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Show 7 FR Telephone 3-50- Cloudiness 50 decreasing today. Not much change in temperature. High '. For Ads News,4 Circulation: Provo Office, . toiday low 30s. ? v 190 .... W 4 th N Orem Office; 757 N State . .". FR ... to 10. 3-5- AC 05 PROVO,, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH SUNDAY, JANUARY VOL 41; NO. .32 rS ip- PRICE 15 CENTS 5, 1964 o - n ri n (CM " , - ' . is ' s p. r - - - - - s. SS S s , A. . -- - - ' s '? , - s s s - ft - A s .. J sS SS s - is . s fV V - T , tVrsS' s srJK, ssN s ss - s t :; s- - s ss "vs ss t' i s W s V s sXs.s rfV. s S1 s. "''T .X , .s . S A s " fSS . S 'SW s j. ; 's t ,SS SS. V.... 'w s s. S " 4S (W' . ""VMS ,sS t stft . ss s s - s ' . sVs S--. - - V.v, ' PS1 W . sssSSSAC .',. J V3 s ' ss i s'4 s. ul lr 'T'THvJ , C ft V I J .m.S. 1 s, '''sV -. . i JOHNSON CITY, Tex. (UPI) President Johnson conferred with his aviation and intelli gence chiefs Saturday in the waning hours of a Christmas-NeYear vacation at his Texas ranch. He flies back to Wash ington Sunday to find out what Congress thinks of his pro- w lit - iirmirMiij RIVER JORDAN . . . NEAR SITE WHERE JESUS WAS BAPTIZED Pope Paul VI offers ble&sing from promontory overlooking the River Jordan The during procession from Amman to the walled city of Jerusalem Saturday. the John to Baptradition, site is a few miles from point where, according Radio (Herald-UPI telephoto) tist baptized Jesus. Goes to Washington P. C. In Barry Again Refuses Debating Rockefeller Berlin Wall To Be Closed gram. The President announced that pre-inducti- draft on examina- tions will be given "as soon BERLIN (UPI) Negotia tions aimed at keeping the Berlin wall open to West Berliners failed today and the barrier will be sealed at midnight Sunday, a West . Berlin official an . Goldwater said during a brief PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) Sen. to who flew stopover in Los Angeles to Barry Goldwater, Washington Saturday to begin change planes for the flight east his GOP presidential primary that he did not believe Republi campaign battle against New cans should debate each other. He added that debating York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, nounced. rea to "would Rockefeller be more issued what amounted The wall was opened by jection of Rockefeller's chal- like debating a member of the the Communist East Berlin gov- lenge to debate the issues. New Frontier" than a fellow ernment on Dec. 18 and passes Republican. over the Christmas holidays He's been tearing my hide off were issued for 1,318,519 West for the past two months," Gold Berliners. No more passes will I water said of Rockefeller. be issued after today. don't call that debating." The West Berlin spokesRockefeller had issued a chal man, Egon Bahr, said negotialenge for a public debate after tions between the West and Goldwater's announcement FriEast Berlin government to exday that he would seek the tend the Christmas agreement GOP presidential nomination. had failed to produce agreeov. (UPI)-GN.H. CONCORD, As for the issues he could de ment. of New bate with Rockefeller, the con Rockefeller A. Nelson Thousands of West Berliners presidential hopefu streamed through the wall to- York Saturday lashed out at servative differed from views his said Sen. Barry Goldwater's announ day. those of the New York gover West Berlin sources said one ced plan to base his- bid for nor on a ndmber of important of the travelers was a repre - jthe Republican Presidential points. sentative of Mayor Willy Brandt nomination an a campaign of He said Rockefeller favored sent to discuss the issue with compulsary unionism, while he sanity, security and solvency. East German officials. "How can there be solvency," is against it. Many West Berliners apat a news And he said Rockefeller wants peared reluctant to depend on Rockefeller the possibility of any new conference, "when Goldwater is Red China admitted to the Unitagreement with the regime against the graduated income ed Nations, which Goldwater which divided their families by tax? How can there be security strongly opposes. "He (Rockefeller) seems to when he wants to take the building the wall. "I am certain this thing will United States out of the United have implicit faith in the Unitend tomorrow," said Renate Nations. How can there be san ed Nations, despite the fact it Gillenhaus, a medical student. ity when he wants to give area is not living up to its prom"It would le darned off if it commands the authority to ises," Goldwater said. didn't." SfTevmade the com-(Se- e make decisions