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Show f - Telephone FR 3-50- ri bf Provo Office, 4th N... FR Orera Office 757 N. State 50 AC PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, VOL, 39, NO. 15 P wwww?fiwfl PUfPW.WJWI Li i ,. ii and low tonignt 50. PRICE 15 CENTS UTAH SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1961 j run " f ! 3 " s S Four Men Accept Key Posts in $50, Campaign 1 u Beale Fletcher is crowned Miss the equ ally beautiful Nancy Ann reflect the happiness of both in and the beginning of a year's reign MOMENT OF CORONATION Lovely iVMia America of 1962 Saturday at Atlantic City by Fleming, Miss America of 1961. Radiant smiles what was a last official duty for Miss Fleming for the new "queen." (Herald UPI Telephoto) - Miss Utah is Second Runnerup Goldberg Sees North Carolina Girl Is Peace for Miss' America tor TORT" Auto Industry ville, N.C., she. is the daughter of By United Press .International1 ATLANTIC CIT.Y, N.J. (UPI) two dancing"teachers and hopes M?.riaf Beale Fletcher, to use her prize money to study a beauty who represent- dramatics. ed the state, of 'North Carolina, "It feels just tremendous," she Saturday was chosen Miss Ameri- said after crowned on the stage ca of 1962. at Convention Hall. "I had no idea The runnersup in the pageant I would be chosen but I will try were Miss Arkansas, first; Miss to be a good representative." j Utah",-secon- d; Miss Texas, third; Charles Beale Fletcher, father s Minnesota, fourth'. oi tne new miss America and a 5 5 a foot inch brunette professional dancing teacher, said Maria, was for six "I had a feelilng she would .vin measuring months recentlj' a Radio City Music all along butl it's bard to look at Hall Rockette. A resident of A'she- - something like this objectively." He said his! daughter had a tre . . - andjj-Mis- 35-24-- TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg said Saturday he was certain there would be a year of peace between the auto industry and the United Auto Workers Union. General Motors has agreed on money matters in the negotia tions biit details were being work ed out prior to signing. Speaking before an estimated 15,000 persons at the Lucas County Democratic ox roast, he said the administration had "rejoiced" over the settlements and told his audience in this auto parts manufacturing city, "There will be a year of peace in an industry so vital to Toledo." He" went on to say that the Kennedy administration's record of legislation for the "welfare of the people" is one which "compares favorably to the first 100 ' days of the mendous capacity to concentrate and that she had been dancing almost since the' day she could ' walk. ' While Fletcher was talking with newsmen, his daughter was pos ing nearby' for photographers with tears ofj joy in her eyes. "This is so thrilling, she said over and over again. She won the swim' suit eliminaHe said all the measures of the WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. tion and also scored high in talent Kennedy administration have a John J. Sparkman, pre- fci a dance to her own recorded common purpose. dicted Saturday- - the Senate will voice of "Somebody Loves Me.' Maria was graduated from A.C reject by a close margin a change in ; the rule. Reynolds High School in 1960 afteri ' Sparkman, in an interview, three years with a scholastic aver said, There is no really good age of 93. She has been winning time to bring up this question." local talent awards since she was But "if it's inevitable that it be seven years old, a total of 14. Six others lw?ere announced as brought up this is as good a time winners for their tal as any other," he said. ents the Misses Delaware, Dis n The Senate will reacn the of trict Colurnbia, Indiana, Maine, stage; on the smouldering Puerto Rico and Rhode Island. issue as the last piece oi legisThe finalists in the 33rd Miss A FORT STOCKTON, Tex. lative business during the present America Pageant included four blistering fire and explosion at session, probably at the end of blondes, four brunettes, and five a wildcat oil well fire in a far next week. and ranged in age from west Texas cotton e The bill, reported redeheads, patch, where 18 to 23. 