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Show Telephone 'For 373-505- 0 Cloudiness Circulatiofl: Ads, News, of the variable kind today with tcattered snow showers. High today la the lower 40s. Low ' Prove Office, 1M W. 4th N. .... 373-50- 5 near tonight Orem Office, , 757 N. State ..; 30. PRICE 15 CENTS PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH SUNDAY, APRIL 11, 1965 to 1 Modldfe Wis Rivers Go President Reaffirms On Rampage By United Press International ii The twentieth century's worst river rampage in ttie upper Midwest swamped more com munities Saturday, bringing the total of homeless to nearly 13,- 000 in three states. if o 40 To Johnson TWOD DAMAGE Hundreds of volunteers look like ants as they build a dike of sandbags along the banks of the Minnesota "River at Mankato, Minn. The ranging river swells in the background. Governor Karl Rolvaag has called out the National Guard in some southern Minnesota flood areas. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). Decision Inval idating Orem Low to Have B rod ing to volume of sales. He WASHINGTON (UPI)-Pr- esibillion dent Johnson's $1.3 school aid program, its journey through Congress completed, Saturday was on its way to he President and swift enactment into law. The measure, which would channel federal' aid for elemen tary and high schools to most of the nation s school districts, passed me Senate by an ovej- whelming 73 to 18 vote Friday night to break a string of de feats for general school assist for violation of the city ordimatter nance. Mr. Pyne, backed by a contested the liberately effects were in the conviction that the law number of businessmen in the seen Saturday' throughout the x community, appealed the case unconstitutional. ras i: state the unanimous decision to the Fourth District Court, Orem decision An Court City of the Utah Supreme Court dewas against Mr., Pyne, and he where Judge Harding reversed claring Orem City's business was ordered to "pay a $50 fine the City Court decision in Octo license ordinance unconstituber. : tional. Case Appealed writThe weekend decision," The case was then appealed ten by Chief Justice F. Henri by the Orem City Council to Henriod, upheld what Justice the Utah Supreme Court, and Henriod called a "scholarly was argued before the court on opinion" by Maurice Harding, Dec. 18. During the months Provo, judge of the Fourth Diswhen the decision has been trict Court. Judge Harding at pending, the Orem Chamber of the district court level upset Commerce has asked the city an earlier decision of the Orem council on several occasions to of the Orem case in Court City San a has. adopt a proposed new license told. Provo City . -City vs Dee Pyne which was drawn up Those familiar with the situ Francisco real estate consultant ordinance of eight committee a the by to would like employ ation said Saturday the supreme firm it two .members jrf in to aid -te4 planning is organization court decision expected Lowell Thorn result in new business licenses for downtown Provo develop the city council, son and Paul Washburn. The in over 60 per cent of the cities ment. ordinance would impose a new of Utah which have similar . Mayor Veri G. Dixon, acting $25 for every business, flat com of decision the a on city ordinances. Among these are a fee of $3 per year for plus mission made afternoon, Friday Nephi, Provo, Logan, Ogden, Fran(See DECISION, Page 4) Gunnison, Manti, and many has so notified the San cisco firm. others. The commission authorized .;' Discriminatory the mayor to telephone James ' In the decision, Chief Justice O. York of Larry Smith and Co. - Henriod said the city ordinance to notify him that the city charged some businesses a flat wishes to make use of the a percentage services of the firm. - fee, while levying of sales volume on other busiLuke Clegg Commissioner nesses. This resulted, he wrote, said that the commisSaturday is a wide variance of tax owed sion did not specify any particuand "appears to be discrimina- lar length of time for the firm's Utah (UPI)-Secre- tary tory." employment during Friday's ALTAi The case was instituted in decision. In a later formal com- of Defense Robert McNamara Orem City Court in late sum- mission meeting, more details and his wife, Margaret, spent mer of 1964 when the city of the matter will be decided, another day on the slopes Sat charged Dee Pyne, Orem auto- he said. The mayor, in Logan urday at the Alta ski resort. The secretary said he planned mobile dealer, with failure to Saturday,' could not be reach to license fee remain untu Sunday night, business a ed. pay international developlevied under the city ordinance. W. Smoot unless Commissioner Mr. Pyne's business came un- Brimhall said that while the ments required his return to der