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Show . . v. . : ' :: . . JINGLING THE NEWS FOUL TIP' A BASEBALL UNION'S nude Its; r .v.bow, : ; It's "organizing players now; I Quite possibly the boys may like f Site chance '.for once to CALL A ; STRIKE. Stan Arnold. THE WEATHER Utah Mostly clear today . and Thursday; wanner today, "with, afternoon temperatures 75 ta-15; low temperature Thursday mora-inr, mora-inr, 46. except CO in Utah's Dixie; local frost higher valleys. Temperatures: High 71 Low 49 : SIXTIETH YEAR, NO. 232 COMPUTE UNITED PRESS TZJUEGBAPH NEWS SERVICJE PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, APRIL ! 24, . 1946 r ; UTAH'S ONLY DAILY SOUTH Of SALT LAKX PRICE FIVE CENTS More Famine MRRA Granted Grain For Area Use British - Canadian - American Food Board Grants an Additional 97,000 Tons of .Grain, 200,000 Tons Short of Requests WASHINGTON, April 24 U.R The combined British Canadian-American food board today granted UNRRA an additional 97,000 tons of grain to meet immediate food seeds in famine areas abroad. The allocation was 200,000 tons short of UNRRA Director Di-rector General Fiorella H. LaGuardia's request. It was announced by Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Ander- son after a two hour board meet- Three Crew. Me,n Killed In Crash On YAL Test Trip LOS ANGELES April 24U.R Three crew members were killed today when a Western. Air Lines DC-3 airliner being test flown after af-ter an engine change, crashed and burned in the San Fernando valley val-ley between North Hollywood and Roscoe. The three Pilot Wayne Pied-erhoff, Pied-erhoff, Burbank, Co-Pilot Marvin Swartzbach, Roscoe. and Mechanic Me-chanic Leon A. Turgeoh, Los Angeles An-geles were the only persons aboard the twin-engined craft. They had been testing the plane an hour and 40 minutes when Fiederhoff radioed one engine had failed, WAL officials of-ficials said. No further report was received from the plane which crashed at 1:58 a.m. PST, in the back-yard of a residence occupied by Matthew Mat-thew Brychta, has wife and three children. -Van Nuys Police Sgt. Roy O. Miller said the plane struck a tree in the Brychta yard, damaged dam-aged the service porch and knocked knock-ed fca door off the , Brychta garage. ga-rage. There was some damage to the house from fire but the occupants oc-cupants escaped unscathed. Bodies of the two pilots were founds in the flame-blackened wreckage. The body' of Turgeon was found a short distance away where it had been hurled by the impact. AH the victims were married, WAL officials said. County to Probe State's Failure To Construct Roads An immediate investigation will be launched bythe Utah county commission, members decided today, to-day, as to why the state road commission is not proceeding with a previously promised program, of 1946 road construction within the county. Commissioners R. J. Murdock. Sylvan W. Clark and William J. Johnson said the state road group gavethem an understanding, that three Utah county roads would be constructed this year with state funds as state secondary highways. high-ways. The state commission proceed- Ing with one, having called for bids on 1.73 miles plus a new bridge between Lehi and the Redwood road, but apparently is maKlng no progress on the other two. Included in the 1946 program pro-gram as previously promised by the state were four miles of new road between Mapleton and Spanish Span-ish Fork, and a two mile stretch on the east end of the Orem-Edgemont Orem-Edgemont road. The latter two roads are badly bad-ly needed farm-to-market highways, high-ways, the county commission said. k They are now graveled, but if included in the state program would be hard-surfaced. i The state has under consider ation a 90-mile program hi Utah county contemplated if - federal road funds later become available. avail-able. The foregoing three roads. n however, were promised by the state road commission for 1946 regardless re-gardless of the hoped-for federal aid, county commissioners said. Cline Convicted On Forgery Count SAN FRANCISCO, April 24 (U.R Alfred Leonard Cline, 56, convicted con-victed of forgery in connection with the estates of two wealthy widows who died mysteriously in his company, was convinced today there is no "perfect crime." Cline. silverhaired former convict con-vict and choir singer, said he would devote the rest of his life to religion. A jury of five men and seven , women late yesterday found Cline ' guilty of nine forgery counts after af-ter deliberating one hour and 44 minutes. Judge Herbert Kaufman then set sentencing for Saturday and Prosecutor Norman Elkmg-ton Elkmg-ton announced he would ask the maximum penalty 126 years. ing. LaGuardia conceded that the allotment probably was about all he could