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Show . I ' '! S . " - - j . . ' :: "' J- 1 , ."' . '' I S- nere no ! .j L :. .,.-.- - ' ; S . - SS; j ' ' S'S" ' v. ..... r - .j -..: adob : r t - rw , - 7 ; ' ' "' v.:' !.'...-,'.-;.- vs : ; - tvw U 1 -- ';: ! ., ' SS .""' '..''; ' S .'". .' .- - ' ji j' ''-."-. - ; : ' r I - r J , A 1 m At his 'news conference! Wednesday4, Kennedy added a third condition:. "I would go if 1 thought it was in our national interest." j . "I do not intend to j go," he added, "unless there is a situation developing which t believe would ' make, such ' a trip fruitful ; and rewarding." The President's chief Western partner in negotiating with Russia, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, is coming to this country next month. By jthe time he sees' the President j in late April, proceedings of the disarmament conference at j Geneva sliould have indicated whether a summit j would ' be, as j Kennedy put it, ' fruitful and rewarding. . Geneva ; conferThe ence' met with the understanding that a progress report would be drafted before June 1. fThis has led to speculation about a possible summit conference in late May or jearly June. , Other comments rat Kennedy's news conference touched! on rela tentions with Russia, East-Wesion proceedings in Cqngress and politics. The President made these ' ' points: Berlin; Russian tactics to hin-.dmovement of Western-aircraf- t through the Berlin airj jcorridorp are dangerous, additional hazards to ' a Berlin settlement.! Russian dropping of aluminum foil chaff to upset radar installations might 'intensify the danger." 'Medical Care: He indicated he will press for a showdown vote ! . j j l7-nati- on 1- st ! er T ft i: GOP Opposes Provisions of Welfare Bill The (UPI); House today called upjja bill to reform thb welfare, program! Republicans accused Democrats of making it an. invitationj for states to raid the 'federal treasury." The $325 million measure car- ries most of the requests President Kennedy asked to help the needy and get some ojfj them on -- their feet. The bill;had general support for two . provisions. One of them costing $40 million, would raise from 50 per cent; jtb .75 per cent the federal share of the cost of certain (welfare and jcounselling services.- The other would shift from the j states to the federal treasury $140 million of the' cost ' j of the program. Only ond amendment was to be allowed, and Republicans' hoped to use it to knock but both provisions, cutting $180 million of the bill. They j appeared to have little ' chance of success. J " I 1 ex-ceg-pt - . j . Training ; Bill Sighed -- 11 o V y ' w r n l ; 'n.::hn . tTDTTDS ; 7 i n ; Russ Offer Plan Disarm signature . :Afh , - ' " J i 11 U '! rT )i i .htiAjt 4 J ii T'Y Soviet Still Opposed To Any4 Plan for I n te r n a tio n a I Co n ro I t A U' lira By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International The United (UPI) States called today for "repeal of the law of the jungle" with 'a speedy 30 perl cent reduction in world arms and nuclear delivery vehicles plus j global warning system to prevent war by sur i '. prise .or accident. The Russians countered With a draft treaty! for general and complete disarmament at first reading similar to the one they proposed two years ago. They re mained as opposed as ever to the of kind the West controls demands. ADean Rusk IState jof Secretary and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko presented the jplans of their two countries at the opening of debate by the GENEVA first ( j rs VUA At The new program will be a full jscfrteffprt'1' to get jobless Americans? off relief rolls and on private payrolls. Because the length 6t training courses will vary, estimates of the number of workers to benefit have varied from 500, 000 to 1 million. The federal government will pay the full cost of the program in its first two years; states will match the federal outlay, in the third year, and presumably thereafter. This also could Jffect the number of trainees. Mum Is Word In Steel Negotiations Provo, the BYTJ campus and all of Central Utah is in the grip of mounting basketball fever today on the eve of the Western Regional NCAA Basrepre- sentative, and Pepperdine, champion' of the! West Coast : Athletic Conference, square off; in the tournament ! opener at 7:30 tomorrow night. The other contest in the first round . 'event will find; Utah of the four-teaof the Skyline Conference facState ing UCLA, champion of the Big j m 'Five. arrive in Provo today and all will have workouts on! the BYUfieldhouse floor. Tonight the players, coache3, offi - K disarmament conference.'