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Show ir U rly m 13-ho- FR Telephone mm P Tuesday's primary is on the only .The vote on repeal or retention doesn't come u until Nov. 7. It vote hr the primary regardless of the charter. . ur pen: Z ices. as candidates for the three city council positions to be filled this fall. The voters' job . . . your job . . . is to choose six, of these as the November finalists. The candidates are Robert K. (Bob) Allen, Dr. Sanford M. Bingham, Ronald O, (Ron) Boulter, Mrs. Tamorrow is election day in Provo. It's the primary election in which you, the voting public, phoose the candidates you want to go on the ballot for city council at the Nov 7 municipal election. : Provo is the only Central Utah city with an election tomorrow. Polls in the city's 46 voting districts will open at 7 a.m. They will close at 8 p.m. This means that you have a period in which to cast your ballot. Be sure that you do. (See the list of polling places for the 46 voting districts on Page 3 of today's Herald. If you do not know in which district you reside, telephone the city recorder's office or The Daily Herald.) Eleven men and women have offered their serv- bi-yea- mm Of! seveh-memb- -- s non-partisa- Lillian Christensen, Dr.' Lloyd L. Cullimore, present mayor, W. Ward Heal, Arthur R. Morin, Dr. Henry J. Nicholes, James B. Richards, John , H. (Jack)' Smeath, and Mrs. Delenna T. Taylor. council-- " The 11 are seeking the three four-ye- Any thoughtful citizen will realize how, important men and women in it is to' get the office. Usuallv the "best candidates" win when the vote is heavy. This doesn't always happen when there s a light vote. Sometimes backers of "favorite" candidates stay away from the polls, thinking their candidates will win anyway., Tiiis attitude is dangerous. To get on the November ballot a candidate must win in the primary. He cannot win, unless he gets the votes. That's! why it's so important that you. vote tomorrow. Let's have a good vote. Evaluate the 11 men and women seeking office. Accept your Responsibility ; exercise your franchise. Vote!- positions on th(; citys policy and' law making board. There are four holdovers on the council. Local elections are politically speaking. They are not accompanied by the fanfare of party campaigning or of flaming political speeches ona national basis. But local elections are important . . . perhaps more so than some of the national .contests because local government is closer tc you. The people you elect to your city council make the laws, set the "policies under, which you and your neighbors must live. They decide; ori. the special improvement projects, on expenditure of public fund s, on. questions which shape the character and destiny of your community. man-at-lar- ge council candidates of the city charter is urged that you how you stand on -- V.4 best-qualifi- e'r - n, - -- , ar ed - CLOUDS 3-50- 50 increasing: with "snow beginning over the mountains, this afternoon and chance of light rain in the valley tonight and Tuesday morning. Partly cloudy Tuesday afternoon. A little warmer. High today in low 50s. Low tonight 34 to 38. High Tuesday upper 50's. For Ads., News, Circulation: Provo Office, 190 VV. Fit 4th N. Orem Office 757 N. State AC 50 05 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH MONDAY, OCTOBER YEAR, NO. 60 EIGHTY-NINT- H 3 o i i Li Li i Hi M fti l fxi .i Y PRICE FIVE CENTS 1961 2 -- 1 J r t 5 t i O By UNITED. PRESS 'INTERNATIONAL Russia today detonated a giant nuclear device in the arctic which European detection stations said may have been Nikita Khrushchev's promised bomb. But the White House was described as "highly skeptical" that the explosion involved the big bomb, labelled by thid country as a, terror weapon. -- ; ':" 50-mep:at- on I I ' U. N. Still 1 Debatina f UNITED nt pending a study. de The commission's world-wid- e tection stations have' recorded all of the explosions in the current j . Soviet series. Both the French Atomic Energy Commission and Sweden's Uppsa- a University Seismolagical Institu tion said, the new Soviet explosion (UPI) have probably was in the ? NATIONS, N.. Reports that Russia may touched off its nucjear range. networks