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Show - - - ' - - v. 9 hi V .TefepKone FR : v F or 3-50- ' '4 ' ' V - ,' '..:. 7 I' "i " ' . yv ' i .: J'-' - Ads.,' News! Circulation! WW. ' Fair ; v 59 . ,i Low i day's. - IAC " 1 lempert-- t4lay. Predicted ;Wfh tnle today In ProW.rt, 9(1 N. State.! ;V;..' ivr -- . FR 4th N.t: ' 1 4 Jk .,4-- ' Orem Office 757 1 50 Provo Office,!. - ' ; A ; to 6 ' 1 tonit 50 Ftl- - lo 54. ' hUrh was 85, low 44. 05 VOLi f40 NO 15 PPICE J15 CENTS ,VROVQ,,UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1962 omaa ravric i , t - By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Traffic accidents- killed Americans at a record pace-s- ix every hourf-o- n th. first day of" the long. Labor Day" holiday Saturday.; As the count shot well ijast the the nresi lent of the National afety Council said if the trend con- viiiuco ii new icwiu vi. uakJ1. win uc catauiioucu. Howar'd Pyle said the toll, was running 20, per cent higher than- lasi year, at this time and "The alarming increase - ' ' ' " ' ASH :.' ' : 4 m(, : i ' r : L f . 'Get-Toug- h' - Is due to one of the biggest traffic jams in the nation's history At' 11:30 p.m. EDT, a United Press International survey showed that 137 persbns had perished in ' traffic accidents. . The breakdown: . ' . 137 . Eraffic 10 ' In Berlin Boating j " Planes WASHINGTON (UPI) "U. S. forces in the Caribbean area were under order today to shoot back if they are V again attacked in international waters off Cuba.' The instruction! were issued by the White House in"he aftermath of an incident Thursday in which a V. S. naval plane was fired (oh 15 miles north of Cuba-In' Havana, Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, denied today that Cuban vessels attacked1 the plane. Castro, speakinff ! get-tou- gh . 1 0 troops "to be ready to die", if they attack Cuba." . (Havana radio broadcast i in official statement from Castro calling the Teport "absolutely filse.M It continued: "It is a purely fabricated incident, according to a method long in use in Yankee '". , policy.") 16 Miscellaneous ' ' 164 ; Total Minnesota hed the nation with 10r traffic deaths. One of. those killed in Minnesota was E. Ray Cory, 70,'presi-- , dent of the Minnesota Automobile Association. r In a mishap, a young' airman fell 180 feet to his death while attempting", to put a Confederate Flag atop an abandoned radio tower near, Panama,' Fla. The victim was Tony Reed, 21, Decatur, Ala., who was nearby. Tyndall Air Force Base. Pyle stressed the only way to meet f,the "extra danger of holiday traffic is increased care on the part of the nation's drivers." A total of 2C persons were killed in just five accidents. " BERLIN (UPp Mayor "Villy Brandt told West Berliners Sat- the Western Allies, 'urday night wilt fight- - to defend their isolated city'.. but not to knock down he wall that splits it. ; : special; statement i, The by , . jiriti-refug- ! ee Brandt 'appeared ; aimed at preparing West Berlin residents for new? Russian unilateral acts to upset agreements on the citysuch as a possible ban on Western military patrols in Four-Pow- er r EastBerlin. It.was believed here that Allied. j . automobiles might 'b6 barred soon from East Berlin anil the; Western Allies probably would confine, themselves to protests military when they are 'banned. -- - non-traff- ic sta-tioned- BERLIN (UPI) The French The worst accidents included: have stationed an army medical team in place of an American '"Four, persons were killed Berlin bor- when twp cars and a truck. col. unit on the. East-Weder to aid .refugees shot down in lided on the Indian Reservation (See TRAFFIC DEATHS Page 4) East Berlin.' f , - The switch was made- at the 'Friedrichstrasse: Crossing in! line with assumption i of the rotating chairmanship "of the Western allied Kommandatura, West Berlins military counciL on the "first day of the month. The Western.' allies ' have had medical ccrpsmbn at the border since - shortly after the Commu-xilst- s shot Peter Fechter as he tried to flee East Berlin. The refugee died on the East- ern side' anti-refug- J ee of.-th- e Communist-buil- t wall because nobody went to his aid. i ' The East German j j Communisty DeutschlandrSiat-urdaNeues 'newspaper reiterated the Communist 'demand "that a German peace "treaty be signed ending Wes'ten rights In Berlin.' f Observing the 23rd anniversary of the outbreak of World War II, the newspaper' charged that, the ' same German militarists who. invaded Poland Aug. 31;. 