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Show SUNDAY, MARCH SUNDAY HERALD 2 Utah Mrs. Kennedy Lives Life Of An Indian Princess United Press International India (UPI) Mrs. Jacqyeline Kennedy, living the life pi an Indian princess, slept - late lunched on . wild Saturday, boar- - and then took a leisurely cruise on the Maharana's exotic lake studded with cream - colored . island palaces. It vas 'the U. S. First Lady's second boat trip in two days but , 'the view was entirely different. Friday in" the Holy; City of ULLAIPUR, ' vJ -- Janet Leigh, Seclusion Benares, Mrs. Kennedy saw pilgrims bathing in the Ganges, bodies being burned beside the river and swarming humanity along three miles of shore line forming the holy bathing area. Saturday she saw a quiet steel blue lake with cream-colore- d and granite cupolas rising at one end and brown rolling hills on the other. - She was accompanied by the Maharana, highest ranking prince of the rajputs of this historic desert land and a number - of lesser Rajasthani princes in a red, white and, blue motor 'y:":ylaunch. i 80 of about It. was a warm day ' was held degrees but the heat down by a number,, of white j clouds. " The First Lady spent about an hour and 40 minutes on the lake, touring two island palaces. She then pleased the lakeside crowd of beturbaned Rajasthanis and their barechested children by pulling close to a cement pier, allowing the crowd to have a good look 10-mln- 1 , , four-mile-squa- re Jant Actress Leigh and her Tony Curtis, announced jointly Saturday they had agreed on temporary separation , after more than 10 years of marriage. Ttfe couple 'said they were separating in an effort to "try .and vori out the problems of our maractor-husban- d, . J ; - ' riage: ; i :;:!:: z ;.. Curtis moved into the home cf a friend in Palm Springs ' and Misf , Leigh remained with their two small daughters in the fanv ily. home. . f Tile children are; Kelly, 5, and - ... Jamie, 3. "Our: parting was very tender and friendly." Miss Leigh ex plained. "We like one another al-- together too much to stay together and make each other unhappy, "There were.no scenes of temperament," she added. "We' needed time to bar apart to take a good look at ourselves. We aren't .i . ( any divorce action contemplating v at this time. As far as we're con- cerned, it's a temporary separation to get our bearings." Miss Leigh and Curtis married In the. East on June 14, 1951, It is her second marriage, bis first. ..Until recent years, they had' C been considered, one of lywood's ' happiest married Hol- -- ; .; Chqrg ie Bring Prison Term She then stood up to wave and, , Mrs. Mary Rockefeller, who MRS. ROCKEFELLER RETURNS FROM RENO Nelson! Rockefeller in Governor New to no, ended her York marriage ' auto Nev. earlier in the day, is ushered into a waiting by her brother, John R. 31-year-- qld Clark, after arriving at P liladelphia International Airport, Friday. Telephoto). In sentencing Royal Donald Reid 44, Judge Willis W, Rltter said the sentences would run concurrently. Secret Service agents arrested Reid in his apartment on Feb. 27 , and confiscated several devices used in counterfeiting operations. In other action, the federal judge placed a University of Utah stu dent on probation for two years after he pleaded guilty to mail theft and delaying the mails. Dan Harris Gillespie, 23 was j arrested after postal authorities found hundreds of pieces of mail in the trunk of his personal car which he used as a part - time . Man, 30, Dies From Crash Hurts A SALT LAKE CITY, (UPI) Salt Lake' man died Saturday in a local hospital after) he' was crit ically, injured Tuesday in an auto-mobi- le crash.' ; j 30, died of Robert K. Ferrej head injuries' which he suffered when his car collided with another driven by Betty Hinckle Schroe-de- r, 34, Salt Lake City. Ferre was ' carrier. thrown from his car by the im jmail .. Another- - Salt Lake man who pact. pleaded guilty to mail theft JS1- mer Lee Carter, 27, was sentenced to live years in ' a federal peni Romney May tentiary. He was accused of taking" a letter containing a U.S. New Fashion jTrend Treasury check. In Stubby Neckties Larry Byrd, , 32, Moab, doing business as Moab Taxi Co.", , was SALT LAKE CITY ;(UPI) placed on probation for five 'years George Romney, recently resign after he pleaded guilty; to failure ed president of American Motors, to pay a federal liquor tax. may start a new fashion trend in Robert Henry Wright, 39, Orem short, stubby, neckties. pleaded guilty to delaying the This may be the result of a maris while a postal employe and ribbon cutting ceremony at the was placed on probation for two grand opening of Rambler Village years. here, a new Rambler automobile , I , Start 4- i Hie U.S. chemical Industry uses more than 8,000 tons of oxyjgen per day, most of it in the conversion of hydrocarbons into acetylene, traUl j ; Published by Herald Cor- -, poration, 190 West Fourth North Street, every afternoon,: Monday through Friday. Sun-- i day Herald published Sunday morning. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Provo, Utah, under the act of March By CHARLES CORDDRY - Orem office cumber, - AC - l firm C , . - .1 omni-direction- al Delta School Replacement Under Stm dv ; . I als j j. omni-direction- al . ? ... 12,000 Mile .'.f . Range , a much advanced Titan-2- , version of the earlier Titan,-nobecoming operational, "is capable of ranges up to about 12,000 miles depending on the size and weight of the nuclear warhead it carries. It user new propellants and delivers more thrust than any other U.S. rocket except the mammouth . Saturn space booster. At its extreme! range, equal to about half the distance around the earth at the equator, the Titan-- 2 has far more reached, than needed to hit Russian targets. The earliest Atlas missile with a 6,400 mile range, can over 90 per cent of the empire from the central United States by using direct transartic routes. But with the Titan-2- , the Air Force has t the start of a more flexible missile force, which can carry very large hydrogen warheads and follow; what are called 1 . Sino-Sovi- et v I Civic Auditorium Proposal Wins "intolerable." ' Approval ? SALT LAKE KEEPING AWAKE CITY Ten (UPI) members of a special committee The organited to study prospects for SIKESTON, Mo. (UPI) Rev, William Chapman, vicar of St'. a civic auditorium for Sa: t Lake Paul's Episcopal church, .thinks City expressed approval of the he has a way to banish drowsiness idea Friday. , at church events. A committee member. S A. 'An- The! minister says parish meet- derson said the city is losing be. I . ings preceded by dinners, invariably suffer "from people and dishes bustling and "clattering in . and about the kitchen, to say nothing of our universal tendenecy "to sit in a surfeited slump, eyelids at half-mas- t, during meetings." ! The Rev. Mr. Chapman says in place of the big . dinners, serve coffee and doughnuts "as needed." tween $30 and $40 million Annually because lack of an auditorium is sending conventions elsewhere. Salt Lake impresario E U g e n e Jelesnik told the committee he could book big name performers, Broadway' musicals- - and plays in the city if he could assure them of seating for an audience of at least DELUXE SET 7-p- c. durable t i s a f 4 s w MlhWJlMJJ - A- i f i s nh .i i Uri rvii i . rTTrr-.r t ft f r i Opens to 60" I . ; 6 j 1 f 1 "olden wlte' wiih : j i : Perraa-Edg- c 'X -- Jta- "INSTANTLY'! D (- ... Friend Coffee-Love- Ever v'JcT ( A' ; Miit jt) the '"Mute Materul" 'Ceftntie frtil! : HONORED SY THIS CCVfTJO 0urantcd br VGooi Housektipin; Lai WfTM MACtCOf K3 FilttrS Cives Yoa Sediment Free Coffee) fctzni tttkz - - o A SIMPLE AS fr.stituts Keasure - C KEiVEKLY CU? CF CCFFEE .'INTRANCIXS DEEP CEEP A-B- -C A Place Filter en collar. :Q Press Holder on top cf filter it? fNorShown) AHO INCLUDED IJISTANTLY ESE'.VS CAf:CIX3 FLAYS . J -- Place on top of cup . . . Add ona measure full of ground coffee Fill to top with boiling water. Thafs Atl Therm to It! .... AKCMA ZZZr Hii . - SfSL- A r :. , j ft Honestly, H yotf kad AJjddia'i Lamp or bossed I tsme, you couldn't wish yourself a more heavenly if coffee than cip No, because Hector's lawyer, having once taken the risk of this juror's capabilities, couldn't back out after the verdict went against hira. The court said that would let him, in effect, "gamble on inaMlNIT.Thespeedsf PLUS the joy, the body, the flavor, tht aroma if REAL coffee. And for ss little! Order Now! MAG1CUP brews for yon "instant"! I jUSE HANDY ORDER BLANK it NOW - ONLY MiniNMakcr, Inc. IIS S. fnnt St. Phil. , P ll 52co v ' I I i, j Self-leveli- ; ' LL.Lli11 ' , - laminate fop with matching Vood-Groi- n Perma-Edg- e that won't chip, bubble or flake. brass-plate- d , s glides. c tapered legs. Gotdenpfcte finish Eig, deeply upholstered backs, with POLYFOAM cushioned seats, Wood-Gril- n . - , NEVER OFFERED BEFORE AT SUCH LOW PRICES..'