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Show ' ' - . , f Planes , i i ' . ' -- I n WASHINGTON '(UPI) The Air Force announced Saturday that four squadrons of jet fighters are being sent to Europe ;to take part in NATO maneuvers. There was speculation that the planes, 72 in all, might be Jcept in the European" theater after-- . vards to reinforce U. S. units already there. But! a Defense! Department announced that the jets will take) part in "Exercise check-mat- e t7 f f jiu-w- . isw v. 757 N. SUte.r...... AC is... . ll A r 'ill Ill- If S7 A 1 ! - v " 5-1- , .' .. ' .. ' i ,' !' I ... . i. : "W-- v , t "V - v-;- - ji PROVO,. y, y A i f . Sept. 1244;! j ir The supersonic fighters' Sabrejets. r iJannoujncel-ment said they willj be deployed to European bases Ichosen by Gen. Lauris Norstad, U S. Commander 3 in Chief for Europe ana t, aiso NATO, commander. Exercise "Chec! inate" is a NATO maneuver involving air, grjsund and naval forces of. all countries! under the! allied Eiirope- an command. ' Allied headquarters in Paris an- nounced b xicay ijat ;the maneuver would take place through-ou- i the allied command, and that a fecond exercise-- desig- nated Checkmate J II, would be held in southern . Europe September lace for their de. No date or parture was given, but the squad rons were identified as follows: j! The; 356th from he 354th Technical Fighter WiAg at Myrtle F-lu- Q . . I - . . . ; - By DONALD JOHNSTON United Press International The Kremlin was silent Saturday about the Soviet atomicexplosion, but elsewhere across the world ' the blast resounded Jin anger, end alarm. to Up Saturda, there had been no Soviet jthilouncement that Russia had relsumed the testing of nuclear weapons in central Asia" as repotted by the United I'M. - any time. The" State.- - Friday. But observers in Moscow Couple Held plosion. Of 4 Persons MIDLAND,- Tei - (UPD-i- A 32-- f divorced ather of five and his 13 year old girl friend were errested today, and police said, admitted, killing four per sons in the past four - days, paThey led a Texas highway ' trolman to one "tiody near here in and. described, a Bellevilld, 111., Wednesday night yearnoid -- jjloublf-lcillin- M g John Edwin Rieyter, 32, and Don na Marie Stonei 13, both ofidhicaj-go- , rjesistance when Jack jReeves stopped patrolman of this tciblimits at th their cai ' west-- Texas; city.:. ,, . and un-- i Meyer, thin, offered- - no-- , ' I. ipng-haired- snavea, saia ue atu waai iiui, "111 take the said. Miss r 1' ' rap myself," he !.''!' ,( . looks older Stone, 13 than herj years, said she had long hair" when they left Illinois "but that Meyer cut? it off to a boyish length pith" a razor! blade': M"to disguise me. f They were Wanted for kidnaping Miss Margaret . Wernicker, 39, ojE Belleville, who was abducted a short, distance fbm iwhere the bodies of Geoirge and Carol Bal;- ' lard w ere found near a wooded, secluded lake jin Belleville.: Officers quoted them as saying they - killed Mss Wernicker near Thayer iMo., on pe way to Texas. They! said they killed Arthur DeKraai,1 a hitchhiker they pickWorth ed up in the .Dallas-For- t who . j - , Calls for Summit Meet range American equipment indi cated the Soviets were preparing .the test even while they were negotiating & test ban treaty in Nehru Warns Of Growing r War Danger s Geneva. President Kennedy w as in Hy- annis Port, Mass., for the week- end, but he kept remote control tabs on the nuclear situation re sulting from Russia's test. He flew to his Cape Cod home after the announcement of the Soviet explosion and a round of confer- fences on where the- United Sates goes from here now t, hat Russia has decided- to end the three-yea- r moratorium on nuclear tests. Officials in Washington indicat ed the- United States hoped to ' bring world opinion to bear against Russia through the United Nations. They called the Soviet explosion a flat defiance of the 1958 U.N. General Assembly reso lution urging a halt tests while treaty negotiations were in progress. The. next as sembly session begins Sept. 19. j v - By K.C. THALER United Press International BELGRADE ( (ppi) Indian Prime Minister Jawaliarlal Nehru warned today that Russia's new nuclear explosion! "has enhanced the danger of war." He urgently called on Russia and "the