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Show Telephone FR 3-50- Snow Today For Ads., News, Circulation: ' "I i ' : i Provo Office, ISO ... Con- - lata today. Partial clearing; M ' : FR 39 ..AC 05 W. 4th N. Orem Office 757 N. State i if 50 I:- - tinned cold and locally windy. Tilth today 33 to 45j Low in the 20s. PRICE. 15 CENTS PROVO. UTAH COUNTYUTAH. SUNDAY, MARCH; 17, 1963 VOL. 40, NO. 43 Tuesday 7 A.M.' to 8 P.M. '!. U.S. Rapsj o BaiSldf ed Planes Alaska Over Million .5 i l?(o3ss WASHINGTON R n it 'W aucari " if Oil OJ What is the Provo Board of Qualified voters who are also property taxpayers will go to the Education asking and why? polls in Provo Tuesday to decide The board is seeking $2,500,000, if the' Provo School District will to be paid over 15 years, for new ge its requested $2,500,000 bond school construction which it says issue-fo- r new school construction. is needed now to relieve ah alPolls will be open from 7 a.m. ready t overcrowded school sys to 8 p.m. at five voting places, tem and provide for the forsee-abl- e s, the Provost, Franklin, future. If the bond issue carJoaquin and Wasatch ries it will: Builc! a new elementary-of which is in one school each Schools, of about 14 classof the city's five municipal rooms in northeast Provo: build wards. Voting will be by munici- another wing oipll classrooms pal wards, and citizens may refer and a shop to the Provo High to ja map of these wards on page School; build another wing of 20-of today's Herald. From this seven classrooms and a gym to map, and from the school board's uie rrovost Elementary bcnooi; legal advertisement on Page 11 build another wing on the Dixon of jtoday's Herald, you should be Junior High School to include a able to ascertain where you vote combination gyrh - auditorium, on Tuesday. , nine classrooms! library, lunch As-- means of informing qualified facilities, storage and study voters just what the school bond rooms. The Dion construction election is "all about, the Herald would match similar enlargement presents the following questions now being completed at the Far- that may arise, and the answers: rer Junior High School . Timp-anbgo- A Who is eligible: to vote? Briefly stated, all qualified voters who are alsio property taxpayers. This me ins you must be qualified to vote from the stand point of residence requirements, age and other regular voting rules. And, you must have paid property taxes within Provo City within the past 12 months preceding Tuesday's election. If you are not a property taxpayer, you cannot vote. (This is in, accordance with Utah law on voted bonds or loans whjch must be repaid from Aax revenues.) Attorney Generarf A. Pratt Kesler has ruled that payment of any property taxes qualities you to vote, either 'real" or 'personal" property. "Real" property is defined as land, or permanent improvements such as buildings on land. "Personal" property is generally North Utah Gets Heavy Snowstorm fey United Press International Utah dug out Saturday from un . der the heaviest snowfall of the reason but more snow was reported on its way to the Beehive state. The storm, .which hit northern Utah early Friday, moved east ward after dumping heavy am- ounts of snow and sending the other property, uch as a motor mercury plunging to levels in many parts of the state. vehicle, household furnishings' or (The VS. Weather Bureau re- other personal property that is j ported that the latewinter storm taxable. What do officials mean school left, 81 hundredths of an inch of when they say they can pay back precipitation at the Salt Lake arthe borrowed $2,500,000 without ea, heaviest precipitation taxes? raising this winter. What they are saying is this, ; The 11 deto mercury dropped taxes will not be raised school grees in Salt Lake City early Sat- as a result of the bond issue. urday and the Weather Bureau And are Referring only to they described it as the lowest tem-l-n the of the and total outlay dapital the winter." debt service leves,' which togethjThe storm left roads slick and er amount to 1609 mills. kept law enforcement officers This is only part of the total busy Investigating automobile ac- levy which Provoan's paid last cidents and aiding injured and year for school purposes. All told stranded motorists. in 1962, Provoanjs paid 51.46 mills An 'Sandy boy was for school purposes out of their killed Friday when he was struck total 1962 tax bjll of 79.46 mills. by a car at an intersection 4n Of this 51.46 mills for school tax south Salt Lake County. Investi- es, 7.1 mills w ere paid to the gating officers said snow was fall- separate state school levy, and ing at the time and visibility was the remaining 44.36 mills was levpoor. ied locally by he Provo School