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Show . -i i ': 1 j A- THE WEATHER ; 1TAH Cloudy with showers tJ 7- 4H autrt w AVtmlnO luivlnar fjMloti v -rf. partly cloudy Saturday with scat- tains. Cooler, tonight and slightly warmer eatijraay. Temperatures: nighj ..!....,... Precffpltatto nfTy-HGHTH YEAR NO. ?3g- - y : ;Q ' PROVO, UTAH, COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY, APRIL 28," 1944 -. ' , TmBniira i1E1wlt'sKvroa PRICE FIVE CENTS': irrtfe iAacArfhtir In erence Last of Holiahdia's 'MS. Troops to Conclude 5-Day Blitz; Aus- sies capture Aiexisnaren ADove Maaang By UNITED PBESS . Acceleration of the American amphibious march ,to- . ward tne milippines and, China was expected today, follow-i$g follow-i$g the first meeting of the, two highest Pacific military ieaaers ttie swilt completion I Britain Pats Tight Ban On Oversea Travel & Gemma Claim Skips mm l ' Forts Being Raided By ROBERT DOWSGn United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, April 28 . Britain, basefor the biggest ea tmd air-borne invasion 4. .ever planned, moved nearer Day; today with the im-Xjtlm'tt im-Xjtlm'tt a ban on all travel I overseas and continuing Ger u , jnan air raids on what Nazi m broadcasts said were ships mass ing: in English ports. some oo.wu.uuu persons in tne ritish Isles virtually were quar antined from the rest of the world at midnight last night, when au out a nanoiui airecuy involved in-volved in preparation for the in vasion were forbidden to leave " the country. Their only link with the out Side world was tight-censored communications , and ships. 'and planes heavy with military cargo . and soldiers moving toward the point from which they will pour across the water into western Europe, xne Dan on travel aoroaa was announcea ncariy a wee am ou v": those who previously had received C xit permits were permitted to leave up until midnight last night. enceiorui, oniy inp8e invpiveu on the most urgent government . business which cannot be post-; post-; poned will be allowed to go over-seas. over-seas. Foreign diplomats, wtth the- exception ex-ception of those from the United States and Russia, previously had been forbidden to leave th country, coun-try, . send diplomatic pouches t' communicate- WitH the govern-Vifeents govern-Vifeents in code. '. , The official Nazi DNB agency reported that German bombers in oWiderable strength" last night continued their attacks on "ene fmjH saiP concentrations, important targets arid harbor installations alomr the Enelish southwest y'coasf'V Evervl nieht during the past weekfc tRe dermans have senti planes scudding along the east, south, indWeat coasts. Red flares have been dropped, presumably tO help recmnaissance photogra- phers. " , Previous Nazi reports had as- arrted that th Allies were raass-' raass-' tasr in British Waters the largest concentration V shipping since Dunkeraue. nresumably for the Impending invasi War in Brtef Br TTVtTEn PRESS AIR WAR Allied fWta bomb horthern France and, 'Nazi radio I reports Paris area running p re-Invasion re-Invasion bombardment into 12th day at a pitch approachlrkr eight tons of explosives a minute , RUSSIA - Russian artillery - barrajre demoralizes G er in an ' . trooBs mAMinar for attack on - ttanlan front but confirmation of nemy reports of new Red of fen-: fen-: give In that area still lacking. PACIFIC Acceleration of Am .' erican amphibious march toward mmppincs ana cmna expecveo following meeting of two highest Pacific military leaders and completion com-pletion of Hollandia campaign. XTALY -Allied and German pap ; frols exchange increasingly heavy 'V stows or Anno oeacnneaa ana on rNDIA-r-Britlsh armored forces rock Japanese invaders of India with counterattack into mountains jfcwrounding Wcfliima, to Plan Campaign Airfields Occuoied by of the Hollandia campaign, and the growlngr range, of the AI- U. S. troops occupied the last of Hollandia's three airfields Wednesday, to conclude a rapid five-day campaign! and Allied bombers already were using the bases in Dutch New Guinea, only 1,200 miles from the Philippines As a result, the next major blows may come simultaneously with the Allied invasion of western west-ern Europe. The : official announcement of the first meetinari of the' War be tween Adm. Chester W. Nimitz and Gen. Douglas MacArthur at the latr's headquarters said they which indicated they intend to In tensify the Pacific campaign to obtain their objectives , the Philionlries for MacArthur and the China coast for Nlmitx In the New Guinea .campaign, Australian trooDS captured Alex- iahafen. . eicrht miles north of Madansr. and Sek island off shore at the eastern end of New Guinea, Allied bombers followed up the ground victories with, new raids east., west and north of the Hoi? iandia area, in th Soron area. 760 miles northwest of Hollandia, heavy members hit Jefroan alrdrosc, hn ir uatrols destroyed small Japanese cargo vessel, disabled dis-abled another and sank 10 troop-filled troop-filled barges. , ' East of the new invasion points, escorted attack planes dropped 60 tons of bombs on the Wewak area and air patrols sank a coastal coast-al vessel on the Sepik river. Combat Patrols Trade Bloys At Anzio Beachead BY REYNOLDS PACKARD ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. NAPLES, April 28 (ttEfc-AlUed and German combat patrols trad ed increasingly heavy blows on the Anzio beach head and on tne Adri atic coastal front yesterday, a commounlcme disclosed today. while bad weather grounded most of the Anglo-American air forces for the Second successive day. Tank-led 5th army skirmishes struck out against the Nazi beachhead beach-head lines three miles southwest of Cisterna, knifing deep into the enemy positions before withdraw- in r with a half-dozen prisoners. A second patrol successfully cleared the enemy from a Torwara area four miles northwest of LittorlaJ but a third raid launched by an Allied platoon 2H miles northeast of Carano was repulsed by heavy German mortar and shellfire. Nazi patrols attempted two counterblows south of Cisterna and In ;the Cafano sector, but both were broken up by Allied artillery and rifle fire. On the Adriatic front, h Germans Ger-mans hurled two relatively strong attacks against the. Allied lines near Ortonta and Tolls, 4 tt miles inland .The Nazis threw about two platoons into each assault, but failed to break through the Al lied defenses. A third enemy force of unknown strength Infiltrated the British positions north of Crecchio - but was driven .back by a determined counterattack The Cassino sector of the main 5th army front generally1 remain ed quiet, apart from a brief exchange ex-change of fire between Nazi tanks and Allied artillery three miles southwest of the town. Company; Union Conference Fails isemove iinne inreai rrom urei t BAul lLKJS 11 X, . A.pm 9 riE A lengthy conference between be-tween company and union repre mm m m Mmm m mmm immmm m - sentatives today had failed to remove, re-move, the threat of a strike late next month on the Salt Lake A Utah-or Orem-railroad O. A. Rowan,- international rep- resentative of the AFL Amalgamated Amalga-mated Association of Street Electrical Elec-trical Railroad and Motorcoach union which has called the strike to take effect, at the end of a SO- Paris tMed isS& Ma&uwer MDmetMan i By Allies In Massive Raid Pre-Invasion Bombardment Bombard-ment Goes Into Its -12th Straight Day By PHttJP AULT LONDON, April 2 - Allied air fleets bombed France, including, Nazi broad casts said, the Pans area, to day, to run . the pre-invasion bombardment of Europe into its 12th straight day at pitch now; approaching 500 tons or explosives an hour, or eight tons a ininute. 1 Striking in the wake of migmy tinusn mgnt assault nn Germany, France and Belgium, the daylight raiders swarmed out across the English channel and straits of Dover despite heavy clouds that in earlier ; months would have grounded them. Marauder medium bombers of the 9th U S. air force, l esborted and - covered by RAF arid Allfed fighters, led the daylight parade with an attack on an airfield in northern France; followed by Fly ing Fortresses that raided another airdrome at Avord, 130 miles south of Paris. Fortress crews said they saw no enemy- fighters, though they eh countered heavy antiaircraft fire. Thunderbolt and Mustang fight ers escorted the Fortresses, while Lightning fighter-bombers attack ea another unidentified airdrome in France. The Nazi-controlled Paris radio reported Allied air, attacks on "numerous localities in northern France and certain objectives in the .Paris -region." With the . tonnageA of bombs dropped on Axis Europe I totalling 11,000 to 12,000 in7 the 24-hour period ended early this morning, the Allied air offensive appeared to have reachedthe scale which Prime Minister Churchjll predicted only two months ago would be "beyond the dimensions of anything any-thing yet employed or indeed imagined. Up to 1,000 RAF bombers participated par-ticipated in a four-pronged assault last night bringing to perhaps 6,-000 6,-000 the dumber of Allied planes that