OCR Text |
Show HERALD PHQNES r FR 4th N. For Advertising, News and Circulation Ptoto Offices 50 today. Cooler today and tonight High expected today, 68. Low 35. Friday's high in Prove area was 87. Lowest Saturday " morning 54. 190 W. ProTb Society ........ .FE Orem Office . . ........ .AC 741 N. State .VOL. 36, . NO te-nig- ' 34 55 . ' .' By RICHARD B. LANEY SAFETY POSTPONED AT YUCCA FLAT M s sog LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) The 15th safety test in the Atomic Energy Commission's program to discover the. best assurance against an acci- dental nuclear explosion was postponed Saturday The test had been set for as in on his attacks vigorous just noon p. d. t., but 2 hours the National G0P administration. ' before the firing, the AEC said This could be dangerous for .it had been postponed and "a Watkins in vievj' of the highly dinew readiness date will be anvided opinion over the president's nounced shortly." No reason Formosa policy land in light of the was given for the postpone-- , fact the U.S. Senate vote in Utah ment, but it was indicated the will be split among three canditest simply was not ready at datesthe scheduled time. Some political observers' have suggested that perhaps former Gov. J. Bracken; Lie entered the Senate campaign1 against Watkins and Moss not so knuch to win election for himself jas to defeat Wat- , PRICE TEN .CENTS As 'Alb ' . unitea iress international LAKE CITY (UPI) The main issue in Utah's 1958 general election campaign is rapidly becoming the policies of the Eisenhower administration especially in the Formosa crisis. For this reason, the outcome of the Utah election could provide a strong hint as to what will happen in the 1960 presidential elec- tion: Republican Sen. Arthur V. seeking a third teriii at the of 71, is basing his campaign kins. age Lee blamed Watkins for being on strong support of President in defeating him in instrumental Eisenhower. Democratic senate 1956 Lee when sdught an unpreceaspirant Frank E. Moss has been term dented third as governor. Now it. is" Watkins who jLs seeking LedAlgbama Boycott a third term. ' Campaign Fixture By BRYCE MILLER One of the main fixtures on WatUnited Press "International kins' campaign wagon is a perLITTLE ROCK, Ark. J UPI) An sonal letter from. President Eisenof exodus high school students" to hower. The letter states in . part: in other parts of Arkan-sa- s schools "I hope you can yourself make in other states was even and this known to all the people of v.- - f; Utah, and by all means I hope reported Saturday.of students out The movement you will make clear how deeply I and many, others in responsible of Little Rock indicated that many, were tired of waiting for places, both in Congress and in parents to reopen, either as inschools the A the administration, lvalue your NEW YORK (UPI) or jiristitutioris. how constructive and tegrated services Negro woman' stabbed the Rey. useful it and, with Dissatisfaction the, closing always has been." Martin Luther King Jr., Southern An instance of Watkins "impor- of schools in Virginia also was- in.Negro integration leader, tant contributions", President Ei- dicated. Parents were trying to day . while he was autographing senhower cited "our Middle East- set up a plan which would enable 'recently-publishe- d of his copies ern policies, in respect to which their, children to attend classes-ibook in- a Harlem department ' I received your helpful report in" private homes, lodge' halls or ' store, churches. 1954 "You made enough people suf- December recentandj had the beneThese parents did not claim the of your effective speech fer in the last six years," the fit new makeshift system would end. to the Senate." , woman .said, as she plunged a the integration controversy that In one of his major, campaign knife into King while he sat in closed has three schools in CharWatkins strongly supthe book department of the store addresses, Front Royal. But lottesville and ported President Eisenhower's 3urrounded bya crowd. would give some it stand on the Formosa situation they believed Police said King was rushed to and to the 1,700 students who schooling Congress "fully, consid- are,5 ' now Harlem Hospital with the knife ered said idle. this issue in 1955" when it -- otill stnVlr in him! were' T-Classrooms v ..i "granted the President broad au --Little Rock, television end Form0sa.wTfte ' thority th pxtpnt nf his iniurv. was used as a stopgap being situation has changed' little since Stabbed In Shoulder school until classes are resumed then, he- declared. four the .'King was stabbed in the shoulin high schools. city's The senator criticized