Show REFLECTIONS " w vs ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL LXXVI WEATHER n Oliver Wendell Holmes the American jurist said: "Sin has many tools but a lie is the handle which fits them all" No 183 OGDEN UTAH PRESS INTERNATIONAL UNITED I TUESDA EVENING OGDEN: Cloudy hot Low 11 high 90 UTAH: Partly cloudy Hot Low 58 high 102 (See weather map page 3A) v UPI TELt PHOTO JULY 2 1963 EXport n7 n n President Kennedy and praised his efforts? to obtain world peace and racial equality in the Unit- 10-da- y s ed States Roman Kennedy Catholic president of the United States spent 36 minutes in pn vate audience with the newly crowned pontiff in the ornate papal library of the Apostolic Palace Then discussion cen tered on their mutual hopes for ) r Telephoto STRONGER STAND FOR UTAH peace After talking alone with Kennedy the Pope received members- of the presidential party and addressed them and the President in En EAMovesf© WioeOistS edreaation " u 11 southern states which have separate NEA affiliates for white and Negro teachers The resolution was proposed by Pat Tornillo of Dade County (Miami) Fla The NEA sensitive to the feelings of white teachers in the South has been reluctant in the past to go quite this far Generally its stand on desegregation has been a resolution commending those communities or organizations which have made progress w i t h the problem However as one NEA official said "If the classroom teachers want this badly enough they will have little trouble making it official NEA policy" This they could do by submitting and supporting a resolution to that effect before the representative assembly later this week The classroom teachers Monday also By G K Hodenfield DETROIT (AP)—The nation's classroom teachers by sheer force of numbers are pressuring the National Education Association to rid itself of racial segregation j They also are pushing and prodding the NEA into a stronger stand in sup- port of the school teachers of Utah who are nearing a final showdown in their long battle with the state government The Department of Classroom Teachers (DCT) is only one of the NEA's 33 Its departments and commissions views carry a lot of weight however because it represents about 800000 of the NEA's total membership of 860000 Monday the teachers adopted a reso-- i lution which urged "local district and state associations to open their mem-- I bership doors to all teachers regardless of race color or creed" The resolution is aimed directly at 7 WASHINGTON (AP) — 'Politi- cal infighting over civil rights broke out in the Senate Commerce Committee today as two Republicans served notice they would not offer any? amendments to the administration's public accomodations bill Sens Winston LI Prouty R-a and Hugh Schott said it was up to the Democratic majority to propose any peramendments said They : 41 r fecting i t i j were to noi going iaKe reuiey for sponsibility sponsoring any changes that might be interpreted as crippling or watering down the bill Sen Warren G Magnuson the committee chairman "retorted that'every senator on this committee has a responsibility to suggest amendments he thinks are necessary to make a better bill to achieve the objecVt R-P- D-Wa- sh tive" The exchange came as Attv $en Robert F Kennedy was testifying for the second day in support of the bill to ban racial discrimination by owners of stores restaurants theaters and other business establishments catering to the general public Kennedy agreed under Prou-ty'- s questioning that members Jf:Congress have raised "legi timate questions as to wnetner the language of the bill is exact enough" with respect to the privately - owned establishments that would be covered i — — SURE v —— from Sh e's Dead She's Dead j Utah ex- - pressed appreciation to the classroom teachers' action They were not happy about the NEA's executive committee decision 'DEAD IN UTAH' One who declined to be quot ed by name said "If the NEA lets us down now the NEA is dead in Utah" There was some fear that the action by the classroom teachers might upset the current behind- - negotiations going on in the Utah impasse Utah teachers voted to with hold contracts for next fall until more money is assured for the schools After the NEA Executive Com mittee announced its decision not to invoke sanctions at this time top officials of the Utah Education Association agreed that "no useful purpose would be served by imposing national sanctions while current negotia