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Show SUNDAY HERALD SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1DC3 Utah County, Utah cjr Nov al Chief For CdsSra Declares - War on Cuba, Forms 'Liberation IJnii (UP!) Filipe Vidal Santiago, a former, naval commander for Fidel Castro, formally has declared war against Cuba in the hope of gaining a base of operations for his liberation movement. Vidal, 37, said he was petition ing the White House and the am bassadors of the Organization of American States in Washington today for recognition of his United Front for the Liberation of Cuba as "a belligerent under interna' tional law." Vidal and an attorney,. Charles R. Ashmann, said they were con fident of recognition by at least one Latin nation, even if the White House turns dowa the petition. With recognition from one nation, hey said, the group - would have MIAMI "1 V- - "1 t a legal "base of operations." It would also be free of "inter ference" from U.S., British 1 or vessels in inother ternational waters despite the U. S. crackdown on raids, the men said. But Vidal vowed that even if no nation recognizes him, he will establish a "floating headquarters" in international waters being careful not to use any Un registered or owned vessels. non-belligere- nt anti-Cast- 1 t ;.mHi,v 4.U , ro U AW Expects Slice of Big Auto Profits fill HiDi IlliWillli im i IfMwi inli DETROIT (UPD United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther has made it clear his un ion expects a slice of the record profits earned at giant General Motors Corp. in the past year. Reuther, after addressing a ses sion of the UAW National GM Conference Friday, said ' in the face of such profits, it would be an "unconscionable crime" for the auto industry , to raise prices of 1964 model ears. Since the steel increases were announced recently, there has been talk in the industry of an increase of at least $50 per! car beginning with the fall introduc tions. It was generally felt that GM would set the pattern and the remainder of the Industry would follow suit. Describing the profit report. m OBJECTIVE: FREEDOM FOR CUBA Felipe Videl Santiago, left, a former naval officer under Fidel Castro, announces at press conference in Miami the formation force called the United Front for National. liberation, which of a new will be under his leadership. At right is his brother Ivan, modeling the uniform which the group will wear, while, hanging over the rostrum, is the flag which their boats will fly. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). anti-Cast- ro Si LvMan Ki I led; Th ree Hiirt In Head-o- n Crash The Utah Highway Patrol iden was killed and tified the victim as Vaughn Gil Salt Lake City man three other persons injured early lette, 22. head-o- n Saturday in a violent two-ca- r Two Salt Lake City men and a collision in Parley's Canyon Park City teen-age- r were hurt. east of Salt Lake City. Lake suffered Salt 41, Doyle Gill, a possible broken facial bone and lacerations; Floyd . Desmond, 48, News Quirks also of Salt Lake, suffered a possible back injury and facial lacerations, and Gene Crandall, 17, Park City, received a possible broken left arm. All three are in "fair" condition. The mishap took place about five miles up the canyon at about 3:30 this morning. SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) A Nobody Goes To Sleep In This Audience By United Press International KEEPS AUDIENCE ATTENTIVE NoST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) body slept during Michigan state police Lt. Lester Coykendall's lecture at a firearms safety pro' ' gram. ;" . His lecture was punctuated at intervals with a shot from each weapon he described. PASSES BAD CHECK ' GLENDALE, Wis. (UPI) The debonair young , man handed grocer Arthur Peterson a check he wanted cashed and suggested he look at the back of it. Peterson did and saw? the words, "This is a holdup." Peterson put about $1,100 into a paper bag and watched as the young man left. THANKS OPPONENTS Ind. (UPD BLUFFTON, James Johnson, unsuccessful Republican candidate for state representative, took an ad in the Bluffton News-BannFriday to thank citizens who did not vote for him. "Thank you," he said. "Last November I ran an ad thanking the people who supported me. Now, after reviewing the