. I ' ' CUAUTY FEATURES tI UTNISORCER ILAHr NAMf. S,S i Enclosed find $ for set (s) MAGICUP (g $2.00 each set, postpaid ADDRESS J h ' THE VERDICT ( . ii The Best RoadoKs Court v o A- S - A - J the verdict" (State laws vary.) (Cecyrirht lS2- - Gzh&tmI Tea-- ".i S3 W ;''--rK-:-:-:-:Y:- iturcj corp.) COFFEE (ANY GRIND) ure nt, 5,000. ? TRUE-BREWE- mar-resista- laminated plastic top. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. 36" x 48 i t man nimn Riissni Moufded Martex plastk seats. Sturdy tubular steel frames. Curved wire damage-proo- f grill backs. Table has sturdy steel legs with i ; I I you'd think home was a place to go oner mey get tired ot being nice to everyone. USA 9 ! WhUe (UPI) Nikita S. Khrushchev, was talking vaguely about a new "global rocket,": the United States was actually firing one. While i the Soviet premier was boasting that no one warning system could be devised against such a missile, American , engineers were working on a satellite designed to detect them the moment . . .. they are launched. The satellite is the Midas (Missile defense alarm system), which has been orbited experimentally but probably is several years '" . from perfection, The missile is the , Titan-2- , which leaped off a Cape Canaveral launching pad inj its maiden test Friday and streaked more than 5,000 miles down the Atlantic WASHINGTON- wrote to Officials of the one of named Romney, recently Best Dressed "Ten America's Men," and asked him to send one of his neckties to take the place . f of the traditional ribbon. He did. The necktie war cere moniously snipped in two at noon " today. But the story doesn't end there. Rambler Village officials insisted that: they had only "Borrowed" the necktie. It will be returned to him. And the man' heralded as the "Father of the compact car", may become the "father of the com- pact necktie." The wav soma neoDle octJ ' y :,. ;- f l;s LITTL1 i tUIX I to have, .UVUgU I his remarks so imprecise were ranges. ing :. Specifies Lacking that experts here could only It was such an speculate. He might even have rocket that Khrushchev seemed had s u b m a r I n e s or bomber-launche- d missiles in mind or armed satellites, which . at this junc ture are considered the hardest and least accurate means; of atjcP ; tack.' ,: 1 ;:? .''.'':. He aid "the new global rocket can fly around the' sphere of fhe world Jin any direction and deal a blow at any set target." He said that made America's far northern warning radar worthSALT LAKE. CITY (UPD-Offi-ciless. .'.jJ are considering the replaceThe potentiality of ment of the Delta High School missiles has long 'figured building because of dang e r o u s in American calculations. That Is structural defects , one reason for the Midas satellite This was the. report today from system. It is intended to scan the director of the" State Building the entire surface of the earth Board, Glen R. Swensonl. and" by means of heat detectors, He estimated that- - it would cost to knefw the instant' missi es are structural launcnea. $183,000 for minimal corrections, including complete replacement of the mechanical and heating system. Meantime, the director of school plant planning for the State School Office, Fred M. Fowler, said 20 per cent of the existing buildings in the Millard School District are S. Ll omni-direction- al United Press International 3, 1879. Subscription terms by carrier in Utah County: $1.75 , Per month . 6 months in advance $10.50 One year in advance $21.00 By mail anywhere In the United States or its possessions: $1.75 per month; $10.50 for six months in advance. Herald telephone numbers: , all departments call For ' I'll ; dealer. I j 'i tracks over vary-- ; I to be! claiming .. , ' ist ; ; - Nicaragua com pared the current situatjon there to the revolution of 1954, when Col. Carlos Castillo Armas over threw . President Jacobo Arbenz. , Rocket Detector Satellite ; S. L. I (Herald-UP- U,S. Engineers Working . terfeiting and passing counterfeit s, land-sea-a- ir desert late Friday land received range. SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) A the biggest and warmest recep . Salt Lake man was sentenced Fri- tion of her tour. The day to five years In federal pris.''coins. in J . on on each of two counts of coun- t" cast heard Vil-lano- va. blood-donor- like her sister, Princess Lee Rad