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Show Herald Telephones For Ads, News, Circulation: Provo Office, W. 4th 190 f Orem Office, 741 N. State , .... .... ..... AC t (it 'v sfx f X AV 05 . For Provo Society: FR I!!'V'VV ;bV -- . Taix Ike vy H ike; . Held PMbaBlej By RICHARD B. LANEY United Press International " SALT . LAKE CIT (pPI) An increase of 3 to 5 mills irf the state property levy may, be im-- . ' posed on Utah taxpayers. ': This possibility results from a tentative state budget for the 1959-6- 1 biennium which has been exec- worked out by a five-ma- n ; - V. TTl Joint islature's Dro-- tentative budget would vide for a general fund of Thi , -- r T Appropriations Committee.' V:V V PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH !Vascv $64,-518.0- 00 and a uniform school fund totaling $78,780,850. This ;; would .still leave a deficit of j $26,580,850 . The pared down tentative budget is partly based on a program of state aid to education set at a level of only $5,100 per distribution unit. The House of Representatives has passed' two bills that 'would , set the figure at The two bills come up. for Senate action "Monday. Other reductions in budget proJ posals were made by: allocathe . Cutting proposed tion for acquisition of state park sites from $1 million to $750,000. Cutting the proposed state building construction program from the requested $13.7 million to ' T. $12.5 million. allocation the proposed Cutting for' planning of state building proj$5,-30- 0. i i an trans-'ferrin- PRICE TEN CENTS ; x x t Russ Trawler Could Have Cut Cable Killed In House, day night. Lt. Donald M. Sheely told a news conference here that he "considers it feasible .that the trawler could have cut the cable with its fishing gear alone. "It is definitely quite possible and probajbly quite likely the Russians had something to do with breaknig the cable," said Sheely,, executive officer of the U.S. Destroyer Roy O. Hale. The Hale located the . trawler about noon Thursday and sent out a boarding party to inspect it. . "I don't know whether it was accidental intentional," said Sheely."'rWe ad "no' difficulty la boarding the ship. Our party of five was unarmed. We called for the captain and told them we intended ta board. One man on the trawler said 'wait' in English. A (Continued on, Page Four) t ; 27-3- 6 ; , By RICHARD B. LANEY ' United Press International House The Democratic-controlle- d of representatives has killed a bill thatt t wouldTVT have1 repealed TUtah's itignt, to worK law, Dui; a democrat and a Republican immediately, started a rnove to resurrect the repealer. Meanwhile, the Senate passed bills to expand Weber Junior Coschool, inllege to a four-yea- r crease fees of notaries public and allow trust deeds to be used as also ad? mortgages. vanced to third reading a bill that would make deficit appropriations' totaling $623,494 to various state departments. 1 1 . , Senators TVi a "rnccVinnfic'' 'Kill "eViill onrJ was tabled by the House to allow its sponsor to amend the, measure. .The bill would requirethat a 5K.au ana tiussuyues metis, auu the words ' ' contains poisonous ingredients" be printed on all tobacco containers in Utah. House ""members also passedVraanimous-l- y a bill to create7 a State Indian Affairs Commission. The vote on the Right to Work late repealer Friday afternoon was. 27, "ayes" to 36 votes against the bill. Sixteen Democrats, whose national party organization .calls for repeal of Right to Workjeg' islation, combined with 20 Repub licans to defeat the repealer. Republican Adam Duncan" of Salt Lake and Democrat Ernest I. Wilson of Nephi changed their votes to the prevailing side to enable them to move for reconsideration of the repealer when the.. House reconvenes Monday. Duncan was the only GOP representative to favor thef repeal of the bill which forbids making union membership a condition of employment. House Speaker Sheldon Brewster wasamong the Democrats voting . against repeal. Brewster, who pointed out he had refused to sign a statement saying he would uphold the Democratic platform,, said the issue should be put to a vote by the J ) citizens of Utah. ' i A move was made to uphold the vote on the off highway gas tax refund until the repeal bill was voted on but I resisted that threat," Brewster told the chamber. "Other legislators were5 told that If they didn't change their attitude on repeal that there would be. an unfavorable vote : jr , Discoverer I , satellite leaves the The two-sta'DISCOVERER LAUNCHED launch pad at Vandenberp; Air Force Base, Calif., in an attempt to. orbit the entire 1,3004b. second stage around the poles. A Thor booster is used for the first stage, into horizon scanning device Was intended to orient the satellite and an infra-re- d S. AIR of (U.earth. surface the the with to attitude horizontal a resepecti path ; ) FORCE PHOTO VIA UPl TELEPHOTQ) , ; ge j Shots Fired Near Home Of Castro ' i ; . (Continued on Page Two) HAVANA (UPD Several shots were fired in the vicinity of the home of Premier Fidel Castro