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Show 4 PHONES LiAILY HERALD FR AC 3-50- 5-16- CONTINUED FAIR (Provo Office) (Orem Office) 50 05 Sunday with partial rloudinr Sunday afternoon. High today 8S.. Friday's maximum in Provo was 87, lowest Saturday through For Advertising, News, Circulation FR (Provo Society) 3-46- morning: 4S. 84 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTArJ, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1957 VOL. 35, NO. 17 For President Object Of Assassin's Attack Federal Judge Refuses Delay In Integration MANILA (UP) An assassin attempted to kill Presidential candidate Manuel P. Manahan with a knife Saturday, injecting violence into the Philippine political campaign and arousing fears of bloodshed before the election in November. The Philippine news service Tnited Press Staff Correspondent LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UP) A federal judge insisted Saturday on immediate integration of a high school here in a stern order that gave Gov. Orval E. Faubus the choice to remove national guardsmen from the campus or face contempt of court charges. Jn a day of developments, the outside of a clash later between the troops possibility also arose and the city police of Ijttle Rock. on Baguio, ' i situation. No ruling was expect ed before Monday at the earliest. Mann told Bennett he wants to know whether he can order his police force to, clear the streets around the school of all persons, including the national guard. By late Saturday it began to appear unlikely that any of the negro pupils would show up at Central High until and unless the national guard- is removed, Mana. -- ho has bitter y opposed the governors drastic move, Bennett: as,k Who has jurisdiction for the purpose of law enforcement on une city sireeis: "Do I have legal authority . . . to use the city police force to clear the lanes of traffic and to keep the crowd moving to prevent blocking of traffic? "If force should interfere with this, what legal remedy do we Faubus has kept troops there ,ince Tuesday and indicated they would return next week. He did "not comment on the jurist's man- date but will tell his side of! the story on a television pro- Zram f ABC 9:30 p.m. EDT) to-- ! morrow. j Little Rock mayor Woodrow Mann said Faubus had created "a powder keg waiting to be ignited by a planned incident at the school." He said a "state of anarchy existed and asked the attorney general Bruce Bennett for a rul- - have? j Middle East Resolution By DONALD J. GONZALES Colorado Beauty Named Miss America of 1958 land weighs pounds and has She was measurements- of four over of the the cnoice judges orin other finalists. Trailing her der were Miss Georgia, Jody Elizabeth Shattuck, 20, Atlanta; Miss Oklahoma, Mary Nancy Denner, 21, of Alva; Miss California, Lor-n- a M. Anderson, 18, 6f Sacramento, and Miss Florida, Dorothy Maria Steiner, 20, f Boca Raton. Miss Utah, Francine Louise Felt of Salt Lake City, received a special :alent award of a $1,000 scholarship although she did not reach the semifinal round in the judging. She tied with Miss Kentucky, Jane Marvin Brock of Liberty, as the most talented musician in the competition. 130 By RUSS GREEN United Press Staff Correspendent ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UP) MariMiss Colorado, of Denver, lyn Elaine Van Derbur a statuesque blonde with green eyes, was named Miss America Saturday night in the climax of a week-lon- g beauty pageant at Convention Hall. The five-fooeight inch Miss Colorado, who played an organ recital in the talent division, was crowned the nation"s beauty queen for 953 after winning over 50 other young lovely girls in three gruelling nights of competition before the semifinal and final rounds. The fairest beauty of all the -- - 35-25-- ilr -- rttf 'i (kH . East Resolution adopted by - Press Secretary James C. Hagerty and Justice Department desources reported the high-levcision, reached in and after a 45- minute White House conference. The decision was not changed, Hagerty said, by District Judge Ronald N. Davies, ruling Saturday rejecting the Little Rock school board's appeal for an indefinite delay in carrying out the integration order. "I would doubt very much," Hagerty said," that there would be any announcements or statements from the federal govern ment until the (FBI) report has been presented to the judge and he has had an opportunity to study it. "There are still court actions that are