the section of the ordinance mayor was unable to contact Washington. (See CITY MOVES, Page 4) He and his wife spent Friday providing for taxation accord skiing with Alt Engen, veteran Alta instructor who taught three News HERALDING youngsters to ski. Mrs. McNam ara and children have visited Alta every year since 1940. "This is purely a vacation for Mrs. McNamara and myself, and I do not wish to talk about de- Far-reachi- X ' City Moves To Employ Consultant McNamara On Utah Ski Vacation - , the Swim Suits in Winter? We've Got It Today... Don't be confuced today by the pictures on the first page of the second section, and the one on J. . Page Seven. : We admit, they're a study in contrasts but it just proves how versatile we are. e We're referring1 to the layout of the latest in swim suits and a Saturday scene that's about as1 wintry as you can get, especially;. for April. Oh well, how did we know it was going" to snow ? Elsewhere today, your usual Sunday Herald reajjngjbpnus the Family Weekly, colored comics, And more news of varythinj. full-pag- Rockies. School Aid Bill Goes By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN fornia its 13th successive day of rain, making this the state's rainiest April in 39 years. Deep snow was reported in mountain areas from California- - to the Fifteen hundred residents of Chaska, Minn., joined more In the Far West; a vast storm than 8,500 other Minnesotans al system gave normally dry Cali- ready on the refugee rolls, most of them in the Mankato area. Authorities estimated mat 2,500 Iowans were homeless, with the Des Moines River flood crest moving into popuplousDes Moines. At least 100 . persons were homeless in Wisconsin. ::v:kv::w:::- I- at Windy times. 225-16- VOL. 42, NO. 45 . ""f defense, military or world affairs," the cabinet officersaid. "In fact, I would like to forget them as much as possible to concentrate on my skiing." The Defense secretary did state that President Johnson's speech Wednesday on the Viet Nam situation was one of the most important the President had ever made. He said reaction has been very favorable the. world, with throughout many leaders labeling it an outstanding talk. 4- ance measuresjoing bajkjo Tours Flood Areas Gov. Karl Rolvaag toured Minnesota's flood areas by plane Saturday morning. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, in Minneapolis to see a n granddaughter, prepared to make a similar flight later in the day. Sheriff Lester Melchart of Carver County ordered half the population to flee from Chaska, where a Minnesota River crest arrived two days ahead of Peace Aim SAN MARCOS, Tex. schedule. Minesota Civil Defense officials said Chaska was the sec ond hardest hit community in the state, exceeded only by the Mankato area. Weary volunteers continued to labor at strength ening and raising the height of Chaska s dikes and levees. At Mankato, the Minnesota dropped slightly after climbing to within a foot of the forecast crest. Mayor Rex Hill called the drop in me water level "terrific news. That other foot of water would have flooded down. town Mankato." PactApp ears LikelyO n Colorado River Water we canlive (UPI)-Presi- dent Johnson "softly,, but firmly" warned the world Sat urday to make no mistake about Americans- - willingness and ability to defend freedom though it seeks only peace. Recalling his offer Wednesday of "unconditional discussions" for a 'peaceful settlement of the war in Viet Nam, Johnson noted that he had emphasized U. S. "firmness and determination to carry out our commit ments there. new-bor- whether witfi the Dedication Speaker He spoke at the dedication of a new Job Corps training center here for youths who seek skills to rise from a background of poverty and said he wishes such efforts could be applied throughout the world. The President said: "Three decades ago, thirty years ago, the course of history for the world was set upon a tragic direction because other men in other nations misread our American . purpose, mis judged our American will and not least of all miscalcu lated the spirit and the stamina of our American youth. President "Determined" "There must not be any mis takes like that made today. Because I am determined to use whatever talents Tire- mine to take certain that American is not misunderstood in the world - today. , A decision may be reached next Friday, he said. "The board (CUCD) will meet at the Bureau of Reclame" tion office in Salt Lake City Friday morning and go over an the ramifications involved and make a decision on what the board action will be on April 19," he said. "We will then met with the Arizona group ' in the afternoon. "Next Friday w will decide Soviets End - "'SAIGON (UPI) A strike force of 114 U. S. warplanes bombed vital North Vietnamese supply