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Show DAILY HERALD PHONES FR 3-50- AC 50 5-16- 05 (Provo Office) (Orem Office) GENERALLY FAIR through Sunday. Rising, temperature Sunday. High today 78. Chance of local frost in Provo and Logan areas. Friday's maximum In Provo was 79, lowest Saturday For Advertising. News Circulation FR 3-46- 84 morning (Provo Society) PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15; 1957 VOL. 35, NO. 18 PRICE TEN CENTS ay bos As On Schoo mpronniis ui ration Attitude of 3? Governor - Pleases Ike mi ZJ? ' k k. , .: .S if g ' 1 ' fto Governor Tells Ike He Intends to Respect U. S. Court Decision L3 er they had met for two hours DAYLIGHT' EXPLOSION The 19th atomic detonation of the current series, code name Fizeau, starts to form its mushroom about 2 minutes after being detonated near Las Vegas, Nev. at 9:45 a.m., Saturday. It is one of the few nuclear devices detonated after dawn. It approximated 10,000 tons of TNT. (UP Telephoto). U.N. Condemns Russia 60-1- 0 for Brutality In AEC Sets Off 19th j The vote was hailed as a victotry for the West, confronted with stern Communist by opposition and an to down water Asian "neutralists" the resolution. Tops Original Tf topped the margin on the attempt original condemnation of Russia's Hungarian action, voted last Dec. with sembly president. Prince Wan 12 Then the tally was Waithayakon of Thailand, to seek 13 abstentions. n Soviet and Hungarian compliance In Saturday's vote, only the resolutions. They with 'previous Soviet bloc and Yugoslavia demanded Russia get its troops opposed the resolution. Nine memn bers of the groups and Finland abstained. South Africa was absent. n The abstainers were Afghanistan, Ceylon. Egypt, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Yemen. Prince Wan said after the assembly session that he planned to go to Moscow as the first step toward obtaining compliance with the previous assembly resolutions. BON N, Germ any 'UP1 T h e India had suggested that instead elecfor today's general (Continued on Page Four) campaign tion ended Saturday with Chancel55-- 8 nine-natio- Afro-Asia- Adenauer Afro-Asia- Sure Bet In Election j : ot .salmo- 25,-00- remov-(Continue- - CITY, Nev. (UP) A Fallon, Nev , girl was killed and seven persons were injured Friday in an auto collision on U.S. 50 near Dayton, Nev. The gu-1- , Claudia Jennings, was a passenger :n an auto driven by Alfred Casey, Lake Tahoe, Calif., He, his wife, Emilene, and their four children were seriously injured. They were taken to Carson Tahoe Hospital here. Their car collided with a vehicle carrying Mr. and Mrs. Qerald Beattie, Walnut Creek, Calif., who were en route home from vacation. Mrs. Beattie was injured whose s, Nationally-know- n writers besides sports Grayson, will columns whose appear in the Herald are Murray of the NEA's sports staff who writes a new column, "Between You and Old-erm- an Me," and , Oscar Fraley, ' ViJt jr "Today's Sports Pa- distributed over the wires of United Press. Columns by the three national writers will alternate with columns by three members of the Herald's local sports staff under the new, expanded column coverage. Ray Schwartz, Herald sports editor, will present his "Sports 'With Schwartz" column each Friday. Wendell M. Rigby, veteran sports writer and Herald staffer, will write his "Behind the Sports Scene" column, featuring predomt-nanthigh school sports, on The column of Tuesdays. ace "hunting Bown, Casey and fishing expert, will appear on Thursdays as a reg rade" well-kno- is wn in j HEADS TOGETHER Putting their heads together, President Eisenhower and Governor Orval Faubus of Arkansas are pictured together after their conference at Newport, R.I. Saturday. (UP TeJephoto). 212-ho- ur Turkey Orders Ouster Of Two Russian Spies y d mie Nikolai Bulganin to Turkish Premier Ad nan, Menderes. But Westerners regarded it as an indi- new fish and game cation the TuTks would not bow to Russian intimidation. Release Note Bulganin's note, delivered Wednesday and released Friday night in Moscow, warned Turkey that any joint intervention in leftist leaning Syria with the United States would bring disaster to Turkey. He repeated a charge made last earlier this week by Soviet eign Minister Andrei page. Grayson, whose "Scoreboard" column makes' its debut today as a regular feature of The Sunday Herald, is one of the most colorful and best sports writers in the business. r Be it the Rose Bowl, a wingolf tournament at box the press the ChurchjllTBowns, -- Miami, at ring- side at Madison Square Garden or the World Series, the welcome mat is always out for Grayson, a one-tiwrestler who got; broke into the newspaper game .in Portland, Ore. That's why he gets so much news that nobody else gets. v me For- Gromyko that the United