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Show - - tf -.- '" . ' - r : ' - isx nurncone ; TH0UGHT- Heads for S- BROWNS?: IUT -- JUPli J Htaricane Beulah, her vicious center winds Increasing and her the northern gales, lashing Mexican coast, boiled northwest through the. Gulf -- of- Mexico toward lower Texas and the mouth ef the Rio Grande. She was - expected to strike land tonight' near the Rio Grande and then turn northward up the Texas coast. Thousands of persons started evacuating, from Brownsville to Corpus Christi, 136 miles up the coast A girl was reported - missing while surfing in the six- foot breakers swollen by effects of thehurricane-- at Freeport, Tex., 130 miles north of Corpus Christi. At 10 a.m. EDT the New - Orleans WeatherBureau located the center of the hurricane near latitude 23.7 north and longitude 190 miles west, some . 95.7 southeast of -- Brownsville and moving northwest at 10 miles per bourr Winds Increasing Winds at the center had Increased to 130 miles per hour a fromilrHmiIes "per "Mir jight - ' M To Nation - LfoHs; WASHINGTON (UPI) De fense Secretary Robert S. McNamara'splan for a limited $5 billion antimissile system will defend allinhabited areas of the United States against possible Red Chinese attack, officials said today. It 'Will also- - give most - of ! and hurricane Monday force winds extended outward - 70 miles. Gales swpt 250 miles to the north and 100 miles to the :,.vs. oUthr Beulah had already claimed 29 lives in the Caribbean and $2.00 PER MONTH n n-o o I til 1 j ,v Ef tf.ijtA .7y ffailvt: tfiu 'i .i' VVl j't"WIW, mW r ' " : on rs- n ' - 10c PER COPY" ' ' :' U0a yliiiiiiedl IFir Will Offer : r Protection - " i ' ROVO UTAH COUNTY. UTAH- .TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 i - .:4.-:,lc"' it ' A - '"" nmsMmmSSi&frT? . 95th YEAR, NO. J ' L . . .. " m vjyWm Brownsville ; Jf TT"- -: ' ri .trr""" ii stMwj i. America's 1,000 Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missile rrCBM) sites added protection agairtst Soviet attack, they said. But the "thin" Missile (ABM) system an nounced by McNamara Monday lira major policy speech before the conference of United Press International Editors and Publishers in San Francisco will not protect this country against massive Soviet attack. ' McNamara made it clear that the Johnson administration has no intention of snendine the $40 . . L!ii! or more neeoea tor sucn a major defense, which he said THOUSANDS OF BYU STUDENTS packed Into the fieldbouse this morning for the annual would be futile anyway since "Welcome Back' assembly. Students were seated according to their borne area and most the Russians could always foreign students, show In photo, were grouped together. (Photo by Phil Shurtleff) spend more money and over-- Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and A CROUP of stndents and townspeople "protesting the enforcement of the city's or nearby islands. v;r J KAMID dinance against overnight parking on the street, Mrs. Don McConkie, 775 N. 7th E., Frovo, Gov. John Connally cancelled her opposition views on die situation at the Provo City Commission meeting Monday gives to to Dallas a planned trip ; : ..: night remain in his Austin, office and watch the hurricane. The 2,500 residents of Port .Isabel, on a narrow finger of land jutting from the mainland near Brownsville; and the 1,800 residents of Port Aransas on Padre Island off Corpus Christi were ordered evacuated. , Hurricane warningsjrere.up. i protests and asked that anyone they said no decision has yet By VAL HESS ... ma i. ...! Jlong the coast from Browni. u . . wun any posspies xraie persons nwsuy sville to Port Aransas and gale BYU students with the the problem contact the com - parking citatfons will replace .met warnings extended to Galveston. Provo the courtesy7 tickets. . City Commission Monday mission. High Tides Predicted to protest the enforcement) However, solutions mdifeated that Several night possible they The weather bureau predicted ihe city's ordinance banning Wey felt the ordinancewMuld were voiced to the problem at tides flooding the coastal of areas from Brownsville to vwernignt pamngco. - No Close Protection atreetsThe commission did not taled and not liist hmored any Nm theCity Commission chahv Corpus Christi. conclu to Uie reeommenda take at action the all character de. were was Contrary m any there Because ..nwre. beYsThey The weather bureau predicted tions of enthe Joint Chiefs of 01 so sm the the amend-the other cities .meeting cisionas to any possible way tides up to 12 feetf where the ABM the new Staff, plan makes continues. iorcemem tteat ordinment the its or coast center crosses the repeal, tonight. tnisprowem tides from The students were present to ance will continue to be enforc-- One possibility is to