tions for settlement are in pro CHICAGO (UPI)— Within four days the bloody slaughter of the gress arid M 'L John C Evans Fourth of July weekend begins Jensen executive Jr secretary and and the National Safety Council of the UEA said they president estimates that 550 to 650 persons felt Utah schools would open will be killed in traffic acci- this fall dents said they were speaking The holiday weekend forThey themselves but also felt that begins at 6 pm local time July national sanctions should not be 3 and ends at midnight July 7 "With the Fourth of July) his- applied But they both said the teach' torically more dangerous" ers themselves might not agree Safety Council President How- to proposals stemming from curard Pyle said "it calls for ex- rent negotiations tra caution by all of us to hold Evans and Jensen said the the number of fatalities to the lower side "of 'the 'estimate?' ' negotiations were being'- kept secret and that the situation was He noted the Memorial tay so 'delicate that any further weekend toll of 525 killed last statement do harm might month set n record for a 102 ' hour holiday period The previous high for a 102- hour Independence Day holiday period was in 1961 when 509 persoTRIBUTE: Amelia Earhart ns-were killed in traffic land and her navigator Fred Noon-a- n 415 lost their lives in other types of accidentsdisappeared somewhere in the Pacific 26 years ago' today The worst holiday' toll in his on a leg of a tory was the black Christmas flight of 1956 when 706 persons died Miss Earhart was born in Atchison Kan July 24 1898 On July 24 the city will salute the "first lady of avia(TWO SECTIONS 20 PAGES) tion" The program will in- elude the first-da- y issue of a 4B Amusement Movies ? air commemorative mail Holmes Alevander 4A and US Postmaster stamp 9A Dear Abby Gen J Edward Day will be U 9A the main speaker Bridge The ceremony will be at Comics 2B 3B Amelia Earhart Stadium Editorial Page 4A 'Atchison's municipal airport SB- Obituaries t also is named after Miss EarRadio-TSB Logs hart' 10A 11A Sports COURT RULING: It's an inWomen's Page 9A alienable right of man to have Drew Pearson 4A his body tattooed a New the-scen- es Holid ay Toll May Hit 650 -- 102-ho- ur ? 10-da- reply K The pontiff told newsmen after the audience that "our topic was peace in the world" He then gave the journalists and photographers accompany i n g the President "my blessing to you and all of your persons families and your country" Vatican sources said following CHICAGO (AP)—The Nationthe meeting "We have the feelal Association for the Advanceencounter was constructhe ment of Colored Peope unani- ing tive and very interesting for the mously adopted today a resolu- problems of world peace" tion calling for a national civil was not a mere courtesy "it ' rights legislative convention in call" they said 8 Washington Aug Pone Paul who was crowned The emergency reso ution in- Sunday to succeed the late Pope troduced at today's second ses- John XXIII noted a n sion of the organization's con- fact when he recalled a vention also urged a much stif-f- encounter with Kennedyprevious civil rights program than "With joy do we wel that proposed by President Ken come yourgreat excellency to the Vatnedy ican recalling with true happiWhile commending the Presi ness our first meeting almost dent s proposals as the best so 25 years ago when as a young far offered! by any president man you accompanied your the resolution demanded these parents to the coronation of additional points to meet what Pope Pius XII" the pontiff it called "the minimum needs said of the existing situatio At the time of Pope Pius' cor 1 A Fair in 1939 the President's onation Employment Prac tices Commission with subpoena father Joseph Kennedy was powers and the power to en- US ambassador to Britain force its decrees Pope Paul speaking in clear d but English 2 Extend the authority of the OfUIVC Ul U1C Ulltli lllg OlllVllig attorney general to "imtiate and to obtain world peace" by file suits for the protsction and NAAGP Lists 3 Demands For 'Rights' as a whole has about 860000 Delegates Kennedy's work for world "will find a ready response in all men of good will" Then in an obvious reference to racial problems in the United States the Pope added: "We are ever mindful in our prayers of the efforts to ensure to all your citizens the equal benefits- - of citizenship which have as their foundation the equality of all men because of their dignity