expect in view of the critical world grain shortage. He indicated he was pinning his hopes of beatinr off mass starvation abroad on TJNRRA's allocations alloca-tions for the next four months. Anderson said the board should be able to tell by next Monday, when it meets again, exactly how much each hungry nation can ex pect from the world's dwindling grain reserves. The additional grant to UNR BA, plus a previous allocation of some 363,000 tons of grain during dur-ing April, will give the international interna-tional relief agency about 460,000 tons of cereals in the near fu ture. Part of the allocation can not be delivered until May. The increase was made possible pos-sible primarily through the board acceptance of a British Brit-ish offer to divert 200,000 tons of cereals to more immediate hunger areas, UNRRA will get 60,000 tons of this. The entire en-tire amount will be made up to Britain later by the United States and Canada UNRRA also will get 10,000 tons of barley as a result of a British deal with an unnamed third country. In addition, Cana da previously had agreed to give UNRRA 3,000,000 bushels of oats Express Strike Cancelled On Truman Order Threatened Strike Of 65,000 Workers Set For Friday, Called Off CINCINNATI, 0., April 24 (U.R) President George M. Harrison of the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks (AFL) today cancelled the threatened strike of 65,-OOONRailway 65,-OOONRailway Express workers in compliance with President Truman's order that a fact-finding board study the dispute. The strike deadline, set for 12:01 a.m. Friday was cancelled as required by the RaUway Labor La-bor act, which gives the president's presi-dent's board 30 days in which to issue an opinion. No strike can be called until 30 days after the opinion is handed down. China Crisis MANCHURIA riy ,A . -CtHMIfCkWM l PtOVINCl s FiwIiimi C. of C. Asks Congress To End Subsidies WASHINGTON, April 24 (UE) The U. S. chamber of commerce today asked congress to end all subsidies and all price controls except rent ceilings by next Oct. 31. The plea was made by Dr. Emerson P. Schmidt, the chamber's cham-ber's economic research director. He said in testimony prepared for the senate banking committee that the government is ' battling the symptoms of inflation instead of the causes, and so cannot possibly succeed. The committee is considering legislation to extend price con trols beyond next June 30. The house already has passed a nine- month extension containing restrictive re-strictive amendments which price officials say would make the act impossible to administer. Schmidt said the government's policy of permitting wage increases in-creases while trying to continue subsidies and enforcement of price controls was "economic myopia." A change in committee plans prevented Schmidt from testifying testify-ing today as scheduled. However, the chamber of commerce released re-leased his prepared testimony for publication. Manufacturers Of Men's Clothing Threaten Shutdown WASHINGTON, April 24 (U.R) Government experts, hopeful of boosting production of men s suits, today faced the threat of an industry shutdown on May 1. The retraining and re-employment administration said industry officials announced at a 'clothing conference that unless maximum average price regulations are drastically altered, they cannot continue to ship suits after that date. David Dreschsler, attorney for the Clothing Manufacturers Manufact-urers association of the United States, told MaJ. Gen. Graves B. Ersklne, RRA head, that suit makers had been -unable to maintain the required balance between low and high priced garments. They have until May 1 to make adjustments for the first quarter quar-ter of 1946, he said, and due to short supplies of low price wool and other material they will not be able to 66 so, he said. OPA clothing experts discount ed the warning. One official called it an "idle threat." How ever, the agency said that if the suit makers can present evidence of hardship, appropriate adjust ments will be made. GEOLOGICAL DEPOSITORY AT UNIVERSITY OF UTAH SALT LAKE CITY, April 24 UM The geological society of America today had designated the University of Utah library as an official depository for its papers and books. L. H. Kirkpatrick, librarian, reported re-ported the first books and papers of the society already have arrived ar-rived at the library. Strikes At A Glance Shipping National mediation board expected to ask President Truman to intervene in threatened threat-ened walkout of 65,000 Railway Express workers by appointing fact finding board. Railroads Two railroad broth erhoods meet in Cleveland to re view recommendations of presidential presi-dential fact-finding board in their dispute with nation s railroads. Iron