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Show DAILY HERALD PHONES FR 3-50- AC (Provo Office) (Orem Office) 50 5-16- 05 Mostly Clear ffunday; Home what cooler in west portion. Hijrh Sunday 2 in Wert: 77 to 87 in East. For Advertising, News. Circulation FR 3-46- 72-8- Proro low Saturday, (Provo Society) 84 For Mob Violence RACKET KING BANISHES HOFFA PHOTO Ike Puts Blame On Arkansas WASHINGTON man of the Senate Armed Services committee. Eisenhower obviously was nettled by a telegraphed complaint from Russell objecting to the presac-j Friday secret FBI reports, sharply storm troopers" of "Hitler's ence cused the Arkansas state administration Saturday of encourag-- ! in Little Rock. "I must say that I completely ing mob violence in Little Rock fail to your compariby using National Guardsmen to son of comprehend our troops to Hitler's keep Negroes out of Central High storm the . President troopers," School. rare display public statement, in a Eisenhower, of anger in a implied strongly the strife never would have broken out if the guardsmen had received differ- ent instructions from Gov. Orval E. Faubus. ". . . Had the police powers of the state of Arkansas been uti- lized. not to frustrate the orders of the court, but to support them, the ensuing violence and open disrespect for the law and for the Federal Judiciary never would have occurred." the President said. Faubus, asked about Eisenhower's charges, replied in Little Rock that "anyone who gets into difficulty wants a scapegoat." Eisenhower did not mention Faubus by name in pinning the blame for the crisis on orders to the guardsmen to prevent integration of Central High, but he said: "The Arkansas National Guard eould have handled the situation with case had it been instructed to do so." Telegram to Russell The President's statement was made in a telegram to Sen. Richchair- ard B. Russell (D-Ga- ), (Continued on Page Four) U. S. Integration Picture in Brief By UNITED PRESS NEWPORT R.I. President Eisenhower blamed violence at Little Rock 'on the Arkansas State Adminis- tration. 0 LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Gov. Qrva Faubus said Eisenhower is looking for a "scapegoat" and disclosed he may call the state legislature into session to consider ways of barring negroes from Central High. 0 LITTLE ROCK Mayor Woodrow Wilson Mann said the actions of Gov. Faubus were primarily responsible for the trouble at the high school. 0 said Sen. Olin D. Johnson the precedent established by sending federal troops into Little Rock could lead to a dictatorship and charged communists and fellow travelers are backing the drive for racial integration in the South. WASHINGTON CHAPEL HILL, N.C. Adlai E. Stevenson called for a quick withdrawal of federal troops from Little Rock. Soys Report CAIRO An Egyptian (UP) newspaper reported S a t u r d ay that Saudia Arabia has ordered troop concentrations along the Gulf of Aqaba coast to parry any Israeli move in the wake of King Saud's pledge to support Syria. The newspaper "Al Hakira," on Saudi usually Arabian affairs, said in a dispatch from Jeddah that the Saudis had moved troops to the area after receiving "highly important" information. The paper said the information s of Saud's regarded stand on Syria. The Saudi Arabian monarch, following talks with Syrian leaders in Damascus, pledged yesterday that his counsupport to try would give of in event aggression Syria against it. "Saud's attitude had an acute effect on the enemies of Arab Nationalism and especially on Israel leaders," the Al Kahira dispatch said. It charged that Israeli leaders had "begun to offer their services to carry out some moves in an attempt to ed ofter-effect- all-o- ut harrass Saudi Arabia." The newspaper said that Israel always has been prepared to challenge Saudi Arabia's stand on "exclusive Arab rights" to navigation in the Gulf of Aqaba area. It added that Saudi Arabian troops had been ordered massed along the Gulf of Aqaba coast "in readiness for any move which Israel or those backing Israel might be contemplating." Another Cairo newspaper, "Al Shaab" reported Saturday that an American submarine was sighted approaching the Egyptian coast off Alexandria harbor last Thursday. By BRUCE MILLER United Press Staff Correspondent LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UP) Gov. Orval E. Faubus said Saturday he may call the Arkansas special sessioin to enact legislation designed to get Leg-islaturein- to newly - integrated School "out from Central High under federal control." He said one "possibility" would be to cut off all state tax money for Central High and transform He implied that Eisenhower is in political trouble for sending federal troops into Little Rock and is hunting for a "scapegoat." Anyone who gets into difficulty wants a