t Several sections of Salt Lake District. Of the 44.36, the City were without telephone serleeway election levy accountvice, for a, time Friday night as ed for 5.25 milljs. Since this latthe heavy snow toppled telephone ter was ruled invalid by the state lines supreme court fit cannot be reFive inches of snow fell in the peated in the 163 levy. Salt Lake Valley, while., amounts So, when school officials refer in the nearby Wasatch Mountains to taxes which will not be raised! ranged from six inches to more as a result of the bond issue, than a foot. (See SCHOOL BOND Page 4) sub-freezi- f (UPI) Two Soviet reconnaissance planes violated U. S. territory over f Alaska Friday but flew back to Russia when American jet fighters were sent up after them, it was disclosed Saturday. U.S. interceptor planes took off after the intrducers, the Pentagon said, but no shots and no jdefense missiles were fired. The Soviet planes were seen on radar but not visually. The charge was contained in a protest delivered Saturday to the Soviet Foreign Ministry in Moscow Foy D. by U.S. Ambassador j Kohler. A state department spokesman called it "the first clearly established incident of a Soviet overflight of the United States." The Defense Department has Istrongly denied several recent reports that foreign planes- flew over the south eastern part of the United States. The Defense Department said the Soviet craft were reconnaissance planes and penetrated 30 miles into U.S. territory. U.S. interceptors from Alaskan defense bases pursued the Soviet planes (See U.S. RAPS Page 4) ng 24-ho- ur j so-call- U.S. Brazil VMM ' , ' IA - jL .s ; . hi " , - ; I The story is on page onj " - , the biggest financial increase in the state's history to public schools a total program of :$94.5 million in state money a ear. On the last day the legislature aiso gave mm a giam ouuuing Program using some borrowinr autnonzauon wmcn some preaicir ea wouip gei vetoea. ! Additional Burden For the taxpayers the lawmak- ers also voted an additional den. A; one-ha- lf per cent sales . tax increase for six years with the money earmarked for build- ing got "final approval of the ate. A four-ceincrease in the tax,; plus a 25 per cent cigarette tax onj other tobacco products was also approved, The third big program approved on the final day wts. a $7.1j mil lion state fund for aiding scnool d district which are to buiidjmore classrooms. Anje figure wis $6.1 million until the House,j assured the money was there, voted an extra $1 million from the state treasury. The Senate coneured on a 19-- 2 vote. To get the school finance bill passed j finally in the Senate and nt i Left in the hands of Gov. George D. Clyde were bills for , PLANE SMASHED BUT ALL HANDS SAFE! Crumpled debris lies in backyard of home near Milliiigrton, Term. All 33 persons aboard Navy transport as crashed rainstorm. serious aircraft without during injury escaped plane (. Herald-UTeiepnoto) twin-engi- All 33 Plane Occupants Survive Winter Blizzard Howls Out Of Rocky Mountains crackling." By United Press International A late winter blizzard howled out of the Rocky Mountains Saturday, sweeping winds across Colorado and Wyoming, and hurling the worst storm of the season into western South Dakota and the Nebraska pan- "I got up and looked out of the window and saw the plane in the back yard," he said, A neighbor, Mrs. Mary Crew, was peeling onions in the kitchen sink. "The lights went out and I saw a big puff of fire," she said "I called to my husband that He something had happened. of out to me back at get yelled handle. house." Ahead of the fast moving the The crash happened as the pilot, storm, tornadoes and high winds (See CRASH Page 4) wrought damage in Iowa, Illi nois, Missouri and Kansas and fanned prairie fires in Kansas. A A, .1 Search for Bolivian Airl i ner, 41 Abo$td j BIDDERS ON CLEARFIELD PLEDGE AID CLEARFIELD (UPI) Low bidder on the Clearfield Naval Supply Depot has promised to as sist the high bidder in developing the depot into a successful com mercial enterprise. A corporation formed by the Clearfield Naval Supply Depot Public Action, Committee Friday submitted lowest of two bids opened in Denver on the entire de " pot. Jesse D. Barlow, president of the committee, promised , the group will lend any assistance it can to the successful bidder, K. W Schumacher, who bid on nine of the 10 parcels. Schumacher represents Oakland, Calif, inter j ests. Barlow said the Public Action Committee believes the area can become the most promising and successful industrial park in the north end of the state. j Now You Know By United Press International St. Patrick, a Briton and the sot. of a Roman government of ficial, was sent as a bishop to Ireland in 