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Show Telephone FR 3-50- 50 FAIR TODAY For Ads., News, Cirenlation: except some aftern oon cloudiness. FroTo Office, 190 W. 4th N. - "'H Continued hot. Illjh today in the 59 IJ V i Orem Office, I I M il l t 7i L -- . VOL 40, NO. 9 C6ooedly Starts Over aylBing o Mil Btary B rass m a n m V I IV 1 1 11 XJ 1 . J J l& V U. r i. int 'A'. I The .'A'rc" ' f- - - -- ;1 'y 2. o. ' Pledge Neutra ity J 1 of the U.S. high Regars. Continental Trailwavs bus command came "swiftly shakeup all of whom were injured re- i mained in hospitals' here, and at ord..leaied out m ParIs U.S. Air Force Gen. Denver, hnt the rest had heen rp. Laurls Norstad would' resign efleased bv Saturday nieht. 1 as Nov. fective supreme Allied None M the eiht was in SpP. " : in commander fftii- - rnnrtiHnn Europe and com of American forces in Regal's bus,- northbound toward h?ahder iriaytrer - - 75rt Europe. dynamic general is 55 and p.m Friday after passengers no- - Lnas rel1 a general officer for 19 tired a ffreen and tan 1QS2 nr 10S.1 Ms 36 yearservice. He has station wagon 'pull abruptly - in o' commanded NATO forces for the front of it from a side road. The nassenirers said Reeal tried Past : six years and held high years desperately to avoid the car and NA9 (See KENNEDY Pae 4) the bus drifted W the Tight shoul- der of , the road and overturned. Regal was slammed against the windshield with such force that it was knocked loose. He was thrown out and pinned beneath the win dow frame wreckage. Head-o- n Passengers were hurled about j' Inside the bus along with baggage and other flying objects, but none SHAWANO. Wis. (UPI) was critically hurt. Three couples leaving on a fishing trip and a young neighbor were killed early Saturday in. a head- on collision of their cars on the crest or a; hill southwest of here. The seven deaths made the ac cldent one of the worst in Wis consin road history. Killed, were Oscar Mehlberg. and his 51, wife; Wal CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) U.S. scientists repaired a balky I 50. and Anita, 43; John .- -j W. who were all wife,, 46, Nora, :CJci Ma one car, and Dilton Pingel, 22 drfver ot the second car, who oKruit , &iifJ0l: 7 Killed In ; Crash Venus Shot Meets Delay . , ld, w Jw rcL r: CI7r .r.TnV"" Is successful, TkI i iS-- VF were from all A11 probe and its six experiments will tims UXfd 225 million miles hurtle where -7. L" ,,v, .I four- rura j .t,J Z0"Z - crash occur- redweather was clear and Z iJ-SJat road time of the Sh planet sheriffs said. crash, deputies the year. The the three The lounching, which, may ded was loaded with fishing gear. pre-daw- n . r:8 :r7 mrw.rwV.r :rJrrT, llT V; r r" 'L Yr "Z'.&LZZ Mariner-1- , first of The Mehlberg car was headed rth while Pingel's car was goin touth toward Marion. . T U.S. shots at Venus scheduled for the current 50-da- y f two idear firing originally was. set for early Saturday.' But the attempt was called off less than two hours time when tech before blast-of- f nicians discovered an unwanted radio signal in the rockets period, ' m . . m ' m JSSfSl' 1""..! crashed, his - crop dusting plane exploded and, ignited a grass fire near here. Killed was pilot James A. Ber genske, 31, of Hutchison, Kan. lie was spraymz peas on a Maxfield said the pUot made two passes over the field in a Piper Super Cub, and was' going intoa turn for a third pass when the motor cut out, and the plane crashed and exploded. Minidoka County Coroner Dr. Loren Neher said Bergenske Is survived by a wife and three chil- dren in Kansas. He arrived in Idaho Monday. -- 5 m: GENEVA (UP ) Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko said Sat urday the declaration of Laos las a neutral state is a. uiitut ouicome of! President Kennedy's Vienna with Soviet eeting Premier; Ni-kita Khrushchev 13 months ago. LEHI ' Contract has been awarded for the second of four major structures on : the Ameri can Fork-Dr- y Creek Watershed Control Project a bid of.: $136.