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Show i mints We Partly Cloudy in I through Tuesday with scattered showers. Lowering daytime temperatures. Low tonight 58 to M 60. 3rd ' Life Day ; PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH YEAR NO. 33 NINETY-FIRS- T MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, PRICE TEN CENTS 193 A (UPI) Team Report ABERDEEN, S.D: (UPI) The progress report was yerybody doing just fine . . . it's a miracle" for the five tiny Fischer quintuplets in their third day of 'life today. .Sister, Mary Stephens, administrator of, St. Lukes ospital, came from the nursery where the quints s quirmed and cried lustily in their special incubators. After a visit to the mother, Mrs. Mary Ann Fischer, Sister Stephen beamingly reported: grateful to the "Everybody doing just fine. We can be ' Lord. good plications," she said. The quints had been examined early today by Dr. James Berbos, who delivered them at 3:01 a.m. CST Saturday. Before his arrival, the nurses caring for the long babies .had increased their food intake from four cc's to five cc's. They are fed every two hours. The three elder children of the Fischeri family went to school this morning for the first time since the quints were born. Father Andrew Fischer drove them two miles from his farmhouse home in his green, slightly rusty Plymouth, to the Sacred Heart parish school, a block from the hospital.' Girls Named Mary Danny clutched a football and carried a book satchel into the school. Julie, 6, and Charlotte, who will be 7 Wednesday, carried books and brightly colored lunch pails. They smiled as their father spoke with was Goldwater, the featured speaker today at the luncheon of opening-da- y the American Minings Congress convention. a Goldwater spoke following resoa at which session morning lution was introduced calling for a congressional redefinition of stockpile purposes and a reappraisal of stockpile objectives. The resolution first acknowledged the necessity of stockpiles of strategic minerals and metals as a national asset of great value and insurance against .future reporters. Seven-year-ol- emergency requirements. But it said "the current stockpile objectives for minerals and metals in some cases seem wholly unrealistic." The resolution continued: "This indicates the urgent necessity for Congressional redefini- tion of stockpile purposes and reappraisal of stockpile objectives. Such redefinition and reappraisal should take into account not only the military requirements of the free world, but also civilian needs in the event of a major emergency or conflict and requirements for postwar rehabilitation." The resolution, introduced at the morning opening session, also called for continuing reappraisal and urged Congress to maintain its control over the disposal of the minerals and metals in the national and supplemental stockpiles. "The minerals and metals in the defense production act stockpiles, not now subject to control of the Congress, present a continuing threat to orderly mar kets," the resolution read. The resolution urged a stockpile disposal plan for each metal or mineral rather than a general plan for all. Other resolutions Urged that domestic energy Industries such as coal be permitted and encouraged to maintain levels of productive strength that will enable them, both in peace and war, to meet the energy needs of the nation. Less government control, fewer government "socialistic experiments" and a decrease in the "hordes of minor public officials : bureaucratic 4 Girls; 20 Injured 18-in- Barry imposing dates." Blast Kills good Lord that there are no com- Sen. (UPI) man- Now You Know By United Press International International Monetary more than $15 billion with Fund, in gold and national currencies, is the world's largest source of availalbe international quickly credit, according to the World Almanac. The v fit rg m , ' 1 : y rA 4 " r -- , I in f Jr ? i n inAillr..,W'-- i Andrew Fischer, father of nation's PROUD PAPA first miints. leans over to pose three of his five other children as they leave Sacred Heart Church in Aberdeen, SD. "after attending mass. Children are Charlotte, 6; Telephoto) Julie, 5; and Danny, 7. (Herald-UP- I O. BRYANT United Press International Ala. (UPI) BIRMINGHAM, A force of 1,400 policemen, state d Natroopers and tional Guardsmen were poised for V action today in the aftermath of ftA 'imiiijfi a church bombing and street vio lence that claimed six lives." In the charged atmosphere cre ated by Sunday's dynamiting in ' this racially-scarre- d city, three i public schools were scheduled to begin their second week of integrated classes today. The schools West End and Ramsay High and Graymont Ele admitted Negro stu mentary. dents for the first time under fed eral court order last Wednesday v off resentment that 'touching into the X--' bombing Sunday erupted -ten I i 91 of the, 16th Street Baptist Church. Hurled from a passing car. the dynamite - stick