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Show PRO VOr UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1962 VOL. 40,. NO. 22 n n n n W oman' Jel d- ft Unverified fe" frill Dea hooWng "? v Test Ban : :'::: '7,'-- - UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) Diplomats predicted today that a; resolution tailing for an unverified cut-oof nuclear tests by Jan. 1 would be approved by the United Nations despite opposition by. the United States and Britain. The Western nuclear powers late Friday countered the er resolution, which carries Russia's endorsement, with their dwn measure calling for an end to nuclear weapons tests "in all environments for all time" with "effective and prompt international verification." X' a urn & tuu vvuiyi cucuoi c uau on tests J the British and Ameri 1 cans proposed U.N. endorsement i of their (offer , previously made at the Geneva disarmament con ference I for prohibition of nu clear .explosions "in those environments where radioactive fall out is a matter, of international concern iand where nuclear weap James SHOOTING VICTIM ons tests can be detected and Arvel Wilkinson, 26, killed by a shotgun blast Friday night at identified without international in controls,) namely, the atmosphere, 'the home of his f, the oceans and space." Provo. Police said the Francise Wilkinson Keenan, 23, The United States and Britain admitted the shooting. regard jthe unverified new year's cut-oproposal as a mere renew al of the uncontrolled three-yea- r test moratorium which Russia broke with its series last; autumn. The opposing resolutions consti tuted a restatement of the con nuclear posi flicting east-wetions at Geneva. 30-pow-er - South Sandhill Keenan, Road, Orenv who, police said, V admitted the shooting. 9 980 to at called p.m. Police, W. 4th N.,- - Prosp, found Mr. Wilkinson a Utah State hospital escapee of two months ago lying ' wounded on the lawn. shotA blast from a gun fired at a distance of 10 feet had hit him in the abdomen;. Admitted to Utah Valley! Hospital at; 9:15 p.m., he died 15, 23, 1815 . f 12-gau- ge I ff 30-po- w : minutes later. Eye witnesses told Provo Police Chief Jesse lEvans that the single barrel shotgun had been Mrs. fired by the victim's Keenan. f The victim was pie of two reportedly dangerous patients who escaped frbm Utah State Hospital Aug. 15, after waylaying an . attendant at knife's point. Police Chief Evans Saturday related incidents leading up to the fatal shooting as follows: Mrs. Keenan's present husband, Charles Keenan, 36, Orem, whom she married last August, was preparing to go; ' hunting -- Friday evening. ' About dusk, Mrs. Keenan left their home in Orem to go to her By United Press International former Provo address to pick up Three hunters, including a Salt Lake City police department cap clothing for the children., . When his wife failed to return, tain, were dead Saturday as Utah's fall deer hunt got underway. Mr. Keenan phoned- her;.. Two of the men died of heart She told him she had ."comand one was accidentally attacks pany." 12-gau- ge ex-wif- e, ex-wi- . . fe ex-wi- ff Three Deaths Listed In Utah Hunt ; i st CoOncil Elects 112 Prelates " Concerned, Mr. Keenan and a shot ip ths back. Arlin Robb, 65, Hiawatha, Utah, neighbor, Merrill Blair, 1275 S. was found dead Saturday after, the Sandhill, drove to 980 W. 4th N., hunt started at dawri. He apparent Provo; and found Mrs. Keenan's there. ly died of a heart attack while sit An argument: ensued, and the ting in a Jeep 25 milets east of - ' 7 two Orem men took Mr. Wilkin Salina; son outside.. Captain Phillip E. Brinkerhoff, They told the chief of police head of the Salt Lake, Police Youth that they had been standing with Bureau, was kiUed Friday "in a their backs to the house, when hunting accident in a remote sec, Mr, Wilkinson, who was facing tion of Carbon County. A r San Diego, Calif., the; house, dropped. saw and turned Mrs. They hunter; Oswald It. ' Douct, was . Keenan holding the shotgun in found dead of an apparent heart '. her hands. attack Friday. He was found in his Chief Evans said Mrs. Keenan deeping bag on Chippean Ridge 15 said she was afraid of her former miles northwest of Blandirig. husband, who had visited the Brinkerhoff, 36, was s h o t Provo home on; Oct. 17, and 18 as through the heart when