Conciliation Director Ed gar L. Warren asks President Philip Murray of CIO Steel Workers to meet with manage ment Monday in effort to settle strike of 11,000 Lake Superior iron ore miners. Coal Magazine Iron Age pre diets that strike of 400,000 AFL United Mine Workers against soft coal operators may run well into May. . REUTHER'S SLATE FACES OPPOSITION CHICAGO, April 24 (U.R) Six CIO United Automobile workers union leaders headed by President Presi-dent Walter Reuther met today to work out a compromise slate of departmental heads for presen tation to the union's executive board. It was the second meeting on such appointments within little more than 12 hours. Union lead ers were striving to agree on a slate which could be presented to the board for approval without bringing out, in the full board meeting," the cleavage between Reuther and his union opponents led by Vice President R. L. Farm Prospects In Utah Take On Rosy Hue Says Economist LOGAN, Utah, April 24 (U.R Dr. W. P. Thomas, head of the Utah State Agricultural college department of agricultural ecoA nomics, said today that on the basis of early reports Utah should have another splendid year of farm production this year. Thomas said the sudden chance from winter to summer with the ommission of spring had advanced advanc-ed crops -very rapidly. Although full statistics on spring planting were not yet in, he predicted "Utah's high wartime war-time production will be maintained maintain-ed this year while food is so badly needed all around the world." Commenting on the unusual weather, Thomas warned that anv sudden change iu the weather' that would bring freezing tem peratures would be disastrous. However, he added that farmers always must take that chance. Another official at the college, Dr. G. . F. Knowlton, extension service entomologist, pointed out that the unseasonable hot weather would increase the danger of "big leaf hopper," the insect that in fests sugar beets and tomatoes. by bringing the pests on generation gener-ation ahead of normal. ' Knowlton pointed out that young plants were not as resis tant to insect attacKs now as they would be with a more normal spring, .and warned that con tinued dry weather would en courage many other Insects, par ticularly grasshoppers, that ma ture quickly. tjil ic m-.::::r.-:-::::-:- -r. (NEA Telephotol Communist Chinese prepare to take over Harbin (1) when Russians Rus-sians move out Thursday. Communists Com-munists have taken Changchun (2), surrounded Harbin as well as Kirim (3) and may take Dar- ien if Russians' evacuate that port. Nationalist troops are reported re-ported holding Mukden, Anshan, Fushin and ell other towns on Mukden-Changchun railroad as far north as Szepinghai. Chiang Calls Off Assembly; Harbin Lost CHUNGKING, April 24 (U.R) Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek today announced indefinite post ponement of the first meeting of China's national assembly while press reports said the government has decided to forfeit Harbin, a major Manchurian industrial city, to communist troops. Chiang called off the scheduled sched-uled May 5 national assembly be cause the communists and the Democratic league have not presented pre-sented the names of their delegates dele-gates to the government, spokesman spokes-man K. C. Wu disclosed. The communist daily news- paper published a letter from communist leader Chou En-Lat En-Lat to the government com-mittee com-mittee saying w.th- Ohineso communist party "cannot con sider the problem of submitting submit-ting nameless nominees to the national government national assembly. "If existing problems are unsolved un-solved guarantee of human rights, re-organization of the state council and executive Yuan, re vision of the constitution, and duties of the national assembly- the responsibility for postponing the assembly should be the gov ernment'R," Chou wrote. Alpine District Teachers Voted Salary Increase A salary Increase averaging slightly more than $300 per teacher teach-er will be given in the Alpine school district next year, Superin tendent David R. Mitchell said today, revealing also that the district dis-trict plans to increase its tax levy one mill. The salary increases for the district's dis-trict's 180 teachers will cost in the neighborhood of $70,000, he said. The one mill levy will not cover the entire increase in the 1946-47 budget, Mr. Mitchell stated, and the board of education plans to dip into its existing general gen-eral fund balance for about $28,-000 $28,-000 to make up the difference The district general fund balance has accumulated considerably over the years because officials have been unable to proceed with a normal building program, he said Superintendent Mitchell fore cast an extensive building program pro-gram for the district,, details to be announced later, as soon as attacks. materials are available. The program pro-gram would included several new buildings, he said. The one mill which the Alpine district plans to raise its levy can be done' without sanction from county or school officials. The levy is now 13 mills, and can go to 14 on the authority of the district board of education. Fur ther than 14 would require' per-iftission per-iftission from state officials. Nebo school district officials announced intentions Monday to apply for a three mill raise from 13 to 16, chiefly to provide money for salary increase. 