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Show CLEARING V TEMPERATURES ! tonight and Wednesday. Temper atures 15 to z5 Wednesday morn Inc exeept above freezing lm Utah's Dixie. sutloa ' MaaMlaSUUoa Max Mia It 3t;8n rran. SS 4 S SS Lot Angeles C3 41 St 34Utt Vaga 8 3J 4 J Denver ... 3S 3? 3t lgiChleaga ... 33 It 2 JtiNew Vark 4 tl 64 33 Atlanta .. f 37 alt Laka . odc .... Balia . . . Butta Partland . . , Statu . PROVO. UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, TUESDAY, SIXTY-FIRST YEAR, NO. 186 FEBRUARY 18, 1947 - PRICE; FIVE-CENTS 9 Compan ies Freight Rate Utahns Asked To Back Freight Cut With Telegrams To ICC SuDDorters of Utah's great Geneva Steel plant today suddenly sud-denly awoke to the fact that they face a bitter fight to retain re-tain the newly granted lowered low-ered freight rates for the plant, when word was received receiv-ed that a total of eight steel companies and a Pacific northwest north-west merchants'- association have filed protests against the rates with the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington, D. C. Clayton Jenkins, manager of the Provo chamber of commerce, immediately began a counter-of-fensive In the form of a letter.and telegram barrage in support of the rates to the ICC, urging that everyone, from private citizens to any type and size of an organiza- ion immediately begin flooding he ICC with a campaign in defense de-fense of the rates; A protest from Henry J. Kaiser, Kais-er, filed yesterday, plus similar filings from perhaps two or three other companies were fully expected ex-pected by Geneva supporters; but the protest movement 'today had snowballed into alarming proportions propor-tions with a total of eight of the nation's leading steel companies in the opposition ranks. . Companies which have protested protest-ed besides Kaiser include the powerful Bethlehem Steel corporation corpor-ation of Pennsylvania a: d its subsidiary, sub-sidiary, the Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel corporation; the equally powerful Jones and Laughlin Steel corporation, the nationally-known Republic Steel corporation, Sheffield Steel company, com-pany, Colorado Fuel and Iron company, and the powerful eastern east-ern Weirton Steel corporation. Benjamin F. Fairless, president of United States Steel corporation, corpora-tion, today issued the following statement: "Any reduction in the present freight rate on the shipment ofj steel by rail from Geneva, Utah, id the west coast will benefit a customer of Geneva Steel company com-pany on the Pacific coast to the extent of such reduction, and not Geneva Steel company, the U S subsidiary, which operates the former government steel mill at (Continued on Page Two) City Commission Moves to Start Dike at Airport -Working through- a mass oi business that ranged from an im portant decision on the municipal airport to a zoning protest, the Provo city commission Monday night: 1. Appropriated $15,000 to match a similar, amount from the state, and enipowered Mayor Mark ' Anderson to sign a cooperative agreement with the state to throw up a partial dike within the next month and save the. Provo airport from flooding this spring. 2. Heard and promised to investigate in-vestigate a claim from five lower Grandview residents that a stor- age tank establishment erected by Don Ferguson on the east side of highway 91 just past the Provo Pro-vo river bridge is in violation of the city zoning ordinance. 3. Authorized the notice of intention in-tention for a special improvement improve-ment district to cjsver the Tanner lace, or Sixth. West ditch, with abutting property-owners to pay half and the city paying the remainder. re-mainder. 4. Reapointed John Memmer-ing Memmer-ing as golf .professional and manager man-ager of the municipal links for the 1947 season, on " the same terms as last year. S. Decided to have an impartial commission of five Provo realtors make damage appraisals along the easement sought for the city's new aqueduct through east bench orchards 6. Received and filed a petition asking that 25 acres be set aside as a city park in the upper north east part of the city. L. M. Winsor, 'state road commission com-mission engineer who will be in charge of the lake diking, said he hoped to actually be moving dirt on the job Jby Wednesday. He plans to engage up to 12 draglines to push the job through. The partial par-tial dike is designed to protect the airport this spring, until fed eral funds can ' be obtained to finish the job. Winsor told the Kity commission the actual dike could be built for about $65,000. A $100,000 project is planned if federal aid is secured, to include some needed roadways and pumping facilities. State Aeronuatics Director Joe Bergin plans to go to Washington Washing-ton soon to expedite the fund