pending. Eisenhower was informed im- mediately of Davies' ruling but he did not confer again with Brown- ell, Hagerty said. The President broke off his New-- ; port, R. I., vacation L; fly here! for a day of conferences on the Arkansas school problem and the Middle East situation. Hagerty said Brownell discussed with the chief executive the alternatives for federal government action in the face of the governor's continued defiance of federal court orders .to admit Negro students to Little Rock's Central High School. el DULLES, HENDERSON CONFER WITH IKE Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, left and Loy Henderson, special U. S. Envoy to the Middle East, pause for arrived at the White House, Saturday or a conference with photographers as they . on problems raised by the buildup of Soviet arras in Syria. President. Eiseniipj-.e- UPTflephoto). Ike Vetoes 24 Killed, 70 Hurt In France Train Wreck Postal Wage Raise Bills MARSEILLES, Franee (UP) A train packed with weekend travelers derailed Saturday while passing at high speed through the I j j WASHINGTON Pres- (UP) Eisenhower Saturday as inflationary two bills to raise the pay of more than Postal and Civil Service employes. The raises would have cost the federal government 817 million dollars a year, according to adident i ! ;";Jr - Ar-- f ce-to- ed ministration estimates. Eisenhower announced he was killing the bills by pocket veto because they would spur inflation and might force him to ask for another increase in the federal debt limit now 275 billion dollars. Congress passed the bills by heavy margins shortly before adjournment. One would have given 500,000 postal employes a pay increase averaging 122 per cent, including a flat $546 annuallly to all field service employes except Service 7 5 : I - .,; Radio Logs, Too ff is v VH. rt V-- v axil ' -i , ; u f - ' m ' .vXl kv 4 r jk " ry . J K , . HI I ' Marilyn E laine. Van Derbur of Denver smiles at the Convention Hall crowd as she walks down the runway after being Selected Miss America of 1958 in the annual pageant at Atlantic City. (UP Telephoto). two-fol- Chan- The 50 million West, Germans Mobile, Ala., to Tamp, fizzed as Debbie 'its never had it so good. They see way Fla., toward the coast at 15 miles an no sense in ousting the dynamic hour. It was carrying winds of old man who led them back to just 35 miles an hour at 11 p.m. where they are today. but the weather bureau said that it would probably have winds by the "time it moves inland near Fort Walton Beach, Fla., early Sunday." The chancellor, generally conceded to be one of Germany's worst public orators, has barnstormed hie way to a w triumph in simple, almost naivo language. Storm warnings were indicated He tells his listeners just what from Mobile Bay eastward to they want to hear and they love it. Tamoa Bay. A-Bo- programs. With the complete week's TV and radio logs will be! more pictures and stories about television programs and. stars. The Herald pioneered the Television Tab in Utah and the weekly section has proved a popular feature 'vitb the read- You'll like the new and larger tabloid even more. Watch for it next Monday and every Monday. And be sure to save j it and use it throughout the mb Syria in an official reply to American arms shipments to Jordan, today declared that Syria "will not tolerate any action against her DAMASCUS, (tTP)-Syrw- i, "farce." He said that in this connection from The Herald's popular: Tele- Any Attack ur "the President authorized the ac d: U.S. Steals March On Russia ers. IViibS AMERICA CROWNED bureau alerted the gulf coast Intention of A spokesman read the declaration in the name of the Government. It was Syria's first official with the Constitution of the United reaction to the U.S. airlift of arm to Jordan, scheduled toj start next States." Eisenhower's pronouncement on week the Syrian crisis was contained in "Syria does not intend to attach a statement ready by Secretary anybody," the statement said. Jphjq iv .Eostex u ptuJJes. to newsmen "All that Syria is doinin th White House con- armament field is lor purely deafter a two-hofensive considerations. ference. "The president affirmed his in"Syria, however, will not tolertention to carry out national , poli- ate any action against hex securcy, expressed in the Congression- ity." Daal Middle East resolution which The government-sponsore- d had been adopted, and exercise as mascus Radio th needed the authority thereby con- stepped-u- p American arms