OCR Text |
Show wr - v , mr 4 ; ?- j mq0m0mn0ij0 - j i ), !r !!'&! - '" Tribune Phones News departments, EM Information, scores, EL business, advertising, circulation departments, EM VoL 182, No. 121 Salt Lake City, Utah Nod Wisely ST. LOUIS, Feb. 11 (UPI) The St. Louis BoanJfc Aldermen has been adftbif ished for its lax behavior. Board President A. J. Cervantes told the Aldermen to stay in their seats during work sessions and at least By Associated Press pretend they are paying atPITTSBURGH, Feb. 11 Secretary of Labor Arthur J. tention when spectators are Goldberg reached Pittsburgh Saturday night on in the gallery. tour of depressed areas. his five-stat-e THE KENNEDY CABINET member, formerly general council of the Unitfd Steelworkers of America union, predicted that the steel Thdustry will supply the 600,000 jobs it had before the recession set in. Goldberg remarked with a laugh that when he was with the union he sometimes helped close down mills in labor strikes. Now, he said, his mission is to restore mills to full Help of All d Umbrella Time Utah and Salt Lake Partly cloudy, tered showers and cooler. Weather map on Page .B-4- February 12, 1961 Sunday Morning Price Twenty Cents Kennedy Calls In ExpertsStage Set for Khrushchev By Associated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 President Kennedy talked for two hours Saturday with a panel of key advisers on policy. He got a first-hanreport from Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson on Thompsons recent confidential conference with Premier Nikita Khrushchev. U.S.-Sovi- - It is now expected that Kennedy and Khrushchev probasession In a bly will meet for an informal little more than two months. 1 found one dominant theme and that is that people want work. William L. Batt Jr., Pennsylvanias director of industry and labor, who with Pittsburgh Mayor Joseph Barr, greeted Goldberg, remarked that nearly one out of 10 unemployed in the country are in GOLDBERG agreed that the situation is grave. Speaking of the steel industry, the labor secretary said he has great confidence in the industry's future and feels it has not reached its full potential. I do not share the view that the steel Industry is over expanded, he said. Goldberg said he and President Kennedy are confident that administration programs can restore full employment to the country. GOLDBERG arrived at the Greater Pittsburgh Airport from Columbus, Ohio, where he said that failure to deal with an unemployment problem would be "a denial of responsibility by us all. He reported that Ohio has more communities with sub-- , stantial unemployment than in Illinois, Indiana and Michigan, states he has already visited on his tour. THE LABOR secrteary ran into some business opposition to Mr. Kennedys program to provide $1,200,000,000 emergency aid to idled workers, & P Goldberg said would be al for a of un- upgrading permanent 1 o m ment e compensation y p benefits, i Associated Press Wirephoto Arthur Goldberg . . . Urges partnership toward recovery Normal Course Riddle Tests Session on Utah Funds By O. N. Malmquist Tribune Political Editor The fiscal riddle confronting Utahs Legislature moved no closer to a solution during the past week. On the surface, at least, the developmen s of the week added complications. BUT SOLUTIONS to legis- lative fiscal problems frequent- ly come into a focus by the segments first moving in opposite directions. The major developments affecting the budget m a k i n g process were: 1. PASSAGE by the House, with almost unanimous support of the Democratic majority, of two educator-backeschool bills which would cost about $6,600,000 more per bien-nuthan Gov. George D. C y d e s recommended pro-- , gram. 2. Announcement by Democratic leaders that they would oppose property tax increases, and make a determined try to reduce the statewide school 1 The Presidents purpose in going into such a , wbuld be twofold: 1. To make an initial exploration at the summit level but 0 not in a summit conference of Khrushchevs purposes in the present phase of his policy toward the United States, and to 4find out whether there are possible East-Wes- t agreements, especially in the field of dis armament 2. TO r v ip .. , President Kennedy chats with Press Secretary Pierre Salinger and Mrs. Salinger inside Marine helicopter before Copter Flies President To Retreat MIDDLEBURG, VA., Feb. 11 President Kennedy (UPI) savored the snowy isolation of Virginias hunt Country Saturday as he paid his first visit e to Glen Ora, the historic which will be his estate ex ATKINSON, HERSCHEL weekend White House. ecutive director of the Ohio HE TRAVELED here from Chamber of Commerce, and Don Wiper of the 'Ohio Manu Washington by helicopter to facturers Assn, questioned join his wife and whether business can meet the daughter Caroline, who began added payroll tax proposed to the weekend stay at their finance the plan and urged rented 18th Century home FriSee Page 6, Column 8 day. The trip marked Mr. Kennedys first absence from Washington since he entered the White House Jan. 20. 