on the use of Asked whether he would be OPENING IN, Page 4) nuclear weapons?" willing to debate President Goldwater Johnson, replied: been debating him I've "Sure, Rocky Blasts Goldwater Statements near el - . said Heralding the News for - Off With the Bulge Look And Feel Your Best in '64 10 years." The senator said he expected that Johnson would consider a public debate with him as comparable to the famed television debates between the late President Kennedy and former. Vice New bulge at your waistline ? Just past the holi- President Richard M. Nixon 1960 days a lot of people are discovering one . . . especially during . the wnicn presidential were crea-i if they are in "spreading thirties" when something campaigns ited with helping Kennedy to a happens to that youthful figure ! large extent in defeating Nixon. Well now's ii the time to start doing something about it or you may graduate into the "fat forties'! To help you get started back down the. lean and healthy road again, The Daily Herald will offer during rt the next several days, a series, written by food and nutrition editor of Maddox, expert Gaynor Newspaper Enterprise Association, designed with hew I Now You Know By United Press International The privileges of infallibility in matters of Roman Catholic waistlines in mind. V ; doctrine and sovereign jurisdic Mr. Maddox, through fad diets and crash diets, tion over all the faithful have has steadfastly 'stuclrto the best known facts of nu- been enjoyed by popes over the trition, Jlo give his readers accurate and expert ad- centuries and were solemnly device on eating for health. fined in 1870 by the Vatican on into 1964 looking Council constitution Pastor Ae- So, off with the six-pa- - fatand and feeling your best! Ifoa new serieswill begin Monday, ' turnus, according to the Ency clopedia Bntanmca. Negro Bay Registers At Auburn heavily-guarde- d Auburn Uni- versity withouta Federal escort Saturday and was greeted by jeers from white: as he registered as the school's first Negro student. Segregationist Gov. George C. Wallace had scores of riot-train- ed state troopers stationed around the campus and had given them orders to oust, bodily if necessary, any federal officials who put in an appear- the lights in the Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher while the Pope was savine Mass. Flickers of flame were beaten out by a workman while the Pope continued the ceremony. The hysteria of the throng stemmed from good intentions. But security guards lashed out with rifle butts and clubs at the wild masses whose aim seemed to be to get close enough to touch the Pope or kiss his fisherman's ring. At one point on the Via Dolorosa, or Street of Sorrow, the Pope was forced to take shelter from the crowds in the doorway of a convent. This was at the sixth station of the cross, where Veronica wiped the face of Jesus. He was there for about ance. I C" ' 1 V l. 1 r hi - HnfrtA r .'.sftss . . Sfes. .. - . s. M&jRiXAib-s- . imnirtlri Franklin entered the campus unnoticed shortly after junch hour, went to Magnolia Hall, where he arranged for his dormitory room, and then walked across the campus a distance of about 3 blocks to the library building, where he formally registered.. Although a slight drizzle was falling, about 150 students gathered outside the library building and it was. here where most of the students got their first glimpse of Franklin. "I'll bet the Nigger wont have to stand in line to register," one youth yelled. Another, after watching the the , If ; fJi&xy AAiJt r 11,1,1 WIELD STICKS TO HOLD BACK THRONG Members of Pope Paul VPs Arab Legion honor guard use sticks, to. beat back admiring crowd that surged toward the Pontiff and tried to touch him state troopers check Franklin's as he visited the Stations of the Cross on the Via identification and usher him inDolorosa in Jerusalem. (Herald-UP- I Radiotelephoto) side, commented: as possible" after registration to all males, instead of waiting until they are called 15 minutes and. he seemed tq, for the draft. be shaken. His face was ashen. Johnson is alarmed by the As a result of his fatiguing de physical, mental and moral day, he was forced to cancel ficiencies of American Youth. He does not want to get young men in the army earlier, but believes mat if their physical and mental shortcomings can be diagnosed early they can be treated and possibly corrected before the armed forces need them. The President plans to fly back to the Capital Sunday afternoon, but he has not an nounced a firm time. He h a s been at his LBJ ranch Johnson City since Christmas