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Show ,' . ' ft n rs K i; ' fact-findin- g mid-Octobe- r. con-- 1 f . ' - Pact voir " , The panel settlement was be im- board eluded that makes its required report to the possible at that' time because President on Jan. 7.. both sides were hopelessly dead Board Chairman George WJ I! Tavlor was widely credited with locked. the reconvened Eisenhower narrowing the differences !in the Taft-the under j of board week a Wednesday strike during hearings will the sessions but they held before the three-ma- n Presi(UPI) strike steel Eisenhower's dent ' board will resume public hearings to put "heat" on union and management negotiators to reach an agreement, it was learned today. There is no definite date for its : i IT L WASHINGTON ; ' period, the union will injunction expires. to strike Eisenhower, in reconvening the g board, called on un-io- n again. CIO President George AFL and management to recognize and union other leaders their responsibility to the na Meany are pessimistic: about chances of tion and to try to reach a settle- e ment as soon as possible. agreement before the er y mills under the injunction. ' After the report, the National! Labor Relations Board will have an additional 15 days to conduct a vote among the steelworkers on the final company offer. Following anoth- - Hart ley emergency procedures gotiations,- - nas saia ;ne plans no This was viewed as a formality further talks Deore Nov. 23 at .Id' I so far as immediate action was the earliest concerned. .He put off mediation bfforts to Federal Mediation Chief; Joseph permit union jjajjm management F. Finnegan, who has left town officials to devote ul attention to rest up from the wearing ne- - to problems of reopening the 80-da- fact-finde- five-da- y . be free km Jan. 26 rs fact-findin- anti-strik- LA Fair Herald Telephones with variable high cloudiness this afternoon and tonight. Increasing cloudiness Friday. A little warm er tonight. High both days. 62 to 68.1 Low tonight 35 to 40. Low-arest temperature In Provo Thursday morning: was 28. II gh- est Wednesday 65. A For Ads. News, Circulation: Provo Office. 190 W 4th N. FR ' i Office, 741 N. State 50 Or-in- ...... AC ea 05 fc FR For Society 84 PHICE 'FIVE CENTS UTAH, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 4959 EIGHTYtSEVENTH YEAR NO. 74 J ir! 6 Labor Law Go Changes HI I ntb Effect roT.es: KB Mew Radio West 3e r n 1 1 II til U ) ; . the: against employers go into effect appropriate measures to predlude the possibility of such unlawful aci tion," Tass reported. j; .; The decision to establish the radio station was "unlawful since it is incompatible with, the existing status of West Berlin," the note said. (The 'State Department would say only that it had received a note from the. Soviet Union and that it was under Prs-miHAVANA, Cuba .(UPI), study. The department declined to Fidel Castro makes another disclose the contents there or the of his rri a r a thon television American reaction, pending furth speeches tonight and was report-- . er study. ' The Russian note is the newes ed ready to answer U.S. charges denunciation by the Communists that he is deliberately .leading western propaganda,! irtoi traditions1 against , Cuba away from its via radio stations; in West tably friendship with America. is which disseminated beBerlin, , ; (In London a Cuban . embassy hind the Iron Curtain. j ; spokesman said Capti Victor Tenza Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev Cardoza "prbbably" has gone to has- frequently called propaganda Czechoslovakia to arrange the chase of jet planes in case. Britain efforts originating from West Berdoes not provide them for Cuba.! lin a "cancer" that must be 'iit tii.1 ; 'ji Britain has been underi U.S. pres- OUt." The Russians' campaign to wipe sure not to sell arms to Cuba but out freedom stations in the: beOffice has the British Foreign to say whether Britain will leaguered ; city played a big iolc ; ir Foreign Minister Andrei Grom-yko- 's bow, to this pressure. , arguments in Geneva dur It will be his first speech since the ing Big Four conference last 26 when he told a crowd of Oct. ' ii .' summer.-h . the presidential 250,000 before J Mos.