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Show - - - . , - ' . , ---- , ..,,..,..,,,,p artly , .,. LittkChange - - - lot),,d,,,,,,,,,A.,.........., ,,,,..c, 1 ho, ,Wutliirlep.oit.- Page A-- - ''' ' 2 - - - - . ... - '. - 342 No VOL ... ,LAK E x'CI TY,: LITA 1$ re. i -- -, "47 . GLUM- )1 ORd - .- .. I . . - .... By DON SHANNON .' News Washington Bureau . ' - the , - (I' .. ' I - ..L'.. 4 '- 1 sonal Investigations and recom- mendations that I have made In this instance," the under secretary said. On Horns of Dilemma "I refer to the Echo-IPar- k Darn and Reservoir." Mr. Tudor said the department was "on the horns of a dilemma" because of the "fundamental desire to preserve the natural beauty of the Dinosaur National Monument and the necessity for water development on the ' - ,... 22,200 . - ' ' anti-Re- d - -- - - - ,'" ' - 7 'tt, o ,,,, .i i,, tt ' , 0,, ''' '2, , 0v ,.... , . i : , r ,,,, - .0,, , T 1 . I - 4'1., , , ft ,, ' I tr. , back 347 prisonersincluding 21 Americans, on the ground they should be held while a Kopeartirpeaes "Conference - de- ...' :,,,,e4 ", ',:... - x warning.-7- - already had made it clear that the United Nations sregards midnight Jan. 22 as the absolute deadline for detaining prisoners and that his command will free the men two days after receiving them. It was announced in Tokyo that Hui -- will flytoKorea Tuesday to be on hand for the Wednesday morning 'release. Advance Nationalist Chinese parties already have arrived on thepeninsula to greet the anti- Red Chinese and offer them a new life on Formosa. Hull ' 21-i-- Chi-Fan- - , . . , , , , , .,!; 1 7 ' ' - ;., ,,i,:'.,.... - v, , 1- ,- : . IIi ' e i ''.. ,,, ," ., ,, ' .., , 1 r , , , I 4N, i . 1 it ig, libh ...,, ,- a, '''''..., v41 rt ..... I lif: I-- r ,..40,--.,- ,I ,,,,: ..,4 g , .,... WM. 1 . A. g , oo,e:x ' " ,. .. ' aEl 1 .4,,... - - i , ,- ". 1, --:,, , ,. o ,..,,,, ,A 1;'...,...i..',.:............L , A. ,- 81b. - BIG FOUR MEET SITE SELECTEDCommandants in Berlin have finally reached agreement on site for the Big Four conference which will open in Berlin Jan. 25. Sessions will be held In the old Allied Control Authority Bldg. in the American sector during the first and third weeks, and ,:in the ,4vviet,,embassy,j,n, during the .second week. Among commandants who arrived for meetings on technicalities were, left to right, - . 4!,- - Maj. Gen. Thomas Timberman, U, S.; Sergei A. Dengin, Soviet; 114. Gen. C. r. C. Coleman, British, and 'Gen. French. The agreement Pierre Manceaux-Doriatt- , Weat..4U. P. Photo.) si,tompossagasksnadilatelay..ibe -- - 1 - 660,000 to active Americans NN , years. These were- - part of .a basie fivepoint program Mr. Eisen. bower recommended to help re- lieve the "serious burden" of medical and hospital costs so i that "the means of achieving good health" ' will be "accessible to all." Bill Introduced In a special 3,800-wor- d health and welfare message to the IHouse and Senate, Mr. Eisen- also:: 1. Urged strengthening of research activities by the Publie Health Service, particularly in the fields of cancer, mental ill. ness, heart diseases, dental prob. lems, arthritis and blindness. 2. Proposed a new approach to federal grants-in-ai- d to states for health, child welfare and rehabilitation. He said states with smaller financial capacities should receive proportionately '''!' - vocational ,tion program to restore I working citizens in Ile next five I 1 . -',': , e t i rel1vnastuerasd . ' I 1 - l'CRehden h - f' Is:It Id; grre:Pqrrt):171steaPnbrdleiess nonprofit insurance .,'bompanicv 4)ffer broader-healtpr ction :to more families. 1, extplaenalso 'called for a . greaNlyNt '11 I I t0Oactl a;r1:2n1;.0001:Ym 4 '444 ,:, '''AkNGTON iIVAEisenhower disabled , .. 