!; TEAR GAS BOMBS DISPERSE RIOTING STUDENTS Rioting Guatemalan students try m vain tar cover eyes and noses as they run from tear gas Tbombs thrown by police in Guatemala Cjity. Sketchy reports from the David J. McDonald and R. Conrad Cooper, principal industry negotiator, planned morning and afternoon sessions today, following resumption" ot the recesseti talks Wednesday. two sides had broken off , The talks March 2, setting May 1 as the date they would try again. However, President Kennedy last week urged that the USW and i n d u s t r y representatives meet sooner, suggesting Wednesday for the renewal of talks. The two sides agreed. Talks had snarled originally on the cost of job security provisions, an issue being pushed by the j USW. - cials and news representatives will be guests at a social hour and banquet beginning at 7 o'clock at Riverside Country Club. Sponsors of this event will be the NCAA and local businesses and individuals through cooperation of the Chamber of Commerce. The Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions and Exchange Clubs are hosting the teams to furnish transportation coordinated by the Downtown Coaches organization and a Provo auto dealer is providing a car for the coach and director of each team. Tomorrow's Daily Herald will carry a special section on the tournament with pictures of all the teams and stories on each of the teams and coache as well as individual stars. j Latin, American country indicate a student anti-gove- rn ment? rebellion. The Guatemalan government has clamped down an almost tota riews blackout. (Herald UPIlTelephoto). ;! GAMP WILLIAMS AWARDED Six Executed FUNDS FOR SEWAGE PLANT In Brazen Boss U. Optimistic On Viet Nam WASHINGTON (UPI)-- f Defense McNamara Secretary Robert told Congress today he believes "we will win the struggle for. South Vietnam." The defense chief made he fdre- cast as he appeared be ore he House foreign affairs subcommittee to support the $i.5- billion military section of President k.en- nedy's new foreign aid bill. McNamara said the threat to U.S. security by no means has diminished in the past year. But he expressed "considerable' opti mism", about the outcome of South Viet Nam's fight against Communist aggression rom t he north. S - The United States, the secre- tary said, is continuing to aid the South Vietnamese government with training, logistic supplies, communications and- - transporta ' :i r tion. I' is "The only restriction (on mili tary aid) I know of is the restriction against the use of U.S. com bat forces," he added. Actually, McNamara said, he was generally .optimistic about the world ipicturejt He warned, how. ever, that the struggle to oppose Communist encroachment in the world will be a long one with no short cuts. "The security of the United States,! which depends! upon the .security of the Free World alliance as a whole, requires the continuance of our military land economic assistance programs, 1 he said. r Current plans for the project include construc-solid- s removal system, and a drain tion of a suspended; M ace disposal! system. age field or The Utah Army National Guard Authorities will be responsible for administrative matters pertaining to construction, including solicitation of bids and awarding the construction, contract after approval by the. National Guard Bureau. sub-sui- rf Mrs. Kennedy Overwhelmed By White-Marble- d Beduty of Wondrous Taj Mahal in India , It was still warm, but afternoon By PATRICK KILLEN United Press International ALGIERS (UPI) "Six of you condemned to death j by the OAS." This was the voice of terror speaking in Algiers today. The words came from European extremists who invaded a Moslem quarter social center here and were addressed to the 18 men they found inside, who stood trembling lined up against a wall. Then the Secret Army Organization terrorists marched the six, three Europeans and three Algerians,! to the yard of the; Chateau Royal headquarters of the social center s service area arid lined them up against, the wall. A volley of about 100 shots rang out. and! the men crumbled as the bullets found! their targets. Five died instantly. One, writer Mou- loud Faraoun, winner of the Al gerian literary grand prix and a iriena pi me late ;rencn XNODei g no yejli s t Albert Camus, was wounded and died jj low-keye- ..!''!!; . I - of fountains Prize-winnin- , ! t j ",, '. the playing of cores along the waterway AGRA, "ihdia XUPD krs. Jacto the tomb cooled the queline Kennedy1 spent 401 golden leading later. minutes today in the beauty of atmosphere. 'White-marble- d was The brazen OAS jattack.i near and Mahal in Jackie pensive quiet the Taj restUl visit. Guides the Church of El Biar, was only the soft late afternoon sun. during her first lady her member the visit last year by one of a series of incidents as The dark-haire- d t See SIX EXECUTED Page 4) bright green and turquoise dress Vice President Lyndon B. John-- ! of of son. Told echo the a striking contrast against the quality sparkling walls,' could not find the acoustics under the central words to express her emotions dome,' Johnson let out a Texas- sized rebel yell. when she emerged. Mrs. Kennedy posed for the tra ditional tourist photographs, out lined against the marble memori al perhaps man's most beautiful tribute to woman ARLINGTON, Va. (UPI)-Ju- ve-, The Mogul Emperor Shah Jehari nile built-iauthorities 'said today they 1630 a tomtn as ordered it have obtained