-coBut an American source in palace that the United States was ' of termed the note "not, very in "shameless guilty neglect" Miami-Base- d to significant" and "just a) restatepermitting planes of old facts, something for ment Ha"bomb and machine gun" ' ' vana. the record." The next day U.S. Ambassador The note was not taken by' some Philip- -' Bonsai presented a diplo- - foreign observers as1 the opening matic : memorandum to President o a new campaign, by the Soviet Osvaldo , Dorticos asking the rev Union against western forces in M' j lutionary government "earnest'.y Berlin. review its position in order that "The plans of the government traditional friendship of the two of the German' Federal Republic countries might, be restored be to build a radio station': in West fore further damage is done." Berlin . cannot but be regarded; said Dorticos he "categorically as an endeavor to step up subvef rejected" parts of the note but sive activity and hostile proga- ( Continued on Page Four) (Continued on Page Four) In TV Speech j j Castro Ready . To Answer Charges er - , re-fus- ed , " -- . w . j . j Cancer Cans ing Element Will Not Harm Humans - mans. Dr. Boyd Shaffer, a toxicolo-gis- t for the American Cyanamid Co., said- - his experiments with aminotriazole produced cancer in rats only after "continued administration over the ; lifetime of the- - ratsf at a relatively high dosage." He said similar experiments .- . De Gaulle Plans Visit to Britain (UPI) French President Charles de Gaulle will pay three-dastate Visit to Britain .in April, it was annorinced today. The timing of the visit meant summit meetthat an East-Wewould before May ing hardly be possible. The invitation was extended to De Gaulle soon after he became President in 1958. Fixing of a final date apparently was delayed pending settling Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's visit to Paris, which is set for March 15. De Gaulle will be. the first French head of state to visit Britain in 10 years, since Vincent Auriol made the trip. LONDON r y st , -- . Attorneys for organized labor, business groups and government agencies differ widely on the precise impact of the changes in the Act. But they do agree that it will be years before the courts and administrative rulings spell out exactly! what a union can and cannot do under the new statute. "The; new. amendments occupy I less than five printed pages but... seldom; has legislation packed so jniany apparently close and difficult questions into such a small Amount of type," one member of the National Labor Relations Taf-ilartl- ey y' t i - i ! - anti-la-jb- oi i V X " "lil train. BILLINGS, Mont. (UPI) - A howling blizzard "killed five per sons and left Montana renins imder more than a foot of snoar w.-'.-W'.- o thirl?. jtoday pt Dayid-Goliat- warm temperatures. A veteran stockman 'MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA' A smilipg President Eisenhower turns to wave to a friend as he walks from olane uoor arrival, at Bush Field in Aukusta, Ga. this afternoon. He's taking a short! vacation before his Telephoto) trip to Europe. (Herald-UP- I Youth Invokes' Diplomatic Immunity, Set Free Son of Ireland's Envoy Hits, Kills Pedestrian In By RONALD II. NESSEN Capital Police said the bar driven by young Hearne struck Mrs. Jossie Negro, Hamlin, 'a ji about 6 p.m.- e.s:t. as she was crossing! an intersection in the northern; part of the city. Pvt. Earl M. Rinick . Police! said Hearne told him that while he was; making cer ain that he missed another pedestrian who passed in front of his car, Mrs. Hamlin suddenly appeared a few yards beyond and w as struck, Rinick said the victim was struck by the right front fender ot the car and knocked 41 feet ii, She was pronounced dead oh ar rival at; Providence; Hospital After Hearne' s fight last month with a policeman; dutside a local night spot, ar precinct clerk said the vouth had been "aiiite a fre quent visitor!' to i. he station dur- ing the; past three Or four years. "He is really insulted if we call him a foreigner,'' the clerk said. "He claims he's as American as anybody until he's threat Then he's ened with a lock-uno longer American but an Irish man entmea to aipiomaiic ira ld ; . i III j d, 45-in- ch p. i ed 132-inc- HERALD j INDEX . ' ;. .. i, a, where the Watutsi - thev prefer that spelling to the Amerihave ruled canized Watusi centuries over the cool hills ot their beautiful land. ' Legend Protects Them They came down out of Egyp-oEthiopia centuries ago, bringd ing with; them the cattle exactly like those; depicted on ancient Egyptian tombs. And their legend of invincibility had fo-thre- , Continental Divide was stopped by the State Highway Patrol and sheriff's officers closing a 117 mile stretch of U.S. 10. An estimated 50 cars slid from the highway in the Hellgateo Canyon between Missoula and Helena. Only One Traffic Fatality However, the only traffic fatal-itywa professional guitar playcrash near er 'killed in a two-cBillings. He was the fifth person to die as a result of