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Show Tribune Phones VoL 184, No. 154 i CLARK AIR FORCE BASE. PHILIPPINES, March 11 (UPI) Thunderstorms in the western Pacific Saturday hampered a massive air sea search for a missing American airliner with 107 persons aboard. four-engin- e running out for plane, a Super of the Flying which vanished without a trace en route, to embattled South Viet Nam with 93 specially trained U.S. Army Rangers. AMONG THOSE aboard the plane were Sgt. John J. Jones, of Ogden, Utah, M.Sgt. Delbert L. Riggins, of Boise, Idaho, and Sgt. 1C. John C. Wendell of Caldwell, Idaho. A serviceman aboard, Sp. ,4 Stand: Terms Impossible Soviet A-Ba- n By Associated Press March 16 The Soviet Union accused the United States Friday of laying down impossible conditions for ending nuclear weapon tests. American officials said President Kennedys proposals for a meaningful test ban treaty- - remain open for jiegoti- ations, and refused to accept Soviet rejection of the proposal as final. Time was ticking away on the problem. The United States has announced it will fire a series of atmospheric tests late in April unless the Soviet government has in agreed to an internationally policed ban by tnat time, ... The next move, American sources said, is up to the Russians. GENEVA, Revolt Gains sparThe ring was at the edge of the disarmament conference. Soviet Ambassador Semyon Tsarapkin again rejected U.S. demands for an international inspection system at a crowded news conference. WHILE HE WAS speaking, his boss in Moscow, Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, declared the Soviet Union would never accept the American proposals and threatened the United States with a new global rocket which he 'said could not be brought down by antimissile defenses. J East and West began open- ly wooing the nations of the central group in the conference dubbed "the eight middle foen. . These are Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Sweden and the United Arab Republic. And the middle men began careful moves of their own to keep the United States and the Soviet Union negotiating on the widest possible range of disarmament and nuclear testing problems. . INDIAS defense minister, V. K. Krishna Menon, asked the conference to switch" its emphasis from speech-makinto intimate study sessions by U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Ministers of the middle eight began sideline conversations among themselves. They asked themselves: WOULD IT BE possible for the eight countries to make a joint appeal to the United States and the Soviet Union to defer plans for fresh nuclear weapon tests at least for the duration of the Geneva g t&IRs? Canadian Foreign Minister Howard C. Green was working hard to keep a western foot in the central camp. Polish Foreign Minister Adam was performing the same function for the Communist side. , Ra-pac- Green and Rapacld have been in contact with each other. Informed sources said Green still believes there is time for the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union to negotiate , See Page 5, Column 1 SUNDAY SPECIALS THE UTTLE Anti-Re- d SCHOOLHOUSE! soldiers, HERES Section C , , f be One Exclusively in Salt ak gribunf Amtncet Greet Hewspepert 'V. three-Sou- th -- Soviet Global Rockets' Invulnerable, K. Says Warning System of U.S. Obsolete, Nikita Boasts By Seymour Topping New York Times Service MOSCOW, March 16 Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev as serted Friday that Soviet scientists had developed a global rocket Invulnerable to weapons. anti-missil- e He said it had rendered obsolete the early warning system of the United States. In a speech calling for disarmament and the early conclusion of a German peace treaty, the Russian leader warned the United States that it was just as defenseless as other countries against rocket bombardment. Khrushchev said the new rocket ccfuld circumvent the radar and detection devices of the early warning line that the United States has established at a cost of billions of dollars in an arc extending from northwestern Canada to Greenland and the British Isles. Vietnamese The Soviet premier did not specify that the new weapon was already militarily operational. Asserting --that -- it -- would -- not- be-- necessary for. Soviet-rocke- ts in time of war with the United States to travel the shortest line across the North Pole, Khrushchev said: d e U.S. AIR FORCE The new global rockets can fly around the world in any direction and strike a blow at any set target. Power in Guatemala all-ou- AVv Nr . r . studen- Associated Press Wlrephoto By Associated Press Sun Splashes Over U.S., Chases Cold rose-colore- d