the names, of' all she died for his wife after giving four involved in a fracas 15th child. took to It their birth " youths 22 years to complete the building with astronaut John Glenn, 40, One of with its PAGE, Ariz. (UPD-- 4 onion dome and and plan to 'contact their parents the major cables used for plac vast Interior. before deciding if court action Canconcrete at Glen s . t should be taken. ing giant Wears Velvet Sandals ; conPolice were yon Dam will be back in opera Mrs. Kennedy put on crimson immediately tion next week. one of the the boy velvet sandals over her white tacting parents HERALD Workmen at the damsjte plan to shoes for a tour of the actual who may have taken a swing at finish replacing the 2,050 - foot tomb of the shah and his . wife. the Marine lieutenant colonel last Central Utah area and Saturday during a disturbance at cable by the end of the week. They are in a cellar-lik- e News 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 15, The track cable, four inches in attendants carried kerosene, lan Glenn's church. J I; 11, 12, M3 . Classified None of the youths was identi-liediameter and weighing almost 40 terns to light the way. 11-. Comics . .' Under the largest dome, Mrs. tons, stretches across the dam 10-Editorial from heat to tail tower Sgt. Warren Siske said Glenn Kennedy looked on in wonder as M National, World had dem Moslem two bearded agreed to sign, a petition which priests The cost of replacing! it, Neifs .. 2, 10, 11, 14, 17, 18, against the boy- - who tried to hit after the cable has onstrated the echo. Obituaries ........ ..!..i.......... 4 takes place a ff erf Prime Minister Jawaharlal Neh him if police insisted, but he said J nanaieai Deiween oaa juu.uuu anaj ivaj Society ..... and a large crowd of women the space pilot was reluctant tp ru was 000 of cubic yards concrete, Sf Sj5o r ts - .....-..in colorful saris gave the wife o do so. estimated at about $100,000, in : . 4 Stocks ' Officials were indignant over KENNEDY Page 2) MRS. (See eluding lost production hours. shadows-an- ; !'- have been Bureau. '.'. 1 " OAS Attack Senator Frank E. Moss announced today that $34,500 in federal funds appropriated by Congress for the construction of sewage disposal facilities at Camp Williams has been released to the National Guard 17-nati- on The American plan called for U.S. and Soviet armed forces io be limited in the first state to 2.1 million men. The Soviet! plan provided for reducing U.S. and Soviet forces to 1.7 million in the! first stage,, and other nations forces to fixed levelsj Both plans called for further troop reductions j to a final point where ' each nation would retain only enough police- type forces to 'maintain internal order. See Nothing New American officials said that, at first reading, the Soviet proposals appeared to contain nothin g new. They said they appeared to contain nothing new. They said, they appeared to be about the same as those Russia submitted in Sep- temper, 1960, at the United Nations. However, there' was no immedi ate formal U.S. delegation reaction because officials wanted to check v Gromyko's presentation -more closely.: v were The speeches relatively d with neither engaging in any particularly! open propaganda attack on the other.! Gromyko spoke first and Rusk followed him immediately,! thus get ting the two nuclear giants' on record at the start. Rusk urged the conference to approve "without., delay1" a; four-poi- nt interim1 program which, among other features, would end production of fissionable material M ' for nuclear weapons; , In addition, he again appealed to Russia to sign a nuclear test ban treaty with inspection and control p r o VLs i o n s to guard against bootleg' blasts. . . Zone Wants Atom-fre- e Gromyko countered with! a repetition of earlier Communist pro-(Se- e UNITED STATES Page 4) - 4 PITTSBURGH (UPI) Labor and management may be making progress in the newly resumed steel contract talks, but if so, they aren't telling anyone. United Steelworkers President , ' j j i :.' p; All four teams were slated to sJ C: depressedareas. bills to provide the government with a tight check on misleading advertising, .packaging, sales and' other practices aimed at bilking the Jbuyer. ' The presidential message is the first of its kind to deal 1 entirely with the interests and needs of j' the consumer. an exannounced also Kennedy ecutive order togive the consumer 'j'whQse views are not often heard" in Washington, a voice in j government. Fulfills Campaign Promise Fulfilling a campaign promise, he directed the creation jof a'con-sumeadvisory council to keep the Council of Economic Advisers posted on the needs of purchasers of goods and services .He also ordered the head of each applicable federal agency to pick an assistant to keep him advised on consumer interests. ji He also directed the postmaster general to set up a jpilt project by displaying in some 100 post offices, samples of publications useful to consumers. "The; housewife, is called upon to be an amateur electrician,! mechanic, chemist,1! toxicologist, dietitician and mathematician," Kennedy said, "but she is rarely furnished the information j she heeds to perform these tasks j . proficiently." cost of said his the Kennedy consumer proposals would be "modest'." Officials' estimated the cost' would run about $io million for; the added staff and programs. Stresses Safety Factor Strongly stressed in the message was a proposal to require that new drugs and r therapeutic devices, such as back braces and (See JFK ASKS Page 4) at-lar- ge A I able-bodie- - i A ".