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Show & Tlie Salt Lake Tribnne, Saturday, June 6, 1964 Shifts Favor Goldwater To Win on First Ballot Pressures Disturb Warren Probers VN3 - ? 'SV tv-- ,N - i 1 x - V p fJ f tat i 'x aH,T' ' v, " f i IW;. ?X front-runnin- g 5-- Sen. Wv 7 '$ By Asioclated Presi total in the AP pol of delegates already chosen to WASHINGTON, June Barry Goldwater has picked up 470. 'n : V 'Vjjr"- - ' ' 1 ,JM t - $ V "v8' Moss Reports .: . yf ' I P Fateful Day statement: THE WHITE House and State Department, for diplomatic reasons, reportedly are adamant that the commission say when it issues its final report that: 1. The alleged killer, Lee Harvey Oswald, had no accomplices when the fatal shots were fired in Dallas last Nov. 22, killmg-th- te -- ). , las last November. The commission is nearing Commission members went the conclusion of the taking of to Mrs. Kennedys home in to testimony and is giving thought of Washto the content and form of its Georgetown section to get her testimony, ington The commission has report. reached no final conclusions and Afterward, they issued a has not discussed final conclustatement saying the sions as a commission." Presidents Commission took the of MrsrJohn F, Ken- SOME COMMISSION embers testimony home this afterat her nedy suspect high administration noon. officials of planting the stories as a part of the administrations The commission declined to present foreign policy of play, go beyond this, and would not ing it cozy with Russia. say what members heard Mrs. Chief Justice Earl Warren Kennedy or how long they were heads the seven-ma-n there. commission President Johnson apn The panel, headed pointed to make a complete inChief Earl Warren, Justice of the assassination. by' vestigation has long let it be known it He sees the need of collect- wanted ttr hear Mrs. Kennedys ing more information .before account of the Nov. 22 slaying of the commission reaches any the late President JoJjn F. Kenconclusions, a spokesman said. nedy. Warren and possibly other BUT THE GROUP wanted to members of the commission, it conduct this phase of the investiwas learned, will go to Dallas gation at her convenience, and on Sunday for further studies with no advance publicity. -- 1 ce e President S - s - day. Dixie Pledge ssS ChIego Tribune Service pomtment of its staff. They A have been WASHINGTON, June 5 appearing ever since. administrathe that wedk This a rash of them suspicion tion wants to dictate the conin newspapers from WASHINGTON, June 5 (UPI) ' clusions of the Warren CommisMrs. John F. Kennedy Friday sion on the Kennedy Assassinathe Warren Commission ingave The commission met in spetion is disturbing -c-ommission her husbands assasvestigating cial session and then issued members, it was disclosed Fri- the following tersely worded sination her own account of what went on that fateful day in Dalcoast-to-coas- t. ONE BIG BOOST for Gold AuoeUted Freti W Inpkola water came In Ohio where a new Chief Justice Earl Warren . . shows Press Associated survey at least 17 delegates willing to Sees need'to gain more data. vote for him on the first ballot The Tribun Washington Bureau delegation is nom- Names Area Judge The inally pledged to Gov. James S. WASHINGTON, June 5 Rhodes as a favorite son, but the WASHINGTON, June 5 (AP) promise of early consideration of the Dixie Irrigation Project "by pledge is not legally binding. President Johnson Friday the House-- . Irrigation and RecOhio state chairman Ray nominated Walter Ely, lamation Subcommittee was an- Bliss is expected to have a lot Los Angeles lawyer, as a nounced Friday by the office of to say about where the Buck- Judge for the 9th Circuit Court Moss Sen. Frank E. eye State votes go. of Appeals. The 9th Circuit emSAID AIDE AN that before But so far he has given no braces northern and southern the senator left for Utah Thurs- public indication of where his California, Oregon, Nevada, day he conferred with both sympathies lie.. In the absence of Montana, eastern and western .) Chairman Wayne N. Aspinall Idaho, Arizona, a stand by Bliss, at least 17 dele- Washington, Alaska and Guam. of the parent Interior Hawaii, vote to on the are gates expected Committee and Chairman Wal- first ballot for Goldwater. Irri.) of the ter Rogers THREE OF Michigans 48 delgation and Reclamation Subegates say Goldwater is their committee. first ballot choicer even though HE SAID BOTH had prom- the state convention approved a ised the authorization legislation resolution urging the delegation southern to remain uncommitted. Most for the Utah irrigation project would delegates at least 38 say be taken up soon. theyll probably cast first-ballThe Senate passed the Dixie votes for Gov. George Romney as a favonte son.