100 some the worked to rules committee without roughnecks by The girls paraded their beauty the killed least two at that well, cap recommendation, proposed three-fifth- s of the senators could (See NORTn .CAROLINA Page 4) men and burned 72 others Satur'vote to cut off further debate. day. A hospital at nearby Monahans, Under . present rules, it takes of the senators presTex., said Herbert Whitfield of ent to end a filibuster. Monahans and Pat York of Fort Stockton were dead bn arrival Senate leaders expect the from burns when they 'were rushrule to provoke an immediate talkathon by Southern In ed there from the fire; senators who, have continuously Fort Stockton police chief W. G. A President McDonald said the blast killed fought against any change j in : LONDON (UPI) their favorite weapon against Airlines DC-- 6 plane with 82 per two men. He said at least 40 sons aboard trashed Nearly today persons were taken to the Fort civil rights legislation. A move to cut off any filibuster shortly after taking off from Shan Stockton Memorial Hospital. He under the-- present said some of the injuries were rule, non Airport: Ireland. j to 76 or come The not four is expected after serious. passen plane, carrying five days of talks. If it fails, the gers and a crew of six, was flying Another 14 men were taken to rules-chanattempt will be from Dusseldorf, Germany, eri the Pecos Memorial Hospital, and 10 were taken to the Vard Coundropped, according to Senate route to Chicago, 111. sources. First reports indicated there were ty Memorial Hospital in MonaThe Southern blqc expects to get no survivors. hans. It was not known immedto The Senate from was traditionalists be understood help plane iately if, any of the injured could and some Republicans in their at- operated on. fcharter by the air be classified as critical. McDonald said the accident haptempt to- stop the rules change. lines which has its headquarters, ' said. Van in the Calif. rule Sparkman present Nuys, pened at a Parker Drilling Comeri worked "has First reports said the four quite well for the pany rig near Coyanosa, between South over the years and I don't gined, propeller plane crashed into Fort Stockton. and Pecos, in the think it should be tampered with." the choppy waters of Shannon Riy barren wastes of far west Texas. He pointed out that many fili-- , er three miles east of the airport It was believed the oil field busters of the past have had noth- and sank almost immediately. roughnecks were trying to cap to with do civil 'rights and Launches headed for the crash the well when it exploded. Mcing hence the rules change should site, but rescue workers were Donald said the wildcat well had not be considered a civil rights hampered by darkness. All hos been burning since Friday. It exissue. pitals' in the area were alerted. ploded about noon Saturday. Filibuster Rule to ;Stdyf. Says Senator Roosevelt-administration.- D-Al- a., Two Killed In Oil Well Blast, Fire anti-filibust- er ; non-finali- st show-dofW- , . rules-chang- - ds 8 anti-filibust- er Plane With 82 Aboard Crashes Shannon River ; i . mm. Cities are Evacuated m PRESTON McGRAW United Press International PORT ARTHUR, Tex. (UPI) An estimated 100,000 Texas and Gulf Coast residents Saturday fled inland to escape killer tides and steadily rising winds that heralded the advance of Hurricane Car-l-a, churning shoreward with 135 winds. The hurricane warning area e was extended in a, arc West to La., from Grand Isle, Bj By STEWART IIESLEY United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) The 0 Defense Department ordered troops to Europe as reinforcemen ments in the Berlin criris. It also The announcement said ship- ing, housing, medical and other' needs of the 40,000 new troops would make it impossible to supply both them and the dependents. Therefore, it said it will "require 40,-00- Four prominent Provo have been appointed to head the four divisions of the Provo Economic Development Fund Saturwas announced it (PED), day by Dalian R. Clark, general chairman of the drive. The four men, and the divisions they will head, are: Phil Perlman, advanced gifts; LeRpy Johnson, business and industrial; John Bernhard, professional; and Wilson W. Sorensen, residential. These four men will enlist the aid of approximately 800 individual workers for the fund drive, according to William K. Wother-spoomanager of the Provo Chamber of Commerce. The program is being conducted under the auspices of the P r o jv o Chamber. Goals of Drive Designed to raise a total of $50,000, the fund drive will begin on Oct. 2 among the business, industrial, professional and residential areas of the conimuniy. All funds raised will be Hised to attract new industry and business to Utah' Valley, with expenditures being made for the