236,000 Sign For impeachment Of Senator Bilbo SAN FRANCISCO, April 24 U.R More than 236,000 signatures nave been obtained for a petition asking impeachment of Senator Theodore Bilbo of Mississippi, sagar Brown, director of the Na tional Nego Council, said today. Brown will take' the petition to Washington for formal presentation presenta-tion to congress. Californians have been found to be "out of sympathy" with Bilbo's Bil-bo's attack on the Negro soldier and his efforts to defeat the fair employment practices bill. Brown said. . Byrnes Arrives In Paris For Big 4 Meeting Powerful Delegation From Russia Headed By Minister Molotov PARIS, April 24 (U.R) Secretary Sec-retary of State James F. Byrnes arrived today for the Bis: Four foreign ministers conference as Russia revealed she is sending the strongest Soviet diplomatic team yet as sembled to the Paris meeting. The powerful Soviet delegation is headed by Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov . who arrived at 5:13 p. m. today by plane from Moscow, Mos-cow, accompanied by Andrei Vishinsky, his chief foreign office of-fice aide. V. G. Dekanozov, No. 3 man in the foreign office, arrived yesterday. Soviet Well Represented It is the first time any allied diplomatic meeting that the Soviet So-viet has sent its three ranking specialists to attend. The Russians Rus-sians will be accompanied, it was revealed, by the largest group of specialists of any of the conference confer-ence delegates some 200 in all. This is nearly three times the size of the American delegation and roughly four times as big as the British group. The size and prominence of the Soviet delegation was believed to Indicate the major ma-jor emphasis which Russians placing upon the foreign ministers deliberations. The conference will open to morrow with the arrival of Mol otov and British Foreign Secre tary Ernest Bevm but formal de liberations probably will not start until Friday. Byrnes had no comment on his arrival. Byrnes was accompanied by Sen. Tom Connelly, D., Tex-, and Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, RM Mich,' "who wflHseTve"a' advisors. advis-ors. The party was met at Orly airfield by Ambassador Jefferson Caffery. The party landed at 12:25 p.m. (6:25 a.m. EST) after a swift At lantic crossing in President Truman's Tru-man's personal plane, the Sacred Cow. The Big Four conference prob ably will not get started in earn est until Friday, although the formal opening is scheduled for tomorrow. Both Ernest Bevin of Britain and V. M. Molotov of Rus sia postponed their arrivals from this afternoon until tomorrow. lb t 5 a Defease '''j.t, i ' Omi Him mi Sain) Cas Roxas Keeps Safe Lead Over Osmena MANILA, April 24 CU.R) Man uel A. Roxas maintained a lead of nearly two-to one over Sergio Osmena tonight in the counting of votes cast yesterday in the election of the first president of the Philippine republic. Tabulation of votes in Manila and 18 provinces gave Roxas 119,-013 119,-013 votes and Osmena 61,971. Roxas led in Manila by 47,507 votes to 18,116 for Osmena, with returns complete from 320 of the city's 570 precincts. Osmena, present president of the commonwealth, took a long lead in his home city of Cebu on the basis of returns from 111 of 170 precincts. On the whole the voting was orderly throughout the islands, but Governor Ramon Impiral, of the Canarines Suf province, was wounded in the abdomen when he was ambushed by unidentified Seven ballot boxes were re ported stolen in Cavite, and one report said that ink had been poured into one ballot box there Aussie Bride Sees Stars and Stripes I v i y f' . J I lr- I Si ' -I feSiLiW! i if frir irnWiriTiiTiTiVlfi mi n 1 in mil iMfir-" i tmm rnwmJ 1 ' (NEA TeUphoto) Already wise to Old Glory's stars and stripes, Mrs. Audrey Cap-mano Cap-mano (left) of Adelaide, Australia, one of 410 Australian and New Zealand war brides who recently reached San Francisco aboard the USS Monterey, proudly wears an American flag sweater she knitted during the trip from "down under." She'll join her husband at Pittsburgh, Pa. Also headed for Pittsburgh in Mrs. Joan Fulwaler (right), of Melbourne. Fascists