OCR Text |
Show i 4-Sia- Juno ge ' j I i I v..'.! ' , , ' - :" , ". f .' i 'IN-- ' . r. . '. i . v ::vl Juno 11 piasteq a, "kitchen sink" satellite! into thej jsaid thd sky ..today .and authorities . mooniet appar piuiuexpenment ou-i- on EIGHTY - i' ',:. SEVENTH ',.';lli 1 1. (In Washington, at y.'fz a.m p.s.t,, an official of theVNational Aeronautics and Space Administration said: "It's in orbit. ' It completed one entire circuit of the earth before the announce-ment came that the launching had been successful.). All four, stages pf the rocket, combining several U.S. space ad weapons, fired on schedule, jubi lant missile men said., . The vehicle, protecting its deli cate yi.o poana satellite, witn an aerodynamic shroud at the of- - its length, rose from its fully pad in a cradle! of flariie at 7:30 a.m. hp.k.t. it climbed along a steep path; under the power of its 150,00 poind I' thrust booster. Tht Satellite was dubbed kitch- eni sink" because it is loaded with but 'the! llutchen "everything sink" in the way of a htimiber of experimental devices The rocket headed to the nrJIttiJ east, "seeking an nrhif. tha would fluctuate 50 degrees north and; south of the equator or over jail J of the United States excepL; nn U.S. Shows UIjn WlM W Unemployment Dips -- 96,000 In Month olF September 76-fo- ot t TV ! n, ,Ti- - Hh 1 .. By EDWARD COWAN United Press .International Unem-ploymeWASHINGTON (UPD in 193,000 dropped by to" the 3,230,000, gov September ernment reported today. At the same time, the number of peo-fepie working by 894,000 'as 1 i .'.i,:v. r ' s ; i " V ' I , tl ', ( ) ' ' i . ' - more-- ' A than f ? went back to school. In their latest assessment of the s - w Labor reported .11. ''.ill V; I t - r " y - less-develop- -- l Denies Evasion Charge. Van Doren Returns to New York steel-usin- . ; ' - - ' Million MPH VIEW DELUXE Silhouetted shows of man at base. of figure ri Is 60-to- tele-phot- Tele-phot- . Space Speed Goal . (Herald-UP- I m ! the Juno II missile's tail at blast-of- f at Cape Canaveral. The man looks dangerously' n bird due to close to the o the effect of the 1000mm lens. He is really at safe, distance. as against 160,000 in ber. The exijecited surse of lavoffs g in industries probably will hold the unemployment total ultras uxawiy uve me miec t million mark In October, Wolfbein mid-Septe- steel-usin- said. . U. S. Launches Missile From B47 Bomber , Secretary Labor By JOSEPH L. MYLER United Press International LANGLEY FIELD, Va. pPlj- -j bcientists ?are snooung tor speeds of more than a million miles an hcur in space and less than 100he miles; an - hour-- - close'l to ground. . This roughly represents the ex- tremes of research beiiig pushed o) j , James IP. IVlitchell promised last spring ihe would eat his hat aublcly if unemployment ' did not , go below three milliori in Octobeh The of ficial tally is not, due to be re leased until early November, Wolfbein said that despite the problem the "underlying economic picture! is still pretty s.trong." , He pointed out that the numat its various scientific centers by of peoplel out of work 15 weeks the National Aeronautics & Space ber (Conitnued on Page Four) Admini$tration (NASA),. Between the extremes are CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) search land development projects S. i An ballistic missile aimed at: c ' ' ! was fired from a B47 bomber to 11 Perfecting collapsible space i "the vicinity of" America's orbit-ih- g Platforms and SDaceshiDs t which r i satellite early paddlewheel automatically expand after being! today. ; fired" into orbits .high above ins The Air Force said the bomber earth, WASHINGTON (UPI) launched the ALBM from a point DevelnDment of radio primJ United States was expected today oyer the Atlantic Missile Range miinif atinn! ranahlp nf sljannlnJ to continue to press Russia for "to demonstrate the' feasibility of the information about Ill missing interplanetary voids. firing ballistic missiles ' from airAmerican aimen despiie a new Plan "Parking Orbitl' craft.' Soviet disavowal of any knowlinto rockets Boosting "park authorities emphaHowever, edge of their fate. i. from lunarorbits" which ing no Soviet Charge aires Miksized, there was attempt made to intercept or knock down the probes could be launched morej hail M. Smirhovsky told the State satellite, ..nor did the missile go successfully than from stationary Department, jMonday that a fur sites oh the ground. into orbit, ther investigation by his