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Show - " - . - :'a Telephone TorAds, f 373-505- 0 News, Circulation: Generally Fair . Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. ...... Orem Office, SB N. State to- - slow warming trend with 373-505- 1 day. High today near 70. Low tonlght-Bppery- kto ... ; 22S-160- B VOL. 43, NO. 45 JROVQ( UTAH COUNTY, UTAtf SUNDAY, APRIL Toll for Oklahoma Mr Crash: SlDead U.S. Still ;. . . . - ..' - , PRICE 15 CENTS . yo So Ado 1Fdc Jefts Ready to ccharred GENE AUTRY, Okla-(U- PI) wreckage of an fathom the cause of me crash Investigators found the flight airliner shuttling, troops and set that killed 81 of the 98 persons' 'recorder intact Saturday.in the up an emergency center to aboard. 'BTlitehTsTWrtai gators and officials of the Civil Aeronautics Board icab) smea through the debris in hilly southern Oklahoma.There was no indication of sabotage in the wreck the first in 27 years of flying, for American Flyersr a charter airline " " Survivors, many of.,, them were being cruelly burned, 24,; 1966 ? rovbMan Cong ress Candidate questioned when possible out the story of Dr. J. Keith Melville of Provo, help piece horror. associate professor of political who was president science at Brigham Young Uni - Imong - the of - the- - firm,-w- as versity, Saturday announced he dead. will seek the Democratic nomi The turboprop nation for congressman from -Electra, with 92 GI's and 6 Utah's. First Congressional crew members, smashed into a District. Vhillside Friday The new-Fi- rst District, as brushy, rocky in a thunderstorm, night created by" the last state legis " lature's reapportionment, in r Bodies," debris - and cattle herd a from caught in the cludes Utah County and 21 scattered were path plane's others; with Utah County shift ed from the Second to the First hundreds of yards. The aircraft ' District by the action. The First burned. . .. Some survivors were still in District as now created includes seats with their seatbelts their everything in the state except bait Lake, Tooele, 3uab, Mill attached when found by resard, Beaver, Iron and Washing cuers. Teams of burn specialists ton counties, which comprise were 'sent to hospitals that held the new Second District. the injured. To Take Leave The candidate said ' Among Big Disasters The crash was Jhe third he will be on leave from his position at the uihyersity be worst military air disaster in ginning the latter part of May United States history. to devote his full time to his Most of the passengers were bound from Ft. Ord, Calif, to campaign. Active in civic affairs and the Ft. Benning's airborne training Democratic Party, he has voted school in Georgia, some possithe Democratic ticket since he bly destined for Viet Nam. came of legal voting, age at 21. Sixteen CAB specialists flew tie was named a de eeate to from Washington to Perrin Air the state Democratic convention Force base, Sherman, Tex., last year, and is a leader in his then were taken by bus to own rrovo aistrict. While in Ardmore, Okla., near the crash ' Idaho on the faculty of Ricks scene. College, he actively supported A spokesman said the flight the campaigns Democratic recorder, a basketball sized Candidate Claude Burtenshaw mstrument package with the for the U. S. Senate in three vital signs of an airliner's different elections. performance, was recovered in Teaching Record good condition. Prof. MelviL'e teaches both The flight recorder was to be (See PROVO MAN, Page 4) (See TOLL FOR, Page 4) four-engi- MELVILLE Orchardists Continue Frost Fight Already tired and weary from . battle to the protect their fruit crops from the frost of the past week, a number of Utah County orchard owners Friday night staged another defensive against the assault of the cold weather. But many others, ' already having lost nearly all their crop for this year, resignedly went to bed in the knowledge that the amount of fruit remaining on their trees did not justify the costs of another night of smudge burning. . Unexpected Dtp , The mercury look as unexpected plunge downward Friday night, reaching a low at the official U. S. Bureau Weather Recording station W southwest Provo of 26 early Satur-- . day morning. Early risers were amazed at the pall of smudge they saw lingering in the air Saturday morning, but most of the smudging seemed to be in the area north of Provo. This was undoubtedly due to the fact mat the fruit in the northern section of Utah County was generally not as heavily damaged by the frosts earlier In the week as was the fruit south of Provo. Northern Area ' Thus the farmers in the Orem-Pleasa- nt Fork' Grove-Americ- 'area still had a sufficient amount of fruit left to warrant another night's battle to save it from the frost. Joe Barlow, Utah County extension agricultural agent, reported that although he had not made any - official survey of the damage Friday night he felt that the orchards that were heated during that time probably escaped with little additional damage. He