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Show Unless justice be done FORECAST... he THOUGHTS... te others it will not be done te us.—Woodrow Wilson, EY t & Vit 2, go> PARTLY CLOUDY today and a little warmer. High tn the 405 with a low tonight about 30, Probabili- ty of moisture, 10 percent. «< ) PER MONTH— PRICE 15 CENTS PRO\ aks Open Second Phase Of Off ensive Orem to Ballot Tuesday On Bondfor City Center OREM— Residents of Orem sor School, while districts 16, Civic and community leaders will vote Tuesday in a bond 17, 18 and 19 will ballot at have joined in strongly reco election on a proposal to build Geneva Schoo! mending the project and aska $716,000 City Center. City Hall will be the voting ing residents to vote in favor Polls will open at 7 a. m. site for districts 3, 4, 5, and of the bond proposal. Mayor Winston M. Crawford Tuesday and will remain open 6, while Scera Park School will be the polling place for dis- ).4. until 8 p.m. All registered voters who pay property taxes are eligibie to vote. This in- tricts 7, 22 and 23, 1 SAIGON “Orem City is in better finan. cial condition than it has been for 20 years.” Mr, Squire, who has audited the city’s books and directed They raided five major US bases | Base in the Philippines enroute back to the United States, They were expected to arrive . | et Andrews Air Force Base early this morning. Theyare, left to right, Lt. (j.g.) David | P. Matheny, U.S, Navy, Bakersfield, Calif.; and U.S. Air Force officers, Maj, Norris M. Overly of Wheeling, W.Va., and Capt. Jon D. Black, Johason City, Tenn, (Herald-UPI Radiophoto) | | Form of Lottery Plan | Three || WASHINGTON (UPI)—Pres-|form of lottery selection sysident Johnson's decision to! tem. abolish graduate school and) Speaking for major segment Freed LBJ Tells Brigade | stir up Vietnamese the area, Mekong To Resist Attack new! President Logan Wilson of the demandsin Congressfor some| American Council in Education| regulars battled American Marines and South Vietnamese infantrymen to a |near standstill on the 19th day | of combatthat started when the |Communists began their lunar new year offensive on Jan. 29. Casualties on both sides mounted in the old walled Citadel of Hue while the new outbreak of fighting erupted jover wide areas of the countryside and rekindled the battle of Saigon, U.S. and South Vietnamese occupational draft deferments of ‘the academic community | Way Home promises to Saigon in Delta rice bowl. In Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon near the threatened northern frontier, diehard North 4 i a ‘ , | THREEU.S. FLIERSreleased by North Vietnam Friday are back in uniform at Clark Air May Stir Demand for the biggest towns cludes both real property and 11, 12, 13 and 21 to the Cherry DeLance Squire, certified tional $1.2 million in bonds. personal property, Hill School, Districts 14 and 15 public accountant who handles The proposed bond issue is Voting districts 1, 2, 20, and will cast their ballots at the the Orem City audit, has $716,000, which would keep 2% will cast ballots at the Wind- Westmore School. backed the project and said: (See OREM TO BALLOT,p. y | in several allied outposts on the central iighlands and the Orem City to issue an addi- | 1 . | LB J S Action on Draft Viet- heavy attacks throughout thre: quarters of South Vietnam. its financial program for a number of years, points out hee = ve of a vole in that with the current assessed districts Tuesday's election (UPI\—North namese and Viet Cong armies opened a second haseof their 1968 offensive —Sund with Districts 8, 9, and 10 will go {Vor of the city center in \aiuation, the law will permit to Hillcrest School; Fighting Rages Fiercely troops counterat- tacked quickly in a move to stop the second wave of attacks before they could gain momentum. FT. BRAGG, N.C, (UPI)—\with members of the 82nd) The heaviest fighting early urged “the administration and) By DARRELL GARWOOD president Johnson told 4 Airborne in green battle fatigue| Sunday was at Hue, where more Congress to consider (UPI)—The| brigade | e a system) WASHINGTON ade of of paratroopers bound Order Will jof random ‘selection at the three American pilots freed by forVieton Setirday they must lined up before him, Johnson|than 70 Americans and 3,000 eae have been killed, earliest possible moment” to|North Vietnam flew home! give the same answer to the said: and around the Tan Son Nhut spread the impact of the|Saturday for a reunion with Communist enemy that has “At this very moment Base on Saigon’s northwest decision over all ages and their families. Hanoi's peace! always been given: “Resist| second wave of terrorists are® Air outskirts where Viet classifications of draft eligibles, |talks statement that accompa-|their ruthless attack.” attacking