governaircraft' sa ca Designing ment had failed to shed any light jet Instead, it passed near the path of ble a than mile speeds greater on the missing fliers, of the paddlewheel in an effort to The United States: claims the rhprk thp arrnrarv rif thn tfiiirtl j- second to handle human trans ance system at exit angles ap- - iportation from point, to point on airmen were sho down delibef-amon- g 17 men nrnanhino thr, vprtiaV" Af thotfthe earth's surface. ately. They were 130 C which of a other Thih a host iboard and was the near mooniet ransport its time, crashed and burned in Soviet Arr low passage point of about 160 searcn projects, including an of- menia on Sept 12, 1958,. after miles in the sky. . V spacecraft resembl Fay -a nee from flattened being intercepted by Red jet everything Transmitted Data to a flexible kite, are being; fighters. die The Air Force said the ALBM Russia returned the bodies of rt ported to some 2,100 guests this transmitted data to ground sta- week of the fliers but insisted it 100 six dol million at NASA's tions, which provided information knew on (Continued nothing: about the other 11. Page Four) Additional data on J p U. v Pressing Russia About Missing Fliers air-launch- ed j . The j ; - d-A- ff ; i - i 1 . -- j its trajectory." was gleaned through the tracking of-- the satellite itself. A similar attempt to fire .the ALBM on Sept. 25 was called off because of "technical reason's." The Air . Force1 said at that time' that "a' need existed to refia? guidance data on such a missi'e W I . Steel Shortages Result In More Auto Industry Layoffs . ..i trajectory..." DETROIT (UPD Steel short-- ; The Paddlewheel satellite, offi- ages ,in the auto industry have cially known as Explorer VI, was Doosiea ine; numuer, oi j iaiu uu fired Aug. 7, from Cape Canaver- workers to . 17,400 today and al as America's most complex threatened to idle another 4,100 '" 'H space data collector to date'. Wednesday.;. 14 The satellite, contained sep.The most recent layoff j catne arate experiments in its at the Chevrolet manufacturing a including package, plant in Flint where General Mo-- I which took device the tors sent home 2,400 hourly-raie- d scanning first crude television pictures ever employes because , of i.rnaterial made of the earth's surface from shortages caused by the nation-- ! ' , space. wide) steel strike. g Orbit Another 4,100 workers will be Its orbit ranges from. 25,000. laid off Wednesday at ' th6 same miles away from earth at its fai plant. To date the layoffs have been point to 150 miles at the near ALBM confined to General Motors' sup-- i point, toward which the rwa.- launched today. plier-- j plants. None of the fassem-- l nickThe satellite received the bly lines turning out 1960 'models name Paddlewheel from the four has been halted although the propaddle-shape- d solar eel vanes at- duction pace has been slowed to tached to its medicine ball shape. conserve steel supplies in some Scientists said at the time of cases. GM's parts plants were the first (Continued' on Page Four) '' 142-pou- -- J1 Testifies Before Fact Board McDonald Challenges Top Steel Men To Negotiate End Of Steel Strike By WILLIAM Jl EATON United Press International j chief counsel Arthur Goldberg, Taft-Haof use the that charged ley Law in the strike; is illegal because the walkout has not imperiled the national health and safety'. Prof. George W. Taylor, chairman of the board, indicated mea-- i while that little or no progress has been made in the j extra-hou- r loieetings designed to bring a! vol rt SteelWASHINGTON (UPI) workers President David JJ Mc Donald today challenged leaders of the steel industry to sit down with him and negotiate a settle I ste. ment of the strike "I personally would like o sit untary settlement.. down, with these chief exeeu-tiofficers, the men who have the re .hs sponsibility. . . and talk ou cornissues," McDonald said. He to reach plained of being unable any top industry officials, McDonald made his statement to President Eisenhower's fact finding board which is racing the calendar in an attempt to either settle the dispute or issue a port to the President by midnight Frjday. By AL KUETTNER Before McDonald testified! th? United Press International g board chairman of the ASIIEVILLE, N. C. (UPI) xliarnlv criticized both sides for "Texas fever", hit the! Southern failing to reach a common ground Governors Conference today. tie said the whole process of If the Democratic National Conpeaceful