OCR Text |
Show Teleoh one FR 50 For Ads., News, Circulation: Provo Office, 190 W. 4th' N. ...... FR Orem Office 757 N. State AC i Ill 30 ' M I T H7! Pi PROVO, UTAH COUNTY,: UTAH WEDNESDAY, PRICE FIVE CENTS K.C. 000 Yanks THALER Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei LONDON (UPI) Moscow to flew today with a pledge that' his Gromyko government will "do its best" to find a peaceful Berlin solution. British Foreign Secretary Lord Home said in a speech shortly afterward he believed Gromyko has been convinced )- - All-G- nqoae in erf i n Alert . ' I that 'a war over Berlin "must not be allowed to arise." the optimistic statements, British officials indicated there had been no concrete progress toward ,a definite solution but that both sides had agreed to keep trying. Lord Home, speaking to the Conservative party's annual convention in Brighton, made it plain the West will not back down from what he called the "crisis of communism" in Berlin. . By MER IMAN SMITH "If there was interference with UPI White House Reporter (Allied) access (to West Berlin) PresiWASHINGTON a fight would start and no one (UPI) dent Kennedy planned to hold his could say that it would not end the ultimate disaster, , of nufirst, news conference in six weeks in clear war," Home .said. today. Berlin appeared likely to "I think that we succeeded in be the dominant subject. convincing Mr. Gromyko that The 4:30 p.m. EDT meeting that situation must not be allowed with newsmen was scheduled to be to arise." carried ."live'' by all major radio in. an airport stateGromyko, ' and television networks. newsmen told the talks he ment, The conference, Kennedy's 16th had with British Prime Minister since he took office, was only the Harold Macmillan Tuesday "made fourth for which "live" certain contribution in the right dicoverage has been arranged. rection over the Berlin question." House White press secretary The Tlussian diplomat added that Pierre Salinger said this did not the Soviet Union's "No. 1 choice" mean any announcement of un- was the conclusion of a German usual significance would be made. peace treaty together with the However, it gave newsmen their Western powers. first opportunity to question the "Only in the case that there is President' about his meeting last no agreement" will Russia gn week' with Soviet Foreign Min- - a separate peace treaty with Com munist East Germany, he (See BERLIN, Page 4) do, not think an interim settlement would be good. We think be concluded a peace treaty must w and signed!" ensn i Despite opic ICehnedy hSeVvs Parley . . TV-rad- io said-"W- v New Effort jviaae -- Am Tie-U- p Ship stopped GROMYKO FLIES Page 4) FRANCISCO (UPI) Labor Willard Wirtz today continued separate meetings with shipowners and the Masters, Mates and Pilots Union in an effort to start joint negotiay West Coast tions in the Maritime strike. At issue Were proposed actions by Labor Secretary Arthur Goldboard. Last berg's three-maweek the board recommended solutions to . minor issues in the strike, and suggested that major items be submitted to arbitration. The Pacific Maritime Association,, the shipowners' group, said it had accepted the panel's recommendations, but the union spokesmen said several issues re- mained to be negotiated. To date the strike has tied up more than 44 ships in West Coast ports. The. PMA represents 13 shipping companies which own a total of 136 vessels. The union announced Tuesday its members had voted to cut the pay" of its top officers and eliminate four $10,000 a year jobs, but that the move had no connection with the strike. Un- of dersecretary in London Tuesday after talks with President Kennedy in Washington last week. Ke met with Macmillan and Lord Home Tuesday night. "We had very interesting con-(Se- e Gromyko nan 10 II T IL I A e 14-da- n. . ' Three Marooned Hunters Found In Good Condition Cancer-stricke- n DALLAS, Tex. (UPD House Speaker Sam Ray-bur- n, 79,: developed pneumonia today. The. chaplain at Baylor University Medical Center said he is in a coma. His condition is now considered critical. Physicians, trying to prolong the life of the speaker with a" new, experimental drug, had . said earlier that they feared a sudden infection. "Mr. Sam Rayburn's immediate condition has grown more serious during the