in nearby Cojimar Beach ; Friday night. The area'' was 'sealed off by police . during an extensive search By HENRY SHAPIRO for the gunmen. .' United Press International . Castro was not at home. He Premier LENINGRAD (UPI) was in the presidential palace in Nikita Khrushchev will fly. to East Havana,' presiding at a council of Germany as soon as he whids up ministers meeting. . his apparently stalemated talks with Prime Minister Harold Mac- j . Early AppeaLto Be Filed Wash.. (UPD Attor iiecK piannea an Dave neys for early appeal today on the income tax conviction, of the former Teamsters Union president. Beck was' sentenced Friday to , five years in prison and fined $60,000 for evading $240,000 in in- - $60,000 Fine TACOMA, . $70,-961.52- mm .a- o, was a man of insatiable greed. He said Beck plundered s his union and his inti- . and "cheated mate associations t t every last numDie American wuo pays income taxes." ' 1 1 A , stoically but his face turned red fets Boldt described the "sad and s! hocking" storyrof Beck's swift rise jto power and equally swift descent. XJCtA tUUIV 5 Scientists Presi(UPI) dent Eisenhower has appointed Nofive scientists, including two ' science to his bel Prize winners, advisory committee. The President selected Dr. John Bardeen, Nobel Prize winning physics and electric engineering professor at the University of Illinois, for a spot on the committee. Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, chemistry professor at the University of California who also won a Nobel prize, also was selected. Others chosen were Dr. EMan-ue- l R. Priori, research director for International Business Machines Corp., in New York City; Dr. Cyril Stanley Smith, metallurgy professor at the University of Chicago and atomic weapons specialist; and Dr. Britten Chance, University of Pennsylvania biophys-iciand a pioneer in radar research. . , uoiai saiu uecK, LUC . - - - - - st make." Beck said, is that I per and. I sonally have said before t r' i continue to say now mat i nave - rrrcot anrt firm np npf in rn tmni our of judiciary system. justice "I've authorized my attorneys to go ahead through the process . onnool . a. T'm nrf tVi o RED VISITS INDONESIA JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI). President Ho Chi Minn of Communist North Vietnam arrived visit to here Friday on a y Indonesia. 10-da- HERALD INDEX Steelworkers Stress Full Em.7 ployment . . ...... Class "A" Hoop Pairings An. . . 12 nounced . . . 7. . S Amusements 9 Business News Central Utah News. v.:.. 3, 4, 5, fircf fnnn. cent person to be sentenced nor am I going to be the last. But I am confident that with the passage 'of time and out 'of the atmosphere that has existed over the past number of months, that the best interest of justice will be served." it was an through March It was expect' 10. ed Khrushchev would leave for 's The Soviet bews agency Tass the fair immediately after scheduled departure from announced Khrushchev's p i a n s while Macmillan, just arrived Moscow Tuesday. Western experts had no doubt here on a tour of Russia's provEast-WeKhrushchev's visit to Gerthat for was calling inces, a" with that many would include, negotiations warning negotiations "hopes for peace are not enough." for the transfer of control of Tass aid Khrushchev has ac-- ' West Berlin's lifelines to the Gercepted an invitation from the East man Communists, and possibly German government to "visit the negotiations for a peace treaty with Red Germany as well. Leipzig International Fair." (There have been - authorita ive The! East German! showcase fair at Leipzig opens Saturday and runs predictions that Khrushchev would seek to negotiate a "separate peace" with Russia's German Mac-millan- - j st j WASHINGTON ? . Ike Appoints , through 1953. Beck was free on bail of 1950 millan next week, nounced. Saturday. i Beck Gets 5 Years In Prison; . f Khrushchev to ly to Germany , .......... .............. .................. .B, 8, 20, 21 I. "Classified.... Comics .23, 24, 25 Editorial DRAWS PRISON TERM Former Teamster boss, Dave Beck, grasps his throat as he leaves Federal Court in Tacoma Friday, where he was sentenced to five years in prison and received a $60,000 fine for income tax evasion. He also received a tongue lashing -- 15-min- from Judge Boldt. (Herald-UP- I ute Telephoto) By BILL WILKS Press International. VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (0PI) The first Discoverer satellite was launched d here Saturday but the artificial moon had not been heard from! hours after it was fired on a course to put it in. polar orbit,, . . ' Officials refused to be disheartened They still held hope that sometime during the night a tracking station would pickup the first radio signal from the blun"- ed pencil-shape- d artificial moon. It was lofted from its pad on the Sandy Beach Range some; 160 miles northwest of Los Angeles at 1:49 p. m. PST (2:49 p. m. MST). It rose slowly; almost slug first. Then, given! a gishly-aboost by the first stage Thor mis sile, it shot almost straight up before arching into a horizontal, -southerly flight. Streaks Out of Sight less In than four minutes.it was out of sight. Only a wide, yellowish white vapor trail was left In its wake as it disappeared high in the skies in the general direction of Los Angeles. 