had battered Germany's Atlantic At-lantic i&all and (ear areas in the 2,4-hour period. j -: Hundreds of four-engined Lan-casters Lan-casters making up the bulk of the huge fleet turned Friedrtchshaf en. site of aircraft and radar plants on the shore of I ake Constance in southwest Germany, - into a burning fire visible for 100 miles. Reports from the' Swiss-Ger man frontier said the raid was unprecedented in fury with all Frledrichshafen appearing to be eneulfed in a "sinsrle sea of flame. ' The attack lasted an hour, during which terrific ex plosions shook buildings on the Swiss shore of Lake Constance Japanese Capture Three New Points In Chinese Drfve CHUNGKING. April 28 (HE) Japanese forces in Northern Hon- an Province have followed up their capture of Mlhsien by tak ing- three -other points- in their drive to clear the north - south Peiping-Hankow railway and the east-west Lung-Hal . railway, a Chinese military spokesman dis closed today. The Japanese, reinforced by 10, 000 men for a total now of ap- prolmately 70,000 in the area, have taken Chenghsieni Juncture of the two railways, a point bitterly, bit-terly, contested during s the nine days of the Japanese offensive, the spokesman admitted. The enemy also has taken Sln- cheng, on the Peiping-Hankow rauwway so rmies souui ox Chenghaien, and7 west ; of the previously captured Mi&sien. . The- third point was ; described by the spokesman as having onl "paruauy r alien. ' it was Huiao Pass, gateway to Loyang, oh tne Lunghai railway 70 miles west of cnengnsien. ; day period, , said th company to formed him it c ld ' not afford RMlMilan , ttfaata fAAMaaaa a vj' tvv 4kvvcwa The union .charges the company's' new manager repudiated a J previous contract. j-1 - nowan said the next move would be up to the railroad, n Hnterurban mteruroan serving communities between Salt Lake City land Pay-son. Pay-son. Salt , Lake A Utah officials have said they would leave the dispute np to mediators- provided Dy me national railway labor act aenat Road ; Heirt Attack at f Age Of 70 . 'STATES J ' : Jl -.1 1 1 . . W "f i i -r-jr aniiinrvinn i . - .-- i VI- 3 BAHAMAS '? Cj. s Atlantic 6ceri .' jy pS" Canal ; w,Tflnldad f t VjvveiNI?t6;A 'Q Map above- shows locution of the eight Atlantic bases, now urider 99-year lease from Great Britain, -whose acquisition in perpetuity was recommended to the. House Naval Affairs Committee by Representatives F. Edward Herbert, Louisiana; W. Sterling Cole, New York, and William E. Hess, Ohio, three-man sub-committee. : as Dewey Calls For U. S. Collaboration Following the Var NEW YORK. April 28 UJ - GoV. Thomas E. Dewey of New Tork, calling for creation of a peace structure -'backed by ade quate force to" prevent . future wars," proposed today that the United States, Great! Britain, Russia, Rus-sia, and China continue collaboration collabora-tion after the war. -' - "No -initial -fneavores against Germany and Japan, however drastic, will have permanent value unless they fall within the setting of a durable cohesion between, Great Britain and ourselves, together. to-gether. I hope, with Russia and China," he said. "Germany ami Japan must not only be utterly defeated and com pletely disarmed, but they must not be left m a post-war. environment environ-ment which might enable them to maneuver as a balance of power." Dawey's ' statements, made at the annual dinner of the bureau of advertising of. the American Newspaper Publishers' association last night, were his first expression expres-sion on foreign policy since the Republican conference at Mack inac Island, last year when he advocated a British-U. S. alliance. He said Secretary of State Cor-dell Cor-dell Hull's outline ' of post-war collaboration on April 9 deserved respect, but failed to "relieve the waSConcem , and uncertainty our pep- ple feel. Ickes Charges LaGuardia, Bricher Yith Showing Racial Discrimination WASHINGTON. April 28 Wto Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickcs feels that Mayor F. i. LaGuardia La-Guardia of New York and Govs. John W. Brlcker of Ohio and Walter Wal-ter Edge of New Jersey have manifested man-ifested racial discrimination in making statements 'ominously out of tune with precepts of democracy." ' , Branding the trio7 as a "strange fife and drum corps" Ickes last night issued a statement replying j.t , . i shuffle in Denmark HOLM April 28 CUE German7 officials were believed in some quarterstoday to have sealed seal-ed off -Denmark in order to reshuffle re-shuffle theif anti-invasion dispositions dispo-sitions