41;.. 11 II AW Included i' - .. 1 t , 3. Hospital Aid ,t0h t' ., 4 . 1- , ,I, '' :.'S - I ., IN '), $, I -1 , -- ., , f.,, 11 1 - 1 ,..... .o, '' .,, 41, , 1 it,2";'1. . . 1 Reinsurance, . " 'I .i., ft f mitt ,, 4 --,' A - -, ' - '': k,,,, 0 ,,, ; .. - ) le 41' -- - 1 tf, ;t4,, '1 ,' I i1 1 tor' 11 '' , , . '1 , ' 1 - ' t '- 4 , - ' - . ,, ' -i ,, .:.:A,:,l'o.'-',- - t . . Lir.. 14.6. .,;. - ;- t- , : , e . . '. -- ' a Aj. (7:- - -' te .11tok ''N's""0,-- - ,,, , ,,,, , r , , air gI - 0 s. . Li .....000'"""' ,....ii i 1 tA, ,..; . '' - . ss''."'', - stice violation. ,Ignore Warning But Hull, who has completed elaborate arrangements for acceptance of the North Koreans and Chinese, was expected to ignore Thi- - ,, , a . 4 . , ... ,, a :.,,, :,,, , fIF , liberates their fate. Net Answered----------Communists have not an::The swered Thimayya's request for, a reply to his announcement that he will return all prisoners to their captors Wednesday, three days ahead of the date set by the armistice, and Thimayya said he Inay have to hold these men temporarily. "We mity have, to act unilaterally and withdraw custody in one case and wait and see what we can work out with the other side," Thimayya said. Thimayya dispatched a note to Gen. John E. Hull in Tokyo, warning the U. N. supreme commander that release of the prisoners before the peace conference la held will be an armi- 5 . osecril , 11,... - ' l'' .,, , Mai ,t., . , - mayys's . , . , .' 01 14 I prisoners' I the United Nations-bu- t warned the Allies not to free ' their captives. Thimayya, Indian chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission, said in an exclusive interview he "may have to" release the Wednesday to avoid a "mass breakout." Ile also said he expected the Communiststo refuse to take IL - , Efli , "It ir t , ,,,,,ce -- ,,,,,,...,, 1.,.. t . . 1. ,,, I ,i,, 7 to mp Sc -: .. . ' i, PANMUNJOM, XOREA (UP) Gen. K. S. Thimayyk,indicated Monday he will go through with his plan to re-- , turn 18,, 1954 JANUARY, - - .SN.., r3 Iranintis certain Unusual circumstances surrounding it and certain per-- MONDAY, ., . ' ,. . . Indians Warn -- Combined From Ur and Washington Bureau Reports WASHING'rON Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson warned Monday that city- .. dwelling Americans may revolt against the whole idea of farm price supports if the program gets .too costly. Mr. Benson made the state ment before the Senate Agri other hand." The undersecretary outlined culture Committee:,, to the dam by venopposition Mr. Benson said the, present. ous conservationist groups, who of rigid high supports claith ' program would destroy the has piled up huge surpluses in scenic it of the monument, beauty government warehouses and but added that an alternate site the government'S losses "are "would result in a serious loss likely to be substantial and of water in a region which will they might be staggering." always be short of this commod, "We helm reached 'the stage ity In which water is the limit-jo- g In our fatm price support perfactor on the development ations where' we need to ask of the economy and resources . ourselves a few pointed ques- of the basin." , tions," be told the senators. ,Some tosa Vnacoldable Ior-exae. "There is no practicable way 4At- what point will the 140,- - to avoid some evaporation 000,000 Americans who do not losses from the surface of res. live on farms rise upas they lervoirs," he said... "It is possidid in the potato fiasco of a ble, however, to select reserfew years agoand demand not voir sites where such evapora. revision but outright elimina- - tion would be at a minimum. tion of all direct aid