United States to negotiate now "in this crisis of human destiny." Ip an emergency appeal to the conference of unaligned nations, Nehru cautioned that "there is no choice left between negotiations or war." P" Nehru spoke after Ghana President Kwame Nkrumah, fresh from talks with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, called for, an East-Wesummit meeting to settle the Berlin Crisis before it .! lead to war. Nkrumah 'said the Soviet .nuclear explosion was a "shock which forcibly brings home to us the supreme danger facing mankind." Plea for Peace Nehru, speaking without notes, earnestly pleaded that the presidents and prime ministers meeting here push aside iheir own problems and Jihrow all their influence into th task of preservJ ing peace. "If ,war comes all is lost," Nehru said. Absolute silence the of the room plenum Yugoslav parliament, crowded with more than 200 delegates representing a quarter of the world's population, '! as Nehru went on. "This today is the most dangerous situation that has arisen before us in the last 15 years since the last war," ' the Indian leader said. "The danger of war has been enhanced by . the decision of the Soviet government to resume nuclear tests," Nehru said. - - - , Reds Accuse West The Soviet press and radio were filled with statements aimed at justifying the , Kremlin s decision to end the statements The moratorium. stressed the theme that the West st Soviet-British-U.- , waspreparihg aggression against the Soviet Union. In Belgrade, the U.J!, anounce-men- t intensified the ail: of urgency at the summit meeting of neu: tral leaders. The announcement came shorily after Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev sent a goodwill messago to the conference. A Yugoslav delegate; called the explosion "a blow" and an Indian official said "this is adding insult to; injury." Others of the African, Asian and Ltin American delegates expressed amazement , at Mv Khrushchev's "cynicisrA." Dr. Torsten Magnusson, a Swedish nuclear expertj said "the Soviets apparently have developed a new type of nuclear wdapon while negotiations for y a test, ban were going on." Other experts in Europe- said a test like the one reported by the White House would require months to prebare, indi cating preparations wef-- in prog ress while nuclear talks were in session in Geneva. . filled -- S. j . 1 young enmpanion Involved. - .. .'' e " " Jj. fS -- ad- . I 1- r 1 ' " I -1 M 1I 1 1 ; f ' . ' erallr r warmer. ' I Hiffh 'Mtpecled r- nirht M 7 ' ' I-- . iA . , M.. .i.M:, I r I I 'jj ' - ;. . v" PRICE 15 .CENTS acns Afrie mc a ' !' , j' k'.l " ggsgggggmt i B,uiiLiiii4jujpjpiuMMjyijiauM m ums vmmmum 1 h kh imiimi m llhhhwi m j: r ra a n y i nTravelers ....... Kmw-"--- '.I ' f fi I i i.'f. ieeps Tab 9 I '- S t On Crisis - ' . ' - " V4 :v. ; T 1 i v if t ... M By ALVIN SPIVAK mm United Press internationai HY ANNUS PORT, Mass. (tJPI) President Kennedy kept rejrtiote control tabs on the Berlin crisis andjiRussia's new nuclear tesf Saturday in a calm, seaside setting far removed from such unpleas- 1 s j neighborhood 17 mm three-and-a-ha- lf liliill ; , , the Stale Department said that as. of 1:30 p .m. EDT,. it still had not received a nw Soviet note on Berlin travel delivered in Moscow Saturay A spokesman jsaid this country has no diplomatic relations jwith the East German regime, C'it is hot in a position to extend Ha . U.S. citizens traveling! there the protection customarily available to Americans in foreign countries." Thei warning applied equally t East Berlin, but! was less argent for West Berlin, Y '!: ; American businessmen traveling to West Berlin were urged to use American, French, Kand. British Air Lines which fly through tha air corridors in East Germany Travelers on these routes do not Russian-dominate- d . candy store, piling of her ., cousins! Americans original- May; I960.. Officials being renewed "in recent developments that-becau- se year old daughter Caroline to the 'heri and r II j ; to' in issued ly said it was view of the in Berlin." Meanwhile, of advice j his , "com-pellin- antness. The Chief Executive, 'who plans to fly back to Washington Tuesday; morning, attended to first things first as soon as he arrived Friday night at his Cape Cod home ill Hy annis Port. took ; WASHINGTON (UPI) The State Department Saturday warn- ed Americans not to travel to East g Germany unless they have reasons" for doing so. , The warning was a restatement ' 'i of on East Gerrriany by U.S. Basis of He Prdblem Si ' He Urged to Airlines Non-Recogniti- President is Kept Informed of Latest World Developments and ACROSS BERUI Berliners (foreground) wave to East BARRIER Ber- - jWest playmates aboard an electric golf liners across d vising fence and anal. In a new jlpvelopment in the Berlin (crisis. cart built to seat four, adults. reinforcement 'of. Communist Eaist Germany has protested laist week's 1,500-ma- n On a more serious line, an inU.S. military garrison in Berlin, it was ahnounbed Saturday. The the tricate communications system charged that the reinforcements; violated thes sovereignty" of the German Repub- kept Kennedy' informed of inter Weslj Berlin (Herald-UP- l Telephoto) national developments worth his lie. and "misused" the access route attention while Kennedy's mili tary aide, Maj. Gen. Chester "V Rdte-.FjeacheFour Per Hour Clifton, was on hand ;to provide Early an intelligence briefingi Reveal Actual Test , Tjie President flew here Friday after a long round of White House conferences on where the United States goes from here, now that Russia has decided to resume nuclear tests. The day The National Safety Council eswas climaxed by a White House By United Press International By JOSEPH B. ' FLEMING 45 minutes beannouncement 420 on persons die would timated at a rate Americans were United Press International . that 0f almost four andying fore Kennedy's departure hour on the the highways duijing the current BERLIN (UPI), Communist the Soviet Union actually had hation's highways Saturday on weekend. The worst Labor annouhced Day East Saturday Germany conducted a , nuclear test in; cen- the first Labor weekend was that of !.:"':. day of the 1951 when it had protested the reinforcement tral! Asia. jDay weekend. garrison in Ber453 person were killed in traffic of the U.S. Army While51 the weekend White House, lin:' by 1,500 combat-readThe death pace was running troops. had no' firm plans to announce officials ignored the a score ahead of that for accidents: American pearly further developments oh this, act- the same period of the 1960 holiprotest. ing Press Secretary' Andreiy T. day. It approached that of the U.S. officials said they would Hatcher said hi, was on a "one-hou- r recent July 4 weekend traffic Could Avert Crisis pay no attention to the protest alert" just in case. This laughter, the worst of any sum-tne- r npte and would not answer it bemeant he had to be' available in record. cause the United States does not holiday pn terms of time' and distance withAt 12:30" a.m., EDT, more than recognize the East t German rein in hour of any call 3 hours after the holiday began, gime. BUt as far as could be deter- United International counted Press !They ignored- what appeared to mined, Kennedy hoped to go 34 deaths in traffic accidents. be an East German claim to" the ' 1 ahead with as routine a weekend , The breakdown: right to rule on American 'use of here as possible mainly meanthe routes to isolated West Berlin Traffic 134 ing afternoons with his family on through East German territory. his Drownings 21 yacht, Marlin, anchorThe protest reported by the ofing for swims in sheltered waBoating 2 ficial East German news agency RIO de Janeiro; upd ters of Nantucket sound near his Planes. Ithe movement of the Congress Saturday invited Vice ADN, saidHelmstedt-Berlihome. n Miscellaneous 15 HighGoulart to be President Joao 20 of American way 1,500 Aug. Total 173 sworn fin Monday at the capital Virginia led the! nation with ,10 in Brasilia as a purely symbolic? soldiers violated East German sovereignty and was a "misuse" raffic fatalities, followed by North president, of Brazil. of the highway. Carolina with niiie and Pennsyl If Goulart accepts the presidenThe East Germans said they vania with eight. West Virginia, cy uncjer those conditions he poMichigan, Ohio and California had litical frisis touched off eight days wijmld not attempt to. control Westfeeven. j Illinois had six. ago by the resignation of; Presi- ern allied military! traffic "until Eleven states listed no traffic dent jjanio