bomb shattered the church, filled with 400 wor- , j, shipers, and killed four Negro LONDON PAPERS SPOTLIGHT CHURCH BOMBING British press headlines togirls in a basement Sunday school day played up the Birmingham,! Ala. church bombings in which four Negro girls class. At least 20 persons were were killed. In Birmingham, a force of 1400 policemen, state troopjers, and National treated for injuries a hospitals. Crowd Hysterical to on Guardsmen were hand today keep the peace. (Herald-UP- I Radiotelephoto) . A crowd of 2,000 hysterical Ne groes swarmed from their homes after the explosion, and police struggled and fired rifle shots hi the air for two hours before the group. Shootings and stonings broke out through the ; city and continued late into the , night of one these incidents, During WASHINGTON The up in Senate action on civil rights police shot to death Johnny (UPI) Negro, who as a result of th Run. inson, a. bombing jof a Negro church in CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. (UPI) Birmingham was denounced in day violente. which took the lives was hurling rocks at whites' cars The bodies of two more Air the ;U.S. Senate today byf Demo- of four Nttero girls land ignored orders to halt after Force officers drowned in a crats andj Republicans who called Senators denounced the bomb- - ne Hea down an aey. weekend boating accident were for 'swift punishment of those re- ins as a national crime." "dis- At about the same time, ' seven . 1 rA TI recovered from Lake Tahoe today. sponsible! for the crime. nours 'utaiter "i explosion,, Tvirgu'1 and graceful" "outrageous" One Republican, Sen. Jacob K. terly reprehensible." Ware, a All four officers believed to Negro, was have perished in the mishap were Javits, N.Y., demanded 4 speed- - Javits touched off the angry shot from ambush while riding stationed at Stead Air Force Base round of reaction when he arose a bicycle with his brother in a in the Senate to denounce the at residential area 15 miles away. north of Reno. Two were women seen riding a nurses from the base hospital. tack. He iaid that Alabama Gov. Two white youths . a area were tne in as-- 1 re1 motorcycle C The body of 1st Lt. Janet L. Wallace "cannot George was sought by police. for 28, somi it." Rankin, Bradford, Pa., cape responsibility Officers arrested 19 Negroes in found floating about a mile from Senate Democratic Leader Mike tne Sand Harbor Sunday. Stead offi- Heart-Broke- n vicinity ot tne txwnbea churcn Mont., Mansfield, Republican cials said the two bodies recoverWhip Thomas H. Kuchel, Cklif., on a variety of charges . including and Sen. J. William Fulbright, retusing to obey an officer, drunk- ed this morning were those of followed Javits in attack- - nness and carrying concealed a man and a woman. Positive weapons. , identification was not immedi- ing the bombing. Lrovernor Sends Troopers Mansfield said the bombing was diately made. unief Jaime Moore, fear- no . police can Jthere be BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Aside from Lt. Rankin, those "reprehensible. The words came quietly, halting excuse foi" an occurrence of this la repetition'. of the rioting i, involved were Capt. Jean F. w ujuioing ox a a from circumbroken heart. kind under any possiDie 30, Leonminster, Mass., the ly, Negro will "Her stances." never be attorney's home Sept. 4, filled other nurse; 1st Lt. G. L. Morplace called all available members of in C. Democratic leader Senate said this The A, Wesley, home," gan, 27, Athens, Tenn., 2nd Lt. 600-mhis force to duty. Mayor "this outragewith that reverence almost s:!d. O. however, J. Murdaugh, 25, Tulsa, Okla. referring Albert Boutwell the not to his ous killed does acUoa appealed to Gov. represent Coast Guardsmen said bits of daughter, ; Wallace for help. George of the wii.h in a of other three the hull and deck of the great majority girls Sunday feeling vvauace 300 Alaof of or a dispatched citizens troopers church explosion triggered by outboard the foursome was using Birmingham bama or of the United ' States as ana alerted 500 National Guards- on a water skiing excursion Sat- hate. men in the Cltv. where raHal "She was our adopted daugh a whole. M urday indicated the craft struck (See BLAST Pare 4) "This i something that no one said Wesley, principal of a submerged rock or a heavy ter, told the Mansfield who can Lewis Elementary School, condone," floating object. and it "has set back the no children. has other The Senate, "Cynthia ' victims were reported was six she when to difficult course on the road of us missing Sunday when they failed came race relations." to show up for scheduled duty years old." 'Toots' 'f We played with her dog Fulbrigjit endorsed Mansfield's assignments. Lewis and termed the bombstatements we for left church," Two Air Force helicopters, before an He's that loved "She dog. ing Coast Guard patrol boats and said. ("outrageous, disgraceful shore searchers from the base a cocker spaniel. He hasn't be occurrence." were participating in the search gun to miss her yet. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) "But he will,". Lewis added for the remaining officer today. Albert Boutwell -- cried Mayor with infinite sadness. when he talked of the bomb that "We washed the dishes together ripped a church and of the four this morning," he went on, speak children who died in the Negro ing in almost a whisper. "That's blast: : when we always talked. She "This is NelNEW-yORGov. (UPI) sickening," he said. wanted to go to a football game a is "It event, is just said A. Rockefeller tragic son school. I Sunday tomorrow at her .high individuals a that few sickening the announce would he the that abut by was concerned danger could commit such a horrible but I had told her she could go end of the year, perhaps in NoSAIGON (UPI) President Ngo if her mother agreed. This made vember, whether he will run for atrocity." His voice5 shook with emotion Dinh Diem lifted martial law her happy and she went to look the 1964 Republican presidential and tears streamed down his nomination. the schedule. throughout South Viet Nam today, up Rockefeller also eaid that he cheeks. "The occurrence dfsuch "Cynithia wore a white dress but heavily armed troops and po- this morning because she was to would rather see Sen Barry a Uiihg has .so gravely concerned in the White the. public . . . " His voice broke lice continued to occupy strategic have been an usher in the church Goldwater. House than President Kennedy. and he could not continue. y points in Saigon, including the service Emstreets around the American bassy. In addition to ending martial regulations imposed last month at the time of the government crack down on Buddhists, the president also ended press censorship. Observers, however, expected The NAACP!s telegram to KenPresiWASHINGTON (UPI) King wired the Chief Executive that presidential action to have little effect on the tense interna dent Kennedy kept in close touch that he, would "sincerely plead nedy urged "complete interventional situation in Viet Nam. with developments today in the with m people to remain non- tion" . of the Justice Department racial violent jin the face of this ter- in the case of the bombing of a Heavy government security meas- explosive Birmingham ures and the arrest of dissident crisis, one of the gravest in the rible provocation.1 However, I'm church Sunday and the deaths of convinced that unless some im- six persons at Birmingham. elements in the country were ex nlation's recent history. "If we are not to have more mediate! steps are taken by the to to continue. pected Among the first messages than a restore to mornfederal picayune and piecemeal aid government Saigon remained a tense and un- reach his desk in the early this type of bestiality in the confidence sense projecot from against easy city today although the sur- ing hours were demands us now so that we can tell and Martion Ofj limb, please Rev. property, life, face situation appeared calm. Hunleader the resources as we such ears marshal on will Nadeaf fall plejas the my dreds of heavily armed troops and tin Luther King Jr. and such meth-ad- s and see in shall wei. and employ Birmingham possess police still occupied the central tional Association for the Advanceas our desperation may market and streets around govern- ment of Colored People (NAACP) and Alabama. the worst racial in holocaust this nation has ever dictate in defense of the lives of ment buildings and the American for intervention federal seen." people," ihe NAACP aid. Alabama. Embassy. battle-equippe- - wi etasT KILLS GIRLS . EI , Andy Fischer, 38, looked rested and sprightly. He disclosed that Sunday night he had suggested that Mrs. Fischer start to work 'thinking about names for the four girl quintuplets. So far they each have been named Mary for purposes of their baptism Saturday afternoon. "I told her last night to start either working on other names middle or first names to go with (the Mary," Fischer said. He uttered a! laughing "yes" when asked, "Do you still love your wife?" Dr. Berbos went immediately into surgery duties after quickly five bun checking the quints dles of kicking, squalling, bawling humanity with heads the size of oranges and hands not much larger than a silver dollar. would He said he probably tofirst time for the them weight he and that might day change their diet to some kind of a milk formula. They have been by nose tube getting sugar-wate- r since Sunday morning. The doctor made it plain, however, that he will iake it very easy with the quints, who were born six to eight weeks prematurely, until he feels they are safely through the danger area, until which extends Tuesday morning. Sister Stephen said Mrs. Fischer, 30, has been getting gifts of fruit and flowers in her room. Her "doing fine" report also applies to the mother. As for the father, Andy Fischer got up' early, as usual, and milked his two cows, a Jersey and a Guernsey, in the