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Show n ... Nlew UN Aion Hying a nan: ev - S Q if By BRUCE W. MUNN United Press International tJNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) The United Nations Steering Committee voted 15-- 3 today to recommend a new airing in the General Assembly of the 1956 Hun-gari- n freedom revolt and its brutal suppression by the. r, since 1950. The action marked the resumption of diplomatic relations which were severed in 1950. Eisenhower gave the post to Edward Page Jr., now the consul general at Munich, Germany, and a foreign . service career officer since 1929. The,. President, who has been in Since .Nov. 12, was Augusta " lit-natio- n to Bulgaria scheduled tow take off for the na- normally Is done during' Decern-betion's capital ajbout jmidaft moon, but Eisenhower will be gone getting back to . the White House most of next rnnth." minister American that he will not spend Thanksgiv- North Atlantic Treaty Organizaing at his farm in Gettysburg, but tion and Christian A. Herter. , will have bis holiday dinner in ' The President also will confer the White House with Mrs. Tuesday wfth Secretary of Treasury Robert B. Anderson and BudEisenhower was expected back get Director Maurice H. Stans on at the White House between 2 and the budget for fiscal 1961. 3 p.m p.s.t. today. His schedule Working in 'his office this mornmornincludes an ing at the Augusta National Golf early Tuesday named by with Henri Paul Club, Eisenhower ing meeting -ecess the of appointment, the first Spaak, secretary general By MERRIMAN SMITII UPI White House Reporter Presi AUGUSTA,- - Ga. (UPI) dent Eisenhower got in a final golf game today before flying back to Washington and an unusually heavy "schedule of conferences preparatory to his tour next month. in The President's, schedule will be so, heavy Washington I - s rain oil on D S) C . at dusk. f the Chief Executive stay at the Augusta National Golf Club, he conducted almost daily conferences on the budget for, 1951, summoning official, from Washington by the During .The agenda awaiting him in Washington was crowded. It ha been necessary to telescope into a comparatively brief period of the involved an labors many in for thenext nually preparing 1 session of Congress. This fis-"c- al plane-(Continue- on Page Four) work d' ' I Soyiel Union. The Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and' Romania voted against including the Item on the agenda. Moroccois and As Indonesia abstained. Peru, whose representative , sembly President Victor Belaunde, . did not vote. The U. S. told the Steel Mills Approach 90 Capacity committee that "apparently the end of the reign of terror is not in sight" in Hungary. The Steering Committee, with the Soviet Union and its satellites refusing to participate, voted with, two abstentions to send the Hungarian question to the 'assembly for debate. The assembly later must approve its Steering committee's, recommendations. Cabot US: Ambassador Henry statements Munro's cited Lodge ' Soihat foreign armed forces viet troops remained in Hungary and that trials and executions of Hungarian freedom fighters had taken place since last year's general assembly. At' that time, the Communist authorities gave assurances that' these things had ' The. nation's' steel furnaces, roaring back g after a strike shutdown,' approached 00 per cent of capacity production f&th day of a , the today 116-da- .v Taft-Hartl- ey . cooling off period : - - , . w7 : TTzSLyL. On hT; '() y) pz 'A 1959. . 0, - - H T - Soviet Deputy Premier Visits Mexico Plants d). U LI-LI LLS U U & s ? ,- x - f- ,; , , . WASHINGTON , Ahas-ta- s Mikoyan winds up a tour of industrial northern Mexico today and : heads for the oil ' center of Ciudad Pemex, on the south Gulf " ' ' coast. i in flew Sunday night Mikoyan from Moaclova, where he offered to .' sell- - "all. kinds of industrial machinery" to the Atlos Hornos ' steel mill, Latin America's ' argest. He said Mexico- could have" 10 years to pay for Soviet purchases at 2 per cent rain-choK- -- ( ed - , Mdo Trying To Sabotage Summit Plan J seemed happy to have ) a boat ride." " Despite much confusion in the flooded areas, most families remained calm. 69-fo- ot Kent-Aubur- 18,-00- 0.' ; 2-Y- ear st (UPI) A top (UPI) Polish intelligence agent has defected to the West and is now somewhere