THE TOWERING 103 foot vehicle was topped by the larg est warhead ever carried by a U.S. rocket. nose cone was The three-topacked with instruments in place of the nuclear charge which would be flown in combat flight-recordin- g WITH THE engines of its stages pouring out more than half a million pounds of thrust, the 150-toAir Force projectile blasted away from the cape Friday and streaked unerringly to a bulls-eyin the South Atlantic Ocean at a speed of more than 15,000 mph. Initial concentration will be developing Titan 2 as a two ocean-spannin- weapon capable of delivering nuclear warheads more than half way around the world. for ONCE PERFECTED military purposes, probably in about a year. Titan 2 is slated as a booster for several space Including the assignments. in Khrushchev said the rockets approach the United States from an ocean so that it would be impossible to detect them In order to gain some time to prepare for some counteraction against the rockets. He charged that the U.S. early warning system had been setup to Intercept rockets that might be launched by the Soviet Union in a retaliatory attack. THE PREMIER said the ac curacy of the global rockets could be judged by the Vostok spaceships that carried Maj. Yuri Gagarin and Maj. Gher man S. Titov on their orbital flights around the earth. Khrushchev coupled his disclosure of the new weapon with the announcement that the Soviet Union had launched an instrumental earth By John W. Finney New York Times WASHINGTON, March 16 Dry and sunny weather Officials surmised Friday that washed over most of the naSoviet Union was opening tion Friday one of the first the scientific offensive in new a of a in span long gentle days the storms. exploration of space and a new propaganda campaign of Temperatures were In the its military missiles. mild bracket along both rattling Atlantic and Pacific coasts and across the south. Even in Big Springs, Idaho, there was that unmistakable sign" fff spring: The plow trains moved out toward Yellowstone National snow-choke- d Park. n 1963-6- 4 2 Jets Crash Over Japan TOKYO, Saturday, Two American-buil- t F86F jets of the Japan air forces collided in the air south of here Friday and crashed. There was no immediate indication of the fate of the pilots, police said. One of the falling planes set fire to three dwellings but there were no reported Injuries to the inhabitants. e Electrical power was snuffed out in a wide area by the accident and train service on the Tokkaido Trunk Line halted. Night Flight New York News Service BERLIN, March our military transport planes made the first Soviet night flights in the corridor Friday night Western sources said. 16-F- Berlin-Ham-bur- THE RUSSIAN planes made the trips between 8 and 9 p.m. Planes of the Western allies flew their normal schedules two commercial passenger planes and an unknown number of military craft The flights went off-oschedule, and there were no reports of any incidents. n THE SOVIET flights were regularly announced in the Berlin Air Safety Center, where the Soviets still work together with the Western allies. Irish Blues-Gre- en Gone Khrushchev made his By Auoclated Press remarks about global in a speech that DUBLIN, IRELAND, March THIS WAS THE general re- rockets 16 A shortage of shamrocks action to the launching of a otherwise was relatively mod hit Ireland Friday night, the new Soviet earth satellite and erate in tone. eve of St Patricks Day. to Khrushchevs claim that the Soviet Union has developed a HOWEVER, Khrushchev so Normally the .country often has dropped his most rocket that is global In range covered with the stuff. imforceful as remarks and Invulnerable to aides in major promptu This year, however, thouweapons. speeches that Western observ- sands of Irishmen will have There was no forma! re- ers have come to regard them to celebrate their patron saint action to either the Soviet as studied in intent and char- without the traditional wearspace achievement or the acter. . ing of the green. Small sprigs of shamrock, missile claim. KHRUSHCHEV spoke in the enough to fill a buttonhardly The presumption among of- Kremlin's palace of congresses hole, were selling at three ficials was thqt the two events before 6,000 voters of Mos- shillings (42 cents). Last years were part of the Soviet Uniops cows "Kalinin district where price was sixpence i7 cents). propaganda tactic, evidenced FLOWER SHOPS and street in the past, of exploiting its he is the sole candidate for Sunprowess in space- for political parliamentary deputy in su- vendors blame the shortage on the weather. days elections for the impact Soviet. His speech was Late snow and heavy rain One target, it was reasoned, preme