Quadros may be a peace treaty is signed." But they added: "This is on the MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet deaths since the holiday period solved.J There wajs no immediate condition whether that thdse routes are not he word from Goul$rt Union Saturday gave the Western began. A National misused the for for purposes in direct would agree to he cbmpromis'e spokesman powers its reply to .their warning against interferring with allied air Safety Council said the. traffic plan. He arrived Friday night in contradiction to agreements on cleath list got off to a "very "fast Porto Alegre, capital cf his home Germany's post-wa- r access routes to Berlin. development." "could tbe note fetart" Do be which weekend released and the after Rio ADN, of Grande state Sul, The reply to the Aug. 26 allied .'his was of bad said view transmitvisit it in from jjad," stages especially Saturday, returnibg notes was contained in notes pi ted to the U.S. Ambassador in to Communist China. handed to the American, British Weather conditions. valate Brazil's with crowded for The Prague last Saturday. Highways ending proposal and French embassies in Moscow. siick d U.S. Officials said the United for were calls and turmoil changpolitical The text of the Soviet reply cationistsin had the right of unrestrictMountains. a States the presidential sysRocky ing over from was not available in Moscow. h the' eastern half of the nation tem ofj government modeled after ed jaccess to Berlin, They said Informed sources said, howevwere jammed with families that of, the United States and used the United States accepted no. er that it merely repeated ear- pads peeking relief- from the heafr and since Brazil became a (republic in East German claim to control lier Soviet arguments about use humidity. (See jGOULARTj MAY Page 4) r, (ee GERMAN REDS Page 4) of the air corridors over Communist East Germany and matters involving organization in Berlin. The Soviet note was delivered t the U.S. Embassy early Satur. in MassachuHYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) spokesman mader it clear that he wps apparently day afternoon. ' setts. precautions "appropriate steps"! had been were taken today to guard Presi- taken. ;.. lll'f Cleary said Cooper "has made J j J '; ..hi'. a statemenl dent Kennedy from a dangerous, killing the State troopers jwere also sta- President." regarding HERALD was He believed mental patient heavily armed, tioned at Barnstable Airport near j with a .45 caliber autoarmed who has threatened to kill the here and at Logan International matic ; ML. 9 Chief Executive. Amusements and a revolver and Cleary 4 i Boston to observe pasCentral Utah News ..J. .'. 3, 4 warned in a, bulletin that Cooper State police doubled patrols on Airport on incoming flights, sengers Classified was . "extremely dangerous.". roads leading to the 1 Resident ; 11 Former' Area Comics j. . and The Secret Service said Cooper Kennedy compound there 1.... 10 troopers were stationed Editorial . The wanted man was identified escaped, from a state mental hosat i. the U 2 Bourne and National, World News Sagamore bridges, as Howard C. CooperJ 48, a" for- pital at Austin, Tex. more than 4 the Obituaries .J.,.. only two land routes onto the mer resident! of Brookline, a Bos-te- n 16 years ago and since that time Society suburb. He was at first be- had worked in Massachusetts cape. 4.1. .5, 6, 7 Sports No unusual precautions seemed lieved en roate here from Texas, and Maine, He was. committed ......: 4 stocks in effect at the President's summer according to State 'police !Lt. James after twice being charged with home. But a Secret Servict Cleary, but. latr official t aid assault with intent ia kilL prote st 1 German Reds Holiday Weekend Tfraf fic Protest U.S. pe l oll Continues to liise Reinforcement GM Asked to Union Accept f j TRAVELERS Pagis 4) -- ' ' 78-ho- ur i j y i 1 , i Goulart May Be President In Name Only ' j f - I j 50-foo- i, t - 110-mi- le l Profit-Sharin- g DETROIT !UPI) The United Auto Workers Saturday formally proposed to General Motors that it accept the package settlement the union reached last week with American motors, , including a , profit-sharin- g . provision. The union in a five-pap- a statement handed to GM Saturday said it