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Show Cfoudiness Telephone FR 3-50- irith a few t h a n d e r showrri fore-ets- t: threarh Thttrsdiy. rire-di- f 50 For Ads.. News, Circulations Provo Office, 130 W. nectirrlnr shower activity with dm( total iraotuU .IB to JSQ Indu.. Tempers tores STer-c-I3 to decree below norrasL i. ng FH wesa 4th N. temperatures bertnmrg sboct Sands y. Prove low Uus 'morning: 2S. Bftrfwr Orem Office, 727 N. State JLC 5-1- ' i .YEAR NO. 206. EIGHTY-NINT- H PRICE FIVE CENTS PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1962 ' on i zin LdDi(d n 4 W U ODD i i . PARIS (UPI) President Charles de Gaulle's gov ernment today relieved two generals of their commands in us struggle against the terrorist Secret Army Organiza tion, land five cabinet ministers resigned in a policy over European political unity. dispute f At the same tme, the government authorized Defense Minister Pierre Messmer to draft all ybuths in Algeria from; the ages of 19 to 21 into the army to remove them 1 ' fromlOAS influence. Information Minister Alain Peyrefitte announced that the two crenerals who were relieved were Gen. Henri Sauvagnac, commander of the 2nd Military Region at LfUe; and Qen. Pierre Mone glia, who holds a command in the French army in Germany. ! I backed and filled in relatively light trading today with many blue chips favoring the downside, Trading was more than a million shares slower than Tuesday, ! NEW YORK (UPI)4-Stoc- ks o)(0(Q Marines Due In Hours 24 to Season Wins Nomination In Nebraska j Incumbents, Favorites Sen. Carl Hayden, 84, WASHINGTON (UPI) who has served in Congress longer than any he has decided to try other man, announced today that ' , for more. to a seventh He said he would seek term in the Senate. He came to the chamber in 1926 after having served in the House since 1912. J D-Ari- z., . ! -- re-electi- i j six-ye- ar on i j Texan Ordered to Testify Ralph fire Rblr ' ' I' tsres iJeaj ings sub-poen- ed hree Soldiers Succumb to D-Ar- k., ant agriculture secretary. Freeman, meanwhile,' told a Republican member of the House Agriculture Committee he "would be willing to appear in good time" before congressional investigators looking into Estes' tangled finan cial dealings.; Several Weeks Away The Senate hearings re not ex pected to get underway, the staff investigator told UPI, for another three or four weeks, j. He said Estes was served with the subpoena in Texas Sunday. No date for his appearance was set. Freeman discussed the possibil ity of testifying with Reps. Paul and Bob Dole, R- Findley, Kan., when he went before the committee on the administration's new sugar bill. matters stand however, As chairman Harold D. Cooley, D-N.Ci, has refused to order an in quiry into the department's rela tions with Estes. Cooley has con tended there already are enough investigations underway. Last' weekend, Sen. John L. Mc announced that Clellan, the Senate investigations subcom mittee has decided on a full-sca-le Inquiry of the Estes, scandals. Democratic congressional lead ers said today after a White House weekly breakfast meeting with President Kennedy that there was no discussion of the case. But Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield told i newsmen: "We think the investigation is in the very capable hands of Sen. i j Flash Blizzard Alaska (UPI) r-flash blizzard, a weather rarity for this time of year, lashed ja company of soldiers on night maneuvers on a high, bald ridge in the Chugach Mountains Tuesday. Three died and nine others were V hospitalized. The troops, members of Com-pan- y Cof the 1st Baije Group of ANCHORAGE, A, R-H- l., the 23rd Infantry aKnearby were on a three-damountain exercise aboutxeight miles southeast of here. The blizzard, described as a late season freak by Army offi cials, but nevertheless packing winds , of more than 70 miles an hour, caught the soldiers at about lj. a.m. as they were crossing the crest of a 4,000-foridge. The 12 men became separated n from the company during the storm. A search was started as soon as they were missed, but two were dead when found and another was pronounced dead on arrival at the Elmendorf ' Air . Torce Base Hospital. The first group of missing men found were .transported overland McaeUan." JW tracked weasel-typ- e cargo car Ralph was the fourth adminisriersj The others were airlifted tration official to lose his job, in out In a helicopter. the furor over the government's The nine men hospitalized jfor dealings with