a compan ' well as Friday. ion slipped in the mud and! his She told police she feared to a rifle discharged. The bullet have him come to the Orem home struck the victim in the back. lest he harm the family. xne tooK place in a The Wilkinsons were married hunting misnap about 15 niiles camp when they eloped to Nevada, said southwest of here in the Star V v Chief Evans; Point area. It happened about They were divorced j in May, 5:30 p.m. and Brinkerhoff was 1957, according to Mrs. Keenan. on arrival at a , dead She had custody of their -- four Price 9 p.m. at hospital .children. Two Ogden hunters were woundMr. Wilkinson was committed to Utah State Hospital July ,14, ed in separate mishaps in Weber 1961, after Mrs. Keenan signed a County. Leslie Groesbeck, 39, Ogden recomplaint, contending . he har-- ceived a serious wound in,the rassed her, said. Chief Evans. while hunting, - in the leg right i he shooting Friday evening was investigated by Sgt. Jim Snow Basin area. Hcwas struck (See THREE DEATHS, Page 4) 4) (See WOMAN HELD, . . , i ' I " 30-3- - jpro-nounc- ed ? j Page W.VMWAV rnrwiifcnir i 1 ' To Key Posts -- The VATICAN ,CITY i(UPI) announced Ecumenical Council the names today of 1112 of the men who, will guide the deliberations of the greatest conclave in the his tory ' of the Roman Catholic American prelates. The names of those elected to . seven of the 10 commissions were released this morning. The vote count still was incomplete on the names' of those chosen for the other, three, commissions. , The gathering of more than j ment of the names with a message calling for peace in a world menaced by the threat of. thermonuclear war. Altogether, 160 prelates will be elected by the council members, with the.Fope appointing 80 more, eight to each commission. The American elected included, James; Cardinal Mclntyre of Los r. ;. Angeles.' C Pope John XXIlf changed existing regjilations to make a plurality rather Hhan la ' 50 per cent majority sufficient for election on the first ballot, which was held last Tuesday. ; A communique said this was done "so the council could proceed without delay" and in view of the fact all leading candidates had won a high vote, even though several were short of the 50 per cent V 'mark; Vf x The names of council fathers elected tq seven of the commissions were made public shortly af ter today's third and longest working session of f this largest conclave of the Roman Catholic Church. On the remaining three, ballot counting still was underway (See COUNCIL Page 4) . : I ' . - announce- 2,500 prelates followed -- .', k ... s j... - ,.t.rmu Soviets Launch Another Cosmos ;;.. i'f ,.;r ..).:: 3 Nations j i : t ! ' ! J - - 1 '7 4S earlier. State Lincoln Whitig hailed the Pana- manian move- !as "very gratifying." Panama, h added, "obviously .acted in the light of its own inter ests," but iri addition "its action is also tangible evidence of furth er cooperation by the government Of Panama with all the Free Na tions of the Western Hemi sphere." See Drastic Orders White said that neither Pana manian nor Liberian vessels had carried on any vast amount of Cuban trade In the past year.' But because they are the two most im po rtant JL' tla g of -- coriveniencnations in the world, their dec! sion meant hat a large potential supply fleet has been denied Cas- tro. 1 Meanwhile officials still were on the details of a dras working tic executive order President Ken nedy may issue early next week. The order would close all U.S. ports to ships of any country if any vessel under that country's flag hereafter carries arms or strategic material to Cuba. "Legal difficulties" have held up issuance of the order. Officials have pointed out the necessity for drawing upj the regulation with extreme care to a void uncertain I' pitfalls. There must be a way-t- o guard against isolated or accidental situations that might arise if, for example, a British tramp steam er were induced to trade with Cuba. If the, United States found out about this, . the new rezula tions would- force it to bar the Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary, among other British passenger liners, from New York. . - WEIRD STORM INCHES AWAY FROM COAST WILMINGTON, Hurricane -- PRESIDENT STRICKEN President- Kennedy, shown in Chicago Saturday as he left hotel for trip back to Washington, He cancelled the remainder- of seven-stat- e weekend campaign tour after his doctor announced he was . suffering, ifrom I aj "filight., respiratory infection." He was- expected, to, go right Telephoto) . shake off the infection (Herald-UP- I - to-be- - .' By MERRIMAN SMITH . UPI White House Reporter Presi WASHINGTON (UPI) dent Kennedy Saturday had to cut st election short his campaign' tour and returned to the White House to battle a fever ish cold. ' The illness was described as a "slight upper respiratory infec- coast-to-coa- ..' Berlin Crisis . Negotiations Held Unlikely WASHINGTON (UPI) - for negotiation. 