request. re-quest. A delegation of lower Grand- view residents, including Rex Griffiths. Reed Nuttal. Vera Nut-tal, Nut-tal, John Nicol and Dean Buck-ner, Buck-ner, told the commission that (Continued on Pace Two) Buck Geneva Green Meets Hostile Reaction In Strike-Control WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (U.R) AFL President William Green today to-day expressed blanket opposition to pending strike-control bills. But members of the senate labor la-bor committee told him to drop his "negative" attitude and cooperate, co-operate, because congress is going go-ing to do something at least about curbing jurisdictional strikes. Green ran into hostile committee commit-tee reaction when he opened labor's la-bor's attack on proposed labor reform re-form measures by denouncing all of ' them as threats to indusrial peace "and America's world -position. Sens. Allen J. Ellende'r, D.. La., and Irving Ives. R., N. Y., Pocatello Woman Killed; Companion Injured In Wreck POCATELLO. Ida., Feb. 18 (U.R) A young Pocatello woman was killed and her companion seriously seri-ously injured .early today when their car went out of control and overturned on a side road near the Ft. Hall Indian 'reservation north of Pocatello. Bannock county sheriff's deputies depu-ties identified the woman as Mrs. Lorna Winward, about 30. Her companion. Aurtin Green, 40, a Union Pacific railroad brakemrn, was taken to a Pocatello Poca-tello hospital where he was reported re-ported in ,"f air" condition. Both Were residents of the Portneuf fnousing project on the western outskirts of Pocatello. Officers said Mrs. Winward's husband hus-band could not be located. They did not know how long she had resided here. She was-an employe of the F. W. Woolworth store, Pocatello. Investigators said the jcar was traveling. aboutO miles... an hoar when it approached a bridge on the side road near the reservation bound- : ary. The machine went out of con- ,t , skidded 462 feet and went into a barrow pit. The front of the car struck the edge of the pit. Both occupants were thrown cut and the car, going end-over-end, landed on them. The accident apparently happened hap-pened shortly after midnight. At 6:45 a.m. today, L. B. Bailey. Tyhee rancher. noticed the wreck. Investigating, he found Mrs. Winward's body and "Green still underneath the overturned csr. i his fingernaiis and torn! his fing ers trying to dig through the din to get out of his steel trap but had not been successful. The rancher was unable to lift the car. He went for aid. He and another farmer, using a truck, finally lifted the ear and took Green to a hospital and Mrs Winward's body to a mortuary. It was the first fatal automobile automo-bile accident of the year in Ban-rock Ban-rock county. Morse Warns Of Industrial Chaos COLUMBUS. O.. Feb. 18 (U.R)--Almost complete industrial chaos will result if present proposed legislation to outlaw the closed shop in union contracts is passed by congress. Undersecretary of Labor David Morse predicted today. to-day. Morse said such- an . action by congress would wreck the coun-kfor tl-V'S Chances for One Of the most peaceful labor years in its dustrial history. He said restrictive legislation as a whole was ill advised at this time because it might interrupt a current labor trend toward collective col-lective bargaining "at the grass roots." "If nothing goes wrong, we are going to have one of the most peaceful years in the history of American industry1 he said. He cited recent agreements in the building trades, packing, steel and oil industries as indicative of "the way labor day." is thinking to-; Federal Grazing Fees To Be Increased 3 Cents Per Unit SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 18 (U.R) H. Byron Mock, regional administrator for the federal bureau of land management, confirmed, con-firmed, reports today that federal grazing fees are being raised three cents per "animal unit month." The fees are now five cents per unit. Mock said that the in crease to eight cents per unit is effective May 1. He explained that one unit is the amount of feed required for one beef animal per month with the acreage in-i Opp osing Bills .1 - told him it would be wise to work with congress because congressional congres-sional action on jurisdictional strikes is inevitable. Other congressional - developments: develop-ments: Budget the house rules committee com-mittee barred any attempt to alter al-ter the Republican-sponsored $31,500,000,000 budget ceiling when the' measure goes to the house floor Monday. This ceiling j represents a $6,000,000,000 cut in j President Truman's spending recommendations rec-ommendations for fiscal 1948. Thus, any change apparently will have to be made in the senate, where .there is bi-partisan opposition oppo-sition to such a big slash. Excise