Estes. exposure and extreme fatigue were But Republican demands for identified as Sgt. Leroy Jonson, Orville L. Agriculture Columbus, Ga.r Sgt. George Pul-li- Freeman's Secretary brought a resignation Philadelphia; Spec. 5 George ringing endorsement of the cabiM. Chitty, Adrian, Mo.; Spec. net ' officer Tuesday night from Anthony Ruffin, Richmond, Va.; President Kennedy, f Pfc! Tyrone Smith, Bartley, jW. Freeman , afterwards Shortly Va.:Pfc. John W. Quick, Balti announced Ralph's dismissal. more: Pfc. Donald Boyd, Miami, Freeman said the Justice! DeHa.; Pvt. Robert J, Kakareka, partment told him it found j that Wayne, N.J., and Capt. Stanley Ralph had made long distance Pore, Clarendon, Hills, HI., com (See ESTES CASE, Page 4) znander of the company. None of the hospitalized was in serious condition. Army officials y , "D-Ar- k., ot 200-ma- I I I ; n, J " f j j ' aid. ; .. j , Names of the dead were being I i . ing: bags. All three of the dead werej in their sleeping bags when found. , I . j See Page 4 for obituary of Mrs. Sorensen.;- -. : j j The best known figure in the primaries, red beaton, won tne Republican" nomination for gover nor of Nebraska by a landslide. With about half of the state's pre cincts reporting, Seaton, interior secretary in the Eisenhower ad ministration, held a 1 margin over his nearest opponent, George A. Clark. He will face Gov. Frank B. Morrison in November. Morrison defeated Mrs; Ralph G. Brooks, the widow of his predecessor as governor, by a mar gin of about '5-In Pennsylvania, former Phila delphia Mayor Richardson Dil- worth held a whopping margin in the Democratic primary for the It appeared ' he governorship1. would face, a fellow Yale man, Rep. William W. Scranton, who held an even bigger lead in the GOP primary , In Maryland, Gov. Millard Tawes won the Democratic re- nomination to face former state Motor Vehicles Commissioner Frank Small, the Republican nom inee, in the fall. Other , major primaries: Lawyer Carlton Maryland. Sickles held a solid lead in the iJemocrauc nommauon ior con- 1. ASK MORE MONEY FOR SUPER-SONI3en. Curtis E. Lemay, Air PLANES Force chief of staff (left) and Gen. Bernard M. Schriver, chief of the Air Force Systems Command, are shown as they appeared before the Senate Military Appropriations subcommittee in Washington today. Lemay told the group that the the development of the RS-7- 0 super-sonplane will suffer further delays under a C ic House-approv- ed Telephoto). Dutch New Gui nea (UPD Dutch naval units to day captured a boatload of 20 armed Indonesians atterrmtifte a iandine near Fak Fak in Western New Guinea. Dutch military head- onarters annnunrpH While the seaborne invaders were being thwarted, the communique said, Dutch troops also were ' attacking a band of Indonesian paratroopers who were dropped near Fak Fak Tuesday. (A Defense Ministry statement HOLLANDIA, 5 Ministers Walk Out,, Quit DeGaulle's Cabinet City. Moves To Bolster Appeal Rfrer Dam President Charles de Gaulle during a cabinet meeting today. Pierre Pflimin, a former pre mier who now is minister of state in the month-ol- d government of premier Georges Pompidou, led the walkout. on . De Gaulle summoned ' , ' , the cabi net to discuss the Algerian situa tion prior to leaving on a new tour to gather for support European unity. The Ministers met with De Gaulle at the Elysee Palace. Thirty minutes after the meeting be Provo City Commission at noon gan, the MRP members talked By today was trying to get heavy out. Informed sources said the main equipment in to strengthen banks of the meeting was to business of the diversion dam at 2100 North of stopping the inmeans WestJ Second study JERUSALEM, Israel' (UPI) bloodshed between Eurocreasing . The Israeli Supreme Court Willi .Q..w fr.nm peans and Moslems in Algeria Aixrar.. announce its decision May 29 on Second and to discuss plans for an indeR.yer convicted Nazi mass killer Adolf Wegt canal pendence referendum scheduled Fichmann's appeal against his Commissioner Luke Clegg said for July. . death sentence De Gaulle was scheduled to a city dragline is in operation at The court announced today it ... imnnrtant H,WrRmn H9m hn leave on his tour this evening. win men rraa i tour of southwestThe four-da- y juusmcm, v" heavier equipment is needed im the appeal. mediately. The commission has ern and central France is Eichmann, a former high offi been seeking to get this heavy first since last fall. It eial in the Nazi SS, was kid equipment from either local con- - will start Thursday