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Show .... HERALD INDEX Page Central Utah News Obituaries Business Page MOSTLY CLEAR 2-- 7 2 Rising- - 8 Sports Section Women's News, . Features. Editorial Page Church and School News Daily Comics Page Classified Ads . . .... 13-1- 6 17-2- 0 R3. day in Provo 21 22-2- temperatures. Hifh today Maximum temperature Frilowest Saturday 68, morning; 47. 3 24 26-2-9 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, JUNE 23, 1957 VOL. 35, NO. 5 wra Jf 1 PRICE TEN CENTS 4 v. " t"Jfk ? - 3 I "Vj dm. House gest hurdle at the moment" was arranging a timetable for commitsponsors Hells Canyon bill tried to change tee action on it. The bill passed the Senate by a committee schedules Saturday to 6 vote Friday and next will be on vote House a the for way pave considered bill before Congress adjourns the by a House Interior subcommittee headed by Rep. for the summer. Al a , Ullman spon- Wayne N. A spin all (D., Colo.). Rep. A spin all said the first open dates sor of the plan to authorize construction of a "high" dam at Hells on his crowded calendar are July Canyon on the Snake River in the 18 and 19. But he said he would Pacific Northwest, said the "big "trade" with sponsors of other WASHINGTON the of (UP) Senate-approv- ed 45-3- D-O- re. it is likely to be vetoed by Presibills for earlier dates if he can. Ullman said the July 9 dates dent Eisenhower. would "virtually eliminate" The measure would authorize 500 chances of a House vote this ses- million dollars to build one high sion and that the sponsors were dam in the canyon. The administrying to arrange earlier hearings. tration already has authorized Ida"We're certainly going to do ho Power Co. to build three low dams. everything possible to get a vote this session," he added. A major factor in Senate debate Administration leaders pledged on the bill was a rapid tax writea bitter fight to head off the bill. off benefit granted Idaho Power And even if it does get through Co., and then cancelled by the 18-1- ed Troops on Full Alert . sv r? x k vf .N o:rjt,T C I . 4. "W ROK Cancels All Military Leaves - V r , A A t ! , y WHERE THREE DIED Ross Bryant, 14, rigrht, an eyewitness to the crash of a Capital Airline DC-- 3 training plane that killed all three aboard, tells Montgomery County (Maryland) policeman John L. Shaw, Jr., what happened. (UP Telephoto) The U.S. Air (UP) Force will fly a group of late-modjet fighter planes from Japan to South Korea early this week to begin the modernization of United Nations forces arms on the divided peninsula, it was reported Satur- TOKYO el Girard Appeal Upsets Supreme Court Recess an international dispute and U.S. By CHARLOTTE MOULTON feel it jeopardizes rela officials United Press Staff Correspondent tions with a number of alues. WASHINGTON (UP) The SuIt arose after Army Specialist preme Court today underlined the 3c William S. Girard killed a Japimportance the United States anese woman as she was scavengplaces on the Girard case by post- ing for scrap metal on an Army poning Its recess to settle the legal firing range - Japan. langle arising from it. Attorneys will press appeals The court, which has not sat in filed by both Girard and the govJuly during recent times, set July ernment from last Tuesday's deciS for hearings in the case. sion by Federal District Judge Extension of the court term, alJoseph C. McGarraghy. Tnat rulready one of the longest in recent ing barred a Japanese trial for of I ! years, disrupted vacation plans most of the justices. Justice William O. Douglas, a veteran summer traveler, already has left for Europe and his schedule calls for him to be heading for the JChyber Pass and Afghanistan in a station wagon on July 8. Girard. Court aides said Douglas will be notified of the decision to hear the appeals. But it was not known whether he will cancel his trip. Plans of Chief Justice Earl Warren and Justice Tom C. Clark to attend an American Bar Assn. Touches Off Dispute off touched case has The Girard meeting in London July 0 will (Continued on Page Four) Midwest Hit By Severe Informed sources said the reinforcements probably will include and at least a of latest model the wing of the fighter that clobbered RusBy UNITED PRESS sia's MIGs during the Korean war. The latest tanks, field guns and Black tornado columns spiraled across the Midwest Friday, touch- bazookas also will be shipped soon to South Korea, along with new ing at Nebraska and Kansas, while severe windstorms and heavy rifles to replace the wornout weaprains did their share of damage ons now being used by U.S. forces in the U.N. command there, these to the punished area. sources said. The move is the reAt least one person was killed sult of the U.N. command's deciwhen a tornado cut into the north- sion to the Korean armisern part of Hutchinson, Kan., tice ban scrap on sending new weapons tearing down power lines, and ig- into Korea. niting a series of fires. Winds It could not be determined im98 miles hour per reaching ripped whether atomic rockets