European detection device caught the United Nations if it that wasn't 'the 50- agreed delegates today in the midst of a it was the bigmegaton weapon, debate on a "solemn appeal" to so detonated the Russians by the Soviet Union not to explode gest in far this ft series. the super-bom- ir b. I ' ) .' V " j ! "1 SPECTACULAR FIRE AT SEAPORT Dense smok'e billows skyward from the Italian liner Bianca, C, after ian jeilgirie room blast wrecked vessel. Two crewmen were killed and 18 persons inthe 18,427-to- n jured, but 600 passengers and crewmeli were quickly rescued from Nobel Peace Prize Goes to Hdmmarskjold Posthumously The late United mission to the Congo. His- - name, Nations Secretary General Dag1 which had been mentioned for the Hammarskjold won the 1961 Nobel peace prize in the past, came Ppflee Prize todav. the first time h th PnnP tn a HpaH strongly into contention in the wake of his death. , u 'man. As usual, the committee gave At the same time, the Nobel j Peace Prize Committee awarded no reason for its decision, apart its previously vacant 1960 award from the terse communique issued to South Africa's Albert Luthuli, the secretariat of the Nobel by the native nationalist leader. Institute here. Hammarskjold was killed along with. 15 other persons in a plane ' The communique said: The Nobel . Committee of the crash in Ndola, Northern Rhodesia, 18 on a while last Sept. peace Norwegian National "Assembly has decided to give the Nobel Peace Prize for 1960 to Albert John Luthuli. The prize rfor 1961 has been awarded Dag Hammarskjold post mortem. The prize money for 1961 .will be placed at the disposal of Dag Hammarskjold's estate. The prize for 1960 is 225,986.76 Swedish kroner ($42,600) and the prize for 1961 is 250,232.83 Swedish kroner OSLO (UPI) . : ($42,200)." The Congo Italian Liner Wrecked by Blast, Blaze PORT OF (UPI) An ( Herald-UP- I Radio-Telephp- i By HENRY SHAPIRO United Press International MOSCOW (UPI) The Kremlin publicly humiliated former Soviet President Klimenti Voroshilov, 80, to his face today for opposing Premier Nikita Khrushchev in the 1957 "antiparty" plot. Time and again the former Red army 'hero tried to interrupt his denunciation by Russian Republic Premier Dmitri in front of the 5,000 deleto the 22nd Soviet Commugates nist Congress. 1 explosion wrecked the 18,427-to- n Italian liner Bianca C. in Grenada Sunday, killing two crewmen and injuring 18 others among the 600 passengers' and crewmen aboard. So far as was known there were no Americans aboard. ireF raced through .the ship, c?using such intense hejat that a stricken vessel at an altitude of 900 feet was tossed about like a leaf by rising air currents. Each time the chairman banged The ship exploded and caught fi ; &s it was ent nng the harbor down his gavel, drowning out wordsT of St. George on . the British Voroshilov ' sat in a platform of Grenada. Passengers and crewmen were ferried to shore by chair only a few feet away while lifeboats and local launches. Late . Sunday night the ship was still burning fiercely. The U.S. Have a Question On Coast Guard reported it a total engine-roo- m . ' red-face- d Po-lyans- Vor-oshilo- is-la- ro ' mission .which was losi. his last was part of the long and ; The liner was on its way to arduous struggle for peace that England from the Dutch island of ' ,- , Your Voting Status? See County Recorder marked Hammarskjold's days ' as Curacao., ' Utah County Recorder Mark Second engineer Rodiza Napale secretary general. Boyack announced toady his In November, 1956, his quiet and an unidentified oiler died in office will be open until 8 p.m. diplomacy accomplished the virtu- hospital of burns. Tuesday for anyone wishing ally impossible in a moment of i'to check their voting registra-- " life and death for the United Nation status. People may cail tions when he managed to get FR HERALD with inquiries, he the first troops of a U.N. emerg' said. ency force into positions along the Central Utah News 3, 4, 5, 7, 14 Mr. Boyack has a master list truce line between Egypt and Is.. 13 Classified , 12, of voting registrations, which rael. 11 Comics can check against district he Before that, Hammarskjold diEditorial 10 In event a person's, name lists. plomacy had arranged a cease-firJVorld News 2, 11, 14 not National, on district rolls, and he is between the two. Then he followed Obituaries ...... 