In the town naped from Argento by Israeli struction firms or National of Figeac. agents and. tried and convicted in Guard De Gaulle leaves the capital at Israel last Dec. 15 for his part Htv W0r wnrkine a time when the country is in the killing of an estimated six rappin banks near the n plagued by a series of strikes for Jews in Europe during sWe country Qub and city and higher wages and shorter working World War n. county crews were strengthening hours. In Algeria, tension is risbanks of the swollen Provo River ing as a result of increased viowest of the Geneva Road bridge. lence between Europeans and Algerians. Rail service was resumed this morning when 350,000 trainmen strike. The naended a In tionalized railroad system was brought to a virtual standstill by the strike. ' plications after an auto accident Postal and telephone workers, DENVER (UPD The 10th U.S. March 20 in prem. of the, nationalized gas "Mrs. Sorensen was. crossing the Circuit Court ofAppeals has af--a employes and U.S. District Court de- - and electric industries, intersection of Main and 1st West firmed Air of France airStreet in Moroni when she was cision in Salt Lake City that gives ground staffs additional walkouts line planned struck by a car driven by Mrs. the government title to a in ' the next few days. LaRae Dyches, 34, Moroni. segment of the San Juan River. The State: Department of Fin an- - j The government brought the cial Responsibility ruled L today suit in 1959 to quiet title to the APPROVE CODE CHANGE VuPI) . WASHINGTON The that the death of Free should be river - bed. classified as a traffic fatality. Free The river was to have been House Tuesday approved a bill died in a Provo hospital of com--1 deeded to the State of Utah when that would make a major change plications resulting from injuries j Utah joined the union if it were in the Uniform Code of Military suffered in the accident. navigable. In 1931, the courts held Justice by giving commanders a At the time of the mishap it the river was not navigable when stronger hand in punishing errant was believed Free was not badly Utah became a state on Jan. 4, officers and men without resort 11898. hurt. to a court martial. meet-the-peop- le Ruling on Eichmann Slated May 29 , - De-Gaull- e's .j ..,, ' (Herald-UP- I Dutch Thwart Indonesia Sea tnvadefs, Attack Paratroops large over biaie House Speaker Perry Wilkinson In the closest race in the state, a former Rep. Edward Miller-hel- d James slight edge over attorney Gleason in the GOP race for the Senate seat being vacated by Re publican John Marshall Butler, The winner will face Rep. Daniel Brewster, who handily won the PARIS (UPD The five Catholic Democratic nod. fhe state's other were renomi popular Republican (MRP) minis six congressmen ters in ;the French cabinet have nat'ed. Sen. Joseph S. resigned; it was announced today. Pennsylvania The five ministers walked out Clark was unopposed in his bid for the Democratic renomination. He will face Rep. James van Zandt, who was unopposed jon the GOP ticket. Nebraska Rep. Ralph Beer- (See SEATON, Page 4) gressman-at- - Schriver supported the testimony. appropriations bill. i River-millio- 24-ho- ur River Squabble j j Nov You Know f seats. 55-mi-le Mrs. Lillian Morley Sorensen, 78, I Moroni, Utah, died Tuesday in a Provo hospital of injuries suffered ' when she was struck by a car United International Press By 7. May was r first flame thrower The to was GerAlso the list added the a csed as weapon by the of D. name mans during the World War I Free Sr., 74, Ledger .' of Provo who died April 19 of com- wiatex U 1914-13- The favorites and the incum bents appeared certain of renomi- nation today in most of the pri mary elections in Maryland, Pennsylvania and Nebraska. The posts at stake included the governorships of all three states and various House' and Senate Moroni Woman, Provo Man Court Decision Added to Highway Death Toll Affirmed iwnHlns nnttfirntlnn , next of kin. An Army spokesman said that very man in the company was dressed in field gear, with field By United Press International and or rubberized ponchos jackets Two more names were added to foul weather gear. He said the day to Utah's 1962 highway death troops were carrying rucksacks toll, raising the figure to 57. With rations and mountain sleepBrlth)i1fi By United Press International 9-- the group plans tp request Agri culture Secretary Orville' L. Free man to testify. A spokesman for the subcommittee," headed by Sen. John L, saxd about a