th roof off a building and sent mediately or artillery would be included in it crashing into the home of the allied buildup. Windstorms all-weath- er F-86- Steven Chlentocs, 35. Chlentocs was killed and his son Ted, 5, taken to a hospital. Highways in north central Kansas were barricaded with fallen trees as severe thunderstorms blew through the area. Meanwhile, tornado alerts and high winds dominated weather reports in Oklahoma, southwestern central Iowa, northwest Mis souri anoTnosCpf eastern Kansas. An unconfirmedtwister caused some damage1 at Glencoe, Minn., while about an inch of rain fell a over area including FT. SILL, Okla. (UP) A mortar shell exploded in a company Omaha and Lincoln, Neb., Sioux of ground forces at a public firing City, la., Redwood Falls and on Page Four) demonstration here Saturday. Four men died and 14 others were injured in the shower of hot steel. An estimated 300 soldiers and Fire Threatens civilians viewed the accident from bleacher seats about a mile from Atomic Installation the blast scene. LOS ALAMOS, N.M. (UP) All of the injured were memMore than 300 B 522nd sought bers of Company of the head-ofa blaze sweeping over to f solInfantry Battalion. The foot diers were making a mock attack 400 acres near the Los Alamos on Adam's Hill under cover of ar- atomic installation. The atomic installation was not tillery and mortar fire when the shell exploded among the men, in- threatened nor were ranches or towns. stead of ahead of them. The mishap occurred on the Fort However, U.S. Forest Service ofSill east range in the Wichita ficials said the fire might not be controlled until tonight or Sunday. 24-3- Clyde Meets With Fellow State Chiefs 4 Killed In Shell Blast far-flun- g Min-(Continu- ed Va. WILLIAMSBURG. (UP) Utah's big Gov. George D. Clyde met with fellow state chiefs here today at the opening of the annual national governors conference. Clyde arrived Saturday aboard a Utah National Guard plane, accompanied by his wife, daughter Mary Ann, and Maj. Gen. Maxwell E. Rich, Utah adjutant general. They toured through the Governor's Palace and other historic buildings reconstructed here as a shrine to America's Colonial be- F-lO- fire-fighte- rs ginning. Following the conference, the Utah chief executive will meet with President ' Eisenhower and other governors at a White House luncheon on Thursday. After that, Clyde will spend two days as a guest of the Governor of North Carolina. He plans to tour projects of the Tennessee Valley Authority MANOR V ILLE , N.Y. (UP) a statement saying Kris had stood enroute home, arriving back in enwithBenny Hooper's doctor has by Benny during his Utah about July 5th, has bill for $1,500 for saving trapment and his hospital recuperdrawn the boy from death in ation "a considerable personal sac- a well. He acted at the recomjrifice" and had every right to rend Invites Ike mendation of the Suffolk County derabilL But it said that when medical society. a family cannot, pay, an adjustTo Minnesota Visit Dr. Joseph Kris agreed to can- ment should be made. "Dr. Kris made up the bill WASHINGTON (UP) Sen. Ed- cel all fees sought from Mr. and he was under a mistaken while invited Mrs. Benjamin Hooper for the proward J. Thye that a considerable President Eisenhower Saturday to fessional care he gave Benny. The impression of money had been colamount spend this year's vacation in Min- agreement was reached at a meet- lected for Benny and earmarked nesota. ing with the parents and the memedical for purposes," said Dr. "The enthusiasm among Minne- diation committee of the medical Louis F. chairman of the Garoen, sota ns for such a vacation visit society in Bay Shore, N.Y. A socommittee. mediation would equal the tremendous recep- ciety spokesman said "the whole Garten said a review of the tion you have received in Minne- thing was due to a misunderstandsota during your visits in past ing." Hooper's financial position by the The mediation eommitte issued osnmiUee had convinced Kris that years," Thye wrot. Chinese Reds Fire Barrage On Quemoy TAIPEI, Formosa (UP) Chinese Commiffcdst coast artillery Saturday bombed the Nationalist offshore islands around Quemoy with 1,544 shells in the heaviest barrage in almost two years. A Nationalist central news agency dispatch from Quemoy, southern anchor of the offshore defense chain around Formosa, said the garrisons on Quemoy and the smaller islands around it have been placed on "general alert" for any possible Communist invasion. A defense minstry communique said the Red artillery fired 466 shells on Little Quemoy, Tafcan and Ertan before dawn Saturday. A second barrage later in the morning rained 1,068 rounds on the three islands which lie between Quemoy and the mainland. The defense ministry reported three men wounded in the shelling but made no mention of damage. ,7 Senator (R-Min- n.) no funds had been contributed for f , w3t I uc i At :ive8k .. r ' k i Bill Drawn In -- South Korea and Nationalist China, however, the decision was bailed as a morale-buildin-g on Page Four) ed