scapegoat," Faubus said. The governor spoke before an impromptu news conference on the lawn of his official mansion after a group of about 150 white women, including some mothers of Central High students, had "marched" on the mansion to ask that Central High be closed. Faubus said he told the worn-me- n that he is "giving serious consideration to a number of approaches to resolve the situation." it into a "private institution." Faubus brushed off a charge by President Eisenhower Saturday that the state administration enthese is the possibility couraged mob violence at Cfntral of "Among a session of the legisspecial High to obstruct Federal Court orsaid. he lature," ders admitting nine Negro students. Cut Off Aid Faubus safd legislation might be enacted to cut off state aid to integrated schools, or to make all public schools private institutions. A reporter asked if he believed such legislation would be upheld in the federal courts. "I don't know why it wouldn't," said. he LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UP) Faubus said: "I would favor Mayor Woodrow Wilson Mann said today that Gov. Orval E. Closing Central High School if that Faubus has only himself to blame would result in its return to state for the presence of federal troops and local authorities". in Little Rock. The "Mother's March" on the "The governor's actions were Governor's Mansion was led by sponsible .for the Mrs. Margaret E. Jackson, 36. diprimarily trouble we've 'had here," the vorced wife of a Little Rock firein interan said man, who has two teen - aged mayor view. daughters in Central High. She "There never would ckhave hjeen had predicted earlier that "hunmob violence in Little-Rohad dreds" of women would join the it not been deliberately stirred march, asking him to close the schooL up." ' Mayor Criticizes Faubus Action At Little Rock . Soviet Party Boss Calls War 'Unthinkable7 In Yalta Meeting. With Eleanor Roosevelt United The interview with Khrushchev Mrs. Roosevelt's capped visit to the Soviet Union. She is scheduled to leave today fqx Copenhagen on her way back to New York. Mr?. Roosevelt said Khrushdiev was "cordiaK simple and outspoken" during the interview in his Crimean retreat which she said he had turned into a kind of "sumturn from Khrushchev's vacation mer White House.' retreat at Yalta, historic site of Khrushchev, she said, was "very the World War II Big Three nice" In general but did get "a bit angry" when he emphasized Correspondent Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt said Communist Party leader Nikita S. Khrushchev called war "unthinkable" during their g talk at Yalta Friday. "We must not have it," she quoted Khrushchev. Mrs. Roosevelt met with correspondents hi Moscow on her rePress-Sta- ff MOSCOW (UP) three-hour-lon- By LARRY COLLINS ' United Press Staff Correspondent WITH U. S. 6th FLEET OFF WESTERN TURKEY (UP) U.S. 6th Fleet Commander Vice Adm. Charles R. Brown ordered his airmen to shoot to kill when a plane, believed to, be Russian, streaked low over his maneuvering forces Thursday, it was disclosed Saturday. American aircraft gave chase a ngnier- the plane when headed straight for three 6h Fleet carriers 150 miles away. But the plane escaped the pursuers by swerving to the west before it reached the carriers, then disappeared into Bulgaria above the Greek island of Thasos. Brown flashed the shoot order when the plane roared over the NATO landing exercise beach in Turkey's Saros Bay area at tree-to- p level at noon Thursday, then headed out to sea toward Lhe fleet carriers. Brown told his fliers tn use missiles to sidewinder knock down the intruding plane air-to-a- - & (ft v 4. 4 Lower Court Cancellation Is Reversed X tjV. carriers their threatened it if on By WILLIAM J. KATON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) The U.S. court of appeals Saturday gave conditional permission to the teamsters union to go ahead with election olf new officers at its convention; opening Monday in In an uncoded message flashed to Rear Adm. C. R. Duerfeldt, Brown warned: hostile aircraft ap- area. Low alti vour Dr0aching tude If it menaces your tion use sidewinders to prevent nhotoerachv " The Navy refused to confirm that the plane was Russian. But the pilots who chased it said tney nad no doubt it was a viet aircraft They said it seemed to be a flashlight fighter - bomber with twin jet engines and swept-bac- k wings. It was painted white. Brown's order was reliably said to be the first order he has issued since taking command of the U. S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. "Possible forma-myste- j 'bO ; J ry Miami Beach, Fla. It stayed a lower court order cancelling the election. But it said it was doing so on condition that only those delegates selected "in accordance with" the Teamsters' constitution may. be seated at the convention. Thirteen teamsters who sought to stop the election had daimed more than half the delegates were improperly selected. 