- bill last October. ' s v ventions. five weeks. Vote shifts recorded Friday And theres no, guarantee that boosted the Arizona senators all of the delegates who now say they would cast first ballot votes for him will stick with him. V Itv l' previously uncommitted deleAND ESTIMATES by political gates since his California victory and observers in 15 leaders first-ballto a him give enough states and Puerto Rico are that nomRepublican presidential ination if his expectations in the Goldwater could get as many as 200 of the 258 delegates still to coming weeks selections mate- be chosen. rialize. , He was expected to start gathASSOCIATED Press surveys ering some of that support in of major uncommitted or favor- state conventions in Colorado, ite son delegations and of the Washington, Hawaii and. Alastates where delegates are still bama Friday and Saturday. to be chosen show Goldwater But the senator could run will have more than the 655 votes stubborn opposition in Ihto needed barring major shife of home the forthcoming conamong the delegates in the next 32 Jackie Gives Account of 2. THERE WAS no foreign (Russian or Communist Cuban) Involvement in the assassination plot. Newspapers frequently chosen by the Johnson Administration for sending up trial balloons began publishing stories that Oswald had no accomplices and that there was no foreign involvement before the Warren Commission could even set up s hop, members reported. THE FIRST OF these stories which commission members said obviously had been,- - planted appeared last December before the commission completed ap- - -m- blue-ribbo- 1 FBIPinpointsBulletJYIark In Ruins ofi)eath Plane s. Associated Press Wlrephoto t The selection of a national flower has come up in Congress .again. Carolyn Windsor, House employe, poses with entrants. u a Sneeze Is tille Picks Artificial Floiver A Sneeze Is . By Stanley -- j: that it would have been directly in the line of fire between the pilot and anyone standing in the aisleway between and slightly to the rear of the pilot and copilot, Hoover so positioned j said. Earlier this week, the CAB disclosed that the Bell Telephone Laboratories had established that the last radio between the San Francisco-boun- d airplane and the Federal Aviation Agency control tower at Oakland, Calif., were the words of the copilot, Ray E. Andress: THE FBI notified the Civil Aeronautics Board that laboratory examination showed that an indentation In a piece of Younger was unimpressed tubing from the plane wreckage by testimony of the rose people was produced by a bullet. 1 that their flower had won FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover votes more than twice advised CAB Chairman Alan S. the number of any other flow- Boyd that the tubing had been SKIPPERS shot. Weve been in a poll of 1,055,629 identified as coming from the er shot (I was) tryin ta help. Americans. upper inboard comer of the The quote was taken from a backrest frame of the pilots I DO NOT BELIEVE the seat. tape recording analyzed by the San Mateo children have conlaboratory for the CAB through THIS BULLET indentation is spectrographic techniques. ducted a poll, Younger said. children drawings, crayon sketches of Uncle Sam say-- ing: Meisler Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON. By Associated Press WASHINGTON June officials announced Friday definite evidence of bullet damage in the Pacific Air Lines plane that crashed near San Ramon, Calif., May 7, killing 44 persons. v J une 5The Associated Press Friday assigned one of its greatest sufferers from, pollen allergy . to cover a congresIne sional hearing on the selection of a national flower. 386,-84- Unfortunately, the witnesses brought their flowers with them. The hearing began in a room bedecked with Shasta daisies, daisies, corn tassels, 'plain roses of every color, mariall live golds, carnations and one lonely pot of artificial poinsettias, which do not bloom at this time of the year. Despite impairment of hearing and sight, I stayed and scribbled down whatever I could hear and see. Rep. Lindley Beckworth begah by plumping for the rose, his advocacy so vig- orous that one member of the House Subcommittees on Ll- brary find Memorials, Rep. com- . John Brademas men ted: . (D-Te- (D-In- 1 SINCE PRESIDENT John-- 4 son is trying to unify the n . . . I hope we are not bringing up issues that will divide us. The Shasta daisy drew, sup--. port front Rep. J, Arthur who told Younger the subcommittee that the na- - tional campaign for the Shasta Daisy as a national flower was started by a third grade class . in a San Mateo school in his na-tio- district - t) He distributed some of the $ be gait fakfDialgfibtnu EM 143 South Main O Eatablllhed April 15, 1871, lucd e very morning by the Corporation, Salt Lake City, Utah. Entered at the post office at Salt lake City as second clais matter under act of March 8, 1879 ' All unsolicited articles, letters and pictures sent to The Salt Lake Tribune are sent e t th owner's risk and Corporation assumes no or responsibility lor their custody Kearns-Trlbun- manu-crlpt- s, Kearns-Trlbun- -- return. 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