following: industrial Research, surveys, and commercial development, brochures and maps, consulting services, educational transportation, postage and mailings, and selling the community to industrial leaders. No money will be used for salaries, emphasized Mr. Clark, but such manpower as needed will be provided by the Provo Chamber of Commerce. In addition to the four rrien named above, Mr. Clark also ' announced that Raymond E.. Beckham, executive secretary of the BYU Alumni Association, has been appointed as assistant chairman of the fund campaign and chairman of the communications committee, and that Kenneth J.' Pace, local advertis ing executive has been appoint ed as chairman of advertising. k Duration Kick-of- f date for the campaign (See FOUR NAMED Page 3) - One-Wee- Warsaw Pact Leaders in Conference LONDON (UPI) Moscow" radio said Saturday night that defense minis fers and chiefs of staff of n the Warsaw Pact have concluded a two-da- y meet ing to work out "practical methods" of; military prepared ness. In a broadcast monitored here, Moscow radio said the Warsaw Pact leaders met to plan for the war threat posed by NATO. The meeting openeJ in Warsaw Friday and ended Saturday, the broad cast said. A broadcast in Greek, aimed at southern Europe and heard here, also announced the conclusion of the meeting. It said the ministers 'and chiefs ot stait tooK note of the ag gressive North Atlantic Military Bloc (NATO)" and it$ alleged threats to "start, a new war." The official Soviet news agency Tass said the meeting was held under the direction of Soviet Marshal A, A. Grechko, com mander in chief of the pact armed forces. eight-natio- clamped tight curbs on! the flow of dependents to the' European theater. The travel dependent suspension starts next month except for men assigned in West Berlin The Pentagon indicated that the exception for West Berlin was being made for morale purposes. that transportation of dependents Europe be suspended until further notice, commencing on Oct 9, 1961." The order will ap-t- o civilian government em ply well as military peras ployes to , sonnel. Many Families Involved A department K. Rejects U.S., Appeal MOSCOW (UPI) Halt fo) Soviet er Nikita Khrushchev today mally rejected the U.S; British peal for a. halt to atmdspheric clear tests. He said "it goes without saying that the Soviet government cannot and will not agree to such a deal." in a statement handed to the U.S. and British ambassadors, Khrushchev said the proposal would allow the United States to carry on with underground nuclear tests and endanger the security of the Commu- sts sidered along with the whole question of "general and complete disarmament." Khrushchev was replying to a note of Sept. 3 from President Kennedy and British Prime Minister! Harold Macmillan in which they asked Khrushchev to agree to an immediate halt of nuclear testing in the atmosphere. They set today as the deadline for the Soviet reply. The Soviet leader said the An nist-world.. .. "proposal "in general" failed to include France. He said it would allow the two major Hits Brick Wall: Western powers "to go on improving thejir nuclear weapons, inasmuch-as this proposal does not cover experimental nuclear weapons blasts underground and in outer space." Khrushchev said there was no which he ' guarantee France ' said was "setting- off one nuclear would device after another" abide by any test ban. He said a new U. S. agreement to train MOSCOW, Sept. S9 (UPD IU French! NATO units in atomic arms dian Prime Minister Jawaharlal dispelled "all illusions" Nehru flew home Saturday, ap-- 1 France! was holding tests by itparently having "failed in his misi self. sion to persuade Soviet Premier The Soviet leader said it was Nikita Khrushchev to nd nuclear "with an aching heart" that Rustesting and ease woirld tension sia decided to resume nuclear over Berlin. tests. He said that the Soviets had farewell set off fewer blasts than the UnitThe two leaders' speeches at Vnukovo airport were ed States, Britain and France "and we have every reason. . . politely mild. Nehru said his thrpe days of to claim an equal number of test talks with Khrushcjhev were explosions." Khrushchev said the U.S. nu"useful." "now Khrushchev said both nations clear weapons program tests. He underground shared a common viewpoint oil said the United Gethe at States "many questions of the present neva nuclear test ban talks has dayuknl he said the Soviet Union had "an ardent desire to avert sought for