'Convention Rigged' They charged, the convention was rigged to assure the election So-bom- rank-and-fi- shoot-to-ki- ll of U.S. Expected To Turn Down ir four-week-lo- ng points he "believes strongly." She said Khrushchev spoke "warmly" about her late husband. "He felt Franklin understood what the Russians were trying to do," she said. "All the Russians I have met have said the same." Mrs. Roosevelt said much of the interview was devoted to discussing Khrushchev's family. She said she' bad tea and cookies with Khrushchev, his wife, daughter, grandson and grandbefore she left the Khrudaughter shchev villa. son-in-la- w. By COLIN Russ Feeler 3 By BRUCE W. MUNN United Press Staff Correspondent UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP) Western observers said Saturday the United States undoubtedly will cold shoulder a Soviet feeler for a top-levBig Four conference MCKINLAY 1 "VV & 1 ar r Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vassili V. Kuznetsov put out the feeler during a news conference here Friday. !!!? 'jII 'JKauvfe.smi "The Soviet government favors disarmament any constructive a view that takes HE WON APPEAI measures 'and Martin F. O'Donoffhue, attorney for the Teamsters Union, won appeal before Federal they should be examined at the highest levels," he said. District Court on ruling of Judge F. Dickinson Letts Western sources saw Kuznetblocking- election of officers at the Teamsters' convensov 's remarks as a bid for a new named. . tion in Miami Beach, Fla. next week. Election will go The Atomic Energy Commission meeting at the summit of the forward and James R. Hoffa predicts he'll win presisaid the shot, from a balloon, was United States, Great Britain, dency on first ballot. (U.P. Telephoto). below nominal yield in power, or France and Soviet Russia. The less than 20,000 tons of TNT. Western powers have- - been cold to Earlier, laboratory technicians previous feelers from Moscow and had said it was likely it would sources said the United States is be "above nominal," or over the not likely to change its position estimated strength of World War at this time. Kuznetsov also said he believed II atom bombs unleashed over anVEC also a had visit to Washington by Soviet But the Japan. "Charleston" Minister Georgi Zhukov Defense that nounced earlier had a wide range of possible might prove useful. But he added ate Rackets Committee Saturday By JOHN A. GOLDSMITH that likelihood no of or he knew any be above it could and Staff United Press yields Correspondent accused James R. Hoffa of 34 such visit might occur. below nominal power. WASHINGTON (UP) The Sen- - more "improper practices" as which and prove Rumbles" may Disarmament, "Bangs it wound up hearings on the eve The blast was heard as "bangs to be the major topic of discusof the Teamster Union's convenand rumbles" at Boulder City, sion at the 12th General Assemtion in Miami Beach, Fla. Nev., and as "rumbles" at Lincoln bly, formally takes the stage Utah County Business Level The new charges, added to 48 Mine and Lund. Nev., and at St. Monday with the meeting of the Holds listed at the conclusion of last 3 Steady George, Utah, 150 miles east of U.N. Disarmament Commission. month's hearings, brought the Scheduled Sale State Ram Utah (Continued on Page four) (Continued on Page four) committee's count against the 4 Fork for Spanish vice president and teamsters' to Mill on Go Geneva Structural crown 4 prince to 82. Curtailed Scheduled WILL RETURN TO SEA John L. McClellan Chairman Kansas State Overpowers BYU five days of hear36-said 15 Football Team, 13 ings this week had shown that Amusements 8 Hoffa, candidate for the presBusiness News Central Utah News 3, 4. 5, 6, idency of the nation's biggest union, was guilty of collusion 10,26 30 with employers, manipulation of 26. 28. .... 37, 29, Classified union funds, and scheming 25 Editorial Page News 12, 2, 11, against the interests of union National, World - ot - New Racketeering Charges Made Against Union Boss NEWS INDEX 13, CASABLANCA, Morocco (UP) back home in West Germany the Five of the six men who sur- Bonn government ordered all ic vived the sinking of flags flown at half staff in mottrn-in- g Obituaries Sports dS -- lifeboat after they had spent 54 hours being tossed about by d waves in waters. The five survivors were flown back to Germany from Casablanca in a U.S. Air Force plane. Of the 86 men aboard the Pamir, including 25 young German Sea Cadets and the crew of the regular merchant mariners, " 80 remaining perished. Those who arrived in Casablanca Cadets Heinz Kraas, Foikert Anders and Klaus Fred-rich- s, seaman Hans Georg iwirth and Baker Carl