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Show Telephone FR 3-50- 50 For Ads, News, Circulation: Provo Office, FR , . : Orem Office, ......... y t k 1 AC 05 FR 84 PRICE 15 CENTS PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, r UTAH SUNDAY, APRIL 9, 1961 VOL: 38, NO. 46 Saturday Conference Session hG) ''''. Fir Respect Of MaGTiage L aws By JAMES C. BAPIS ' ' Jill li 111 i i ' (S f7 Dtm TD i i TJ IJI j ' t - i tmw - I 1 I J I ( I J ft I Mechanical Failure" Blamed United Press International I - , .. , ' .. : His address , highlighted . the second day sessions of the con Mercury Drops to 24 ference. 5 : y.y. : ,. y ' " J1 ' I ixv-v:.i- . v 1 ' ' i , . , , 28. - Slump Held 'Mildest' of Recessions k - its V un-Ameri- ' AS THE SESSION ENDS Throngs pour from the historic LDS Tabernacle' across Temple Square in Salt Lake City as the Fourth Session of . the 131st Annual LDS General Conference ends Saturday. Sessions of the : their support." He warned that attempts are underway to indoctrinate Ameri can Youth in organ v izations, Isaacson urged institutions of higher learning, including colleges, to "see to it that no youth organizations .exist on . campus without approval of ' school ofun-Ameri- . ficials." . . j Heaven." Patriarch bomber said Saturday that the missile was launched by a meY chanical failure. "Look out! One of my missiles has fired! First Lt. James W. Van Scyoc said he yelled into his radio Friday the moment hex saw the Sidewinder streak towards its 0 feet away. Y target A1 helicopter brought UP report er Gerard T, Brown down from, the mesa late Saturday during a break in the weather. He said he saw the bodies and they are In pretty bad' shape. Two helicopters . managed to make- - a; trip to the top of the mesa just before dark and bring downeven newsmen. The .heli copters had to leave 35 men on the cold tableland but they had firewood and blankets and had found a hut. They were in ho danger. Brown said the wreckage; of the big bomber was scattered over a wide area and the ' wreckage burned until' past midnight Friday, despite heavy, snow and high wind. It was not possible for the searchers on top of the mesa to make a wide search for'j the two ' men ' still missing. , Van Scyoc said that when he shouted a warning that his missile had launched, it was already too late. He estimated that it took only a second or a for the supersonic missile to an hit engine pod on the left of the B52. ; wing There was an explosion, fire broke out on the plane, the wing folded and the stricken bomber plunged into the mountains be- 1 By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International : j Eldred Smith told the assemblage one of the most of love is important, qualities ' ; forgiveness. We cannot love our Father in Heaven without loving our fellow man," he' said. He said it was as beneficial to forgive as it was to be forgiven. President. Henry D. Moyle, second counselor in the first SAIGON, South Viet Nam (UPI) presidency, and Apostle Ezra Communist elements set off an(Continued j on Page Four) other bomb today . near a hotel housing U. S. military advisers, injuring one American and nine Vietnamese in" the latest wave of terror aimed" at disrupting SunIn .. day's presidential elections. At least four- bombs and grenades have been exploded in the USU past 24 hours. Informed sources LOGAN (UPI) An autopsy con- said the Reds were responding ducted today to determine the ex- with alacrity to orders from North Viet Nams capital act cause if death : of a old Utah State University student. of Hanoi to "do anything to disBenjamin Hal Robis on was turb the election scene in this land. ;t found dead in his bed Friday aft staunch The latest of the bombs explodernoon by a roommate. He had apparently been dead for several ed today near a hotel where U.S. hours, according ' to investigating military advisers are quartered, i officers. injuring St. Carl S. Cox of A roommate told officers Robi- - Salem, Ore., and nine Vietnason had eaten breakfast at 7 a.m. mese. Cox's injuries were not se. Friday, then returned to his room. rious.' Results of the autopsy will William C. Thomas, a U.S. aid administrator from early next week. , Con-muni- ar ' : pro-Weste-rn : . t . .... ced . Political Peace Talks nedy and Macmillan said their 11 hours of discussions had "served to clarify and confirrr our common ; commitment to those who care for freedom." 