432, according to the Encyclopedia Britannic. j Search Finds Girl's Bodv In Avalanche The froz OURAY, Colo. (UPI) Amelia Hud en body of son, buried alive 13 days ago in a mountain avalanche, was recovered by exhausted searchers Saturday beneath southwest Colorado's Red Mountain Pass, The search, went on for her 11 year-ol- d sister, Pauline. ; The two girls were hurled out of their father's car, which was parked alongside a highway when the snowslide Jhitj Sunday morning, March 3. Their fa her, Rev. Marvin Hudson, 39, a Ouray Congregational minister, was putting cnains on the car at the time. His body was found last Sunday. Ironically, the! car was under only two feet of snow. But it was nearly 600 , feet from where the slide hit, and the searching team had to orobe patiently along the slopes of the Uncompaghre River Canyon. "It was in shreds," a man at the scene said. "It was just like they'd shredded it. The top was gone The doors were gone. The engine was gone. Amelia's body was found lying face own beneath the right front wheel of the car about an hour after Duane Kenny first uncovered the right rear fender. Kenny, Colorado Highway Department em ploye from Duirango, Colo., was operating one of two bulldozers in in the search operation. . j The Dp6 Lloyd Aereo Boliviano Airlines was en route from Arica to the Bolivian capital of La Pa, across the rugged Andes Moun- ains. It was scheduled to land in La Paz at 1:27 EST Friday. Two Americans The two Americans aboard were tentatively identified as Leon A. Bornstein (9260 Bay Harbor Ter race ), Miami, Fla., who report edly owned a cotton gin in La Paz, and Robert MacCormack, whose hometown was not known A note of mystery was injected when a Panagra airliner report ed it sighted the DC6 Friday fly ing due west toward the Pacific Ocean instead of on its scheduled northeasterly route to La Paz. The Panagra pilot reported that the DC6 failed to respond to radio messages. Aviation officials here and in Santiago were at a loss to i explain the pilot's story. In Dispute SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) South- ern racmc nauroaa j ana me Brotherhood of Rafiw4y Clerks agreed to a "full and ment of their five year dispute over automation Saturday night. TTnHrinir tertral mediator Fran ci" A. O'Neill, who has worked with negotiators since Feb. 6, said they signed a contract I on 175 of ae issues: A second document to b2 sent to President Kennedy was an agreement to arbitrate five is- sues which thev cannot! settle. O'Neill called the settlement 1 1 1 mAlion-fa-yea- I "unimiA in railrAflH historv." It wac th first timp that a contract has provided for "a system of nar fiirjil attrition without anv fxceu : j , . The issue of what toT do about. j P""1 siuus I ? tf u assure an adjournment each party had to give a little. The Demo crats vent along with the 'school program for an average $1,100 in additional spending per distribu-tion unit after seeing ine .Dig, H building bill pass. The? school problem was the topic pf conversation during the entire- day both off and on the floor. cA resolution passed by the House of Delegates of the Utah Education Association breaking off all contract negotiation causl ; ed even more stir. Tied into the new school P ror gram is a new $2.7 Increase in autnorizea spending j on me local level. orrauia , , , uasic. r is o.eou per ais- asic lormuia 11 rf fl H. I.Il. ai 4io 01 A u uie uisirici cannot raise uiat 2w1?..mmth.Su J?0,?t - ttrcpnt T men displaced automated r"1- r Dy laws Southern equipment has nagged The, supplemental program is Pacific and the brotherhood for $600 bn a four-mi- ll levy and a five years. $137 or four of board leeway The union has wanted the com mills,; whichever Is greater, On pany to retrain such men for new jobs within the SP has maintained such a plan basIc: wculd create unnecessary jobs and Five Democrats voted against retard progress. Via eVirv-Kill Kilt frnrtTYimtej "This dispute is full and finally sIx Democrats joined 12 jRepib- settled," O'Neill said. xi.aii ku vvitc iiau au uie problem of automation is solved." Democrats voted;c9. the bill. against iie saia union ana management th4 measur(1 would havi failed each would name a member to a for Uck of a constitutional ma- tnree-ma- n arDitration panel, and jority of 13. that both sides have asked Presi- Another compromise building dent Kennedy to name the third never even got to the floor of neutral party. either House during Uie day. The Arbitration should begin next one which was passed 3 in the week, he said, and with luck be House and 22-- 1 in the Senate was. for $46 pillion over slxj years completed within 10 days. The agreement ended what has using sales tax revenue. It per-been a constant