to agri"Echo Park Reservoir is such culture?" a site. The deep lake' created by Echo Park Dam would have Speech Highlights , Other highlights of Benson's! a minimum of surface exposure in proportion to its volume and - testimony: the location in deep, cool, The administration will ask shaded canyons, is also very to Congress appropriate up to favorable. Not one of the al81,000,000,000 over a three-yea- r ternate sites which have been period shipment of suggested can compare from surplus U. S. farm commodities, this standpoint. to "friendly countries" as a "Studies of alternate plans lorm of foreign aid. reveal that the increased evapPresent farm prices are "evi- oration losses- could amount to dence enough of the fact that several hundred thousand acre high support prices do not feet yearly. The magnitude of mean high prices in the market these quantities is made cape-dail- y clear when compared place." Farm prices have been dropping steadily for two years with the total use of water by although government supports the home, places of business have been fixed at 90 per cent and industries of a city of appeople parity. onsix- - basic crops. proximately 600,000 "There Is nothing new or rou ghly 7,190,900 acre feet ' a year." revolutionary", in the idea of incltided a table in his tea-Se-e flexible price supports ranging He .COLO. RIVER rage A-from 75 to 90 per cent of parity. . It was part of the of ' both parties in 1048.platforms' first Diplomatic Post I Crowded Session TAIPEH, FORMOSA Fourteen of the committee's, an- China -- Monday st' ,' 15 meMbers attended the' nouriced Atbe-firappointment hour session, as well as eight! of a woman to a diplomatic post or 10 additional senators. The abroad since the government 'hearinuroom was so Jammed' fled the mainland in 1949.- that spectators sat on the floor. She is Miss Chen There were large crowds gath- 28, who will leave soon to beered around the two doors.en- come an attache at the Nationalist Embassy in Bangkok. tering the room. S. - ,, 0 0 0 seci- , Allies on , ' - - . - ' . . ' . - EDITORIAL . PHONE '0 . . .,1P e - -- ' . , 4. I - .., - ' - , ,, ," , , portant nature of, the projects to Utah, several, explana- 'tory stories On the 'subject ,B-on .' ', are being 'run Page , in Monday's Deseret News, 'tom---t - - - Revolt Seen ... - ' - - '- , T ' ' . . SPORTS- SCORES .. . . 0 Stor-,,,,- i is' 1 props , . - , F Farm , - , INFORMATION.' - , . - - ' - , ' age Peoj,ect began in Wash. ington, D., C, Monday.' Because of4he many Involved and The highly im-- . . 1 , Aj hat For Costly ., - Stall 'ITS 104IN , . ' of the Interior Ralph and Telegram. WASHINGTON, D. -- - The stories explain just ,..,.., A. Tudor told a packed congressional hearint room Mnntlav Mat House-- the Echo Park phase of the Upper Colorado River storage proj- - hearings and what Utah has. ect was "in the greatest interest of the nation." to gain or lo!e. -- -- Tudor was the House as witness the Interior Sub- opening ' , 'committee on Irrigation and0 . , . Reclamation begantaking tes--i 7 - Vs ' , timony on the,hig project. 11 Tudor a presented.; 11"; , statement in which more than , to support the oas bait quoted :, . Echo Park Dam.. , .., "It is my desire to give of--1 . tidal consideration to one fea- , -- IN - . . NOW NewSSASSI , ,, f, .., . 1114111111 Prolect f or Best IInterest Of Notion, Official Declares, ' ' - - ,411ST 1 .P11511 - 'House hearings on Upper, Colorado River . ' , . , . - .' if, . ,, . ' , " g a g rum, 41 - InB-1StorI- es 1 , . Colorado Rtver Case Explained, V - - - fok . . tile moutita.i.N . - r.. , 0- '''. ' tC " - ,, , N I:) ' --- , .., .. 