night," a bulletin issued by his doctors said. "He has developed left lobar pneumonia with pleural effusion." His lungs were filling with fluid and draining. "This diagnosis' was made from examinations completed X-ra- y Nov You Know By United Press International The first American to win the Nobel Peace Prize was Theodore Roosevelt who received the award NEV YORK (UPI) The top command of the AFL-CI- O today invited every teamster union lockUn the nation which is dissatisfied with the leadership d James R. Hoffa to quit his union and come into the international Troops Test Army's ' organization. President George Meany revealed that a closed ses Defenses in U. S. Sector of Berlin sion of the Executive Council of the AFL-CI-O had decided on a head-o- n attack on Hoffa, whose By JOSEPH B. FLEMING United Press International BERLIN (UPI) More than 1,000 American soldiers today took part in an alert designed to test the Army's defenses in this isolated Western outpost. Troops of the 1st Battle Group, 18th union was ' expelled four years ago on charges of corrupt leadership. as preparing, Meany said he to grant charters to several team ster locals which have defected from Hoffa and applied for AFL-CImembership. Meany did not identify the locals. Sen. John J. McClellan, chairman of the Senate Rackets Committee which investigated Hoffa, said todaj he was highly gratified had voted overthat the AFL-CIwhelmingly against readmitting Hoffa's teamsters. An-dre- ss O McClellan, who, by coincidence, was addressing a luncheon of New York traffic experts in a ballroom next to where the Execuwas tive Council of the AFL-CIin session, said he agreed with Meany that Hoffa and the team- st O -- 1 the West. West Berlin police said a Com-- , munist policeman Tuesday night fired a shot at a East Berliner who scaled the Communist wall at Heidelberger Strasse to the American sector district of Neukoelln. He was not wounded. The youth was one of 14 refugees who escaped during the night. Two were Communist policemen, West Berlin police reported. The United States is stockpiling semiautomatic rifles for West Berlin border guards despite Communist protests against strengthening Berlin's military defenses. s U.S officials said shipments of the weapons to Berlin have been sent for seVeral weeks. The move was taken following heavy pressure from both the West Berlin press and police officials here for better armed border guards. West Berlin's 12,500 policemen have been carrying only pistols on patrol of the divided city's boiders Communist patrols are Jimjny Hoffa speaks t3 teamster officials at Western Teamster Conference in Portland, Ore., Tuesday. He was reindicted today on mail fraud, charges. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) ON THE SPOT corrupt than when they were expelled four years ago. Five hundred of them came McClellan said that the AFL-CIashore from the 19,000 ton Army move rejecting Hoffa was "the way to win friends and in- transport Gen. Simon Buckner when it docked at Cherbourg's fluence people.'The AFL-CIexecutive com- Maritime Station. .The ship was takmittee Tuesday voted 24-- against due to leave later in the day Brcmer-haveing the other 1,500 to a proposal for "immediate Germany. of the Teamsters. The soldiers first from AmerHoffa, in Portland, Ore at a to land at Cherbourg since Teamsters' meeting, was advised ica 1945 lined the rails as the gray-- ; of the executive committee's facpainted transport eased slowly intion. dock. "I have no comment to make to Asthe the docked, a now' Hoffa said. "We'll take French bandtransport played first the care of that in due time.", Banner" and the Meany announced the council "StarSpangled would take up the possibility of "Marseillaise." Many of the" soldiers, who had granting "federal charters" in been laughing and kidding, be- -, to the estimated 100 the AFL-CIThe serious, Teamster locals which he said came suddenly home to seemedto anthems bring had inquired about membership. them that this was not a pleasure Has Strong Opposition not a junketNbut something The proposal, .which could touch cruise, could that be .deadlyXserious the off major labor strife with Hoffa's real thing. union, had strong oppo- O in On Union Pact WASHINGTON PORTLAND (UPI) Teamster President James R. Hoffa said today an agreement "is worked out" to bring West Coast teamster and longshoremen's warehouse locals under a single master contract Team- (UPI) ster President James R. Hoffa was reindicted today on mail fraute charges involving alleged misuse of union funds in a Florida land deal, the Justice Department announced. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy announced the return of a indictment against Hoffa by a federal grand jury at Orlando, Fla. An earlier indictment 16-cou- nt 12-cou- nt qerian Hits Policies Of America Plans Heavy Shift Of Troops To Europe 100-nati- on ce 00 J against Hoffa was dismissed July 12 on grounds that the grand jury had been improperly selected. Also named as a defendant in today's indictment was Robert E. McCarthy Jr.. a Detroit banking executive, the department said. Hoffa and McCarthy were indicted on mail fraud charges involving alleged use of more than. $500,-00- 0 in teamster union funds to develop a "model city" near Cape Canaveral. The government has charged that mail fraud was involved because Hoffa and McCarthy falsely slated that the Sun Valley real estate project was when actually it was privately union-sponsore- d i owned The original indictment handed down in December, 1960, named a third defendant, Henry Lower, v former president of teamster local who 27. Aug a Detroit last died ; O 900-loc- al sition within the AFL-CIitself, including that of Walter Reuther's United Automobile Workers. Hoffa scoffed at the executive councils vote against O O, 00 . ld anti-Castr- . 1 . Re-electi- on DUBLIN (UPI) Sean F. was reelected premier of Ireland today by vote of Parliament. Premier Lemass, whose Fianna FaU party lost its majority in the Dail (lower house of parliament) in last week's elections, was returned to the post by a vote of 72 68. , no women. The maximum East-We- st I oiks Fizzle n Secretariat for UN penalty under the charges brought today would 0 be 20 years in prison and an UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) $85,-00The Unitea States and the So vitt Union were deadlocked today fine. The Brevard County, Fla., real on the question of a successor to estate project Was launched in late the late Secretary General Dag 1954 by a company known as Sun Hammarskjold There were no arValley, Inc. It had dffices in De- rangements for further talks on the issue by the two powers. troit Lower was president. The corporation has since gone Soviet insistence on the Kremout of business. McCarthy is now lin's "troika plan for three asan officer of the Public Bank of sistant secretaries general to act Detroit Hei was manager of a "in concert" with an interim U.N. branch of the Bank of the Com chief led to the breakdown monwealth 'at the time of the al of U.S Russian consultations latH leged frauds. Tuesday. . Irishman McCormacIc to Get House Speaker Post Unless Irishman Kennedy Blocks Path . Irish Premier Wins Le-ma- ss "Who asked 'em?" he said. The proposal to readmit the Teamsters had been made without Hoffa's express approval by firebrand Michael Quill of the Transport Workers Union. The three; members who voted "against rejecting it were Joseph (See AFL-CIPage 4) U.13. District Judge Joseph P Lieb dismissed that indictment on grounds that the jurors had been improperly selected from a state voter registration lis that included no. Negroes and Tampa n, n" J - Agreement 2,-0- read-mis.sio- Hoffa R ematcre For Mail Frail d Bridges, :Hof fa- U.S. , CHERBOURG, France (UPD The Yanks returned to France today. Two thousand s e r i o u American soldiers arrived at this 4 historic port through which passed tens of thousands of Doughboys of World War I and GI Joes of World War II. They were the vanguard of 40,000 troops President Kennedy has ordered to Europe to beef up America's five battle-read- y divisions facihe the Red Armv in Germany and the vital communi cations lines that support them. 3 'Big Powers7 . Cherbourg O U one-senten- sters' leadership was even more -- st Explodes New Device Under Ground 2000 GS's A rnve 'In O Infantry, rushed from Barracks this morning in trucks and Jeeps and took up battle positions in the U.S. sector of, Berlin It is one of three battle groups stationed here, and was sent to Berlin by President Kennedy to reinforce the garrison after