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Show J : j. '.. : , ' - - . ; . . . p . , . ' EIGHTY . I'm YEAR, NO. 57 i U ' - . j ' 4 - LL , . L4J PRO)VQ, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1959 : : . ,. i hi'- -- '1 ! : - J i ' . ; i t Voting, Over City . By CHARLES W. CORDDRY - Ma-iiar- is districts reported! 'very "very poor" response to sl&w" or the election compared with previous primary elections. Some districts reported only 9, 11, 13 and 16 votes prior to noon today. Some of the larger districts HSA f II u r i if f i I " Iij doubt about where you vote? Call The Daily Herald ' Election Service, FR give them your address, and they will tell you. The same information .may also be obtained by calling the office of I. Recorder Grant City Bench until his office closes at 5 jp. hi. today. The Daily; Herald Election Service may jj be "called until the polls close: j tonight. -- jecture. :Irf 1957, Provoans cast' a .total of 3510 ballots in the pri- -' mary. The year of 1955, the year in which Provoans voted for the first city council under the coun-- ! form of government, dew an ex:ceptionally heavy pri-- ; mary vote ia total of 4627 ballots. Only "other highest primary vote .in Provo's histor was 1947, when a total of '4902 ballots were cast in preliminary voting. All figures listed refer to primary vote totals. Final elections in' each case were much heavier. Following are the primary to- (Continued on Page Four) II; M The ANGELES. (UPD 0 Forest 'Service said that the 14,-20- .ft . I a Ices Plea Fbr reland Settlement China-Tibe- tl r UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP!) sion of Tibet by the Chinese Ireland appealed to Red China Communists'. Ireland and Malaya sponsored today to negotiate a peaceful setH arid a resolution calling for "respect Lama with the Dalai tlement small for the fundamental human rights recognize ''the right of the' Tibetan people to control their owin Jof the Tibetan people and for ' their distinctive cultural and re, destiny." The appeal was mads by Irish ligious life." Aiken acknowledged j'quite canExternal Affairs Minister Frank Aiken in the opening round of the didly that there is nothing this orSoviet-oppose- d United Nations de ganization can do to prevent them bate on last summer's suppres (the Chinese Communists) from crushing; the Tibetan people." But, he said, "actions like those China in Tibet have more than of Officials a local effect. They sei; the block back the world over." Malayan Ambassador Nik Ah med Kami, opening the debate, called oil the UN., to use 'allots j j moral force" to protect the! funda-cultur- e mental human rights, the and the religion of Tibet. 'lit is our contention that any systematic violation of human rights and fundamental freedoms in any part, of the world. . canWASHINGTON The hood of Carpenters; 'Earnest Mark not be (UPI) morally justified and must government today charged four High, New York, editor of Spot be a matter which the jUnited Napersons, two of them high1, unioi light Publications; and Pe,ter tions must face," Kami! told the pfficials, with contempt of Con- Licavoli, known as the leader df General Assembly. gress for defying the Senate Rack Ihe "Purgle; Gang" of Both Aien and Kamil rejected Detroit. ets Committee.' arguments offered earlier by h Indictments returned by a Alleged Christmas Gifts Indonesia and olher "neuGrand Jury here charged Hutcheson was charged on tralists'"' that no good could be tht each of thetodefendantsbefohadc counts involving his refusal to- achieved "in debating the Tibetan been' subpenaed testify answer questions abouls alleged ra question here without the presence (hef Senate Rackets Committe?. lationshipsj with ' a Gary, Indj of Red China. but,, either refused to appear or teamsters official. Pressor refused to give complete answers. accused o failure to supply red One of those named was William ords concerning alleged Christmas dresser of University Heights "gifts to the teamsters. Licavoli'-an.. Ohio, head of the Ohio Conference High wre charges ot Teamsters and an old friend 5f with refusing to supply record!: teamsters President James R. about quasi-labo- r publications. ay Hoffa. . Hutcheson appeared before! this The others were Maurice A. committee,, which ended 2Vz years Ind., of investigations in the- labor-ma-n Hutcheson, Indianapolis, By RICHARD GROWALD 'field of summer last in United the BrotherUnited agement Press International president LONDON (UPI) June, 1958. He was charged today The British with refusing to say whether he farthing isn't worth. .well, it knew Hofffl and Miehapl Sawnrltj isn't even worth a farthing: of teamij rka, Wcretary-treasureQueen Elizabeth's royal mint ster Local 142 at 'Gary.Ind. 