1939, (are plotting with the aid' of. the North Atlantic, Treaty Organization" to use wist Berlin as a base for a new..Vir. - Suspect Held In Kidnaping OfGfrlin '54 " J , : ' CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPD ce have disclosed that they, are ' questioning a suspect in connection with the widely publicized of little 'Judith Ann Roberts in Miami eight years ago. kidnap-slayin- g j ! f Cache Quake Damaq May fors in pie Caribbean area were to shoot ack if they are again attacked in Internati6nal waters off Cuba. The plane is in the background. (Herald-UP- I jrelephoto). ! force Base. U.(S. AMERICAN CREW FIRED ofthe U;S. fired'-oS2F was Tracker plane-- that by two Navy's gunboats off .the coast of Cuba, Thursday, believed to be Cuban,f shown as they arrived at the Andrews Air w ik'nder orders''" 1 I r S6Vef Venus Shot Fizzled lated that it might have-bee- n attempt to send' a space sprobe toward Venus. , The scientists said four fragments of a" Russian rocket were LOGAN (UPI) Damage esti- tracked in a ' slow orbit ' around mates in' Thursday's earthquake continued to mount today as resi- the Earth. They said the fragdents of- - three northern Utah ments were so low thai; the attowns began cleaning up debris tempt had to be a. failure, no their damaged matter what its objective. and, inspecting One of the pieces of space homes and businesses. . has reentered the trash Damage was expected to exceed Earth'salready and disapatmosphere the $300,000 mark in the temblor, to .ash burned ' apparently peared, which struck at 6:36", a.m) Although it; was felt in .several 'qher states,' mainly southern Idaho and western Wyoming, the earthquake concentrated 'most of its damage in Logan, Richmond and Lewiston.The quake was centered about 10 miles northwest e of Logan. AdBusiness Friday theSStnall ministration anounced that it PASADENA,; Calif. (UPI)' was designating Cache County a Mariner-- 2 neared the- - inillionmile disaster area as a result of the - .' , quake damage. The agency's declaration quali-- f ' i e s home owners, businesses, "churches and charitable institutions whose property was damaged or destroyed for SBA reconstruction or rehabilitation loans at 3 per cent interest. In Richmond, city officials announced that at least nine homes would have to be rebuilt. NEW YORK - (UPD An unemployed feuitar player killed two Herald TV Section persons Friday night and ignited a wave of terrorf through the carPreview Autumn nival atmosphere of Brooklyn's Coney j Island where crowds of Television Horizon holiday visitors were sent scream, What's coming up on teleing for cover. , vision this fall? .0 j The enraged1 gunman killed a You can get a preview of woman and a patrolman and then the new autumn slate in Mostaged a running . battle with police before he "was riddled with nday's Daily Herald TV Sec; tion. bullets by a courageous patrolMost space in the . section man, whoj donned an armored vest will' be devoted to articles and strode into the path of the and pictures scanning the .' killer's gunfire. video horizon for the upcomtwo other Six persons, including ing season. Watch " for your policemen," were wounded in the copy. wild volljey of shots which filled (See THREE SLAIN Page 4) . . -- U.S. Mariner Million-Mil- three Slain New Gun Battle In To - -- . - -- r (UPI) - County detec- tive flew here to question Robert Franklin Jones, 47, who was ar-rested for stealing women s linge-- : lie from clotheslines. . Charlotte Detective Capt. O. A. Crenshaw said that during the questioning of Jones in connection Swith the clothing thefts he confessed having sexual relations .with a child - in Miami. IV-J Authorities said, however, they were , not sure Jones' confession had a bearing on the Roberts case. They said parts of Jones story did not jibe with official. file scn the slaying of the seven-year- . . v The Miami police., officer who 111' (Miami) County 'Sky Shield -f- lew here, Dade Chief oihDefectives T. A. Buchan an, said he could not determine whether Jones was connected with. the Roberts" case , untE after he 1 talked with him. WAsWGTON (UPD If 'you're 3 had , Judith Ann was xabducted ! from to take an airplane trip the apartment of herx grandpar-- T planning 2 p.m.' and 7:30 betwen Sunday ents, whom she v. was visiting, on p.m. EST don't. t the night "of July 6, 1954.XX airliners All . 