the Communists sealed off the Ealt-WeBerlin border Aug. 13. An Army 'announcement de- -. scribed the alert as "a routine operational readiness test which is part of normal training. The test is designed to evaluate the unit's ability to react to various situations." On the barricaded East-WeBerlin border, Communist police again opened fire on fleeing East Germans attempting to escape to Rayburn Develops Pneumonia; Condition Listed As Critical AttaclcOn Hoffa ut United Press International ns - U By JACK V. FOX by 1964. , Hoffa said he and Harry Bridges, president of the International and WarehouseLongshoremen's ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo. (UPI) men's Union, agreed on the proThree hunters marooned in mounposal in talks here Tuesday night. tains southwest of Rock Springs Hoffa said his aide, George wre "found "in good condition, Mock, would go to San Francisco warm and comfortable but with to work out formal agreement food supplies running low" Tueswith Bridges within 60 days. with equipped day night. Both Hoffa and Bridges left Search parties had combed 40 and other automatic weapons. todav' Hoffa for Detroit and Informed sources said the U.S.-square miles of open country befor San Francisco. would Bridges to have prefer fore the group was found near government was circulated in The bor-(SeWesl e proposal Berlin police patrol the Richard Mountain 60 miles south form among dele1000 YANKS, Page 4) mimeographed of Rock Springs near Clay Basin, to Conference the Western gates Utah. of Teamsters. The missing hunters were Amos UNITED NATIONS,! N.Y. (UPI) Bridges earlier said only that Diehl, Jac McQuallan and Jenhe 'planned to return to San nie Amizich. Nigerian Foreign Minister Jaja Francisco after taking care of Diehl's son, Bob, and Sweet"the matter" which brought him Wachuku called on the small nawater County Sheriff George Nini-m- o tions of the world Tuesday to here. led the party which found the snatch leadership from the big grouppowers whose "insane" policies The. trio had leff Friday and threaten global atomic destrucplanned to return Sunday or Moninwas but six marooned tion. day by ches of snow in the area bver the "The time has come when the WASHINGTON The (UPI) weekend and more Monday night. United States exploded another great powers should not "be alnuclear device deep in the e,arth lowed to bulldoze us into a situaThe WASHINGTON (UPI) Tuesday, the, third shot the nation has announced since it resumed Defense Department today was tion which may result in our destruction due to our own neglitests Sept. 15. reported preparing to increase A announcement America's troop deployment to Eu- gence," he told the from the Atomic Energy Commis- rope well above the 40,000 men General Assembly. It applauded him loudly. sion said the blast was of low announced Sept. 9. The 40.000-ma- n yield, meaning its force was deployment beWachuku, East and flaying in tons measured of of thousands West alike, said the big powers this morning," the bulletin added. gan today with the arrival of American soldiers at Cher- had become obsessed with the "Because of this condition, he is TNT. . was It detonated underground bourg, France. It was scheduled to idea of their grandeur based on now, considered critical." at the AEC's Nevada testing be completed by Nov. 1. Mean- how many each could kill in the The change was sudden for Rayburn, though doctors had grounds, site of announced tests while, .eight additional air squad- other camp. never doubted that his cancer Sept 15 and 16. President Ken- rons probably containing close to would r be fatal. They, had hoped, nedy ordered the current test 5,000 men have been stationed in however ' that the" new drug being sites, designed to perfect small Europe, and there were reports battlefield atomic weapons, after thai additional air units may be j given to him, 5 fluore-uraci- l, Russia resumed nuclear tests sent abroad. might slow the progress of his 1. Thf 40,000-ma- n , contingent inmalignancy and extend his life Sept. not It was known whether the cludes only ground troops 17,000 weeks or months. ; has set off any individual soldiers to bring the 7tli United States were hopev Physicians: talking fully Tuesday of being able to im- atomic tests since Sept. 15 without Army in Germany to full strength, WASHINGTON A Bos(UPD prove his ., condition sufficiently announcing them. In announcing 3,000 complete mechanization of 20,-0some ton said and to first him the enable three seems new Irishman with the test, Kennedy almost cerinfantry divisions, drug not in made to and at his be combat support to spend his last days supply tain explosions might step into the second most -' units. known. ; powerful post in government-Ho- use Bonham, Tex., home.