after Allied and under ground intelligence had searched t the' details of the Nazi de- enses. Responsible sources in South Swederi speculated that German occupation authorities feared their position in' Denmark would be dangerously vulnerable in case of an invasion while the Allies-had & clear layout of the Nazi strength in troops and material as well as Lwhere they were situated. The teener was growing mat it the Germans actually were making mak-ing targe scale- changes in military mili-tary ; dispositions and reinforce-ing reinforce-ing them, the moves were of a defensive de-fensive rather than offensive nature! na-ture! ' - 15 MEET DEATH IN NAVY FIRE Fifteen civilian workers Vt-erel listed as dead toaay ana zo outers as injured a result of a' fire which swept through the hold of a naval vessel! at the Norfolk navy yard last night.. - . Re A, HIIUIIIslIUll Seeks Dissolution Of Temporary Injunction Restraining Officials By JAYNE MILLER' United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, April 28 Counsel for, Montgomery Ward and Company went to Federal court today to seek dissolution of a' temporary injunction restraining company com-pany officers from interfering interfer-ing with the government's operation of the mail order firm's Chicago properties; ' The company, in seeking to dis splve the injunction obtained by Atty. Gen.. Francis Biddlc at a special court session last night, said the government's action n taking over the plant wals a violation vio-lation of the! United States constitution. con-stitution. ' ' , The petition claimed that the government imd not, shown that Montgomery Ward was a producer pro-ducer bf war goods and therefore had no right to take, over the Chicago Chi-cago properties for failure to abide by a war labor hoard order. After hearing arguments pre sented by Ward's counsel. Judge William H. Holly said he wanted further time to study the case and announced he would hold another an-other hearing Monday. If there are no. objections at 'that time, he will rule at 2 p. m. Tuesday on whethexlaiiUsw.thft. As the company moved into court, Undersecretary of Com merce Wayne C, Taylor, operator of- the plant for the government,, reaffirmed instructions to soldiers patrolling the plant that they should prevent Sewell Avery, chairman of the board and head of the firm, from entering the building except -for. the annual stockholders meeting this morning. morn-ing. He said the same order should apply to Clement Ryan,i who became president of the fimi recently when Avery dropped tha.t title. - ' Ryan arrived at the mall order or-der firm's offices a few minutes before the Stockholders' meeting, and went - directly to the room whero the meeting. ws being held. Avery did not; appear. After, a perfunctory session which v. lasted only three minutes, the Stockholders adjourned the meeting until noon at the' Black- stone hotel. ' . ; to- their opposition to any relocation reloca-tion of Japanese-Americans in the east. . Of all, people, Ickes said, LaGuardia La-Guardia was "carrying the flag and must be shocked and disturbed disturb-ed to find the drummer boy from NeW Jersey on his left and the f ifer frim Ohio flanking him. on the right." ' -. LaGuardia was reported yesterday yester-day to have protested against relocating re-locating Japanese-Americans 5n New -York City on , eecurity grounds. Asserting that the mayor was protesting on the theory! that the evacuees were dangerous and subversive, Ickes, said then was not a single "proven case of sabotage sabo-tage on the part of a Japanese-American Japanese-American since the war -began--not even in Hawaii." He said none of the 800 evacuees in New York City had caused the, slightest trouble nor intended to do so. Ickes charged that Bricker, "in trying to further his (Republican I presidential aspirations,", had told a west coast audience mat tne war relocation authority, under Ickes' jurisdiction was releasing disloyal evacuees and that the west coast communities should be permitted to decide whether the Japanese-Americans Japanese-Americans should be permitted to return ter the war; 5P- Wholesale Abortion DENVER, April 28 OE The district attorney's ; office tody announced the uncovering of What was termed a "wholesale abortion ring" in Denver, and the subsequent subse-quent arrest for investigation of two doctors of medicine and two chiropractors. The four men one of them a former state senator were arrest ed late yesterday as Denver and suburban authorities staged, a series of raids. At the tune of