Fight Communism In the Name of Mussolini prison rioters except for a group of 25 today surrendered to police after British army authorities threatened to intervene and smash the uprising among 3,000 prisoners prison-ers In San Vittore jail. MILAN, April 24 (U.R Italian police blocked, all. roads into Milan today to prevent a Fascist march on the city inspired by the Prior Attack By Russians On U. S. Planes Reported .VIENNA, April 24 U.R) U. S. army headquarters - reported today to-day that four Russian planes fired on an American C-47 transport trans-port plane over the Linz area Sunday, two days before a similar simi-lar incident at Tulln airport near, here. Gen.' Mark W. Clark. U. S. oc cupation commander in Austria, protested to the Russians against the Linz attack, as he did in the case at Tulln. In each ease, four Soviet fiffhter planes fired on or in the direction of a C-47. At Tulln the transport was coming com-ing in for a landing, which it completed without 'damage or casualties. In the Linz incident, the transport trans-port had left Vienna at 9:40 a. m. for Munich. It was a regularly scheduled flight on a prescribed course in the so-called "Llnz-Tulln "Llnz-Tulln corridor. Officials said the plane was flying at 4,500 feet, and four attacks at-tacks were made. The first was made east of Linz, and a second over Linz, informants reported. Famous Flier Leaves Note In Desert Suicide Death LAS VEGAS. Nev.. April 24 (U.R) A scribbled note convinced authorities today that Alex Pa-pana, Pa-pana, 40, famous flier and former form-er personal pilot to King Carol of Rumania, killed himself be- ' - - ; I cause nis wue pianucu uirmw. The body of Pa pans, test puot and former Romanian air force cantain. was found yesterday in a desert ravine 15 miles southwest of here. Authorities believed he may have committed suicide while posses were searching the desert for him. Two notes were found in the pocket of his blue Jacket and a nint thermos bottle lay nearby. Deputy Sheriffs Cyrih Stewart and Carl Sheppard, who found the body, believed the bottle had contained poison. They said marks in tne rocKy fround indicated Papana died slowly and in agony. He , appar ently had dragged nimseix, writu-ing writu-ing in pain, from a mountain peak to 'the ravine. last Wednesday when his expensive expen-sive coupe, containing a note addressed ad-dressed to "Jean," was found parked on the Las Vegas-Los Angeles An-geles highway. The body was found about three miles from the car. ' The note read: "Loved you with every part of myself. I wanted you to be happy. hap-py. You got ; off the track;- J guess what you did is not really your fault and I forgive, you..- I do. 'i y It was siened Alex.' "Jean was Jean Hacker, whom Papana married here last March 30. Deputies said Mrs. rapana was staying at a local hotel to establish residence - for . a divorce. They said -she met 'Papana when she worked in the control tower and he tested planes at Northrop Aircraft, Hawthorne, CaliL Mrs. Papana collapsed when notified that her husband had been 'found and was -taken. to-a The search- for Papana started, hospital . suffering fronr, hysteria. fteftSejUt? MjsolMs bQdy and claims that a fight against Communism has begun in II Duce's name. A fiery manifesto circulated by the "Fascist- Democratic Party proclaiming a fight against "The Red Parasite" regardless of the cost prompted police to take ex treme precautions against an out break of violence. State police squads in jeeps blocked all roads and checked . all vehicles. A double circle of policemen 30 yards in diameter -was established around the empty grave. The manifesto, smacking of the blood and mysticism used by Mussolini in his heydey, was cir culated among newspapers and reached police. It was accompanied accom-panied by a copy of the note found in a sealed envelope by the empty grave. "Duce, we will fight in your name, teaching ourselves the way," the graveside note said The manifesto said the "Fascist Democratic Party" was obliged to begin the struggle "against those henchmen of Red violence" to compel the free expression of the popular majority. Authors of the manifesto claim ed that the grave robbers escaped with the complete body, although reports circulated that a decomposed decom-posed part of one leg had been left in the grayer A United Press correspondent who penetrated to the inner part of the police circle around the grave' saw no remnant of the leg in the grave. Pieces of clothing, cloth-ing, which had been- tossed into the grave with the naked dictator were found nearby. The manifesto was distributed distrib-uted on a letterhead marked -PFD" for the "Democratic Fascist Party" nd was signed by the - "Central Steering Committee. The accompanying graveside note said: "Finally, O' Duce, you are with us. You will always be for us that light which we will look to as the sun. The sun has returned to shine on 'your forehead. We will surround you with roses but the perfume of your -virtues will be stronger than roses, Duce, we will fight in your name, teaching ourselves the way." Boy Drowns In irrigation Ditch MORELAND, Ic!a, AprU 24 m --Richard W. Fischer, , aontof Mr. and Mrs. Percy K.