'issued a report that sneered at The indictment also Isaid HutchM ithe little coin of the realm as a eson refused to say whether h& ("sporadic irritant" and one .that received teamster money iA an wasn't worth the bronze lit was A Indiana land deal Inj return foj? minted in. ' BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPD mechanical failure caused an ex- supporting Hoffa in his fight to H. J. James, the Queen's secreplosion in an "engine room of the avoid ouster from the AFL-CItary of the treasury, also hinted 'Woodward Iron Co. today, injuriOn another count, j. Hutcheso.i the farthing may not be long for ng; four men, two of them ser- fas charged with Refusing . tb a world in which it can buy ab.. tell the Jackets group; whether solutely nothing. iously, f .'.The blast, which rocked this carpenter 'union; funds! were paid Cannot Buy Anything c o.: ihern steel center, view the lo Max Raddock, a New York A farthing is worth roof off the building and shattered publisher, - for personal expensed pt a British penny, and a British windows in ' the engine room', one Presser appeared before the penny is worth about the same ot tour supplying air jo tne nuge committee in September, 193a as an American cent. Before blast, furnaces at the iron works. and according to today's indict- World War H a farthing could John Urquhart, chairman of the ment, testified that hi; had comji purchase up to two matches. Now board of Woodward, said it was plied with the committee's sut pem it cannot even buy a toothpick. "purely an accident" and it ",wiM lor personal records. "Farthings may. have .finished But! the Grand Jury charge-take some time to determine the their useful life," the treasury amount of 'damage.' (Continued onTPage Four) secretary said. j 1 t . so-call- .. In-li- a; . fed-era- j -- . 4 I VIC j - " P j j r - ; ; ; i ; j one-four- -- I I. J th ,500,000-ph- d spring i ... II: . he . - Missile Ordnance PICKETS REGISTER PROTEST Thes members of United Steelworkers picketing Homesteiid Works of U. S Steel Corp. in Pennsylvania show wlaat they think v Act. ((Herald-UP- I of the government's use of Taft-Hartle- Telephoto) - back-to-wor- may meet their doomsday along with Britain's entire, mixed-u- p coinage system. James said once again Britain ishumming with plans to sweep away the pound, shilling, and pence system that complicates adding machines and taxi meters, annoys bookkeepers and frightens tourists. Studying Decimal System He said the British !Assn. for the Advancement of. Science and the Assn. of British Chambers of Commerce, were studying the possibility of adopting the decima' coinage system. James noted that Vnearly every important nation" in the world has followed the American exam pie of using, the decimal system of coinage. Canada and india went over to the decimal system and South Africa is toying with " the idea. - - k - court-ordei-e- d "r . : ' Western ob (UPI) servers today saw no letup in Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khru shchev's "peace drive" despite the expulsion of the security officer at the American Embassy in Moscow !inj an incident reminiscent of the Stalin era. Diplomats were surprised, even shocked, by the kidnaping and arrest of Russell Langelle and his ouster by the Soviets on charges of espionage. But they tended to regard the incident as an isolated episode rather than any switch to the methods of the cold war. All signs,' in the belief 0f officials here, still point to a continua- tion of the "spirit of Camp David," as far as Khrushchev is concerned, coupled with a genuine desire on his part to get along with the West. The. Langelle incident jolted officials here1. However, they did not regard it as any indication of a switchback to