1,800 scheduled 1 She had been strangled and sex- - and more than 75,000 private and ually attacked. business aircraft 'will be grounded A Dade (Miami) 1 . " -- . . old-chil- d. been unable to find any Russian object headed for Venus5, Mars tor any other planet. This discount ed, . they said, any possibility that -thte the "no indicationrohi objects orbltiflg" fragments' were "parts the of the in orbit" what of, a vehicle which had sent a purpose shot- was But they said it was proDe towara some otner pianec. "highly reasonable" that it was They said there was ho doubt a Venus shot because of the very that if the Russians had attempt-e- c a Venus probe iKhad failed. narrow "time window" .available v for su6h attempts. jThere was. no way to tell from In space ' terminology,! space electronic tracking, they said, the window means the period of time precise size or character of the in which two bodies are in the frjagments. But one of them ap- correct relation to each other to fpeared to be large enough for permit space shots from one to telescopic observation- and. might be a rocket casing.the other. have said The scientists they SAmerican scientists had"': said earlier that Russia might try to fij-a Venus probe to outrace the launched Mariner-- 2 rocket. us. r The Mariner is now one million miles deep nearly into space on "Tfs journey to the tt planet. Faces, Crucial Test' But on Monday . the Mariner mark Saturday oh its rflight to de- - faces a crucial change of course termine what lies beneath the ndaneuver that .will decide, whethheavy cloud layer that perpetually er it' will be able to take a "close look at Venus." enshrouds the planet, Venus. The three remaining fragments As ihe spacecraft approached its ' first historic milestone, space of ; the Russian space Vehicle are scientists reported, they believed ia relatively unstable orbits and Union had tried Jbut are expected to have only a' short the Soviet ' failed to beat - the United States life. Officials of the National Aerto the vicinity of the mysterious onautics and Space Administration (NASA) predicted that they planet. A spokesman ?4or the National Would burn" up "in a matter of ; Aeronautics and Space Adminis- day? or weeks." there officials said However, tration (NASA) said in. Washington Friday night American; track- was no firm evidence that the ers discovered four fragments of fragments were the remains of a the Soviet space vehicle, in orbit Russian probe to Venus around the earth.. He1 said it was believed to have been a vain at' tempt last Saturday to send a space probe toward Venus. , Earlier, space scientists , said Russia might well be expected to send up a probe which with more powerful booster capacitymight outrace. this country ; Mariner-2- . ALGIERS Troops (UPI) The spectacular success of. the val tolleftwing. strongman Ah MarineiLspacecraft . thus med Ben Bella unleashed attacks' far has led scientisTstobe ex against A rival guerrilla forces tremely; optimistic that a cruci holding the Algiers area at twocourse maneuver inots south of the cabital Saturchange - of the probe with- dayi a communique broadcast ;bV will send Monday , in 10,000 miles of the Algiers radio said Saturday night. Venus in December. However, strong civilian opposi tion to fighting between the rival lactions. appeared .to have les- ened i the possibility of all-oivil war. Even as the reports of f for that ' j Now You Know By United Press International The praying mantis, a vora- elous, predatory insect, "washes its face ilike a cat after every meal, according to the National . . five-and-a-h- hour alf per- iod Sunday for "Sky Shield III" a "massive exercise to test the North, American air defense 'sys- tem. x . N This mid-LabDay holiday weekend was. picked deliberately or as causinfthe least , .inconven- ience to the traveling public. But Sky Shield still will , ground about -- - ; -- I ' . . . e Ned rs 447-pou- nd Distance ciioud-covere- . -- -- Troops Clash In Algiers - - 447-pou- nd cloud-shroud- ed I , ' . i , , j co-pil- ot; . -- - U.S. es by the heat ot friction, they scientist said Saturday they had said. The othersalso are expectdefinite evidence that a Russian ed to be i short-live- d jn space. The scientists said they had space shot- failed and they 'specu- Top $500,000 . ; 6N4-The-cre- WASHINGTON ') ed . .da-tie- s, -- the ' French' two-engin- . st ; Involved was a. S2F White which the "tracker" plane llbuse said was on a routine t ' ttainuig mission. , fit vhs no shit. But ilwas learned tlat the thre crewmen "were ' cose enough to the., Cuban '.ships'',! f . t see the flashes from the mar- - j announce- zies and hear Ihe shells explode. The House White ment, issued date Friday, sa d the fU.S. patrol planes . generally ;. unarmed U.S. plane was attacked have orders to take a , look 'at by "two small naval vessels be- ships off the American coast to : lieved to be Cuban." It added : identify them. Neither