- B Tile additions will bring AmerIn contast to the three U.S. speaker' unless another Rayburn has been ailing about 19 nu ican troop strength in Europe to Boston Irishman tries to bar his a year; Three months ago his blasts, Russia has set off back began hurting him severely. clear explosions since resuming approximately 275,000 men. path. The first Irishman is He had to leave Congress in ses- tests Sept. 1. All have, been in sion , in Washington and return the atmosphere where they spread PICKET U.N. Rep. John W. McCormack. NEW YORK (UPI) Some 400 The second" is home. He - thought he had lum- radioactive fallout, and many Presi' o In millions and measured dent demonstrators been John F. Kennedy. h3ve . pro bago. A struggle between these two But suddenly on Oct. 2, his of tons of TNT power. picketed the United Nations TuesAli the" announced U.S. shots day but were kept, apart by po- Democrats Bonham physician ordered him to should it occur would produce a donnybrook. Bqylor Hospital for exhaustive have been in underground cham- lice. The two groups shouted at each medical tests. bers where the radioactivity was At stake v is the Democratic Last Thursday, examination of contained under tons of rock and other and left the area before leadership in the House a posisoil. (See RAYBURN, Page 4) . nightfall. There was no violence. tion which will become vacant be- . (?(? Executive Council Votes United Press International j n n I , By OS (sir JhSvSJ n (c01(a S vnet tor Mem n por 1906. s OCTOBER 11, 1961 i SAN oyer the mountains. Decreasing-cloudinesThursday. High both days in the low COs. Low tonight near 40. Windy at times" today. U. S., Britain Talks I in of the variable nature this afternoon and tonight with a few light showers and .some snow M lUUUyl, i, I rdmy f . 17-7- 1 9Wk? j?S V""70Q FUh & yXXWLkWm YEARrNCU52 EIGHTY-NINT- H After CLOUDINESS 3-50- The United . States, which originally supported proposals that the ' veto-fre- e General Assembly appoint an interim successor to Hammarskjold, planned tq con- close consultations with a group of uncommitted countries seeking a way out of the stalemate. "There was no progress," a U.S spokesman said after a two hour 20 minute meeting involving Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. .Zorin, and U.S. Ambassadors Adiai E Stevenson and Charles W. Yost. "We are disappointed. We appeat to have fallen back a tinue small-powe- r little bit." Roth the United States and Russia have found Burma's U Thant "acceptable" for appointment a$ acting secretary general until April, 19G3, w hen Hammarskjold's cause Rep. Sam Rayburn, who I ban any member of Congress, term would have expired., has held it for 21 years, has been '"he position pays $45,000 a year, stricken with incurable cancer. twice as much as other members It will be up to House get. HERALD Democrats to elect a successor. McCormack, even his foes conNo one expects Kennedy to inter- cede, has considerable support vene publicly. The issue on among Democrats from both the Central Utah News .... 3, 45. 6. 7, 8 which Kennedy's top advisers North and South. Even some of Classified 11, 13 disagree is whether the his House critics feel McCor- Comics . tarply . 13 White House shouldj have behind mack deserves the top post in ....... ............ :.v.. 12 Editorial the scenes to support a challen- View of his long service as the National, World News. 2, 11, 16 , Democratic floor leader, ger to McCormack. 4 Obituaries .1... Massachusetts The congressAs speaker and leader! of the 9 Society majority party, Rayburns suc- man has held the number two 11 10, cessor would preside over the spot since September, 1940, ex- Sports Stocks 4 House. The speaker: has far more cept for periods when the Repubprocess licans controlled the House. power in the : INDEX ft MM law-makin- g ) |