big blue barn behind his Jarm house, two miles outside town, which he rents for $55 a month. Sightseers are common now on the road in front of stucco house, octhe and their the Fischers cupied by five other children. The three oldest Fischer children, Danny, 7; Charlotte, who will be 7 Wednesday; and Julie, who was 6 Sunday, start the fall (term today at the Sacred Heart parish school along with 715 other children. The two youngest Fischer children, Evelyn, 4, and Denise, 3, (See QUINTS Page 4) 4 I By WILLIAM til tit" I ' U UH ,, r 9 "n1 i V l ..... linn i in iiiiiniwr EXPLOSION DESECRATES PICTURE OF CHRIST Stained glass window depicting Jesus Christ is almost intact after dynamite explosion except for the face wrecked the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. Sunday. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). : By PATRICK HARDEN United Press International JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) "l had no food or water for a week, but I don't rerheber being hungry or thirsty.";; Mrs. Lorna Slade was relating her experience aboard a slowly sinking cabin cruiser which drifted nine days in the Atlantic Ferris Wheel Collapses; Four Killed A TIJUANA, Mexico (UPI) loaded to capacity collapsed Sunday nighit in the midst of a milling crowd of about 800 Mexico's Indecelebrating pendence Day, claiming the lives of four persons including a pregnant woman and her unborn child. At least 16 others were injured in the accident at the scene of a traveling carnival ori a dirt lot near the bridge just across the international border from California. All of the dead were women and citizens of Mexico. Doctors performed k caesarian section on the seventh-month- s pregnant woman, but both she and tile unborn baby die4The district attorney's office here said about 60 persons were on the wheel when it collapsed while in operation. ferris wheel Ocean while she tried to signal for help. Her husband, retired Canadian Naval Commander Stuart L. Slade, died after six days. The spunky Mrs. Slade was picked up Saturday by the tanker S. S. Perryyille and brought here Sunday night. Smoking a cigarette nervously, native of the tiny, grey-haire- d told ordeal the of Lincoln, Neb., which began as an island-hoppin- g jaunt through the Bahamas and which took on a tragic note when the engine failed and her husband, suffering a leg infection, became delirious and died. The cabin cruiser, The Crystal, sank with her husband's body as an Coast Guard cruiser tow it back here. to prepared Sunburned And Emaciated Mrs. Slade, wearing black slacks and a colored blouse, appeared sunburned from spending most of the time on deck painting "SOS" signs and lighting makeshift flares. She was emaciated from a week without food or water. She said she and her husband, after spending time in California after his retirement from the navy, decided to come to Florida to buy a deep sea fishing boat. They bought one and decided to take the trip to the Bahamas. Mrs. Slade, who was rescued about 120 miles north of here, said she spotted four fishing boats during the ordeal, but they apparently thought "we were fishing." She said she and her husband (See WOMAN Page 4) 82-fo- ot HERALDING The News They're Sad But Important, We Treat Them Accordingly An obituary s usually sad news but it is important news. And The Daily Herald gives more details and a more Complete story of a person's life than any other daily newspaper you will find in this area, by far. It is the last time on this earth, so to speak, for a persori to have his or her story told. We try to tell it completely and sympathetically. Obituaries are always grouped on Page Four. The weekend was a bad one in Utah County for traffic accidents. You'll find them on Page Three. Child prodigies usually have two things in common they stand in the brilliant spotlight of public acclaim as children, and fade into adult anonymity. A familiar Utah jfigure has proveh the exception. He was a child prodigy as a musician. Today he remains a familiar figure in the musical field, both as a performer and promoter. He is he? See Page 12.; These are a few highlights inside today's Herald. For the latest on the Birmingham bombing and other top news of the world ancj the nation, see of course Page One and elsewhere. I rxr - : r j Woman Rescued After Drifting Bodies of 3 Drowning 9 Days in Sinking Boat in Victims Found Atlantic Ocean; Husband Dies - ? : Ji -- d five-bedroo- '.:: C DilbihTDsi f' "I feel it's a miracle to the Goldwater Addresses AMC Meet LOS ANGELES BDTtDfe5iii(3 Senators Deplore dispersing Church Borribing Rob-leeislati- 1 A1 ; on j Negro Father la ; a 1 i As Girl Dies D-Ar- j Cas-barr- : an 18-fo- ot -- birmingham Mayor cries OVER BOMBING . Rockefeller Run? Decision Due By End of Year Diem Lifts Martial Law . v it f ... President in Close Touch With Birmingham Crisis; NAACP Asks Federal Intervention - j lur tttr r r " . r i ' i 'j . v j r- - " - - - " fm r i.r - - .. |