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Show - i : ;.- ::.- .. I ; - -:- , .:...--';- - . v y ! ::-7- . - ' "' ;. . ' " ,. - : , Votes on Tyascky oio bard - - .. . ; - :- .... , ; . " ' '. ;-'. - :.; i ' ' ,' . - -. ' : . - .: v : Q) J. - ,? .' .. J; ; :; ... 7' ; . ' " : .. .,j , ..:-.:,... .... , j - Aslcs j; SchI L'fay Tom. - 3t63-Mi- ll Fair, Warmer Levy today with clearing skies. pected high today, 54 to S3. Low tonight, low 30's. Precipitation in the Provo area, 1.06 inches. For the second time in two years, Provo voters will go to the polls Tuesday to grant or deny , a school board request for addiVOL. 40, NO. 49 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. tional "leeway" funds to be used in operation of the city, schools. The reason: The first leeway election held in February of 1962 was declared invalid by the state supreme court and the board is seeking to restore Uie annual funds, or part of them, lost by that decision. The school board collected (and spent) about $145,-00- 0 from the 1962 election authori- zation. Since the supreme court decision prevents it from the levy authorized in '62, ' uing it is seeking new authority in the . Tuesday election taking care to eliminate in the coming vote the ; phases of the last one which made The mendations of the Bureau of Rec WASHINGTON (UPD it illegal. Interior" Department has appro- - lamation. ed allocations of hydroelectric dow- The allocations were made under to be generated by plants oi marketing! criteria approved March er " Where do you vote In Tues-- j the Colorado River Storage "Pro 9, 1962, by Secretary of Interior j day's school leeway election? j ject to more than 100 municipali Stewart U Udall. In general, they I The same place as you did j ties, government installations, and follow closely the tentative allocain the recent school bond elee j cooperatives in Colorado, New Me tions of storage project power an tion, within the municipal j xico, Wyoming, Utah, Arizona, Ne nounced in January. The departj ward in which yon lJjys and j ment said there were some minor vada, and California. j at the pollinff station dcsle-j be will of block The first power changes in the tentative alloca j nated within that ward. On j allo- tions originally suggested, because The in available September, Pa:e 12-- of today's paper, j cations were made upon recom- - of comments received from poj the school board's legal ad- - j ' tential customers. The j vertisement lists PLACITAS, N.M. (UPD ' voting sta- - j As a result of the changes, cus- Air C47 lotions in detaU. with their "Gooney Bird," tomers inj the northern division dove Force down through a light . overI cation and the voting districts will receive a net increase of 33,750 cast toward the rounded j each humps o'f encompasses. Voting kilowatts of season winter' power j the Sandia its 7 8 a.m. Mountains, to engines hours are p.m. over the announced allo n n rp Power Allocations pncowien On Colorado River v f Approved by : rpr 15) j . an From admittedly vague statute, school legal opinion per to vote in mitted 1962.' The supreme court said no on this Issue. Hence, only property taxpayers, who are also regis tered voters of course, will be permitted to vote Tuesday. The school board Is asking for !'seven per cent of the , basic - state - supported program" on Tuesday's vote. Practically, this means if approved it would cost . taxpayers a mill levy of 3.63 mills and raise about $101,000. The '62 (See BOARD ASKS, Page 4) non-taxpay- To Red Talk ers MIAMI (UPD One of the 103 refugees from Cuba who arrived here on a Red Cross chartered plane Saturday night said the Cuban people are now "completely indifferent to government - .. propaganda." "They're so used to it now it has little effect on them," said Cuban American from Brook lyn who said he went to Cuba from Puerto Rica 45 days ago to visit his sick father. He declined use of his name. The man said the Cuban radio report that bombs had been dropped ' on an oil refinery outside Havana Thursday night was disbelieved as government propa ganda when first broadcast Fri Ai Force StaysSays Crowned as Mrs. America day. ": - de- First; Tour - Of Russia . IOScbw (UPD Cuban Premi- er Fidel Castro headed for Moscow, by train Saturday for a bear hug greeting by Premier Nikita Khrushchev and one of the most enthusiastic welcomes Russia has ever given a visiting foreign leader. The ;Soyiet capital already was gaily bedecked with flags and slo gans for the forthcoming May Day celebrations, and Castro's mammoth Red Square welcome was expected to eclipse those giv to Prime Minister Jawaharlal en services customs migration and President Tito and Chinese Nehru, at Miami International Airport. Communist Leader Mao Tze-tun" The bearded Cuban flew into Murmansk Saturday on a flight from Cuba in a Soviet TU-11- 4 A statuesque brunette from California was crowned Mrs. America Saturday night to end the week-lon-g pageant of the 51 top homemakers of America. Mrs. Marilyn Mitchell, 35, stuzming in a evening gown, crossed her bands in front of her chest when judges selected her