OCR Text |
Show '; V-f-j- ''Is t fc j r 2 rwn , i - n mm . n : JS i i MP CqOBuGD-'QCD'S- GDDBDOflDDts 0 Urges Meet At Geneva On Tuesday MOSTLY CLEAR and moraines. Partly cloudy afternoon Sunday. Little' temperature chanre. High today 8S to 93. Low tonUht 53 to 58. Minimum relatiye j humidity 14 cent. Friday's birb in Provo areas was 80, lowest Saturday nlfhts pr morninr was PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, SUNDAY, JULY 20, 1958 VOL. 36,, NO. 9 i 'I , f i. r1- . I five-pow- er . $ - By BRUCE W. MljNN United Press International UNITED NATIONS, N.V. (UPI) A Soviet vetof of an American proposal to replace the Marines in Lebanon with an international police force has effectively blocked any quick U. N. action in the Middle East crisis. A Japanese compromise resolution to beef up the iinarmed U. N. observer corps in Lebanon gave only faint hope that; the i j Our Nation Must I Guard Up! Keep In letters to President Elsenhower, British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, French Premier Charles De Gaulle and Indian Premier Jawaharlal Nehru; Khrushchev said he would agree to any time and place the West, eni powers set if they opposed Geneva next Tuesday 'in this calls grim hour of history when it is (Editorial) course The dramatic of events in the Middle East for national unity iri backing the administration and our allies in whatever measures are necessary to hold in check the Russian program for world conquest mi n every Amer i nis unity win spreiy oe tosireng-wieneican citizen takes the time study the pertinent facts and ponder on the practical alternatives. This is no time for panic;; neither is it a time for wishful thinking. We face a grave crisis, perhaps the most serious! in our his , ! ; Securityv Council: jwould move to " ease the situation on Monday. But most observers predicted that the United Nations' only chance of taking effective action now rests with the General Assembly which could not meet in emergency session before Wednesday at the earliest. jU. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge called on the deadlocked Security Council Friday night to summon the assembly into emergency session. But he agreed that a vote on his resolution should be postponed until: Japan presents its compromise offer to the council .j Monday afternoon. ,, Acceptance Unlikely The Japanese have not yet made public their resolution but reliable sources said, it would call for a strengthening of the observer group in Lebanon so that U. S. forces can; M withdrawn from there. Diplomats said the United States was unlikely to accept Japan's resolution unless it provided that the neiv unarmed border patrols oe-- transformed into a much larger armed police force. The United States proposed Friday that the Security Council call up an international police force to take over from the Marines in guarding Lebanon against infil tration of men and arms across the Syrian border. Nine ofUhe 11 council members voted for the proposal but it was killed by the Soviet Union's 84th U Ni veto. Sweden abstained. The council also voted down, 8 to 1, with Sweden and Japan abstaining, a Russian - demand that the United Nations! order American .and British forces out of Lebanon and Jordan immedi-ately. A Swedish proposal to "suspend untu further notice ac ivities of the United Nations fact! - finding (Continued on Page Four) Jordai-Iraq-Leban- on 1 - i j ; j 96-m- an I i . i - " m -- r y MARINES UNLOAD AMMUNITION U. S. Marines unload boxes of ammunition and other equipment on the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Tension continued to rise in the area, as the more than 6,000 Marines, plus Army paratroopers, took up their Telephoto) positions. (Herald-UP- I J . Cuban Rebels Utah County Democrats Release Last Fill Slate for Primary 14 Americans 1 N.C. Tension has been appreciably rising here for the last two days. Rebels today The attacked Lebanese Government headquarters in downtown BeirutFirst one contingent invaded the American Presbyterian Mis-- i ' (Continued on Page Four) f long-dorma-nt - j Utah County Democrats Saturday elected as their nominees for county commissioner two - year