trials and tribulations of the overtime Indiana legislature, I wish to thank all the voters who did not support me." -- ; Cost of Working About WASHINGTON (UPI) "the 40 per cent of gross earnings of a erouD of working wives in Ohiof were spent on a recent U.S. Department of Agriculture survey lndicatea. The expenditures included higher income tgxes brought about by the isvife's earnings. job-relat- ex-pejas- jes, ed Reader's Court I THE VERDICT Yes. The court said that, , if the lawmakers had intended to use the word "livestock" in such a bhad sense, they would not have added the words "bees or because they, loo, poultry" would have been Included as livestock. (State laws vary.) (Copyright 1963, General Fea tures Corp.) - er . TIZZY i " ' Blast Kills Three At Rocket Center . General Motors : recorded a rec ord first quarter profit of $414 million. Last year the company ROCKET CENTER, W. Va. (UPD An explosion of undeter- had record profits of $1,459 bil mined origin demolished a proc lion for all four quarters. , essing building at the Allegany ballistics labortory Saturday, Mil ing three men! injuring 10 others and causing heavy damage. The center is operated by the Hercules Powder Co. for the U.S. Navy. It produces solid fuel for missiles, and played a prominent r0le in developmen of the Polaris missile. A spokesman said the blast oc curred about $:30 a.m. He said WASHINGTON r (UPI) An property damage "in the imme American adventurer7 who. claims diate vicinity f the explosion is he went on a bombing raid over severe and minor aamage 10 oui Cuba has said that an under lying areas is! extensive." There ground radio in Havana directed was no fire, the plane to its target. Alexander Rorke, a freelance The three men killed were the inside processing reporter - photographer, said the working center when the explosion occur- - plane maintained radio contact red. "with underground people in the The injured were outside at the Havana area" as it flew towards time and suffered varying de Cuba oil refineries. Thursday grees of injuries. Six were hospi night. talized. Four others were treated Rorke, 36, refused to identify the at a hospital and released. amphibian plane or the three men killed he said accompanied him on the men were nine In 1960, also ,in raid. He said the plane '"was a blast when occurred, launched from an island south o the processing building, Cuba" and ' picked him up inHhe Rocket Center is located .abou Caribbean. eight miles southwest of Cumber (In Havana Saturday, a radio land, Md., ahd employs 2,700 broadcast persons, charged that the plane used in the attack "took off from For a different flavor for fried U. S. territory and returned home foods which need, to be floured with absolute impunity." substitute pancake for (The government announcemen said the . Fidel Castro regime will regular. protest to the United States and By KATE OS ANN "report what happened to all U.N, pro-pellan- FR Orem effict curler. - twin-engin- When the plane ' was about 150 100-pou- nd ill-fat- ed ci&Uoa. 1 4 i Cuban Premier Fiden Castro, right, wearing a Russian eossack-styl-e hat, and Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, left, had warm smiles for each other after Castro arrived by Russian jet at Murmansk, Northern USSR port Saturday. Man in center is unidentified. Castro arrived a day earlier than expected, said Soviet news agency Tassi He is expected to spend about a' month in the Soviet Union. (Herald-UP- I Radiotelephoto). CASTRO IN RUSSIA Castro T j In Russia On Official Visit (Continued from Page One) it was expected he would get a mammoth welcome led by Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev himself. Soviet newspapers, which had not announced Castro was due to arrive, carried numerous Soviet- Cuban friendship articles today. Radio Moscow broadcast an ac count of the Murmansk rally to the nation late Saturday morning. Castro is making his first exoutside Cuba since he cursion HILL AIR FORCE BASE (UPI) to went the United Nations in Some employes at this, sprawling 1960. northern Utah military installation will be affected by a reduction in The bearded Cuban is expected force of logistic command em- to spend about a month in Rusployes at air bases 'around the sia, touring various provincial country, the Air Force