delivferred on the President," Dulles eries to the Middle East as said. New Hurricane Nears Florida Here's good news for Herald vision Section is being expanded to full tatyoid size Monday, and will include the week's radio logs as well as the video ; BONN, Germany (UP) I Syria Denies described cellor Konrad Adenauer these days wears the confident smile of an almost certain victory in the Sept. 15 West German elections perhaps by another landslide sweep. With the polling only eight days off, it no longer is a question of whether "Der Alte" (the old man) can win again at 81. The only question is, the victory margin. West iron - wiUed Germany's leader takes it for granted that he will be chancellor again at least until 1959, when he may run for the federal presidency after Theodor Heuss seps dow from the post. Even the opposition socialists and Erich Ollenhauer, their hardworking chief, have stopped talkMIAMI (UP) Tropica! storm ing of a socialist win. At best, they hope for an increase over the Debbie, expected to reach land 29 per. cent vote they rolled up in with winds, lung1953 elections. the ed toward the northwest Florida coast Saturday night while hurri-ca- n But even a 35 per cent socialist Carrie, packing winds up to vote could hardily stop Adenauer 130 miles an hour, churned far now. out in the south Atlantic. The reason for Adenhauer's The New Orleans weather cocky confidence appears to be readers: I - Adenauer Confident Of Victory -- Herald Enlarges Television Tabloid Monday I railway station. Police said 24 persons were killed and 70 injured in the wreckage. The train was the Paris to Nimes Southern Express. It was the second French derailment in two weeks and the second fatal train accident in two months. Thirty persons were killed July 19 when the Nice-Par- is Express bit a switch at 75 miles an hour near Bollene in Southern France. Nozieres-Brigno- n j The other would have given raise to one anll per cent pay million federal Civil workers. Eisenhower said the government would be setting a bad example in the fight against inflation if it granted the raises. I I Con- gress last spring. Thi could include the use of armed forces. That resolution provides that "if the President determines the nec essity thereof, the United States is prepared to use armed forces to assist any (Middle East) nation or group of nations requesting assistance against armed aggression from, any country controlled by international proCommunism, vided that such employment shall be consonant with the treaty obligations of the United States and - i7 1st- - ? - But th President lerved Hunt, notice that he k prepared to "exercise as needed" the authority conferred upon him by th Middle rural carriers. 3 lf ' United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON ( UP ) President Eisenhower sternly warned today that the United States is prepared to intervene if Russia should "push Syria into any act of aggression against her neighbors." Eisenhower expressed hope that the Soviet Union would not prod Syria and that "the people of Syria would act to allay the anxiety caused by recent events." ( UP ) President WASHINGTON Eisenfiower and Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr. Saturday de-- I cided against immediate federal intervention in the Little Rock school integration case. The President and. attorney gen-- ; era! decided to wait, at least un til next week, and see whether the explosive issue isn't solved through legal channels.- That put the next move up to- Faubus. i W5F N'Hff rrv President Prepared, to Exercise Authority In Against Intervention - Miss Utah Gains Talent Award - a Ike, Brownell the governor's authority ing to use the guard in the present Eisenhower and the Justice Department were keep- ing in close touch by telephone school Rock with the Little was no action further crisis but level national expected from the for the present. District Judge Ronald E. Dav-ie- s bluntly rejected a request for delay 'in the admission of nine ' 1 native of Opon, as the assassin. Baguio, who has a police record, refused to say why he tried to kill Manahan. ng Prp.iHrnt t, Andronico o Derate reported the attempted murder took place in Opon, Cebu province, while Manahan was on his way to address a rally of his minority progressive party. Manahan's bodyguards and constabulary men seized By AL KUETTNER fast-breaki- Worn Filipino Candidate SHOWDOWN PRECIPITATED PRICE TEN CENTS celerated delivery to the