term, J. Clark Elmer, Payson, and Marcellus Neilson, Spanish Fork, and for county sheriff, Deputy Sheriff Ralph Peters, Orem, and Deputy Sheriff Roscoe Kay, Provo. Eliminated from the primary Democratic race for these posts were county commission candidates Francis S. Lundell, Benjamin, and Roy; Lyman, Spring Nine American Soldiers FRANKFURT, Germany (UPI) U.S. Army announced that nine soldiers held captive in Communist East Germany since June 7 were realeased to the West f-- The Saturday. The soldiers, eight officers and an enlisted; man, had strayed over the Iron Ckrtain in an Army helicopter during a thunderstorm and ' ! a A ' j !' map and recognize the f ull importance of Turkey as a base for holding Russia in check by the deterrent threat of attack by planes and shorter range missiles. Fact No. 4: The dependence of our European allies on the oil of the Middle East. While it must be a strong wish of all. that friendly arrangements can be made with the Arab peoples who i ihabit the oil production areas, this oil was developed by the western powers and they require it. Unless We are ready to face the overrunning and en slavement of a helpless Europe by the Russians, we cannot allow the control of this oil at this time to fall into the hands of governmen t subservient to Russia. In terms of the days and hours immediately ahead, the die is cast. After prior consultation with major parties, our government and allied governments have taken a stand from which retreat is inconceivable. In the face of a! possible ultimatum from Russia that war will be punched, the answer of America is in the tradition of PatHck Henry. Liberty comes before life itself. t If war is averted and we hope fervently that it will be looking ahead in terms of weeks 'and months it is apparent that after her setback in the Middle East, Russia will take all steps wjthin her power to regain her position. We face the necessity of a much higher order of preparedness, with real and substantial sacrifices. The degree of mobilization and extent of defensive measures must be ' determined by necessity. The effect of kuch mobilization on our economy in terms of years cannot help but cause misgivings. But national survival in ,159 and 1960 must be considered prior to the state of the economy in 1970. Only. from a position of strength can we negotiate the only solution that appears feasible in the foreseeable future, namely a settlement with Russia including an adequate inspection system and adequate safeguards against surprise attack. Until then, whatever the cost, we must keep our guard up. Lake, and sheriff candidate Sterling Harding, Orem. Mr. Elmer, building contractor and fruit farmer, was county commissioner from 1949 to 1952, and Mr. Nielson, former mayor of Spanish Fork and Mapleton, was county auditor for eight years prior to 1943. Roscoe Kay, former Santaquin chief of police, was a8 deputy sheriff for the past 14 years and is past president of Utah County Peace Officers Association. Deputy Peters, former Orem chief of police, has been a deputy for the past six years. Candidates Endorsed The conyention endorsed Democratic candidates filed for office prior to requiring no elimination ' the primaries Sept 9; These Democratic candidates Cuba BAY, The Cuban rebels un- GUANTANAMO (UD ; H-bo- . no longer possible to wait an- other minute." Levels New Charges He leveled new charges that the United States and Britain were guilty of "aggression" lo Lebanon and Jordan. Khrushchev suggested United Nations Secretary General' Dag Hammarskjold also attend the meeting. The letter to Eisenhower oar- ried the additional warning that Russia has "ballistic rockets of all types, including interconti nental ones." He added that Rus sia was ahead of the United States in development of inter continental ballistic missiles. While the United States has the atomic and hydrogen bomb, Rus sia has them too, Khrushchev reminded, j j He said the world, as a result action in the of to a point at "come has Mideast, which any incautious step may precipitate the world's greatest that Anglo-Americ- an j catastrophe." His statements sharply recall( ed the warning by Russia durh inva