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Show 'i FR Telephone 3-50- 50 Fair . For Ads., News, Circulation ' Provo Officer 190 W. 4th N. FR ! with rising temperatures through Thursday. Iligh today In the mid-30'Low tonight 15 to 20. High Thursday in the low 40's. Tuesday's high in Provo area was - Orem Office, 757 N. State T;-- s. 50 32, lowest 16. AC I EIGHTY-NINT- YEAR NO. 161 H PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH ' WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1962 PRICE FIVE CENTS i Windb wo n p I ; sJ kaJ xJ. k By United Press International Parts of five. Midwest states re- mained . walled off behind snow drifts today," and a new storm was boiling up in New : Mexico. . The Northeast continued to dig out from under as much as 2 feet of new snow. . A record heat wave toasted Florida,.! where Miami reported 89 ever on degrees Tuesday, highest " March 13. Rising streams caused concern in i parts of Iowa, Illinois, Michij gan andj Ohio. Canadian cold sifting southward behind the Midwest storm area dropped the temperature to 5 be- " j . : s . V f ' : ii . - mid-Apri- - Honorable Mention :. V ' - v AII-iAmeric- i a ! Awards Jury Cites Provo . ' f ( TABLEU-Herald-U- Pl Provo today received honorable shows delegations of the Big Three mention in the City Kadiotelephoto judging for the Outstanding role countries as they surrounded the conference table at General DisaiTnament Conof its citizens im being alert to the opening of the ference at Geneva bottom left is U.S. Secre- needs At and especially today. community in the field of yotith welfarej Alfred Willoughby, executive director of the National Municipal League at New York, announced Provo's rating in a letter to Dr. Quinn G, McKay, chairman of the city's presentation in the 2ity awards competition. One of Finalists !;z-wzmy,Provo (was one! of 22 finalists BERLIN The United of (UPI) from a large field municipali and Great States consideration Britain for nominated ties planned to send commercial . flights in the contest. The fact that the HAVANA (UPD! city was ones of 22 in the finals Premier Fi- - through the Berlin air corridors and received honorable mention del Castro lashed out early today today in direct defiance of an: un is a great tribute to the com- at government censors who try to munity, said Mr j Willoughby. muzzle" Cuban heroes by delet- The City compe- ing references t God from their tition is sponsoreji by the Najtional historic4 utterances. Municipal League and Look MagCastro was incensed by the azine. After preliminary judg- reading at a mass meeting here ing last fall, Dr. McKay and Dr. of an abridged version of a slain Stewart L. Girow made a personal leftist's testament;" presentation at the annua con- The words'jpolitical "we trust that the vention of the National Municipal purity of bur motives will find League in Miami Beach, Fla. favor with God"j had been cut Both felt that Provo's chances from the passage. award were for an failed sc low that we we "Have, hurt when the city voted out the must By BRUCE AGNEW omitj thesej lines because council-managUnited Press International system of gov- they speak of religious convicernment last November, inas- tions?.. N.Y. (UPI) BINGHAMTON, Castro! demanded in la much, as the National Municipal and private guards speech, "This was the Armed police this act of a lackwit League strongly advocates, watch over, a city stood today who has confi' '. system-dence neither in hik own ideas hospital which received bomb Nevertheless, the "honorable nor in Marxism, who considers threats because six infants! died mention" selection was hailed by there of an overdose of salt In the committee today as being! im- history as something dead and their formulas. portant recognition for Provo. rotten.j" detectives, Pinkerton guards, The prerhier also Former Mayor Lloyd L. that the name of ihe Rebel Youth hospital employes and volunteersappointed the committee Association should! be corridor of the sixchanged to guarded every for the City presen- the Association of General HospiYoung Commu- - story Blnghamton tation last summer. The comtal. Outside, searchlights were mittee's entry stressed the many nists. trained on the grounds during the Coin New Money community projects designated to h hours. At the same time the Castro ';(;'" aid youth and reduce delinquency. six calls were received least At I announced coin it is that regime Cities four at the hospital ing new 20- - and 40 cent pieces. Tuesday The 11 cities honored as which is now being switchboard, w ere Anacorjtes, Cubans , will be given two weeks be to exchange most their exist- - tapped by police. Three weresame r, Wash. ; Lynwood, Calif.; to the be made; by to peso lieved 4 coins, from j Ore. ; Falls Church, man. J Va. ; Galveston, Tex. ; Hartford, pieces, tor tne new issue. i Called Screwballs, Cranks 2coins and Existin Conn.; Independence, Mo.; Rock-yill"The 'callers would have to be Md.; Slalisbury, N.: C; Sioux will continue in circulation. screwballs or cranks," said