400-acr- Assassination Plot Denied Clues Spur Lumumba Hunt By Associated Press cape was manufactured. E L I S A B E THVILLE, KA- - Nevertheless, the suspicions et) TANGA, reached to U.N. headquarters tanga government hinted Sat-- ' ew York': Eleven'pro-Lu- " urday that U.N. troops- were mumba delegations demanded involved in the disappearance an inquiry int0 Lumumbas of Patrice Lumumba and announced new clues in the hunt Sov'iet Union" requested" for the Congos deposed urday secret Security Council meeting to discuss Lumumbas HOPING TO allay wide fate. spread suspicion that the story The Soviet move failed of Lumumbas escape from Ka- and the matter will come up tanga jailers was a cover-uat a council meeting to a assassinate the for plot Congos foremost political agiNo evidence has been protator, the government issued a communique denying the es- - duced here to substantiate the Navy to Keep ON ARRIVAL, the President was greeted at the helicopter landing strip on the grounds by Mrs. Kennedy, attired in a gray sweater and slacks. The Kennedys are expected to insist on extreme privacy New York Times Service levy. during their visits here. The WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 Administra8. EXPRESSIONS of hope Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rick-ove- r Federal Aviation banned tion has plane flights the Navy from the Joint Appropriations is being kept in over the estate. Committee, by both Democrats beyond his normal retirement The mansion itself cannot and Republicans, that the age of 62, the Pentagon anbe seen from nearby highbudget can be balanced with- nounced Saturday. out a tax increase. THE CONTROVERSIAL ways. 4. Disclosure by minority of the atomic submaLight snow fell in the rollSee Page 12, Column 1 father rine will remain in the inter- ing countryside during the day, ests of the Navy and the na- and the sky was heavily overtion, according to John B. cast. Mr. Kennedy, who will Connally, secretary of the return to Washington early Monday, boarded his helicopter Navy. The action apparently on the White House lawn at stemmed from efforts by con- 12:37 p.m. and arrived at Glen gressional backers who in the Ora 30 minutes later. have pushed the Navy The Virginia estate Is the WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 past Rickover. into promoting latest in a series of famous (UPI) r President Kennedy has decided to name Edwin O. This was in keeping with presidential hideaways. Reischauer, a Harvard profes- Kickovers career. Its predecessors have been sor and renowned expert on He had the Navy Dwight D. Eisenhowers pushed the Far East, as the new Amer- into developing the atomic Gettysburg, Pa., farm; Hary ican ambassador to Japan, it - was learned Saturday night. submarine when high Navy S Trumans yacht Williamsofficials doubted its possibili- burg; Franklin D. Roosevelts mountain camp in MR. KENNEDY already has ties and resented some of the Shangri-Lchief which was also its Md., Thurmont, shortcuts by employed asked the Japanese governused by Mr. Eisenhower, who ment for its approval of the advocate and sponsor. Last month the Navy gave renamed it Camp David, and appointment, reliable sources its highest peace- Herbert Hoovers RappahanRickover 50, speaks said. Reischauer, the Distinguished nock River fishing retreat in Japanese fluently, was bom in time award, Medal. Service Virginia. American of parents. Tokyo , Past Age 62 JFK Chooses Japan Envoy a Prm DETROIT, Feb. 11 High should school principals abolish their formal grade levels and let students race ahead or plod along according to their individual abilities, a high school principal urged Saturday. B. FRANK BROWN of Melbourne, Fla., said public edu- - Today Chuckle The person who has a ondhand car : knows how hard it is to drive a bargain. cation 'has been in a rigid lockstep for 9 years, with students grouped by age instead of ability. As they march together from the first grade through the 12th, he said, the bright students become bored and the poor students fall hopelessly, and helplessly behind. Brown is principal of the nations only ungraded high school Educators have been experimenting with -- ungraded primary schools for years, U.S. Blacks Out News On Satellites, Missiles By Jack Raymond New York Times Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 Officials made it clear Saturday that information from United States