Otto Dtemmer were clad only in borrowed TJ.S. Army suntans. Tfaey lost everything else, They were met by blaring tugboat whistles and a cheering dockside crowd of 500 here, while ' 'v - .. Stocks for the country's loss. 14 4 19,20,21 15, 16, 17, 18 8 - Society mid-Atlant- president of the International Teamsters Union." spokes main for Thomas Hick-e- y of New Vjork, the other candidate for president, called reports of Hoffa's strength as "just a myth! . . . We are confident that Mir. Hickey will upset Hoffa . . . There isn't a chance that Hoffa will win on the first A ballot." Counsel for; the defendants, including retiring President Dave Beck and his beir apparent, James R. Hoffa, asked the three-judg- e appeals court to stay Letts' order pending a lengthy review. The Appeals Court had been alerted in advance and met in extraordinary session to hear arguments just ao hour and 27 minutes after Letts sighed his order. Defense Counsel Martin F. O'Donogoue charged that Letts order was an1 "abuse of discre.) tion." He sard it was based on "loose and eonclusionary state-mentsubmitted by the plaintiffs 13 rank and file members from New York Stite. Letts said anj election now 'would permit looting) of the teamsters by "gangsters" and members. The final volley of charges was "racketeers." He ordered the unfired after witnesses and com- ion not to recognize credentials of mittee investigators drew another allegedly improperly picked con (Continued Ion Page four) (Continued m Page four) (D-Ark- 7 German Ship Survivors Arrive in Casablanca the German sailing ship Pamir in a hurricane this week vowed today to go back to sea again despite the tragedy. The five arrived here aboard the USNS Geiger, a U.S. military sea transportation service troop- - F ship, to which they were trans- - r f erred from the American T Freighter Saxon. The latter selected. It said the preliminary injunction issued earlier today by federal district court Judge F Dickinson Letts barring the election altogether went too far. In Miami Beach, Beck hailed the appeals court decision as a "full and complete" victory, and Hoffa predicted he will win the (50,000-a-yeunion presidency on the first ballot over the bids of two opponents. Thomas Haggerty of Chicago, one of Hoffa's two top rivals for the presidency, said the federal court action pjut the Teamsters on "our honor to run a clean convention." He (said if this is done and if he is given, a. fair hearing on his challenge of the seating of 177 delegates supporting Hoffa, "we feel confident we will be victorious and I will be the next properly ' V L on disarmament. United Press Correspondent ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev. (UP) Atomic test shot "Charleston" rent the western sky Saturdya with a rumbling blast heard 150 miles away. moThe bright orange fire-ba- ll Las Vegas, mentarily lighted up about 90 miles to- the south, "like day," and silhouetted the 11,910-fodesert pkak for which it was James R. Hoffa vice-preside- nt Beck. The appeals court left it up to the convention's credentials committee to see that delegates were ' Si Atomic Shot Heard For 150 Miles s" i treasury if ''" - .' t v, ' Jt.J'j jpff f I ' le midwest teamster boss, as successor to retiring president Dav el Saudi Arabia Faubus May Seek Bill Puts Troops To Get School 'Out Along Aqaba From Under U.S. Control7 well-inform- Plane Mystery Eludes Pursuit (D.-S.C- .) 0 PRICE TEN CENTS Ughi Jimmy Hoffa's picture has been stripped off the wall of John Bitonti, numbers racket king of Dearborn, Mich., a senate investigator said Saturday. It has been banished to the basement. , In fact, investigator James P. Kelly told the Senate Labor committee Rackets today, Bitonti "turned purple" when he learned county records showed him owing Hoffa's Teamsters union $10,000 more than he had borrowed. Kelly testified he helped Bitonti straighten out his loan but the gambler vanished before Kelly came back with a subpena. State Officials By MERRIMAN SMITH UP White House Reporter NEWPORT, R. I. (UP) Pres-- j ident Eisenhower, backed by SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1957 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, 35, NO. 20 VOL ' 48. 4 i- r -- 'V S f s c ft, N -- t ( L j, 30-fo- ot shark-infeste- ( v- s v v1"' , $ i. ' I " . r S " i- ' 4 is i f - - - ? " , ,';,, j4, r " f II , 3 Five survivm of fche" German HERO'S WELCOME sailing ship Pamic are shown here after arriving Saturday aboanf the United States troopship Geiger. The battered survivors received a heros welcome. They spent 14 hours in a bottomless boat when & hurricane sent the fouMnasted ivind-jammcr'- to . thbottc !The sur- vivors are, left to right, Hans Georg WirthJ Karl Kraaz and Klaus Fred- Karl Otto Dummer Foikert TTT Anders, ' f. I rrU.- .Vtnfnl 1 1- ' ' |