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Show "i . ""',' 1 Y " 1 - STOJ' 5- SUNDAY HERALD 8 1960 v Ci'vil Rights Awaits Ike Signature Bill - ! v:::;;:i::;K::-j:.;:- i - . ' " i . ' - ' ' . ? . " I, - v , ? Grimly Named 'Coffin1 J' ' .' V ' i ' ' ''. ' ' : l I Air Force's Launch Pad I I I long-debat- , - 1 v ) : ly . I Ml 4 r. ' l - ' J ' - -4 ' ' '4- - ' J i - - I f ' , i ' .& !: I . T : t S V: , v m legislation. ' The House gave final passage to a civil rights bill vote , sent Thursday. , The 288-9- 5 the bill to, the President, who was certain to sign it into law. The issue occupied Congress since the session began Jan. 6 and final action came only after 10 consecutive weeks of debate. V lae principal, section set up new guarantees for Negro' voting rights in the south. It authorized federal courts to name referees to hold hearings on voters' quali fications in areas where a "pat tern or practice" of discrimina tion was found. Other, provisions law ' enforcement strengthened control of hate ' bombings ' and other racial violence. Providing medical care for the aed loomed as the next issue Health' SecreS Flemming declar Arthur tary ed after a session with the House Ways & Means Committee, which is holding . hearings on medical care bills, that the administra tion opposed any measure which would link the benefits to the So cial Security program. Other major developments: Minimum Wage: Labor Secre tary J ames P. Mitchell laid the administration's blueprint for revising the' federal minimum wage law before a House labor sub committee. He urged a ' 'mod erate" 10 to 15 cent hourly hike in the $1 wage minismum with ex tension of its coverage to an add itional three million persons. Foreign Aid: The House set a ceiling of $4,038,500,000 on foreign aid spending in the" next fiscal year. The House passed an authorization bill' trimming only $136,500,000 from President Eisen but more cuts hower's request . were predicted, Farm: House Democratic farm leaders agreed on afarm bill designed to appeal to ianmers and taxpayers alike. The measure would permit farmers to marketing and production controls ; just the opposite of administration desires "for greater freedom from existing controls. "six-poi- - ( - f - 1 S, -- Him' III, ' n , f... .. . ... 7 " .. . By STANLEY HALL United Press International VANDENBERG AFB, Call f. (UPD The! Air Force's grimly named "Coffin" launch padis op- the dinner. 'The Eisenhowers were honoring thlDe visit. The painting Gaulles,' who are here on a four-tlay' MrsrJames K. Polk, by is of Telephoto) ' G. Drury, 1883. '.' it t i '. I (Herald-UP- I ' !""'. Madame de Gaulle I s Woman of Character ''. j f 4,300-mil- She appeared almost shy FriJBy SUSAN WAGNER International United Press day as she received a bouquet LA yVASHiNGTON (UPD Madame of i brilliant red roses from Mrs. Charles ' de Gaulle, a remarkably Christian jj A. Herter, wife of the secretary of state, when; she aryoung-lookin- g grandmother of 59, rived with the general for a five-da- y met her famous husband when he visit.: Spilled a. cup of tea in her lap Mme. de Gaulle, known as ' 40 years ago. or rather col- -' "Tante, Yyonne," 6r Aunt Yvonne, The couple met in a tea room in Mme. is a woman of character. She lided i. , de Gaulle's ' native French port town of Calais.'; The then? Yvonne Vendroux, daughter of a prosper-; ous diplomat and businessman, miled. Five" months later , she married the young army captain. As the first lady of France, she walks quietly and inconspicuously by the side of the towering French president. . . What's Playing At The Movies stood staunchly by "her husband during thex rigors ,of his early army career, the 1940 fall of France, de Gaulle's World War exile in England and the stormy post-wa- r period of French politics. ' ' . She might prefer .the quiet life of the de Gaulle country house -near Colombey-les-Deu- x Eglises. But she is a capable