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Show Telephone FR 3-50- 50 Fair For Ads., News, Circulation: through Saturday. A little warmer afternoons. High today near 55 and Saturday 60. . Low tonight 26 to 30. Thursday's high in Provo area was 50, low 24. Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. ..FR Orem Office, 757 N. State EIGHTY-NINT- 50 j AC H . YEAR NO. 173 PROVO,; UTAH COUNTY, UTAH FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1962 4: 1 ,;. j , I ' x ' '. ry V .fv I - ' ..,:... :. HEARING OPENS ON CANYONLANDS NATIONAL . PARK BILL Governor George Clydej of Utah, right and Interior Secretary Stewart Udall are shown at the hearing of the Senate Interior subcommittee, Thursday TTTJT'k TTfn'h'o Gov. George told a Sen-nat- e subcommittee hearing on the proposed Canyonlands National Park today he does not consider multiple-us- e provisions of the Moss Bill adequate. Clyde testified today before the Public Lands Subcommittee of the Senate Interior Committee, now considering the Moss Bill to create a 300,000-acr- e national park in the rugged aea of southeastern Utah. The governor told the committee he vianted to make his position clear at the outset, "'because there has been a great deal written ?in the press, some of it misleading. Let me say rrght now that I am here to 'recommend that Canyonlands Park be created. I am definitely in favor of the i have on entire the; US. Plan Be Submitted is no provision for future develop established To At Geneva ment of these resources park system. GENEVA (UPD The United Clyde listed two other reasons The governor told the senators a States Soviet balked e attempt toof he feels multiple-usprovisions that less than 24 per cent of to to commit total disarthe Moss Bill are inadequate: Utah land is unddr private owner day in mament four years, working on are entirely dependent they ship .and therefore subject to state instead on a plan of its own that administrative- ' decision and there taxes. "In other words, would eliminate the world's trying to operate as only a quar armies in nine years and ter of a state." He admitted that with a ' standing of one per replace them only about one-ha- lf to keep the Nations United force cent of Utah land is now included : . na-tion- Agency Holds al , , in national ,parks and monuments peace. will U.S. The be submitted plan and that Canyonlands would to the General Disarmadouble this to only about ment next week as a Conference cent. But he said other factors Backifal on make it a matter of real Data, Charge cern. con- . we can ever to ideal con- under cultivate, hope WASHINGTON Two ditions and with every drop of (UPD congressional investigators today available water developed and util- is five per cent of our land," plajined to talk over with Presi- ized, said. He told the senators Clyde dent Kennedy jthe question of how (See CLYDE, Pagd 4) Moss Clyde said he realizes the much information they should Bill does contain certain provisions relating to resource develop- have on alleged foreign aid irment, "but I do not consider they regularities. Chairman Pjorter Hardy Jr. ' of are adequate to protect Utah's legitimate interests. There . is no a House watchdog committee, assurance that the provisions con- - and Rep. Johjn S. Monagan, one of his fellow investilameu iu . nit; pieseui vcidiuu ui the bill would be accepted by gators, were prompted to" see Kennedy today by an incident Congress." exthat arose pver the air program GLOUCESTER, Mass. CUPD A chief Utah's The Republican small coastal freighter with a ecutive said supporters of the na- in Canbodia. j tional park system are underthe crew of eight exploded and Hardy complained such when concerned State Department and the foreign burned today near the entrance standably i ; t t are proposed, iearmg aid agency held back vital infor- to Gloucester Harbor. departures The crewmen- jumped into the the effect such a precedent might mation during an inquiry into the water and were hauled to safety by use of American supplies to help Russian-sponsoreof one d three Coast Guard patrol build a hospiboats that in tal the southeast Asian counsped to the fire-sweWirth Says Park the Rameaux II. . vessel, try, 'jj! hnnHn'f Rp Cut-crewmen The remained aboard Hardy's subcommittee wanted the to boat help fight, the patrol documents from official files dealBelow 332,000 Acres on fire the vessel laden ing with the problem. The State with none frozen fish. Apparently and the aid agency National Department WASHINGTON (UPD of men was the seriously injured, to make the files availA Park Service Director Conrad L. agreed able, but without the names of authorities said. Wirth said Thursday the proposed the foreign service officers who Canyonlands National Park in wrote and signed the papers. Utah should not be cut to less Hardy refused to accept them than 332,000 acres." - Interior Secretary Stewart L. that way and! was finally given documents complete with the Udall earlier was critical of pro the names. posals by Utah .Sen. Wallace F. Other congressional news: Bennett and Gov. George Clyde to create three small parks inBonds: Congressional leaders stead. (See CONGRESS, Page 4) Secre- WASHINGTON (UPD tary of Agriculture Orville L Freeman today slashed federal Death Sentence Looms for Leaders dairy price supports for