U. S. to Withdraw Troops From Japan, Kishi Told Nixon Hits Foreign Aid in Korea under the allied decision By STEWART HENSLEY United Press Staff Correspondent to end the truce restrictions on a Korean build-uWASHINGTON (UP) The U.S. Some of the obsolescent air force First Cavalry division and a Maplanes in Korea will be brought to rine regimental combat team will Japan. The Korean build-u- p comprising 20,000 to 25,000men manin Air a Force net mean gain will pull out of Japan in "easy and a net loss in Korea in power instages" starting next month, Japan, sources here said. formed sources said Saturday. A Pentagon spokesman said he was decided in conThe pull-oferences this week between Presi- had no information on where the dent Eisenhower and Japanese approximately 15,000 Army combat Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi. troops and 8,000 Marines now The withdrawal of the ground based in Japan will go. The pull-ostarting next month troops will be conducted over a with this government's in line is to six of months. up period for "prompt" withAn official said the Air Force, agreement its of all drawal ground combat Navy and Army logistical forces forces from Japan as set forth in based in Japan are not affected - Kishi communiEisenhower the agreeby the Eisenhower-Kisque. ment announced Friday. announced after The But a temporary reduction in three agreement, between Eisenof talks days U.S. Air Force strength in Japan also and hower Kishi, provides for may occur simultaneously. Mod- 500 million dollars in U.S. aid to ernized U.S. fighter wings in Japan ir old bases Japan. will move back visit Kishi ended his four-da- y as a with breakfast Saturday FranTheodore of Chairman guest .) of the Senate cis Green Foreign Relations Committee and a luncheon speech to the Japanese-America- n Society before going to New York. Opponents p. Vice President Richard M. Nixon, at Mayflower n ceremonspeaking criticised ies, today budget cutters who say the nation cannot afford its foreign aid and defense programs. Legislation Planned To Overturn Effect of Supreme Court Ruling Goes to Congress Asked Saturday if the legislation would go to Congress woon. Hoover said "yes." Other sources said It wouid be next week. .The measure is intended to br pass so--c ailed Jenks decision. II was one of three recent court de- crees that set the Department o Justice back on its heels. Another handcuffed the FBI's drive to put second-strinCommunists behind the bars. A third upset contempt convictions of persons who refused to talk about past Communist associates. The Justice Department has obtained 108 convictions under th Smith Act on which the Supreme Court has now placed a new inter pretation. The law forbids advocacy and teaching of overthrow of the government by force. In freeing five California Communists and ordering new trials for nins others, the court said the government would have to produce mors prfyoi that the defendants were actually conspiring to overthrow the government, rather than advocat-i- n gan "abstract principle." g ut Nixon spoke before a crowd estimated at about 3,000. He made his speech a short distance from the anchored Mayflower and famed Plymouth Rock. "No price is too great to pay for freedom," Nixon said. The Vice President said the United States would be foolish not to use every chance to change the Communist world. "If they will accept sound proposals on disarmament," he said, "we will be glad to make firm and binding agreements that will lead toward peace ... but we would be foolish to substitute the hope for the deed, the word for the act." He warned that the dull fight for ut hi to-the- 550 Navy Men peace may demand sacrifices comparable to those of war. "There are some who say we cannot afford the sacrifices needed to maintain oltr national security," he said. "They oppose foreign aid WASHINGTON (UP) Naval programs or even some of our direct costs of defense because the bases on 'both the Atlantic and Pacific seaboards have been alert(Continued on Page Four) ed to watch for any sign of the highly contagious "Oriental flu," a Defense Department spokesman said today. Some 550 men at the Newport, mine was made at Kris' sugges- R.I., Naval Base apparently have stricken with the disease tion, and the doctor said he would been which first appeared on the China abide by the society's decision on a fair charge for his services. His mainland and then swept across of $1,500 had Asia. own es UJS. Surgeon General Leroy brought a storm of protests from across the nation and anonymous Burney announced Friday night threats of violence against the that all 48 state, officers were notified in hurry-u-p telephone calls physician. But many of the citizens m this of the unexpected outbreak on Long Island community defended the Eastern Seaboard. Dr. Joseph Kris because he haGovernment health officers bad bitually answers appeals for med- been keeping a close watchu at ical aid regardless of the hour. Kris' bill "for professional serv- Pacific ports and have detected