cold war tactics. LONDON i ; - - . ceed Without any heat on the parties for an ai'cement. Dur- both sides felt ing .the strike the workers economic pressure got no paychecks and , the industry sold no steel. , Strike Resumption Likely pn ion and company officials will point their major efforts to the vole on managc- er. off me union win mcnt's final campaign for an overwhelming "no" vote and management will do the opposite to improve bar- yarning position The strike iis likely to resume alter the injuiiLtion expires ' unless negotiators, reach an agreement well botqre the deadline. A back - to ork order issued now would prohibit resumption of the walkout until 'around Jan. 10. This would probably inspire a for dcalin: flood of proposals with emergency disputes t h a t could brine wljc to union and management when Congress rc-- J convenes in Jpnuary. Taylor and Mite h c 1 1 have warned that unless '"this dispute is settled at thl bargaining tabk', it mav lead lb contract terms imposed by government decree in the future. ' " Burns On Test Flight The 203,590,000 farthings jangling uselessly in British pockets A : Can Court Really Solve Steel War? 'Peace Drive' m y f from George C. Doub, an as$isr :. Nikita Likely To Continue Toft-Hart;e- llant attorney general Jet Liner trashes And and cooler Wednesday. High today ,66 to 70. Low tonight ,36 to 42. High Wednesday 58 to 65:. y el-bau- high-tensio- on the increase today. Considerable cloudiness with a few light showers tonight. Partly cloudy President Eisenhower, , today asKea leaerai court to issue an itceJ injunction to halt the strike for 80 days. U. S. Attorney Hubert I. Tei handed the back to work petition to the qlric-'othe district court, putting' it up to Federal Judge Herbert P. iorg to decide whether to .order 506,P00 jsteelworkers back to their jobs. Sorg accepted the petition ani then went into a closed seSsioT with Titrlhaum unrt plark .Tamp? Wallace, saying "until I have ,eVd the petition, I cannot say when a II hearing ;will be held." Teitelbaum received the petjuon &3-da- men. More than 70 tons of grass Seed were being sown over the forest in the wake of the blaze to prevent floods during the proi-ect- s through the Los Angeles Basin. officials began releasing Fires, equipment and firefighters Monday night. Some 700 men Monday contained a 3,500-acr- e fire near Casatic, 40 n miles northeast of the central blaze in rugged mountainous territory. The fire started Sunday when a fired bullet tore through n a power line. Pilot Saves 4 Lives School Camp Evacuated A Long Beach, Calif., school to be evacuated camp facility had Monday when fire broke through the northeast corner of the Angeles Crest blaze from Bear Canyon. There were 10 adult's and three children in the camp. Two pilots 'escaped injury when their four- - engine aerial tanker SEATTLE! (UPI) A veteran carrying 2,000 gallons of witer-borat- e Boeing' test pilot today was credsolution for the fire crashed ited with! saying the lives of four on takeoff from Palmdale Airport. of eight persons aboard a 707-22-0 The flyers were Carson Shades 47, which crashed and burned on a and A.J. Alice, 42. river sand bar 40 miles north of More than 100 homes were here Monday. (Continued on Page Four) Four survived the fiery crash of the Sleek jet liner because Russell H. Baum, 32, BeUevus, Cloudiness f d , : Britain's drthing Almost Worthless-MBe Dropped . Iron Company Plant Blast Injures 4 Men acre brush fire flaming through the Angeles National Forest for the past week was "contained" today. Complete control of the baze was expected by 6 p.m. About 400 firefighters were released while National Guard ar- IjQories at Azusa and Arcadia in the foothills near the fire, were se'f up as "rest centers" for fire- N AMERICAN PRIVILEGE Mrs. Paul Tripp, left, who is 21 for the first time! this electioii, casts her first s Provo jmunicipal primaries. Voting judge in District 25 is Mrs H. Winf ield Clark. Of Congress for Defying Senate Rackets Committee , r thrust Saturn rocket needed to match" the heavy Possible III Effects Pondered loads Russia has boosted into space. Says U.S. Lags Reds But he said the government ha not thrown1 extra money into this ' project, Von Braun said it was "quit? possible" that the Soviets wou!d have within two years a rocket which could put a "bus! load of Negotiations will stop for 10 By WILLIAM J. EATON astronauts into orbit around the United Press International'' days or two weeks while manearth. Govagement and ujnion leaders are WASHINGTON (UPI) It would take; the U.S. four to with prob- five years ;o develop such a rock ernment officials expressed con - occupied lcmset under the present program, and cern today over possible harmPossible Slowdowns at least three years even if extra ful side effects of. a Workers, angered at being ' hal in the steel strike. money is provided. llltlJ JU'J3 "l Eisenhower President .said In a "speech earlier before a may express tins pay oju scaics; breakfast meeting of the. .National Monday' that he had no choice resentment by slowdowns, refus Association; of Food Chains, Von but to seek an injunction to send ing lo worK ovctimc and otner Braun laihed out sarcastically ,al the striking steelworkers back to harassing laclids. the' new U.S. space policy. He the mills for 80 days. There may be chaos" in But Labor Secretary James P. said the ;decision. to give the Air ihvn steel mills markets reoi)en. Mitchell and, chief fact - finder It Force full control of space will wdeks a take perhaps shows: lack of confidence "i.i George W. Taylor made no se month or niorej to ;et produc cret of their belief that sit'eh. a tiona proven rocket team." )( to cent of eapac- up per He said the shift threatens to truce .would not settle the maraitv. Some expe ts say only 30 throw this jcountry even further thon dispute. rivi 80 days o production will Here's what informed sources brbehind in the race with Russia. bed ause of tne need possible scientist head- in Washington believe may occur tr warm The German-borthen re and furnares d ay ed a team which perfected th? during the so - called 30 facilities. pair "cooling-off- " period:1 (Continued on Pa?e Four) lumncr baipauiing win pro j LOS 4 Charged With Contempt i V ,4 Braun Control Of California Blake Near - i. By J. ROBERT SHUBERT United Press International A U.S. PITTSBURGH UPI) attorney, acting under orders of ... 5 j How today's vote will hold up with primaries of previous year in Provo wds a matter of con- - Including 2 Union - he 'someone Past Primaries ; ; Court Asked To Send 500,000 Men Back To Work For 80 Days i. Von Braun said he had no in himself assaileJ called indecision by tention of quitting the agency at in Washington" and this time, but that he might get said", there must be a long-rang- e out and go into private industry to mean we don't unless the Army team is given "if program important work to do. He toldj a news conference that he, Medaris and others at the ABMA inj Huntsville, Ala., wa.it a "crash' program to devjeloj) the Von t -- v. ' . Polls in each of Proyo's 42 voting district will remain open until 8 o'clock tonight, and. heaviest voting is expected in' the evening, f Set Time For Hearing what reported "steady' voting but still j u r uo abandon the heavens to the Reds." He said! Medaris wanted to 'pitch in and help" this country catch Russia in the space race but was not given any "challeng ing task." Medaris announced M b n d ay night thai he is retiring as head United Press International WASHINGTON Rocket (UPD expert Wernher von Braun said today that Maj. Gen. John resigned as head of the Missile Agency beBallistic Army cause he was discouraged with "foot dragging" in the U.S.- - space of the Army Command. program. Early reports from districts throughout the city indicated that 'voters were slow in casting votes in the primary election today. . o u Feet Dragging In Rocket Race e below expectations. i Von Braun Raps Check Indicates Light N - Army Missile Head Resigns -- ; Judge Will yMimiMIPMMMWPiMMff ' To Vote! -- U j M 'Order End ha W alkouf PRICE FIVE CENTS (2) ; . v- ForYou Most ' . - - Still Timp Noon-Tim- ; i Co) .i ; jV rignr LJ 1 l SEVENTH - : MMffiffim , 'Ml' i.v -- ; i .Taft-Hartle- Wash.. gave his life in the emergency landing. The 200-tc- n jet, valued at 5 million dollars smashed m.o wreckage when Baum set it dovn on the sand bar on the Stil'i-guamis- h River after three of L's four, engines were torn away 'n what Boeing