States is plotting with Turkey to attack Syria. Western observers in Moscow said Israel could be expected to be the next nation to get a Bulganin threat. The United States repeatedly has denied it has any intention of intervening in Syria. But that has not slowed the Russian propaganda campaign. In Athens, a Greek government spokesman lashed back at a Moscow radio broadcast accusing Greece of conspiring with the United State against Syria.By UNITED PRESS He said that Greece' friendly Salt Lake City police said Saturformer student ties with all Arab nations are .veil day a at the American Fork training known an "maybe this fact an-- ( and been school has confessed Continued en Page Four) charged with the 1955 murder of Joceiyn Hickenlooper. arrested last Bernt Murphy, and charged with raping Tuesday old Salt Lake City girl, a today was charged with me 1955 Mc QUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, murder after he took police "on a of the N.J., (UP) A Russian jet airdetailed liner the same plane that piocrime. Murphy, who can neither read neered jet passenger travel across nor write and who told police he the Atlantic 10 days ago landed did not know the Salt Lake City here Saturday night with Soviet Gromyko girl's body had? been discovered, Foreign Minister Andrei of the Russian and other members Cieon took Police Chief; W., Skousen and other officers to the delegation to next week's United Nations meeting. scene of the crime. 4 The Hiekejiloopier girl's body ( The tourist-clas- s swept- was found in a shallow grave at wing jet carrying 51 person in- the mouth of Parley's Canyon ' S. airmen near ; the Salt Lake Country Club dudinsg three U. a grey overcast golf course," on June 28, 1955, 11 streaked in from days after she disappeared from and landed at this air force base j 70 miles from New York City at her Salt Lake City home. P.M. EDT. The plane left told 6:17 he left the police Murphy Moscow at 11:46 P.M. EDT Fri (Continued 7n Page Four) ? weekly Guard troops arc keeping Negro students out of Central High School at the governor's command "I wouldn't know," Faubus replied. The United Press was informed that Faubus had presented a to the president compromise under which integration of the Little Rock schools would be decooling off layed for a year-lon- g period. Offers To Cooperate In return, it was said, Faubus offered to cooperate fully to help prepare the people of Little Rock for integration. President Eisenhower was said to have listened to Faubus' plan without making any commitments. He made no reference to it in a brief statement issued after Faubus hAf given his version of the meeting to newsmen. Shortly before Faubus held his news conference and before his own statement was released to the press, Eisenhower left his office to play a round of golf at the Newport Country Club. He finished at 5: 45 p.m. (EDT) and returned to his vacation resiil dence, The two men talked privately for 20 minutes in Eisenhower's vacation office and then were joined by their aides for an hour and 50 minutes more. Among those at the meeting was Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr. who is behind an effort to get a federal court injunction against Faubus halting his use of troops in Little Rock. Faubus made no commitments on whether he will withdraw the troops from the school. He said he had not decided what to do about the soldiers yet. Asks For Understanding The supreme court school desegregation ruling must be car-- ( Continued on Page Four) -- - ular feature of the Herald's ter .,4 V-- "'' Man Confesses In 1955 S.L Girl's Murder d Grayson's Scoreboard MakeBebut; Top National, Local Columns To Be Rotated by Harry Grayson, one of the deans of American sports-writermakes its debut toin the Herald's green day sheet Sunday sports section. Grayson's syndicated column, distributed by NEA Service, will appear each Sunday in the Herald, in rotation with columns by five other nationally and locally prominent sports scribes. ' red-hande- 4 pop- -i By EUGENE McLOUGHLIN United Press Staff Correspondent , Turkey reacted to a blunt new Soviet warning on the Middle East Boy, 10 Saturday by ousting two Russians from the untry for spying. The accused spies Soviet assistant naval attache Copt. Alexandre Maraguine, 38, and another PITTSBURGH, Pa. (UP) A named Michael Lischin Russian boy who shot and killed were caught by police his father was freed Friday by a to military buy Friday night trying coroner's jury which' ruled the information from a young Turk at slaying was "justifiable." Michael "Mickey" Chervenak Bosphorus. Both were given 48 hours to get asked his mother what the verdict out of the country, in which they meant when it was announced. have lived since 1952. The mother, Mrs- Shirley CherThe Turkish action was not venak, hugged him and replied, "It marked officially as reaction to a means you can go home." note from Soviet Pre- The boy, the youngest ever to belligerent face a possible murder charge in Allegheny bounty, testified at the emotion-markeinquest that his father, Michael Chervenak Jr.. 31, repeatedly beat him and his mother. The shooting took place SjH. 6. 