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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 1

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

oh) LilCS ip) a I lOUU I op oiniees App Under Sturdy ifil 1 I Federal Jobholders' Turnover To Be Far More Extensive VE CENTS EIGHTY-EIGHTH YEAR, NO. 86 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1950 PRICE OA By MERRBIAN SMITH TJPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI) The 3 1 JiuT.l!J turnover i leutu ai s. Council lo Study New City Budget Balanced Budget As Proposed Calls For $3,786,902 Spending may be far more extensive under the administration of President-elect Kennedy than originally indicated by his personnel specialist, it was learned today. The first appointments of major Kennedy administration' 'Officials will be announced this week and next 1 The President-elect's press secretary, Pierre Salinger, called a Leftist Led BACK SEAT TO THE VEEP President-elect John F. Kennedy, takes a temporary back place while his ticket-mate, Lyndon B.

Johnson, vice tells reporters what he and Kennedy discussed during dinner meeting at the latter's home following Johnson's return from NATO parliamentarians conference in Paris. Johnson said they talked mostly about progress in filling admimtration positions. (Herald-UPI Telephoto). On Medical Care for Aged Public hearing on i proposed $3,786,902 budget for the next year Violence and recommendations by the fi news conference to announce what he' termed "hard news." The news will not involve; ap nance committee to balance it will highlight sessions of Provo pointments. Salinger may 'disclose new studies ordered by Kennedy, City Council this evening at 7:30 p.m.' The council is expected to Plan Involving iperson- Kennedy not necessarily nel matters.

take the recommendations under advisement, but to take no action I 4th Day At, Least 3 Killed; 'I Venezuela Cabinet In Emergency Meet" on the budget tonighti Draws AM A Fire The recommendations of the city finance committee, which 1,800 Jobs OPen -Kennedy and his chief advisers in planning the transition jjof government from Republican) to includes Assistant Mayor Stella H. Oaks and Councilmen "narrow" election vic- Kennedy's lemocratic control have- given priority to about 1,800 top federal policy jobs, "ranging from CARACAS, Venezuela (UPI) mi- it 1 i. 1 1 vor Madsen and Frank Killpack, contain several key suggestions. They are recommendations only, By JOSEPH 1). HtJTNYAN United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Dr.

E. Vincent Askey, president of the American Medical Association (AMA), said today President-elect the cabinet down to "schedule with the final adoption or rejec I -w 1, S. --ww4i-r pKfyV -j .4 1 'i' 4 I- jK" 1 I WyA S'MMCiWjLA ill i 1 1 4 x- I WjWsmfJWjinttt ..1. xne government rmieu uui launs today in front oi the presidential palace as a precaution against leftist students and agitators rampaging through downtown Caracas in the fourth, and worst- day. of aniigovernment demonstrations.

a classification of approximately .1,200 federal positions which may be. filled by presidential annointmnt! 1 tion up to the council as a whole Would Balance Deficit They propose to balance a 000 deficit of requested expenses Visits Wife, Baby above revenue in the city gen President Romulo Betancourt United Press International learned from within the Kennedy planning staff, however, that the new administration is studying eral fund by budget trimming in held an emergency meeting with his cabinet and decreed the partial the general fund itself, the electric utilities and waste removal thousands of federal posts within- suspension of constitutional guar budgets, plus addition of revenues planned from recently-approved antees a move that enables the army 'to move freely and quickly JFK Mobbed By Staff Of Hospital the normal Career classifications of the Civil Service system. Job Fori Brother? 1 The possibility of high gov fee hikes in cemetery, bicycle li- -L I againsty the wild disorders. Rifle fire crackled all day eensing ana ciiy aump use, ana an extra $10,000 contribution to hroughout the downtown areas of for Kennedy's remainecT an ernment post brother, Robert, he capital city and police said the general fund from the waterworks department. The recom seven officers had been wounded ter the two men open question a mendations, if adopted, would so far today by shooting balance the general fund with a from the rooftops.

Twenty five conferred Sunday for th first time since shortly after the elec $16,000 surplus. Details of the demonstrators were reported hurt. tion. tory denied him a mandate to make massive changes in medical care programs. Askey urged the nation's doctors to pitch in and back the recently approved federal-state program of medical care to the aged, strongly supported by the AMA.

7 He said this was the best strategy for combating an expected drive by the Kennedy administration to junk the present plan in favor of medical care for the elderly under the Social Security program. In Fighting Mood Askey made. the remarks in a speech prepared for the second session of the AMA's 14th clinical meeting, which opened Sunday ii a fighting mood. His speech sounded the same battle-cry as previous speakers the AMA should not permit Kennedy's election to slow down its vigorous fight against the Social Security medical proposal. 'While our profession clearly may face a hard struggle in the 87th Congress on the issue of medical care for the aged binder Social Security, there is no ground for defeatism," he said.

"The President-elect's margin of victory, is so narrow that it would be difficult for even the most zealous adherent to consider this a mandate for a massive program of social change." recommendations have -been pre DEMONSTRATORS DISPERSED BY POLICE Rioters run along Caracas' University Avenue after being dispersed by police with tear gas. Pes. Rornulp Betan-court's government blamed leftist agitators for four days of bloody rioting that left at least three dead and scores wounded. (Herald-UPI Telephoto) the President- Bob Kennedy oday. The demonstrations started (Continued oh Page Four) early today when students tried crash through police guards to schools closed after three days In New Orleans anti-Betancourt demonstrations.