Greaf National Service Career Ends I i i IW'M ill i -1. : A c m- ' . SECRETARY OF THE Workers Heeded In Next Six Months SALT. LAKE CITY, April 28 (UJB) Joseph S Mayer, state war manpower commission director, today to-day told a group of key Utah civic and governmental leaders that $7,800 new workers would be needed is the state during the next six months if Utah industries are to be kept at the full strength necessary to insure their postwar operation. J Mayer, speaking at a special conference, said that full staffing of the "basic heavy Industries" is necessary "for the war effort and as a means of livelihood for Utah citizens after the war." He emphasized em-phasized particularly the 1 necessity neces-sity of tull operation of the Geneva Ge-neva Steel plant, where a shortage of skilled and unskilled workers already is .preventing full-scale, production " French Lessons For Doughboys LONDON, April 28 (HE) -The U. S. army newspaper, flrank" is publishing a series of French lessons for the doughboys, doubt less in anticipation of Some impending im-pending military operation, and to-' day's lesson reached the acme' of practicality. "The ones youve -been waiting for with a few unprintable exceptions ex-ceptions which you'll pick tip anyway,-', was tho headline over a lst of practical phrases. The phrases were u "I would like a drink." "Have you-got a friend?" "You've got nice eyes," "Are you married?'' "Why not?" "My wife doesn't understond me." . . . ,r, - - nvmsn Wivm SINK GERMAN SHIP i CAIRO, ,Afcril 28 tLRABritish. war-planes sank a German supply ship and probably "destroyed a second th a series of sweeps over the Aegean Sea area Wednesday, a communique said today. One enemy vessel was Inter- cepted off the west coast of Greece arid, left listing heavily attdsettUng, and another was hit and-gunk in the Gulf of Laconta. Ring Uncovered in one of. the . ram m -Arapahoe, county, an abortion j was" in progress, pro-gress, Ray Humphreys, chief investigator in-vestigator for the district attorney's attor-ney's office ih Denver, announced. Hf added that $1,000 in large denomination de-nomination -bills was found in one of tne cniropractors pockets. Tne en airesxea are m, George A. Glenn, Denver physician and a former state senator, and Julius A. Wolf,. The chiropractors are. Jaw H. Montgomery and C. Hi Utah AM -i&tit NAVY FRANK KNOX Government Files, Brief Against 9 Cult Defendants SALT LAKE CITY, April, 28 (KE) The U. Si government charged charg-ed today that nine' members of the polygamy-practicng fundamental-' ist sect "apparently justify themselves them-selves in violating any law which interferes with their licentious desires and Immoral practices by saying that; their actions - are prompted ofGod 'and not by man." irt a brief filed, in the white slavery and kidnaping cases of nine members of the sect, Assistant Assis-tant U. S. Attorney John S. Boy-den Boy-den made the charge while answering ans-wering defense claims that practice prac-tice of plural marriage by the cult was in keeping with constitutional constitu-tional guarantees of religious freedom, i The 27 -page gbveernment brief wjSs lodged with the district court qierk here for transmission to district Judge T. Blake kennedy of Cheyenne, . Wyo., . who will try iu .d a ...,itL...a' il. . fit of jury. Kennedy win beg working toward his .verdict fter he receives a cult rebuttal, due within five days. , In hist lengthy paper, Boyden denied that the 1848 treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which Mexi co ceaed most or tne area now occupied by the Western states to the United States,, gave present residents any privileges different rrom.uiose or omer American citizens. citi-zens. ' . - " .'..! i ' , He pointed out that the' original Mormon settlers of the valley -ol the Great Salt Lake, while at odds with the government because of tneir persecution m Missouri and Illinois, had sworn allegiance to the United States and- had furnished furn-ished : the Mormon battalion ' for. the Mexican war . Boyden Ignored most of the defense ' arguments ; supporting polygamy as such, although he neted that in his opinion "the present pres-ent practice of polygamy is1 a malignant mal-ignant ewil which? corrodes the moral standards of a civilized community." com-munity." . Live In Chicken Coop "We object to7 the manner 'in which the defense counsel," the government 7brief said, "now ;lry to paint a picture, independent' of the evidence, 'of the virtues -of plural marriage, the happy homes the beauiful children and other circumstances drawn from the ttimmi Th Denver, Colorado Fulton, both of whom gave addresses ad-dresses in Arapahoe county. The district attorney's office said it had evidence1, gained from an investigation which had been under way several i weeks, showing show-ing that a; large-scale abortion ring had been in operation - for sevenu , .months in the . Denver ares. Fees sometimes rans as high as $250, , with clients solicited in Denver and the operations . performed per-formed la the suburbs Fbimer SoldiecHelpJ To Build U. S. Fleet into World's Largest K : - --.." - , e . . :. n " WASHINGTON. April 28 u.