- 1983 by the Stevens Engineering and Construction Company of Salt Lake for an earthfill dam and system of spillways on Dry Creek. Work.is expected to begin this '. , month. Already completed and recently dedicated is a similar structure on Battle Creek. The new structure will be built on Dry Creek just south of the ;- promyko and Secretary of State fan Rusk joined in (praising; the oui.vc9siui vuuuiusion oi me tion Laos conference at its final meeting Saturday and Rusk offer ed Laos economic and technical w to eliminate the wastes of run-of- f. JFK Appeals for 60 Day Strike Delay y The White House said the dis Law in chinery of the conto , the solution pute involves 150,000 workers at Kennedy made a per,-- calling for a ar. HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) The sessionxbf the conference President s been the foteign ministers of sonaljplea Saturday for a troversy which threatens to shut 53 missile plants and bases. Ken down most of the nation's missile nedy dispatched his telegrams at But administration 10:30 a.m. EDT from the hummer program. sources said that if this plan White House Saturday after talk-inby phone with Labor Secre didn't work he still would have y recourse of tarjr Arthur' 3 . Goldberg in Wash open the k in ington. seeking an y ' junction. Kennedy arrived Friday night for his third consecutive weekend here with his family after receiv ing a gloomy report on the strike situation from Federal Mediation Service Chief William E. Simkin The report, relayed by Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg, warned Kennedy that union' con tract negotiations in the aerospace industry were deadlocked and a strike might begin Monday that would halt work on much of the The U.S. missile LOS ANGELES (UPI) and aircraft program. United Auto Workers (UAW), Kennedy was confronted by a AFL-CI-O Saturday delayed a re situation which Sen. John C. Sten- sponse to President Kennedy's chairman of the Sen request to postpone a scheduled nis, Services ate Armed Preparedness two strike delay in athreatenetTstrike that would halt most' of the" nation's missile production and delay its space program. One large union involved immediately heeded the request, ij Kennedy, who also named a three-ma- n board to investigate the stalemated dispute, said, "In this important defense industry all parties have a responsibility to cooperate in achieving a settlement without any interruption of work." The International Association of Machinists announced in Washington that it would bow to Kennedy's request. The United Automobile Workers also are involved in the dispute which affects 150,000 workers at 53 missile plants and bases. HERALD "In this important defense inCentral dustry all parties have a responaerospace Utah News .... 3, 4, 5, 6, 8,f4-against sibility to cooperate in achieving matter Subcommittee, described as a 10-11-said the and Classified companies a settlement without any interrup(See JFK APPEALS Page 4) would be submitted to union Comics tion of work," Kennedy said in a Editorial meetings Sunday. telegram to all parties involved.- membership UAW vice Leonard Woodcock, National, maKennedy acted outside the 12-of World News in the aerocharge president 2, 4 Obituaries . space department, UAW's response to the President will be Society ... made after membership meetings 9, 10, 11, 12 Sports . of members employed by North Stocks l 4 American Aviation in the Los Angeles area and by Ruan AirA part-tim- e craft Company at San Diego, DENVER (UPI) carpenter from Sacramento, faced Calif., m a castistatement jail sentence today after Woodcock's, Labor WASHINGTON (UPI) bomb to, a Colorado a gated aerospace management for mailing Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg to- what he; called "men of primitive woman. David W. Wion, 52, was sen day announced settlement of a class struggle mentality." strike of ironworkers "Their last ditch resistance to tenced Friday by U.S. Dist. Judge that had tied up virtually all con- policies long accepted by most Hatfield Chilson, who ordered that struction work in the Pacific American industries has now Wion be given a psychiatric ex Northwest. a breakdown in free amination while he is in prison. The strike concerned construc collective bargaining," Woodcock Wion was convicted by a fed project at Tibbie Fork and Grove Creek. In add! ion, a reservoir is tion activities in both Oregon and said. eral Jury here June 22 of sending to be built; at Silver Lake Flat, Washington. a homemade bomb through the with water to be used by irrigaGoldberg said that under terms Lock- mail to Mrs . Mildred Tandy, 46, LOS ANGELES (UPI) tion companies of the region. of the settlement, all local unions heed Aircraft Corp. Saturday told of Eckert, Colo., a divorcee whom Already completed on the; proj involved and the contractors have President Kennedy it' "willingly he had once dated. Mrs. Tan'dy lost both her hands ect, 1 in addition to the Battle agreed to resume work and op- accedes" to his request to conCreek