congress' der. Police sad that some custom- men other Arkansas's In major inteurging Senate talks on the 12 ers in Blumenstin's Department Quemoy-MatsNegro stuu or .ques- gration controversy, store screamed, and ran for cover tioning Presidentproblem Eisenhower's .ac- dents who quit Van Buren High while others seized the assailant. tions there. School two weeks ago because of . Police later found a loaded .32 Moss immediately took sharp a white students' caliber Italian automatic in her strike will start back again Mon' exception to this. handbag. "The present administration's day. U.S. District Jtfdge "John E. MilKing, recently released from a 'brinkmanship,' has us . teetering southern jail after arrest on a on the edge of the Formosan isle ler refused to grant the Negroes disorderly conduct charge, was in with guns pointed at us by both an injunction against the school New York, to promote sales of the Chinese Nationalists and the boardFriday, but he. suggested his book, "Stride Toward Free-'do- Chinese Communists," he said. that the school board see they are The Montgomery Story." protected. Blasts Ike The minister led the fight for Television lessons, ' which began The Democrat lashed out at the Fla in , Montgomery, integration President directly by saying Mr. Saturday, are on film and are a buses. Eisenhower "has told the world pilot program for six hours' a day we would not be appeased and of lessons that begin on Monday was taken to Harlem Hospital for that present difficulties can r be over three Little Rock commercial examination. psychiatric solved by . peaceful negotiations, stations. The lessons Saturday included: but he has never ventured any "The affirmative statements as to what "Introduction to Biology;" ' " 11 Others Missing and "Better Reading." steps we might take toward that Pilgrims; Moon." to the "A Trip negotiation." Transfers Mount This has been the sharpest conscheduled for showwere They flict produced so far in the Utah 1 2 p.m. c.s.t., over to from ing campaign. station (KATV). Regular a single Evidently, Watkins is continuing to pursue the strategy he believes television instruction will be both won him the GOP primary elec- live, with regular high school tion nomination. An election night teachers, and" film. School Superintendent Virgil T. victory statement from Watkins m sv sr Blossom reported that 210 of said "I interpret my victory in on Page Four) the primary election to mean the A State voters still support the EisenhowWASHINGTON (UPI) er program. I campaigned on the Eisenhower effort to make Amer the . United states win press Ameri17 aH ica strong and keep the peace." again for return of The Moss attack is following the can airmen downed in Russia this not just the six bodies pattern laid down by the national month Democratic organization a cam Russia has agreed to return. indication no been has There paign of direct criticism of Eisen11 are hower and his leadership. WASHINGTON the other ; men", The (UPI) whether National Democratic Chairman Labor Department has reported dead or alive. Russia agreed in a note Friday Paul Butler disclosed the --key to that new claims for 4 unemploynight to return the bodies of six his party's strategy when he said ment compensation dropped to of the men who were aboard an during the recent Western Region- 255,000 last week for the lowest unarmed "Air Force transport that al Democratic conference in Salt weekly total since the recession crashed in southwest Russia Sept. Lake City: began. .2 after being intercepted by Rus-Solid GOP As further evidence that the is"There sian .fighters. general dissatisfac slump is lifting, the department But the Russians said that they tion with the type of administra also announced late Friday that have 'np information" on the 11 tion provided by General Eisen- 2,645,100 persons received jobless hower. The feeling among his own benefits during the week ended other men. handed to Richard people is that he is not a real Sept, 6, 48,200 less than in the The note (Continued" on Page Foot) Davis, ranking U.S. diplomat in previous week. Russian Moscow repeated a' charge that . the plane violated Russian airspace, and denied that Gen. Twining Takes Critics to Tosk Russian planes intercepted it. . The new. Russian note did not crive the names of the dead men' It also did not specify how the bodies were s to be returned. was making a flight scheduled entirely within Turkish By CHARLES CORDDRY dangerous period when it will airspace, according to U.S. off -' trail Russia in military strength. cials. United Press International He said in a speech . before the WASHINGTON Gen. Defense Orientation