negotiation is endangered vention were in Session! now, Sen. by the strike. Lyndon Johnson would get the Talks to Auto Officials of the Democratic " majority The President instructed the Soutb's support. to seek first of all b Based on' interviews with the settlement between labor and mail chief executives it appearSouth's agement'. That failing, the gqvern ed that the Texas Democrat ment will go into court and! seek support in Arkanan injunction that would halt the has strongest South Carolina, Mississippi, strike for an "cooling off" sas, Tennessee' and Oklahoma, Georgia, period. and is probably a draw with Sen: McDonald told two General Main MaryJohnJCennedy tors officials Monday' night that land . ; j The governor, after a full week' if they brought pressure on day ot informal political talk that the steel industry. brought Kentucky Gov. A. B. McDonald- charged at t delay's (Happy). Chandler front and cenboard hearing that meetings with ter into thej presidential running, industry officials so far have been settled down to a morning of merely a "public relations ga me: serious discussion of the south's "I have failed to be able o sit education problems and a report down with these gentlemenj ". he on industrial progress, . shouted.'"! hereby challenge these High points of reports:; v. The committee on induslrial gentlemen to come to Washington and let us go to work, and get an development told of expanding agreement." economy in! Dixie that is bring USW Another union witness, ing in morejthan 1,000 new plants a year. II The Southern Regional, Education Board (SREB), an agency created by the governors tonfer-ence:- il years ago, said the South Central Utah News .. 3, 4,js, 6 must and. study how to anticipate Classified 12, 13 meet a of college enrolldoubling 11 Comics ment within the next 10 years. Editorial u . 102 The board recommended1 inWorld News National, ..!. .. creased financial participation by . 4 Obituaries the member; states in the cooperaWIV .10 V tive .........i ' ftI regional education program. Society. Governors were asked by he 8, 9 SREB to increase financial aid to Sports . 4 Stocks the Meharry Medical r College (Negro)-at- . Nashville, Tenn - i i Governors Of South Get j Texas Fever7 fact-findin- fact-finde- rs 80-d- ay 2.5-pou- nd . Wide-Rangin- j, ( J j it i i ' dent. At best, Taylor sakj, he hoped j 4 ill . - Taft-Hartle- j (D-Ark.- - ).' til .''' i self-sufficienc- ; back-to-wor- t V ,, - to get a "meeting of minds" and to narrow the issues involved, McDonald said his r suggestion that the auto industry intervene m the steel strike was based on a new union proposal. He did not disclose the nature of the offer On notice from the! union that k a court order would not bring permanent peace, the 'board held private! meetings with reached at her father-in-law's- ,. union and industry representa- home in Cornwall, Conn.b by tele tives to try to narrow the area phone told United Press Interna- oi disagreement. tional, "My husband has gone to Complete Testimony Today Neyy York to keep an appoint- Board Chairman 'George W. ment. Taylor said Jlje hoped tlie union refused to say. where, or would finish;' its testimony jat with whom. public hearings! today and the "I expect to hear from hi: la- steel companies would ' complete tor today," .she added their presentation by noon ITfruhi Asked if her husband had been day. served with the subpena Issued by If Taylor's schedule waS keot. the House investigating! subcoma day and a half would remain mittee1, she replied: 1 t i for drafting the board's report! to "No, he has nevjir been served the President' before! the Friday with a subpena. He was j not night deadline set b- - the White aware uidi auv.ii tx suutud uau House when Eisenhower invoked UCCu 133.UCU. y law last week. the The subpena was issued per- McDonald's discussion with the sonally by Subcommittee ;Chair-ma- n auto industry officials tame at a It- orOren Harris Sheraton-Park at the to Van Doren dered reception face quesHoteJ following the White House tioning about the rigging of the decorrespondents' dinner fori the funct quiz show "21." .1 ; j President, Last week, Van Doren denied; The union leader told. GM Board in a telegram to the committee! (Continued on Page Four) (Continued on Page tFourl i. i i j Taylor said the board is not yet sure what the issues are between management and labor, and that defining these issues may be tha most; that can be done in the sia gle week allotted by the Preai Dulles.. :j r I) j Unthinkable Sayu War i Studying events of the past half century for possible- jeljues to ths future, the President; said the: tim& for "blissful had passed so that "nations how have no logical alternative jti replacing coercion with honest negotiation and cooperation."