Eve, combining relaxation with high-levpolicy meetings and State of the Union messages He conferred Saturday with Najeeb Halaby, Administrator of the Federal Aviation Agency, and with Director John A. Mc Cone of the Central Intelligence Agency. In addition to budget matters, Johnson discused with Halaby his forthcoming mission to Moscow. Halaby will talk to t h e Russians about the details of (See LBJ ENDS, Page 4) -- HarAUBURN, Ala. (UPI) old Alonzo Franklin, 31, entered short-circuite- d Vacation on Texas Ranch a' J Opening f A further mishap marred the visit when an electrical failure LBJ Ends His U- v J ft on the way of the cross. J- X . JERUSALEM, Jordan (UPI) Pope Paul VI was buffeted Saturday by a hysterically enthusiastic throng of 100,000 persons that shattered police lines and injured scores watching the first Papal pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Only heroic efforts by Jordanian soldiers and police saved the frail, 66 - year -old Pope from actual physical harm as he traced the footsteps of Christ J SSSS ssss,ssy. SSW s' ' ss" Vs.s--s , , SOs S VsVLV ,s. S ,s - Crush of Hysterical Multitude Threatens Injury to Holy Father X ,s SS -- ss SS s. j j . s s SJs sWs s)ssss S TS ss t sssxS.. WsWss'V S i ssss ss " ss' ,s s J3r&Z s1 JV- - s sV SSS S SS - W 11 Tss S. ssysss.ss SSS s s S SS SS ' SSS. W s . SS SS5S"S , , - " s ss CTS "S T s - S sst -. JsCf ss 'SSSSS ssss"s ' , v. A sss. w. s '" - w...'!:sfr., S . A Xs V s - - . 31 i - V V ss i , n V4,"4'- , r t.tKSWi' ' - ''c r ' i " - 's ' - , rssw-- Low tonight 5 scheduled audiences with Greek Orthodox Patriarch Benedictos and Armenian Orthodox Patriarch Yegheshe Derderian Saturday evening. A high Vatican official em phasized, however, that "the difficulties on the Via Dolorosa were due to an enthusiasm no one could foresee and certainly PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The could not be blamed on the prancing clowns in Philadelph Jordanian government." ia's annual Mummers' Day But the Spectacle to those parade, bereft of black face by who saw it was a frightening a court order to avoid racial one. violence, marched up Broad Shop windows were broken Street Saturday guarded by and toys and glassware and 2,500 policemen. cheap watches were trodden inThe marchers in the city's to the cobblestones as the sepost-wyear hi- curity guards forced a pathway for the Pope to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. "They'll kill him!" exclaimed "Well, I'll be damned. It took me more than two hours to register. This Nigger is really getting good treatment." Despite the jeers and slurs, however, the atmosphere Saturday was in sharp contrast to that of last June 11 when Wallace "stood in the school house jinks were openly disturbed by door" and tried to block the the court edict which came desegregation of the University about after civil rights groups of Alabama. On that occasion threatened to stop the parade the late President Kennedy had "with our bodies" if blackface (See NEGRO BOY, Page 4) were in evidence. Many of the paraders strutted along in Lackluster fashion. One policeman at the start of the parade route said he felt as though he were "waiting for a bomb to go off." The Hammond Comic Club, which last week protested the ban on blackface, paraded withBELGRADE (UPI) out any makeup. At intervals Sixty- four died the club members chanted: persons Saturday when g a express flashed "One, two, three, four. We a red through signal light in hate Cecil Moore." and fog plowed into a stationMoore, a Negro attorney who ary passenger train at a suHONOLULU (UPI) Seventy heads the local chapter of the burban railroad station. An official communique said aircraft, three ships and hun- National Association for the of Advancement Colored 162 other were injured, dreds of men ranged over a was in the forefront of and 72 ofpersons People, them admitted to half million square miles of the the civil rights' protest against hospitals. Pacific Saturday in an increas the use of blackface. Most of the victims were Council President ingly urgent search for nine Paul City peasants and soldiers, bound airmen lost somewhere west of D'Ortona, a spectator at t h e for their homes on leave on the start of the route, said the overnight train. Hawaii. court injunction "has taken the All day rescue teams crawled faa The airmen, including and cut their way into 16 wreckther of 14 who had volunteered heart out of the parade." ed home were of coaches,! eight of them dethe the in Some units heading retirement, r Globemas-terailed. in a huge Air Force They found a pitiful