countries offlhe area of economic, and other defensive items which have been programmed for their use." "The president expressed rfhe hope that the international Communists would not push Syria into any acts of aggression against her neighbors and that the people of Syria would act to allay the anxiety caused by recent events." Eisenhower interrupted His vacation to deal with the Syria and Little Rock school integration crises, flying in Saturday morning from Newport, R. I. -- The White House, conference was held in the wake of Friday s official announcement 'of a U;S. airlift oi defensive weapons to Jor East dan and other nations. Syria's first official reaction came while the meeting was in progress. A government spokesman in Damascus said Syria will not "tolerate any action against her security," and insisted that its was "purely defenarms build-u- p sive " Sitting in with the President and Dulles at the White House conference were State Department Mid-di- e East trouble-shootLoy W. Henderson, who just returned from a mission to the Middle East, and Assistant Secretary of State William M. Rountree. Dulles said Henderson, in his er fact-findin- -- g, trip, "found deep concern at the apparent growing Soviet domination" of Syria of Soviet , Arms and the ouud-u- p in Syria 14-d- ay The broadcast said the United States and Jordan announced on thes agreement "long ago" .. i n i aeuvenes. munitions .out, it aaaea, the U.S. now wants to "dramatize" the deliveries because it is "angered by Syria's attainment of uncommitted economic and military power."' Damascus Radio's commentator said the main object was to divert Arab interest; from the threats of Zionism and jhriperialism. These are tjhe "real threats that endanger Arab security," the broadcast said. .1 . 1 1 . . 1 1 fineau Seeks U.S. Support WASHINGTON (UP) French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau told Secretary! of State John Foster Dulles Sa turday that most of Algeria would go Communist if it became independent of France. An authoritative source said this was a key point in Pineau's appeal for 'American support .when th Algerian question comes before th U. N. General Assembly next month. France Swill lay its pi ana 'for Algeria before the assembly. 'r self-governme- nt NEWS INDEX fact-findin- g, Be , sure to read Frank Choppin ,. one of the many features of the new, restyled Herald editorial pace. Lay ton Woman Killed fat Weber Canyon Crash t Industry-Educatio- n Partnership Can Saferuard American Way ............. .3 Lehi Girl Wins Crown of State 1 Dairy Princess On the opening day of the conNetters Reach Finals Aussie ference Bullen proposed that the of National Singles ..13 United States, the United Kingdom to Seek Wrap Up and Soviet Russia set off four "Timps Playoff Shauahnessy atomic bombs so that the inside 14 Today of the earth could be studied. Business News 9 This suggestion was given a flat Central Utah News 4, 5, 8 ...3, rejection by Dr. Vladimir Belous-so- Classified 3 one of Russia's leading Comics ......... ...20. who said: "Any and all Editorial Pare 19 atomic! bomb tests should be National, World stopped because they are certainly News : 2, 10, 11 J 12, dangerous." Obituaries J. .... ,4 Beloussov proposed instead that School and Church News 8 explosions caused by conventional .25-3- 0 Society methods should be recorded by Sports ..,... 1311 hfpersensitive instruments. .x stocks .'.'. .9 to Be Exploded Underground The TORONTO, Ont. (UP) United States stole a march on Russia Friday when the Atomic Energy Commission announced a small atomic bomb would be exploded at the Nevada testing grounds to assist seismologists to study the structure of the earth's interior. The bomb, which will explode with a force of approximately tons of TNT, will be detonated on Sept. 14. The explosion will be 800 feet underground at the end of a tunnel out into the side of a mountain. 10,-0- 00 The announcement was made here by Professor K. E. Btulen, of Australia, president of the International Association of Seismology at the 11th General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics. Details were contained in a cable to Bull en from Dr. W.F. Libby of the AEC. "Talis is the first time exact information has been issued in advance about an tomac test," Bui-le- n said. '"This announcement promises a new era of between the Atomic Energy Commission and seismologists throughout & world. C Block, v, 21-2- . geo-physicis- is, 17-1- ."V |