-"- r ; I'l j hs a ' ear i - ;sU - ; ' ketball; tournament. Oregon State, .the crs ' ' 3-Y- ; A Manpower h 'A Watch for Herald Green Sheet Section Tomorrow Basketball Fever Sweeps Provo Area on Eve Of NCAA Playoffs Friday, Saturday Nights ' " , , i I this year on his plan to finance medical care for the aged through Social Security. He said he felt the proposal would, come 'to a vote "definitely in the United i '.. States Senate and, I am hopeful, in the House 'before the end of Way Opened to Launch ' 'L ' j: this session." t Million $435 Nuclear Tests: The I.S. would how have' test a ban rather treaty than go ahead with its scheduled Program This Summer April series of atmospheric tests. A system for detection of tests as WASHINGTON (UPI) Presipart of a safeguarded treaty is dent Kennedy today signed the more important than a system for detecting preparations for manpower training bill that he ' H : placed first among hft proposals tests. ,, Foreign Aid: He threw his full to Congress this year for bolsterweight against those in Congress ing the nation's economy. who would axe his request; for The President's $4.9 billion in foreign aid for the next fiscal year, saying if such no longer government to launch a three-yea- r, economy advocates $435 millioa- program this were interested in fighting comsummer. It is designed to retrain munism, they should cut the proto a million Americans whose I up gram.. "I think it would be the have been eliminated by the most unwise act possible to dim- jobs of disarrival automation or the inish our assistance program," of old markets.. appearance he said. M The bill was the major Edward Kennedy: He will not item of New Frontier legislation senain his brother's participate law since Congress retorial campaign in Massachusetts, to become to in January. work turned but will vote in the primary.1 was It also the No. 1; domestic Agriculture: He called on Conin State of the request Kennedy's gress to reverse the House Agri- Union Message. He said then that of culture. Committee's 'rejection help "stop the his temporary program to keep the proposal would d of waste men and dairy price supports at their pres- Women who Want to work but ent level for the rest of this year. has- - been ReHe said the committee action whose only skill a movedwith machine, by placed threatened "unnecessary hard- a mill or shut down with amine." ship" . for dairy farmers!. A federally sponsored job retraining program is not' altogether new a small training system already is underway, as part of the 1961 Area Redevelopment Law. But it is keyedT to providing pools of labor toyiure new industry into j WASHINGTON c. mr ; JFK Vsks Curm TS Aia ' Consume By HELEN United Press International PresiWASHINGTON (UPI) j dent Kennedy today proposed sweeping j new federal controls to protect the consumer's health and pocketbook in the purchase of food, drugs and cosme(rcs. In a special message! to Congress, Kennedy urged passage of ' PRICE FIVE CENTS 11 '.' . ' A--'VA- PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1962 n matic levels. .4 YEAR NO. 162 H '; throufch Friday with rislnsr Urn. I EIGHTY-NINT- M ' ' 'W- : u-yA- ..- :' - j '!'! 'j ' ' '. : S yir uJ K'77viii i kjti rtiTm . H - 1 S : By MERRIMAN SMITH UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI) President Kennedy appeared today to be preparing the 'public '.for his participation in a summit meeting with Soviet Premier Nkita S. Khru-sche- v in the not too distant future. . Although the President claims his position is "constant,"! there has been a slow shift away from his stand that he would go to'the summit only to avert. war or give final approval to agreements worked out at lower diplo ' v " :' .. Macmillan. Due w - ;;ss,rv;;;;; AAmmA-.- ' j . ; j" j,: ' ' :: ' i ! ; I Glenn Attacked bv 4 Youths In Coming to Aid of Pastor Major Cable To Glen Canyon to Be In Operation 187-fo- ot . I . j INDEX : the incident, Thomas Richards, vice chairman of the county board said that "such conduct will not be tolerated in ' our community. The fact that they attacked Col. Glenn and that they attacked him at a church, compounds the out- rage." Went to Help Pastor The incident took place in a parking area at, the Glenn farn--r (See GLENN Page 4) 8-- A d. A j A i 9-- A 11 1-- A, A 2-- A .. 1 ' Mow You Know j By United Press International On this date in the year 44 B.C., Julius Caesar was murdered by political t rivals in the Senate house in Rome. He had been warned to beware the Ides of March. |