the citi . Our forces\mortar and rocket fire early Under the new Selective|Mied their release left Johnson) Speaking at the Army base are ready I know. They will|Sunday touched off a thundes ‘Service regulations~announced |2dministration officials nim) lequip themselves whenever it|rous explosion and huge fires, Friday, only graduate students sige ee a comes, whereverit comes.” Mortar shells hit “Pentagon |in medical or dental fields or| The pilots, Air Force Ma). The President paid a surprise ; East,” the nickname for the |_Dr. Wesley P. Lloyd, dean tio those in at least their|Norris M. Overly and Capt. Jon Suspect Held | U.S. military headquarters for of the BYU Graduate School ; rol i [flying visit to the base to say| land president of the Western |Second year of higher schooling D. Black and Navy Lt. (j.8.) |Vietnam at Tan Son Nhut. Fires sees no Gredaata Schools will be granted deferments. |David P. Matheny, were expectgoodbye to the paratroopers, EXAMINING HIS BADLY burned hand and arm is Thomas ; cad ed to arrive at Andrews Air }many of them already veterans |blazed on ihe base flight line oaiaide: was inZ flames, G. LeFevre, who was shocked by a 7200 volt powerline Fri- Sataurday ‘said that the fed- National classifications Of |Foroe Base, Md. jof the Vietnam fighting, and tell)land the chapel E day as he was working on a city power pole in scutheast eral action to withdraw draft deferable occupations were also| Washington early this morning. them the nation was praying for, Communistforces fired rock|deferments for graduate stu- abolished, and although ia hePentagon ‘aid Overly and S. G Murders them. Provo. jets for the tirst time at Tan Son dents will probably cut the enNhut and stormed the gates of roliment of the BYU Graduate boards may| still grantstich) pick would leave almost S.C. (UPI)-- | The men were among 10,500 exemptions “on a showing Of/immediately for Air Force |Police tagged Lee Roy Martin|reinforcements requested by the base behind a hail of rifle |school by 25 per cent. and machine gun fire. essential community need,” this hospitals closest to their homes, | He also pointed out that the category of deferment WAS! where they will undergo brief- Saturday as the Gaffney stran-|Gen. William C. Westmoreland, In addition to serving as the jSchools in the Western Associa- eka co under the ings and physical examinations gler, lodging a second and third) commandingofficer in Vietnam, military headquarters for both murder charges against him)to meet new Communist on- the United States and South tion, including 70 universities | Overly, whose wife, Nola, and acknowledginghe is suspect! slaughts. in 13 western states, will lose sf eee os Vietnam, Tan Son Nhut is a between 20 and 40 per cent of | Estimates of the number of| resides at Wurtsmith Air Force in a fourth slaying for which Ft. Bragg was the President's major base for allied bombers Lye veatee pe who| Base, Oscoda, ae will a) to! another manis serving time. their graduate students. Least first stop on a weekend tour of|and Saigon’s commercial airwil ome subject to imme-|Wright-Patterson Air Force) « i y ’ hard hit will be institutions got the to say|port. It was a prime target in eecee) military toinstallations with medical and dental school, diate callups ranged to more |Base at Dayton, Ohio. Black, ae Fee the killings,”|farewell Army and Marine the first phase of the Communist offensive on South VietBy TERENCE L.DAY |Fevre said Saturday. “Not whose students will still be ex- than 800,000. whose wife Carol lives iN 'said Cherokee County Sheriff] troops headed for Vietnam. “ zs many get a second chance at|empt. The existing practice of|Laredo, Tex., will go t0/ Julian Wright, referring to the| Heleft Pope Air Force Base/nam’s population centers and Cut Graduate | Rell-at- BYU: |On Three | GAFFNEY, Lucky To Be Alive, Admits Worker After Electricity Jolt, Fall From Power Line Thomas G. LeVevre's boss} fe,” Dean Lloyd said, “The more drafting the oldest eligible Lackland Air Force Base at San| strangulation slayings of Opal outside Fayetteville, N.C., atthe scene of bitter fighting early says he’s lucky to be alive, and Heis the father of six child-| critical the period for any na-/males ahead of young eligi- tonio, [Dianne Buckson, a 15-year-old) 6:19 p.m., EST for the West/this month. i LeFevre's not likely to ren. He has worked for Provoition, the greater need for bles was not changed by Mathenywill enter Bethesda | Negro girl, and two white|c,.< , probably for a visit to El The raid on Tan Son Nhut argue. City since 1956 and has been| trained personnel. This order Friday’s announcement, mean- Naval Hospital in suburban! women, Mrs. Nancy Parris, 20.