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Show THE WEATHER UTAH: Scattered clouds thl afternoon, becoming partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; continued warming, with high temperature today, 80 to 90, and near 100 in Diixe: low temperatures Tuesday, morning 50 to 60. Temperatures: High St Low 40 WffUUMt a WilA Spanish Fork, tettled In 1SS0, watt niiii4 tnr ih Knanlxh VatIt river, which took its name from the exploration of the canyon by Escalante and the Old Spanish Trail. SIXTY-FIRST YEAR, NO. 1 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS I'ICIIIII UIVO Baccalaureate Sermon at T LDS Apostle Exhorts Graduates To Shun Evil, Live Righteously With a capacity audience of friends and relatives in attendance, at-tendance, baccalaureate services ser-vices one of the major events in the 70th annual Brigham Young university commencement week were conducted in the Joseph Smith building Sunday night. Dr. Joseph F. Merrill, member mem-ber of the LDS church council of twelve, principal speaker, admonished ad-monished the graduating class to ;shun evil'and live righteous lives. "Unfailing self-discipline, coupled coupl-ed with persistent effort and .God's help can make a happy home a joyous, successful life," he declared. Precedng the services, at which President Howard S. McDonald presided, was the traditional academic procession from the Karl GV'Maeser Memorial building build-ing to the Joseph Smith auditorium, auditor-ium, and a sacred band concert by the BYU band under direction ! of John R. Haliday. Beautiful music for the services ser-vices was furnished by the BYU orchestra under direction of Lawrence Sardoni and the combined com-bined choruses directed by Dr. Franklin Madsen: Commencement exercises at the university will be conducted Wednesday at 10 a. m., with a band concert at 9 a. m. and the academic procession at 9:45. Alumni day activities will dominate dom-inate Tuesday's program. Dr. Merrill, in his baccalaureate baccalaur-eate sermon, urged the graduates gradu-ates to live humble and worthy lives as advocated in LDS church teachings. This, he said, is the only way to reach the celestial kingdom. He admonished the students stu-dents to constantly, fight evil by being strong in character, zealous in church work and clean physically and morally. "Now to a greater or lesser degree," de-gree," the speaker said, "we are all subject to the temptation of the evil one. But every normal person can if he will use his win power 10 uie umii nu KJ ... . -i . A with God s help, readily given to e., ! to do wrong." Continuing, he declared: "The religious faith that you have accepted ac-cepted is divine, given by the Lord to his children for theiror smaii ratner man Dig ousi-good ousi-good and blessing, both in this . nesses. life and the one beyond the grave. It is unnecessary for a normal being to have any con-j tinued doubt about this truth forj the Lord has not closed the' channels of communication be-1 tween nimseir ana nis cniiaren;nev general in charge nere in mortality. In closing he remarked that "however well-trained, cultured and scholarly We become, yet sincere humility well becomes all of us. even the ablest. But the divine way of life is faced with so many difficulties and handi Ut f ., ctrm,. Enough t; succeedn-ov them without the Lord's help." K T k n " Traffic Toll In Utah Goes To 79 Today SALT LAKE CITY, June 3 (U.R) Utah's 1946 traffic fatality toll stood at 79 today, nearly' 60 per cent higher than at the same time last year, as another death was added to the toal. The latest victimwas Axel E. K. Hansen of Salt Lake City. He died yesterday 6l injuries suffered suf-fered May 3 when he was struck by an automobile. 325 Meet Violent Death In 4 Days By UNITED PRESS More than 325 persons met vio- lent death during the four-day ,ful Japanese has confessed he Memorial day weekend. planned to join the communist At least 142 persons were kill- party and then deliberately fail ed in traffic accidents as bad in an attempt to assassinate Gen. weather added hazards on most Douglas MacArthur so as to im-of im-of the nation's highways. Eighty- Plicate Japanese communists in a five persons drowned and 99 died "Plot" against the supreme com-in com-in other accidents. mander's life, police said today. Traffic fatalities showed a! ,saki Hoshino. chief of police sharp increase over war-time i 2t ..th? sma11 !"oun.tei i?n ? Memorial holidays of 1943-45, and it was- estimated that the total to-tal number of persons killed would equal or surpass the toll of 1942, the last Memorial day that motorsts were out in great num bers. Deaths from . all causes davl,1I94H2em0rial h0li!who was a'ssocPatld with or day totaled 350. !,,v.n th.