! J; Fo! lowing his themft that the big nations j of! the world have grown so awesomely powe-fthat war is unthinkable, the President's5 speech ,wa. soiree, of specific mticism of j Hussia ani. her old war tactics, j nstead. Ei senhower'1' stressei;!;the;'!' heed for. "understanding aqd wisdom tween nations. !1 IMMIIMIM M !As the less developed inatjonij progress toward more pnaoie economies and hig hef living stand- t ardsj Eisenhower envisioned hewj record peaks for theAmencaj n cponomy . J !! ; oft-favor- ul . I ' "it - i.n;;-r- even "Burdensome surpluses those of wheat- - Will disappear.! "Tne world mustUearn t wok it together," he added, "or finaUy I will hot work at. aUV'j 'The President flew here 'froin Washington during jthe early morfl-- i ing; and- - after spending' the night in Abilene, planned, to rnake a! Jet i l flightlback to the.hation's da'ital; Wednesday morningi in time t3 spend as much of his 69th 'birthday as. possible with his wife land other members of the family. Receives Birthday, Gifts '; j I i ' Before leaving the White House, Eisenhower; received three red pak trees as birthday fiifts Ifrom ,the Republican j National (Committee and the GOP campaign commit tees of the House and Senate. Eisenhower turned two I shovels of earth for the first formal tree- (Conitnued on Page, Four) . j i Typhoon Roars Near Philippines Typhoon Charw 150 miles pcf of winds with ibtte nOUT TOarOU Close 19 inc liruuiH" pines today, threatening northernmost Luzon and the Batanes (islands with heavy ralnsjand, strong MANILA (UPD j winds:i ri i ; i i : The Manilai Weather Bureau lo cated Charlotte 260 mi!les east ,of ' !' northern Luzon early today, The typhoon had increased in strength -- j -- from 130 to 150 miles per, hour" as it swept along. . - to be hit by the shortages be- cause it laid in a smaller supply of steel in anticipation of the walkout and because ' its parts plants were operating six weeks ahead of the final! assembly lines. . Chrysler and Ford . were oper ating r their parts j plants only abouC two, weeks ahead of final assembly and American Motors and Studebaker - Packard were operating even closer, to the belt. Chrysler said it couk continue production with current supplies "into November." Ford said its supplies .would last at least until Nov. 15.1 American Motors and Packard said they Studebaker had enough steel I to continue r .. tnrougn jNovemDer. 5M, earlier estimated that parts shortages caused by the, steel strike would hit its final assembly lines about Oct. 20. j -- . I .) - .... . it, ...it i i (D-Mass- ? dependable, 'self guaranteeing; methods to reduce the ipst andj essentially wasteful 'expenditures for armaments, soj !that nuch of the saving 'may be used in a com prehensive and effective effort for world improvement,'! The library, to be ercc ed on site (across the! street! from ths Eisenhower home jand inufeum, eventually will house Imost of tha! written records of Elsenhower's military and presidential . servicj,.; plus many of the! papers of th late secretrry of State! John Foster! !j By BART KINCII United Press International NEW YORK (UPD Charles Van Dorcn's attorney said today" the television quiz whiz had not iiv any way evaded service of a congressional committee's subpena and is ready to accept the som- mpns at any time. Van Doren's father and We said at the elder Van Doren's Connecticut home that the young Columbia University professor had returned to New York City after a Jong weekend in New England. His lattorney, Carl Rubino, said Van Doren "is within easy reach of me" and "there will be no difficulty in serving it (the subpena); all the committee has to do is let me know when and where they ' want to. serve it."' J Rubino was indignant at charges that Van Doren had deliberately disappeared to avoid service of the subpena to testify before the House committee investigating the fixing of TV quiz showsi "He could not , possibly have been evading that which he didn't even know existed," Rubino said He! said Van Doren now has learned he is being sought. Mrs. Geraldine Ann Van! Doren, . fact-findin- - -- j Steelworkers president WITH TOP STEEL OFFICIALS WANTS POW-WOi ed as