further said that most orchards that were not heated did not suffer much addition ally because they already had lost most of their fruit. The weather forecast for Saturday night called for temperatures in the high 30s after a .. high Saturday of near 70. -- ' State Hospital Applies For Improvement Grant Ste Utah Hospital is in the process of applying for a Hospital 'Improvement Project (HIP) grant from the federal Department of Health, Educa tion ,and Welfare on a non- matching fund basis to initiate a program of patient after-car- e in the state.' Available on a basis at $100,000 a year, HIP would bridge what Dr. Gordon . S. Johnson, superintendent at the state hospital, calls "one of the shortcomings" in the present program of mental health treatment in the hospital. He said the after-car- e sought under HIP would be similar to an out patient clinic situation. : Starting Point Under the application outline, the , program would be started in Salt Lake where such a patient clinic situation would be established. The program requires a community coordinator in each community to help keep track of patients re-- HERALDina The News Culture? Ifs Running Out Our Editorial Ears We're, pretty cultured today. Not that we don't try to have a' little all the time, but today we outdid , ourselves. ' On Page Three is a sory of an upcoming art and musical festival to be held in Provo. Page Six carries a review of "Coat of Many Colors" which was presented Friday night, and a story on' the opera "Aida" to be alaged soon by the BYU Opera Workshop. And on the first page of the second section is a full page of pictures on the Community Concert movement and membership drive. Enough culture for one day? Okey, turn to 16 8ilver Page Seven for beavers and buffalo beavers and one buffalo (head). How's that for a change of pace? 4 Elsewhere, there' a lot of newa today about the - world, nation, state and Central Utah. Plus our usual Sunday bonuses of the Family Weekly ' and other features. ' " "' . ... AmmcansifotDemocraticfc (ADA), Humphrey said Saigon is as close !' to Washington now as London was to in 1940 during the Nazi air The-pilo- J. KEITH Vice WASHINGTON (UPI) President Hubert U. Humphrey went before a partially hostile i, audience of friends and former friends" Saturday to 'defend administration policy .in negotiate peace. In a speech prepared for the annual convention of the liberal leased from the state hospital. The coordinator and HIP would make use of the manv local. state and private or it now m in existence agencies the communities to aid in pa tient after-car- e. Dr. Johnson said that presently full use is not made of the various agencies available. Hopefully, after HIP becomes a reality in Utah, centers would be established about the state to help in patient after-carWider Spectrum "The Hospital Improvement Project is programmed to give a wider spectrum of services to , living in their respective communities," Dr. Johnson said In a report to the Public Welfare Commission. "It is the responsibility of mental health aeencies and fa- feilities to offer the best mental health care to the greatest number of citizens in the most reausuc and economic wav possible. In the past a number of difficulties have been encountered in the integration of hospital and community nro. grams. Although this has de manded considerable mutual cooperation in respect to community services, hospital services, as 'well as related state and federal agencies, there has been'; a great deal of prowess in the area," he said. This proeram does, how ever, demonstrate the necessity for a unified mental health agency. Such an agency should not be subordinate to any existing agency or department, and should be on an eoual hasi with departments' such as Health and Welfare, as recommended by the Little Hnnvpr Commission," Dr. Johnson said. non-prof- e. p ill- tion that .. nm, , inipi . - I n, ,f xl'.-- i&irifoV -- ..f. ' a r , - -- I. ir J , z?Jh "V v Wff i ViefNam x&J SAIGON (UPI) -- U.S. Air Force jets fought a dog fight with North Vietnamese MIGs 25 miles Northeast of Hanoi, downing two of the Russian-bui- lt i know that there are differences within this room as to just how we should meet our responsibilities in Asia and particularly in Viet Nam," he said. Humphrey, a former ADA s vice chairman, said exercising his right to advocate a differing viewpoint. He said no liberal could tolerate aggression and' that particularly militant, strain" of aggression was aimed at South Viet Nam. The vice president said that the overwhelming (See U.S. STILL, Page 4) he-wa- , Man-Mad- e Heart Still Going Strong HOUSTON (UPI) --Marcel L. DeRudder passed through the crisis period Saturday showing improvement with an articicial heart imbedded in his chest. The man who built the artificial heart said the device was working "perfectly."Dr. W. W, Akers said the 65- year-ol- d DeRudder, an "unem ployed coal miner from West- ville, HI., was "much better" but still remained unconscious, as he had