in the United States, authorities said today. Col. Pawel Monat, former, mili- - Cloudiness Pact rs , st - Washington Gets Official To The Rose Bowl i to a considerable extent through tary attache in' Washington and trained A little warmer this afternoon. High both days 44 to 50. Low tonight 32 to 38. Lowest ', temperature recorded Monday abouts.' V .; Monat who returned to Poland mornin? in. Provo area was 29. Highest Sunday temperature was in May, 1958 from Washington, is said to be tin his late 30s . and 44. ' as in political as well work. intelligence military He is the second military chief of ali of Poland's military attaches, is said to .: have fled from behind the Iron Curtain to the West last summer while on his way to a Yugoslavia vacation with his wife and family. Monat, who would have had access to top .Warsaw Pact military American Who Became Cuba Revolt Chief Says Trujillo Offers Big Reward for Him ' i BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) Washington today was officially chosen as the West Coast representative to play in the Rose Bowl football game New Year's. Day against Wisconsin. By MATTHEW T. KENNY j 24 Killed In well-arme- Crash Of Afghan Plane i - n " y ex-Ya- ? th, - ist vador Jesus Soto and Jose M, de la Aguilera. , -- The election was denounced, bv Calcines, leadihg pro- ' ponent of the unity plan, and army Capt. Gustavo Mas, leader of the Airline Workers' Union. Calcines "charged .that the j?Iate.'gave important posts Id "Mujaiistas"-support;- rs ot.the regime ousted by Castro on New Year's Day. - The convention had been' marking time- for more than 14 hours when f Salvador appeared lo pre- sent the slate that had been 'ham-- ' mered out in overnight consultations behind the scenes.The early morning hours vvcre taken up by committee reports and speeches by,, foreign" visitors, while i delegates drowsed. i .their seats or wandered out ; to nearby restaurants and bars. S. Military Denounce few the resolutions' y Among n hours the adopted during was one denouncing the "unfriend- Faustino ist . pre-daw- ly attitude" of U. S.. armed forces during this month's' in Panama. The convention (Continued on Page Four) anti-Ameri-rio- . ts c , " 5 i r . i 1 :l - r, i 1 H,mtW Hi"' , , 9-- 22-1- Utah-Stanfor- fa--mil- . DeGaulle Hopes to See End Of Alaerian War PARIS (UPI) Gen. Charles de Utah operations would be back on the job, but company officials Gaulle, who turned 69 Sunday, wasv reported hopeful today of indicated it might take longer war in In Arizona, the International bringing the Oth his before end. to arf Union of Minej Mill and Smelt- Algeria er Workers said it would con- birthday. With brithday greetings showertinue to picket Kennecott's smelting down on him from world leader at Hayden. Steelworkers was 300 strong at Kennecott's Arizona ers, the French President back at his desk after a speaking operations said they would not tour in which he told crowds in cross the picket lines. several cities that' the "road tn No Mine-Mi- ll pickets were at peace" in Algeria has been "found. the Garfield,- - Utah "smelter and At a reception in Colnxar he was refinery because" that union i reported to have told members no represented at those opera of Parliament from Alsace Provtions. ince that a settlement in Algeria A Kennecott official estimated '"will in any case come before the that about 100 steelworkers wouli end of 1950 return to work today during th three shifts at the Utah smelter Greg Engelhard, chairman of the' 1930 Pacific Coast Selection atvotes from the nine schools that and about 300 workers would be tache from an Iron Curtain used to make up the defunct Pa- back on the job at the refinery: country whose defection in receht cific Coast Conference. Arigejo Verdu, negotiator for months has "come to the surface1. was a unanimous ballot," the United Steelworkers of Amer"It It is assumed that others have Calica said "The steelworkers are defected but that authorities have said Engelhard, University of director. athletic ifornia, being called back to work very been able to keep the facts seseason V Washington finished the cret. rapidly, and the men are work- h The other defector is Lt. Col. with a 1 record, losing only to ing hard to get the Utah smelt5 er and refinery back into opera Frantisek Tisler of Czechoslova- Southern California by a