over the Intertele- doused the enthusiasm of the was the disarmament broadcast vision Network of the Soviet country people who normally this conference that opened bloc. pick the shamrock in the hills. week in Geneva. anti-missil- e - 17 TVo UNION Pacific trains, (UPI) throwing 15,000 tons of snow and hour, opened up the route frpm Ashton to West Yellowstone in about 15 hours. Along the way, the rotary Titan 2 is the most power- units . chewed through drifts ful intercontinental range up to 12 feet high in Reas missile planned by the' De- Pass. fense Department. In northeast Idaho, the snow It Is capable of carrying a plow trains are a surer sign nuclear payload with almost of spring than the first robin. twice the punch of the earlier MEANWHILE, cold weather Atlas and Titan 1 ICBM. Unofficial estimates place stayed on in interior sections Titan 2s warhead capability at of the north. The mercury up to 10 megatons, equal to dropped to minus 7 in Devils the explosive force of 10 mil- Lake, N.D., and minus 5 in lion tons of dynamite, or 500 Drummond, Mont. times the fury of the atomic Snow flurries dusted areas bomb dropped on Hiroshima in from Illiois eastward into World War H. Pennsylvania. It will be the first in a series of test shots similar to the extensive series already conducted by the United States designed to gather data for manned space flights. Russ Propaganda Seen in 2 Actions By Associated Press Gemini space capsule and the Dynasoar manned bomber in 1964-65- . Several .unmanned space missions also are planned for the rocket. ' two-ma- CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA., March 16 Americas mightiest war rocket, the blockbuster Titan 2, successfully flew more than 5,000 miles on its maiden test flight Friday and bolstered this nations military and space potential. The missile was powered by revolutionary new liquid propellants. They emitted a glow of hot gases instead of the tail of bright flame familiar to most rockets. plows snow, not earth. This powerful diesel tosses at rate of 15,000 tons an hour. The Union Pacific Railroad annually has a spring plowing job, but unlike farmers, it 5 Mighty Titan 2 Ffaslies. 5,000 Miles to Target Russians Try could search planes took off from this base north of Manila at intervals beginning at dawn to criss-cros- s 42,000 square miles qf open sea and cloudy skies. The second days search was launched by a giant SA16 amBy Associated Press phibian plane that took off at GUATEMALA, March 17 4:30 a.m. (1:30 p.m., MST, FriPresident Miguel Ydigoras day) and it was followed by a conservative government Sat- dozen other planes from this t army base. urday ordered an drive to smash a bloody, four-daAdditional planes from old revolt that appeared Guam and other areas were to be gaining fresh support. participating In the search ANTIGOVERNMENT oppo- as were ships of the U.S. sition mounted over violent Seventh Fleet. measures used to end the Air rescue officers said more t-sparked disorders. Five radio station personnel aircraft were flying into the were reported shot dead after search area from Okinawa and an uncensored broadcast in Japan. They estimated that as this riot-tomany as 60 planes would be capital. in the air at one time during INFORMANTS estimated 20 the day. persons many of them stuSix planes kept up the dents have been killed and more than 200 injured since search throughout the night the revolt erupted Tuesday. looking for flares from surAfter a new wave of street vivors but they saw none. clashes, the army seized conRainstorms, moving toward trol of the city under Ydifrom the east, the goras orders and announced werePhilippinesthe aerial search making it is prepared to take extreme more difficult , measures to restore order. COORDINATING search efHeavily armed patrols forts from here was Capt Clinwere stationed at key points and an 8 p.m.-- a.m. curfew ton Hahn, of Arlington, Tex. He has been working over was imposed. maps and search flight plans The students demanding for more than 24 hours withYdigoras resignation and dis- out sleep. solution of congress have won "Everyone is helping in the support through strikes by search, Hahn said, including railway workers, bank em- 85 enlisted men who volunployes and a large number of teered to fly aboard the search See Page 5, Column 1 farm and business workers. quick-strikin- TO DO Price Ten Cents March 17, 1962 NINE RADAR-equippeships and 40 planes searched 150,000-squarmile area ye- tween- - Guam and the Philip pines but no wreckage jor life rafts were sighted. Speculation that the plane crashed and sank with its human cargo increased. e INCOME TAX i McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, N.J., March 