lines Saturday as the first Marine jet fighters and 1,400 more Leathernecks landed in South Viet Nam with the sound of battle crackling in the distance. ; J : . "t The Marines, vanguard of a force of 3,000 being sent in tojoin 4,000 already at the Da Nang air base, waded ashore while Vietnamese rangers and - clobbered Communist Viet Cong troops who had hoped to disrupt the land- fighter-bombe- rs Harassment ing. In Berlin ; Marme Corps helicopter tried to rescue wounded Viet- in with rock BERLIN (UPI) The Rus namese, swooping et fire. It met and machinegun sians Saturday cut short their war games west of Berlin and such heavy ground fire it was ended harassment of this iso unable to land and pick up the lated city as the U. S. Army wounded rangers. Two U. S. sent a combat infantry battalion Army 'copters also engaged the here from West Germany in a Reds in the Le My area. The Viet Cong Saturday won show of force. The Soviet and East German their first big victory In weeks Communists made no attempt only 36 miles from the Marine to interfere with the American landing spot when they overran a company - sized outpost at troop convoy as it rolled to West Berlin over the (See 111 PLANES, Page 4) Communist highway crossing East Germany. The Soviet move was an nounced after Ihe American Army sent 452 infantrymen in four convoys of 103 trucks and highjeeps along the way from Helmstedt to West A . - 110-mi- le Fatal to 110-mi- le Linda Darnell Berlin. Convict Killed Colorado In and enunciate a program that I hoped would be war against war itself. In a tripod, three pronged speech that I made in Baltimore on Wednesday eveCANON CltY, Colo. (UPD- -A Denver convict at the Coloning to the nation and to the world, I made clear our rado State Penitentiary was firmness and our commitments, stabbed to death with a wood and our determination to carry working tool Saturday in a quet out our commitments; our read cell bloc. Prison officials cap- iness and our willingness to en ftured another Denver inmate gage in . unconditional discus running from the scene. ' sions; and our .Christian and It was the second fataTstab- great humanitarian desire to bing at the state prison in four participate in helping to devel- months. op other parts of the. world." Deputy Warden Fred Wyse identified the victim as Wendell Know 1 Prison Knifing - CHICAGO (UPI) Actress Linda Darnell, one of Holly-- ? wood's brightest stars of the 1940s and 1950s, died Saturday from the effect of burns. , Death came to the brunette beauty at 3:15 p.m. EST, about 33 hours after she was burned over 80 per cent of her body at the suburban apartment of the former personal secretary. Miss Darnell s only daughter, Charlotte, 16, whom she adopt ed aa an infant, visited her ear--f lier Saturday. But no relatives were present when Miss Dar- "r- nell died." "t.----7--"'Miss Darnell had been con- scious during the day and had spoken a few words, according to spokesmen at Cook County Hospital's Sumner L. Koch's burn unit. They said she was 4 "slightly improved." But doctors said from the start that few ever survived the extent of the burns, that almost covered Miss Darnell's body. .. "' ji Miss Darnell, 43, was burned early Friday in suburban Glen-vie' ' a short time after she and her former personal secretary sat up and watched the Leroy Crouse, 37. He died in late movie, "Star Dust," in the prison infirmary 20 min- which the brunette beauty starutes after the stabbing from red in 1940. about 20 wounds in the chest Miss Darnell was found beand stomach. hind a downstairs sofa. Mrs. Prison officials held Ralph Richard Curtis, 36, whom Miss Hedrick, 24, for questioning. Darnell had been visiting for Wyse said prison officer Noel several weeks, said the actress Quick captured Hedrick as he had gone downstairs in a belief, ducked around a corner and that Mrs. Curtis' daughter, Paran from the scene. tricia, 16, was trapped there. . ; j ( ' Union Rift Slowing Down Steel Contract Talks - Steel industry contract negotiations, generally regarded in. recent years as the model of collective bargaining, again have been relegated to sideshow stature by the power play within the PITTSBURGH (UPI) : Lifelines -- d Decision Due WELLS, Nev. (UPI) -Keith Lee Rice, Kearns, Utah,, was killed Saturday k in a accident on 40 about 22 miles U.S. ky east of here. The Nevada Highway Patrol said Julius Newsome of Wendover was driving east when his car . slid on the pavement into the path of a truck driven by Clarence. Munson Bloodgood Jr., of Walnut Creek, Calif. , Soviet border guaros passed the convoys quickly and with out difficulty through check points at either end of ihe high way, the Army announced. The troops were soldiers of the Berlin garrison returning to the city from field