Conference (UPI) RIOTERS SENTENCED Nathan F. Twining, chairman of Assn. that he conceded Russian LONDON '(UPI) - - Five men strength should not be underrated. who took part in London's violent the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said But he added: race rioting of three . weeks ago Friday night the United States is "Considering our superior strahave received sentences of 18 "militarily superior overall" to tegic retaliatory power; our fleximonths to two years. The judge, Russia now and expects it to ble 'and I mobile tactical power, in passing sentence Friday, said continue to be in the future. our industrial ; prowess and our he - had been forced to "reyiveV Twining took to task such economic strength, I 'say in full a law almost 300 years old in ord- critics as Lt. Gen. James M confidence, that we are militarily er-to dear .with "this growing Gavin (Ret. ) and cithers who" con superior overall. to the , Soviet meaaoe of 'street warfare' tend this country it entering a Union today. I eee no reasoa why. f lTl ' '' . ' Wat-kin- s, ' JSCJ i ; . ' unanswered. White House Press Secretary James C. Hag-ertsaid state as as could officials far recall, this that, department was the first time a Soviet communication ever had been Students Miqrat ing ! rejected. Eisenhower issued a special statement at the vacation White House denouncing a letter received at the American Embassy In Moscow yesterday. He labelled the Soviet Premier's latest charges as "unacceptable" and termed the letter "abusive" and full of Rey. King .'7 threats." Grotesque, Dangerous f M. Davis, U. S. Charge D' Affaires all-whi- te - - . X-ra- Vs i V toef . - . -- anti-integrati- on m, . . Russia Agrees To Return Bodies of 6 sss Lit-(Contin- BPV , - New Claims For Unemployment Drop to New Low s . t Crew members of the 83rd Fighter-Interceptmissile under the wing of an Squadron install a Sidewinder Air U.Sl on a Force base guarding the Chinese Nationalist stronghold of airfield is the Matador guided Formosa. Also based at the squadron's newly-bui- lt to Communist on as a deterrent attempt at invasion. missile, counted any ' v UPI Telephoto). FORMOSA DEFENSE WEAPON: air-to-a- The-plan- e i- ' . '.-- , F-1- 04 ir Star-fight- er Spiog Slows Down Business In L A; ' LOS ANGELES thick Nationalists Sink Commie Torpedo Boat (UpiT---- A yellowish-gre- y of smog down slowed business Friday for the second straight day and pall , alert. caused a It was the second alert in as By AL KAFF many days and a third alert was United Press International Na- predicted for Saturday. Prior to TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) a Thursday the Los Angeles area sank Chinese tionalist gunboats Communist torpedo boat Friday had gone 14 months without a night in a 40 - minute sea skir- - smog alert. mish near the blockaded Quemoy Added to the discomfort Friday Islands, the Defense' Ministry an- was an unseasonably high temnounced Saturday. perature of 89 degrees. The ministry said a direct hit by Nationalist guns set the Red craft, on fire. The communnique added that one Nationalist boat was "slightly damaged" in the fight, which involved two gunboats and three torpedo boats. The fighting started at 11:10 p.m., When the two forces "enThousands of TAIPEI (UPI) countered" one another 13 miles ofIsinto the business swarmed southwest persons Big Quemoy land.4. of district Taipei af dusk Saturday to cheer five Nationalist Chinese Convoy Runs Blockade , A .Chinese convoy braved Red pilots credited with destroying MIGs near begunfire Saturday to deliver sup- five Soviet-buiplies to the beleaguered islands. sieged Quemoy. The Defense; Ministry said an The five young pilots, each with ecified-number of landing craft a new medal on his khaki shirt reached the beach on Quemoy and a garland of flowers around and unloaded all their supplies his neck, rode on a jeep in a despite a barrage that started 20 victory celebration unrivaled in minutes after their, arrival. size since ,1954. The communique did not in- ' They were the sabrejet fliers dicate the quantity of , cargo un- who shot down five faster MIG loaded on the island, nor did it 17s Thursday while protecting a say whether the landing craft" Nationalist supply convoy to the were escorted by U.S. destroyers. ; Adm. Harry D. Felt, U. S. Quemoys. Thousands of Chinese lined the supreme commander in the Pacific area, arrived from Saigon to streets through the business and take a first - hand look at the theater district to tree shaded New Park to see the MIG killers. Formosa situation. Each pilot stood in the front of The admiral said the situation here is still "very