basin, are terracing, re-- erations immediately.! the bomb exploded as she when tinue operations for a period of four-ma- n g Goldbe-a announced on that and work was seeding, to days under existing agree drainage opening the package in her areas above Battle Creek, Grove team of mediators would ments. r general store at Eckert last on and the recommendations make Creek, Dry Canyon Dry J. P. Lydon, vice president, in- Jan. 18. involved. Her' said issues Creekj money dustrial relations, at Lockheed, Wion's conviction was appealed to had accept said the company had made a to the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of The entire flood control project both parties agreed J the recommendations Appeals. (See BID LET Page i) (See RESPONSE Page 4) 14 participants ' accept the neu- lity declaration brLaotlan Pre- ier Prince Souvanna Phouma thus setting up Laos, as an inde pendent and nei tral state. Gromyko and Rusk addressed tiie conference a few hours pefore they were scheduled to meet for their first private session on the ajor cold wait topics of Berlin d disarmament. Their nresence here fnr thA signing of the Laotian neutrality declaration has given them an op poriunity to resume high level talks on crucial cold war issues will The 14 foreign minister meet, again Monday for the formal signing ceremony. I Taft-Hartle80-da- Response To Plea Delayed By Auto Union . INDEX s., A 9--A, back-to-wor- " ' A A, 7-- A 6-- A 5-- A, 8--A, Carpenter Faces Jail Sentence For Mailing Bomb A 1A-4- Goldberg Reveals Settlement of Ironworkers Strike A 20-ye- ar six-week-o- ld pre-cipitat- ed , i mi - Nabs 9 Suspects . j - , ; "."L?." Taft-Hartle- ; 60-da- y ThejfiiJ' wiU be. the YORK (UPI) FBI a mysterious fMf. X" whom they ,NEW stop and control a big rush of sixth said was known to them was still a arrested water which in previeus years agents Saturday connection in the being sought. with suspect nas uoooea we. area au Gordon A. Tallman, 30, a stock of blue of $1.2 irjillion' worth a theft mxo wm. .An f? .oe a huge (Wall record clerk j at Bache '8c Co. wiu ciearea or trees ana unwn chips stocks fromhouse last month. where, the, stocks were stolen last will be built to act as a res- - Street brokerage , a with Another suspect prison rec- June 12 admitted at his arraignvou-man raer was with ord chargedgrand lar ment Saturday that he had once area, ana me water win ;ue k without baiL served nearly three years for robheld and through the dam at a constant ceny William B Gladstone, 45, of bery in Virginia. Know. ".u.aI..K Manhasset, N. Y., was taken, into The theft that started as a I New Hampshire Is the only drops to ' a smaller amount dur- - custody at Brant Lake in upstate "joke" was replete with stocks New 'York, federal, agents an- being smuggled under clothing, a state where law allows a girl as I ing the day. ih I buried treasure in securities and Two more such structures are nounced here. young as 13 to bt married, if office an FBI man who posed as a New said York FBI tO built The consent as of ; jbe parents part the overall Nov You rck i . ( , K V yf (UPD-Russl- i ' - - er of Carmine Lombardozzi, who attended the Apalachin gangland convention. Martinelli and Lombardozzi were seized after supposedly closing a deal to sell $200,000 in stolen blue chip stocks. The buyer turned out to be an FBI undercover man. T " New York Dist. Atty.l Frank S! Hogan .'said! the $1.2 million theft started out as a joke. City. i arTallman and Dodge, the istrict FBI agents in Newark, N.Ji, attorney said, got into a rested Joseph George Martinelli, 48, Jersey City, N.J.y and John "joking" conversation in a barcould do if Lombardozzi, 36, Brooklyn, broth room about what-the-d- . . y Election-Yea- r Tax Slash Held Mistake WASHINGTON (UPI) Many of both congressional veteransj think President Kennedy jparties. will be making t political mistake if he decides to push for an elec tion-ye- ar tax cut. Unless the economy undergoes , 1 an unexpected and sharp slump. a's: tal - j -- ' , tax-cutti- ng Indian Troops Attack Chinese Chinese-languag- i ; of Hsinchiang Arabs Launch Rockets; Join at PDT) Saturday. In Era Space ignored not to in Tibet p.m. (3:30 a.m. "The Indian troops warning from our, troops attack, and at 7 p.m they be gan firing- at our guard post. Our troops had no other choice but to measures. take to latest reports "According our from the post, troops were still under Indian attack," - self-defen- se New official Communist China. News Agency; in a similar J Th