hostess in the President's official residence, rhe Elysee Palace in Paris,xwith a staff of 140 and an annual housekeeping budget of $140,000. In a few, weeks, Mme. ' de Gaulle will act as hostess to some of the world's most powert, sumful leaders at the mit conference opening in Paris . East-Wes- Sunday, April 24, 1960 May PROVO Who Was That Academy Curtis. with Tony Lady?,, Home From the Paramount mil, with Eleanor Parker. Tnta One Night of Love, and Miss Body Beautiful. Pioneer The Unforgiven, with ; OREM . , . - ;- GenevaThe Unforgiven, with "Audrey Hepburn. Scera Closed. The Unforgiven, Timpanogos with Audie Murphy. SPRINGVILLE . Art CityOn The Beach, and It Happened to Jane. Rivoli The Black Orchid, Loren. with; Sophia - i PAYSON 4- Fred Astalre. PLEASANT GROVE Grove Closed. AMERICAN FORK Samson- and Delilah, Coral, ! - . : - . ; se Riots Flare In Communist-Ru- n Italian City Italian paratroops battled civilians in this Communist-ru- n city for hours Thursday night and early today until; troops v and police subdued them with tear gas bombs and warning shots. Forty six persons were injured in the fracas, fiVfe by gunfire ' Communist - led unions called a strike from 11 a.m. to noon today to protest the paratroop action and activities in the port were shut down. Many workers left their jobs beforev ' the strike dead, . ' '; withHedy Lamarr. i . Blue Denim, and Over Tokyo. Stop ' j&tarlight LEHI ' ! Royal Closed. ' - V- -i - FILM STAR GOES TO CANADA Italian film! star Gina Lollobrigida and her husband, Milko Skofic, smile for cameraman in New York, but their son, Milko Jr., 2V2 doesn't jseem in the mood, They, arrived from Rome. Yugroslav-borr- i, Skofic has been declared a stateless! person by Italy. Because of difficulties arising from a bid to seek Italian citizenship for Skofic, the family may seek Canadian citizenship and live in Canada. (Herald-UP- I - - -- Telephoto) . . , . ' failed. . The Air Force said the trainees met or came close to meeting the scheduled launching within 15 minutes of the first alert. The ofd ficers agreed they were now, ready to "fire in anger" if an enemy attack made it necessary; "Coffin" is the label given the Asher, you remain one of ;my launch pad because it embraces the Atlas in a concrete tomb that counsel of record." r isolates the missile from nuclear Chessman, in an angry The missil0 can :be explosion. letter a ago, had sug from raised thei coffin! and filled gested that Davis withdraw from . 15 within minutes. the case since Chessman (pharged that Davis was more interested Holland, at one time, was joinin publicity for himself fhan in ed to Belgium as a single nation. helping his client.". j Resignation of Justice May Be Break for Caryl Chessman SAN" , FRANCISCO (UPD Caryl Chessman may have got a helping hand from dame fortune today in his fight to avoid, his date with the San Quentin gas chamber May 2. State Supreme Court Justice Homer R. Spence announced Friday he will retire June 1. Spence is the one of the court's- four judges who voted not to. recommend ' that Chessman's double sentence of death be commuted to 'life imprisonment. The court twice split last on of the issue whether February is should .urge clemency for the . prisoner. The Governor cannot commute the sentence without such a recom mendation because Chessman was convicted of more' than two onies prior to. the offenses which she was given a death sentence. The Governor can, however; grant another reprieve. Ai y reprieve would postpone the execution date past .Spence's retirement date. Observers felt that Gov. Edmund G. Brown, an outspoken op of capital ponent punishment, could now grant Chessman a re prieve and then appoint as Spence's successor some one he knew would vote for executive , clemency for Chessman. " Such a clemency recommendation,' political observers' empha sized, would give the governor a perfect excuse to commute the death