3 They pledged themselves to oppose Soviet attempts to undermine j v ! - ; , " . Threat M U R R AY (UPI) A bomb threat forced the evacuation of the Hi-La- 1 nd Dairy plant in Murray on the border of Gizenga's Orien- today. tal Province . and apparently too Murray police officer Cal Gillen close to several Gizenga military said about 60 employes left the garrisons to make the Leopoldville plant about 8:30 a.m., and stood at a d i s t a n c e while officials delegates feel comfortable. Meanwhile, another parley is searched for a bomb. The threat was apparently phonset to take place - at Bumba, 60 miles from Bundoki, between ed in during the night by what Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu of Leo- officials called, a man with a voice. An empoldville and Gen. Victor Lundula "broken-accenteof Stanleyville to decide on how ploye discovered the threat when to mesh their forces under a unit- he played a tape on an automatic ' later d' ' ed government. Both the political and military talks were designed to find a way for the rival Leopoldville and Stanleyville regimes to corns together. By JACK V. FOX United Press International CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) Prime Minister Harold Macmillan called Friday night for a NATO "partnership" in nuclear weapons which would end exclusive control by the United States and Britain. Macmillan, in a major foreign policy address capping his American visit, warned that the health of the alliance depends on finding a way to share nuclear deterrent power with other Western Euro pean powers. "There are some who think that you and we might unleash the deterrent power rashly; there are others who fear just the opposite that we might both be too va cillating to use if at all until it was too" late," he said. "Some fear our fingers on. the trigger others fear our thumb on ,', the safety catch. "So there is today a certain unease in the NATO alliance." Macmillan addressed 7,000 per sons, including 150' of the world's top scientists, at the 100th anni versary "celebration of the Massa chusetts Institute ' Of Technology. Macmillan flew back to Wash ington after thespeech for a wind up of, his talks with . President r . i Kennedy, , , . Ogden Shooting Fatality Ordered . I second-and-a-ha- lf low.,. Van Scyoc first read a prepared statement about the crash. Then he answered questions. One question was what his immediate personal reaction was when he saw the sidewinder hit. "It was: .'Count parachutes, " k Van Scyoc said. He said he saw none, because 10,000 feet below the 36,000-folevel at which the sidewinder was launched, there was a heavy cloud cover. Capt. Dale Dodd,. who was flying wingman for him, saw no parachutes either j Dodd appeared with him at the news conference. Van Scyoc said four safety switches to prevent .the sidewinder's firing were on and were checked twice: once while climbing to make a simulated attack on the bomber and again just before we started making passes at it. Finished Attack A He said he and Dodd had finished a simulated sidewinder attack and were making a practice cannon attack his sixth pass at the f bomber when the on Page Four) ' " ot 5 ; OGDEN (UPI) Ogden police today, were investigating the fatal shooting of an pgden man early this morning at his home. Clark;'. 45, with a .38 caliber bullet wound in his temple. 'His wife had called the police. . side-continu- ed Fire Hits British Liner, 500 Aboard BAHREIN the turbulent seas by ships - from half a dozen nations. As the international rescue began ferrying survivors towards shore, word came that the fire aboard the Dar had died down. , Second Officer C. W. Alexander, ina Briton, went back aboard-tvestigate .the vessel's condition, the ship's agents said. The Dara carried a crew of 110, mostly Arabs --and Pakistanis, and including 19 European officers. ar-ma- de -- o 1 A. i ; imaSILE PILOT First Lt. W. Van Scyoc,: above,' was the pilot of the 0 Jet fighter that accidentally shot down a 2 jet bomber near Grants, N.M. James F-10- , B-5- - Discoverer Satellite - Ship Abandoned, Nearly All Safe The 5,030-to- n (UPI) British passenger ship Dara carrying more than 500 persons, reported to include, some Americans, caught fire and was abandoned today, in a raging storm in the Persian Gulf. But a rescue operation by ships of several nations saved almost everyone on service. board. phone answering The voice on the tape said the Only one person was known bomb would blow up about 9 am. dead. Four were missing. More When no bomb exploded employes than 500 survivors were reported went back to their jobs. to have been plucked safely from . , - . Murray Dairy Plant P . Partnership treaty banning nuclear tests.' "We have reached a very high level of agreement on our esti mate of the nature of the problems we face," the two statesmen said in the communique read to re porters by Kennedy. They added that "we realize all too well that to meet these ' prob lems will require from us many sacrifices." j . Dangers Noted Furthermore ithey said the y were "in complete agreement as to the gravity and depth of the dangers in the present world sit uation for those nations who wish to retain their; independence and the priceless right of choice." Fort Myers, Fla., was injured by To meet the challenge now fac a grenade thrown into his home ing the West, both Macmillan and about noon Friday. Kennedy agreed that ihe North Thomas was flown to the Philip Atlantic Treaty Organization was pines, where doctors removed a not enough. grenade fragment from his right NATO, they said, continues "to eye. He was reported in good con- be the core of Western security dition, against armed aggression." Two other grenades exploded But they added "we also disFriday night outside Saigon movie cussed how our countries can help houses.