McClellan, dozen new investigators have been assigned to the Estes, case, which Tuesday led to the firing of anoth er administration official. He was James T. Ralph, a former assist By ROY MCGHEE .United Press International Senate WASHINGTON (UPD Investigators disclosed today that Billie Sol Estes has been to appear at congressional hearings on his 'Shattered Texas farm empire and the possible involvement of Washington officials. A spokesman for the Senate pei mlanent investigating subcommittee also said that many, of Estes records have been subpoened and ' Dominate Primary Elections In 3 States - - in the Hague today said the Paratroopers "have succeeded in es- tablishing an embryo bridgehead on On in Peninsula, north of Fak Fak Harbor.") Britain, New Zealand, Red China Warns Against U.S. Moves Australia, Others In Southeast Asia Urged to Send Units By STEWART HENSLEY United Press International I UPI) Tt WASHINGTON State Depi rtroent said today the United Statu is holding talks with its Southeast Asia aad Pacific allies on the possibility cf joining this country in sending military forces Into Thailand. Department Press- - Officer Lincoln White said the United States "would certainly welcome" any action by other members of the Southeast Asia Military Alliance to back up the U.S. move. American officials said Australia, New Zealand. Britain. Pakistan and the Philippines tad been asked to consider tendirg small military units to join U.S. forces being flown into an area of Thailand eer Laos. White noted that the SEATO Council met today in Bangkok. He said it took up the quettion of what its members might do to join the United States in bolstering its stand agaia&t the Communist infiltration of Laos. Most of the represcntaUes here Thailand. of the countries involved were said U.S. Air Force Hercules trans to have responded favorably to the port planes from Clark Air Base request. But U.S. officials declined in the Philippines and from Okin- to give their reaction on a awa also began landing shortly basis. before-no- on at Bangkok's Don The U.S. request for tokea allied forces was put before lha Muang Airport, Garnish said. SEATO may Help ambassadors and other represent Interior Minister Gen. Praphas atives of the five countries Tues Charusathieng said the American day by W, Avert 11 liarriman. as troops may be joined by troops sistant secretary of stile for Far from other members of the South Eastern affairs. east Asia Treaty Organization llarriman gave the diplomats (SEATO) if the situation grows the reasons for President Ken worse. forces nedy's decision to scad U-up positions into Thailand. hich borders Laos Already taking near Thailand's northeast border and asked that the Allies consider with Laos were 1.000 American sending some of their own troops. soldiers who have been here for; Thailand Is Willing month. Allied acceptance cf the U-The American decision to send proposal would have the effect of trooDs into Thailand, with the giving the operation a regional blessing of the Thai government, character and removing some cf resulted from attacks by pro- - the element of unilateral AmeriCommunist rebels in northwestern can intervention. Thailand Invited Laos which drove the royal Lao the U.S. forces but also was untian army across the Mekong derstood to be willing to receive small elements from other memRiver into Thailand. Reaction Airs ber nations of the eight-natio- n Peiping reaction Communist Cbina'i Southeast Asia Treaty Organisacame in a commentary in me tion. official Peiping People's Daily So far as could be learned, the newspaper, quoted by a Peiping only member of the pact cot Radio broadcast. asked for token forces was Amer-(See of It said the dispatching France. President Charles de RED CHINA. Pare 4) Gaulle's government has consisU ently refused to endorse allied military action in the area in which Paris has now lost virtually all its influence. Meantime, hope for a diplomatic settlement in Laos was spurred by Russia's renewed pledge to and work for LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) Laos? support a cease-fir- e Where's that? creation of an independent neuOnly two of 24 persons ques tral government in the violence-tor- n little Southeast Asia nation. tioned in a man on the street interview in this desert gambling Top officials, however, warned In United Press against any undue optimism. They city Tuesday by ternational had the slightest idea. pointed out that Communist intenSeven persons had no idea where