poThe coiAage is the second lice City, Iowa, and Wichita, Kan. The Sgt. Carl Stolz when j queswinning cities will be featured by sweeping economic reform in! as tioned . by a newsman j But the Look Magazine late this month, many days following Castro's raT heavy guard was maintained, for Dr. George H. Gallup, director tioning of food and other house- the protection of patients in the of the American Institute of Pub- hold necessities. red brick hospital. measure jsvas The rationing lic! Opinion, chairmaned the j Of the 30 infants who received awards jury1, which sifted entries openly criticized by some Cubans, d last formulas "The situation will be worse week When a . from more than 80 contestants. nurse appractical (See (See NEW REFORM Page 4): Page 3) parently placed salt 'in a sugar container, four remain under constant observation. ' 'There continues to be steady improvement in at least two of ! ? . i All-Ameri- in ! : 1 ca j PRESIDENT'S BROTHER IN THE RACE - Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, youngest brother of the president, is shown with his wife Joan, as he made his xnent that he is a candidate for the Democratic nomina- tion as U.S. senator of Massachusetts. Kennedy (made the announcement in his fashionable Beacon Hill home. (Herld-UP- I Telephoto) tary of State Dean Rusk; Second man up from Rusk iii R u ssi an M ove r .' ca Li - Berlin-Hambur- fed Kennedy Seeks Demo Nomi nation for Senator Edward (M. for the Democratic nomination as (UPI) 30, youngest U.SJ Senator. (Ted) Kennedy, brother of the" President, formally Kennedy made the announce announced- - his candidacy today ment at his home at the foot of Fashionable Beacon Hill. He pledged himself to run on a campaign "to build the fu ture of Massachusetts." i BOSTON -- . Draft Call For 6000 Men Issued forj May Kennedy thus challenged Massachusetts Atty. Gen. Edward " J. McCbrmack Jr.,"nephew of House Speaker John W, for the party nomination. Mc- WASHINGTON The Cormack made his announcement (UPI) 1 Defense Department today issued March 5. Ifi , .a draft call for 6,000 men toj be Kenndy s statement said: "I inducted into the j Army during am announcing todayj my candiV .'" dacy! for the Senate of the United !'! May. This continued the low draft States. I : make this decision in rate established for March and full knowledge of the obstacles I April. The high during the Berlin will face, the charges that will be buildup lastj fall was 25,000 induc- made and the heavy responsibiliI tions, in September. ties of the office to which I a! .5; " The .Army now has strength aspirp." of 1,114,000 men, including 156,000 The contest this year is for the reserves and National Guardsmen two tears remaining in the Sen called to active duty. dee TED KENNEDY Page 4) ' ; J i ' , Fire at Missile Base Triggers Air Force Alerf; Damage Small Smoke base. The call was erroneous.' Air Force officials said the mis from an electrical fire at an Atlas missile complex south of hlere sile atj the site, 18 miles southeast triggered an Air Force alert Tues- of the! base, was in training status day, but there was no danger and only and not an alert missile. But jthey refused to confirm or only minor damage. that the missile j'1 'was More than j 100 missile special- deny ists from nearby Forbes 'Air equipped with a nuclear warhead. Hanneman said a small fire de Force Base, command center for a network, of nuclear missile veloped in one of the motors launching sites, converged on ithe housed in underground bunkers troubled site when the Broken (A- surrounding the submerged! Atlas rrow alert was sounded. Such j an missile; on its launching pad. a "The, smoke was carried into alert is used whenever rooms of the complex' by a at situation other develops dangerous officials said. the air missile nuclear ventilating system," he site, But there was no Broken Ar- said, 'jthe missile crew, on duty row," said Capt. Albert '.Hanne-xaa- became alarmed and sounded the Information officer at the alert. TOPEKA, Kan. I (UPI)-- - . - n. ; . V . 68-min- " f t )' Culli-mbr- All-Ameri- . e! ca i :;"'( pre-dawi ; 'All-Ameri- ca "All-America- j n" j Milton-Freewate- I0-ce- nt ". i 1- -, e, -! f h - i 319-be- . j d, , J sodium-poisone- j . ALL-AMERIC- j Jackie Shows Skill As Rider During Busy Day By PATRICK KILLEN United. Press International ii. Punjabi pajamas at a ; " - fash.' the four infants who suffered dium intoxication," aj. hospital bulletin said early today. One of the infants remained on the critical list, one was reported school. Then she presented India's "serious", and two are "fair," the children with a portable Ameri-- i hospital reported. can schoolroom r for young art A SomberNote But Dr. Lawrence Finberg, a students, T7: IT .jlvais. xveuiieuy ciiaugea ner cosspecialist from' Johns? Hopkins tume five times during the day Medical School, added a somber iind such . was her att: :actioh tiat crowds broke through police lines and peered through the glass winHERALD dows of her limousine Turbaned, black-- b earded Sikhs seemed Central Utah News ... 