the White j tie 't in fu incident' "I any such ifouse nor the Defense Depart-- ! ture where U.S. aircraft or naval raent would, say whether, this was vessels are fired upon in or over the case with this particular ' ; waters 'while -- Mn flight. international .4 of their The crew, all naval reservists' peaceful performance, the United States! armed on temporary active dutyiivas forces will employ aU "means nec- lit. David F. Fitzgerald, of Minessary for , their own protection neapolis, Minn., the pilot; 1L and , will assure their full use of Richard C. West, of Washington, "such waters." and chief aviation r).C, "Had Better Not Fire'j man Marshall A". Pick-el- t, ordnance '.In-- ' the words of presidential District Heights, Md., the ra- Press, Secretary Pierre Salinger, 4iai operator. this meant "they (the Cubans) f j They were attached to an anti had better not fire" on them." (See WHITE HOUSE Page 4) J : , ; 'l White House Sends Out Instructions; s 100-mar- k. Expect New Russ Moves ." airline flights,at a cost of-- i network that guards the entire North American- land and .1 sea about $1 million to, the carriers, area above the Mexican border. World, Trans United, American, 1,700 - . Western,. Southern, Northwest, and Los Angeles airways are holding "open. ' house" at various airports. The publichas been invited; to' inspect planes, and special exhibits a gimmick which during ' last year'WSky Shield drew hundreds of thousands' of . M visitors to airports'. The defense exercise 'Itself ils similar to the previous Sky Shields.? Hundreds of jet bombers will attempt ' to penetrate; .the radar, interceptor and missile . , - ) This year's Sky Shield, however, is considerably shorter- - than the 1962 exercise which ran 12 hours and - cost the airlines ; more than $4; million in lost revenue. t Grounding of commercial and private 'flights was made official in a special regulation issued by Federal Aviation' Administrator Najeeb E. ' Halaby. But the ; Federal Aviation .. Agency will Issue special, clearances to any civil deemed flight necessary for , i . . health or safety reasons. ;''v' ut the two clashes reached Algiers pere.was doubt that the conflict would spread and negotiations were ' reported" undr way between the feuding factions. The ;. communique issued by Wiliaya 4, the military district Controlling 'Algiers, said the fighting broke out at Boghari, 84 miles south of Algiers, and at Ain Adjillah, 95 miles y south of the jcapital. The communique" said' the Ben Bella forces launched the two attacks and added that the fighting was continuing. v A police spokesman reached by from Boghari reported telephone r bursts; of machlnegun and rifle fire were crackling in the area Saturday nights I - Southe rners May Dfecide Steel Case WASHINGTON ern South(UPD will probably members determine whether diciary Committee '. the-Senat- Ju- e wfll' . recom- mend contempt citations against four leading steek companies and : ' their officials. A judiciary subcommittee Friday voted 5to 2 to press for legal- action against the firms for their "wilful" defiance: of a congressional investigation. ,"', If the full committee" endorses the recommendation,- it is considered likely that the Senate will ask the attorney general to file a suit in the federal courts. The antitrust subcommittee, headed by Sen. Estes Kefau-ve- r, voted in favor of asking the Senate to Hold the firms in" contempt of . Congress after their, officials defied sub poenas' ordering them to " appear ' I before the panel. '' To . Asked Appear The executives had been asked to appear to . explain why they were refusing to supply the subcommittee with data on their steel pricing policies. Kefauver said it was the first time he had ever bad a witness refuse to even appear, before one of his investigations. He said that if the' steel officials did not want to answer questions, they could either j refuse to reply or take the . Fifth Amendment. "But we are entitled at least to have their appearance . . . or see what excuses they had," he said. The subcommittee, resolution cited the "wilful conduct" of the Bethlehem, . Armco, Rational and Republic Steel companies ' and certain of their officials. Party Line Vote ,, vote was The subcommittee (See SOUTHERNERS Page 4) , - . n., Belief Gr ws r.Soviets Landed oops In: Cuba Press International By United Cuban leaders and a U.S. senator have voiced ex treme disagreement, with ' President Kennedy's declaration hat no Soviet troops have landed in Cuba, 4. . ' The reports (hat " R u s s i a n troops" have arrived in Havana, bringing with j them