from among the 10 finalists. . Mother of Three. Mrs. Mitchell is the wife of a Pacific Telephone Company executive, R. Lyle Mitchell, (4002 Olympic Street) San Diego, and the mother of three children. "I don't believe it," Mrs. Mitchell said as emcee Johnny Olsen and the retiring Mrs. America, Mrs. Lilla Masson of Detroit, garbed her in a glittering crown robe of and a red. regal In the final testing tonight, Mrs. California brought laughter from the packed auditorium of the Golden Gate Hotel when she was asked if she thought a wife should make breakfast for an early "rising husband., "Yes,?' she smiled, "If she can go back to bed right afterward. First runnerup was Mrs. Min- - S. four-engin- . th - g. -- 500 Jordanian Students Raid Baghdad Embassy Five hundred (UPD in Jordanian students Iraq entered the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad Saturday, threatening to stay there until King Hussein Middle falls, Egypt's semi-officisaid. News East Agency The agency said the students ripped Hussein's pictures from the embassy walls and raised the three-sta- r flag of the new United Arab Republic in its placewith a fourth star representing Jordan. CAIRO white-trimme-d al (See MRS. AMERICA, Pare 4) 5. 5 j i t f - ' x r- -- f. - 1 ? Ah - v ' i - r ' - ; .; U. S. Public Health officials tained the planeload of refugees for.; 2Vi hours until they determined that a g'ri's skin rash was only chicken pox. e DC6B, carrying The the refugees and two Red Cross officials, arrived from Havana at 5:25 ; p.m. EST. It wasn't until two minutes before 8 p.m. before the passengers began filing out of the closed door examination rooms of the public health, im- MIAMI BEACH, FLA (UPD full-long- Cowboys Rick Bennet and Paul Davis, working on the Diamond Tail Ranch, looked up and saw one wing drop away from the plane. Then another piece fell, and the plane disappeared behind a ridge. George Koch, 19, who was at his father's mountain resort club, saw the same thing, from the top of the ridge. He started running. The C47 sheared at an angle into a mesa and exploded. Eight servicemen and one servicewoman aboard were killed instantly. When Koch reached the scene 10 minutes later Friday, the wreckage was burning furiously and he could be of no help. ;The plane had .left Andrews AFB-afWashington D. C, for March AFB, J Riverside, Calif., with a crew of four and some military "hitchhikers." The pilot (See 9 KILLED, Page 4) Castro On j ; transport. He received a "viva , Powell Ends His Civil Rights Truce With JFK Souva nna t I t on ; 1 The Rains Came . . . And 4v V ,4 v it , W ft Came . f ; i ' ' 4 . " .. -- "' hi : If 1 ' t j : ; ;. . .And Came - ; : v. SUBMARINE LAUNCHED The Daniel Webster of the newest classjof Polaris, missile submarines, makes at&- - big splash --as 40 tons of concrete drop from the deck to impede its movement during launching ceremony, Saturday,! at the General Dynamics Shipyard in Groton, Conn. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) -- It rained, and then it rained some more, and for a change the wind blew . . and it was mighty cold. But all this failed to halt Brigham Young University's 50th anniversary track and field Invitational with some exceptions. Relays were called off, and the Saturday1 tennis, and saddest of all . . . those cute little pep cjub girls didn't get a chance to strut their stuff. It's in today's big green sports section, rain and all. School drop outs, are admittedly a growing problem but how growing they are in Frovo might startle you. It did us, after reading Joan Geyers' story of a recently completed survey on Page Seven, and we think it will you. Will Hoyt, former judge of the Fifth District Court with headquarters at Nephi, has some positive legal opinions concerning the threat of a strike this fall by members of the Utah Education Association, lie. voices them on Page 11. And on Page One is everything you need to know about the coming Provo school leeway election on except how to vote, and that's strictly up Tuesday to you. I . ? CONGENIALITY PAYS - Mrs. Hawaii, Lorraine Bachren, left, Kaneohe, Oahu, was chosen as Mrs. Congeniality during the Mrs. America finals Saturday. She is shown with Mrs. Alaska, Mrs. Jan Ross, Ketchi-l- n. (Hcrald-UP- I , Telephoto) . j Soup-hanouvon- Soviet-Americ- A j r Fo rce To S hu t Dovn 4 SAGE, 25 Raddrj Units Ballistic Test Awaited in Rights Etowah County Sheriff Dewey Colvard announced the first degree murder charges shortly after he received a report on ballistics test on a 32 caliber rifle owned by Simpson. GADSDEN, Ala. (UPD Police Saturday awaited the outcome of a ballistics test that apparently will determine whether Floyd L. Simpson will be charged in con nection with the slaying of a crusading Baltimore postman. father of Simpson, was six children, picked up Thurs day for questioning and held ever since on suspicion. Authorities have 72 hours in which to bring specific charges. The suspect operates a grocery store-fillin- g station in nearby Coil-bra- '' n.' (UPD The Pen said tagon Friday the Air Force will shut down four of its SAGE