- r, t safety council estimated that 329 would be killed kill-ed in traffic accidents during the four days. These figures include persona who die later as a result of injuries received in holiday accidents, the council said. June Boom in Love 11 if 1 1 -" Eager-to-be-June brides, and bridegrooms, these lovers lined the corridors of New York's Marriage License Bureau June 1 before offices' opened. Ninety-five licenses were dispensed first hour. Iron Age Intimates Berge's Efforts to Bar U. S. Steel In Geneva Acquisition, Futile Supporters of U. S. Steel's bidjsaid in a general article on the for Geneva took comfort today in subject: a statement of the latest issue oil Iron Age, authoritative steel trade) publication, but a Sunday radio forecast by Washington Columnist Drew Pearson that the attorney general's office would rule against it cast a shadow over the general picture. In the issue of Iron Age which reached here today, the magazine Geneva Decision Requires 2 More Weeks, Says Berge By ROSEMARIE MULL AN United PreSs Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 3 U.R Capital observers interested in disposal of the Geneva, Utah, steel plant noted today that President Truman came out against in- I wavafc fi lf J l-JJ VV1IUV. WC 111j, .... : j . oP the ernmened Pl"t to U. S. Steel. In a speech to the graduating class of Washington college, Chestertown, Md., Saturday, the president declares his preference "I would rather see a hundred steel companies than one United States Steel Corp." he said. Of tHe justice department's anti-trust division, said it probablv would be another two weeks-before the department decides whether to approve sale of Geneva to U. S. Steel for $47,500,000. The U. S. Steel bid was approved by the war assets administration.. WAA's ' Bergc? when pues-; ' proval. Technically, Attorney General' Gen-eral' Tom Clark makes the recommendation on sale of a property as large as the $200, 00.000 Geneva plant. In advance of this recommendation, recommenda-tion, Clark considered the president's presi-dent's expressed antipathy to big companies. Below Clark was Berge, conducting studies of the U. S. Steel offer,. who six weeks' ago told a senate committee "eastern "east-ern interests will do everything in their power to prevent operation opera-tion of Geneva." WAA, in announcing its approval ap-proval of the proposed sale to (Continued on Page Two) Jap Plot Revealed to Assassinate MacArthur, Implicate Communists By LETER KALISCHER United Press Staff Correspondent TOKYO, June 3 (U P.) A youth- Shibukawa, said that Terunori Aral, who was arrested in con.-nection con.-nection with a recently-announced May day plot to assassinate MacArthur, had disclosed details of the plan. According to Hoshino. tho 21. i., u a i .i were Japanese army officers.. One suspect, Terukaya Ito, was arrested arrest-ed in Tokyo and taken to Shibukawa Shibu-kawa where he was released for lack of evidence. Arai was arrested at Shibukawa, Shibu-kawa, 60 miles northwest of To Starts New Ljne EA Telephoto) "Information that the price review board had given its aprpoval was taken to mean that efforts of Wendell Bene to bar the award would be ineffective." Just what position the price re view board has in the matter was not specified. Local sources were unfamiliar with details concern ing the agency. Peaion's Sunday radio fore cast threw a general chill over the U. S. Steel bid picture, despite assurances from all four of Utah's congressional delegation in Wash ington that it was a wrong guess. Governor Herbert B. Maw, ar riving in Washington Sunday irom the national-governors' con ference in Oklahoma, said he was "disturbed over the prediction, and scheduled a . meeting today with Utah congressmen and senators. sena-tors. After Pear-son's broadcast. Sen. Abe Murdock (D), Utah, said ho could "see no reason for rejecting reject-ing the offer. "I am still optimistic over pros nprls that it will hp annrnvpH " le added. "I have every confidence in the attorney general's office,"' he j said. j Rep. J. W. Robinson said "there is a group that would like to sec the attorney general turn downl Uie U. S. Steel company bid but j mis group uoesni inciuue inc, presiaem or me anoi ney general. Rep. Granger (D), Utah, likewise like-wise said he was "confident the 141 K dl,VU UJ 114 1 JUS Sen. Elbert D. Thomas said "II think this is one of Drew Pearson's Pear-son's bad predictions let's wait and see." Pearson predicted the department depart-ment of justice would make an adverse ruling on the U. S. Steel . . "novt uioolr " A ccictant Attrif tioned on it by the United Press in Washington, said he doubted if the opinion