tion." scor(eJ to over who himself turned kia, 1 sched-uple s a He said a union local repreofficials on t Victims The the State Department husky in were summer Colorado, Idaho, The Washington. senting the steelworkers at the Magna-Arth, Oregon,; UCLA, Oregon mills in Utah did whereabouts of Tisler and, his also is unknown, but he is State, California, and Washington not return to work today ' because no work; was available for them. State. said to be in--: this' country. . Although Castro had appealed directly lo the convention for unqualified adoption of unity plan, only- J6 of more than 3,000 delegates voted against the ' executive "slate." The Communists abstained. The convention recessed after electing the new committee, and it appeared likely that adjournment would follow closely. The thre? unity supporters on the new executive committee were CTC Secretary General David Sal- , . ''". ts. ex-G- at Kennecott's union-ist- s shortly after 4 a.m. .by an overwhelming majority of delegates tc the CTC "Convention included enly three supporters of a Communist-backed "unity" plan, and all of them identify themselves as ' ex-Ame- ri- 2,000 steelworkers (UPI)-Cu- ban rebuffed. Premier Fidel Castro early today by electing a Communist-free' executive commltte for the CtC Union Federation. . The executive committee choScn can who now is 'a Cuban' citizen, said today that Dominican strong United Press Internationa' , , of observation. man Rafael L. rujillo is offer- 'Maj. HAVANA, Cuba. UPI) Instead of the missing whisk William A. Morgan, an ing $590,000 to ahyone who "can three cartons of stolen radios were kidnap me and deliver me alive in the, Dominican Republic." tound in their car. I, The The ' Chicago federal .court, 2 formerly Americans of Toledo, Ohio, made the charge vvhere the two were; convicted, refused to throw out the evidence during an interview in "his secludPier-otti- , Albert ed penthouse apartment where Henry's companion, d Cubab army soldiers did not appeal to the hign court. maintain a c o nstait- guard against any new attempt on his Justice William, O. Douglas Vlife. speaking for the majority, disa' He said Trujillo is anxious to greed With the lower court. He dead or alive said that a seizure of evidence for get him tomini-cain his a on role must be based Iurnigt arrest An key BEIRUT, Lebanon, (UPI) invasion force into a fatal "Under our system suspicion is Afghan airliner crashed in flames not enough for an Officer to lay onto a hilltop near Beirut Saturday- trap at Trinidad J Las Villas Frov- hands on' a citizen," Douglas said -night, killing 24 persons in- ince, in the southern central pat "It is better, so the Fourth cluding two Americans. Thre? of Cuba last August. Amendment teaches, that the guil--t- passengers survived. w o "assassination .. T attempts sometimes go - free than that The Americans were listed as have been made againsf him here Gordon .Hay Clark, 48, a Nebras during the past two months. ka physician, en route to Kabul "One man, caiight in one of the from Rome ,and Frank William attacks, said he had been offered Shepherd, 51, an accountant en $45,000 to; kill rhe," the route from London to Kabul. said with a relaxed smile. Both Americans' were reported "But to anyone who can delivemployed in Afghanistan. Their er me alive to; the ' Dominican hometowns were not immediately Republic, Trujillo will pay. out a available. a million dollars," he added. half Most of the passengers were a lot ofj dough and there" That's from Turkey, Czechoslovakia, Aflot a are of mercenaries willing banked furnaces and ' for other ghanistan and India. to work him." for , start-u- p procedures. Morgan, became one of the top More steelworkers were expectrebel guerrilla leaders in the suced to be called back tot work cessful revolt which ousted the as soon as start-j- p procedures had progressed far enough to Batista regime last Jan. 1 and create 'work for- - them. brought Fidel Castro's 26th of One union official expected that July Movement into . power. by Wednesday nearly all of the , ' HAVANA fDead or Alive' 400 Steelworkers Called information, turned himself ; over fo U. S. authorities in Vienna. Officials said he has since come to the U. S:, but for security reason they cannot disclose his where- i By JOSEPH A. TAYLOR United Press International n. -- j Top Polish Intelligence