as persons and children of God" RUSK ATTENDS Secretary of State Dean Rusk who was in the presidential party took part in the last 15 minutes of Kennedy's private audience Kennedy on the last day of a y European tour made no The classroom teachers adopted resolutions which promised financial support and job protection to their Utah colleagues - NOW? WILLARD DETROIT (AP)—The Department of Classroom Teachers of the National Education Association has voted to impose sanctions on Utah and establish an emergency loan fund for Utah teachers who refuse to sign contracts to return this fall This is what the Utah delegation asked the NEA as a whole to do but the NEA's Executive Committee earlier Monday said it would not invoke these sanctions at this time The NEA is not bound by the classroom teachers' action but that department is the largest group in the NEA It has about 800000 members and the NEA 6-- little-know- er ( Italian-accente- enforcement of all civil rights" 3 Provide sanctions against labor unions which discriminate against Negroes Earlier Roy Wilkins executive secretary of the NAACP said Republicans face a major test in Congress on civil rights legislation Wilkins in a keynote address Monday night to some 4000 perr sons attending the kick-of- f meeting of the! 54th annual convention of the NAACP said "If in this human rights crisis the Republican party has nothing' to offer the Negro then' ::t has nothing of real value to cffer the na— - s tion"! "It is to be commended high j Mary L Voight a frail widow was pronounced dead twice by the same doctor in less than 24 hours 80-year-- woman died The Monday night" She had clung to life more than 19 hours after she was believed to have died the first time Walter Lindsey Sr was about to embalm her in his mortuary Sunday night when 87-pou- nd he saw her breathing and sweating After detecting a faint heart--beLindsey and an aide wrapped Mrs Voight in blankets and rushed her back to at Willard Municipal Hospital She remained in an oxygen tent until death came shortly after 7 Monday night - round-the-wor- INDEX V ld and once again called for con clusion of a German peace treaty i But he again refrained from setting a deadline for the signing of such a treaty In his speech to an East German rally Khrushchev once again reaffirmed his policy of "peaceful coexistence" with the VVest The remarks assumed special importance because of their timing almost on the eve of the scheduled meeting in Moscow of Soviet and Chinese Communist leaders to discuss their ideological differences The meeting is scheduled to open Friday and at the very heart of the dispute is the "peaceful coexistence" policy' backed by Khrushchev The Chinese Communists hold that war is inevitable if communism is to be spread around the ' world "We want all the peoples of the world to be able to look calmly into the future" Khrushchev told a crowd of 9000 in East Berlin's Werner Seelebind-e- r indoor sparts arena "We stand for peaceful coex istence between states with different social systems" he Sino-Sovi- et added! Khrushchev said the German people know only too well the meaning of war "The understanding of man to the Vatican in 1915 and former President Dwight D Eisenhower met Pope John XXIII in 1959 —Conferred anew over lunch with Italian President Antonio Segni Kennedy and Segni then issued a joint communique in which they agreed that negotiations with the Soviet Union could and should be continued without weakening NATO and European unity can be achieved without lessening collaboration with the United States The two leaders also agreed to continue studies on the possible develop- where he was presented with some gifts the late Pope John XXIII had set aside to give him on his visit The Pope died before he had a chance to present them so the gifts were presented by Richard Cardinal Cush-in- g of Boston One of the gifts was a rare autographed copy of the Pope's encyclical message "Pacem in Terris" ' — Flew by helicopter from Rome to Naples where he visited NATO Southern Command Headquarters and delivered a major speech reviewing his "findings and feelings" after 10 days in Wrestern Europe He said he was "heartened" by his observations The President originally had been scheduled to return to Rome from Naples and' leave lor home Wednesday morning But he decided to cut short his tour and fly to Washington tonight In his Naples speech Kennedy four-count-ry Min me Kennedy by de-adressing up