would be ready "within "with-in two weeks." Iron Age expressed the opinion that . "apparently the efforts of Colorado Fuel and Iron corporation to mobilize public support for its bid came too late to be effective." The magazine article continued: "In press conferences conducted conduct-ed in Colorado and Utah, representatives repre-sentatives invited Questions on their intentions and plans and! only In rare instances took refuge ref-uge in 'off the record' replies. These officials were armed with documentary evidence of a large (Continued on Page Two) kyo, last Wednesday after a fel low-passenger on a train he was riding told police he heard the suspect say. "MacArthur must be eliminated." Police said Arai steadfastly de nied any Connection with the May day plot. Hideo Takayama, still is sought as the alleged ring leader of that plot which was disclosed on April 30 two days after Aral made his remark. Arai was arrested a month after his conversation was over heard. During a painstaking search, police located a girl who told them he frequently came to Shibukawa to buy food. From her description of him, police picked him up at the railroad station. When the details of the May day plot were disclosed, supreme headquarters said it was timed to coincide with a communist-led demonstration. At the same time, headquarters carefully pointed out that there was no evidence to link, communists with the projected pro-jected assassination. T Italian Voters Favor Republic; Communists Running Poor Third Abolition of Monarchy Favored In Early Returns; Gang: of Submachine Gunners Fail in Attempt to Steal Ballot Boxes HOME, June 3 (U.P.) Early returns in the Italian election elec-tion count tonight showed the Communists running a poor third while the first trend was toward abolition of the monarchy in favor of a republic. The first sizeable block from Milan, heart of the Italy. The tabulators were sembly votes first and then public referendum Of 33,000 assembly votes count ed in Milan, the Socialists polled 12,000 the Democrat-Christians 9,000, and the Communists 8,000, with the remainder scattered among smaller parties. When 5,000 referendum votes had been counted, the republic had 3,545 and the monarchy, 1,455. The first report In the country came from the Rome suburban village of Trevi Del Latio. It gave 2.400 for the republic and J5 for the monarchy. mon-archy. In the final phase of the elec- tion, a gang of submachine gunn- -tJt Koiw kv ,i Svnn nMr Rnn. Thev were driven 'Off in a gunfight with po lice. Police wounded one attacker and arrested three during the shooting fray at the polling place. Several gunmen escaped. . When asked about the attackers attack-ers politics, police said only 'there have been a number of arrests of Neofascists in the Genoa Ge-noa area recently." The eun battle was the only serious incident in the day andjsists 120, a loss of 10, left repub- a half of voting which ended at: noon today. An estimated 80 to 80 per cent of the 28,000,000 eligible el-igible voters cast ballots. Women voted for the first time in a na tional election. Some Milan polling poll-ing places reported 100 per cent turnouts. A Marchioness was arrested arrest-ed in Rome for trying to vote a second time under another name. A colonel was caught when three extra Illegal ballots bal-lots fell out of his pocket. Two voters were killed when police guns went off accidentally, and eight were injured when a balcony fell on a polling place near Turin. Tnree were wounaea jin a Kniting ai ine pons near a- Pies- . .. . . The last-minute appeal Dy -ope -ius jui ior Italian vo s - ophy clearly meaning Com " , r ru v iT , although he didn't call ' munism it by name was expected to have a heavy influence in the voting. Solon's Condition Growing Worse WASHINGTON. June 3 (U.R! Sen. John H. Bankhcad, D., Ala., who suTfeVed aro-ke at the capUl itol on May 24, was worse today. Capt. R. E. Duncan of the Bethesda naval hospital said that Bankhead lost ground last night and his conditions "is not as good as it has been." COAL OPERATORS SEEK HIGHER PRICES WASHINGTON. June 3 (U.R) TUa t Initnvu lultv gan a fight for price increases to cover the cost of pay raises granted in the new contract be- tween the government and United Mine Workers (AFL) Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 020 009 New York 700 101 Potter. Miller (1) Fereni (5) and Dickey. Home run Keller, NY, 4th none on. Detroit at Washington, night game. (1st Game) Cleveland .... 002 200 Oil 12 1 Philadelphia . . 