been since the start five-hoof the dramatic surgery performed Thursday by PRINCL FLIES HIGH Swedish Crown" Prince Carl Gustaf is thrown high into the air ia Stockholm, Sweden, after he successfully completed his matriculation examination at the Tele photo) . Slgtuna Boarding School (Herald-UP- I Utah Pilot Leads Raid - Dr. Michael DeBakey Methodist Hospital. in Akers said the artificial heart, which assumed 75 per cent of the workload of the left ventjicle of DeRudder's heart, required constant watch. "We found we had to adjust to him," Akers said. . The artificial heart initially was adjusted to beat 25 times a minute and took over 60 ; per cent of the workload. However, Akers " said, members of the research team found they must check keep a to adjust a bypass pump so it will keep pace with the beat of DeRudder s heart. Akers and his research engineers worked with DeBakey on the heart project. DeBakey laid down the Ideas for the pump while Akers built minute-by-mmu- te it. The hospital reported that "in general, the patient is doing well," the most optimistic bulletin so'iar on DeRudder's progress. DeBakey said the pattern of the of electrical activity been had brain patient's improved and heart beat had grown stronger. The patient's blood pressure and pulse rate were approaching a normal level. Former Resident Of Provo Aids DeBakey Team On Enemy The World This Morning - 4 Police probed the ruins of a rural menin Finland's d history. Flames mat swept unchecked through the hospital late Friday killed 29 patients locked in rooms with bar' red windows. The victims, most of them elderly, were asleep when the fire broke out, police said. A nurse freed seven patients from their rooms before the blazing hospital, her hair afire. Three of the seven patients that escaped were severely burned: HELSINKI (UPI) SAIGON A Utah (UPI) pilot led a raid of Air Force and Navy planes Saturday which pounded targets in North y Viet Nam. , Two American planes were brought down by enemy ground fire, but the flight led by Capt. James R. Mitchell, 36, of Og- den, Utah, successfully eluded repeated salvos of Red anti aircraft missiles. At least five missiles were launched at Mitchell's flight of Thunderchiefs and Supersabres, which were bombing rail lines in North Viet Nam's Red River Valley. None of them hit its target, but one came fairly close. "When I first saw mat one, it was at about 1,000 feet," Mitchell said. "It exploded about 300 feet above me, but did not damage my plane." s One of the planes in Mitch ell's flight was shot down by Communist guns while evading a missile attack. . The pilot parachuted, but, could not be res- tal hospital Saturday for the cause of the worst fire state-owne- , - Soviet Defense Minister Rodka (UPI) said Friday Russia has developed an antiaircraft system capable of "capturing" whole formathei of fighter planes. At the tame time, Malinovsky said the Soviet Union has e rockets. The a new system to combat in "introduced" been has Russia, the defense system chief told officers and men of tbe Budapest garrison hi a speech carried by the official Hungarian News Agency, BUDAPEST Malinovsky anti-mla-sl- le long-rang- tle In North vCvK V Air-Bat- blitz.- MTL . UNITED NATIONS UPI) Secretary General Thant to Eleanor Roosevelt who, he memorial a dedicated Saturday g striving for said, "gave an added dimension to man's dignity and The memorial is a granite bench in the U.N.'s slab tall a showing a flame in North Garden facing and bearing the inscription "she would rather light a candle cued because of heavy enemy than curse the darkness and her glow has warmed the world." The quotation was used by the late Adlai E. Stevenson In tribwound fire. Mitchell, a former University ute at her death. of Utah skiing Star, is the 8jm of Mrs. Louise S. Mitchell of Tbe West's seemingly inexhaustible LONDON (UPI) Ogden. stocks of wheat are reported to be running low because of the Insatiable demand from Communist bloc countries. ' Red China and Russia between them have bought np Western wheat for this year to tbe tone of an estimated $500 million and they are in the market for (till more. planes, an American military, spokesman said Sunday. At least one of the American planes was reported hit by .ground fire and lost during the raid over the North. One of six MIG Ira in the air battle was shot down with a Sidewinder missile and the other a Sparrow missile.