - if j , .. . Arrest m n 'V' - Difficulty BERLIN (UPI); The U.S. Army, in a new expression of its rights of access,, today sent a small, d convoy out of Berlin without difficulty. An Army spokesman said the convoy, consisting of eight men in four trucks, iras- through the Soviet checkpoint outside Berlin without incident Such small convoys never dis mount, and the spokesman said Russians at the Babelsbere checkpoint did not ask this one to get out of its trucks to be counted. Tuesday a larger convoy, of the size the Russians have harassed in the past, traveled to West Germany after a brief deiay. The Russians did not demand the 54 soldiers in 13 vehicles ' dismount, but - they did ask them to slide to the rear of their trucks to be counted. The commander ' of the convoy refused. The convoy was passed into West Germany after 80 minutes. Convoys usually pass in from 30 to 40 minutes. The Russians held one Amer ican convoy for 41 hours beginning last Wednesday because the soldiers . refused to dis'" mount. AA , Tbday-sconvoy cleared in 10 minutes,- travel the-11- 0 miles across East Ger and then was passed many Russian the through checkpoint Marienborn in 16 minutes. k r.-:- QLYql . Bab-elsbe- rg f -- V MOSCOW (UPI) U.S. Am bassador Foy D. Kohler today , cess of their plan." The statement said the U.S fmilitary had been told of troop f movements on the morning of ithe coup "but the cover pian fning had been sd welt conceivedJ and executed . that the imminence of . a coup d'etat was not Vr strongly protested to the Soviet Umon against the arrest on spy charges of Yale Umversity Professor Frederick C. Barghoorn and Requested his release Didn't Advise Harkins t The sources said Harkins was fnot taken into, the confidence of ? the coup ' leaders because tney I considered him too closely to the Diem government. ! They said U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge was kept up L, (See SAIGON, COyP Page 4) con-nect-ed rebel still Baath party gov ernment had routed the rebels. The fighting, observers said, nine-month-o-ld . 4 14 f phatically'' that Barghoorn was a. spy, . demanded "immediate access" to the professor and requested his release. Kohler s trip to the Foreign Ministry followed a firm pro test lodged there this morning was believed to have developed following a reshuffle in the Baath hierarchy in which h strongmari Deputy Premier El Saadi was ousted. The fighting broke out this morning when Iraqi air force Sa-le- (J ' jets attacked the presidential REGIME STANDS Maj. palace. Fighting was reported at the Gen. Ahmed Hassan (shown in file photo) appeared to be heavily fortified defense minis-- 5 in command of the situation try and in the city streets. i No Information; after h s nine - monthj - old There was no information Iraqi regime had repelled an apparent, coup against the available on casualties. Diplomatic circles here said government. the fact the Baghdad Radio was still in government hands indicated Premier Maj. Gen. Ahmed Hassan Bakr's regime was in control The station was heard here ordering 'workers back to their jobs ' a It specifically a s k e d elecWASHINGTON (UPI) The tricity and water department first agreement by a private workers and postal and teleconcern for sale of American graph employes to return to , wheat to the Soviet Union is ex their jobs. of Control the was it radio, pected to be announced at any time. It is likely to be followed pointed out, is a prerequisite for success for an uprising in by other deals Commerce Secretary Luther the Middle East. Another indication of governH. Hodges said Tuesday: that in (See WHEAT DEALS Page 4) ment control wa3 the calling of a leadership meeting by Bakr. Cairo's "voice of the Arabs" radio said Bakr's government had imposed an indefinite cur; ; ; Wheat Deals With Soviet Near Win dup 15-min- ute few on Baghdad. Reports reaching Tehran, the capital of neighboring I r a n, said martial law had been im . posed. a'"a;-v Saadi, and Brig. Hardan Tak- - riti, commander of the a i r force, were dismissed, the station said. No explanation was " given. names out were of left Their a list of the1 new party . Ad aid the first (UPI) leaders appeared genuine ministration forces, heartened time, over prospects of optimistic ly by their best round to date in the measure this week. the 'Senate's prolonged foreign finishing Administration forces, beaten aid j battle, closed ranks today badly in the early days of the leadership. to Arrives In Spain raise anew attempt by Walter J. Stoessel, deputy against to win The situation was rallied fighting, Tuesday confused chief of the U.S. mission, interest rates on foreign . aid roll call showdown every a further by Spanish foreign of loans. against the arrest of the American professor, a The Senate bill, currently to proposed amendments. But they fice announcement that Saadi ESCAPE FOILED AT LEAVENWORTH PRISON agreed to accept two amend- had been in Madrid since TuesUnder Soviet law, Barghoorn is almost $800 $3.7 billion, taling Robert Robbiras, a convicted kidnaper from San faces imprisonment or a pos- million less than President Ken- ments that would knock out the day, when he arrived with "a wall at the sible death' ' sentence if found , (See RAID ON Page 4) Antonio, Tex., is lowered irom a $240 mil- revolving fund feature of the de and asked only.. nedy ;. Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary in Kansas , after guilty of the charges. lion more than the House voted. velopment loan fund arid 'A11h to escape Kohler was pressing a request It would authorize- - another year ance he was shot in the legs while attempting fof Progress" loans for yesterday. Another prisoner, Quitman Strickland; for further; information on the of economic and military' assist Latin America. of Jacksonville, Fla., also made it to the top of the case and a demand to see the ance overseas. The amendments, sponsored New York-bor- n Telephoto). expert on Rus wall, but was not shot. (Herald-UP- I , Ernest Gruening: Sen. Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R sian affairs. by test aid latest for ka, posed the Mikhattj Sntaovsky, chief of backers with an amendment to Colo., would forbid relending of In L. the 'American section of the increase interest rates on loans loan repayments under; the two Soviet Foreign , Office, told to not less than 2 cent a SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) per programs without reappropria ' Stoessel this : morning that no of David O. McKay of same tion funds the President provid figures by Congress. details could yet be provided yearthe Church House. the of Jesus Christ of the ed by The bill's backers, however. and. that" the: request for an Latter-day Saints, admitted to a Present rates range as low as fought jdown three unwanted interview wouia oe "passea three-fourtof. 1 per cent over amendments and wrote in one Salt like hospital Monday, for on. 40 years. The Senate Foreign of their own. They also ; dis rest and an examination, was TOKYO (UPI) Prince Noro- nation's neutrality, observers ambassador's action was Relations .The, Committee recom played enough strength; for Sen. listed in "very satisfactory" Cambodia's here said .today. dom Sihanouk, (See U. S. PROTESTS Page 4) mended three-fourt' the condition. of . 1 per Wayne L. Morse, cjiief of state, may have based Norodom, ruler, of Administrator L. Brent Goates cent for the first five years and bill's leading opponent, to aban his decision to renounce U. S. a Southeast Asian nation about don a proposal to ban alii types of LDS Hospital said McKay 2 per cent for the next aid on what he considers Amer- the size of Missouri,' announced U. S. with a maximum repayment pe 01 aw, 10 economically .devel was admitted to the hospital on ican, coolness toward his small Tuesday in his capital ' - of advice of his physicians. riod of 35 years.' oped nations. Phnom Penh that all . American ;i H. Democratic: Whip Hubert aid to Cambodia ' would cease Minn., predicted an HERALDING The News Humphrey, Dec. 31 and said he would bring In Productive day" of 11 "most other in three to five Communist Chi progress as 'the Senate began nese experts to help organize NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-T- he 12th : dayl of debate on the nationalized, industry, Justice Department appealed to its U.S. aid to , Cambodia- this the nation's second highest, fed year is estimated at $29.2 mil eral court .today in another atlion. - ' tempt toblock an, Alabama Lloyd WASHINGTON (UPt)-Ab- outi Though there have been some He had' announced Monday grand jury, probe of government 11 per cent of the United States restrictions on Eastern Euro-- H Ph Dposal tliat the state was taking over transportation furnished Negro was marked ."off limits" to .dip- peans ..(.'. such as navmg to give Some ,of , the best stories; if you have the leaderMartin rt Luther. business and King Jr. the import-expolomats from five Eastern Euro- advance notice of trips the perception to spot them, come ?out of naturalizawere In The WASHINGTON .Government nationalize would (UPI) attorneys Canodian countries today in a move system of closed areas did not' pean tion proceedings when people take their examinabanks as the' end'bf thext scheduled to present their argu- terstate Commerce Commission to! discourage spying. ;j - j x apply ;to them.:; : tions or oaths for American citizenshop. The June Cir- plan to cut passenger service U.S. 5th the before o: ments of his as who announced officials if Soviet program, a part U.S., ,,Thus, military atHerald's Joan Geyer has the perception, and oil, "advanced of FranSan aftand this between cuit Appeals C(jurt socialism." Ogden the- travel said it tache could not visit a U.S. deto' Page 1 1, she tells you about some international -was Dec. cisco Observers here pointed oui ernoon, t was designed tot close a loop- fense area, he always could get protested "incidents" happy ones, that! is; tiiat Norodom has altered his : The arguments were sched- day by Repi Sherman P.Uoyd, hole which had allowed satel- the military attache of ?aJ Red Ever hear of a stylish burglar? We've got position often in the past ., and uled for ,4 p.m.; EST. Rtah.v-:-A:;,.'