ing the 1956 sion of Suez that Russia could hurl an atomic rocket at Britain at any time Khrushchev expressed a feeling of extreme urgency in his call for the meeting. It was believed he would be willing te (Continued ea Page Four) Anglo-Frenc- j Expects Them to Arrivo Hussein Asks UlS. Troops For Jordan mb j King Hussein AMMAN (UPI) announced ( ' i led B rojadcasts Message To Troops in Lebanon 1 i four-year- -- te I j Marx-Stadt- Hungarians Tear ; j Up SovietvFlagH . ' anti-Commun- ist i ' ; Goldfine, J r. in Hospita I; Razor Cuts -- j ! Self-Inflict- ed " Fla; (UPI) j SARASOTA, K 1 jr J S self-inflict- ed razor blade cuts over a large I , f'p- Gold-fine- j " ) ms " r i j f VI ' -- ' HERALD lljjDEX Es-condi- found Mrs. Goldfine alarmed when he reached the moteL She told him her husband had locked himself in the bathroom" and she was afraid, he .would take his own life; ,! Elie, a personal friend of knocked on the bathroom door and asked Goldfine to come out. Elie jsaid Goldfine was reluctant rat Jfirst but finally opened the door; Goldfine was clothed in a pair of blood - spattered shorts when he came out, Elie said.. The patrolman said Goldfine admitted cutting himself with the razor1 but declined to give a rea son.- - Elie said Goldfine had cuts on most areas of his' body, "even his portion of his body. Physicians at Memorial Hospital reported that he lost much blood but added that his condition was "good." They said all the cuts were superficial and did not require stitching, j V j Police' Were called to the motel where Goldfine and hisj wife were staying early Saturday when the manager reported a disturbance. Patrolman Donald G. Elie said he face."" f j I H. Maxwell Goldfine,' 36, son of Bos-to- n industrialist Bernard Goldfine, was admitted to a local hospital Saturday for treatment of "between 80 and? 100" j Saturday that he had U.S. asked for 14 troops for Jordan released their last expectedly said and "I expect them to arAmerican servicemen hostages rive." Friday. A rebel commander, said Hussein made his statement to the men were freed because of a press conference in his palace. the "Lebanese situation." p ( Jordanian Ambassador to BritThe return of the 14 men in a ain Abdul Moneim Rifai told newsday marked a sjudden single men in London Thursday Jordan, switch in rebel tactics. Previously had asked for direct military aid the captives had been released in from the United States and the groups of four and fivej and States has "accepted."! United sometimes less. in Washington, U.S. offi; (But Seven sailors and seven Ma on Thursday there were said cials rjnes were airlifted out of the U.S. troops to go into for no plans hills in Oriente Province to this Jordan at Ihe time. They did not M U. S. naval base by helicopter in rule out such a move eventually four groups. They were the last IWn rnc Annincf Incidents but said any final decision must of a total of 47 Americans and await further studies and more three Canadians kidnaped by the specific information !on whether rebels to dramatize the fight I they would be needed.'"). against the) government of Presi With sorrow etched on his face, dent Fulgencio Batista. v the King also told the '. are: U. S. Cdunsul Park Wollamand assembled newsmen he had '"just s, nis vice eonsul.V Robert Wiecha, County Commissioner for were forced to land in "East Gerheard" that the entire Iraqi Hash-emiMarion G. Provo Mayor handled the negotiations for the many six weeks ago. Royal Family had been release of the hostages. They were captured near the Hinckley and Hilton A. Robert; the rebels. killed inby WASHINGTON (UPI1 Presi- self by radio to the "Marines, ' ,' town of Karl about 25 son, Provo. County Surveyor, that confirmed He those among LaVerir D. (Vera) miles inside the Soviet zone bor-' cumbent dent Eisenhower, in a personal sailors, soldiers, and airmen" en- killed were his cousin,! King Feisal Green, Provo, (unopposed) . Counder. message! told U.S. troops in the gaged in the' mission. and Crown Prince Abdul Blah. on a flight ty attorney, incumbent Arnold The helicopter was Middle (A Damascus Radio broadcast East "You are helping the Lebanese Saturday that their from