allow no provision for close-i- n protec and up to tion of American cities against Brownsville to Matagorda. protest . the regulation that ed. y parking on one sideMlof the street The Texas lower Rio Grande forces them to find at a time, On ev numbered, Courtesy Tickets even inus ine decision to ouua few, private The Provo Police have been nights cars park Valley's f 15 million citrus crop parking while of citizens were present to voice issuing courtesy tickets to vie- - side of the street. wnueisn odd such a system was the target of worth and J5 million both camps, in by meir oojeaions to tne law, vegetables were imperiled riawrs ana continued wiyprac- - nights they would park online criticism from ' " Some lawmakers - ; the storm.' i Commissioners listened to the.tice this morning. However, odd uumbered side of the street Congress. too little and too it was : Harvest thought started on the 8.7 mis wouia allow cleaning or million boxes of citrus last week snow removal to be effected on lafejjtherasawit .as a failure of U.Sdiplomacy in that the and was scheduled to run until one side of each of the streets United Stages has beeirunable next spring. The major citrus ; ; every night .; to get Russia to agree to a inland 60 and is miles area Other Suggestions mutual stondoflMn-th- e arms (See HURRICANE Page 4) Another suggestion was that race. : parking be allowed on east-we- .Chairman J. William streets one night and on of the Senate north-sout- h streets another Foreign Relations Committee night saia the awa decision AnU-ballis- v - City Dads Get Protests, Ideas On Parking; To Continue Enforcement ii' - J j i 10-fo- ot mity Embassy ; 10-fo- on-np- r e T Tax Commission to Finish Utah County Hearings Open Housing - MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPI) Open housing, the issue that and brought: Negro, marchers white violence. to ' Milwaukee streets, today moved to cit? hall for a showdown. Negro militants demonstrated for the 22nd successive night Monday while white opponents prayed for their own cause. Four-tim- Ful-brig- sented in MiiwauKee - st Thursday; Statement Given At Showdown es Common Council has refused to pass an open housing ordinance, the only thing mat can end the demonstrations according to Ne- gro militants. The city's only Negro alderman, Mrs. Vel Phillips, planned to resubmit her open housing proposal today. The common councils four previous reject tions of it by 18-- 1 margins prompted the protest which n - -- be--ga- Aug. 28. . u,a V ..j fe!apL,Sal - - n.JJdet stu-sio- . tae A Israeli-Occupie- ' Raise Tax Region d By WALTER LOGAN Arab feaflets called fdr a general business strike lg the .west bank area, .of Jordan day to coincide with , Israeli-occup- ied ... - ie opevig ot'the -- United Na tions General Assembly in New York but there were no .immediate indications- - the.: strike was effective. In Amman, heads of the Christian and Moslem churches in Jordan cabled world religious leaders, U. N. Secretary Gen-erU Thant and heads of state protesting the Israelis had vio-at! holy places in Jerusalem and demanded they be "liber ated" from "Zionist aggres-ioo.- " . a! ed ... vA SAIGON anti-Isra- el m r.f!.. r.,; luura - al ml ' " , (UPI)-Comm- uriist long-hair- : wo4ed ai leasi A welcome back ' assembly tors to the campus were quoted was held this morning at the which complimented the BYU Joseph Smith Fieldbouse on the on the fact that there were no BYU campus today, at which beatniks, beards or Provo City's Mayor Vert G. sloppy dress on campus. A let Dixon spoke briefly and a state ter from President Ernest L. song competition was featured. Wilkinson was read stressed short skirts, cutoffs, Mayor Dixon acclaimed the school as. "the greatest and fin- sandals, bermudas, strapless est university in all theworld." gowns, and dresses with 'spa He complimented the students gretti' straps are taboo on the who he said obeyed the laws of campus. A state song competition was and higher God, the community ' held under the direction of Dean academics. ', . Lorin Wheelwright assisted by was followed to the The ury ed which -- ; mayor podiunrbjrstudent twdy-presi-de- jjjiaraati)oainanewEne. nt land Yankees sang, "Yankee Doodle Dandy," as Southern students stood up and turned their backs to the New Englanders. The Yankees responded in tarn by turning their backs on the Southern "rebels" as they sang "Dixie," As Idaho students sang their state song, Wyoming students waved a sign which read "Potatoes are the root of all evil'Tinally the entire studentbody joined in with four where passible. Hawaiian' students as they sang A short sketch demonstrating a song typical of the Pacific the dress standards policy at islands. . the university was staged by m me Paul Gilbert who had this embassy: attack. Two hours to say about obedience to the later a young Chinese woman law concerning the city ordin shot and wounded the embassy ance involed overnight parking: . I. . ?. s nome, "1 cannot in good faith support press Hiiacne Vietnamese police, officials the city ordinance as it is now said the terror attacks may constituted . . . As things are have been the work of Chinese now all we can expect is leni Communist party Chairman ency in the courts." He did, 's Mao Red Guard however, solicit the support and fanatics. cooperation on the part of the - VS.