Taxes The house ways and means committee 'refused to accept senate amendments to a bill indefinitely extending wartime war-time excise taxes on furs, cosmetics, cos-metics, transportation tickets and other items. The senate amendment amend-ment would exempt from excise taxes fur-trimmed coats costing less than $150 and tickets purchased pur-chased in this country for foreign travel.. House and senate differences differ-ences tyill have to be ironed out in conference. Foreign Relations Secretary of State George C. Marshall told congress that this country's offer of a 40-year-old four-power pact for policing Germany still stands. He made the statement after privately pri-vately discussing with the house foreign affairs committee "every sore spot in the world." Lillenthal An admitted former for-mer Communist denied he wrote a letter boasting of Communist successes within the TVA while David E. Lilienthal was TVA chairman. Henry C. Hart, Jr., said he was the only TVA employe who attended a Communist meeting meet-ing at Chattanooga, Tenn. Op-( Op-( Continued on Pare Two) Allow Austria To Have An Army LONDON, Feb. 18 (U.R) The deputies of the Big Four foreign ministers agreed today that Austria Aus-tria should be allowed to have an army. The deputies reached no agreement agree-ment on the strength of the Austrian Aus-trian land forces, or whether Austria should be allowed to have an air force. They agreed that personnel not included in the Austrian army or air forces should not receive any form of military training. Austria should be prohibited from possessing, constructing or experimenting with any atomic weapons, the deputies agreed. The Austrians should be prohibited from possessing any weapons or means of mass destruction which might be evolved as a result of scientific research, the deputies dep-uties agreed. Fcodor Gusev of Russia proposed pro-posed that Austria1 be forbidden, jn addition to atomic weapons, "Other means of mass destruction." destruc-tion." He said a similar formula had been decided by the United Nations assembly Dec. 14. The United States and Great Britain objeoted on the grounds that the UN resolution had not yet defined the formula, and until un-til such a definition was evolved, it would be unwise to use that phrasa in the treaty. A decision on the incorporation of that particular phrase was left consideration by the foreign minicliira miuitins in "Mrtantwxr novt in-jrnonth. I '. Reciprocal Trade Hearing Scheduled WASHINGTON. Feb. 18 (U.R) ! The state department announced! today that a second series of re ciprocal trade agreement hear ings would open March 20. The hearings will cover about 20 new products added to the list on which lower tariff negotiations are to be carried on with 18 other nations. I volved varying in accordance with existing forage. Five sheep are the equivalent of one cow under these ratings. Mock said the order was issued Saturday but he did not know of it until he telephoned -Washington today after. Washington headquarters head-quarters had failed to respond to inquiries directed there yesterday. yester-day. The regional administrator, who has charge of Utah and Colorado grazing lands, said he (Continued en Page Two) Big 4 Deputies China Wants Right to Sell UNRRA" Goods Sensational Proposal' By Chinese Involves Sale To Black Market WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (U.R) China, the . United Press learned today, has ask ed the United States for per mission to sell $200,000,000 in UNRRA supplies to the Chinese black market in order to raise funds to bolster her tcllcring economic system. The request has been made by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shjek and rremier T. V. Soong who are leading the all-out fight to pre vent China's economy from crash ing under the centrifugal force of an unprecedented inflationary spiral. -China, it was estimated, , could raise nearly $500,000,-000 $500,000,-000 if permitted to sell the $300,000,000 in UNRRA sup-lies sup-lies In the black market. The sensational Chinese pro- posal requested that of the $240,000,000 in. agricultural pud '. i- Tm .a.,- r-v.s industrial good still due China to dump $200,900,000 into the oiacK marKet lor cash profits. The request is directly con trary td the basic provisions under un-der which . UNRRA aid is supplied sup-plied to China. These provisions limit the use of UNRRA supplies to the relief and rehabilitation of needy war victims.' Quarters close to UNRRA were said to have viewed the Chinese demand as "alarming" since it would divert the bulk of the aid still coming to China to purposes never intended by UNRRA principles. prin-ciples. One of the major objections, in the view of UNRRA officials, was the fact that by conservative estimates es-timates at least 60 per cent of all