16 (AM Airman 3 C. Mary E. York said Friday her famous grandfather offered her just one piece of advice when she joined the Air Force. Just be another York! said Sgt. Alvin C. York, World War I hero. I'll try, said Mary. 8. soldiers and crew of 11 including four women aboard the charter flight-- n Section A Lake City, vicinity, Utah Mostly cloudy with some snow or rain showers. See weather map on B-- Fred W. Talbot, was recently stationed at Dugway Proving Ground, near Tooele, Utah. His home is ih"'Salamanca, N.Y. A Flying Tigers spokesman at the airlines headquarters in Burbank, Calif., said airline and federal authorities would make a joint investigation of possible sabotage. HE EMPHASIZED there was no actual evidence of sabotage as yet, but noted that the missing plane and another Flying Tiger Constellation which crashed in Alaska Friday both had taken off originally from Travis AFB, Calif., and both were headed for the Orient The Alaskan crash killed one man. An aerial sweep of the western Pacific area continued for some sign of the American mid-Pacifi- c Soviet-America- n Saturday Morning; Easier Said... Hope Wanes for 107 Aboard Lost Plane Salt akje Salt Lake City, Utah Utahn, 2 Idahoans listed HOPE WAS the Constellation Tiger Airline. Crab Umbrella fbt 'Stall News departments, EM information, scores, EL5-751business, advertising, circulation departments, EM ' BY EMPHASIZING its power in space and missiles, officials speculated, the Soviet Union was hoping to get the eight nonaligned nations at the talks to pressure the West to make concessions on the dis- armament issue. Another target, officials speculated, may be the United Nations committeeon the peaceful uses of outer space, which meets nexf week in New York. Tallying The Tribune Castro Pulled the Curtain, But Shields Saw the Light NOT EVERYONE . . in fact, hardly ANYONE can get inside Cuba today. Fidel Castro is funny that way. As a result, most stories from that tight little island have a second-hand flavor. Rumors run wild. Everyone is anxious to know what the real story is. . . . , THE PLANES crashed beside one of the main lines of THE UNITED STATES has the Japan national railways between Tokyo and Osaka, ac- taken a decisive lead, both in cording to officials of the line. the number of satellites launched and in the scientific results gained from space AND STARTING TODAY: Wt have it probes. It was reasoned that the SoToronto Star reporter Roy viet Union now was attempting Shields is one man who got by to demonstrate its capabilities Castro (The Cubans arent mad at estimated at up to 10 megatons, equal to in the scientific exploration of Canada) to get the Inside report space. on a land newly converted to . TNT. 10 tons million of explosive force of Roy got it! FROM A MILITARY standft's a real hemispheric scoop RANGE 6,300 MILES with Mark 6 war- point, officials said they found . What IS going on in Cuba? head, up to 12,500 miles with smaller Mark little that was startlingly- - new 8 and Mark 4 nose cones used on Atlas and Reporter Shields tells you in an excluslvenew series or disturbing in Khrushchevs a special on Page 13. Titan 1. claims about the new global starting today Warhead speed More than 15,000 mph. rocket HERERE SOME INSIDE TIPS The claim that the rocket Launching From bottom of hardened was invulnerable to an anti-SeSECTION B SECTION A underground silo within minute after Pare 6, Column 7 Page 6 Utahns speak up. Lady Birds best. alarm is sounded. Church news. Page 8 Hoop and holler. at Air Initial deployment In 12 Todays TV. Editorial notes. Page Force bases near Tucson, Arlz.; Little Todays Chuckle AND YOULL FIND . . . SECTION C Rock, Ark., and Wichita, Kan. Back in Grandpa's day 1 The complete guide to weekOld? Grow two-ma- Future missions Page to Why was booster for there something Space Page 3 end movies and Kilgallens make you sleep. They called Letters to Ann, Gemini space capsule apd Dyna-Soa- r Dear Heloise. Page 4 Broadway. . , , Pages C-- T it work. manned bomber. Titan Key: Speed, Punch By Associated Press ere's CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA, March a thumbnail sketch of the Titan 2 missile which successfully passed its initial flight test here Friday over a 5,000-milcourse. 16-H- e HEIGHT 103 FEET. First stage 71 feet; second stage 32 feet. Weight 150 tons fully fueled. Thrust 530,000 pounds; first stage 430,-00second stage 100,000. Propulsion Storable liquid fuels: hydrazine and unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine with nitrogen textroxide al oxidizer., Warhead Mark 6 weighing more than v three tons. Nuclear payload capacity Unofficially . ... e mid-196- n j i K v |