8 -- --- . -- also suggested that part et the federal grants to states be set aside for "the support of unique projects of regional or national : significance." 3. Presented a four-wa- y plan for expanding construction of medical care facilities, including added federal financial help in building nonprofit hospitals for the care of the chronically BELGRADE, YUGOSLAVIA ill. Other Proposals Communist Party's central committee has expelled Chairman Charles A. WolverVice Pres. Milovan Djilas from ton (11., N.J.) of the House Corn. Its ranks after hearing Pres. merce Committee already has Marshal Tito denounce his top introduced a federal reinsuraid. Tito said Djilas attempt- - ance bill which calls for governed to "liquidate" the Red party ment guarantees on the benefits in Yugoslavia and sought to of acceptable health insurance : e capitalistic-systemadopt-thplanyThis would be itiMilA- r10Iromediately after the 100- - the federal guarantee on bank member committee, meeting deposits through the Federal Sunday in extraordinary sea- - Deposit Insurance Corp. In laying down his health reesion, issued its unanimous decree'. firing hiiiil Djilas re- ommendations, Mr. Eisenhower signed as chairman of the rejected "the socialization of medicine." But he said the gow Yugoslav parliament. 7--ernment could well commit 7 Ile alio repented to health self national "certain his attitude confessing that ' had been wrong. He denied goals." that he opposed Tito and his "No nation and no administra- - '' policies and swore he still was tion can ever afford to be coma "true Marxist." placent about the health of its The committee gave Dines a citizens," Mr. TisenhOwer said. stern "final' warning" to alter i"While continuing to reject the his vjeWs. This appealed to government regimentation- of w , three WI - his ,, Dom plete,,--- expu1 4 medicine,- - we shall and imagination continuously sion from the party. , It appeared likely ersTo that searchout, by appropriate 7 would be ousted from means, recommend, and put' . Djilas his government post as one of ',into effect new methods of Tito's 'four vice presidints,Thetachieving better health for ail of our people." committee hdeeaarlitng,onhlyo,ewvietrb: Concerned because the total !apparently See IKE on Page A3 party maiters. - - - - ig Meet Site i Is A ccord Reached 'Bench to Review Ell FPC Controt of Gas Producers : - WASHINGTON (UP)---Th-e Supreme Court Monday reversed its action of Nov. 30 and agreed tci review a lower court ruling which brought abdut. 2,300 natural gas producers under Federal Power Commission regulation. The court -seldom agrees to hear a case- after once. turning it down. No reason was giyen for the change of mind. Justice Hugo L. Black dissented. BERLIN (1.113)Big Four penis began Work Monday on technical arrangements for the foreign ministers' conference which will open on schedule Jan. 25 because the West gave in to minor Soviet demands that. half .the meetings be held in East Berlin. The three western commandants ordered learns of teehritclans to set up communications press accommodations as well as make arrangements for - Djilas Expelled From Red Party. in Yugoslavia holding half the meetings East Berlin instead of holding! out for three meetings in the western sector to every one meeting in the Soviet zone. The West saved some face, despite the compromise, by reaching an agreement with the Soviets to hold the meet-ing as scheduled on Jan. 25 erasing fears hi quarters that the foreign min-anisters might not meet at all. (For informative background article on the' scheduled Berlin translations. - ' Four Conference, see page An American spokesman said Big A ) no serious difficulties were expected by the United States, France and Britain in