hoped an agreement could still be reached before a Wednes? ' . day strike deadline. Because the time is " so short, the unioi said, the UAW "is formally making a proposal .based upon the principles and provisions 01 me agrecmeni concluded between the union and American Motors!! . y. t. - ! four-pow- (ennedy Guards Alerted After Threat er - ' M) . Wer-nicker- j"5 st 1 v r-Ex- i ' tra j security ' . , INDEX i t !.' j 1 fl i , J. M , I 5-- A, 6-- A. ' 7-- A so-call- ed ; , THEY MURDERED FOUR Donna Marie Stone, 13, and John Edwin Mayer, 32 both of Chicago, who admitted- four murders, two in Illinois,- one in Missouri and one in Texas. Under Texas law the girl cannot be charged with murder because of her age. (Herald-UP- I - Telepkoto) - M M t 1-- A, , 2-- A, 3-- A j j j - .. This would include- We revolii- plan agreed tionary. profit-sharinon by the UAW and American Motors, .pfcoviding workers with a total of 15 per cjent of American, ' Motors' profits before taxes- - and - - g . after, 10 per cent , was skimmed off for stockholders. Thusf.it wasl. thel second time in three years that the UAW; had asked'rCSfM. to accept - profit-sharin- 4 g. In Santaqui Well-Drillin- . ! " 1 s snow-packe- j adult male members vt 1 t ! of the Pilgrims! signed the Mayflower Compact j as their ship lay at .what is now! Provincetown; Mass., .ia November,' l20t 1 TLr. 'H ' ! . Forty-on- e L l ll , j By United Press International ' V j - Now You Know J vs . j so- The girl told police she held the steering i wheel) while j Meyer reached over and shot DeKraai in the head as he slept. "We both thought. he had some money but he j didn't have a penny," the- girl ;said. Miss. Stone said she and Meyer took Miss Wernicker out into a field, tied hex hands and she and each fired! two shots into Meyer ; the ' woman: Both Shot Woman "I shot her (twice in the back and he finished her off," Miss Stone told police. Officers said she showed no emotion over the slayi "j . ings. ' She said 's Miss buried they field between in a body Thayer and Alton,! 111. Miss Stone said she and Meyer were on their Way to Arizona to pick cotton. ! ' - To Protest ' Ottum-wa,Iow- a. . 1 ; ....... Reds Reply j area Friday. Police said his cial security card' gave his dress as: 601 West Main, ' ; ! 3 et Scientists- in Europe said detec tion of the Soviet blast by long 24-nati- In Slayi So-Jvi- d . i. e lr UTAH. COUNTY, UTAH SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1961 , yi -jparerit ex- - ; state-coitrolle- press builtj up, a, tremendous propaganda campaign fin an effort to prepare the Russian people for an Officii an: bouncement. Neutral Nationsi Shocked The White House planned to in dict Russia before the JUnited Na tions for its action, land delegates ;to the Belgrade conferepce 0 un nations reacted with aligned stunned protests to the. Sotiet ex- - . - i ? , M pected a Kremlin confirmation at . A.F.B. South Carplina. The 614th from fee 401st Technical Fighter Wink at England . Louisiana. . A.F.B. ' '429th v The and tie 523rd, both from the 832nd Air Division at Cannon A.F.B. NeSjv Mexico.The Sabrejets c!an. carry! either conventional or nuclear bombs. In air combat, they use 20 millj meter cannon and sidewinder guided missiles. ' .i i' " , 15-25- ' 'i f Kremlin Is S iseni ih Abdul e Sovlpf 1. Exp Iosipn , I JZJJ-- Blast Evokes Anger, Resentment, Alarm j j c C 1 t ii - ' J. jfi ; WNNcC rOT "TxVyir, v nr: nf r tr ii ..v. . 14 cv 2. . A-':-.- 1 -- - ' j . ; ... ! .I Possibility Seen That .Planes Might be Kept VOL. 39 NO. In Europe Afterwards ,1 ' r, ' t uvers ' .'r . , Provo Office, - , f - -- i Join in , . ... ' .! l " g Mis ha d Kills Vernal! Man SANTAQUIN lj,arry Clyde 24, Vernal, an employee of El-drid- Jechnical Service, of Provo, was killed Saturday about, 8 a.m. when the catline broke on a drilling der. rick at Summit Creek Irrigation Co. well, site, .200 N. 2nd W., and dropped a pipe on him. . The victim, . a son of Mr. and Mrs.; Clyde Eldridge, Vernal, was dead on arrival at Payson Hospital. The body was taken to Jolley Mortuary. His father, working on a job out of Moab, was notified shortly before noon Saturday. The tragedy occurred when a pipe dropped some 25 or 33 feet from the broken catline. kill-iz- g Mr. Eldridg ktttantly. . 14-in- ch K , . |