4 Many Western diplomats believe that hope for averting a flaming new crisis, with jthe ever present danger of nuclear war, rests principally' on the possibility meetof a Kennedy-Khrushche- v ing in the next few weeks. American officials who should know will give odds that such a meeting takes, place- - before a crisis. But the two principles are approaching the matter of a face meeting with caution. It seems that neither wants to i appear too anxious. Kennedy told - Soviet - Foreign Minister. Andrei Gromyko at- - their (See BERLIN CRISIS Page 4) to-fa- ce PROVO OFFICER AT THE SCENE Provo Police Of--f icer Joe Shirk stands in the Approximate spot from which the fatal shot was fired in Saturday's shooting and indicates its direction. This picture was taken at the seen by Herald photographer Harold K. ftjonson. " L one-quart- er -- in-flig- ht ' RussCZaught Two lr in i es LONDON (UPI) The Soviet Union is caught between two fires in the dangerous border conflict ; between jlndia and Red China. It is an ally of Red China and friend ' of India. ". .; .'. "t; , The Kremlin holds the key to the dispite but so far has been playing i waitng game. Its sympathy appears , however, ta ibe tipped uf, favor of j India. It may not be" able to remain k on the ( fence. j Moscow's tiking , sides in th mounting, conflict could have tre- -' mendoual consequences: It could bring toian open rift with Peiping if Russia werd to back India. Al-the Kremlin risks heternatively, oss of ' support froni neutral ana uncommitted nations or wnicn ndia so often has been the spokesman. Can't Be Neutral Soviet 'affairs experts say Rus sia could not remain "neutral" in the conflict If, as seems threat. ened, it mushrboms into full scale "). V ", war. What has been he situation to U :i :. i date? Russia does hot like the friction between an ally and a friend with all its diangeroW implications for Kremlli policir. It expressed its displeasure some time ago when The Unit (See BUSS CAUGHT Page 4) .. j , - . ,' awoke Saturday morning. Kennedy arrived at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., by jet plane from Chicago at 1:23 p.m. EDT, and went immediately to the White House by helicopter. . The (UPI) interruption came after he had edHONOLULU States defied the odds and one-thicamof completed only . out a high- carried successfully paign swing.-alti ude nuclear test 62 mUes Doctors' Orders It was a combination of the cold over . Johnston Island Friday and rain along ' his campaign night. n In a series which route that persuaded the Presi- had seen in five one success only dent to follow doctors orders and before this tries night, Friday cancel his remaining engage- test seemed the most of unlikely disto out ments. Word was sent to all succeed. Hawai has been appointed Democrats in Milwau- hit by, squalls all day and a huge kee, St. Xouis, Albuquerque, Las storm was due across the whole Vegas and Seattle. . area. Pacific , h Central i Sunny, warm weather greated was much But it . apparently return to his on him the, capital. He walked from' his jet plane, calmer 62 miles up. After almost with a gray fedora in his hand, an nour- aeiay a specially duui saluted an Air Force guard and missile powered by a Sergeant engine roared" off through the V strolled to . the helicopter. - Enroute to the night. ; . plane from his stormy at exoccurred detonation The Chicago hotel, Kennedy appeared a.m. HST 10:30 (4:30 p.m. tired and rather glum. A light actly 8 Task Force a and Joint rain was falling, and he wore the EIT) con hat. This was unusual for him. spokesman immediately He appeared to shiver slightly firmed that : the test had Oeen a as he shrugged into a" raincoat