-t- he spokesman said. The American plane reported lost was a Thunderchief. One source said the North Vietnamese were known to have received recently at least 15 of the AUG 21s from Russia. There have been unconfirmed reports that as many as 40 have been crated and shipped to North Viet Nam's two principal airports at Phuc Yen and Kep, near Hanoi It was the first time in months American 'Jets had a chance to engage the tiny North Vietnamese jets in the air. They had previously always turned and fled when American jets approached. The US. raiders were attack ing the Bac Giang Bridge, 25 miles northeast of Hanoi. Saturday when the MIGs were picked- - up on the American planes' radar. Two Air Force F4C Phantom jets flying combat air patrol for a flight of F105 Tbunderch-ief- s swooped down and spotted the communist jets about 3,000 feet below them. The spokes man said a dog fight erupted and for five minutes ranged if least 40 miles north of the bridge. Terrorists Attack Police Saturday night, a suspected squad of Viet Cong terrorists attacked a national police headquarters only a mile from the heart of downtown Saigon, (See AIR BATTLE, page 4) ' ' 4l Dalat Riots Bring Virtual Martial Law South Viet Nam DALAT, (UPI) -V- irtual martial law prevailed Saturday night in mis once peaceful haven from the Viet Nam war. Combat troops faced students across barbed wire barricades while authorities worked to arrange peace talks. Both the Vietnamese ranger units, on the outside of the barricades, end the students, isolated In a Buddhist pagoda held and a marketplace, hostages. At least four persons, two soldiers and two students, have Australian Prime been MEN HOA, South Viet Nam" (UPI) reported killed in four Minister Harold E. Holt got a glimpse of the secret war during days of street fighting in the' a visit to Australian troops at the airbase here Saturday. normally peaceful mountain Holt, standing on the runway at the strategic base 15 miles resort town 145 miles north of north of Saigon, watched a U.S. Air Force C130 propjet roar Saigon. In Saigon, militant Catholic aloft. with a drone plane tucked under each wing. Australian officers explained that the drones are used for leaders Saturday night said "sensitive" reconnaissance missions. Details of their opera- - they had formed a force ready to "punish" those (See THE WORLD, Page 4) responsible for the weeks of nationwide rioting and disorder in "Viet Nam. They ,did not mention Buddhists opposed to the military regime of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky by name but it raised the spector of I bloody : religious war. age-lon- semi-circul- ar bas-reli- ef nt - Bomb Shatters Home of Liquor Case Witness MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) on Saturday --A bomb blast - shattered the home of a federal liquor case witness who had been warned be would never live to testify. The man, A Provo man, Dr. James W. were Webster Jr., as chief surgical his wife and a grandchild ' resident of the Methodist Hos injured. aided Tex., pital, Houston, Police said the explosion, famed surgeon, Dr. Michael De- believed set by multiple dynaBakey in the dramatic opera- mite sticks, blew the bed tion Thursday which ' saw an occupied by the woman and the ' the ceiling. artificial heart emplanted in child, against the chest of a man. Searchers found them beneath Provo Chamber of Comto .eports from According mattress in rubble. a Goodwill Tour will visit merce's Dr. Webster's parents, Dr. and Asst. Police Chief D. H. San Dieco industrial areas and Mrs. James Webster of 1105 Cedar Ave., Provo. as chief Lackey said the victims, Jessie j military complexes on Aug. 11, resident surgeon he stood by Eugene Swanner, 52, his wife, 12. 13 and 14 according to Max Dr. DeBakey during the opera Wilma, 50. and their 'grand- Elliott, chairman of the tour. Reservations are now being tion. He has been a resident at child, Renee Gibson, 2, are the hospital for about 24 Years white and mere was no racial accepted for the tour at the chamber office. By United Press International and hopes to join Dr. DeBakey connection in the incident. Swanner The largest lake in the world when he finishes his residency. said another According to William K. Woth- Lackey is the Caspian Sea, which has raised m Provo, he is a grandchild, Jacqueline Gibson, erspoon, manager of the Provo an area of 143,550 square miles, graduate of Provo, he is a grad- 3. was not hurt in the explosion, Chamber of Commerce; the according to the World Alman- - uate of Provo High School and which occurred shortly after tentative schedule will find the of BYU; tour flying to San Diego the U p.m. MST. 11 t.m, EST). - Now You Know v- moonshine s Provoans to Tour San Diego Plants on Good Will Visit Nguyen Quoc Binh, spokes- evening of Aug. 11. On Aug. 12 man for the Catholic greater visits to two plants will be ar union force, said demonstraranged as well as an evening tions would be held Sunday in meeting with, one of the com two sections of the capital the government munity groups of the city. On demanding Aug. 13 a visit to another plant "punish those who destroyed, nationais expected followed by various killed and arrested recreational activities including lists" during the riots. A psychological warfare deep sea fishing. In the afternoon of Aug. 13, the group will plane circled Da Wang, 380 leave San Diego for another city miles northeast of Saigon, late with the Saturday broadcasting news of yet undetermined return to Provo slated for the the major Allied victory al W (Sm DALAT RIOTS, afternoon of Aug. 14. l tin ' |