the storm which howled down from Canada early . Tuesday. Four Air Force fliers were killed when theirj ;F86 Scor- pions crashed after runnijig short of fuel. i The storm was so bad at Helena that motorists abandoned their cars on city streets and trudged through 14 inch snow after chains and snow tires proved useless. Never Fought Battles For example they have larg? drums decorated with souvenirs separated from alleged battle vic- United Press International A David and LONDON (UPI) war Goliath is being fougnt 'n Ruanda-Urundnext door to the Belgian Congo, and what is dying with the Watutsi warriors is th? legend of ' their invincibility, The Bahutus, who are a peopl? of medium height, are killing off the their masters of 300 years one of the stranggiant Watutsi, est and mct fascinating tribes on earth. I spent some time among them in one of their capital towns, As-trid- . ; By ROBERT MUSEL e r ) ar - - . as : tims. No one knows where they got these private mementoes since no one can remember that they ever fought a war before "but the sight of thW this one drums was, enough to make every male pygmy and Bahutu a more devoted servant. Ingenious people the Watutsi for 300 years they parlayed one bluff after another into a life ot luxurious indolence, never raising a hand to light a pipe or pick up the gourd of banana beer (Continued on Page Four) ... estimated were stranded in high! mountaia ranges. Riders expected to try today to get feed to the Seattle. Air travel was, halted because of poor visibility and many motorists were forced to abandon their cars. All highway travel between withoutj Helena and Missoula across the were. And the Watutsi, throwing a spear or firing a pois-- f oned arrow, shrewdly added tc) the legend for they are mosi ' remarkable people, EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert Mu-sof the London UPI bureau has spent' some time with the Watutsi tribe in Africa, now en- gaged in! a battle of survival with the Bahutus who rose from serfdom to kill hundreds of their giant masters. In the following dispatch he tells of their status rise to bear god-lik- e and their fall j to 15,000 sheep and cattle 10,000 Bahutus Shatter Watusi Legend Of Invincibility el j j Battle In Africa h , j - j - --- . ..- : GrouM and . air transportation was snarled hunters were trapped nt Steel Flows From Geneva Open Hearths ' j . Mrs. Co'ncetta Giarletta, 41, ..was blasted by a hand hunters unreported. However, sheriff's officers said the hunter? grenade as, she opened the garage door for her husband, probably were not in any serious Frank, 50. of the irelativeiy trouble because !! .I - t rapped In Worst Storm to Hit Montana This Season I : steel-worker- s l" hunters ! so-call- ed labor-manageme- mmm j, I i Cm rockies and in the wind-sweof cattle were stranded LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two military space experts thousands snow. the swirling warned Wednesday that the United States is defenseless byThe worst storm of the Winter, against an intercontinental ballistic missile attack. 50 an mile hour wind But said Lt Gen. Bernard Schriever and Maj. Gen. packing out of the jhiga when it broke John B. Medaris in separate speeches, Russia also is be- mountain ranges, pushed .towarfl lieved to be defenseless against such ah attack. the Northern and Central Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley " LQS ANGELES (UPI) Gov. Nelson A. RockeF today. feller of New York said today he wants no part of Heavy snow warnhigs were postsecond iplace on the Republican ticket in 1960 but he for portions of Nebraska and ed admitted openly he is touring the Far West to see South Dakota with local accumuwhat his chances are to run for the top spot.; lations of more than four inche. storm was expected to reach The withNEW YORK (UPI) A Staten Island housewife Iowa tonightj .;' norhtwest out "an enemy in the world" died today, her legs blown Many Hunters Unreported off and her body riddled with shrapnel from a booby-tra- p The Montana blizzard left many explosion Tuesday night. United Press International j WASHINGTON An UPI) began four months ago. By this morning two more of aiitomobile driven by the sn of Geneva'e 10 open hearths were Ireland's ambassador struck and tapped as operations at the Co killed a pedestrian Wednesday lumbia Geneva Steel division plant with dogs produced no cancer night but the youth invoked his slowly returned to normal. "...If you ask me whether the diplomatic immunity and police Meanwhile, the callback of to their jobs should bring set him free. very small amount of residue presented (in the tainted cran