strike threat since mits iise of tax anticipation notes O'Neill stepped ijito the picture. If or certificates of payment if bor- the 11,000 member union had walk- - rowing from state reserves In- -. will not get building ed out it would have tied up South- - terest-fre- e ern Pacific in California, Oregon, started. The debt limit of the Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Ne- - combined borrowing Is $10, million at one time. vada and West Texas iman Bjf a series of motions the Negotiations had reached number of bills before the legis- Presipasse last Wednesday when was to reduced from more J lature dent Kennedy- asked both sides 100 to to than arbitrasubmit their differences just three by 3 p.m. tion. Southern Pacific 'immediately The House had two and the Sen-embraced the nlan. but the broth- - ate one. ethood accepted only conditional ly. Up to Saturday afternoon there was not even agreement on what issues should be arbitrated. . I "" 1 50-1- Bolivia and Chile put aside a dispute to coordi nate the search.. The two coun long-standi- 4 final-settle- (UPI) Eight entire route of a Bolivian air- search planes Saturday flew the liner missing' since Friday with 41 By MICHAEL C. SMITH United Press International persons aboard and failed to find A a trace of it. Two of the passengMEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) Navy transport with 33 persons ers were' Americans. twin-engin- jt ne ARICA, Chile i and a specially prepared map is on page three., . Ready td vote you convictions Tuesday on the school bond issue election? If there's still some phase of it you do not understand, we've tried to explain it with k story starting on page one, a map showing the boundaries of the five municipal wards for votand a listing on page 20-ing of voting districts and other information in the school board's legal advertisement on page 11. And to wind up this year's annual malady of basketball fever, see our big green sports section for results of the state Class B high school and NCAA Regional college tournaments. Clerks Sign Pact Fl aboard crashed and burned in the backyard of a residence during an emergency landing attempt at the Memphis naval air station here Friday night. There were no fatalities. Only three persons all reserv known. bound from St. Louis to the ists During Saturday's session, Dantraining tas drew together with U. S. of- air station for weekendminor infor were hospitalized ficials a preliminary estimate of 13 were treated others the combined economic aid the juries and cuts and bruises. for burns, BRAZIL (See Pag:e 4) Crashed Near Home e The transport came 30 feet of the Lloyd down within Pitts residence. Jack Huffman, who was watching television in the Pitts residence at the time, said he heard a sound "like wires In Fashion Section often has to lis, that completion of the freeway was some-thing kind of vaguely In the future, like getting to the moon? it mignt come as somewhat of a surprise that a good section of it, at least from Orem td Lehi, should be opened for traffic this fallJ adjourn-- 1 past its sixtieth ment deadline when passage of a compromise school brogram broke the last barrier to sine die adjournment. At 6:09 Speaker of the House Charles Welch Jr. rapped the gavel to ad- journ. Senate President Reed Bui- len did the same thing; at 6:12 . S. P., BraWASHINGTON UPI) zilian and U.S. officals resumed Pick Your Stylefc for Easter today. Has it seemed to you, as it f " negotiations Saturday for new aid to Brazil, apparently unruffled by reports of Communist infil tration in the South American government. Brazilian Finance Minister San Tiago Dantas held a lengthy pri? vate conference at the State De partment with top officials hand ling foreign aid programs in Lat in America. Dantas has declined to com ment on a State Department re port erroneously attributed to the U.S. ambassador in Brazil, Lincoln Gordon, which charged Communists have, infiltrated the government. Dantas has met with Gordon since the , controversial report was published. The nature of their t.alks was not made ed Want to be fashionable? If you're not, after reading today's Herald, it'll be your own fault. Because this is our Spring Fashion issue, and we've got you name em 'em. Fashions for milady, and fashions for the men even fashions in furniture. It's all in the special fashion section, : R. GOLDEN saIjT lake city i(UPl) The 35th Utah Legislature ended its' overtime session Saturday night after voting an $8.7 million increase in state aid to pubUc schools and a building program involving more than $46 million in construction over six vears.. The legislature was , two days By JAMES ; HERALDING The News Parade ' - 1 .j e Lehi. This was revealed Saturday