milk and butter fat for the marketihg year beginning Sunday. The support for milk was cut to $3.11 per hundredweight and for butter fat to 57.2 cents a pound. The rates represent 75 per cent HAVANA (UPD All 1,182 war their defense," the official press of parity, the minimum permitted by law. prisoners on trial in Cuba's big- said.' The to which specific charge The supports were , cut from gest legal show have pleaded guil' pleaded they government guilty, $3.40 per hundredweight for milk ty to crimes against the" state and controlled newspapers said," was and from 60.4 cents per pdund for waived their rights to defense, that last April's invasion of Cuba butterfat. These 83 government sources said today. "was prepared, organized, trained per cent of parityrepresented for milk and the proIf true, present legal and financed by Yankee imperi- 81 per cent of parity for bjitterfat. ' '' ': ceedings have produced perhaps alism." Freeman said he' was forced by the largest mass confession of " Only newsmen of government to put the dairy supports. He law trial guilt since the Soviet purge controlled publications and those ' nave set higher supports could of the 1930s. of "friendly", countries only if it was ' necessary to assure admitted covered the trial. mercenaries "The ' en supply ' for contheir crime and said they did not The Cuban reporters hinted at adequate sumers. wish to make any statements in stiff sentences possibly death by Freeman noted that there was firing squad tot the three expedia surplus of both milk and butter-fa- t tion leaders. and no necessity existed for were identified as former They career army officers Jose a higher support to assure adej Lt. quate supplies. By United Press International Perez San Roman and ex-l"at sect Oliva Andres a cent ,75 Erneido Christian Even The Glasites, of parity Gonzalez, per, was and a civilian,1 Manuel Artime the cost of the dairy program for now considered extinct, 1962-6- 3 would be about $523 mil-founded in Scotland by John Glas. Buesa. "The maximum n., . n Argentina installation.- Crew of 8 Salje After Freighter Explodes, Burns that - pt 110-fo- ot M i Ik, B u Counter, to a Soviet draft treaty for general and complete disarmament in four years, it was v learned. Russia tried to get the conference started on writing a formal treaty right now, and suggested it begin with the first article of the first article of the Soviet Draft summarizing the whole program. But chief U.S. delegate Arthur H. Dean protested it was useless to write specific treaty provisions until the conference decides what it wants to accomplish and how. In reply to the Soviet proposal, he observed: "You cannot build a house without a blueprint." Dean proposed the establishment of subcommittees to consider such specific problems as how to end nuclear weapons production, how to destroy or 'reduce nuclear delivery vehicles including ships, submarines, airplanes and rockets, and how to verify such measures. "These are not problems of language but of substance," Dean v. said. "When we have reached agreement on how each of. these sub- -, stantive matters is t be han-(Se- e U. S. PLAN, Page 4) f te rfo t S u ppo rt Prices Cut by Freeman 1182 Cuban War Prisoners Plead Guilty In Mass Trial ; J lion, Freeman ment. This "dramatically clear" the necessity of a supply management program if. the income of dairy farmers is . to be protected, he said. Freeman said he had not given up hope that Congress would adopt a dairy program which he said would protect producer income and at the same time reduce government costs. -- - The members of Frondizi's last cabinet, which he formed in his final hours in office in a desperate bid to stave off being deposed, signed as witnesses to Guido's installation. Hold Secret Conference The ceremony took place at the Casa Rosada, government house, which the army sealed briefly Thursday to prevent Guido from exercising the executive power. He made his political peace with the military leaders at a secret conference there Thursday night. The Frondizi cabinet will exercise official functions until such time as he has completed selec tion of a new government, Guido said. As he signed the installation record, a shout of "Viva Frondizi" rang out from an unidentified spectator. - The cry brought scattered applause from around the room. Mrs. Mercedes VilladaJ the widow of the late provisional President Gen. Eduardo Lonardi who directed the military revolt which ousted Peron in 1955, cried. Four Generals Arrested' Four generals who held high posts under Frondizi were under arrest early today, apparently because they opposed the coup that ousted Frondizi. The War Ministry identified them as former War Secretary Rosendo Fraga: his undersecre tary, Carlos Peralta; former 1st Division Commander Edgar Lan-dand Maj. Gen. Juan C. Cor-din- i. so-call- ed - j Mow You Know ex-Ca- pt. st " - physically exhausted Justice Charles Evans Whittaker is expected to ' tip the balance of a e conflict on the Supreme Court. Whittaker's resignation, submitted on his doctor's orders, stirred the flurry of Washington speculation which inevitably precedes the selection of a Supreme Court judge. Kennedy, who will be filling his first vacancy on the high bench, told his news' conference Thursday he would announce his choice "shortly." But he