sentence to life' imprison-- Convict-Author The U. locally, moderate amounts can be expected, especially over Moning to stockmeb in the RockyU tana, northern Wyoming and porMountain and , plains area today tions ' of the Northern Plains. . of cold weatheh, rain and - snow. A low: pressure center over The weather bulletin said: J .Utah $ expected to move very Warnings to livestockmen are slowly eastwards, ith surface In effect for' "Montana, northern pressure rising oyer Montana and Utah, and westjern Wyoming and northwards into Canada. A gensouthwest North! Dakota. x erally j easterly flow will prevail In ehese areas; cold rain or snow over V the northern rockies 'and is occurring or is expected to' oc- - adjacent plains today, and pos- -. cur. Precipttatkn generally is not sibly into Sunday. The. cold' rains expected to be J heavy but with and snow spreading, over portions temperatures around freezing or of Utah are expected to spread below, conditioms will' be quite into, southwest Wypmittg, associhazardous for newly born and ated with the eastward moving Utah low, and the pool of, cold newly sheared livestock.So far the precipitation has air at both, surface and aloft' over been mostly light. But with the the northern Pacific states and airmass becoming more moist the western plateau region., S, , . , . ; - i! - - AMERICAN Gates Open at 7 p.m. ?? - . 4-- 3 Open Daily 1 P.M. - FJl Stolen Ogden Bus Found In Salt Lake City CAROtt damn" STEREOPHONIC i ' OPEN 6:30 70 mem I " V.. V. ........ 7 NEVll $HUT day ........ -- fi mi- . ENDSjSQON THIS YEAR'S n i NOW PLAYING j STONE Productton and VIRGINIA GEORGE SANDERS -- TONY grfp 1 ) h3 ". ofthenar The Story of . the Hunnicutts .: last of ...... ...w. w. .their ... lusty kind! ; tiM umimi 9, 11 ni Ti - T-- frr j METR0 - 60LDWYN MAYER A SOL C SIEGEL PRODUCTION fj j i Starring ROMMIICHUM GEORGE fEPPARD EVERETT SLOANE HAMILTON : GEORGE LUANA PATTEN tLttNIM PARKER onemascope pnd DOORS OPEN 1:00 METROCOLOR N0WSH0WING Feature at 1:15 - 4:05 6:58 & 9:51 ALL PROVO IS TALKING ABOUT :. BURT AUDREY LANCASTER-HEPBUR- ' N W1W ALL THAT IS r K- tennB I y--- Y' nwvAMnnicurn h - y KHH AUDIE I ( C3; ly III i BYJNGTQN-RiCHAR- O HAYDN KURPHT-SAXO- J jfli f0fy XTt J . ' ; j;. . DOORS OPEK 1:39 "MISS BODY BEAUTIFUL - CHi(RLFS -- N ff l i ! 1:45 " ECKfOi ALBERT SALMI' JUNE WALKER by BEN Co-Featu- PIONEER Co-Featu- j ADULTS re $1.00 7:29 9:07 - LOVE" 10:21 NOW illOVJ inn UST 2 DAYS 4 I wish to announce that I am no longer in any way associated with Intermountain Theatres, Inc., and specifically with the Paramount, Uinta and Strand Theatres- - in Provo. It has been a pleasure serving the people of Utah County and I thank you for, your understanding. MEARL A. ROSE, DRIVE-I- N M0T0R-V- U TIMPANOGOS Co-Featu- - 50c 'HI 2:30 Then 75c CHILDREN 25c I Public Notice . DRIVE-I- N & ' . i - .' ! r f Consultant .Theatre Manager Overlook Road. Poughkeerxsie, N. Y. "Good Day For a Hanging" CHILDREN f 1 "Gun Fighters from Abilene'! re 4:37 ! ADULTS QJ 0 III i7 L . ' . 6:15 NIGHT - - ; Gun Fiffhters from Abilene' re - - V f j 3. ' GENEVA ATTRACTION fr-- ItfASE wonderful ( if-- 'w present f f W , i,. l Jy PAIGE-SPRiN- G " -- "ONE JANIS 3t JANET DEAN -- urn IT TALKS STRAIGHT TALK AKD FEELS REAL FEELINGS nnrn ahiiih ' CURTIS MARTIN LEIGH iBaHH mm 1 VAl PICTURE! ! i 11 flinrunuv 7;00 . Scrrmplw RfiPHiQ SHOW EDMUND O'BRIEN TAMMY MARIHUGH ; FUNNIEST LAKE CITY (UljI)- - A bus stolen during the the Greyhound Bus from night1 terminal at Ogden was located in Salt Lake City early today wedged between two buildings . Police booked two young men, ages 19 and 25, in city 3 ail if or - 'the LAST VOYAGE 3:23- mm TTIEATSa the most intense suspense in tnotipn picture history! 