years to, get "legalizatesting. the unleashing of a rocket nuclear tion" of underground one of the ' main been "This has war." conclusion of a But diplomatic circles in Mos- obstacles to the (See K REJECTS Page 4) cow were of the opinion that Nehru had hit a virtual brick wall in discussions oij his chief worry, the resumption of nuclear testing. - Abglo-Ameri-c- an " -- glo-Americ- an Nehru Fails To Convince Khrushchev - . that , re-quir- es' Former Senator Placed on MOSCOW (UPI) Premier L Nikita S. Khrushchev assured Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India today that he wanted to head off a "nuclear war." But diplomatic sources believed Nehru had failed in his mission to stop Russian nuclear tests and ease the Berlin Crisis. The Soviet and Indian leaders talk this had a final' hour-lonin as. many their fourth morning Indian leader the before days flew to, Tashkent. He "will return to New Dchhi Sunday and a joint, communique , will be issued then. Seeing Nehru off at the airport, Khrushchev told him both had "an ardent desire to avert the unleash-(Se-e g . NEHRU Page 2) 'Dangerous' ; ,." .' List PROVIDENCE, R. I. (UPI) Former Sen. Theodore Francis Green 93, was placed on the danger list today at the Jane Brown Hospital where he was admitted with a heart ailment. Green, who will- be 94 next month, was admitted Friday after he complained of feeling faint. His condition was described by attending doctors as a "heart blopk," which is a disturbance of thej rhythmic beat of the heart. Green was the oldest man to ever serve in the Senate when he retired last January. - - ; - " . de Gaulle By CHARLES W. RIDLEY United Press International PARIS (UPI) Terrorists tried tried to blow up President Charles de Gaulle's car with a fire bomb Friday night as he drove from Paris to his weekend retreat in eastern France, police disclosed today. De Gaulle escaped harm but the presidential car was slightly damaged and smoke-blackene- d. unnun Police said the bomb caught fire but did not explode. If it had exploded properly, they said, it could have destroyed' the car and all its occupants. ' De Gaulle, with ,his known contempt for danger, was. reported to have dismissed the .attempt with the remark that "It .was bad joke in poor taste." As the - bomb flare spurted, De Gaulle's chauffer kept going and ; Voice Regrets To Russians ported missing on Perez Island off Mexico and a refrigerator ship was listed as missing. Property damage was unavoidable, but there could be no estimate of its extent until Carla ' had spent itBy MERRIMAN SMITH self. UPI White House Reporter Authorities in Louisiana estiHYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) g 50,000 pefsons had fled President Kennedy and British mated homes state. in At the least Prime Minister Harold Macmillan as many headed td safety inland Saturday night expressed "deep- from the area around Port Arest regret" that Russia refuses to halt nuclear testing in the at- thur, and from shore and island towns to the south and west. low-lyin- . mosphere. The leaders of the United States and Great Britain also said refusal of Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to halt pollution of the atmosphere with radioactive debris was a violation of previous Soviet statements of concern for the health hazards of. such doing. Express Willingness Although there was no evidence from the Kremlin Saturday of any willingness to curtail the current series of Soviet test shots, Kennedy and MacMillan reaffirmed their willingness to negotiate a nuclear test ban agreement "of the widest possible scope." The joint statement was issued at the temporary White House on Cape Cod, where the President is spending the weekend with his family, and in London. Kennedy and Macmillan last Sunday sent Khrushchev a proposal for an immediate three-natio- n d agreement to forego testing. They gave the Russians until Saturday to reply. Khrushchev responded Saturday morning with a flat refusal which the Western allies had expected. He said such an agreement would not bind France which tested independently following the start of (See U.S., BRITISH Page 4 . . j u . ! Colombey-Les-Deux-EG-lise- s, A mass program was underway, under Red Cross and Civil Defense iiuspices. Southeast m Galveston ; f lit a 6 p.m. CST advisory from New Orleans, Jtne Weather Bureau reported Carla 300 miles southeast of Galveston with gale winds extending out from the eye in ths circular-shapestorm as far as coast. the Tides