refused tobe drawn out publicly on Whittaker's .successor.. Among the names which cropped up immediately, however, were two cabinet members, Abraham Ribicoff, secretary of health, education and welfare and Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg; United Nations' official Ralph Bunche, a Negro;, Harvard law school professor Paul A. Freund, a noted authority on constitutional law; Solicitor General Archibald Cox, and Deputy Atty. Gen. Byron White. Appeals Judges Mentioned There also was some talk of two prominent federal appeals judge's Henry J. Friendly of the 2nd Circuit which has jurisdiction in New York and New England, and David L. Bazelon of the District of Columbia bench. Since Kennedy took office, Sens. and J. Estes Kefauver, ., have William Fulbright, been mentioned as potential Supreme Court timber. Kennedy's nomination of Whiwho will be ttaker's successor (See KENNEDY TO FILL Page 4) er test this weekend and high 9 Moslems New evacuations were ordered in Sioux City Thursday night liberal-conservativ- n., i i t 4 Algeria (UPD killed nine Moslems and wounded 12 today in new violence that followed a night of bombing in Algiers. Gunmen of the .outlawed Secret Army Organization ranged into the Moslem areas of the city and carried out their attacks. One European also "was wounded. Between dusk Thursday night and dawn f today, 22' plastic bombs shattered areas in the Moslem sectors of the city, wounding six Chair- more persons. WASHINGTON (UPD man Harold D. Cooley, D., N. C, "In addition, six mortar bombs of the House Agriculture Commit- were exploded in the gardens of committee the summer palace on the heights tee announced today " new on legisla- of Algiers. sugar hearings In the European working (class tion will open May 1. He prea center dicted Congress will raise domes- quarter of of, OAS extremist support, stroops tic sugar production quotas. The Federal Sugar Act, under cordoned off one section for two which the government controls hours while they carried out new the volume of sugar marketing in searches for terrorists. In Oran, police said they had the United States and allots sales quotas to domestic and foreign picked up about 70 weapons, some ' producers, is scheduled to expire ammunition and Molotov cocktail 30. bombs. June Cooley notedv President Kennedy Europeans in the city of Philip-pevill- e not sent his has i extended a general strike yet Congress recommendations for new legisla- indefinitely today in protest over tion. "But we do not believe we the inclusion of Deputy Mayor should delay consideration of this Philippe Roth in the provisional important matter," he added in government that is to rule. Algeria a statement. for the next six months. ALGIERS, Terrorists . a, Hearings Slated On New Sugar Legislation . d, i .: President Thursday that Justice Charles Evans Whittaker, above, is resigning from the Supreme Court because of ill health. The resignation, effective, April 2, 1962, opens the way for- Kennedy to make his first appointment to ). the Court. (Herald-UP- I - Sioux City Wins Battle With Floods - ter kept nearly wa3,000 Midwestern-er- s against the mounting threat from the Sioux River, expected to crest Sunday, and authorities refused to allow residents to return to homes along the Floyd River although the flood crest was past. Two hundred families were to flee from homes in Ceurged dar Falls, Iowa, where the Cedar River was flooding, and police said that many heeded the warning. At least 1,500 Iowans had been driven from their homes by flooding rivers. Another 1,100 were homeless in Nebraska, 200 in Minnesota, and 100 in South Dakota Less serious flooding caused a few families to flee in Illinois, Wisconsin and Idaho.' The Floyd crested at Sioux City early today at a level of 21.85 feet, nearly 6 feet above flood stage but well under the 23 feet expeeted. s j j 219-19- I j j j sje Democrats in overwhelming numbers responded to the pleas of their leaders and rushed to save the measure. Some ' of them did so despite fear that their votes involved some political risk. As a result, the House oh a 225 ti' 190 roll call, refused to scuttle the Bills two major features: tax withholding on interest and dividends, and tax concessions for business. The move failed even though Republicans voted for it islation Monday. The bill ,has generated thousands of letters from voters protesting against the provision that would withhold taxes to assure that they are paid oh interest on savings accounts and government bonds as well as stock dividends and patronage dividends of farm and other cooperatives. The Treasury has estimated that this will collect about $600 . million a year in tax revenue that it is now do losing because many taxpayers x v not report this income. Big IP Faces JFK On Budget By EDWARD COWAN Prime Minister Nehru Stricken vately. With business lagging, Treasury experts doubt tax revenues will reach the record $93 billion foreat six different locations. He said cast by Kennedy when he sub- ! fices in addition to those which already occupy the top floor and part of the basement. Senator Bennett said the work will include renovation and rehabilitation of the existing building, Thursday as it passed the 6 House by a .margin. David S. 