by EarLA. Johnson, District Six engineer for the Utah State Department of Highway ss. He said it was impractical at this time to set an exact deadline; but that barring unforeseen difficulties travel would begin along the Orem-Lestretch sometime this fall. Mr. Johnson said the highway department is hopeful that the freeway from the 12th South interchange in Orem to Provo's West Center Street can 'also be opened to traffic this fall, but some settling problems still remain along this 'stretch which prevent any definite predictions. Completion of the entire Utah County link, is set for 1965. With completion of the stretch from Orem to Lehi, Provoans will be able to utilize it by turning west on the 13th South approach road in Orem (just north of the Geneva Drive-I-n Theater) and getting on the freeway at the 12th South interchange. Should the lap between Orem tsd Provo'f West Centex Street A ; i ! M and where it joins the 91 northwest of ! ! Bill Ends Deadlock i p.m. h present N. S. i " : V ? r-- -. tornado alert was posted for portions of several south - central states. The vast storm, described as Interstate be completed this fall, this would "dangerous and intense" by the U. S. Weather Bureau, increased freeway should be opened to xndKe anomer access avauaDiewjjjj ferocity as it advanced east-(Setraffic "sometime this fall" beLEIII-OREward toward Minnesota; Page 3) tween 'Orem's 12th South interchange - . r V V v , r Resuming Negotiations Q north-sout- ' I ctiooi hard-presse- Leh rem F reevay Lap To Be Ready This Fall 15--Ut- ah's i. Xl I ioBt QYJ&t'OrYllSQ - i i-- p - ' i Ak'J S(slh ng tries have broken relations as the result of Chilean damming of a border river. Five Bolivian and three Chilean search planes fanned out to fly the entire route from Arica in weather described as perfect with excellent visibilty. They returned and reported no trace of the air craft. The search was continued over a widened area. Chilean warplanes conducted an independent search in Chile on the off - chance the missing plane may have gotten lost and doubled back into Chile. Kennedy Rests Aboard Yacht Fathers will Order New Keep Palm Beach Delegations Until Draft Age 35 Federation Subject to , ' Talk - WASHINGTON (UPI) f Presi-- , Egypt dent CAIRO, U.A.R. (UPI) new order transKennedy's Syria and Iraq have reached ferring fathers' draft classifica-- 1 agreement in principle on a fed tion from 1A to 3A wiU keep them eration of the three nations, subject to induction until the age was I announced Saturday night. of 35 instead of 26, defense ofA communique said there was ficials said Saturday. "agreement on points of view o: order merely forthe; Actually, such a federation and that the malizes a practice well estaband Syrian Iraqi delegations lished since 1956 of not drafting would go to their respective cap fathers except in rare cases. But, itals Sunday to consult their gov it will make fathers eligible for ernments. the draft, however unlikely, for The two delegations have mel nine additional years. with U.A.R. President Gamal Ab- The President's order, which he or tne ween, del Nasser most i signed Friday shortly before leavThe communique said after con ing for a meeting of Central Amersultations with their governments at home the Syrian and Iraqi de ican presidents in Costa Rica, apegations would return here to con- - plies to all bona fide fathers exdud tht talks. cept doctors, dentists aad vetfr- . . 1 ' i' By MERRIMAN i SMITH ; UPI White House Reporter vets are still used Inariansl PALM BEACH, Fla. KUPI) in the services for j meat inspec n animal-coPresident tion and some other Kennedy spent! 90 min-- , nected-purposef a on utes working cruise aboard . White House yacht Saturday In Under present practice, a father the otherwise eligible for military the; sunny inland ' waters between service is placed in 1A, but is Palm Beach and the mlainland. Bare from the waist up much given a low priority which in ef- inducfof the time, the President sat in means feet he will not be; When ed. he reaches the age of the, open stern of the White House 26, he is no longer subject to yacht Honey Fitz studying official ( draft. papers brought along h. a black new will be briefcase by his personal aide, Under the plan, he il in class 3A, and unless he has David Powers, j is techspending ajkisurely Kennedy enjoyed a deferment will be here weekend 35. preparatdry to a to until draft subject nlcally to Costa Rica where The 3A class until! now has been Monday flight for three days with meet ffr hMrtt of fa mil if who could he will five Central of the would presidents show that their induction and countries . Panama. American hardshin" for their eaiiM "undu KENNEDY 4) (Se dependents. The- - . rtf |