$--Secretary of Navy Frank Knox a former, soldier who helped build the U. S. fleet into the greatest ' floating force tne Tvorld ' has ever I Known, . aiea toaay as zoo? time of his country's srreat est-battle approached. He was 70. Knox, Boston-born Republican'. ; J publisher serving in a Democratic V administration, died of m heart malady which struck him on Sunv . -day in Manchester, - N. H.. where he had gone to attend' the funeral - oi a rormer Dusmess partner, j. Ai. , Muehling. , V: On his return to Washington. his physician ordered him to bedf v' at nis nome here, on Tuesday nas"s Buffered another and worse heart. ' attack. The secretary's death occurred at. 1:08 p. m. EWT. The announce- - ment was-made by acting Eecre. . tary of the Navy James V. For- j restal. - In solemn tones, Forrestalmada v the annoiinppmpnt nvr th Am- that all employes might know. He- said that "with regret" he had to tell them the news. Knpxs death also was announcf. ed toj all naval personnel establishments estab-lishments ashore and afloat , all over the world in' a dispatch 'sign? ed Jy Forrestal. i Forrestal directed that the , colors col-ors be displayed at half-mast on uaiunenva 01 ine navy uniu srmsec on tne aay or puriai, wnicmwuv be announced titter He also di- : rected that, to the extent permit , ted by war operations,; special memorial services be conducted oil- ail auLii uytiaLC ua. - .. .ir "Because i the nation is at war, -the' firing of salutes and the. wearing of mourning badges shalt-be shalt-be dispensed with' the dispatch said. ' It was the third time in KOnx'S adult life that he had suffered art. illness which, forced ' him to bed. - The graylty of his condition was) not. however, immedlatelv mada public by the naVy. The navy yiV terday said merely that he was ; suffering from a gastro-tntestlnat upset complicated by dizziness. At the time of Knox's deaUt-the deaUt-the navy-r-aiready capable of as . sembling 1,000-piane assault forces , against the Japanese was steadl- ly 'building up toward the ell mactic battles of the Pacific and , the invasion of western Eurofye.-; v It was believed that the man Knox selected as his imdersecre-tary, imdersecre-tary, Forrestal, would continue-as - acting secretary, at least until - 1: hpilf RrffMVAC IICIlk' llWVVlTVJ Coveted Navy In recognition of, services performed per-formed as construction superintendent superin-tendent of naval installations at Midway, Marvin, B. Sheik of. trovo, project manager for thai, Columbia-Steel company at the! GenevaJ-plant, has been awarded I the meritorious cmuan awara and emblem by the United States", Navy. , - ' (f ' The award, authorised by Z 8.x Combs, rear admiral. U. 8. Navy,)', acting chief- of the bureau ofi yards - and docks, Was bestowed : -upon Mr. Sheik "as recognition. of the excellent services rendered over and beyond those normally required in connection with your' duties in the construction pro gram of this bureau," the citation, stated. - "The; chief of the bureau. ecaKj standing performance, and loyal"- ty, ana expresses ms appreciation-of appreciation-of the example you have set for 4 your fellow workers' in furthering the prosecution of the warden the vital construction front." , J a group of contractors engaged jt4 Pacific naval air base construction and spent 18 monthsat ;MiSwsy. and remained nearly thre, months ' after the Japs struck at Pearl Harbor. ' Enemy attempts to taks -j Midway proved A dismsX failure. v principally because of the heavy aerense installations on the island is-land under ifr. Sheik's direction.' Mr. Eheik cams to Geneva' as project manager off , the , Utah-Pomeroy-Morrison company wiore -than two years ago when the first ground was broken for ths hugi 200XK)aooo project About ' a year ago It became t project . maiiager for the Cplumbla - Steel r company in charge cf : construo-A tl6a- at OCaeva. i' ' V -2 -y v 4, i n . 4 r 7 ; V1, 1 1 '. . '- |