tions in the area still were far the small mountainous country in from clear. The U.S. nulitary bausup in southeast Asia, between Thailand was located. Asia was going steadily Viet Southeast Nam. and North n Marine an with Six of those questioned thought ahead, woman one to go scheduled an was battle Laos, group island; n strife-torin Thailand. late ashore country today thought the was a military leader "over la which borders Laos. The Marines, added to ljfcfl Russia with the rest of them ComU.S. mies." Army troops already beaded the for One elderly couple apparently Mekong River boundary street: of Laos, a 1,200-mafelt It was a Las Vegas Army eleU-Air Forra "We wouldn't have the slightest ment to follow and idea." the wife said. "We're otfy and Marine air units. wjJJ brirg ISee BRITAIN, Pate 4 visiting here ourselves. By ROBERT E. UD1CK United Press International BANGKOK. Thailand (UPI) The United States started landing combat planes in Thailand today to reinforce this Country's deA fenses agajnst communism. U.S. Embassy spokesman said 1,800 Marines would be landed within the "next 24 to 36 hours." Communist China reacted with a warning mat its people "cannot remain indifferent" to U.S. military moves in Southeast Asia. The wording recalled similar dec larations in September, 1930. a month before Red China entered the Korean conflict. At the time the Peiping regime was only a year old. J. Edward Garnish, chief of the U.S. Information Agency here. 12 F100 said jet fighters of the 13th U.S. Air Force Tactical Fight- er Squadron had arrived and 8 of them went directly to Taikhll airfield, 100 miles north of Bangkok. He said the squadron plans to send a total of 20- planes as air support for U.S. combat troops in - cots-try-by-coun- try -- S. The Hague said Tuesday that Indonesian paratroopers had been dropped in two places in New Guinea. But the communique issued here mentioned only 40. Authorities here said the errone ous report was based on confusion over the types of planes used by the Indonesian paratroopers. They said the Indonesians jumped from World War II U.S.-bui- lt B25 bombers which were mistaken for the bigger Dakota DC3 transports. The communique issued by the Dutch forces commander, Rear Adm. Leendert Reeser, said the Indonesians captured in the attempted landing by sea today were "armed with rifles, pistols and The communique said Dutch forces were battling the ' Indonesian paratroopers while the landing was attempted. It said they exchanged fire "within three hours after the dropping" Tuesday. Dutch staff officers in Hollandia said the Indonesian aim was to establish a beachhead which eventually will cut off the Onin Peninsula, according to the Dutch Defense Ministry. 140 hand-grenades- ." Mystery Objects Prove To Be Flakes of Ice EDWARDS AFC, Calif. (UPI) The National Aeronautics and Administration disclosed Space Tuesday that the "mysterious objects" filmed by the X15 rocket plane during its world record altitude flight two weeks ago .were actually flakes of ice. S. Where's Lao- sAnybody Know? I,E-ma- a S, Royal Army Regroups Around Ban Houei Sat Rebels Withhold Attack After Pro-Comm- ie By MICHAEL T. MAIXOY United Press International VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) Royal Laotian soldiers are drifting back into the northwestern village of Houei Sal but some frankly admit they would abandon it again in the face of an! attack rebels.! visited the village Tuesday to check reports that the rebels had stopped short of seizing it in their drive from Jhe northwestern provincial capital of Nam Tha The reports were trua. by 1 pro-Commun- ist Much of the damage to the village was done by the retreating royal army. The soldiers edging back were operating in the vicinity of an old French Foreign Legion post hkh was reduced to danserous shambles when the retreating forces blew up its ammunition dump. d The area was littered with mortar bombs. Laotian Troops Airlifted Most of the 2.600 to 3,000 who poured through the villas and across the Mekong unex-plode- sol-die- rs River into Thailand last week were being airlifted back into ether Laotian towns. But some were drifting back to Houei Sal from the turroundirg countryside cr even back arroti the Mekceg from Thailand. Government buildings arccni the fort were destroyed or burned t c? by tba including the clinic late jungle doctor, Tom Dooley. One royal army patrol vestsred some distance up the road frcra Houei Sal to try to locale rebel (See SOYAX AHMV, Page 4) |