- No casualties were - re- to strengthen the free world as We have considered what ported. whole. a The big question was not who measures it might be advisable would win ,r Sunday's presidential to . take, together with our allies, election, but t how much trouble to insure the cohesion, effectivethe Communist terrorists would ness and adaptability of the1 Atcreate. lantic community in a changing Incumbent President Ngo Dinh world." .. ; Diem, running against two oppoAgreements Reached nents, was considered certain to The' joint statement did not go win handily. Neither Nguyen Dinh into details. But sources close to Quat, a retired rubber planter, both sides, said the talks lasting nor herb doctor Nguyen Thanh over a period of four days,' rePhuong was expected to make sulted in these agreements: much of a showing against Diem Firm determination to resist ;.t the polls. any r e n e w e d Soviet pressure against Berlin and West Germany. Bomb Forces They agreed this pressure may this year. come sometime Evacuation of to also pre- withdraw agreed They ( Continued on Page Four) Postponed n the Congo talks Asks NATO the United Nations.' They called rifices.'' In a joint statement issued at on Russia to agree "within a the end of their conferences, Ken- reasonable period of time" to a One American,, 9 Vietnamese Injured In Latest Bombing By Communists Around Saigon 21-ye- : s Presi(UPI) dent Kennedy and British Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan pledged themselves today to work for a strengthened free; "world which can meet the grave and deep dangers now facing it. They said it would require Jfrnany sac WASHINGTON ! - feiinedy;:M?cm Work for o Strengthened Free World ; Nov You Know conference are being" carried by television to thousands and broadcast to audiences throughout the world via closed telephone circuits. n Pledge To Macmillan j He urged students .to "stick to the tradition of your i founding fathers . .... make no compromise with the enemies of freedom." Apostle t)elbert Stapley told the afternoon session that no sacrifice is too great for men ' 'to achieve the Kingdom of J . s. 3,000-4,00- Autopsy Ordered Death of Student :; $ - missionaries realize that ."they are engaged in God's work and not in man's work." He said "May the Lord inspire us to support the missionary, program of this great church." Bishop Thorpe B. Isaacson, president of the presiding bishopric', told the congregation about the need to "Understand and appreciate'' the value of freedom. He urged youth of the. country to repel attempts by to "enlist organizations United Prss International . WASHINGTON The (UPI) current business slump is the "mildest of our postwar reces sions," Federal Reserve Board member J. W. Robertson said to-'. day. Robertson said that even unem ployment, gauged at 5,495,000 in d March, has increased by in this recession compared to a 75 per cent gain 'during a similar downturn. Cstage of the 1957-5- 8 The broad measures of total output that we use to trace the business cycle show this Jp be the mildest of our postwar recessions," Robertson said. "The seriousness of the unem ployment problem stems from the fact that unemployment was at. a high level about 5 per cent -even before the downturn began, , he added. For the fifth week in a row, the number of workers drawing unemployment benefits declined last month. The number went I down to 3,085,400, a decrease of 141,000 during the week ended LEOPOLD VILLE , The Congo March 25. recent The Central Congolese New claims, reflecting (UPI) to government - today postponed layoffs, went down by 18,000 349,000 last week. Both declines scheduled political peace were attributed to a seasonal with the Stanleyville regime of jump in construction and outdoor Antoine - Gizenga because it said activities and rehiring at auto it did not want to confuse these talks with proposed military parplants. leys to be held at the same time. Other sources said the Leopold-vill- e delegates to the political J which had been set for Suntalks, in the neutral International day jungle town of By United Press The giraffe of the Southern Sa Bundok!, wanted more guarantees fcara, believed the world's tallest from Gizenga that they would be animal, attains heights' over 18 safe. Bundoki is deep in tha jungle feet. ; ' s - - LpS " EATON" one-thir- ot - program. said x tableland 9,000 feet high in western New Mexico lies the wreckage of an $8 million eight-je-t bomber, shot down accidentally Friday by a missile during a war games exercise. Searching parties on top' of the mesa have been repeatedly frustrated by the elements. "i A special UPI reporting team Preston McGraw, Hojt Gimlin, Fred M. Shaver, and Gerald T. Brown is covering the story blizzard-swe- pt A SUPI reporter brought down by I helicopter late Saturday from the top; of the 9,000-fomesa; where the huge bomber crashed, saw. the bodies. Three others managed to bail out and save themselves and two others are still