4 At 1:54 p. m;, right on schedule, the second stage the 18.8 foot long satellite fwas cut loose from its booster. The tracking station at nearby Point Mugu Naval Station picked up its signal for 'six minutes. . The downrange tracking ship, some 950 miles at sea south of here,! received the signal briefly. Then; silence. There was no signal when It was scheduled for Its first pass over Alaska. None, either, nearly two hours later at 5 p. m. PST when it should have zoomed over Hawaii. Officials Hopeful But diehard 'launch officials were hopeful. Adm. John E. Clark, Deputy Director of the Advance Research Projects Agency which worked with the Air Force son Saturday's test, told a press briefing that "we have not. confirmed lv the orbit." Pressed for an explanation of the silent radio, Adm. Clark noted the Discoverer's radio antennas were located In its nose cone. At a certain' height, a covering was to have been jettisoned and the antennas ejected. He theorized that the covering faUed to jettison. Supporting his theory was the faintness of the signals picked up at Mugu and range, ship. He said tracking stations would contiue tov monitor the radio's range. If in orbit, the satellite would make additional passes overj U; S. tracking stations at approximately 7 p. m., 9 p. m; K and 12 midnight (PST). Second Stag-Proved; Air; Force Officials said earlier that testing of the second stage was the primary goal. This has been accomplished, regardless of ;' . .. orbiting. - .. The satellite bearing rocket lunged from its launch pad on the 1300-poun- '- r Ic Repea I l" xS" Polar Orbit Uncertain, But Officials Hopeful Nine injured were admitted to a hospital. Four were released after , treatment. The fire department sent all available men and. equipment to the scene where scores of volunteers, many of them parents of missing children, dug Into the wreckage. j Twenty-fiv- e children and an unknown number of adults were on the ice for a children's hockey practice session when the roof collapsed. - Wo U LI jfiriJTju . t-to-- S7 O) '. j million to $10 million million to1 only $5 million. ' The' tentative budget also is from the general fund;' to the By WILLIAM CALLAHAN school fund and by' levying a based on the assumption that the United Press International statewide property tax totaling Legislature will pass certain, tax ARGENTIA, Nfld. (UPD The 4 two 6 a to include bills bills. These mills. . from, Soviet fishing trawler operating The present state property tax per cent occupation tax on oil off Newfoundland when transatY is one mill. (Continued on Page Four) - lantic cables wete mysteriously cut this week "quite likely" had ' r 'something to do with it, the leader of the U.S. Navy boarding party Reconsideration Due Monday that inspected the ship said Fri- j . $8.5 Riah today, Sunday. Rising temperatures. Predicted high today, 54. Highest temperature recorded itt Provo area Friday was 47. Lowest Saturday mornlnx was 29. 1, 1959 (7 " Saturday. beloi "estimated revenues. Sen. Klepn Kerr of the Joint ' Approp- ects from $500,000 to. $300,000. riations Committee,' said the defAnd, cutting ' the emergency g school building program from' $6.6 icit could be made up by - " w-- a Partly Cloudy "Z3 O LISTOWEL, Ontario (UPI) Eight persons were reported killed and 20 were unaccounted for when a hockey arena roof collapsed here : r Prx Of Hockey Arena Gollapses;20 Hurt . :n- - - uran rropeo v ;. 'V t. 8 Killed As Roof t. rr i: fr . 84 ::.;;. From 3 to 5 Mills - . r, - , VOL, 36, NO. 40 ' ros- N.v v,.... 22 19 National. World News.... 2, 7, 23, 26 4 16, 17, 18 12, 13, 14 ...10, Obituaries Society. .....15, Sports. ............11, Stocks ......... 1 9 New City Manager To Take Office Satellite.) Macmillan, who flew 'in from Kiev just before noon Saturday, said at the airport, "We must work . by-th- , , " e , ' Marshalis Condition ; Mondayjln Ogden st I Holds Firm Rein On Foreign Policy Dulles Prog ress Gratifies Experts The (UPI) State Department has said that two cancer experts are "gratified" by progress made by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles during the past 10 days. It said Drs. T. S. Ravdin and Gordon Zubrod, consulted Pulles! doctors at Walter Reed Hospital Friday and reported that they were pleased by the ailing secretary's progress since their last visit Feb. 17. Ravdin is professor of surgery at the University of Pennsylvania medical school. Zubrod is clinical director of the government's National Cancer Institute in. Bethes-- da, Md. They were called in by Maj. Gen. Leonard D. Heaton, Walter Reed commandant who operated on Dulles, shortly after the Feb. 12 surgery for a hernia disclosed a recurrence of cancer. Dulles now has the reins of U. S. foreign policymor- firmly in hand than at any time' since his operaj - tion. His increasing participation in strategy sessions gave rise to in- creased optimism the Dulles would realize his intention to resume full command of the nation's foreign policy. President Eisenhower late Friday spent 20 minutes "in Dulles' j U.SI Delays Firing Moon Probe Shot CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) A dense overcast closed la the cape Saturday and apparently forced postponement of a new United States moon probe attempt by the Army at least until Sunj: .M,: day. V The Air Force earlier Saturday fired a Thor-Abtest rocket on a flight over the Atbut difficulties developed lantic, in the tracking system and chances for recovery of its nose cone appeared slight. The Thor went up into thick clouds.:' The space probe, , a project planned before Russia launched its Mechta (Lunik) rockle long-distan- ce long-await- ed et past ;the moon in early January .apparently was In readiness" for firing this week-en- d when th foul weather moved in. It was to be powered by a tall Jur.9 DZ space probe vehicle, a four-starocket using a Jupiter Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile (IRBM) as its first stage. The probe was planned to reach the vicinity of the moon and, like Mecnia, go beyond. Carry Payload It was to carry a 13.4 iound payload of scientific instruments dwarfed ; by , the 3,245 pound Mechta but its objectives were 'to provide science with invaluabl radiation and pulsation data. The weather forecast for Saturday night gave the cape area'-onl0 a chance for the 2,000-foceiling necessary for a launching, odds too short for the ' Army ' rocketeers to gamble on. The Army planned to aim the rocket directly stately four-staat the moon and estimated it will take 34 hours for the (Continued on Page Four) 76-fo- ot ge , y 50-5- ot I ge 13-pou- nd Attlee Doubtful Concerning MacMillan Visit - vi- Ohio hospital room at Walter Reed Army Hospital. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said he believes they discussed the Berlin crisis. Earlier Friday Dulles had received a telephoned rundown on international affairs from ids special assistant, Joseph N. Greene, Jr. that briefly' presumably also covered the Berlin situation. Four top aides visited with Dulles on Thursday for an hour. activities came The stepped-u- p amid continuing radiation treatment for abdominal cancer which has forced Dulles to surrender y operation of the State Department to .subordinates. , day-to-da- :vl . ... (UPI) Clement Attlee, former Prime Minister of Great Britain, was greeted on arrival here with a question on whether he thought good would be done by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's current visit to Rus'i sia. i. "It looks a bit doubtful now, doesn't it?f AtUee said. "The atmosphere doesn't seem frightfully cordial'A' :'", 1' :. Inf6rmed he would appear today DAYTON; ? for peace?' v The prime minister's declara- Remains 'Unchanged! tion underlined rising western hopes that his visit here might FT. BRAGG, N.C. (UPD DocOGDEN (UPI) Wallon R. L. lead J to some sort of East-Wetors at the Womack Army HosTaylor, forme? city manager at negotiations before Russia's May pital j reported that the ; . seriSuperior, Wis.,! will take the oath 27 deadline in the Berlin crisis ous condition of Gen. George C. .f Monday as Ogden city manager. is reached. Marshall ; "remains unchanged." MosE. succeeds J. to he Allison, Macmillan came said Col. George Powell, chief of Taylor who served in the managerial cow jto try to get an understand- medicine at the hospital, said post for the past seven years be- ing of Russia's point of view on Marshall rested well Friday night fore his resignation Jan. 1. and was comfortable Saturday. He outstanding problems. i . was selected the Khrushchev has made it clear said Marshall's blood pressure .Taylor by Ogden City Council in January repeatedly, and most recently! in and pulse were stable and he had to fill Allison's vacated post." r no fever. (Continued on Page Four) WASHINGTON Pacific hd headed straight up into a cloudless blue sky, leaving a bright yellow tail of fire clearly visible from the press observation center nearly two miles away. After the Discoverer the first attempt to launch! a satellite from the West Coast reached an altitude ;of between 10,000 to 15,000 ' feet, it arched into a horizontal flight, leaving a long vapor traiL j I .. ' ; at Wilmington College's 12th an- nual International . Folk Festival with another son of the British Commonwealth, actor Basil Rath-bonAttlee candidly asked: "Who's Basil Rathbone: Never heard of him." e, Ike Orders Extension of Oil 10-D- ay Imports Controls PresiWASHINGTON (UPI) dent Eisenhower has ordered a extension of temporary, 10-d- ay imports while he studies new pro- -' posals for curbing them. The White House said the extension until March 10 would give the President time to consider recommendations " submitted Friday by Leo Hoegh, director of the office of Civil and Defense Mobilization. The present system of voluntary quotas was Id hava expired |