- - spokesmen . said - Air students in obeying the law 20 1 ut-u- Tse-tung- Force BS2 Stratofortresses, America's mightiest weapon in the war. three times today dropped hundreds of tons of bombs on an estimated ,35,000 school song leadovflag twirl- North Vietnamese troops.-Th- e ers, and yell leaders. "Several (See NATIONALIST. Page 4) letters from tourists andlsi- - Denied by U.S. 2 American Soviets B52 Bombers Shot Down - MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia said today two American B52 bombers were shot down over North Vietnam," apparently by rockets. ' If so it would be the first time any of the huge strategic bombers had been lost to enemy ac- " tion. . In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman branded a similar report by the Tass news agency He from Hanoi as ."untrue." said, "we have accounted for all our aircraft." Reports of the downing of the planes which fly at 50,000 feet came also from Hanoi Radio and from East European news agencies in Hanoi eight-engin- reports. ' i- - T UN-Assembl- learned . Arabs Ask Business Strike In Bombed terrorists bombed out the Nationalist Chinese Embassy and sniped at rescuers in the ruins from rooftops today. U.S. jets hit Haiphong for the second straight - and pounded North Vietnamese divisions "battling American Marines on the flooded South Vietnamese bor der, military spokesmen said. Saigon police said the terror-fists killed tw- o- personsand Representatives of the Utaht "Tie! SUte Tax Commission 'pgrmj. to nroDertv owners of Hinlnmaw n t v..-v- .wnose wnants couia Oispiay while the svstem wul be "thin" a wcuujr '66 ouiw Ku vAuuuussiuu, i. u uwi mm uitvc oceu uujuuiB ireuiB permits and park on the in the beginning, he said, "it property owners in Provo andyProvo and Orem. There is but directly m front of their will get thick before long." urem ror ine past wees, nave wie purpose wr uicse ucwuigs residence. Criticize Delay issued a statement on the heat- and that is to find the present Still another method used in Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, market "valuTirihet various one ' ings;. of. the. House Armed city is the sale of uarkinc The commission has one more properties. The help of tne tax- - nermits for narkintr on eitv Services Committee too anoth-r payers involved is earnestly streets at the rate 9of $6 ner.er tack. "I hope it is not too day of hearings scheduled after which the solicited and appreciated. Thursday late," he said, noting . that month. determinations of what action "The amount of taxes is not McNamara had "finally" came 's..u. The to take in each individual case our immediate concern, to what military leaders ' will be made. , are only chareed with the re "1 ' mmt .w"6"" The hearingsare with rest i sponsibility of equalizing assess- - and promised to contmue studv- for two yearsr matter. the dents of Prove and Orem who ed values of the various nroner- ing Paul Gilbert, studentbody Elaborating on McNamara's n,; ttM t ADA AA Tf tB VflrA orantort aspsampnt rplipf speech, which gave few details by the Utah County Board of pointed out, however, that BYU',acteJas n of actual operation, defense Equalization. The state commis- - property taxes involved stay in5 officials said the system would claim too much reduction Utah County and were levied byl 2rese and rwmpha-wa- s employ Spartan missiles to points included in a allowed and is the local units of government ICBMs in space w ietter commission. These intercept "ie me innroximatelvV 800 casesx-Ua- nrf v UI1U OVI1WI crWi a1v,i UWU1WW) Tha KVUV VUAWW "hundreds of miles" from the (I Kerr's Statement included a claim that the en . are to be used by these local forcement was ' that target area Following is a statement made taxing bodies. . Technological - breakthroughs not the x are hourrinvolved rea by M. H. Kerr, director of the ' in the - last -- few --years have Counties Other X 7: sonable, that the years of Property Tax Division, on beWILL OFFER Page 4) (See assessment and make the mirlrfpn half of the State Tax Commis-- "The same oroeram is Deing mforrpmpnt unfair ami eouaiization wl : sioa: conducted al this time in other; the students-a- re the bearing V SollHIv counUes in the- - state. Many brunt of the