- Fishetoi Moreland, drowned In ari irrigation irriga-tion canal near the family home late yesterday afternoon. The boy, who had been deaf because of an illnes since Be was five months '.old; apparently fen into the canal . syphon h while watching fish In six, foot. deep pond. r. ' , French Ambassador Makes New Effort to Heal Up the Breach NEW YORK, April 24? (OB) French Ambassador Henri Bonnet, gravely concerned over ov-er the continued Big Three split in the United Nations security council, today initi- ated a campaign to get unanimous unani-mous council approval of the proposed investigation of Franco Spain. He has failed twice to mediate Big Three differences, but is trying try-ing again. Bonnet met early today with, council's minority Russia and Poland and later planned , to confer with the leaders of the majority, ma-jority, Britain and the United States, and other smaller nations na-tions such as Egypt and Mexico. ' The Russian - French - Polish meeting also was designed to plan tactics on the Spanish issue which guarantee that the investigation proposed by Australia would be ' an inquiry in fact as well as in name and not a whitewash Those three nations were overwhelmingly defeated in , the Iranian case yesterday-action yesterday-action which caused another council crisis when Soviet Ambassador Andrei A. Gro-myko Gro-myko threatened another boycott of any Iranian discussions. discus-sions. Council delegates, agreed that there should be a Spanish investigation, inves-tigation, concerned themselves today to-day with attempts to reach agreement agree-ment in advance of tomorrow's meeting on details of such an inquiry. in-quiry. Bonnet especially felt that the threat of another Russian boycott of the council and continued con-tinued Big Three disunity called urgently for a display, of a semblance sem-blance of unity-to the world on some issue. ' s The only questions on which the delegates appeared to be even ev-en close to unanimity was that the council man's latest hope' for preventing future wars was in another tail spin. The Russians have made It plain that unity on Iran Is impossible. im-possible. They just won't take part In any further .discussions of the Iranian question. Soviet Delegate. Andrei A, Gromyko didn't mention the report re-port ' on evacuation of Soviet troops from Iran which the council coun-cil already has. requested by May 6. But his new threat of a boycott boy-cott raised fears that the Soviet Union might flout the authority of the council and ignore its request re-quest for a May 6 report. The Russian view is that the ease has been closed since , the Soviet-Iranian agreement. The Anglo-American view la titat the ease cannot be closed clos-ed until Russia fulfills her promise to get out of Iran by May 6, Meanwhile, the delegates es- r pecially those of the smaller ' countries grasped hopefully for the first straw that held any hope of council unanimity. Ironically, Ironi-cally, that happened to be the Franco Spain case, although the Russians, British and Americans are split wider on that probably than on Iran. Nevertheless, the Franco case does contain immediate possibilities possibil-ities of a unanimous council' vote. An Australian proposal fpr a formal investigation of Franco Spain, is pending. There already , appears to be approval in principle prin-ciple by all members of the plan.. (Agreement on details is now, sought and may be found In today's to-day's hotel room conferences. This would give the council a chance when it reconvenes to- - morrow at 3 p. m., EST to show the world for the first time since setting up shop in the United -States that there is at least one procedural aspect of a political issue; on which members can agree. Police Disperse Detroit Pickets h DETROIT, April 24 )M County and state police " today broke up and dispersed a mob of . 500 CIO United Auto i Worker t pickets who demonstrated around the Stinson plant of rthe Consoli-v - dated Vultee Aircraft Corp. , - m Cant. Tom Bagot or tne wayne. - county sheriff's road patrol said . -no physical blows had been struck I and there were no arrests . ' Bagot described the incident as . involving a shouting, shoving mass of pickets who blocaded a roach leading to the suburban ; olant-and attempted to keep sup- i , ervisory and office employes from entering the gates. , - - ' |