training in West Germany. An Allied Have One Purpose spokesman said the U.S. con "Beyond these shores we of voys had long been scheduled America have only one purpose for this weekend and did not that purpose is peace in the (See SOVIETS END, Page 4) world for all men, peace for ourselves,- -, and . peace.. Jor all mankind of all countries. . . "I started out the early part -of the week trying - to - evolve Now go. Planes Bomb Red CRACK-U- P "In this setting, and under these which circumstances, mean so much to me, I would like for a moment today to speak from my heart to the hearts of men and women ev erywhere in all this world to say a few things: Agreement .on the use of proposal." River water by both Mr. Jones said the committee the Central Utah Conservancy investigating the matter under District and the Arizona Re- Leo P. Harvey, chairman, seem sources Company has not yet ed willing to go along with the been reached but 'it appears Arizona group's request fully until the year 2010 45 years near, Sterling D. Jones, CUCD from now. said president,, Saturday. The ultimate phase of the Nine members of llie con CUP would be slowed to allow servancy group met Friday this. Any deficit in water at with representatives of the rer Mr. Jones said, would that source company and Bureau of have lime, to be made up on pro-rat- a Reclamation officials to iron basis a seventh of the deficit out differences between the two to be borne by the power group groups. The meeting followed and by the ulti one Thursday with Gov. Calvin mate phase of the CUP: Rampton in which he told the Suggestion Made You group to come to an agreement The recommendation suggests. by April 19. Mr. Jones said, that after 2010 By United Press International The problem involves an ap or when the ultimate phase the Arizona plication by group comes into being, the CUP sell Although the Magna Carta for 102,000 acre feet of water water to the Arizona group with signed in 1215, guaranteed the from the Colorado River for use the funds to be used as part of legal rights of freemen,, a privi for cooling a power the CUP repayment to the leged class in the 13th century, plant planned for Kane County. Bureau. it took another 400 years before The CUCD has expressed fear Mr. Jones said that the CUCD the common people of Britain that the power project might (See PACT APPEARS, Page 4) secured the same privileges jeopardize portions of the Cen- tral Utah Project. Mr. Jones said that while no McDonald, Abel Co - Chairmen agreement was reached "we feel we have ironed out differ ences. We know what they have, and we know how far we can Colorado coal-fire- 114 IN NEVADA car-truc- It was quickly sent on to Johnson's Texas ranch, where the Chief Executive is spending the weekend. The White House made no of- ficiah announcement of when Johnson would sign the bill into law, but invitations went out to his former classmates at the little country school were John Remain Homeless son spent many hours as a boy However, s.ooo persons re to join him there Sunday for mains homeless at North Man the signing. kato. Two thousand more were Passage of the bill was the out of their names in Mankato's (See SCHOOL AID, Page 4) (See RIVERS GO, Page 4) By" JERRY CORNELL UTAHN DIES United Steelworkers union. The conflict between incumbent USW President David J. Abel McDonald and I. W. reached its most torrid level Friday. It forced cancellation of a negotiating session, left the union further divided nla ud ed doubls whether an accord day when Abel's supporters Incould be sisted their man TreplaceTMc-Donal- d with as chief union negotiareached by the May 1' strike deadline. Only minimal prog- tor. ress has been achieved since McDonald refused to resign talks opened last December. but agreed to have Abel act as The compromise Discussions were in recess during the weekend. They re- was accepted with the stipulasume Monday with Abel joining tion that if talks do1 not get off within a few days of dead-centMcDonald as would petition to Abel forces team, union the bargaining i have the USW Executive Board Stormy Meeting The change in the union convene and vote McDonald out. Abel men won control of the structure came meeting Fri-- executive board in tn4 milUon--J. stormy, three-hou- r ustry the-ind- er during : member union V Feb. 9 election. Abel also scored an apparent victory but the official , an- - ' nouncement by the alternation- - f al tellers is not expected to be made before May 1, the last ) . legal date permitted by. the union constitution..', i i ii;. ..,!.,:.. ., ,4 Expression Of Democracy ' ; The contest was described at an expression of democratic . process within the union. But it left Industry dismayed. The un-- 1 ion eventually developed the (See UKIOJJ RIFT, Pi i A " I |