4or-rent- ular' sports column written .';- Exonerates 26 associated experiments on a Jury sequence timer. Biomedical tests for conducted from time to time dury! ing the series were continued with rabbits exposed in hutches for Father's Slaying flash effect on their eyes. last-minu- Grayson's Scoreboard, ,s 10 Eisenhower, at his Newport Naval Base vacation headquarters, issued this brief statement: "At the request of vrov. Faubus of Arkansas. I met with him this morning in a constructive discussion regarding the carrying out of the orders of the federal court matter of the high schools By COLIN MCK INLAY United Press Staff Correspondent of Little Rock. "The governor stated his intenATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. (UP) to respect the decisions of tion The Atomic Energy Commission U.S. district court and to give set off the 19th nuclear shot of its the his full cooperation in carrying J957 summer test series Saturday --i out his respect after juggijng people, weather con- - to these responsibilitie decisions. ditions and atomic bombs in a hurry"In doing so, I recognize the ineffort to get on with the -up escapable responsibility resting series. upon the governor to preserve law The device, dubbed "Fizeau." and order in his state," he said. was fired at 9:45 a.m. PDT) atop "I am gratified by his const ruc- steel tower at Yucca fiv? and cooperative attitude at a 500-foFlat, ripping the desert sky with oua. meeting. I have assured the a force estimated by observers as governor of the cooperation of about the potence ot lu.uuu tons ot federal officials. TNT. "I was pleased to hear from the Air Force planes (Continued on Page Four) Twenty-fiv- e winged around the awesome 0 n-colored cloud which rose feet into the sky. The shot had series Girl Killed, Seven Hurt In Auto Collision ' err ment. Shock Wave The shock wave of the device roared across the desert and smacked newsmen and observers at News Knob, just seven miles a considered fron the atomized steel tower. lor Konrad Adenauer AEC scientists swung into action four years British Explode New .ure bet to win another to prepare for the firing of "Fizin office. GerWest 35 this morning immediately million eau" than More Aromic uevice canditest device "Whitney" was 3,000 for vote after will mans 494 the for 13 six minutes before the parties dates from MELBOURNE, Australia (UP) postponed (lower seats in the Bundestag Britain exploded the first device 5:30 a.m. firing time. Failure of a key experiment on of a new series of atom weapons. house of Parliament. and Adenauer A brief announcement said only a sequence timer was blamed for The Erich te leader Socialist the device was exploded from the that delay. opposition vocal final their 60 Evacuated made a tower Ollenhauer successfully and that early The speedup of testing operaindications were that the behavior appeals for votes Friday night. d Adenauer addressed 20,000 roar- of the radioactive cloud was fore- tions forced the temporary into five on Page Four) cast accurately. ing supporters jammed terns in Frankfurt's fair grounds. He told them West Germany was " the "dam against the Red Hecold Announces New Sports Columns and reiterated the supreme confidence in victory he has shown throughout the entire fouir-wee- k campaign. Ollenhauer addressed two raLlies (Continued on Page Four) 71 f 3he elections. 60-1- 0 " i out of Hungary and permit free United Press Staff Correspondent UNITED NATIONS,' N.Y. (UP) The United Nations General As vote, with 10 sembly by a abstentions, Saturday adopted a new resolution condemning Rus sia's brutal suppression of. last year's Hungarian freedom revolt. The resolution, sponsored by the United States and 36 other countries, also named its retiring as- . Nuclear Shot Hungarian Revolution By BRUCE W. MUNN if minutes this morning to discuss the situation at Little Rock which had seen National Guard troops barring nine Negro students from Central High School. Faubus, after his conference with Eisenhower, seemed to have conceded that his authority bow ed to thatof the federal govern Desert Sky Lights Up Second U. N. Resolution Bv MERRIMAN SMITH UNITED PRESS WHITE HOUSE REPORTER Arkansas Gov. Orval E. NEWPORT, R.I., (UP) Faubus went to President Eisenhower with a compromise plan for settling- the Little Rock School crisis Saturday and then appealed to federal authorities to be patient in 