funds available to the Chinese government are being employed to prosecute the Nationalist war against the Chinese Communists. It was learned that the proposal was made by Chiang and Soong during a visit to Nanking last week-end by R. G. A. Jackson and Col. Fred Harris, high UNRRA UNR-RA officials who are touring China Chi-na with China Director .General Glen E. Edgerton. The request was relayed bv UNRRA to the state department at Washington According to reports, Chiang proposed that the funds which are due China for agricultural and rehabilitation be used to buy up cereal grains and cotton which would be sold by the government without restriction on the so-called "open market" a Chinese euphemism for the flourishing black market It was pointed out that if China Chi-na succeeded in raising $500,000,-'' 000 by this method she would have the equivalent of the $500,- 000,000 export-import bank loan which has been withheld fromine Pte were the last of 10 to her on the recommendation of Secretary of State George C. Marshall Mar-shall unless and until the Nationalist Nation-alist government sets its house in order. Russians Like American News MOSCOW, Feb. 18 (U.R) Reaction Reac-tion today td the first American Russian-language broadcasts ' to the Soviet Union showed that Russian "listeners liked the news best of all. The initial program of the daily hour-long broadcast beamed at Russia was generally regarded as favorable, according to reports from various localities received by American residents here. Reception was good, the reports re-ports said, - despite unfavorable atmospheric conditions last night at 9 p.m. when the program went on the air. . - ; The consensus of opinion was he average Russian with a two or three tube radio could hear and enjoy the broadcasts if he knew about them and tuned in. But the tproDability ; was that few had heard of the American project. There has' been no an nouncement in the Russian press. Hoover Studies Europe's Food Needs m , ' mm vf j- " 1 1 Former President Herbert Hoover, President Truman's special in vestigator for Continental relief cuss food situation, of Germany. Gen. Harper, assistant to Gen. Clay: Hoover, Governor Sewell, mil itary governor of Wurttemberg-Baden, Stuttgart. Signal Corps Radio Britain Wants UN to Find Albania Guilty In Lawless Mining of the Corfu Channel LAKE SUCCESS. N.Y.. Feb. 13 (U.R Grefct Britain called on the I United Nations Security Council find Albania guilty of the serious and sinister" crime o aowJng mines in the Corfu channel rot-the Adriatic withoutfthat all" the. .circutnstance toMrfeaTwidltfoiCTeir it thuac regard for life or international ed to the Albanian governmeht'ii fr r. tuvalvcimnael law. Giving vent to Britain's anger over the death ot H British seamen sea-men in Corfu miK explosions l&st Oct. 22, Sir Alexander Cadogan, Ca-dogan, British delegate, demanded demand-ed that the council make Albania Al-bania officials sit down with the British and negotiate a private settlement of the issue. He said the council should keep the dispute on its agenda to see that Albania complies. "Even small countries are not Byrd Flies Over South Pole To Drop UN Flags By II. D. QUIGG United Press Staff Corerspondent (For the combined Press) American' LITTLE AMERICA, Feb. 16 (U.R) The flags of the United Nations plummeted to the metallically-glistening snow at the bottom bot-tom of the world today as Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd flew again over the South Pole, climaxing 48 hours of the most spectacular exploration in history. Byrd and 11 other men, flying in two navy transport planes,, roared across the pole at exactly 5 a. m. Little America time (11 a. m. EST) at an altitude of 12.000 feet above sea leavel only 2,400 feet above the snow which forms the core of the great antarctic icecap. The two planes which crossed leave the Little America base in a virtual parade of exploration which began on the morning of Valentine's day. Never before in history have the frontiers of the unknown shrunk so rapidly. ; The 10 planes, flying in pairs, discovered and rnapped more unexplored un-explored territory than had ever before been covered in so short a time. They wrote into the maps two previously unknown mounr tain masses of major dimensions and other terrain . features. The total' effect of their effort is stilL' . . i 1 neing assessea, ana wu oe announced an-nounced later. Byrd's flight today took two navy planes 81 miles beyond the pole on a 12-and-a-half hour trip during which the two engined R4D transports averaged 130 M. P. H. for a total of 1,800 miles. The nolar fllaht went out of its Way to discover and make photo -maps ..of approximately.; 75,000 square mile 'Of hitherto unknown territory. , including ai leasi au new-mountains. v. s ; PARIS GOVERNMENT