enforcement when ' more adjustments have been it is their landlords that are at For made this year in Salt Lake fault SAN FRANCISCO ' (UPl- )City, South Salt Lake and MurResidents Speak ton President Johnson's econ ray, as weH as in parts of Salt Several residents of the com. omic adviser said today that Lake County outside of cities munity Indicated they felt the ana rowns, man nave oeen sweeping and cleaning of streets Americans would be giving up adminis- mauc m uuw vuumy wus wr. was Ot SUCft Mtle Consequence "very little" with the 7a . offensive coinThe IV K Jia wm K'VJU. it" wimuu lo hat that "It ).a .hnnll (jv Ci LCi HI LU H.'"'""" mi U1G VJ inn UCTQSiSQ J cided with Cairo reports forhi, uus proceed, ana u picture, vne or two saia tney eign Minister Adib El Amery.of will reappraisal to the end that would rather not have their Gardner Ackley, chairman of continue Jordan ended two days of talks Council of Economic Advieach property owner in the state streets cleaned and the snow the with Egyptian officials in Cairo said that failure to raise sers, is with assessed equally every removed than to be faced with taxes would lead to "a new and flew to New York with what other property owner according the ban on overnight "parking. round of inflationary pressure." he said was a new 'Mideast w lis tan marxei value. nooeri js. AUen,- -. a Provo peace plan. He disclosed no deThe the average "The hearings thus far have businessman . said he was not Americanmoney tails but said it was aimed baswould save if : his in blind to the of law indicated that opposition ically at . forcing Israeli withtaxes weren't raised would be drawal from Arab territory. , some properties should and will but doubted that the enforce-b- e lost in higher prices, Ackley made and. some downward ment was the solution. He felt said in, a - In ; Cairo the authoritative speech prepared for newspaper Al Ahram said adjustments are anticipated. - .the enforcement, if needed at naUV0rv in iha TTnifajt Dfnes were an, should have been started, at international Editors anf Pub- "IndividualJiearlngs Egypt's intelligence network director Salah Nasr was placed held with .taxpayers Monday the beginning of the summer to Ushers Conference. under house arrest immediately through Thursday of last week allowv homeowners an'opportun-an- d "This is' one of the most the balance wfll be held ity to do one', of three things following Israel's initial attack elementary and fundamental in the Middle East war on June Thursday, Sept. 21, after which get students Without cars, con-fin- lessons of economics; I urge 5i It also said 181 officers and determinations will be form to the law er not to rent. you to help the American people civilians had been arrested made and ,the affected taxpay - j .Provoan Don' McConkie said. to understand It,", he told the f . since the war. en nouuea oi tne aeosions." ; ' t (see dads Pagt 7) editors. Ackfe '" Is avlet.Feat.vi, off-stre- et Students Get Big Welcome at Assembly B YU Nationalist ' ; The only antiaircraft rockets believed to. be in Vietnam are Russian built surface to -- air (SAM) missiles. SAM sites recently have been reported just north of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) where the B52s were reported shot down. The reports said the planes were downed in the Vinh Linn district which is just north of the DMZ. Izvestia strongly implied, but did not clearly state, mat the B52s were downed by missiles. "On Sept. 17, 1987, at 1703 and 1734(5:03 and 5:34 p.m.) two American planes of the ultra, modern brand (B52s) were destroyed over Vinh Linh," Izvestia said. "The rocket units of the countrys and guard in defense of their homeland." The Izvestia dispatch from Hanoi said the B52s had bomb ed southern North Vietnam sev-- J eral times in the past month. "So several days ago the soldiers of the Democratic Republic of North Vietnam settled accounts with the vultures," the paper said. "For the first time, B52 planes were shot down.. On Mideast -- 3yBRUCEW4U UNITED NATIONS "fUPI) -The 22nd annual session of the united Nations General AssiBOH my. opened today with,, a warning from Secretary General Thant that another. Middle East war is all but unavoidable unless the world body finds 1 solution to the crisis. ". r In his annual report-t- o. the assembly Thant said that except for scattered debates "there has been no enduring, persistent effort in any U.N organ" to solve the Middle East crisis. "A' determined ' effort is needed now to find solutions to the issuesTwhich have thrice in the past led, and no doubt will again In the future lead to war between the Arabs -- and Israe " lis," the report said. Elected New PresHenf 7 Thant's report was presented after the world parliament convened at 3 p.m. (See UN ASSEMBLY Page 4) r : L - -- i |