a ices was dated June 14 and sent few eases. The government now to Benjamin Kent Hooper, whose is checking Atlantic Coast Naval son was rescued from a bases as well, possibly to detect ordeal in a backyard' well the spread of the disease from Contract Flu timate i 23-ho- ur 1 Susvpt. (D-R.I- The pro-Americ- an premier was highly successful in talks with President his three-da- y Elsenhower and other top American officials in gaining a number of objectives for bringing about a "new era" between the two ( legislation overturning the Supreme Court edict opening FBI file to defense lawyers in criminal cases. He wiH present a "model" bill which FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover is staunchly behind. Hoover hae warned Oongress repeatedly that removing the secrecy label from any of his files cu?d destroy th federal police agency's effectiveness. .Xi.fe KISHI AT WASHINGTON'S TOMB Japanese Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, left, assisted by an aide, places wreath at the tomb of George Washington during a visit to this historic shrine Saturday. (UP Telephoto) East." - project," ar Arends said. "There is no sense in (Continued on Page Four) UP ) Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr., will ask CongTess next week to pas AJ Asia denounced (he Allied decision today as a "plot that seriously threatens peace in the Far ?- r ii cating that some soldiers had been excused from duty, if the" alert had been planned for some time. Unofficial sources pointed out that the alert was ordered a matter of hours after the Western decision to modernize the defenses of South Korea was reported to President Syngman Rhee. in Communist propagandists Benny's doctor bills and the $1,300 charge was out of the question for the Hoopers. "The committee deckled there will be no bill to the family, and Dr. Kris agreed," Garben said. Dr. David J. Wexler, president of the medical society, said nothing but good will exists between Kris and the Hoopers, and that the parent had expressed their deep appreciation of the doctor's role in saving Benny's life. After the meeting, Kris, the Hoopers and Benny posed together for photographers and shook hands, all around. The Hooper's appeal k the Mact Mar medical society's gfMvaaoa ah 0 Leaves Unexplained (UP) multi-million-doll- WASHLNGTON 1 1 Bill Doctor Withdraws $1500 Benny's 23-ho- rj l ur'-:n?'f- He did not explain why it was necessary to cancel leaves, indi- PLYMOUTH, Mass. this FBI Files Kim said South Korea's troops are alerted every year on about June 25 the anniversary of the Communist invasion in 1950 as a means of "intensifying training and checking equipment." mea-(Continu- "If the economy attitude of the House means anything it should show itself in the consideration of To Protect SEOUL (UP) South Korea cancelled all military leaves Saturday and placed its 700,000 soldiers, sailors and airmen on a full alert Saturday in apparent anticipation of a possible Communist attack. Deputy Defense Minister Kim Chong Kap said the alert was "routine." There was little doubt, however, that it was meant as a safeguard against Red retaliation by force for the Allied decision to match the Communist arms (buildup in Korea New Jets to Be Flown to South Korea bill. r n j company in a surprise move on the eve of the Senate vote. House Republican Whip Leslie C. Arends said "we intend to do everything possible" to defeat th GI Turncoat Sails Home YOKOHAMA, (UP) Japan one of the Andrew Fortuna, 11 American soldiers who chose Communist China rather than return home after the Korean war, sailed Friday night aboard the liner President Wilson for the United States. Fortune spent more than three years in Red China. He came out last week because, he said, he was "homesick." from Ionia, Mich, The barred himself inside his cabin to avoid newsmen during his two-dastopoVer here. When reporters and photographers swarmed onto the ship in an attempt to interview Fortuna, Fortuna ran from the deck to his cabin,, shouting over his shoulder: "I won't speak to anyone." He remained in his cabin and ignored written questions shoved under his door or relayed by ths steward. ex-sold- ier y m House Leaders Hint Ike Will Get Full Foreign Aid Request t WASHINGTON (UP) Despite a quest next week, then start aprampsmgSng economy drive, the proving the various items, one by House Saturday seemed ready to one. The committee started taking military and civilgive President Eisenhower a ma- testimony from a month leaders ign ian a ago Saturprogram-foreon key jor victory "s day. aid. has asked The chief executive Tht Senate recently completed for $3,864,410,000. Most of the mon- action on an authorization bill by ey, $2,900,000,000, is earmarked for voting for an overall program to military hardware and defense cost $3,617333,000. That was out support. -. of less than seven per cent The Bouse Foreign Affairs Committee plans to complete its inves- - Congressional leaden doubt the tattoo si the administration eEbtiM wiil sffwove a deeper out. , |