direction centers and eliminate 25 " radar facilities. Various headquarters will be shifted in . the nationwide air defense shakeup. The Pentagon said the "realign ment" " was designed to achieve the "best means of affording an WASHINGTON New Polaris Submarine Launched The (UPD $120 million Polaris submarine Daniel Webster was launched Saturday, sponsored by the of the famous statesman for whom it was named.) Mrs. W. Osborn Goodrich Jr of Farmington, Conn., smashed a bottle of champagne against the prow of the huge boat as it started down the ways at the electric boat shipyards of General Dynamics Corp. Conn. GROTON, ter A rifle belonging to Simpson has been sent to the FBI laboratories in Washington to determine whether it is the weapon used to kill William L. Moore. Moore, who was hiking to Jack son, Miss., to present a segregation protest letter to Gov. Ross Barnett, was found slain Tuesday night alongside U. S. Route 11 around 13 miles northeast of here. By United Press International Police have been tight-lippe- d The smallest stamps ever issued about their investigation, but have are the 10 cent and 1 peso de made clear that should the bal nomination of the Colombian state listic tests clear Simpson, they of measuring Bolivar, will be without a solid lead in the 6 inch. by case. Only one other person a neigh bor of Simpson's has been picked up in connection with the killing, and police released him with the statement' they were satisfied he had nothing to do with the crime. - effective defense against the longrange bomber threat." Mt was also designed to assure maximum capability for survival of air defense forces in event of a ballistic mis sile attack. ' SAGE means ground environment. It refers to the direction centers which re ceive information on attack or un identified aircraft and Indicate by means of computers and radar scopes what types of weapons whould be used for interception. SAGE centers will be eliminated at Be ale AFB, Marysville, Calif., Larson AFB, Moses Lake, Wash., Mich., and Stewart AFB, N.Y. Military men; in the eliminated units will be and ef forts will be made to help civilians find other jobs. SAGE centers to be closed, dates of closing and personnel re ductions included: 508 f Beale AFB, early summer, 20 civilians." and military Hancock field! will lose 689 mill- tary and 187 c vilian jobs in late summer in the exchange of mis sions with Stewart AFB. Radar sites io be closed, time of closing and military and civilian reductions included:. Fort Lawton, Wash., 635th Radar Squadron, closing. Army and Federal Aviation Agency facilities 82 military, no civil- remaining, ' - : semi-automat- ic re-assig- ATLANTA (UPD Tobacco heir Richard J. Reynolds has, settled out of court for more than $2 mil lion his marriage to his third wife, attorneys disclosed Satur " day. As a " result, Mrs. Reynolds, who had asked for $6 million in ' ' alimony, withdrew her appeal to the Georgia Supreme .Court of a divorce issued a year ago in coastal Mcintosh county. She also dropped claims ia New York a gainst Reynolds. . . n , :: ; t Harriman Assured By Khrushchev MOSCOW (UPD j Time1 . " ' ' in state legislatures is to mention daylight saving time. The efforts of lawmakers to settle the dispute sometimes only compound the confusion. Iowa, only eastern border ... In communities may go over to daylight time. And local option permits cities in the area to choose their own DST dates. Burlington, Iowa, residents will change their clocks tomorrow and revert to Standard Time Oct. 27; but at Wapello, Iowa, Daylight Time runs from May 25 to Aug. 23. Oregon and Tennessee settled the issue in opposite manner. Oregon this year ordered the entire state on Daylight Time 'beginning Sunday. Tcr.r.-:.-se- e ' : outlawed the tis tl . r r;-t:.- but Standard Unit. - 1 Averell Harri- man said Saturday Premier Nikita Khrushchev supports "in principle" the need for the International Control Commission to investigate t Minnesota will move its clocks for nearly ahead at 2 a.m. May 26 and rehalf begins today when main- on "fast time" until the day 100 million Americans after Labor Day. Some states remore than turn their clocks ahead one hour main on daylight savings time at the start of daylight saving until the end of October. time. ' ; Daylight saving time this year be observed throughout the will There are certain to be , the usual!, missed church services, states' of California, Connecticut, missed train and plane connec- Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, tions,, and .late arrivals at ball Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, FNevada, New Hampshire, New parks'..; And there will be the usual Jersey, New York, Oregon, Penngrumblings ' from farmers that sylvania, Rhode Isiand, Vermont, "fast, time" disrupts their sleep Virginia, West Virginia and Wis' consin. ing and working habits. In all, 21 states and parts of Parts of Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, seven others will change clocks Mississippi, Montana, New Mexiand watches to daylight saving co and Ohio will also be on daytime. But