Airplane Co. called a "violent maneuver 'due to mis, application of controls.' Only thu tail section in which those who survived were j riding, remained intact after the plane crashed. The. rest - of the plane became a funeral pyre for j Baum and three others, two of them personnel of Braniff Air Lines, foi whom ;the airplane had "been manufactured. Boeing bfficials, when pressed lor clarification ,of the "mteap remarx. saia tnar ja.iy plication further explanation would have to wait until after an investiga y -- i . who Itiew f here from Washington. The petition asked for an 'injunction directing the Ur.ited Steelworkers Union, on strtks since July 15, to instruct its rr cumbers to return to work for 80 days and for the immediate issuance! of a temporary restraining ojrdT pending issuance oi ine injunc - tion. vj Union Fights Order It was. the second time this month President Eisenhower re-y La tD sorted to the end work stoppages. Earlier he invoked the law to send the s! f ikr ; mg East Coast dock workers back to their jobs. , A spokesman for the union sa?d. USW general counsel Arthur G. Goldberg would appeal the petition on grounds that: "The steel strike docs not Imperil the national health or safety within the meaning of the Taft-HartlAct. "The provisions 6f the Taft-HartlAct which have been invoked are unconstituitonal." The spokesman did not elaborate on the union's contention of Taft-Hartle- ey c ey ' constitutionality. A reluctant President Eisenhower ordered the Justice Department to seek the injunction Monday after his special board reported there was virtually no hope for a voluntary settlebasic steel ment of the acknowlPresident The strike. a was "bad it day for the edged nation." 'fact-findin- g 93-d- ay I; Atty. Gen. George' C. Doub goes before Federal Judge Herbert P. Sorg to request ithe '"cooling off" period, which the President said was necessary .'to remove a pen! to the national .i.i. aimi saitny. ricaun Will Obey Injunction United Steelworkers. President n David J. McDonald said his! would try to block Ihe order (Continued on Page Four)! Asst. i un-lo- Auto Industry Layoffs Reach 72,826 Total Almost 'DETROIT (UPI) of the assembly lines turn- bne-thi- rd werel out 1960 Chevrolets closed down by steel' snortages io layoffs day as auto industry '" ing soared to 72,826. Lavoffs today at the Chevrolet assembly and. Fisher Body plints at Janesville, Wis., the Chevrblet assembly plants at Atlanta and GM's plants at Saginaw and Flint, Mich, added 3,976 to the growing number of idled workers. . -- tion which will be conducted to day by the Civil Aeronautics "Roard and Roeinfi ! Boeing said their origin.!.' statement was based on brief interviews wrtlv, survivors of ih crash who were taken, to Arlington Hospital at Arlington, Wash., near the crash site. After the engine pods ripped (Continued on Page Four) HERALD INDEX Central Utah News 3, . . .. Classified '. Comics .1. Editorial f....L National, World News 2, Obituaries Off the Beat Society Sports Stocks ! j. .r...... 4, 3, 6 12, 13 '. 11 10 .' 12, 14 ................ 8, 4 10 7 9 4 Torn Between Duty and Honor : Steelworkers Have Mixed Feelinqs in Strike Course By JOSEPH V A RILL A United Press International PlTTSBURGjl (UPD Striking steelworkers lorn between duty and honor must resolve a con- flicting allegiance; They feel duty bound to obey the President jof the United States andreturn to work if the y injunction is issued. But they afef honor bound to push? the stride towards a satisTaft-Ilartle- factory settlement. They will obey the lavy of the land in making' their agonizing ' choice. "I guess yoii have lo have mixed feelings about something like this," said Charles Matraz- A fitter's helper at U.S. Steel's Edgar Thomson Works at j nearby Braddock, Pa. zo, a pipe "This injunction ' isn't going to settle (anything. If that company keeps on insisting on taking those eight points (local working Con ditions clause in the contract), we'll be back ts sooii as the1 80 days are up." Then Matrazzo paused. Kids To Feed "You got jprinciples but you also got four hungry kids to feed." ;..., Josenh Birpf. a U.S. Slcel em' ploye who has "two h u n g r y mouths to fill," still held hope a (Continued on rage Four) j . : , . |