'King and M. Blaine Peterson both voted for the measure. j United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD President Kennedy used one of the biggest "ifs" of his 14 months in the White e House when he f said Thursday the federal budget will be in the black next year "if business recovers in the way we hope it would." Most officials now believe that a budget deficit is' virtually inin fiscal 1963, which Indian evitable NEW DELHI (UPD starts July 1, The red-in- k Prime Minister Jawaharlal could run- - to several billion' gap dolNehru, 73, was suddenly taken ill lars. J "' today and doctors cancelled all The chief reason the narrow his engagements for the rest of $463 million surplus Kennedy prothe day. to have melted seems jected ConA spokesman for Nehru's even before the year has away gress party said there was ho begun is failure of business to cause for anxiety, although the the: with like zip anything prime minister was running a expand the administration The forecast, slight fever. Kennedy target' of a $570 billion economy this year is all but beas even the jmost yond reach econoadministration optimistic mists have begun to concede pri- tional 40 years," Senator Bennett said. Senator Bennett said that the modifications of the building will make it possible to consolidate federal offices in Provo which are now mittedhis 1963 budget to Conin k gress January. h One hard fact is that corporate tax payments to the Treasury have fallen short of expectations. Tax breaks for business also agency activities at a single location may be expected to provide will lower revenues below the $93 meaningful economies, increased billion level. And spending, in all efficiency, and greater conveni- probability, will exceed the Presience to the public. Relinquishment dent's figure of $92.5 billion. Hence, a deficit looks certain. (See POSTOFFICE, Pae 4) 34,-50- 0. Wallace F. Bennett. The program, a main project to cost an estimated $478,000, will be applied to the building after the post office moves into the new building now under construction at (UPD ' 163 to 0. SIOUX CITY, Iowa (UPD The Senate Finance Committee Sioux City appeared today to have won its battle with the rampag- will begin three weeks of public ing Floyd River, but faced anoth- hearings on .the House passed leg- A half First South and First West. rair conditioning and elevator reto remodel The present structure at First placement as well as other major the government now occupies million dollar program and convert Provo's existing post North and First West is owned by improvements. square feet of commercial a General AdministraServices into the renooffice and federal building "It is expected that the space in Provo for which it pays a offices structure for more federal tion, government agency which vated building will provide first a rental of $55,000 per year. The prospectus after the post office moves out was handles government buildings, and class office space which should prepared by revealed here today by Utah Sen. "will be used to house federal of- serve economically . for an addi- GSA says "the consolidation of D. C. j WASHINGTON Utah's two Democratic Rep- resentatives voted in favor of President Kennedy's tax bill Tele-photo- $500,000 Postal i ice Remodeling Set WASHINGTON, White House. j JUSTICE RESIGNS Kennedy announced ' homeless. Slain By Terrorists WASHINGTON (UPD President Kennedy's big tax bill sailed today into calmer Senate waters after nearly capsizing during its House passage. The bill which, has few allies and many foes among the nation's most powerful economic was traveling with a groups head of steam supplied by. the Its. successful passage through the House Thursday, despite solid demonRepublican opposition, strated that a remarkable degree of goodwill prevails between' the President and rank and file House Democrats. The bill was twice buffeted by Both vigorous assaults. times SD-Ark- Building to House Federal Off ices " In Favor of His Bill By SAM FOGG and CHARLOTTE G. MOULTON WASHINGTON (UPD President Kennedy's, choice to replace i i . President Swings Tide . makes Plea By Last-Minu- te Bab-El-Oue- said in . a state Solid GOP Kennedy to Fill Opposition His First Vacancy Falls Short On Supreme Court By DAVID F. BELNAP United Press International BUENOS AIRES (UPD Sen. wasM. Guido Jose formally installed as provisional president of Argentina today in a ceremony interspersed by cries of "Viva Frondizi," scattered applause and some tears. The Argentine armed forces which Thursday ousted, arrested and exiled constitutional President Arturo Frondizi agreed to Guido's installation after he pledged in writing to carry out their mandates to ban all political activities by Peronists. It was the victories by followers of ousted Dictator , Juan D. Peron in the elections of 12 days ago that sparked the crisis which led to Frondizi's ouster and Guido's which is considering legislation to establish the Ganyon-land- s National IPark in Utah. A painting of the park is in the background. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto) : Clyde Favors Park; Seeks Multiple, Us4 Safeguards D. Clyde oiOUU Liberal Appointee Likely a Ices President of Senate" Installed; Pledges to Restrict Peronistas L CTTTVrr"TTWr (SQ21 Guido Over Reins I op TT7 A nrvo:nn - t J. - If If D :.:.:.;.:.:.:.:.:.,:. .1 ri 0 I? Q ' .. PRICE FIVE CENTS mid-Marc- |