Frankfurt to GrafenwolH C. Roylance, Springville. County in London Saturday said heard job is to help save Lebanon from peopleto remain free,'' he said. Grant L. Atwood, the U.S. Army, training range near treasurer, Iraq's revolutionary regime and "outside! forces" threatening its He gave them this pledge: the Wagner Festival city of Bay-- Pleasant Grove. County auditor, NEW YORK (UPI) Angry President Gamal A. Nasser's UnitRobert Q. Strong, Provo. , reuth. j freedomj soon' L the "As as Hungarian! independence picked Arab Republic formally pledg. All the men were members of County assessor, J. Earl Smith, ets! massed" outsiae the Russian - and! integrity of Lebanon are se- ed mutual defense! In a himThe President addressed major the U.S. Army's Third Armored Lehi, and Guy H Ivins, American government's Park Avenue manf comrades and then your you signed cure, Saturday. treaty Fork. County Recorder, incum- sion Division stationed in Frankfurt. and dramatically will bej withdrawn immediately (It said the treaty was signed Thelma Vest Smurthwaite, tore aSaturday bent The soldiers are: Soviet Flag to shreds. tnle from country." by Nasser and an Iraqi delegation CWO Leroy J. Malone, 25, Ray- Payson. County clerk, Mark F. While the 40 pickets ripped lip said propin Damascus but did not bring President The enemy mond, Kan. Boyack, Spanish Fork. inthe hammer and sickle flag and to provoke agandists may try Iraq into the Syrian- - Egyptian Utah State Senate, District One, stomped on it in a Maj. George W.' Kemper, 43, 225 Orem Gets Okeh on Federal He said UIAR can cidents itself.)! gutter, exploit. they Calif. Wallace R. Wayman, Edgemont, stood to all time for a will be policemen by prevent trying Grant for Sewage Plant . . . .5 "it Maj. James. R. Zeller, 34, Mount and District Two; Harvard R. possible violence. ; of you." Box on Surf C. Put acingI Soap syr- Hinton, Lehi, and George Joy, Pa. the V picketing stopped, knew the U.S. .. After he But he said Hill:; . . . j; . .j. ......... 6 Derby Caipt. Paul E. Jones, 36, Cleve- Scott, American Fork. ;a botcombat forces, ashore, afloat, or Ca'rvajal, 19, threw f Man, Horse Match Speed, House of Representatives, Dis- George land, Ohio. tle ink of red and a bottle of in the air, will "do your duty to Endurance in Tuesday Capt.Frank A. Athanason, 31, trict pne Ernest H. Dean, Ameri- blue ink at" the building, splatter-in- g 13 your country." can Fork ; District Two, Thorit r' Race Greenville, S.C. ; the wall a brick below just WASHINGTON (UPI) Two Utahns Die in Separate Presi 1st Lt. Thomas J. Westbrook, 27, C. THebertson, Orem, and Dr. second floor window. . He told of took . 2 f . . Eisenhower . ..... Accidents dent ,.' District Orem A. D. Motes, ; by heli,i i. ' '. Macon, Ga, him he Amusements ...... who Pilot arrested policemen 11:16 Mike! 9 Sandy edt, Satua Injured copter ,at an., 1st Lt. .I.....V.8, Ellis, Bremen, Ga. Three, Algie Eggertson Bailiff, spent 40 cents for .the ink "beJ ......... 14 4 ' M., 24 '. "hours to about at his Business News ' T. Ruffinf, 36, Provo; District Four, Oscar. J. spend day .;. Sgt. Carrol In Critical Condition' cause Mosof what ' in happened farm. Central Utah: News Hansen and D. Ross Urie, Pr6vo; cow Gettysburg, Pa Hoyrej ;Tex. J , . ' ! Friday." BurDURANGO, Colo. (UPI) Wearing a brown suit and bo 3, 4, 5. ti 7, 20, 21 The nine men were handed over District Five; Marvin F,: Warren, ....I...... .1 in.i Oassifled .23' 24, 25 nett E. Hunt 33; a Sandy pilot hat, Eisenhower got in the Amy by the Communists to U.S. offi Springville, and District Six ' TERM INFORMANT BEGINS .!. l Hit : 2 10 comics U .. i .22 injured in a plane crash near helicopter on the south grounds cf L. Allen Hof at Bavaria cials in Hodges, p.m. cumbent : . (UPI)-r. ... a Brian ..U Editorial .....19 here Wednesday, was listed in7 the White House for the I3-- n LEWES, ,; a.m. England (6:10 p.d.t.) t "critical" condition Saturday. ; ute flight to his farm. Justices of Peace: James J F. Frederick Linney, 45, ani instru- National, World Neiirs They boarded an Army helicopMrs. Eisenhower was in&lj Hunt suffered' severe bead inr a V. 28 ment' engineer, began ter to fly to Itheir division head- Wingate .Springville; Ernest ...2, 8, 9, 10, " two when1 he the others and trip by, automobile. They rCl Keele, Spanish Fork; C O. New prison term Saturday' for selling Obituaries ........ U... 2, 4 juries quarters in Frankfurt. return t T74ctca tLia (In Washington,' the American man, incumbent, Pleasant Grove, British secrets"" to "Communist Society ; . . . . . . . 1, 16, 17, 18 crashed after Cteir plane struck .vv A::, v..,a tree, ca u Pa (CoeUianed Fow) U tCoctiaued ea Page Four) East Germans Release j j Keynoter Predicts Victory I i -- , : ; J ) j i 1 - ; the scene said the "wreckage was too scattered for immediate idenkificatiOn of the plane's .type. Rebel snipers hit the four-engiine Marine Corps transport as it glided low for a ianding here this morning. They put' two bullets into the R5D plane (Douglas )C4). One of them narrowly missed the navigator. The transport was loaded with Marines from Camp LeJeune, ; 1 Fact No. 1: The military strength of Russia, (as dramatize by- accomplishments in the fields of rocketry and nuclear weapons, coupled with complete brutality and treachery as shjwn in Hungary. Fact No. 2: Recent Russian successes and imminent danger of further successes in extension of Russian power in the Middle East W means of bribery of political leaders, subsidized propaganda and subsidized terror. Fact No. 3: Ou need of Turkey as an effective ally, coupled with the threat to Turkey of Sovjet encirclement. The reliability Of Tirkey as a defensive bastion against Russia was underscored in the Korean War, in which this small distant nation spent lives smaller in number only, than those spent by the United States and the Koreans! themselves to hold off the: Soviet threat. With Russia ostensibly still leading in the field of intercontinental ballistic missiles one need not be a military expert to study the i "? A i ! A tory. ! See page 8 for more news on the Middle East crisis. L, ? suffered its jEirst casualty in the Lebanon action with the death of a Navy pilot! whose fighter crashed inj territory where Rebel snipers had been firing. Nearby vipagers, who saw the crash said, however, that they did not believe the Navy plane had been hil by rifle fire. k Ominous Warning f. 4 The! disclosures of the shootings an and .rthe crash preceded Soviet ominous warning by Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev that the guis are already beginning to fire and calling for a Summit conference next Tuesday to avert "the world's- - grejatest catastrophe." The Navyj plane crashed in an area 10 miles East of Beirut, Nearby villagers said the fighter, believed to be a propeller-driven Gruman F6F Hellcat, to be on fire before appeared a and smashing into tree hitting a steep hillside. But they said they did noifc believe it had been hit by rifle fire. A taxi driver returning from the mountainous scene of the crash! claimed the plane had been shot down by Rebels, but the claim was discounted here. The pilot! died instantly. Reporters at five-pow- er point- edly told the United States that Russia is ahead in the development of intercontinental rockets. I, - i - greatest catastrophe.' He of Peril Unity in Time I j Greatest Catastropho" j Marines had taken rifle fire hits! In addition, America j ; By HENRY SHAPIRO United Press International Soviet Pre- MOSCOW (UPI) mier Nikita , S. Khrushchev oao ed Saturday for an emergency summit conference on the Middle East at Geneva next Tuesday to prevent 'the world's BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) Mideast Rebel shots that hit three American warplanea resounded globally Saturday night with a Russian warning that a world catastrophe could result from American' and (British "aggresr sion : in Lebanon and Jordan. The Lebanese front heated uj witt disclosure that two U.S. Navy carrier planes and a transport loaded with Soviet Veto '!Blocks Quick U. N. Action . V Suffers First Casualty in Crash 0 Navy Warplane U. S. y ;, I.-!, Action Proposed To PRICE TEN CENTS Prevent 'The World's " nn 3ft mi j i r . a. G - vr " . ; Ike Flies to Farm by Copter j . " ". . ; ........; ; f i;. Pay-son.--- -?. j ; , 1 ; 14-ye- ar j A fiAr . I i J ; -- |