3, 4, 5, 6, 9 what pleased with they saw. 16, 17 Classified Visits Fashion Show ...... Comics -1- 13 Mrs. Kennedy wore an apricot-colore- d Editorial .. -- J.12 cotton sheath, high in World National, front with low" oval back, to the News .......... 2, 15, 18 fashion show at the New Delhi Society . 8 Emporium. It featured lovely In...... .....11, 12s Sports dian models, showing both West-(Se- e Stocks ... 4 . .J.. f ; JACKIE Page 2) so- i NEW DELHI (UPI) Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, obviously having the time of her life, whirled today through a schedule that ranged from feeding: a baby elephant to deliberating: 'over buying panta-loone- d ion show. i . .. The first lady was so full of energy she went steeplechase j riding with a presidential bodyguard and. cleared four jumps beautifully while one of her six-foescorts went tumbling off his horse on one of the hurdles. Her car dodging sacred cows in the street, Jackie started the day with a visit to a boy's vocational 10-m- an ot 1 1 1 1 .. j INDE ..... i - 1 i i, j er ;. -- D-S.- C, 110-mi- le tensions Long-suppress- ed six-memb- er Berlin-Helmste- dt , mistic nor optimistic about the '" ' .' :j . outcome.' !:,!': He and Soviet Foreign Minister v Andrei. Gromyko , swapped arguments on a nuclear test ban and other arms control issues! at an ' hour and preliminary session this morning. British 'For eign Secretary Lord Home, at whose villa i this meeting took place, took little part In the discussion save for . the brief portion " relating to procedural matters . Meeting! More Friendly British sources said afterwards the meeting had been "a little friendlier than hitherto." A British spokesman said later that there had been "a businesslike meeting on procedure and a general exchange of views." Rusk and j Gromyko probably will make their opening statements at Thursday's session, with the smaller uncommitted nations anxious to hear the American and Russian views before making their 10-min- Marks Military Muzzling Probe . top-ranki- j j speeches.-:':- !: j , .''.."! ".'.-- .; ; Discussion of a nuclear test ban has been lumped with- general disarmament questions after long years of talks and inability by the United States and Russia jto agree on an agreement. ; President Kennedy has s announced that j the United States will resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere unless a test ban treaty is reached by:! the end of .". ' .' April. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev termed the President's stand "atomic blackmail" and threatened resumption of Soviet tests if the United States carried out its plans. - j 1 i Today's Negotiations First Since Soviet Bloc Walked Out on June 1960 Disarmament Talks ' of.jany nuclear test ban. The Rusi sians object, claiming this would United. Press International GENEVA (UPI) The disarma- amount to establishment of an in-- ! ment conference opening here ternational spying system. eneral and The phased Soviet the first such in today comprises ' the since ternational negotiations Soviet bloc "walked out of the last . By K. C; THALER 1 East-We- st disarmament confer- ence June 27, .1960. The control and vertification issues therefore remain among the chief controversies. The United States backed by inBritain, Canada and Italy consists on effective international trol of disarmament at well as . . ...... f Air Safety Center said the Communist "planes would fly between 7 and 9 p.m. But Britain and the United States held, fast to their commer cial schedules and prepared to send one Pan American and one British European Airways airliner 1 thrpugh at the same' time. In darkness, Western planes would be more dependent than ever on radar to avoid 'collisions. The Russians again seeded the Berlin-Frankfu-rt and corridors Tuesday .with small metal Zchaff" flakes which Lively Squabble i '.'!-- four-pow- er Berlin-Hannov- i , ( note when he said it might be years before it could be determined whether any of the babies suffered brain damage, Finberg flew here to help treat the strick en children. It was explained that the children would have to reach their "full intelligence growth" before permanent brain damage could blur radar s creensLnt be diagnosed. An infant receiving a daily teaspoon of salt gets a No chaff was reported in the third corridor to Hamburg, but the (See HOSPITAL Page 4) metal flakes did fall near Berlin outside the air corridors in East ;.' Germany. The Russian night flights were announced after Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Rome, repeated earlier warnings that continued interference witlr isolated Berlin's f West WASHINGTON The vital aerial, links with the (UPI) counter-measure- s, would stern provoke Senate study of alleged military jj vf muzzling erupted into a lively The U.S. Army today completed squabble today with Sen. Storm two-wa- y troop - move Thurmond, complaining a - massive that efforts were being made to ment on the highway be-- J tween Berlin and West