- J. lite officials to gather, intelli satellite country, to go for him. one. He (or could it be she?) is on Page Three. The .Utah Republican said no gence' f data in parts 'of : the y",Th0..f State y Department also said the latest moves do ; noi ,The government filed an apThe Herald staff has an 'Off The Beat column necessarily mean Cambodia is peal with, the Circuit Court, hearing on the reduction' In serv- United! States closed to Rus- revised the restricted areas for can about You learn on editorial the below the U.S. ice has been held. j Y page: today, sians:moving into the Communis which ranks-just.v. Russians, closing some new loand "visual of not the possibilities blooming opposed A Roughly 2S per cent of the calities and; opening others, to phones," Supreme Court, Tuesday imme- a He said he was camp.' :" . Vt Cambodia reduction but to federal between! easter lilies. ; . the ''t district after Relations hoped the United; States has' been closed take into account the fact that .r v diately ; And elsewhere commission would give citizens to Russian j citizens 7 since 1955 strategic areas have.changed in and the United States havel) Judge Daniel H. Thomas you'll find the nationalglobal iricf to present in retaliation for. 'travel curbs recent years.' The total area . refused strained . come a to, and local news menu which the Herald prepares grant of Utaha: chance . easingly l f I i3 for you,' each , day as Central Utah's own (and since September. .1962, when I temporary restraining order their; views ueiore me Tservice- imposed by the Soviet Union on closed to Russians, however, ' 25 was the cent... CAMBODJA about still Americans. terminated; 4) halting (See grand jury probe. per Page only) daily newspaper. t? lit: WASHINGTOPT authorization.-Fo- r 1 16-m- an 52-year--old . . 40-fo- ot President McKay 'Satisfactory' si Hospital D-Al- as. Cambodia Move Follows Coolness on Neufrdl m V ; A t ? hs I . D-Or- hs e., ; rs 30-yea- Attorneys Arguo King Case Court Today We HdvSome Happy International 'Incidents' . Protests " ice , s ; - -- . U BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) The Iraqi government appeared today to have quelled a brief revolt after unidentified units launched ground and air attacks in the heart of Baghdad. Reports reaching here were sketchy, but diplomatic observers said it appeared the west-boun- 30-year-- I pens Administration Forces Fight forthwith." I nterest ; Kohler called on Soviet Depu Raise to Attempt Minister Valerian Foreign ty Zorin at the skyscraper Foreign Ministry offices and in a Rates on Foreign Aid Loans interview "denied em ty - ofi naiace ..... . r ij. & .1 passed Explosion Jars Atomic Weapon Plant in Texas - 7 -- Sqig on Coup prised PRICE TEN CENTS 13, 1963 be accepted would Up 'Misunderstandings1 eom-jnlssi- -- forecast: f Temperatures i' averaging above normal. Some scattered showers north portion t o w a r d weekend,1 becoming more general over the weekend. r' NeivGonvoy Has No 4 ce . smoky through Thursday. Highs both days in the upper 50s. Low tonight 34 to 38. Five-da- y "1 ' a considerable extent and o) the feasibility and advisability of affecting the withdrawal of the -- 10 North Idaho- - counties, namely Benewah, Bonner, Boundary, Clearwater, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, Lewis, Nez Perce arid Shoshone and the subdivision of the aforesaid counties from the state of Idaho into a sole and separate state. . . " The incorporation articles add The purposes of the group, of in this should be "conducted that according to the. articles apparent." j i' PFpVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH WFDNESDAY, NOVEMBER, . 4. .1' . . Idaho, residents proposed today that i Idaho's 10 northern counties secede from the state and group themselves into the nation's 51st state. : . Their plan was disclosed when they filed articles of incorporation with Secretary of State Arnold Williams for "North Idaho, it organization. Inc.," a face-to-fa- ( '. v ' iA .A' 05 u To Clear i. ' BOISfi;(UPI)Five Lewiston, corporation, are "to investigate legally arid according to the. form they f' I ' Mov M ..; '! " Cloudiness Proposal 'Ridiculous Says Secretary of State J - i : A . 1 -V. - ' - .' ' , " . v fi -. . v " !.;..' - ' , J 'M .:, 5050 in n ' , f YEAR NO.r74 NINETY-FIRS- T m '" r :..:FR - n 1 " 4 ,.'."!. $ For Ads, News, Circulation: r; Provo Office 'i ..f. V 50 - ' r :! : Is - .. - of Country 'Off Limits' To Envoys of 5 Red Nations j , ' m m j - -- ban-Tuesd- ay , - t . -- - . f ; Now Yoiitkniw By United Press International Boston Common,) set. aside in 1634 I ; as: public property, ranks as America's oldest public park, -- v - -- ; ; 'Ar - t " 1 . otMb-bilfe;Al- a; ; - ; graphic Society.; A ft 4 |