reaching with the Soviet agreement Union on technical questions. The western powers accepted Sunday a Soviet "compromise" WASHINGTON (RIRep. proposal that ended a deadlock N. Y.), suggested irt negotittions over the site of the forthcoming conference, Monday that the 11;USe be giv, It was agreed that meetings voiCe, cA ,ratifyingArtaties littlYbe tietcl.rn 'the jIdAI1ied as a compromise in the contro Control Building in Authority WASHINGTON (UP)The v ersy over the Bricker proposal the American sector during. the t o limit treaty powers. Courtruled unani Supreme and first third weeks of the The constitution provides that conference and in the Soviearnously that, state censorship treaties shall be negotiated by Embassy in the - eastert i zone bnards Win' a movie may pot the President and shall become during the second week. ' is "immoral" on grounds it effective upon ratification by The agreement between the 1 s the Senate. A major- iv a s te i n commandants and tends toNpromote crime. .. , ity of those present is required. S o v i e t High Commissioner The ruling was in 04 form 'lavas proposed requiring a Serge' Dengin was reached at of .a brief ordee..There was no o s vote in each branch at rneeting that broke written opinion of Congress. The court" merely cited Its impasse. A four-powJayits put forward his sugges- communique re- - decision in "The Miracle" case 14 hours at ter the in 1952 when it held that films . hife leased aontAlternactiovne3ilichriecdh ended announced the may not be banned on grounds meeting an amendment solution which an American of Congress rejects sacrile,ge. EL, TEX. proposed by Sen . Know land of spokesman as a A separate concurrence Was ment PASO, described witnesses started California : the Republican Semwhich is "not corn- written ,1:1Y Justice William back to the stand ate leader. Knowland's,propos-- , compromise 0.,ing pietely satisfactory.!' Doilgtas Justice Ingo- L:Black i this ; .time for defense al, a substitute for the amend- In principle, the West gave I, , agreed with Douglas' opinion. examinatibri,, ment being pushed by : Sen. In ex- - i 1 me-Avestern'4 d House VOce Supreme Court Bans Slates' In 'Treaty Fight Jo-vit- (R.-Lib- ., Film Censorship - 1 . his-iCtIo- . Suggested-- ' tRt---- - . ' l i -- two-third- , - - I .7, Caldest in Tvtgo a I - Years .,, a UVrave I Arctic I -.-- ,;, st The-frigi- . - , By the,Associated Press brunt of an Arctic cold Tile .,.. shifted front to the northeastern states MonAlaytbringint New. Znilland, its most severe subzero weather in two years. seizure lost-sam- e of its bite in the north central . region. but temperatures below , ,, zero mark were still general in ', all the Canadian border states , from, . Montana eastward. The cold pushed freezing south' through ,' temperatures North Carolina and into Mississippi, Arkinsts, ,,, Telas and New Mexico. lows In the north.Overniph - east area included 31 below zero at Saranac Lake, N. Y., 28 at -.- - - - , - ,' 10-d- h Northease';-istialnd!ss- ' --- -, ,,Oliéti-in- , 22 at Poughkeepsie, automobile accidents blamed on 17 at' Albany, and 10 hazardous driving ,,,conditions., N. Y., - I snowdrifts as at West Point deep as The maderation on th e north- at Helena tied upkransportation Conn., . lite, ern Great:Plains - cross-- 1 2 tnthetrial ' ' ' - - Another was IlevAerry Ford, ,- ) Holland Cold -- tt her Com-mxot- . o. H. ' ' cens-orshi- t, ,, , . - or ', ". , , I self-ifyie- d ' i 'i. , ' 1 . , ' ' .. ' - :,, : - cross-examinin- g ,' -23 - 3..:-- A ; ranch, Mexico he described as a qont I ,, ' northern New parad-1Whic- h 2- Ala-ham- s, ton, , igminigetlatmerly.otAllatiquer" was.- , one-- 04 incl thermometer read1111, Ylertt ,now Bricker':(1t;bhiql-,.