success , and announced that an and climbed into a waiting car. other test would be held Oct. 23. The spokesman said that the While slight, th6 infection was the President's worst Illness since Pet. 23 test would be of a device he reinjured his back last. year. bigger than the 20 kiloton device He was troubled by a cold earlier exploded Friday night,, but small this month, ljut shook it off with er than the megaton device used the help of aspirin' and anti- in! the controversial July 8 blast. histamines and has campaigned , Air Force officials reported one every weekend of the month so narrow escape in connection with the test. . far. There was no immediate word "An Air Force KC-13- 5 jet tanker (See U.S. HIGH Page 4) (See KENNEDY, Page 4) j , . . UiSHigh Altitude Test ..'-J- . Held Success rd , I : Court Clears Election kvJ..: Georgia Negro ATLANTA Brookline, Mass.,' was in a rest room across the aisle from the service door which blew open. The lavatory door was pulled from its hinges, but two belted-i- n passengers in the rear of the plane1 immediately forced it back into place and held it there to protect Miss Lacy, according to passenger Charles Mack, Spring field, Mass.,' who also was sitting in the tail. " Remained In Lavatory Field here. Miss Lacy, on the advise of the The second stewardess on the flight, Katherine E. Lacy, 22, of (Se STEWARDESS, Page 4) death in the . Connecticut woodlands near the capital of Hartford. A" formal hearing' was tatively called for (9 a.m. EDT) today. None of the other 50 "passengers and crew members was ' injured door at the when the Convair rear of the somehow opened at 1,500 feet as Allegheny Airlines flight 928 was going in for a landing at Bradley her , top-hing- j ed twin-engin- ; ed j Superior KUPI) Court judge Durwpod Pye angrily tossed aside Saturday a feder al court injunction and paved the of the1 firstW way fori, the in.election . A.. id JNegro no aaoumern legislature since reconstruction days, Pye ruled hi an unusual Satur . 1 day hearing that votes .iri ) a Georgia senatorial election must be counted by district rather than by counties. He. said a federal injunction against a similar .deci. sion ef rlier this week was "null ... ana voia. y -- 4To Appeal Ruling l: federal tribunal, - which handed down the brder at the re- quest bf Georgia Atty. Gen:Eu-n-o jurisdiction gene Cook, had" in the case and 'the effect was for these three federal judges to sit union tie bench of Georgia where) they have no authority , to sit." pye said. . The order, ' originating from in the Oct. 16 senatorial primary in the state, specifically applied only to the Fulton (ktlanta ) County . election. But it was expected to have an senatorial y effect in othe A districts." Coojc said Pye;sl ruling ttuld be appealed to the State Supreme ' Court! v. If Pye is upheld: either Leroy Johnson, a Negro lawyer, pr T. M. Alexander, a Negro dentist, will go to th State Senate ' next January from the 38th ' District In FujUon County. Johnson kd in the. vote counting by district but would face Eid Barfield, a white man.j In an Oct. 23' runoff under countywide vote tabulations. Alexander was unopposed as the Re publican nominee for the general election. The ' vote-counti- Stewardess Falls 1500 Feet to jDeath; Pulled Out of Plane by Slipstream as Door Flies Open Nov You Know J tion" which sent the President's temperature one degree above normal.-- , He was hoarse . when he re- ported the meeting, described the protest as a "most urgent and serlpus protest." The Chinese Co mmunlsts charged that the Indian govern ment had refused to negotiate the dispute and had launched "mas si ve attacks on the Chinese fron tier guards n Chinese territory," the Communists News Agency said, t "Chhia has no choice but to rebuff their frenzied attacks resolutely' the protest note said. Heavy Casualties The Chinese said Indian troops (See COMMUNISTS Page 4) jinx-ridde- ' ' n Illness Forces Kennedy Stu mp jTbu r Short To Cut ... j st in-a- d Respiratory Infection President Kennedy and- Soviet Premier Ni-kita Khrushchev have traded grim new warnings oyer Berlin that N. C. (UPI) the "weirdest". appear to leave little if any room !Ella, disturbance on the Weather Bureau's books, inched away from the mainland today, flailing the weather with 100 m.p.h. winds