Germany. "stifle" . the inquiry. x in The last element of a 1,500-ma- n the subcorrimittee battle group of the Army's Berlin bubbled into the open as the South garrison left for West Germany Carolina Democrat protested its on jthe Autobahn in final the battle of The exchanges with procedures contingent Chairman John C. Stennis, D- - group replacing it arrived here! movement Miss., and Sen. Leverett Salton-stall- ,. Tuesday.' The two-wa- y 500 in men GOP the Mass.1, trucks, involving 3,000 member. . and Jeeps began March 5.' . j - y g j; All-Ameri- ca er I corridor. precedented Soviet attempt to in- in the timidate the West by flying miliThe Communist plans to fly tary planes at the same time, four planes in the darkness were The Russians filed plans Tuesconsidered the most dangerous day for their first night flights tactic so far in the recent series talks here under present condi'' I of Kremlin harassments in the vi- - tions would be futile. However, Secretary pf State erlin airlifiesj The Russian Dean Rusk was reported by AmercohtroUer in Berlin's ican sources to be neither pessi, .ii- Hospital Where 6 Babies Died pf Salt Dosage Receives Bomb Threats; Heavy Guard Ordered j i tan OS To Block Niahi Mr . -- is British Foreign; Secretary Lord Home. Man in dark suit, upper right, is Andrei Gromyko of Russia. Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin sits next to Gromyko. Alliis Defy Coifi System All-Ameri- I Reform Alters Cuba NfeW ' full-scal- I 17-nati- on X i - - By STEWART IIENSLEY .United Press International GENEVA (UPI) The general disarmament ' conference opened today under a cloud of pessimism. The bleak outlook stemmed from failure of the Big Three for eign ministers to make the slight est progress in breaking the' East-We- st deadlock onj critical; issues, including the American and Russian' threats to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere. The ministers held preliminary meetings preceding the conference J j: 'jj: here.. ; The) conference began late this afternoon at the Palace of Nations with 1 a briei public ceremonv. Then) the delegates t went ' into elbsed session to organize the pro cedure for their meetings. The e first business session will take place Thursday morning. The first session today lasted 40 'I'. V minutes, The conference was called by the United Nations for another at tempt; at halting the global nu clear arms race by agreement! on "complete and general disarma ment' including a big power nu ; clear! test ban Final Futile Conference The! Big Three foreign ministers made a final but futile preconfer-enc- e effort this morning to dent the deadlock over inspection' and controls to! guarantee a test ban and other arms control measures. Omar Loutfl welcomed the delegates from four NATP,-- five Communist 'and eight neutral nations in behalf of the United Nations. A fifth NATO country, " France, refused to attend because PresK dent t Charles de Gaulle felt any 17-nati- on All-Ameri- ca - - s f AROUND THE CONFERENCE ' ! ; ot - , .Three Foreign Ministers Fail to! Reach Understanding Big Wyo., shortl- 25-mi- f . ror nairina j of snow at Corona, N.M., and le inches. drifts. winds fanned Northern New England reported 4 of of schools and business scores inches had N.M.,' Socorro, . snow. firms shut down! Up to 2 feet of A dozen deaths, six in Michigan; snow fell in; Vermont and New four in Iowa, and one each in Hampshire, and Maine had as ' Nebraska and Vermont were much as 14 inches Tuesday. Up ' on state New York got as much as the weather. blamed 1 10 was at inches travel Highway virtually a standstill in sections of the Da- At Cleveland, Ohio, the Coast kptas, Minnesota, Nebraska and Guard reported ice conditions on Iowa. Scores of schools closed. the Great Lakes were the worst in Small towns were running out of many years and predicted the upfood. Stranded motorists sought per lakes may njot open to shipl. ping until refuge in faims. U- ; ' I. i . - "" Arms Race Fort Dodge, Iowa, set a season y! after midnight today. Glasgow, snowfall record of 70 inches." Iowa got up to 4 inches of new snow Mont., reported; 2 below.' IThe new storm dropped 6 inches Tuesday and Wisconsin up to 3 ' - I at Evanston, low zero 10-fo- ot ! - ' V(l! M idlw est : I " OutloolcDirn oow 11 ,i . Z Now You Know I I' - : : j By United Press International The first Arabic dictionary was written by Khalil Ibn Ahmad who was born in ;718 A.D.' and died in 791. He also was the first to classify Arabic metres and set down their rule. disarmament" plan complete supported by Moscow's four sat-- ; ellite " participants, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Bulgaria was first introduced by Premier Nikita. S. Khrushche- - ' the United Nations General Assembly in September, 1960. It since has been supplemented by a number of of-- ! ficial policy statements. In broad outline, Khrushchev' plan calls for a single treaty covering all three disarmament stages,, with no specific arms reduction measures to be Implemented (See NEGOTIATIONS Page U |