Agent Flees Iron Curtain; Now Somewhere in United States WASHINGTON u xi Li t NEW YORK (UPI) New York society! put its seal Th? of approval on Cinderella today. Anna Marie Rasmussen tha Rockefeller made the social register,. - - - L Hit Vote, Say Ousted Party Receives Posts 7-- Earth Slides and Floods Stall Washington Traffic Scores of SEATTLE (UPl) homes flooded fled families today in Snohomish and King counties where raging rivers rose toward crests which promised to be the highest. in 20 years. Others waited for Coast Guard boats or Army Ducks to pick them frqm their homes and carry them to safety. The most severely flooded areis were around Snohomish, a town of 3,000 population .25 miles northn east of here, and the . Ey a 2 vote, the court reversed the'- conviction of John Patrick Henry of Chicago on' the ground that the'" FBI did not have "prob able cause'' to take him into cus tody May 14, 1957.. The agents were on the lookout for persons who had, stolen some whisky from Hayes Freight Lines. They saw Henry and a companion! coming out of a cocktail, lounge and arrested them after a period ed Auburn and south Kent areas de, cided early this morning it was time to leave with the Grefo River at the level and stul rising. The crest was expected at 2 p.m. p.s.t. with the river level four to six feet above flood stage A main dike south of Kent threatened to and the dike area 20 miles southeast of here protectinggivethe wayAuburn packing with a combined population of was seeping badly plant , At Snohomish", where the swolLONDON ( UPI ) Chinese ComuIn advance of the flooding len . Snohomish River was being munist leader- Mao Tse-tun- g is brought by the Snohomish arid (Continued on. Page Four) East-Weto Green rivers and their torrential t trying sabotage an summit conference for the second tributaries, earth slides and bridge time; diplomatic "dispatches re- washouts slashed like a giant ax, Men Ratify ported today. ; cutting the state's major east-Venear routes Mao succeeded in blocking, a highway and rail summit conference in August. their summits in the Cascade 1953, after an emergency meeting Mountains,, in Peiping with Premier Niki-t- a Highway and rail traffic e beKhrushchev, and now is slow- tween eastern and western Washing down Russian pressure for an ington was being routed to the early summit meeting. southern border of the state where sources caid there Diplomatic the highway from Vancouver, SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) has been an almost total absence Wash., on the Columbia River About 400 of 2,300 striking of pressure from Moscow for a River Satus- - Pass into through to work returned top-levmeeting and, that Khru- central Washington remained in- at Kennecott Copper Corp.'s today Utah shchev himself has been notably tact. smelter ; and refinery but Mine silent on the conference he Ion? , .Snohomish County Deputy Sher- Mill pickets halted a return to has demanded. led a rescue work in Arizona. Hardwick Ken Communist affairs experts said iff, across the in boats three Company spokesmen also said behind Peiping's desire . to thwart party to lip it would be about seven day.? Snohomish from pick river : East-Wea top-levmeeting Lindsey and her four before the first copper ingots was a suspicion of independent Mrs. George water began flowing could be produced because of the Soviet moves at Red China's ex- children as farm home. Hr time needed for warming un intothe Lindsey pense. stayed behind in his hay There also was Peiping's anxi- husband loft with a neighbor. ,. ety that a meeting involving the "They wanted to stay with their leaders of the Soviet, United States, Britain and France would property and they have some cattend to exclude Red China from tle to look after," Hardwick saiji. international councils' for a long "No one seemed too worried jr Bid nervous. In fact, the Lindseys time to come. el n f MosJhad protested strongly against Supreme Court said today 'suspicion is not enough" to per mit FBI agents to arrest a citi-ze- MOTOR BOAT MILK RUN Milk run is rp?fde by motor Snohomish boat at Snohomish' Wash., as land farms. No River breaks its banks isolating lowf oii the flood. Civil deaths have been blamed directly are Defense and police emergency groups standing by to 'aid threatened areas. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) ste-worke- Soviet Deputy Premier f7vo. Ell. t M U American enlisted men arrested by Turkish! authorities for alleged black market money activities and the alleged unwillingness oi the state Department and the Pentagon to do anything about it; Agents Did Not Have Cause To Arrest el Tresday. Li Back to Kennecott Pits MONTERREY, ' Mexico:. (UPI) - 01 ji al) ? au- repre-(Continu- : PRICE FIVE CENTS 0 V.. FBI thorities gave assurances that they had ended. "Apparently, the end ,of the reign of terror is not in sight because there are disturbing rumors that more executions are pending," Lodge said. , Janos Peter, deputy foreign minister of the Communist Hungarian regime, said it was his duty-- to reject any attempt "of using the Hungarian people for cold war purposes" or allowing the U.N. "to be used as an . instrument of reactionary forces." After attacking the legality of Munro's introduction of an item for inclusion in the assembly even though supported agenda, formally by a member country, Peter- attacked the special on Page Four) - , y KJj Supreme Court Holds . The steel strike, which began July 15, 1959, was settled by Kaiser Steel on October 26 with the signing of a new agreement United Steelworkers of with America. The agreement will extend to June 30; 1961. interest. in ' ' - ' . (UPI) FONTANA, Calif. anKaiser "Steel Corporation nounced today it took a net los of more than 10 million dollars as a result of the steel strike which closed; the company's mill here for 104 'days. During the third 'quarter of 1959 Kaiser losses totaled offsetting the company's $10,198,000 earning during the first six months .of the, year. ' A Kaiser spokesman said strike losses were magnified by relatively high Interest and depreciation costs resulting from the major expansion program the company completed, ,early this year. The spokesman said Kaiser expects to achieve profitable 'operations in December but still may not be able to report a profit for - ROME v g Loss Tops $10 Million ' 'Suspicion Rebuff by Not Enough' (UPI) The United State! has idered the commanders of American units at the NATO base in Izmir, Turkey, relieved of .their jobs, it was learned here Delegates Court Says today. the ireatnient of Unity Plan Leaders -- Kaiser Strike ' Costco Gets " sembly, when the Communist n n 1 Labor-Manageme- nt $10,-895,00- - : : f ' (Taft-Hartle- '' ' YEAR NO. 8 1' PRO VO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23; 1959, EIGHTY-SEVENT- H American Iron and Steel Institute estimated the output of raw steel, for the first two weeks been ended. of the Supreme . Court back-t- o The U. S. said that "apparent0 3,533.-00.work order at upwards of ly the end of the reign of terror tons. Total steel tonnage .poured from is not hi sight" in Hungary. U. S. Ambassador Henry Cabot the furnacees was expected . to reach 20 million tons by Jan. ?S: Lodge made the statement in the the date when the strike by the .Generalssembly's Steering Com 500,000 United Steel workers may mittee m supporting a request of be renewed under provisions M Sir. Leslie Munro of New Zealand, Relations pecia U. N. representative for the 'Act. Hungary, that the assembly give new airing to the 1956 Hungara Tonnage Is High ian revolt and its suppression by Steel experts said - raw steel Russia. production for this week would Lodge cited Munro's statements approximate 2,400,000 tons, or Sothat of foreign airmed forces the rated roughly 90 per cent in viet remained steelmak-introops Hungary capacity of the nation's facilities. Output in the last and that 'trials' and executions of week of the walkout was. less Hungarian freedom fighters had taken place since last year's as(Continued on Page Four) The " -- : : -- PITTSBURGH, '(UPI) 80-da- y ' ' 21-nati- on 15-- 0 By J. ROBERT SHUBERT United Press International record-smashin- Andres ur HERALD INDEX Central Utah News 3, Classified 4 5, 6, 7 10, 11 8 8 Comics' . Editorial National, World News . m4. 2, 10, 12, 4A, 5A, 6A, 8A Obituaries . Off the Beat Society Sports Stocks ...... .... 8 1A 3A 2A, 4 OMorgan, .v- i. A UNDER GUARD Majj William A. now a Cuban citizeft,jsays Domini-- EX-AMERIC- ex-Amcri- can can strongman Raf el L. Trujillo is offering- $500,000 for his capture,' Morgan is shown with one of the armed Cuban army officers who guard him in Havana. - (Herald-UPI-Telephot- o) ' J . ' |