4 feels it .may have been left up by obtaining permission from 6 off through error, he can , a sovereign nation Egypt for es- Society. 9 check by calling the recordSports 8, tablishment of U.N. troops on its Stocks 4 ;... office. er's soil. . INDEX e ! to ) . j preliminary debate on the appeal to the Kremlin began last Friday, might break his silence at this 17 Receives Reports-Presiden- t Kennedy received in telligence reports on the explosion as he prepared to return to Washington from his weekend retreat at Newport, Rrl. Twice during the morning White House sources' said that on the basis of information then avail able, American experts were highly skeptical" that ,this was the weapon." d One Washington official advised a reporter to treat exthe report of a plosion with caution. He said the (See U. S. DOUBTS Page 4) Kennedy well-informe- Hoffa Files Libel Suit afternoon's meeting. Tsarapkin, approached by news'I: men,, smilingly said he could "neither deny nor confirm" the had Ex-So- v report that the super-bombeen detonated. Despite a warning by Canadian DETROIT (UPir Affairs Secretary How Teamsters External 9 R. C. President James Hoffa and his Green that the ard 1 I aevice might be exploded "this union today filed a $1 million libel weekend" before the committee anu slander suit against G'eorge Polyansky scorned his 195 apol-- ; sponsbile along with the other could act on the appe .1 to Rus Meany,24 president of the AFL-CIother national AFLfCIO ogy that "the devil had misjed menjbes of the now deposed op sia, the political group adjourned and leaders. without action. me into joining the Friday position group The suit, filed in U.S. District chev faction led by former ForKhrushchev opened the current Court liere, charged that Meany eign Minister V. M. Molotov. last Tuesday by saying Congress cast the plaintiffs false, ma"at Insists on Reponsibility Voroshilov had annlniripH. hut thp licious and wicked charges, with Polyansky demanded that the pmLer Unked voroshilov with his objective being to lie and steal aged former defense minister and Molqtov, Lazar Kaganovich and reaway the plaintiffs' members." be held ,fully Georgi Malenkov in his charge The suit was an outgrowth of that they took part in the Stalin statements made by Meany ear- era's mass repressions. Her this month in New York. 7 Polyansky said Voroshilov apolMOSCOW (UPI) It quoted Meany as stating on Defense Min ogized only to cover up his re- ister Rodio Malinovsky suggested Oct: 10 that "there is every indisponsibility for the bloody purges, today the Soviet Union has devel- cation that the (teamsters) union ; especially those in thi Red Army. oped a successful antimissile mis is more than ever now- under the Voroshilov served as defense sile and said that "imperialist' influence of criminal and corrupt when hun powers are preparing to launch a elements." commissar in 1936-3. The Secre- dreds of the Red, army's top- - surprise attack on Russia. WASHINGTON (UPI) suit charged that Meany, bewas on behalf of the were was of seesno made Dean Rusk officers arrested hat and State ranking speaking Malinovsky tary and his remarks were prospect of immediate negotia- the entire officer corps was deci lieved to be the first Soviet claim AFL-CItions with the Soviet Union over mated. His own deputy, Marshal to having conquered the danger designed to raid the Teamsters of a rocket" attack. Union. (See KREMLIN Page 4) Germany and Berlin. Sunstatement Rusk made the day shortly before U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson left for Moscow where he eventually is resume exploratory expected to ' talks with Soviet of ficials on the Berlin issue. Thompson is scheduled to arrive in Moscow Tuesday. In a television interview (ABC Fla. was planned for a range of about to launch the rocket today! Issr 3 and Answers) Rusk made C APE : CANAVERAL, statute miles. 