missing. The pilot of theVlOO jet fighter plane: that fired the $2,300 Sidewinder into thex $8 million ,,'"' He ! By UPI Special Reporting Team GRANTS, N.M., (UPI) At least three of the eiffht men who were on board a B52 bomber shot down by. a deadly Sidewinder missile went down with the plane and were killed. s . J. Zv- v , freezing 24 degrees above, zero in the early hours' of Saturday, according to the official government recording, but a horticultural expert said frost damage to fruit probably was not serious. ' Principal reason was the fact that only apricots are far enough advanced to suffer damage by freezing at least in the Provo area, seemed to be largely untouched by the early Saturday morning temperature. No reports were immediately available Saturday concerning apricots in other parts of the county. Associate Comity , Agent Joel Barlow said he had checked only in the Provo area, but that the apricots seemed to have escaped damage. He said he could not speak for the rest of the county until he had received more complete information. Mr. Barlow :said peaches are not yet far enough advanced to be hurt by frost, and he felt the same was true, with perhaps some exceptions, for cherries. In view of the fact that Provo apricots appeared to be undamaged Saturday, opinion was expressed tbat the official 'govern- Tnent thermometer, located at the KOVO transmitter in the extreme southeast part of the city (16th South and 650 West), might have recorded a colder temperature than actually existed farther east in' the area away from the lake. Forecast for last night was for almost as cold, with low temperatures predicted from 30 down to By WILLIAM ' - A : - Temperature in Provo slid to a . Editor's Note: On a f An Frost Fails To Damage Fruit Buds , overflow congregation in Smith the tabernacle heard stress the need, for keeping the marriage vows sacred. He said sin and transgressions of the law are the main reasons for divorce. Smith said marriage in the LDS temple should be considered sacred and holy and never violated in any , way. President J. Reuben Clark Jr., first counselor in the first presi dency was absent from today's sessions. The church leader remained' home on advice of his doctors. Another speaker, Alma Sonne, assistant to the Council Twelve, praised the Mormon missionary I' . Three Bail Out to Survive Accident i SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Members of the Latter Day Saints Church were admonished Saturday to respect the "sacred laws of marriage." The plea came from President Joseph Fielding Smith of the Council of Twelve, at a session of the 131st annual conference of the LDS Church in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. The Mormon apostle said "The sacred laws of marriage, true in the days of the Savior, are true today." . to cloudy today with scattered showers likely. A little cooler today. I Ugh today '52, Low tonight 28 iq 32. N. State 757 For Society........... At-- 1 11 W. 4th N. ISO Pqrtly Cloudy In Orbit VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPDThe United States today fired , a Discoverer satellite into orbit , to perfect recovery tech niques eventually to be. used for returning sky pictures from space. ' An hour and a half after Discoverer XXIII shot into the sky from the seaside missile base, the Air Force announced it was in orbit over the poles of the earth. Preliminary radio data from the d satellite indicated it had separated from the main stage Thor rocket and its engine had fired to kick it toward orbit, the Air Force announced 20 minutes' after launch. A recoverable capsule similar to one used for carrying back reconnaissance from the Samos Sky Spy satellite. was' aboard the Discoverer XXIIL Air Force officers said the Discoverer XXIII' capsule could, be recalled to a recovery area in the Pacific Ocean off Hawaii from one to four, days-afte- r the launchat PST 11:21a.m. ing 'if plans ; 2,100-poun- : . . 300-pbu- nd pictures ; worked out. r The officers said privately, however, that engineers hoped it would be possible to keep the kettle:shaped capsule itr orbit for a record four days and then recover it. This feat has been tried twice before without success. It would be two hours before engineers could determine whether the long Discoverer XXIII satellite, called a "diagnostic experiment," was in orbit . 25-fo- ot HERALD INDEX 8A There were 440 passengers aboard Amusements 9 . News Business at the time of the fire. Most of , Utah Central them were Indians and Pakistanis News . .". . . 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 5A but it was reported' there also Classified 9A, 10A 11A were some Americans and Brit ... 7A Comics ons aboard. 6A Editorial V, The ship had only limited first , World class accommodations. Most of National, News ... ..2, 8A, 12A the passengers were "deck pas .1 4 Obituaries i sengers" traveling between the 5A. 1A, various Persian Gulf ports at Society!............; 11, 12, 13, 14 Which the Dara was calling on Sports L. 4 . its way from Basra to Karachi Stocks and Bombay. : |