Geneva Works employment levels ' David Hearne, 21, who was arberries) is dangerous to people to nearly 3700 by late today, plant rested last month for socking a I steadfastly maintain , the an officials estimate. About '4800 we-- e policeman, first was booked on a swer is no!" he said, j on strike at both Geneva and Iron-ton- . homicide charge following the ' and then released to accident Magazine Supports View Ambassador John Six more open hearths are slowJoseph Hearne. &neiter saia a human wou i Hearne been in rehas Young have to eat 15,000 pounds i ,o ly being heated and several should with police. Bue on cranberries a day for many be ready for charges of raw ma peated jams e'ach occasion he has escaped years" before he would suff(er terials before the day ends. The frist by invoking his dip of iron punishment ore shipment any ill effect from consumpii lomatic from nearmines immunity. open pit Cedar of" the chemical residue. "is expected to arrive at Ge A City, lieutenant in the acci- police The McGraw Hill Chemical neva to feed the five blast dent investigation unit said all today Week in an editorial prepared for furnaces at both which are charges originally lodged against plants the Nov. 28 issue supported; Sha all how making iron. Officials ycung Hearne were "red lined," fer's view. jj said; that it would be several cr wiped off the books, when he 1 ne magazine saia a persen; more "days before top yields of invoked his diplomatic immunity. would have to eat large amounts high quality iron can be expected . The ambassador, who came to of the berries every day for from these furnaces. the police station to pick up Da-vimore than 20 years to reach the At, Geneva's sprawling rolling assured District of Colombia levels at which the mills, feeding-tes- t by theoperations A. Magruder MacDonald Coroner weed killer first proved harmful. slab, and bloom mill are schedson would appear at an his that "And nobody, but noody, eats uled to tegin late today. The: big inquest Friday although he is not that many cranberries." Chemi mill, which roughs steel ingots legally required td show up into;! semi-finishcai Week added.. ;::'' lit shapes will then munity h strip mill which Professor Robert D. Sweet of join the Young Hearne has been in the Cornell University also debunked started broiling steel on Wednes- United States since his boyhood. reports that the tainted berries day. He previously attended George All 252 coke ovens might be dangerous to humansi and of Geneva's town Prep School and George the 55 ovens at Ironton are Central Utah Compared With Cigarets ir town University. h is father, a now . in operation, plant officials News 3Aiil2A 13, 11, 5, 15, 4, con"As far as the danger is Career diplomat, was named Ir- report, and "coking time" is 'being Classified . . 11 10, 6 the United would ish ambassador cerned," Sweet said, "I gradually reduced to increase Comics 9A States in 1950. rather take my chances wi.h yields of coke produced each day 8A Editorial cranberries than smoke cigaColumbia-GenevHearne' s older brother, John a Local officials National, I'rf 111 rets." r .:.,iiVS1 !' Justin, then 20, wa s accidentally report that the return to normal ' 6 A, 7 A World 14, 4A, News, 2, shot to! death Sept. 25, 1957, when Secretary of Health, Education operations; at Geneva Works i OA, 13A, 14A, 15A a .38 caliber revolver; went off in and Welfare Arthur S. Flemming moymg ahead satisfactorily and '4 . . . Obituaries ......11. hand of his best; friend. The the to started the controversy Monday that no major damage steel . 1A 2A ' Society when he warned that a portion making facilities resulting from friend, John E. Ijeffer Jr. was 9 ....... J.. 8, Sports not charged when police ruled the of the Washington and i Oregon the long shut down has been un(Continued on Page Four) shooting an accident. coverei this far. i ? - Board ,(NLRBV said recently, Unions Win Concessions' Unions did win some concessions in the new law they have generally condemned as . The building trades will benefit by revisions to permit greater union control over hiring. All unions won a j point in another section authorizing discharged strikers tor vote in representation elections, within limits. But most of the changes appear certain to hamper union activity.) The major revisions in clude: -- Abolition of the "no- man's: land" by allowing state courts and agencies to handle disputes where the NLRB declines to assert jur isdiction. Broadening; the present ban on secondary boycotts and outclauses lawing! "hot cargo" (Continued on Page Four) Travel By Ground, Air Snarled down from Washington to