Kennedy as an 'envoy of peace' " scribing him as 'sensible The statement was alluding to Khrushchev's policy of peaceful coexistence with the West nd J US Indicts 8 Firms in "Price Fi WASHINGTON ( AP) — A fed- eral grand Jury indicted eight steel companies and nine of their officers on charges of illegally conspiring to fix prices in the steel casting industry The Justice Department said the indictment ws the fourth returned by federal grand juries in New York City in the past 15 months involving conspiracies to fix prices for steel products These firms and officers were charged with violating the Sherman Antitrust Act: Bethlehem Steel Col Bethlethe theme that hem Pa and Erb Carney its See col 1 page 2A sales forgings castings and" special products manager Corp Philadelphia Security Case Raises Dispute in Commons (UPI)-Pri- the white- washing VISITS COLLEGE —Visited the North American Pontificial College in Rome ' LONDON "Certain persons" broadcast said "are ment of a NATO multilateral nuclear force can imagine only with difficulty what immeasurable damage a stressed third world war would bring" he said ister Harold Macmillan angrily defended his part in the "third man" security case today in a House of bitter name-callin-g Commons debate Opposition Labor party leader Harold Wilson enraged Macmillan by demanding he appoint a minister of security to end the nation's series of security scan TOKYO (UPI) — Communist China today indirectly attacked Soviet Premier Nikita S Khrushchev again today Broadcast by the New China News Agency the attack did not mention the premier by name but the meaning was clear Baldwin-Lima-Hamilt- on Blaw-Kno- x and Sylvester on the Philby case and Britain's other security woes Macmillan referred Hender- Co J Pittsburgh Moran vice president of its equipment division and Benjamin P Hammond vice president for eastern castings sal§s t Erie Forge & Steel Com- Erie Pa and board chairmsm Emil Lange Textron Inc Providence RI and Thomas F Dorsey and Clyde L Hassel president and vice president of its Pittsburgh bteei r ounary uo division General Steel Industries City HI and Howard F Park Jr vice president for sales Birdsboro Birdsboro Corp G Pa and Clymer Brooke chairman of the board The Penn Steel Castings Co Chester Pa and Alvin Mf board chairman and Inc-Granit- e An-do- rn tip-of- LABOR IN CHARGE Island tatoo emporium lenged the ban has ruled HOLLYWOOD chal- MARQUEE: Jackie Barnett who has spent 20 years as agag writer for Jimmy Durante said in Las Vegas Nev he's taking the comedian and Mrs Durante -- For example Justice Jacob Markowifz said M o n d a y Lady Randolph Churchill the American-bor- n mother of Sir Winston Churchill was tat-- ': tooed for ' ornamental purposes as were Kijng Freder- along on his honeymoon: Barnett 42 and actress Joe Morrow 23 announced after their wedding Sunday in Las Vegas that they would take an extended honeymoon trip to j ick IX of Denniark King George V Edward VII Al- fonso XII of Spaii Viscount Montgomery as well as countless other distinguished mem) Europe Durante was best man at the wedding bers of society" He ruled that the " Department ban on tattooing as a possible carrier of hepatitis a liver ailment was uncdnstitutional A Coney " city-Healt- Pre- (UPI)-So- viet President Woodrow Wilson came PEKING RAKES KHRUSH IN NEW ATTACK ist ? And if you do he added you're in jgood company u BERLIN mier Nikita Khrushchev said today the "Damocles sword of war" still hangs over the world i battle York Supreme Court j justice - Khrush Galls the new pontiff praise his efforts to obtain world peace and racial equality m the United States It was only the third time a US chief of state had met a Pope while in office The late - N A M ES IN THE NE WS Ohio (AP)—Mrs KHRUSHCHEV S Calls for Coexistence son to his Sunday joint commuly and we are confident that these labors will find a ready re nique with Kennedy The commen of all in munique did not mention any sponse good will" such item in their weekend talks he said at Macmillan's country house also mentioned the The pontiff in "impressive developments Monday Heath told Commons the exploration of space to which that Philby who vanished last the United States has made notJanuary from Beirut where he dals able contributions" had been working as a news "May these undertakings take Macmillan pigeonholed the man may have gone behind the on a meaning of homage ren- demand and accused Wilson of ron infiAlAMtA Curtain