announced areas with Khrushchev as well as taking: part in ceremonies In the Friday. : , The Air Force said about 1500 capital. , 'I logistics command employes will His arrival just before the big i be involved. Day observance made it vir May However, a spokesman at Hill tually certain that he would be said employes involved would be the most: honored foreign guest given the opportunity to retrain for atop Lenin's tomb during the an new jobs' and others would be nual parade. placed in vacancies resulting from It was hot certain whether Casretirements. tro would visit Red China before The Air Force said reduced i home, but there has returning workloads, with phaseout of some been speculation that he would manned aircraft, was responsible do so. for the nationwide cutback. The Kremlin was expected to while Castro is here to go all-oOn Man wean him away from Peking and American Fork to any hard feelings that Destroyer USS Somers mayallay remain about Khrushchev's USS SOMERS Royce D. Bran failure to consult him before he ning. fire contra! technician sec promised last fall to pull Soviet ond class, USN, son of Mr. and missiles out of Cuba. Mrs. James D. Branning of 430 Harrison Ave., American Fork, is JOINS FAMILY serving aboard the destroyer USS WASHINGTON (UPI) Presl Somers, which" departed, April 3, for eight months duty with the Sev dent Kennedy joined bis ; family enth Fleet in the Western Pacific. Saturday at Camp David, Md. The First Lady and her two Workers children, Caroline and John Jr., NEW YORK (UPI) aren't the only ones who suffer went by automobile to the Mary accidents. Work land mountain retreat Friday. The from ers mishaps give American indus President Joined them by helicop try a $4.6 billion headache annual ter Saturday afternoon, probably to the American returning to Washington Monday ly, according Standards ' Association. morning. l Try Cutback Not Expected to Hurt Hill Workers his s - i ! j (V ( t. If ut on-the-jo- b 1 her WANT TO MAKE THAT ROOM DISTINCTIVE . . "tailor-mad- e" os a den for dad . . . custom-style- d to match thi son . cf end or interests . ? your reflecting tha personality of daintiness charm ana your daughter? $0 IT WITH DECDURABLE PREF1NISHED AND PANELING! Anderson ORATIVE . plus unique plans for just lumber has a wide selection the room you have in mind. .. paneling for th avvrog 12x12 room cn b pvrthmfd . OR . . . Andorsen Lumbar will plon mni far at lint aa $80.00 room rtmodtl tht including oxpert labor and complatal (tnA1 t- " Pr-fii- hd finanelna ... all far monthly - MYmonti FZZ2 ESTIMATES --- ai Y law at luit PHONS KOW I I 1 FOR LEE'S CARPETING SEE 1 'UTAH; VALLEY FURNITURE CAR COSTS NEW ..YORK (UPD The aver age cost. of operating an auto has' declined to 14.47 cents a mile from 15.60 cents two years ago, according to thax Automobile Legal Asso- - i av-latr-ix d, terview in his hotel room. Havana Radio said none of the bombs went off. know Mrs. Harris has only on o littla boy but it euro V) 4 A OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Santa Monica, Calif., housewife's attempt to be the first woman to fly the Pacific alone from East to West was postponed Saturday for the third consecutive day be cause of weather. Mrs. Betty Miller, 36,'tentative- ly planned to try again in her e plane Sunday. But the Weather bureau reported another storm in the Pacific that may de lay the flight tpt several days. 101 pound The freckle-facewas stjntnied again by five mile an hour headwinds over the Pacific. Because of a narrow fuel margin, 7she could not takeoff un less headwinds Were zero or she had a tail wind. Destination of her planned 7,400 mile flight is Brisbane, Australia, with a first stop at Honolulu. The route is similar to the West to East flight attempted by Amelia Earhart, in ,1937. Miss Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, disappeared after taking off from Lae, New Guinea, en- route to Howland Island in the Central Pacific. feet over the refineries, Rorke said they dropped a high explosive bomb and four na, palm bombs. "I think the 100 pounder went off, but we couldn't see the others because we were flying out' to sea," Rorke said during an in- c&3 v. Postpones Pacific Hop ter," Rorke said. ypr v Housewife Other Raids Planned "Other raids have been going on. and others are