he President Eisenhower's before shown testif David J. McDonald, today of' g the steel industry to sit down with board. He challenged leaders '! Teleohoto ' him and negotiate a. rsettlements of the! steel strike. (Herald-UP-I i . : I Kflfe... " steel Kansas town, where he spent most of his boyhood. "No other aspiration," the Pre3 ident said, "dominates my own being as much as this: That the" nations of East and West will find j -- j ed aid-over-ar- 17 i Grou nd I n Ab i lene For Library In His Name upon by East and West khould be channeled quickly into a! vast program for helping M nations. The chief executive reinforced as (the his idea of best way to peace in a speech prepared for ground j breaking ceremonies of the Eisenhower Presidential Library here hi the t n t 177 4 j . t B rea les . -t, ri l ii' 'ff i. By MERRIMAN SMITH million' youngsters ' i UPI White House Reporter Presi ABILENE, Kan. (UPI)! dent .Eisenhower proposed today that financial savings from an disarmament plan ultimately, agreed ll employment picture, c artm ent that the nation's total work force Alaska. in September was 65,347,000. If all went well, the satelliteBoth declines were about norwould go into an elliptical orbit mal for ' ;he nonth, the Labor Pe of 330 miles cerisree.' or Doint partment said. !; closest to the earth, h and 71Q But a further dip in unemploymiles? at apogee, the; arthest ment expected for "October may point be wiped out by a swelling tide The launch was a repeat o of workers (laid off because of satellite try of July 16 tha f aiieu the! steel strike. In that attempt, the Juno II was .Promised to Eat Hat blown after up jut deliberately Seymour Wolfbein, the departlaunch' wnen it leaned off course ments labor force expert, said, as ine mgniy sopmsticateq imojonj many as! 50,QOO moreemployes in let ii designed to study radiation g industries may be laid balance, lyman- - alpha, jX- - rays off this :weec and as many may cosmic rays, micrometeprites, ex-- l le lidled next week. Wolfbein p'oihted out that laypqsed solar cells and space tem-- j peratures. The satellite carried offs as a result of the steel strike (Continued on Page Four) are rising more rapidly than last month. About p5,000 persons were idjed p the first week of I .. nt : - .; M-- ,jlil.U k-- , M a VUU ':! l; IVf 111! PRICE FIVE CENTS n ZU(U ,(OjUU Slight Drop By f nn II..M- ; PROVO; UTAH COUNTY, UTAH,1 TUESDAY! OCTOBER 13, 1959 YEAR, NO. 52 inklocc in h ! , ' , . Atitlv. wpnt infA nrhit. 5 .: II By AL .AEBB United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL, Fid. (UPI a v. i . : i j " ! HERALD INDEX '"""! A i f A 1 -- lM: Search In ;'!? Scotland Yard Opens Ail-O$700,000 Great Britain Jewel Robbery ut . f LONDON Scotland (UPI) Yard launched its biggest search today for the biggest jewel robbery in its history -i- the chain reaction theft of $700,009 in small but valuable items Investigators were ordered into airports seaports and private airfields to try o bloclp the! flight of the gems and baubles takcD from! four jewelry shops in the heart of. London this week end. The jewel thieves,1! believed to be six! men, either had a complete1 knowledge of the workings of the victimized companies or in credible luck. Each shop : thsyl robbed yielded the key to the - hard-to-trac- J ' . j next.! e Three of the shops were owned by the Goldsmiths and Silvec smiths Association, and the fourth was owned by a subsidiary company which had left its key$ in .1 a company safe. 'jj "It's a disaster,'! a spokesman I for the association said. Scotland Yard, which called' the thieves' work "nice and clean," said the loot included rings, heck laces, brooches, diamonds, sapphires, valuable silver plate and items left by customers for sale. Scotland Yard said the first burglary alone 'required "drastic A padlock whs broken measures." ' safe- was blown up. a and open : J : ; , t - . J i -- Mn HitMl' ;j :A Inside this safe j were;i the r; keys to1 footed The thieves were so r m sure that police at first ;fOund nothing amiss, A cop patrolinig his b?at early Monday tried one of tha doors of a looted building, and found it still locked,! nothing ap jj parenlly wrong. fThe thieves concentrated on small items and left bulkier ones behind, but Scotland j Yard; was able to flash descriptions of somf items to Interpol, the internatioii' al police organization In Europe, and to the United! States.1 j How ever they believed the loot stLU j I J j ! was in England, . i t ' j |