000 010 0O4 S 14 0 Embrec. Gromek (9) and Lollar; Marchildon, Harris (8) Rosar, De-sautels De-sautels (9). Home run. Fleming, Cle., 3rd, one on. Lollar, Cle., 4th, one on. (1st Game) Chicago 000 000 0011 10 2 Boston 100 310 Olx 6 6 0 Lee. Caldwell (7) and Dickey; Ferris Fer-ris and McGah. Home run, York, Bos, 8th, none(on. (2nd Game) Chicago ...... 00 Boston 30 Lopat and Dickey; Dobson and Partee. (2nd Game) Cleveland 00 Philadelphia . . 1 Lemon and Hayes; Fowler and De- sauieis. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia . . . ooo 1 Pittsburgh 100 1 Schanx and Seminick; Albosta and Lopez. New York ooo St. Louis 000 Kennedy and Cooper; Beazley and Kluttz. i Only games scheduled. of counted votes was reported industrial region of northern counting the constituent as those on the monarchy-re Communists Lose Top Position In French Election V PARIS, June 3 (U.R) The mod-1 erate popular republican party j smashed the communist bid for Dower in France todav. renlacinir the communists as the nation's strongest political party with substantial sub-stantial gains in Sunday's election. Foreign Minister Georges Bi- dault; leader of the victorious popular republicans, may become uuk yresiucm ui r ranee i me head of a coalition government including communist and social ist members. With 553 of the 586 scats in the constituent assembly accounted for, including all of metropolitan France, Corsica and part of Algeria, Al-geria, Morocco and Tunisia, the party standing was: Popular republican, 163, a gain of 20 over the last assembly; com munists 144, a gain of one, social- "cans i, mixea rigni wmg pan ies 26, republican party of liber ty, 37, Algerian democratic union (extreme nationalists) 11, peasant party seven, unified resistance movement four. The surprising popular republican repub-lican victory strengthened the conservative tide in French poll-tics. poll-tics. American Fork Man Hurt In Hunting Mishap Jem parkel.f 22, American Fork, was in the Salt Lake county hospital today gravely in- frQm an accidental shotgulv H"""--:wound suffered late yesterday in Tooele county hunting accident, ... tha, hl, hadlv wounded right arm will be saved. The young man was rushed to the Tooele county hospital after the accident by two American Fork hunting companions, Percil Shelly and Howard Nielsen. He. received preliminary treatment. "s. maximum support in me and was taken to the Salt Lakei81" y refusal to work ships veterans hospital, and later to the county hospital where his brother. Reed, is interning At a. ui. iirudv. tin uucrauuu; A A l . i!. was performed on the severely wounded right arm, which took the shotgun blast in the lower part as his gun went off accidentally acci-dentally when he sat down to reat. He is suffering from loss ; of blood and has been given transfusions. Hospital attaches 'said they hoped to save his arm, Ka-ihsrrJnff ,AnTl lfitifn The three men were hunting on Lookout mountain in Tooele :county. Late Sunday they sat down to rest about a mile from their car and Parker's gun ac-cidently ac-cidently discharged. Shelly, a veteran of three years . medical service in the army, immediately aoDlied a tourniquet but the in jured man still lost a great deal! of blood. They helped him to the car and rushed him to the hos-t pital. i Parker's wife is the former' Virginia Peterson of Alpine. His mother is Mrs. Edgar Moss. Both were rushed to his bedside when they learned of the accident. B-17 Disappears In Search For Missing Plane HONOLULU. T. H., June 3 (U.R) The navy announced today that a B-17 Flying Fortress with ten men aboard has disappeared between be-tween Kawajalein and Guam during dur-ing an aerial search for. a C-54 transport which has been missing with five aboard in the same area since May 25. No definite trace has been found of either aircraft. An army plane reportedly sighted four or five men clinging to some wreckage. The plane dropped a life raft, but later the castaways apparently disappeared from sight in murky weather. An extensive' hunt ior both planes was continuing. Maritime Unions Appeal for World Support Appeal Is Reply to Truman's Threat to Use the Navy and Coast Guard to Operate Ships During the Strike Set For June 15 WASHINGTON, June 3 (U.R) The world federation of trade unions today advised the seven strike-threatening maritime unions that it is "immediately notifying" all affiliated af-filiated groups of their request for world labor support. One independent and six CIO unions have called the strike for June 15. They asked the world federation to request affiliates not to handle American ships if President Presi-dent Truman mans them with personnel of the armed forces. The reply came today from Louis Saillant, secretary general of the world federation, irt Paris. The seven unions also won from two AFL maritime unions promises that their members would respect