AGAINST WAGE BOOSTS PARIS, Feb. 18 (UJ?vThe government gov-ernment today stood firm against anv ecneral wage increase and equally firm for the strictest, price controls as me enppung- rara newspaper strike entered its fif th, day: " -"s'f'ir 'V 4. needs, arrives at Stuttgart to dis Shown (left to right) are Maj. and announcers from Radio from Acme-NEA. infallible and must obey the rules of civilization," Cadogan declared: He said Britain did - not want to seem to be "a large country trying to bully a small one" but straits between! the Greek island of Corfu, and the Albanian coast. "I -cannot produce actual eye witnesses of the mine-laying? the British delegate admitted, "but a consideration of certain circumstances circum-stances point inescapably to Albanian Al-banian responsibility." A representative of the Sovlet-criented Sovlet-criented Albanian government sat at one end of the council's horseshoe, horse-shoe, table as Cadogan laid Britain's Bri-tain's charges before the council and criticized the Albanian government gov-ernment for what he called "a blatant violation of the rules of conduct ... a crime against humanity." hu-manity." The Albanian, Ilysni Kapo. was admitted to the council without a vote to defend his country against the British charges. isaAsuj& vi una t is w nuiiaub Cadogan said the explosions vhicn damaged two British war- Miips in ii ie wunu straits, itjiuiig 44 and injuring 42, showed that a large mine field had been sown within a few hundred yards of Albanian territory "deliberately, lecently and secretly." . Cadogan parried all of Albania's Alba-nia's answers to early British protests, and specifically asked the Security Council to: 1. Rule that the mine field was laid "by the Albanian government govern-ment or with its connivance" without properly notifying other countries. 2. Order Albania and Britain to negotiate privately in an attempt at-tempt at settlement. Britain wants an apology from Albania and compensation for the loss of life and damages suffered. 3. Retain the dispute dh its agenda "until both parties certify cer-tify that it has been , settled to their satisfaction." Either would be permitted to revive ihe-case if private negotiations failed. 4. - Remind . all states whether members of the UN that it is in cumbent on them to sweep ori permit to be swept all parts of their territorial waters where there is reason . to suspect the presence of mines'.' V ' 7 Palestine Mandate Found Unworkable, Beyih Reveals LONDON, Feb. ; 18 r (U.R) Foreign For-eign Secretary. Ernest Bevin told the House of Commois today that Britainwill-submitnhe Palestine issue to the United Nations with the. -statement that . the .present mandate is : unworkable- - - "We do :not intend ourselves to recommend any particular solution," so-lution," Bevin said: -' , -. .- , . He said he ? regretted "there would be great difficulty in Pacing Pac-ing the issue .before the United Nations at the scheduled meeting of the General .Assembly in September Sep-tember ; . . ' r He appealed to the United Slates' and Other countries of the world: to help .the British reconcile recon-cile the problems of the Jews and Arabs in Palestine. "f ti Winston ' Churchill,- opposition leader,-who repeatedly has urged Two Locomotives, Five Cars From the v r Many Of The Injured Brought In Hospital Trains Reported In Critical Condition; Officials Fear Death Toll Will Increase . ALTOONA, Pa., Feb. 18 (U.R) The Pennsylvania Railroad's Rail-road's Red Arrow Express, speeding downhill through the AUegheney mountains an hour and six minutes behind schedule, plunged from the winding tracks today. At least 17 persons lost their lives. Seven additional bodies arrived here aboard a relief train shortly after noon. Ten arrived previously. The railroad reported that about 85 were injured when the two locomotives and five cars hurtled over a steep 90-foot embankment and ground into an awry, twisted wreckage. Three other cars toppled on their sides. Fear Higher Toll- Railroad officials feared the toll would rise. Rescue workers, using acetylene torches, cut through a maze of girders, jammed doors and broken compartments seeking dead and injured. Railroad officials said determination determ-ination of the cause of the derail ment must await completion of the rescue task and examination of wrecked equipment and ripped out rails. Many of the Injured," brought here . In . hospital trains, were. reported B-erit- enroute naval training station. The wreck occurred five miles west of famed Horseshoe curve. according to the railroad, when the two big steam locomotives leaped the track at. a bend. Ten cars of the 14-car crack train careened off the rails. Three sleepers,-a diner -and a baggage coach rolled down tie embankment embank-ment after the engines. . A combination