parade were below their usual of bodies and twisted went it when said. observers jumble cargo plane strength, would-be metal. A of score marchers down in the sea Thursday. The crash took place at suburA few SOS signals and a mys- appeared in blackface at the terious light in the ocean gave starting point but police barred ban Jejince Station, miles outside Belgrade. Both some hope that the men sur- their path onto the vived. But if any did survive, route. There was no evidence Grains were jampacked with they have spent the past three of demonstrators from any of 350 to 400 passengers, filling days under attack by heavy the civil rights groups which every seat and standing in the seas, strong winds and periodic protested the use of blackface aisles. last week. (See 64 KILLED, Page 4) rain squalls. Mummers' Day Parade Held Sans Black Face 64 Killed In Belgrade Train Wreck ar Aircraft 70 horrified Franciscan priests as the Pope's white skull cap could be seen bobbing along Search for like a leaf in a surging human Sorrow the Street where Christ carried His cross Utah Airmen from condemnation to OF, Page (See flood on of cruci- - CRUSH 4) Wilkinson to Announce Political Decision Soon By United Press International ing the matter" and prob Sen. Barry Goldwater's a n- - ably would announce his in nouncement of his candid a c y tentions next week. for the 1964 GOP presidential "I hope to reach a decision nomination brought comments before the middle of next of "very pleased" from Utah he said. Republicans and drew one week," is considered Dr. Wilkinson Utahn closer to announcement the leading contender to battle of his Senatorial intentions. with Rep. Sherman Lloyd for of Ernest Wilkinson, president Senate nomina Brigham Young University, the Republican said he was well pleased with tion to face Moss in November the Arizona conservative's an Lloyd has not officially an nouncement and added that his nounced his plans. political future would be re vealed next week. Gov. George D. Clyde indi- Feels Expenses Also Should Be Slashed 's cated he was happy with plans but added h e was "not prepared at this, time to state who I will support for the Republican nomination." "There is no question in my (Special to the Herald) Sen. Wallace F. Bennett said mind that Congress eventually Sen. Wallace F. Bennett the Arizonan was recognized as a member of the Sen- will adopt a tax bill which will front-runnfor the GOP ate a finance com- not only reduce rates but will nomination ticket. mittee, predicted for The Her- make other changes in the ex believe don't the "I change ald from Washington, D. C, isting law," he said. in the presidency has complete Saturday that the Tax Cut Bill "However, I do not think it or the issues little eliminated will have the very dramatic efde with would relatively ly pass and that it probably fect on our economy that many stroyed the philosophical pat trouble tern of most Republic a n s," would be retroactive to Jan. 1, expect," Sen. Bennett said. "Much of the effect of a tax Bennett said. 1964. When asked by United Press "Because the bill is so com- cut may already have been re the House version alone flected in the economy inas international about his own plex plans whether to seek the GOP was 310 pages long it may be much as the business commu nomination for Democratic Sen. as late as March befoce Sen nity has been looking forward Frank Moss's Senate seat, Dr. ate floor action is completed, to it for almost a year." The Utahn, who has been a Wilkinson said h was "weigh he said. high-ballin- eight parade Gold-water- Bennett Forecasts Passage of Tax Cut Measure (R-Uta- er tax-writi- ng h), spokesman for the Republican party on many fiscal issues, said he probably would vote against the bill both in the committee and on the floor of the Senate. "I cannot in good conscience vote to reduce the revenue of the government in the face of increasing expenditures.4' he said. "In other words, I can-Lvote for'ttax cuts to be paid out of additional borrowings and reduce the cost of administering present laws, there is every indication that he will actively support new programs requir- ing new financing. These programs If adopted will more, than wipe out any savings that may be made by tightening up on existing agencies." Sen. Bennett pointed out that "we have operated in the red for 26 out of the past 32 years. I can see no evidenqe that even the new programs of the PresHe said "Even though Presi- ident are going to change that dent Johnson is talking and ap- situation for the forseeable fu parently working very hard to ture." ot |