serious", de- the jeep clasping his hands above spite U. S. - Chinese "progress" his head in the prize fighter gesof victory. toward breaking the Quemoy ture The blockade. wife, mother or girl friend Felt said the recent arrival of of each pilot rode' in the back men and weapons has given the seats. United States a powerful striking Old men and school girls pressed force in the ; Formosa area. against the jeeps asking for auto"The Pacific forces are very graphs whie tens of thousands very strong' he l said. "The 7th of firecrackers exploded along the (Continued on Page Four) parade route. U.N. Awaits Showdown On Red China 37-min- . Taipei Throng Cheers Pilots -- - . lt unsp- I . . ; , UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) The General Assembly is poised for a Monday showdown on the question of excluding Red China from the world organization for -- another year. The general 7 (steering ) committee . voted 2 to with abstentions Friday approve a U, S. resolution recommending that the assembly take no action on the China question during its 13th annual session. The Resolution comes before the assembly Monday, when the plenary session considers all the recommendations of its steering committee. U. s sources predicted a result similar to last year's, when the assembly voted 7 in favor of . shelving the issue. While the steering committee argued the Chinese issue, Secretary, of State John Foster Dulles who returned to Washington told the U. N. Friday night Correspondents Assn. he regards the Fkr East crisis as "an extremely serious" situation. "I do consider the situation fraught with very great danger indeed," he said. "I did not want to appear to exaggerate the situation! or to create an emotional atmosphere (when he delivered his policy speech to the assem-;? biy). "I hope the situation will be overcome and I believe it will be. But that cannot be said with full confidence." assembly's . 58-2- POINT OF THE MOUNTAIN Utah Prison officials (UPI) closed the institution's honor cell blocks Saturday in the aftermath of a knifing incident in which one prisoner was hurt. Ernest D. Wright, executive director of the Board of Corrections, said Donville Green, 35, Oakland, Calif.j suffered a shoulder gash and was treated in the ' administration's defense i pro- Saturday the hospital. The. wound was grams. And Gavin in a recent not prison considered serious. book, "War and Peace in the said the " honor block Wright Space Age," said the . United States was entering a period in cells, opened last year by acting which "our own offensive and warden Walter Achuff to permit defensive missile capabilities will L inmates access to other cells. so lag behind those of the Soviets would be- closed each night at p.m. as to place us in a position of No motive for the knifing has great perii." ; ''erbeen was said it established and the weapon Twining roneous" to compare what Russia used has not been found, Wright "might have in 1982" with what said. Green is serving a one to the United States is "certain we 10 year sentence for forgery and wiH have .at .the. same date." v. a - bad check conviction. . . Russia's first Sputnik. He said there had recently been statements which tended to "con--; fuse the onlooker as to just what our military situation actually' is." Former ; President Truman and ) Sen. John F. Kennedy have been paxticuLariy critical , of (D-Mas- . s. i - ' . , By HENRY SHAPIRO , United Press International MOSCOW (UPI)1 Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev says Commu- nist forces from China will throw the U.S. Army and Navy out . of Formosa unless the Americans leave voluntarily and without de-la- y. , sources said Saturday. James T. Pyle, head of the Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA), is expected to. be named ' .. deputy administrator. The' two appointments probably will be announced soon, perhaps next week. government. .to unleash a war against People's China means. . .to ignite the conflagration of a world war." The Soviet premier accused the United States of using Formosa as "a springboard. . .for an attack on the (Communist) Chinese Peo- pie's Republic." ; . home. . ." he said. ' On Chinese-Sid- e ' PresiWASHINGTON (UPD United the "If not States does dent Eisenhower is strongly condo no this other will now, way sidering appointment o his per- be left to China (Red) People's sonal adviser on aviation matters, the j of except armed expulsion a Que-sadLt. Gen. Elwood R. (Pete) (USAF-Ret.- ); to be admin- forces hostile to us from its own istrator of the new Federal Avia"We are completely on the side tion Agency (FAA), authoritative of the Chinese . ; Prison Honor Cell Blocks To Be Closed V Ike Aide May Get Position . 