ziwill, pressed her bands together in the traditional Indian greeting. Policemen, their feet nearly in the water, held .the crowds in cUeck as enthusiastic Indiansshouted: "Mrs. Kennedy Zindabad'Vdong live Mrs. Kennedy), Mrs. Kennedy, wearing after Fri day's strenuous schedule, 'slept late Saturday in the Maharana's likeslde palace and then canceled all engagements until Saturday's beat ridt on picturesque - lake Pichola. Mrs. Kennedy retired about 11 p.m. after a small private , din ner with the Maharana and two other guests. Lady Pamela Hicks, daughter of Earl Mountbatten, and her husband, David Hicks. A scheduled noon visit to . the Maharana's' small armory was canceled because the First Lady would get a chance to see it Saturday during a reception in her honor for 250 .persons including a number of Rajasthani! princes. The armory is just off the impressive ' chandellered reception : r room. Ji' relaxed more Saturday began a phase of Mrs. Kennedy's nine-da- y good-wi- ll visit to India. For the past five days, - the President's Vwtfe has visited shrines, made hurried j shopping trips, looked at cobras, jbaby ele phants, sick Indian children and eve gone horseback riding. Mrs. Kennedy arrived at this it is probwalled bastion city ably the best protected city in India with its thick walls and rolling hills in the middle of a vast j Violence Continues in Guatemala "Castro-Communis- at hen , Counterfeit Looking tired and pale, Mrs. Rockefeller, the former Mary Todhunter Clark, stepped off a TWA jet from San Francisco shortly before Friday midnight accompanied by her sons, Rodman, 30, and Steven, 26. Her brothers, John R. Clark and Percy H. Clark, Jr., both of VUlanova, met her at the airport. Mrs. Rockefeller, wearing a dark tweed coat and carrying a mink coat over one arm, walked past newsmen and entered an GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) a r my took over power airport car with her sons and The and bus lines here Friday brothers.; The car, which was plants its control of a night, extending driven onto the field, drove away to the front of the terminal, build- city all but paralyzed by an 'out- led ing where the party entered a break of student violence.! private car and spend off to The government appealed; at , Before his sister emerged from the same time for the plane, John Clark told news- saying blood banks at state hosmen "I am here to meet her and pitals are running low at the end of a week in which at least 21 that's all I'm going to say." ' his in bride persons have been killed and hunRockefeller, 53, met 1929 and after a storybook ro- dreds wounded in anti governmance, was married at a socialite ment rioting and revolt. wedding in St. Asaph's Episco(An official Guatemalan broad- pal Church in Bala, not far- from Villanova, June 23, 1930. The announcement that the mar- Guinea while collecting native riage was on the rocks came last artifacts. Rockefeller personally fall shortly before their son, directed a search, but Michael,! disappeared in New no trace was found of his son. " - Separate we all figured he would be able t o hear; most of what was going on. Now it turns out that we were too optimistic. He admits he missed some of the most important'evidence. In otherwords, the; blunt fact is that my client has not li&d & fsix "tricil IS HECTOR ENTITLED TO A NEW TRIAL? Weigh both sides. Then, mark your verdict: ; YES ( ) , NO' ( ) For the actual court decision, see verdict elsewhere on this page. raised. ' ' Tony Curtis - I r -- i . .... i HOLLYWOOD (UPI) By WILL BERNARD After Hector had been found miiltv if Kn of the jurors made an embarrassing admission. In n earing is Dad, ' ne said. "I just didn't catch iiy a lot of the testimony." PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Mrs. At once, Hector s lawyer demanded a new trial. HowNelson Rockefeller, 54, whose York New to the ever, the prosecutor disagreed, marriage j ' governor was severed yesterday "This man told us he was hard of hearing before the Reno court appear trial began." noted the Drosecutor. "TWh iAM in a ance, remained in seclusion today let him stay on the jury anyhow." in the exclusive main line sec1 hat's conceded Hector's lawyer. .VHowever; true; tion where she was born and 35-fo- ot Tb Readers Cour 31-ye-ar J. KILLEN By PATRICK Rockefellers Divorced Wife 1962 18, Utah County, Vcurs j Today I iU Wofnut high-pressu- re ng on-husk- y , |