not all of them make light savings time. For years, one of the easiest the switch Sunday and that adds means of stirring v& controversy to the confusion. . Annual' confusion the-natio- of Laos. , n The statement, issued in Moscow following a meet Khrushchev and Under Secretary of State W. Averell Ilarriman. was aboat the only optimistic development in the critical situation. Latest reports from the plain indicated new fighting was taking place around its biggest airfield. Reliable military sources in the capital said "severe shelling" ; was reported Friday. ICC members confirmed thtf reports, but there was . no indication how long the shelling continued.. - By United Press International Reynolds Settles Divorce Suit By Paying $2 Million an any trouble spot in Laos. The U. S. undersecretary said he received this assurance during his three and a half hour meeting with the Soviet leader ia the Kremlin Friday. He had another long Saturmeeting with Minister Foreig&n Andrei day Gromyko, their second in two days. Harriman said Khrushchev agreed on the need for closer contacts between the Soviet, American and British ambassadors ia lans. Yuma, Ariz.. Air Force station. Laos e to help investigations, of violations. 864th Aircraft Control and Warn cease-firHowever,' Harriman said ing Squadron, summer, 129 mili(See HARRIMAN, Page 4) tary, two civilian. States on Fas t 21 . g, Soviet-America- New-burgh- , 1863-186- 6, . secretary of the Russian Embassy and members of the International Control Commission (ICC) mad up of Poland, India and Canada. Souvanna said the Soviet ambassador was unable to make th trip because of a stomach ailment. He said it was not a "diplomatic illness but a real one." The group went to Khang Khsy, headquarters of Red Prince the Pathet Lao leaicr. Souvanna's cause was bolstered .Joint stateby a ment reaffirming full support for the independence and neutrality v. 5-1- : pro-Commun- ist ist j Now You Know I V f N. HERALDING The News . and-neutral- Case Slaying Bulletin nedy administration has ended. The veteran Negro . congressman, in an exclusive interview, said the administration Is "slowing up" in the rights field. As a result, Powell said, he will no longer refrain from offering or supporting anti discrimination riders to administration bills. The truce, in effect since Powell took over chairmanship of the key House education and labor committee in 1961, has kept the racial segregation issue from splitting Democratic ranks on most new frontier legislation. Powell announced then he would withhold support from often amendments called "Powell amendments" as long as the Kennedy administration moved vigorously on the civil rights front with its executive powers. Powell said in the interview that he no longer feels bound to the pledge Inasmuch as President Kennedy rejected the U. S. Civil Rights Commission's recommendation to cut off all federal aid to " VIENTIANE , (UPD Premier Souvanna Phouma returned from the Plain of Jars Saturday and re" ported that j fighting r had halted between the Pat het Lao forces. The neutralist -- prince said th Pathet Lao intends to submit a " general plan for discussion of continuation of the coalition government of this little Southeast Asian kingdom. He said he had asked both sides to continue their shaky cease-fir- e . until he makes another trip to the , plain next Tuesday. Souvanna flew to the plain with V i . GADSDEN, Ala., (UPD Rural store operator Floyd L. Simpson, WASIflNGTON (UPD Rep. Saturday night was charged with ,Y., the Adam Clayton Powell, D-of a Balti roadside served notice Saturday that his more postman slaying a Civil on Southern civil rights truce with the KenCrusade. Fidel", welcome from waiting dignitaries, and a long distance call from Khrushchev who told him: "The whole Soviet people are waiting for, you. I am looking for ward to seeing you in Moscow to morrow."! Diplomats here said the unprecedented propaganda outpouring on the eve of the visit was partly an attempt to line up Castro solidly on the side of. the Kremlin in the Slno-Soviideological dispute. If successful, they said, it could signal greater Soviet influence in Latin America. First rjeputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, who greeted Castro in the northern Russian port, accompanied him to Moscow by train. The Cuban leader was due to arrive Sunday in Moscow, where (See CASTRO ON, Page 4) Mississippi. et n 9 Killed In sputtering. a Calif ornian lime-color- ed previously cations, and a net Increase of 10,300 kilowatts in the summer season. In the southern division, changes in individual allocations were accomplished with no net change in the total tentative' amount of power to be marketed in the area. ine norinern m vision oi tne marketing area includes a all of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; The southern division in cludes all of Arizona, the three southeastern counties of Nevada, 7" (Se POWER, Page 4) V -- 1 Cubans Now Indifferent hi in Lease rire G47Crash A PRICE 15 CENTS m . u U.S. . j SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1963 " n |