|non.” sYor we Be jn Sunday was coordinated with Air Base catitomnia, Friday about 2:25 p.m. a climbing poles for the past | will delay the supply of highly ing new college graduates this Maryland. His parents, Mr. and)and Naney Rinehart, 14. similar mortar and rocket 7200-volt shock jolted him fram eight years. ra . attacks on the headquarters of |trained people the nation year and students ending their Mrs. C, S._ Matheny of) Martin, a white 30-year-old the top of a utility pole at 800 Mr. LeFevre expects to be needs.” first year of graduate school Bakersfield, Calif., will fly to|narttime textile worker and| Standing hatless, wearing a the U.S. Army’s 25th Infantry Washington Sunday for a father of three children, was) Stay business suit and speaking E. a5, pom anM fell secita FE ar tot ae Dr. Lloyd asserted that the Will be at the top of the list. reunion with their son. Division at Cu Chi just arrested Friday after searchers| With a forceful voice, Johnson northwest of Tan Son Nhut, the oven a) ee © Broun ic. eee prans go back 10\ order will also affect under-| In House hearings earlier this : r liers | found Miss Buckson’s body) tld the Ft. Bragg soldiersthat Bian Hoa Air Base, the nearby ising!y, a of ae erate Poles as 300 8 he’S/sraduate programs of univer- month, academic spokesmen theLeeee Philippines Friday night|crammed in a hole in a dry|the Viet Cong and the North supply complex at Long Binh factory condition at Utal peel able. sities because those students said such a change in regula“| Vietnamese are going to try to Be. All are majorfacilities for Hospital where he i Deane, working toward masters and tions as adopted Friday would aboard an Air Force Cll jet| creek bed. on the defense of Saigon. treated bl doctorate degrees comprise a empty graduate schools, deny transport plane, which stopped) He was first charged with “Win now—this year.” one handforandserious an arm, burns a back| P anel I Unable great part of the teaching as- colleges and universities their for refueling at Eielson Air|,iss Buckson’s murder, but) “His aim to shake the First reports on the fi injury and cracked ribs. Ronald Dean, superintendent) Settle of Provo City Power, said Mr. aitamte i i Force Base near Fairbanks,’ after further questioning author. foundation of the South Vietna- ‘ni the highlands and delta areas ean eee aac i sala bal Alaska, on the way to Washing: ities lodged rateter Saree! mese government . . to (See FIGHTING RAGES, p. 4) Tigipreseatlebaetage oe wall yiced students workin gare les — .,,./against him Saturday in the|destroy the confidence in the| LeFevre, 36, of 1275 W.1600 N., Cc Strik: |verstes will become more ser-| timein laboratory ea Overly said at Manila, after| Parris and Rinehart killings. Provo, has been employed by) Copper Strike a ie anny oreo| | |the three had been given! (See Earlier Story on Page 11) the city for several years. Fri|trained doctorates diminishes,”| te SPokesmen said replacing}haircuts, medical checkups and| _ day he had climbed the pole to) WASHINGTON (UPI)—A) ne concluded. ” |the system of taking the oldest’ a lunch of steak and eggs, that help other workmenstring a special government mediation Dr. Lloyd also indicated the men first with a random||they felt fine and were “real| Now You Know government and to destroy the will of your people to see the| struggle through,” he shouted. “Wherever you are, wherever you go each of you knowthat Canadians Deny Russian Intrusion conduit and was attempting to panel conceded failure Saturday | We Western Association of Gradu- selection method would ease the \you will have with you always ee ey The fliers, who tedb had been By United inited Pi Press International roti : belt himself to the pole when in efforts to settle the seven- jate Schools will place this mat- impact on the academic com- Te : |the devotion, concern, the month copper strike aebecause |ter on the agenda as a major munity and provide “fairness| captured during bombing raids z the accident happened. A andtheequity” As Mr. LeFevre threw one neither side is willing to topic of discussion at the UD-|1) draft for all men subject last fall have been released| Emperor Gia Long, having prayers of all who are dear to by North Vietnam in a\Consolidated what is now You. end of the safety belt around compromise |coming meeting of the associa-|'° M® oat. Logan, whose American Coun- previously announced goodwill Vietnam after two centuries of} Following his speech, the the pole, his hand hit a 7200- Labor Secretary W, Willard|tion, March 3-3 in Denver. volt power line and the jolt Wirtz and Commerce Secretary) BYU Graduate school last|‘il on Education represents \(See THREE FREED,page 4) civil wars, made Huehis capital|Chief Executive walked down OTTAWA (UPI) — Canadian in 1802 and built the Citadel on|the line of troops and shook officials have denied a