3 BIG THEATRES Jk&iy M x W 3 - f ,inMotjwSS . - HUNT riUIIUTES off ! m wan, CARFYi- MOW DtSTOiCTlVg UTABTS THRILllNOli hom MARSHA! "STOP OVER TOKYO" EXCITING! - MACpONAljO CllME:fviASeOPi I 2nd feature IN WOMAN SfS Time!fflnrS;; i ' SOUND THAT IS Stay BRANDON LYNLEYrdeWllDE An ANDREW SALT v Of Our I?? FREE : i;U!AN...ALL Biggest IN s, UNCONQUERABLE Tfe3 i". r CHILDREN FREE CAR GETS ! Gouwyw-maye-? i .. 5c 10-pa- ge few-day- investigation of auto theft and grand larceny. One of thej arrested youths was also being held for fain military authorities v as being AWOL from the U.S. Marines. The Lakeshore Bus was found between a house owned fry E. J. Hughes and another building.; Officers apprehended . the pair about tEER AT LOVE f ' a block away. AMONG THE 1 Hughes called police to complain that a bus had been driven into the' side of his home. ' . SEE IT AT: f 1 Damage to the bus and two Tfc 1:00 3:10 buildings was estimated at $500. i 7:40 5:20 ment.'' H When questioned by police one : 10:00 T::.Ji from death row Lof the men remarked, Meanwhile, done came word that Chessman an&1 everything out steal a "I'ye ous, so l News .Mr. Masroo Cartoon attorney George T. Davis have stole a bus." patched up their differences Davis held the latest in a .series of conferences with his, client Friday and Davis then7 showed UTAH COUNTY PREMIERE newsmen a letter from7 the condemned man which said in part: ' "This is ... to confirm that with NOW PLAYING attorneys A.L. Wirin and Rosalie ; 10th EVERY FORI ADULTS SHOW SjTARTS 7:45 p.m. - : metRo . . i LEGHORN, Italy (UPD ar .J: tr n 30-da- The OROFINO, Idaho (UPD search 4 has halted for missing Portland, Ore., nurse Alice Bur-ke- tt at 'least .for the time being. State police and sheriff's officers said two fishermen found the . old A woman's overnight line. ' bag floating on the Clearwater River Friday about six miles More than 12,500 passenger cars downstream from where her car are being used for driving instrucplunged into the water Sunday. Officers theorized that " Miss tion in U.S., schools. . ' Burkett was thrown from the foreign car when it careened from highway 9 on a wide curve about six miles southwest of here. They said' the body apparently was washed far downstream. i Neither. Miss Burkett's body nor her 'car has been found but officers ' sad they are virtually certain the vehicle .plunged info the river l as she was to Portland from a visitreturning to her fiance at Kamiah. . ' 25-ye- Jyj I . ' - On The Beach, with Peck. Gregory SPANISH FORK Arch-- ; On The Beach, with Huish ; Search Halted For Missing Oregon Nurse ; Burt Lancaster. .. 16. - self-impo- (Uk) . time-consumi- ng , f . erational tjday, meaning it can provide ani Atlas missile with foolproof protection from nuclear attack and also send tlie ICEifc soaring toward an enemy-- ' target on 15 minutes notice. ,Brig. Gen. David Wade; commander of the 1st Missile Division, termed the launcher "now operational" Friday after it trige gered a successful flight of the ' powerful Atlas into an ocean target joff Wake Island, The test was made under combat conditions as j a graduation exercise for 16 youthful Air .Force officers who; will man the first operational ICBM base at Warren AFB near Cheyenne, Wyo The base is scheduled to be activated sometime, this summer. ' After three months of training, the crack teaml performed the first successful launching of the 250,000 pound Atlas in three tries by the Air Force1. Two recent fir- ,ings at Cape Canaveral, Fla., nt , MADAME DE GAULLE AT WHITE HOUSE Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, left, escorts Madame Yvonne de Gaulle, wife of the French President, in to dinner at the White Hous.e after a picture taking session prior to s . i - ... Warning Issued to Stockmen Of Cold Weather, Rain, Snow DENVER Operational ed to-far-m f I Weather Bureau issued a warn WASHINGTON (UPD Congress dispatched the civil rights bill to President Eisenhower this week and7 settled to work on a series of vital election-year bills ranging from medical care for the aged, the minimum wage and foreign aid ji ' FREE ... . . - - h |