1,500 The It marked the 20th success in it clear the West is negotiating (UP!) Navy today fired an But there was no wprd l5f any 34 known Polaris from a position of strength. He advanced model Polaris rocket firings since the said that Soviet Premier Nikita from the depths of the1 Atlantic kind from the Navy regarding the George Washington launched the test. It was the second "secret" Khrushchev "must know that we Ooean for the first timel shot 'within eight days for the first submerged Polaris l1, a years are strong." The Ethan Allen, America's larg Ethan Allen, sixth member of the ago. est imissile - launching nuclear nation's growing fleet of Polaris One week ago today, the Ethan Allen submarine, triggered the slipped quietly into a re subs. Polaris A2 rocket from a firing mote stretch of. the Atlantic to The 6,900-tosubmarine, first of in deck. tube its . Polaris. first the fleet designed to fire the fire its By United Press International e The shot the in The advanced Polaris is waterfall The highest appeared generally larger and more powerful Polarcombat-readto to 50 indica but were a next cruised ed ft. about the e 2,425 United States is ises, successful, point tions of minor troubles. The shot miles southeast of Cape Canaveral year. Falls, in California. Cremlin Humiliates let Chief Plot For 0 pposin a K. in Anf'ipa Trinidad SPAIN, the burning ship. The Bianca C. exploded and caught fire as it entered the harbor of St. George on Grenada, British West Indies vote had been expected this afternoon in the General Assem-- 1 bly's Main Political Committee on a seven-powe- r resplution contain- ing the appeal. Danish Ambassador Aage Hes- sellund-Jense- n said the sponsors of the appeal awaited more information on the unconfirmed report of the explosion before deciding how to proceed with the resolution. The measure was sponsored by Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, Canada, Japan and Pakistan. Hessellund - Jensen suggested that Soviet delegate Semy on K. Tsarapkin, who sat quiet while A I - plane crash in the Congo Sept. 18 while on peace mission. -- Bomb Issue , Peace Prize today, the first time the award has gone to a. dead man. He was 'killed in a spokesman for the Atomic Energy Commission said indications were that the Soviet test was 0 in the range. But he ruled out any official state--meA . HONORED AFTER DEATH r The late U N Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, shown in I960 file photo, won 1961 Nobel i Some Countries Disaaree Roads in the lower areas were clear, and snow in scattered flurries fell last night;-.- . One man died of a heart attack near Rupert in southern Idaho and four men died in Utah, three 'from heart attacks and one from an accidental shooting. Sunday night it was estimated 300 had been trapped in the snow during the day near Burley. All except four hunting parties in the Island Park area were reported rescued by nightfall. Jeep units went to the Grouse Creek and Park Valley areas , of northwest Utah Sunday but had notreported back by early today. A search was launched in the Monte Crista area northeast of Ogden, Utah, foe- a missing California hunter Identified as Frank Mendez of Sesesa. As long as hunters remained Hear their cars or camps officials (See SNOW TRAPS Page 4) . Bonib But 50-Megat- on By United Press International ) n U. S. Doubts Device Was Snow Traps Scores On Deer Hunt Jeep patrols, National Guards- men and aerial search teams join- ed forces today in an attempt to guide scores of deer hunters from their scattered camps in southeast Idaho and northern Utah. A snowstorm which swept in Saturday afternoon in the first hours of the general deer hunting season in the two states caught hunters unprepared .Many of them already have spent two nights in freezing temperatures and it was possible some might have another one ahead of them. No deaths had been directly traced to the hardships of the snow. In (most places around the Burley and Island Park areas of Idaho and the Park Valley area in, northern Utah the snow was one to two feet in the mountains. 7X i :;::x:A:A r - i b Against AAeapy j anti-khrus- h- Soviets Claim Defense Against Missile Attack Chances Dim for Talks on Berlin, Secretary Claims - 3 O , " Navy Fires Advanced Model Polaris Rocket With Success From Depths of the Atlantic 15-to- n . Nov You Know 30-fo- ot . n expecl-becom- Yo-semi- te th-r- y A |