rose three to six feet along the coast and continued to surge higher as'winds increased. The storm itself, curving on a northerly course, was expected to strike "on, the upper Texas (See GULF COAST Page 4) feeding-shelte- r d a Texas-Louisian- What , Is There to above-groun- One of the Worst Hurricane Disasters Feared WASHINGTON (UPI) One of a, aster director warned Saturday. ' BERLIN (UPI) Statesmen on both sides of the Iron ' Curtain talk day and night about negotiating the Berlin crisis.: But what is there to negotiate and how do, you go about it? . So many notes and threats have passed between East and West on Berlin that both sides- are so deeply and firmly committed it will take the wisdom of a Solomon to find some area of agreement from which to negotiate. Some of the plans advanced for a Berlin settlement verge onHhe crackpot. So far, four, major suggestions have been' made: That West Berlin 4)e moved physically into West Germany, turning over to the Commuriists a city of empty office buildings and houses. Nothing would please Nikita Khrushchev more, of course, but the persons who argue for itt v Robert C. Edson said Jthat if the hurricane hits the coast as expected, it would be much worse than hurri cane Audrey, which smashe Cameron, La., in 1957,- and Donna which struck Florida and the East Coast last year. Edson said his workers in Beau mont, Tex., had opened shelters in 65 public and parochial schools to help house and feed 'persons flee ing' thePort Arthur area. He said these schools, combined with other facilities in Lamar College in Beaumont, could house up to 400,000 persons. Texas-Louisia- By HARRY FERGUSON United Press International - the worst hurricane disasters the United States has had in years could result from hurricane Car-lthe American .Red Cross dis. Negotiate ? na - say the hard choice is between that and nuclear war.. Uprooting and moving 2,200,000 persons is an almost impossible task. The cost would be staggering because West Berlin is an industrial city and one of the principal electronics manufacturing centers of Europe. of the Berlin resIf only1 to move, they would idents refused remain an eternal reproach to the one-thir- d Free World. Create a free, demilitarized city, belonging neither . to East (See WHAT IS Page 4) In then stopped the limousine briefly at a safe distance De Gaulle resumed bis journey to his country home at 130 miles southeast of Paris, when he learned that no one was . ui 550-mil- Terrorists Use Fire Bombs Escapes ' U.S., British on atmospheric tests must be con- forapnu- , spokesman said The Soviet premier said a ban Premi- mile-an-ho- 40,-00- British A-Te- about 2,000 families vyill be affected immediately by the .move. He reported that between 7,000 and 8,000 dependents a month normally travel to Europe at government expense. The troop order could hasten the day when National Guard and reserve units previously alertto acsummoned be ed may tive duty in this country to replace the departing troops 0 The dispatch of' the fresh to reinforce the 7th Aransas Pass, Texas, as fringe troops winds rose to from 30 td(60 mile (See 40,000 Page 4) an hour along the west Louisiana of coast and a frightened continued. people .A late check showed that throughout the day and into nightfall, no casualties were reported, although eight persons were re- two-thir- ds ge r - Gulf Coast ... . . Curbs Clamped on Dependents n, 4feruB tno n7 o n n me Industrial Fund Drive Set Oct. 2 ' 'i : : 75 www 't two-thir- temperature. High today near mil HI J to a considerable extent today With occasional lignt shower la the afternoon. Little change ia aim Tar Ads., News,, Circulation: 190 W. Cloudiness, 50 om bing lice said the bomb had been placed in a roadside heap of sand Police said a man had been arrested at the scene and made a HERALD INDEX . 7 : Business News Central 3, 4, 5, 6, 18A Utah News Classified ....J......... 11A-13- A .8A Editorial ... j full confession. National, Details of the confession were News .... 2, 8, 9, 10. 7A '., not made public but it was gen World hurt." ; ..... 4 Obituaries Inspection of the presidential car erallv a s sumed the bomb a Society .. . 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A one was the work later showed it had a . slightly crudely-mad- e 11, 12, 13, 14 nf "keen blackAlgeria Frencn" ex .Sports damagecf fender, wassmoke 7 Stocks ened in places and was smeared tremists of the Secret Army Or with blotches of sand and dirt. Po ganization. , i |