heav: r and iong-rang- e weapons, and possibly rockets, have increased ii frequency and insistence in Tecent weeks. The sharpened with the attack on an American Navy plane Thursday by tv o vessels believed tO.be Cuban.. . Kennedy has maintained that Soviet "technicians" have only been landed in Cuba, and not unsoliformed; or r diers. ; Kenney,' at his news conference Wednesday; said,- - "there certainly are'' 'technicians vtheire- (in Cuba). There may be military technicians." However, the President emphasized that "on the question of .troops, as it's generally understood, we do not , have evidence that there are . Russian troops there." Expressed Surprise The Chief Executive said this country has "no information" about reports that the Cuban Communist aregime had received He1 ex- missiles, told that pressed 'surprise when State Department officials have previously indicated that such missiles had been sent Fidel Castro's government. Sen. Kenneth . B. Keating, differed in the Senate Friwith Kennedy'sj statement.. day J: "I am reliably ; informed between Aug. a and Aug. i5, at the, Cuban' port of MarieltylO to .Anti-Castr- o t ' ' m reports ' f ' v unit-designat- ,'.' ' Publisher John S. Knight called on President Kennedy Saturday night to meet the Russian buildup of military equipment and "technicians" in force if force Is required." Knight," publisher of the Miami Herald and , other Knight newspapers, devoted most of his Sunday MIAMI (UPD Cub-"wit- ! torial- "Publisher's Notebook" editolumn to the Cuban situa- tion. He : said he long ago had opposed 4the idea 'that Cuban Premier tidel Castro, should be thrown out simply because; we : did not approve of him. . : . "But today's situation is totally different," Knight wrote. 4"He (Castro) is a Communist dictator who would spread that insidious ideology throughout Latin :, America. . been surrounded by construction 0f a high cjnder block wall. "The Soviet ships unloaded, 1,200'. troops. I call these men wpops, not .technicians They were wear- ing Soviet fatigue, uniforms." j Keiting also said five ' torpedo " boats also were unloaded and 'fare ' now moored" neaTby. "There is .every indication thatf fiese disembarked at the same' lime," he '.'added..1., " " anti-aircra- ft R-N.- '''-- ; ';' " ": ' ' j j M Taken He said they could not "reason-' (See BELIEF GROWS Page 4) No Action -- ed ; "'' " large Soviet vessels anchored! the former? Marante docks. The dock area previously had 12 at - U. S. to Meet Knight Urges 4' Force With Force in Cuba is'-- 1 "'- - JFICTakes 8 - ' ; Family On fifacht Cruise R.I. (UPI) NEWPORT, President Kennedy took his wife; Jacqueline, and members of thi ' first lady's family, on a .cruise Saturday which turned Into a naval inspection tour "of Narra- - ; igansett Bay. . '' the presidential Sailing aboard yacnt, tne. loney rnz, jor; an hour and a half in ihe afternoon. Kennedy took a close Interested, llbok at the destroyers docked at the Newport Naval Station. The Honey Fitz pulled in close to the destroyers. The chief executive also pointed out to thejpar-- v ty on the leisurely cruise the Melville' .ffaval Depot where he .had -- trained as boat commander P-- T in World War II. The yacht clocked at Hammer- smith Farmlat'3' p.m. EDT. The, Presidept add the first lady remained aboard chatting with the others for about 10 minutes.1 The Kennedys then got into a white . convertible and the President iro to the stately; mansion j foreign on thi farm where they are its system to the WesteraUemis- uie wcckuu mui mcu phere. This isa flagrant violation Lwo children.' of the Monroe Doctrinei . and The Honey, Fitz sailed from the should be dealt with as such."" fashionable farm at 1:25 p.m., At his' last news conference, after Kennedy had returned from Knight said, the President voiced swimming at, exclusive Bailey's: fears that U. S. Intervention in Beachl ' 'f. Cuba at this time t ould i cause Russian .Premier Nikita Khrusb chev .'to get 'nasty over Berlin." "B u t nothwithstandingl Mr. HERALD INDEX f 4. W. ;4 Kennedy' dilemma, the Cuban I question must be met with force Central Utah News 3, 4, t; 12. if force is required. Classified ;..m. ...-v- i 6A,; 7A 11 ."People will not long junder- - Comics .li stand. why U. S. "troops are sent Editorial 10' to root - out Comtnunist 'Guer- National, World News r.ZJ. 2 rillas in South Vietnam when we Obituaries' ............; 4 do nothing to prevent the Rus . Society sians from taking over Cuba," Sports, S, , 7, Knight said, f He . has collaborated .with a drove power-ussia-tojxt- end r j , j , : ! ':. 1A-3- ' ' A i 4 ' .. |