iand kicking tip high seas from Florida to Rhode Island. The storm qualifies as the most unusual byj virtue of ' the fact .'jit has demonstrated an ability to re sist cool, dry air. Such air usual ly spells death fori a hurricane It also is unusually large, 1,000 miles across in some spots, r At 9 a.m. EDT Ella was cen tered near latitude 34.3 , north longitude 70.6 west,! or about 300 statute miles o C. It was mov Cape Hatteras, N. at 15 ing toward . the northeast ' miles an hour. Gales generated by the storm covered an area of more than 600 miles in diameter and there were winds of about 100 m.p.h. over a small area near the center. tropical I China News Agency, which Com- - up l.to 20,000 Chinese' talking peace. The Red Chinese foreign minis-- ; try summoned India's charged'affaires In Peiping, P. K. Banerjeu, to a pre dawn meeting today and registered a formal protest. The official Communist New j . attacking that in human Serious Situation . The situation was considered so serious that Indian Defense Minis ter y. K. Krishna Menon called a, briefing last night his second of the day to accuse the Chinese of attacking after long preparation land deliberate planning while spokesman Department : waves at two points of the border overwhelmed a number of Indian posts and advanced three to four miles inside India yesterday. .; . ' India announced j ' ' ; munilsts government and the Greek ship owners association had taken action . I' ,i protest.' r. was reported continuing this morning in the Fighting sectors along he frontier between Western Northern and the two Asian giants. . east-southea- j NEW DELHI, Sunday (UPI) India and Communist China accused each other today of massive attacks in an undeclared border war and the Chinese lodged an urgent Russia (UPI) launched the eleventh of its unsatmanned . Cosmos space-prob- e ellites today, the official .Soviet news agency Tass reported.1 Radio Moscow said Cosmos XI carried scientific apparatus "intended to continue the exploration of outer space" begun with the launching of 'Cosmos I on March 16. The new satellite was the second- BALLOON? LAUNCHED -Russia had launched in four POINT MUGU, Calif. (UPl) ' r.' :. days. Ari experimental high altitude WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. (UPI) Cosmos ; X was launched weather balloon carrying a six -- Airline stewardess Francoise de Wednesday. pound payload was successfully Moriere Evanished in a f'whoosh launched Friday by the Navy and of air" - Friday night , when she . ; headed south toward the Mexican was pulled 1,500 feet to her death r t border, f by the slipstream rushing past an 114said the Navy spokesmen accidentally opened service door foot-lon- g helium-filled By Unitd Prss International on balloon her airport-boun- d Vr Allegheny One of the highest cataracts In gained altitude at a rate of near Airliner. the world, the Angel Falls in ly 1,000 feet a minute. A para Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) Venezuela, descends 3,200 feet or chute Is to return the payload and Connecticut state investigaapproximately two and consisting of a transmitter,! radar tors I today .. sought the reason for times the height of the Em retiector ana telemetering units the freak mishap ? that ,French-bor- n pire State Building, according to to earth after the balloon reaches sent the the World Almanac about 130,000 feet, r stewardess hurtling screaming' to MOSCOW r i WASHINGTON The (UPI) State Department said Saturday the decision of Panama, Liberia and Greece to prevent their ships from trading with Cuba meant a "significant breakthrough" for President Kennedy's policy of isolating Fidel Castro's communist regime. Many ships are involved Vessels registered in Panama and Liberia constitute the huge " flags of convenience" fleet. , j The Panamanian decision was announced Thursday. The Liber-ia-n , ?,-- .v Communists U 20,000 Troops In Human Wove Style Ll Keep Ships From Cuba .;, h Smm lmM m(o)(Q7 I - ex-husba- nd . . "X'--T n ex-husba- ... UN Favors - By JOAN GEYER An Orem mother of four was in "protective custody" Saturday ' In the Utah County Jail with in- -, quest, scheduled to be held Monday into the death of her James Arvel Wilkinson, 26.- fatally .shot Friday evening. She w?.s Francise Dye Wilkinson , ng -- multi-count- - ' ; , I |