report threw him from the pole, Mr. Alexander B, Trowbridge issued| semester had 1,633 students en-|1,500 colleges and universities, \the north bank of the River of hands warmly with many of that two Soviet naval vessels Dean said. a joint statement declaring: |rolled in graduate classes. The “alled the Selective Service | Perfumes. them, looking them in the eye. had intruded into the country’s Mr. LeFevre, who was about “We regret that the panel had/dean's prediction would be that|@¢tion “alarming” and “shortterritorial waters and were 30 to 35 feet above the ground to report to us that the parties|some 400 fewer students would sighted , . intercepted by Canadian vesplummeted onto a garage roof, have been unable to reach|be able to attend after the| Friday’s order will cover sels. then fell onto a fence and fin- agreement.” |order takes effect. (See LBJ’S ACTION, page 4) ally to the ground, Usually a The report came from Rep. | Westmoreland . . Lester L. Wolff, D-N.Y., who 7200 volt shock stops a man’s said he was told of the alleged breathing, if it doesn’t kill him, Mr, Deansaid. Yet, Mr. LeFevre was conj ident Johnson, convinced Hanoi Allard, chief of Canada’s is no more ready to negotiate defense staff, at a reception scious when fellow workmen Extra copies being printed of the Herald's than it was three years ago, is reached him and he did not Greater Central Utah Progress Edition are nearly | here Wednesday night. need artificial respiration, putting unreservedfaith in Gen. Allard could not be reached sold out. The issue comes out next Sunday, They immediately called for |immediately for comment, But William C. Westmoreland and Feb. 25. an ambulance which rushed NEW YORK (UPI)—Negotia-|earlier’ this month piled 100,000|negotiation and mediation are the U.S. forces in Vietnam to the Canadian Defense DepartIf you desire to send copies to friends or | tors agreed Saturday to unpre-|tons of rotting refuse on the\not the answer at this time in keep up the pressure on the ment and the External Affairs him to the hospital relatives and haven't had themreserved vet, Department both denied any Mr. Dean said Mr. LeFevre|cedented binding arbitration in|streets of the nation’s largest|this dispute,” the parties said in| Communists a joint announcement at City | Johnson in solemnterms told please contact your carrier boy at once. He may | such incidents had occurred. A hag a serious burn on the back a garbage collection dispute|city. of the hand which touched the pie mushroomed on fi Gov. Nelson A, Rockefeller|Hall where talks had been jan informal news conference) have a few extra copies set aside. Also, the | Defense Department spokesman Fai ht A |scheduled to resume. termed the report “ridiculous.” wire, and another just above health crisis in New York City’s| ; than Hanoi has showed no convenient order blank for the edition will be the wrist of the other arm {filth littered streets toa eee te ae Foal They said Vincent D. McDon- willingness to negotiate an published Monday for the last time. | Wolff, reached by telephone where the electricity left his |confrontation between two ae for a Siste takeover" of the nell, chairman of the state end of the Vietnam War in) at his Port Washington, N.Y., Themed to “New Horizons,” the big edition |the nation’s leading Republi.|city Sanitation Department to | Mediation Board, would issue a |recent days or at any other ly is devoted to publicizing Central Utah and its offices, said he saw no reason He surmised that the jolt of cans, avert a health emergency. The|“final and binding” decision on time in the last three years. for Canada to deny the incident, manyresources. hitting the roof, then the fence | The agreement lifted the|Rockefeller plan had drawn}, new contract for the The Communist offensive this} He said he has asked Secretary tra copies are 15 cents delivered to your of State Dean Rusk to and finally the ground may have threat of a new walkout by the|sharp criticism from Mayor) garbagemen Feb. 29. It will be month against South Vietna-| door; 25 cents mailed by the Herald within the restarted Mr, LeFevre’s breath- 10,000 members of the Uni-John V. Lindsay and state/retroactive to July 1, 1967, when mese cities “ought to be an investigate the matter. There formed Sanitationmen’s Associ-|!egislators alike. \their last pact with the city pea any schoolboy should United States; and 50 cents mailed to foreign was no immediate word from understand,”the President said, countries. Washington. “I'm real lucky,” Mr. be ation whose nine-day walkout] “It is clear to all that|expired. President Has Faith in It’s Last Chance to Order Negotiators Agree to Binding Arbitration waseveron (wrn-ree Extra Copies of Big Issue [iiiet."%/ sc"ant In New York's Garbage-Sanitation Crisis |