-tifthe'ssiitslibetlIctidettlitilin.:Jérfai:.21quijand Fol. cornParisori, howeverix; as low as 22. More srkow was port of the Eisenhower admin- , with falsely who Identifiedlinisclf as a $uaL-- 1952 'opinion Jencks was thatAilms a .., ample,, a 25degree warmup In in prospect Monday:. and ZB IL shoul4 enjoythe tfree :speechliswearingin a Taft Hartley labor pended - -24 hours left, it below - To the south, however, strtmg, istration. was Jencks law said 1 iiffidavit He in COnstitution in the informer. guarantee prepared zero at :International Falls, chinook winds warmed parts of for Houselitariptemy said southwest. the 1950 a not in he was that and leader .do Tiles-natioand hottest newspapers, that ?Tarty a; just Minn. Colorado and Wyoming. It was under his delivery, to means of - commilnica- nist nor ,affiliated - with Corn- At the time he is accused of proposal require coldest location i for the past And while the 49 at Denver shortly after mid- both ' munists. in the affidivit. Jencks and the House 24 hours as reported to the tions. Senate the lying - warmed slightly to the accom- night, and 41 at Cheyenne-WyLast week, the defense won a wis president of local 890 of , to act on treaties: Salt Like Weather Bureau Nlontlay's ruling-- constitutes paniment of scattered of light Farteer north in Wyoming, at an important enlargement of delay in when the ,InternationalUnion Treaties can be atone and were: anowfall and light freezing dri- Sheridan, the temperature was the same t4 e and Brownsvilie; Tex 14 d t reel! this "free speech" area, al- - it pleaded surprise in some of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers ,approved zzlethe latter in parts of Olde- eight below zero. Made law, the responsibility. dietnot sw ép litigise. brought to the stand by in the Silver City, N. Ms, are though the court International p Missouri home, Kansat-a- nd as the tn- - the government, which expects! A third witness who probably, Light snow fell in North Da- and consider lion Jet interestil de reel aside all bilen....,-4- 9 Tails, Montana dug out of a new storm kota, the ',aka Superior region broadened a d C President do. it plon-twil, to ioncinde,itt-teitimon- y lo wanted get.shafp questioning is ustry Ttah's hottest 'ancl,co est.;,..--1- 1 that had freakish tweets. and along the southeast shores be left free of the impossibility h e , producers!James E. 'Peterson, training.. . contended T or,Tue;day. day ' 59 det eel' SI Georp, Winds ,up m ov1 e3 Ormph, heavy Pot Lake Ontario,,and in western of subjecting-foreig- n One of the government for Kennecott Cop. thfit ol?jFetionable policy, to ' snow andlightning in that state MissouriWashington state had the will lit 48 separate state Vernal . .... . . .. - 4 degrees, should be controlled only by inesses last week was Harveylper Corp., Ray, Ariz Last week . , (Salt Lake, maximum- 52; were followed by falling tem- snow- - and coastal sections of the legislatures, a procedure, not unishment-- after an "t offense Matusdw, former he told of meeting Jencks at a - : , 24 at 'Houl- peratures again. Three persons Pacific Northwest Sad rain or even applied to constitutional minimum 33),' . tNever- - by censorship 1r B1 informer.lhigh-level.Communist party Communist and occurred,' 1 , . , , at liartford, died, one ,of exposure,. two of snow., : amendments:-i ., 'He told 1 meeting Jencks at almeeting in Salt Lake ult.y. ,, .beforehand. d- , Lebanon,.N. - ' Cross Examinations two-third- ' . - - : Hitt - '1', '. '' , ' ..' ''- - . 1 ... : , ,,----. , .. .','.7.--- ' A, .:-- .': ,"'': ' ' ' '',,:.:4.-- , '''"' '',: ' '11A''' , ' ,- -. s' .. .. - -- ?-- - . ' - ', ' , ' .. . . . |