sources about both missiles and satellites would be U.S. and Soviet harder to come by in the future. An administrative change Storm Leaves Soggy Coast By Asaoclated Preo Rain tapered off to light showers in the waterlogged Northwest Saturday, and western Oregon streams swollen downpour beby a three-dato recede. gan THE RAIN spread southward into California and east ward into Montana, where it turned to snow. Light snow and flurries also were scattered from the Great Lakes Region to southern New and it is catching on in many parts of the country. In an address to the annual convention of the National Association of Secondary-Schoo- l Principals, Brown said the traditional levels from one grade through 12 should be abandoned. IN THEIR PLACE, he said, there should be four areas of Instruction, each covering . a three-yea- r span: primary, intermediate, Junior. ( high and senior high ' Within these areas, Brown . - All three were brought to Katanga last month for safe- - The government of this secessionist province announced the discovery of a rifle and submachine gun under a bush near the spot where Lumumbas supposed getaway car was abandoned. After that the hunt came to a dead end as far as official statements were shifting information responsi- bilities from the Pentagon to the National Aeronautics and Space Agency has already cut off usually available material about the Soviet sputnik lunched into orbit last week. The Soviet announced last Saturday that they had hurled a sputnik into orbit The White House and Pentagon disclosed that President Kennedy and other officials had known of the launching before it was announced' in Moscow. BUT ALMOST immediately kfterward no further information about Sputnik V was available from U.S. sources. At first it appeared the Pentagons tracking units were having difficulty maintaining surveillance. However, it developed that under an order issued last November, the NASA and not any of the Pentagons information units would be responsible for issuing unclassified information about Soviet THE AIR FORCES national space surveillance control center in New Bedford, Mass., had been giving out scientific tracking information directly. Under the new it was said, "the talented have ordered to turn rules, its material room to romp. over to the North Americari And the slower student Air Defense Command headmay pace himself into quarters at Colorado Springs, whatever excellence he Colo., which would forward it can attain. . . . through channels for release NASA. If the ungraded high by school is generally adopted, BUT SATURDAY, nearly Brown said, interscholastic three months after the change, athletics may prove to be an NASA spokesman said that an early casualty. he had no information about And, he added, varsity ath- reports that Sputnik V had letics may disappear any- separated into three parts way, if we oganize a new the nose cone, the second stage school jystem to meet our of the rocket and the satellite needs. See Page S, Column 5 "1 BUT A KATANGA spokes man and the local radio said a government commission of inquiry found that a number of men with light brown skins' suddenly appeared at Lumum- bas farmhouse prison early Friday morning and ordered the guards to release Lumumba. This probably was an allusion to Moroccan U.N. soldiers troops, from North Africa. It is a strange coincidence, the radio said, that Lumumbas escape coincided with the withdrawal of Moroccan troops from the Kolwezi area (about 60 miles from Lumumbas farmhouse prison). olive-skinne- r JHsrrlman has been brought back by the Kennedy Administration as an ambassador-at-large- . rumors of Lumumbas death. But the only evidence to the contrary has come from a steady stream of communiques on the hunt for him and two associates, Senate Vice Presi- - chevs aims and purposes. This dent Joseph Okito and former would be in support of Thomp. Youth Minister MfnJrice Mpolo. sons own efforts along that 7.2-to- V , V1 ' p Let Talent Romp , Principal Says By Anoclatad IMPRESS upon Khrushchev in the most emphatic manner that the U.S. government is deeply concerned over the persistent failure of peace efforts in the Congo and Laos. The United States regards Communist support for rebel elements in both places as a major cause of trouble. Thompson was one of four Soviet specialists in the White House Cabinet room with Mr. Kennedy. THE OTHER three were all former envoys to Moscow Charles E. Bohlen, chief adviser to Secretary of State Dean Rusk on Soviet affairs; George F. Kennan, author of AMociated Preas Wtreihota the containment policy in take-of- f Saturday for new country home in Virginia. the immediate postwar period The historic estate will be his weekend White House. of the 1940s, who