passenger-baggage coach and a passenger coach toppled onto their sides along the winding roadbed. Three sleepers left the tracks but remained re-mained upright. Only four cars, including two sleepers, remained on the tracks. .The wreck occurred at 3:25 a.m. three hours and 24 minutes after the Red Arrow pulled out of Pittsburgh. Wreck and hospital trains were sent from Altoona, Conemaugh and Cresson.i Meanwhile, uninjured passengers pas-sengers and crewmen worked frantically to extricate the injured. They were sheltered Jn the upright coach from the sub-freezing weather, until the rescue trains arrived. u - Altoona's two hospitals filled rapidly as the. relief trains began bringing in the injured. Taxi cabs were used to supplement ambulances in hauling the hurt from the railroad station to the hospital. Nearly seven hours passed be fore railroad officials announced that 10 bodies had been recover ed. The . announcement identified only the three crewmen. They were: J. L. Parasock, Altoona, fireman fire-man of the first engine; M. .E. McArdle, of Scottdale, Pa., en gineman of the second locomo tive,-and R. K. Henry, of Derby, Pa- fireman of the second engine. The wreckage was strewn across three of the four- tracks- of the right - of - way hampering rescue efforts.4 Railroad officials (Continued an Fage Two the government to submit the 'issue 'is-sue to the United Nation unless the ; United States would, share Palestine responsibilities said: -Why if this policy i Is right today should "it - not have been announced- a year ago?" , - Bevin replied that:; "it". x Would have been a fatal policy for Great Britain' with all . the leadership she has done in the world . in all her ; history to have .gone to the. United. Nations .without attempting attempt-ing to -solve those differences.' I know the cost-' I, know: the difficulty diffi-culty but if we handle this well at the United Nations nd exercise exer-cise care - ahd v in .the . 'end the problems-of, the Arabs- and the Jews can be settled in some way after .2,000 years of conflict the twelve .months " will not have beeif wasted." v riling e Wafer Bill Debated In Utah Senate By UNITED PRESS A series of bills prepared by the legislative tax study committee and introduced in to the house were expected to take top spotlight in Utah's legislature- today.; - The Utah senate passed yesterday "on second reading; what well may be one of the most far-reaching bills of . this session the water and power board measure meas-ure introduced by Sen. Mitchell Melich, R., Grand. The senate, after debating the water measure also passed a series ser-ies of grand jury revamping bills. The senate also late in the day received the nomination of H. Fred Egan rs r.. publican member mem-ber of tl UiJi industrial commission com-mission to succeed O. A. Wiesley. Kna4 4i.l n 41. bill took up most of the day, and the final product varied widely from the original bUl which Melich introduced. Under the bill the senate ap- proved, a water board consisting consist-ing of 14 members -would be civ- en complete control over the development de-velopment of Utah's latent water, and power resources.. The board would be composed of one mem'? ber from each of seven water districts dis-tricts in the state; two each from the house and senate, and three appointed directly by Gov.- Herbert Her-bert B. Maw. The idea behind splitting up the'' appointments to the water and power hoard .was that it would give the state wider representation representa-tion on the board. U.S.pefehds Statement WASHINGTON. Feb. 18 (UJ0 The. United States today defended defend-ed as a frank statement of Under secretary of State Dean Acheson's observation .that Russian foreign policy "is ah aggressive and expanding ex-panding one." -j." The United States' position was contained in a formal note .from. Secretary -of -State .' .George C Marshall to Russian foreign min ister' V.- M- Molotov. ; , MolotoV had.-, protested . that Acheson was guilty of "slander in -making the statement under questioning before a senate com mittee. U . ; ..v.. v. - i "You characterize the content of his statement - as' a ' rude slander and hostile to the Soviet Union,'" Marshall's note to Molotov said Under our standards a- re- strained comment on a matter of oublie Dolicv is not ; a slander. Therefore, I know that on second thought you wiu not atuiouie hostility to, frankness." - c - The note ; was - dispatcnea v Moscow yesterday and. was made public today, following lis oeuv-ery oeuv-ery to Molotov bjr the U S." embassy em-bassy there. Z v''" ; -- MarshaU said that Acheson's expression was made In response to - questioning by - Sen. i Kenneth McKelliri Tenn." He pointed out in his'renly to Molotov that Acheson's statement "was ,not volunteered." . , ... " - " -i- Tracks ByAcheson |