10-minu- PresiR.I. (UP) said Saturday dent Eisenhower Gov. Orval E. Faubus had stated his intenton to respest the decision of the federal court and to give full cooperation in carrying out his responsibilities. Faubus, who held is own news conference at the same time Eisenhower issued his statement, said that he expected the department of justice and the federal courts "will act with understanding and patience in discharging their duties." ' The statements of the President and the governor were made aft- i Asks Enforcement Delay of One Year enforcing desegregation. After a two hour and conference with the was if asked Faubus the president, meeting had materially changed the situation in Little Rock, where National NEWPORT, CARSON 52. Egypt Rejects Israeli Plea LONDON (UP) Egypt Saturday rejected an Israeli plea to end the state of war between the two counaccused tries. The Egyptians new agIsrael of preparing for gression in the Middle East. The Israeli peace bid was turned down in a statemnt here by Abdel Kadar Hatem, information chief in 0 the regime of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel , Nasser. Nasser's Aide told 500 delegates Trom 49 nations at the London union conference that "When Israel talks peace she means war. When she offers friendship she is preparing for aggression." Egypt was replying to an Israeli appeal for peace with its Arab neighbors that was delivered in London yesterday before the same conference by Israeli Delegate David Hacohen. rliamentary The Israeli delegate had appeal'To our Arab neighbors to allow Hfe still and small voice of peace to emerge from the din of tension and war preparations." ed te " , Leaders Call Statements 'Double-TalI k' LITTLE ROCK, Ark.. 'UP) Two of Arkansas' highest Negro leaders said today that the state--I ments of Gov. Orval E. Faubus and President Eisenhower about their integration conference ar "double-talk- " and "vague and ambiguous." U. S. Sen John L. MrCIHIan (D , returning from a fishing trip at Hot Springs, Ark., said h couldn't figure out what Faubus and the president had derided. "I am unable to tell from th statements jusf what occurred. " he said. "I do not know what can be expected." "It was a lot of double-tal- k and the situation is still in a state of Mrs. L. C. Bates, confusion," of the Arkansas chapter president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored PeopJ fNAACP) said. "It (the situation) is still vagu and ambiguous." Wiley Branton, 4:he Pine Bluff lawyer who handled tbe original Little Rock integration suit, said. "I haven't had a chance to anabut ther lyze the statements, doesrit appear much to analyze. We will have to adopt a watch and wait attitude." Other principals in the dispute Superintendent of Little Rock Schools Virgil T. Bloss. Mayor Woodrow W. Mann and U. S. Attorney Osro Cobb either were not available for comment about the statements or refused to comment. Can't Tel! Segregation Leader James D. Johnson of Crossett said he also (Continued on Page Four) HERALD INDEX What's New In Fall, Fashions? See Combined Society-Fashio- n 3 Section Pages Air Force Sled Attains Speed of 1,800 Miles Per Hour 2 Snow Storm Closes High Mountain Pass 12 2 Mayors, Families to Live Week on Stored Food in Test 3 Pleasant Grove Winds up Successful Community 21-3- . C-- D Fair 4 Dawson to Establish Provo Office in County Building: . 8 Fire Destroys Provo Home.. I Cards Slice Deeper Into 1T Milwaukee Lead Business News 8 Central Utah News 5 Classified Comics .34 . .35 Editorial Page . National, World News 2. 12, 16 Obituaries 4 3 Society and Fashions ...17-2- 0 Sports j... ...:.. Stocks .. 9 3-- 13-1- , . 21-3- Russian Jet Brings Gromyko, 40 Aids ent TU-10- j i? j ( day. It will leave on flight next Tuesday. Gromyko said in a prepared statement that the paramount problem facing the forthcoming session of. the U.N. General Assembly was disarmament; "There's every possibility to move forward inilhe settlement of this problem right now if all parties show the proper desire," he said. The foreign minister did not make any comment on the condemnation of Russia's suppression of, the Hungarian revolt voted by the, general assembly last night. The Russian plane, guided to a safe4 landing by U. S. Air Force n officers who boarded at Gander, Nfld., was required to land her because it was refused clearance at New York's International Airport. Officials have refused to allow any jets to land at New York fields until they have been tested for noise. The flight took 18 hours, 31 minutes, including refueling stops at London, Keflafik,' Iceland, and Gander, .JNfld.)1; f - The twin-jplane, bearing th of the Russian State Airinsignia line, Aeroflot, was the second of three Soviet jets scheduled to bring Russian ;U.N. personjjjsJ Ia ht et VS. ' : |