planned. Rorke said during an interview in his hotel room. "I will participate in more of them." The plane flew north along the coast line of Cuba at about 50 Pinar Del Rio, the westernmost ' province of Cuba. "We cut in over land, flew to the refineries, then out over wa- M I verdict elsewheri v members." (It assailed U. S.' authorities for .... v t raid.) Entered as second class matter at the post office in Prove Utah, under the act of departments IP failing to arrest Rorke despite his admitted participation in the ing..'" For .all non-agricultu- ral ; flour i By WILL BERNARD The Utah economy provided more jobs j Johnson, who operated a trout farm, had less trouble la 1962 than In any previous peace with his fish than with state tax officials. 'They kept on time year, according to data comhim for dunning to ' the state payments piled by the College of Business unemployment inat the University of Utah and the surance fund ind he kept on refusing to pay. State Department of Employment ; Finally the matter landed in court. Security. The economy provided 15.000 "Your Honor' said Johnson, "the law says this tax jobs during the year, and the av erage number of unemployed in does not apply to anyone, engaged in raising 'livestock, Utah decreased from 17,300 to 15.-- bees or poultry.! My trout aren't bees or poultry, but 700, a drop of 9.3 per cent. are a kind of livestock." they f Fewer counties showed de creases In "That is ridiculous!" countered the state. ""Who evefr em than in , since ployment any year lift is trvntr ncajskJUL iusu wing reierrca to as lives lock statistics have been compiled. to twist plain English, just to , avoid paying the tax." Counties registering decreases were Carbon, Emery, Garfield and 1 "I am willing to 'leave it up to the dictionary," reWeberv Carbon and Emery have torted Johnson. "The dictionary says that livestock are suffered from falling coal de- domestic animals. Well, my trout are domestic and mand Weber- - County managed to animals." are j replace a number of jobs lost they of the Bomarc through phase-ou- t MUST. JOHNSON PAY THE STATE TAX? Weigh (UPD " - . Read NJI. (UPD A court of inquiry gathered Navy secret evidence behind closed doors again Saturday in its search for a solution to the sinking of the submarine Thresher with 129 . , men aboard. At Boston harbor, workers pre pared to unload the bathyscaph Trieste which arrived Friday from'' the VTest Coast.. The deep diving device will be used to inspect and photograph the sunken sub if and when it is found. Lt. Cmdr. Donald L. Keach, Trieste's skipper, said he was pretty darn sure" his vessel could help in finding out what happened to the Thresher. In the only part of Friday's tes timony made public, a Navy offi' cer who supervised installation of program. both sides. Then, mark your verdict : Thresher's nuclear reactor said a Cauliflower boiled in a thin cloth piece of discolored plastic believed from the sub was not can be lifted out and served un For the actual court decision, see burned In "a close rush of broken. on this page. flames" as theorized by another witness. Capt. John J. Hinchey testified that he conducted extensive tests on the foot square block of yellow plastic and found that it was blackened by "heavy concentrations of graphite or carbon." Hinchey said the discoloration apparently came when two holes : were drilled in the material to al 1 low the plastic to fit easily around i piping. The plastic , was similar to that .... .J3p'' used near the nuclear reactor of submarines like Thresher. It was found in the North Atlantic near the scene of the tragedy but no or.e has positively identified H as from the doomed sub. - 'ii SALT LAKE CITY PORTSMOUTH, 1 Published by Herald Corporation, 19a West Fourth North Street, every afternoon,, Monday through Friday. Sunday Herald pubLshed Sunday morn- March 3, 1379. Subscription terms by carrier In Utah County: . $ 1.73 Per month $10.50 6 months in advance $21.00 One year in advance .By mail anywhere In the Uited States or its posses si'ins $1.75 per month; .$10-5- 0 for six months in advance. Herald telephone numbers: Details Of Bomb Raid Revealed , j - v ts Utah Economy Provides Record Number of Jobs Navy Pane! : Continues Secret Probe 4' m 264 N03TH 1st WZST-- Ph. F2 4-16- 00 FIRST 5th South and 2nd West |