confer on the new budget tobe presented to Congress in January. Mrs. .Eisenhower will join the President early Friday, the day belore her 63rd birthday The Fast Lady, who dislikes flying, will travel to Georgia tonight by Eisenhower planned to stay at least a week. The White Hpuse gave no date for his return but indications were that he would be back before Thanksgying. He leaves Dec. 3 on his European-Asia- n trip. It will be a mixture of work, and play for the President at Augusta. Federal officials will coma ; Nearly 300 tons of steel flowed from a big open hearth furnace at U. S. Steel's. Geneva works at 0: 35 a.j m. Wednesday to signal the first steel; produced in Utah since, the nationwide steel strike Says Cranberry Scientist By BART KINCH United Press International The NEW YORK (UPI) chemist whose laboratory experiments disclosed that a, weed kill er used on' some cranberry crops ' produced cancer in "rats said the tainted ber-rie- s t Wednesday night: were not dangerous to hu- Friday! minute conference with Premier' of the Felix Hdupholet-BiogiIvory Coast, who called at the White House this morning. - alsr hn n hripf ron- PispnhnWpr r " r ference with Lord Edwin Plowdens chairman; of the Atomic Energy Commission. They reviewed Britr iuh Ameripan progresls in the atomic field. Presi- WASHINGTON (UPD derit Eisenhower letlt here today for; rest and relaxation at the Augusta, Ga,. National Golf Club before his goodwill trip to Europe and Asia next month. The President took off at I(:52 a.m. e.'s.t. 'for the two hour flight to the Georgia golf center. Ijis departure was delayed by a tO- - 1 I gia for lishing a new propaganda radio station in beleaguered By WILLIAM J. EATON .West Berlin, :it was learned today. United Press Internationa' The official 'Soviet news agency Tass said the note;: Six WASHINGTON (UPI) delivered to the. U. S., French and British ambassadors-Wednesdayin U.S. law labor major changes protested the setting up of the freedom sta- sharply curtailing unions' rights tion by the West German government. to picket and conduct boycotts that : n -- The note demanded Western Powers "take n u Amendments Curtail Boycott MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet Union has accused the Picketing, Western Powers of 'fanning up the cold war" by estab- Rights of the Unions U. S. ' " First Criticisjn by Communist Nation Yugoslav Envoy Says China Aggression Threat to Nepal lyre-horne- protected them ever since. Without really fighting a battle the skinny giants, many of them seven feet and over, made slave? of the pygmy Batwas (four feet high) and subject peoples of the Bahutus. They have brought in the pygmies and; their blowguns and poisoned darts to aid them in their battle for- survival. The Watutsi are people of tremendous presence. Their faces chiseled, their arejf delicately walk swaying gracefully impressive. To emphasize their height they wear Romanesque togas drapped down from the shoulder. The Batwas and Bahutus had never seen anything like them They accepted instantly that these towering invaders must b the great warriors they said they . , x By PATRICK J. KILLEN United Press International tNEW DELHI (UPDThe Yugo- slav ambassador to India and Ne-thCommu- pal warned today nist Chinese aggression in th border dispute with India also 'poses a threat to Nepal.", It was the first criticism of Red China's recent actions by j a ' Communist ' nation. Ambassador D. Iveder . said in Nepal Jhat world war might break out on the border issue and ''everyone will have to suffer th? of 'atomic exploconsequences at sions." ' Kveder visited Katmandu, Nepal, to present his credentials as Communist Jugoslavia's fi? & t Tibet and India,! quite i.near some areas In which clashes; have takci place. The Yugoslav ; ambassador, accused China of "trying to assert-he- r authority over Indian terri tories through brutal force of bul lets' and thus posing "a 'danger to world peace." r "China is acting. . .against interest of world peace, Kveder said. "If the fire . is allowed to develop "it will be a danger to the whole world. Nepal's will also not be sovereignty . " , the-large- , spared in that case." The statement by the Yugoslav ambassador was the first from the Communist world that openly criticized Red China's; actions on n border This could the be attributed to the fact that Marshal Tito's "independent" Communist government doeg not get along with tht Peiplng r Sino-India- minister to that small Himalayan kingdom. Nepal is a protectorate of India, which handles its de fense and foreign affairs. It is located in the mountains between gime. I i J |