has been out of government for eight years, and W. Averell Harriman, a recent governor of New York who was a World War n ambassador in Moscow. e Kickover - Meeting in Two Months Considered Probable Summing up his interviews with unemployed workers and industry, business and local leaders in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and now Pennsylvania, the labor secretary said; states - Citywidely scat- The governments original story was that Lumumba and his fellow-- risoners overpowered their guards. p Castro Promises Latin Turmoil By Associated Press Feb. 11 A Fidel Castro vowed Saturday night to spur revolution in Latin America in response to what he called U.S. encouragement of counterrevolution in Cuba. The Prime Minister said Cuba will go to the United Nations to declare its right to do so. His words were heard by a thousand workers who greeted the speech with cries of "Cuba si, Yankees no. Cuba feels it has the right to spur revolution In Latin America, Castro said. HAVANA, Soviet Rejects Apology in French Note MOSCOW, Feb. 11 (UPI) Russia Saturday rejected Frances explanation of the buzzing and warning shots fired past the Soviet presidential airliner off Algeria and demanded again punishment for the French jet fliers Kennan, considered by many to be one of the countrys most authorities on the Soviet Union, has been chosen by Mr. Kennedy to be ambassador to Communist capi- tal whlcV broke years ago with the Soviet bloc and is now considered an ideal observation post for an expert of Ken nans caliber. With Mr. Kennedy and the ambassadors advisers were Rusk and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson characterized the session as an informal talk but declined any specific information about it. There was no statement from the White House. From other sources, however, it was learned that this was only the first of a series of conferences which Thompson is scheduled to take part in with administration officials during his Washington stay. two-hou- r THE SOVIET government made it clear it would not drop the matter involving President Leonid Brezhnev despite French sincere regrets for the incident over the Mediterranean Thursday. At two separate meetings Saturday between Soviet and French deplomatic officials in Moscow, the Soviet Union denounced the buzzing as nothing but an act of international banditry committed by tha French Air Force. It warned France that to whitewash such actions, and to absolve the guilty, is a risky undertaking. (In Paris, diplomats said they feared Russia might use the incident as an excuse for another outburst They said the incident particularly could cause a worsening of French-Russiarelations in the midst of French attempts to end the Algerian war.) n n Guide to Good Reading One Century Ago Today, Lincoln Rode to Destiny President Moise Tshombe of Katanga has long been at odds AMERICAS ABRAHAM LINCOLN was a man of many with the United Nations for moods. . . . failing to stamp out There was Lincoln on his 52nd birthday on Feb. 12, rebels' in northern Ka- 1861, a lonely man on a train ride to Washington, D C, achas tanga. His government and destiny. cused the Moroccans of collabThere was Lincoln, the deeply enewith Katangas orating religious man who said: With His mies because of the Moroccan assistance I cannot fail. . . . governments sympathies with Lumumbas rebels, who occupy AND THERE WAS Abraham the northeastern section of the Lincoln in love. Congo. It was all so long ago. But the deeds of those old days have left their effect on today. And the Me! Lincoln story is good reading for a contemplative Sunday at home. Many Moods We tell the Lincoln story, today In two special reports: THERES THE LONELY train ride on Page . the And story of Lincoln in love in the By AuoclaM Pkm This Week Magazine. AUSTIN, TEX., Feb. 11 A big We recommend them both to f you. youth was left J more And for Sunday specials: handcuffed to a fountain SECTION A SECTION B water standing In knee-deein weather Saturday. The truth, boss? . Page 5 Dan Valentine. Page 1 Page 14 Sports Action. Pages 12-1-7 PLEASE HELP me, Tm Editorial notes. SECTION C SECTION H freezing," Albert W. Meyer, a Cannibal rescue sophomore of Midland, Tex., Best In Business. Pages Page 6 The weeks TV. Pages pleaded with an officer who Classified Ads. Pages freed him at 5 a.m. j r IN THIS WEEK . SECTION W i . . The student told rescuers . to Thrill features. FBIs Pages greatest members of his fraternity, Family chase This Week Magazine! Movie lineups. Pages Kappa Alpha, , had stranded r comics sections 1 ALL THIS PLUS Two big, him about 3:30 am. Please Help Pm a Kappa... Alpha... Achoo! A-2- heart-tuggin- g , - 1-- 3 2 5 1-- 14-1- 5 full-colo- 4 4 . . v-- ' ? - J . |