He said Philby An1 "intrAAirA " dered to God because they iiivcvuvc cuiu uiauicuuc a former first secretary of the augur so much for the benefit The parliamentary British of mankind" he said erupted over Monday's revela- was an Embassy in Washington and had About 4000 persons had gath tion that Harold Philby former been a Soviet 1946 before agent ered in St Peter's Square under British diplomat in Washington while working in the Foreign a hot sun to cheer Kennedy was indeed the "third man" umce f whose turncoat allowed when he departed by limousine diplomats Guy Burgess and Don- aid MacLean to skip behind the VISITS HOME TOWN Iron Curtain ! - NIKITA The President's visit to this southern Italy port city wound up a tour that took him to West Germany Berlin Ireland Britain and Italy He w i 1 1 fly from Naples to Washington tonight In an action packed final day President Kennedy: Met with Pope Paul VI in Vatican City and heard 10-da- y He said he was confident f Teacher Group Votes Sanctions for Utah GOP Jockeys With Demos On Rights Bill glish 4 another year ters Again for that peace Berlin Pad - went further than the NEA leadership has been willing to go in the case of the Utah teachers Here too they could use their force of numbers to change official NEA policy The Utah teachers have refused to school sign contracts for the 1963-6- 4 year until they have assurances that more state aid to education vrill be forthcoming from the legislature With the opening of school only eight weeks off there is no possibility of getting that increased state aid n time to affect the coming school year There have been strong indications however that the Utah teachers will reurn to the classroom if they j get solid assurance they won't have to wait more than "self-sufficien- t" 7 the first peace — (UPI 10-Da- Italy (UPI) — President Kennedy fresh from a historic meeting with Pope Paul VI today called? for greater Allied unity in an apparent new challenge to French President Charles de Gaulle At the last stop on his European tour Kennationalism nedy also urged an end to in a speech at NATO Southern Command Headquar- with President for his efforts for pontiff praised -the Standard-Examine- irnnw- I NAPLES VATICAN CITY (UPI)— Porte Paul VI met today PRESIDENT Kennedy and Pope Paul VI enjoy conversation during historic meeting in Vatican The ft Returns to US Tonight As Climax to y Visit if 4 7 o 1 : if Praised by New Pontiff 5 CENTS 11 a 0 reps t k®ohjv I' Peace Effort -- 4-77- h SPACE CUPID: Valentina Tereshkova Russia's woman cosmonaut said in Moscow she plans to begin "a cosmic family" It was rumored that she may marry cosmonaut Andrian Nikolayev Macmillan said the Burgess and MacLean flight occurred in 19ol under a Labor government When Macmillan's Conservative party came to power he said Philby was "got rid of" The Laborites derided Mac millan for denying — in 1955 when Macmillan was foreign secretary—that Philby was the "third man" in the Washington Embassy who tipped off Burgess and MacLean Today Macmillan said his 1955 answer was based on information 'then available The Laborites jeered Wilson' charged that "Amer i c a n newspaper revelations" forced Macmillan's Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath to an nounce Monday that Philby was the "third man" Labor MP P Arthur Henderson demanded to know if President Kennedy got a report from Macmillan -- Ike Returns to Abilene With Minimum Fanfare - ABILENE Kan- - (AP) For mer President Dwight D Eisenhower came back to his old home town today for a quiet visit Cooperating with Eisenhower's request that his two-da- y stopover here en route from Gettysburg to Denver be unmarked by official ceremony townspeople virtually ignored his arrival by private railroad car at siepped off the train at 8:22 am Eisenhower wras accompanied by Mrs Eisenhower Mr and Mrs George Allen Mr and Mrs Freeman Gosden and the general's military aide Brig Gen Robert Schulz After smiling and shaking hands with the small group at the train Eisenhower drove first to the Abilene cemetery where his parents are buried He spent most of the day at the Eisenhower Memorial L- One small banner saying "Welcome Home Ike" was hoisted at the depot by the Chamber of Commerce and a small group of old friends greet ed the former president when he ibrary' 6 am During the afternoon he met with members of the Library Commission and visited the Eisenhower Museum across the street from the library |