picket lines of the CIO committee lor maritime unity. Both Uie beaiarers inter national the Master, Mates and Pilots unions of the AFL notified Louis Godblatt, CIO maritime committee secretary, that they woud observe picket lines. Joseph A. Ryan, president of the International Longshoremen'-s association (AFL), however, condemned con-demned the threatened walk-out as "a political strike." Meanwhile Rep. John Rankin, D., Miss., accused maritime chiefs Harry Bridges and Joseph Cur-ran Cur-ran of treason against the United States and asked for their immediate im-mediate arrest. Meanwhile Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach declined to permit Pacific coast ship own rs to return to San Francisco for wage negotiations with AFL unions.4 Frank P. Foisie, president presi-dent of the Waterfront Employers' association of the Pacific Coast told, reporters that the secretary requested them to remain here. The , ifppeal of world-wide sup po r t of the . threatened walkout was sent to the world federation of trade unions. It consists of 20 national trade union un-ion organizations, including the CIO. Its executive committee meets in Moscow June 16. , Acting on behalf of seven U. S. maritime Unions, President Harry Har-ry Bridges of the Longshoremen and Warehousemen's union (C-IO), (C-IO), and President Joseph Cur-ran Cur-ran of the National Maritime union (CIO) asked the WFTU executive ex-ecutive committee to consider their request for help from foreign for-eign workers. "Unions in other countries and affiliates of WFTU are bound to be directly involved if the strike takes place," Bridges and Curran cabled to WFTU secretary-general Louis Saillant in Paris. "In event negotiations fail, we "n. DV .ine. government ana "51" yu wuiw, wii.1 urc - :ception of troop and relief ships MV- IJI1IIV VJ1.II 1 , Bridges ' and Curran protested to Saillant that Mr. Truman "publicly threatened to use the armed forces to smash the maritime mari-time strike." They said therefore "possibilities for successful ne- gouaxmns seriously jeoparoizea, an? employers given every en- i.couragement to avoid .lildli. The two union leaders asked for an immediate WFTU. reply onjspection of industrial centers will the "most effective support" it can render. At the same time, the unions modified their demands on hours as the government pressed for an agreement between Curran's NMU and Atantic and Gulf port employers. Federal mediators sought a pact as a pattern for (Continued on Page Two) Russians Sent Details About Atomic Bomb Tests to Moscow 1 MONTREAL, June 3 (U.R) Russian espionage agents in Ottawa Ot-tawa sent details of preparations for the United States' atomic bomb tests in New Mexico and of the composition of atomic bombs to Moscow shortly before the tests were held, it was charged today at the trial of Fred Rose, Communist member of parliament parlia-ment accused of conspiracy. A document, allegedly from the files of the Russian embassy, said the information was sent on July 9, 1945 by Col. Nicolai Zabotin, Russian military attache, based on reports by Dr. Allan Nunn May, who has been convicted of es pionage and sentenced to 10 yean Imprisonment in England. Official announcements at Washington said the atomic bomb testa were' held- in New Mexico on July, 16. The document read today was in' Strike Supreme Court Clears Newspaper In Contempt Case WASHINGTON, June 3 (U.R) The supreme court today reversed contempt of court convictions against the . Miami Herald and its associate editor, John D. Penne-kamp. Penne-kamp. Justice Stanley F. Reed read the court's unanimous decision. Justices Wiley B. Rutledge, Frank Murphy and Felix Frankfurter each wrote concurring opinion. The newspaper was fined $1,000 and Kennekamp $250 on a con tempt citation by Dade county Circuit Court Judges Paul D. Barnes and Marshall C. Wisehart, sitting in Miami, for two editorials editor-ials and a cartoon critical of the I court's handling of various cases, including gambling prosecutions The judges held that the editorials edi-torials and cartoon, which were printed in November, 1944, gave an "unfair and untrue report of court proceedings" and made "false imputations against the court and its judges." The case was brought to the high court after the Florida supreme su-preme court sustained the citation and the contempt convictions. Murray Requests Veto of Case Bill WASHINGTON, June 3 (U.R) President Truman today conferred for more than an hour with his legislative leaders but gave them no clue whether he would sign o veto the Case anti-strike bill. Meanwhile, White House Press Secretary Charles G. Ross said Mr. Truman was considering the! bill "from all angles and