report, said the post was located in the "Chip Chap ITaUey" In Sinkiang, Province. The Chip Chap River Valley is in the Ladakh region of northeast India, which has been the scene of dispute between India and Red China in recent weeks! India has claimed that Communist Chinese troops had moved into its area. they had all the money represent ed by stocks which Tallman han died every day. 1'So they decided to see wha they could do about lit," Hogan said. .rf,..r y The first effort, in turned- to naught. Hogan said Tallman. took 100 shares of Gen eral. Motors stock and gave the certificates' to Dodge, fcut because the stock carried ac individual's name, it required establishing a false identity .to sell. That proved (See FBI NABS Page 4) ! mid-Ma- - . ... . 6:33 In $1.2 Million Robbery crooked stock buyer. It came to a head Friday with four arrests in two; states. One; of those seized was the brother of a delegate to the 1957 gangland convention at S Apalachin, N.Y. Arrested along with Tallman wag Robert J. Dodge, 24,- an unemployed truck driver. Both, he and Tallman. are from New York . revenues In the face of the govannouncement today that it was ernment's present redink spendresuming nuclear testing! came as ing. The question which Kennedy no surprise to the United States. The question had been plainly of must answer is whether a quick ax cut Is needed to stimulate the When the Soviets would do it. Last July 13, for example, the agging economy and head off a Soviet Foreign Ministry issued a possible recession. He hts post statement saying Russia, felt free poned a decision until mid-A- u to conduct another round of tests gust,, when more economic indi because of the current U.S. cators will be available. series. The House Ways & Means .(Com And as lone ago as Anril 6. mittee also is expected to hear Prernier Nikita Khrushchev told economic arguments for .ana Japanese Prime Minister Hay a to against tax reduction this year. Ikeda that "The resumption of The committee has polled a num econo-- " tests by the U.S.A. and Britain ber of will naturally force the Soviet mists, to determine whether they Union in reply to take correspon would be available to testify next ding steps required' to insure its week, should public . hearings be security and the preservation of scheduled. , peace." Some lawmakers in both parties Fired 50 Explosions are clamoring for' tax cuts. But' It had been expected that the a large number of members be- Russians would take the oppor- ieve that the best politics as tunity to conduct a new testing of how would be to Vote against series to amplify- the knowledge tax cut. they gained from their massive One thing is certain, Kennedy round of more than 50 explosions not recommend a tax cut un- will last fall. m tnat series, according to ess he is certain Congress will u President Kennedy, the Russians enact, it. j recommendation A (See MOSCOW Pare 4) would be viewed by businessmen as a presidential proclamation that the economy is 'dangerously. weak. Should Congress then fail to approve' the prescribed stimu- ant, administration strategists fear the business community would panic and the economy would certainly go into a sharp TOKYO, Sunday (UPI) Radio slump. Peiping said today that Indian troops attacked a Communist Chi nese-hel- d border post in the dis Chinese-India- n border area. puted e A broadcast monitored in Tokyo sai "Indian troops suddenly began I' attacking the Chinese border post WASHINGTON Unions! Bow to President's Request a- i-n- earamu uam wiu, !? fPW the spring, se o structure rsv muni," it .added. "Tiif Soviet these lawmakers believe many Union has achieved considerable voters would take a dim view" of results in this respect." a Democratic drive to slash tax FIRES THREE MISSILES The U. S. Nuclear Submarine U.S.S. John Marshall, shown above, fired three Polaris rockets Saturday from beneath the Atlantic stretch!. Announcement of the feat by the United States Ocean in a three-hou- r came on the heels of a ciaimj by Russia that it too had "mastered" the underwater missile launching technique. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). d id Let on Utah County Flood Control Project j Crop Dusting Plane Pilot , Killed in Idaho reply-inevitable- ," 111: . u ' The United States resumed its testing this spring following the Soviet series. But Tass, quoting 41 Soviet government statement, said the decision to resume1 testjing once more was the fault of the United States. "The explosions of the Ameri can nuclear bombs above Christmas and Johnston Islands have produced their echo they have made. Soviet nuclear tests in Tass said. Reduce Fallout In holding these tests all mea- sures will be taken to reduce inl-radioactlve fallout to the-- 14 Nations Announcement . l ing. John I Oifficials at Wi reave may imve new signm- Hospital said James, Regal, of Waf tua nn the Denver suburban city of North- - a slate of military leaders who XT glenn, who was on thecritical list Wit exptl0n of. .the . after the accident Frdav nicht ?5e' . xvianne, commanaant, of his own "j... . rvi x the atmosphere, breaking a three- year world moratorium on test- - Marshall, the ;ninth member of America's growing family of ballistic missile-firin- g nuclear subs, had previously launched tavo Of the ocean spanning mis- siles. d . upper 90s. Low tonight lower 60s. The Soviet Union Saturday night announced it is resuming its nuclear tests in the titmos- here. It said the blame rested on the united States "and it alone." The Tass News Agency announcement1 did iot set a date for the tests to begin. The last Soviet series3 of tests was last fall. The Russians exDloded 40 nuclear blasts, most of them in - nvi - MOSCOW (UPI) A , Polaris number mmmmm In . Near Denver j?. 11 bottle-shape- i flinnoA' ( Moscow Charges B lame Rests On United States ; over-haulin- g- Bus fpriver Nearly Killed TiArttror I I' , selected for chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is on record with a firm proposal to abolish the joint chiefs system and replace it with a single "defense! chief of staff with "great authority." That idea always har been an athema in .Congress and Taylor! seems assured to be questioned on it when he appears before congressional committees. Forecasts Military Merger Kennedy himself is on record h.. ririvpr nMriv iHiw: wh.n w. bus overturned while he was try. .amergep of the ing to miss a car on the tighwav Wjhnng Air Force into and Navy rallied at ' a hospital here Satur- Army, a single service "dominated by a That prophesy wax auu its UJ,1VCI. in his IQfirt KasIt "TtiA Cfnfm. i I rv ur i t- i. ' CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI A ,U.S. nuclear submarine fired three Polaris rockets from beneath the Atlantic ocean in a three-hostretch Saturday on the heels' of a claim by Russia that it too bad mastered the underwater missile launching technique. The t American-- ; sub, the U.S.S. John Marshall, launchd ed the Polarises, from firing tubes in its neck at 4:50 p.m., 6:30 p.m. and 7:50 p.m. (EDT). All three were aimed at- targets more than 1,506 miles away. The" first and; third shots apparently were .successful, but informed sources said troubles during the first minutes of flight " ruined v . I MISSILE TEST President Kennedy's oftthe nation's military leadership raised the possibility today of drastic changes in organization, command and traditional war roles of the armed forces It also opened the prospect of new controversies over the size of the forces and the. relative weight to be given conventional and nuclear arms. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, controversial Army officer . J' ft U.S., RUSSIA FIRE POLARIS i WASHINGTON ' (UPI) ; ; y UE V PROVO UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1962 w r .11 V CAHtO (UPI) The United Arab Re p u b 1 i c successfully rockets launched four single-stag- e enter to the publicly, Saturday " r v space age. President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who watched the tests, said they were' not the first rockets his na tion had launched. He said, the U.A.R. launched rockets from Egyptian soil 14 months ago, or two months before Israel's first announced test last, July. It was the first announced launching of a rocket by an Arab nation. Israel's "weather rocket" was launched 50 miles .into the sky on July 5, 1961, and drew strong' verbal attacks from the Arab bloc. Official announcements said the first U.A.R. rocket launched Sat urday ' soared 600 kilometers (372 miles) into space and its "arrival at its distant target was success- -' fully recorded " It did not iden t ' i tify, the target. "were! The rockets believed to have been launchedj from somewhere in the Egyptian desert. Cal- -. ro Radio said the 'rockets were named "Al Qahir," (The Con.. j '. queror). y:, ' - "Other models of the Ui A. R, rockets "will be launched," the broadcast said. In anouncing the lirst firing, the broadcast said it "heralds: the U. A. R.'s entry ' into the space age." -- . v ' ; |