12-- 81-nati- on Threatens United States In one of the sharpest notes penned so far in his copious correspondence with President Eisenhower, Khrushchev Friday repeated his waruing that U.S. resist- ance to the Communists would mean a new world war. Steps Up Training The Communist Radio in the Far East pounded the same line saying in a Peiping broadcast that units of the man "liberation army" in China "are stepping up tfaining to put themselves in fight'iig trim In view of U;S. armed pra vocations." The Red broadcast denounced U.S. appeals for a moratorium on violence in the Formosa area as y," charging that "hypocris "American imperialists are continuing to expand military threats and armed aggressive activities against (Communist) , China. Khrushchev demanded that the. United States cease its "interference in the internal affairs of China" - meaning its refusal to surrender. . the Nationalist islands to the Reds. '.'The American Navy must be withdrawn from the Taiwan (Formosa) Strait, and American soldiers must leave Taiwan and go j Military Edge Over Russia with concentrated effort and good judgment; we should not be --superior in the 1960s as well." Twining's speech added, up to a report; on "where, we stanii. from a national security point of view' a year after the launching of in Moscow, has been instructed to return the Khrushchev message to the Soviet government Sunday morning (local time). In a second statement accompanying his announcement of rejection of the Khrushchev letter, Eisenhower said the United States considers the Russian" viewpoint "grotesque and dangerous." Khrushchev's note to Eisenhower was one of the sharpest he has yet written to the president. He said the Chinese. Communists would drive U. S. forces but of the Formosa area unless they leave yolun-taril- y and promptly, and he warned again that American resistance to the Communists would mean another World War. ' Khrusdiev also tiemanded that ot shore the Nationalist-hel- d islands be turned over to Red China and said that neither the Soviet Union nor Red China would be "frightened" by American "atomic blackmail." Eisenhower conferred by telephone with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles in Washington Saturday afternoon after the president returned from viewing the (Continued on Page Four) . , . U. S. Holds or Khrushchev 4 TheWhite House said Richard Woman By By DAYTON MOORE unnea rress miemationai R.I.J (UPI) President Eisenhower Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's angrily rejected latest message on Formosa Saturday and sent it back : , a Nikita's Communication Sent Back Unanswered NEWPORT, ' Little Rock ( ht 1? PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1958 18 Utah C ampaDdo Cents Ikes Dcoes SALT FAIR Inside the Herald Beetle Battle, Destiny Drive Flavor Diet Of Sunday Reading Today No-Hitt- er, Prize words the Herald's new puzzle came for the whole family is .getting to be big business. Since nobody won last week, the prize has now built up to $100. Turn to Page 14 for the new puzzle . . . and ' the solution to the last one. Politically-concerne- d Republicans are still .clamoring for Sherman Adams scalp. Is Adams Indispensable? Read .the story on " , Page 20, the Herald's Sunday feature page. Did yon know we have an epidemic in our forests? The boring beetle is the culprit and spruce trees are the victims. The battle of the beetles is going on full swing. You'll find the story' on Page 20 " '. also. Central Utah news will keep you reading: for a spell today. One k of the key stories (Page 6) concerns the BYU Destiny ' Fund blitz which 'opens Monday. Some folks have said Hoyt Wilhelm's a "has been" but he zoomed into the spotlight Saturday by pitching the Baltimore: Orioles to a 0 against, of all teams, the New York Yankees. Page 12. College football pried the lid off a new season Saturday. Read all about it in the sports section, where you'll also find sports columns by Wendell' M. Rigby (on the high school scene) and Milt Waycasy, rounding up bowling in Utah County A "Who Done It" feature story on puzzling angles of the'Nimer murder mystery (Page 2) and news of General Motors' new offd fA fhn TTAW TerrA Q Vil rrVillrrVif fVi Aaxr'm fntMfl tl10TrJl lictMrm The women's clubs of Central Utah are opening a new season. Read about it on Page 15 which leads off the women's section. The Family Weekly Sunday supplement, the colored comics, the bargain ads, classified these will help also to round out a pleasant Sunday's " reading dieV ' two-wee- 1-- no-hitt- er " 4 ' 5 . |