receiv ing much advice about it, pro and con. CIO President Philip Murray! asked the president to veto the measure on grounds it would "encourage "en-courage and increase labor disr putes." Ross said Mr. Truman has not had time to read the request. William K. Jackman, president of the chamber of commerce of lthe Unitcd SUtea urged President :Truman to sign the bilL 1 . Pauley Mission Leaving Mukden MUKDEN, June 3 (U.I) United States technical experts of the Edwin W. Pauley mission left Mukden for the interior of Man chirria today. First stop on their tour of in be Fushun, where they will in vestigate the reported removal of electrical equipment from fac tories. The group was headed by Lt Col. Hubert T. Schenck, professor of geology at Stanford university. Other members included H. M. Thorne, Laramie, Wyo., civilian expert. one of several introduced into the evidence at Rose's trial. The message allegedly telegraphed tele-graphed to Moscow, spoke of the atomic bomb testa la New Mexico and said that "490 grains of Uranium 235 was used daily at the magnetic separation plant at Clinton," ' . apparently for the bomb. ' The report gave other details on the composition of the atomic bomb . and said the information was "handed over to us by Alex.1 "Alex" was ''Dr. May's under cover name, j The document on atomic in formation was identified by Igor Gouzenko, former Soviet secret code expert, who resumed testi fying for the government today, He said it was one of the papers he" smuggled out of the Russian embassy. ' Russia Scores Anti-Strike Legislation Unprecedented Attack Launched in Moscow On U. S. Foreign Policy By EDWARD V. ROBERTS United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, June 3 (U.R) Russia implied strongly today to-day during an unprecedented assault on American foreign policy that it considered President Truman's anti-strike anti-strike bill and other congressional congres-sional restrictions on labor part of a plot against world peace. The Moscow radio denounced American anti-strike legislation and added, "It is evident the government gov-ernment has returned to Wall Street." "The events have more than domestc political significance," the radio said. "Organized workers work-ers represent a barrier against the new world war which most re actionary imperialist circles arc preparing. "Encroachment of reaction n the rights of working people is a pot against world peace." Radio Moscow said May would go down in Americal political history as a month of reactionary anti-labor legislation. The Soviet blast against Amer ican labor policy was the newest twist to a weekend of press and radio abuse heaped upon the United States government, and Secretary of State James F. Byrnes in particular. A parade of commentators sounded variations varia-tions on the theme that tha United States has begun "open violation and unilateral renunciation" renun-ciation" of the Potsdam and other Big Three decisions. Part of the Soviet press cam paign was aimed at the British, but the bulk of its ire was directed di-rected against the United States. Colonel Won't Testify In Army Brutality Trial BAL NAUHEIM, June 3 0I.B Col. James A. Kilian, former commander com-mander of the Lichfield reinforce ment depot, refused to testify today to-day when called as a defense witness wit-ness in the trial of Pfc. W. B. Norris on charges of brutality at the camp. Kilian, acting on the advice of his special defense counsel, Lt. Col. Raymond Ford, told the court: "I decline to answer and testify further before this court. I stand on my constitutional rights." Kilian, who has been accused of authorizing brutal punishment of prisoners at Lichfield, had answered several questions put by Norris' defense counsel, Capt. John Barr of Urbana, 111. Ford had objected vigorously to his answering any queries. To jo Granted Postponement TOKYO. June 3 (UJJ Former Premier Hideki Tojo and 25 co-defendants co-defendants won a nine-day post-ponement post-ponement of their war crimes trial at the tempestuous opening session today. The Far East international military mili-tary tribunal announced it would adjourn the trial until June 13 after hearing the prosecution's opening suiieineiii loinuiiuw- - .Chief Prosecutor Joseph-? B Keenan said his opening:, state ment will be about ,15,000 words long and probably will take all day to deliver. The statement trill be delivered in English and inter prefers will "translate it immedi- wearing neaawis. . It was understood Tthat the -de fense may register objections to certain parts of Keenan's estate-ment. estate-ment. Keenan tokf the court ;hia speech already had' been transr l4rf and delivered la defendants last Saturday. 3 |