The disorders spread as uemocrats Win Utah police used rifles and tear gas in a vain effort to get things Report Asks Elimination Of Race Bias under control. Schools Open-But White Students Stay at Home Tanks Guard Palace As the disorders grew in scope he government sent tanks to ring Congress Seat viously carried in full in The Daily Herald, and will be listed again tonight. Other items on tonight's agenda will include: 1. Swap of quit claim deeds between Provo City and Brigham Young University, whose engineer Carr Greer, re-establishing section corners, found Phillips Lane legal right-of-way was parallel to and south of the existing road. 1 2.

First reading on an ordinance amendment designed to clear confusion by making the shade tree commission advisory, not administrative in function. 3. Public hearing on an ordinance, already approved at first reading, requiring annual licensing of bikes at $1 per year, instead of present three-year licensing. Agreement With County 4. Consideration of a joint Civil (Continued on Page Four) Miraflores Palace, residence of President Betancourt.

Traffic was diverted from the palace area, which until today had been' under routine guard. By JOIIN G. WARNER United Press International NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Four Negro girls went back to first grade classes at two newly integrated schools today after a week's holiday and were greeted by the Police said only one of the 25 smallest crowd of hecklers since integration began. Three Negro girls returned to classes at McDonogh 19 School, but not one white student was seen to enter the This was the, situation when school let out for a holiday a complete demonstrators hurt today was WASHINGTON (UPI) Presir dent-elect John F. Kennedy paid a 25-minute visit to his wife and baby son today.

He reported that both are "fine, very good." Kennedy stopped to talk With the physician who delivered the baby, Dr. John Walsh, as he left Georgetown Hospital. Walsh told newsmen Mrs. Kennedy was "progressing normally" and will see her 3-day-old son, John Fitzgerald Kennedy again today. He said Mrs.

Kennedy still is allowed no visitors, except for members of her family, and will remain in the hospital for a total of two weeks. Kennedy was mobbed by nurses, patients and hospital maids seeking his autograph as he entered and left the hospital. A bystander said Kennedy told her that his wife "seems a lot better today." Kennedy went directly to the Senate Office Building from the hospital. i Police and Secret Service men had difficulty keeping the crowds back as Kennedy entered the hospital, carrying a photograph of himself and his daughter, Caroline, 3. A passing doctor remarked to a policeman, who was struggling to clear the halls, "This is getting to be a bit of a bore, isn't it?" Earlier, the Kennedy baby was reported "improving rapidly" from a slight chest congestion.

The child will be kept in an incubator for another 48 hours, however. SALT LAKE CITY (TJPI) An official statewide canvass of county-by-county returns confirmed today Ogden Democrat M. Blaine Peterson1 officially! won Utah's First Congressional District Race by ja margin of 68 votes. Final totals in! the 25 county district race, certified by the wounded by gunfire and that the Pickup 4th pgh: About 10,000 boycott by the more than 600 others were victims of flying stones or were trampled as students fled in panic when police and national guardsmen fired over their heads. Holding Conference 10,000 persons, including.

About 4,500 pV sicians, were on hand for Three days of rioting already the five-d ay conference on orofes- had cost three' lives and more than 100 injured. Sixty six agi white students. But 'at William Frantz School, where one Negro girl is going, white attendance may have picked up by-one. On the last day of school only lour white students out of more than 400 attended, but today a fifth youth went in. Fewer Guards Used Pravda Fires Broadside At Red Chinese Utah Board of gave Peterson 65,939 to 65,871 vots for his opponent, Republican A.jj Walter Stevenson, I Secretary of State Lamoht F.

Toronto said hi would lately issue a certificate of I election to Peterson, The Ogden jbem-ocrat was an interested onlooker at today's official canvass. stors were, reported arretted. The city awakened today in a ense atmosphere. Disorders broke sional problems and new medical techniques. Dr.

ErnestB. Howard, AMA assistant executive vice president, said Sunday that Kennedy's election should not drive the association toward Nompromising its past opposition the Social Security approach toNnedical out early when students tried to Police guards around the two return to the schools closed by. schools were also the smallest rovernment order. The students since integration started Nov. 14.

race iThe First Congressional tried to force their way through police lines and rioting developed. The crowd at McDonogh, 19, the was the only major Utah office more unruly of the two during in doubt the Nov. 8 elec- care for the elderly. Heavy guards were posted at time there! tion. For some the sites of previous was but the first week of integration, was down to a handful of compara- "The surest way to totaldefeat is to say, 'we are now going to talk of a possible recoun -these plans were dropped by We particularly the neighborhood of Siiencio But today's riot-1 Ing appeared to be the worst in sit across the negotiating, table WASHINGTON (UPI) -j- President Eisenhower's Commission on National Goals.

wants every state in the union to make progress "in good faith" by 1970 toward ending racial segregation in public schools. In its long-awaited report to the President, the commission denounced discrimination on the basis of race, religion and sex as "morally wrong, economically wasteful and in many respects dangerous." "In this we must sharply lower these last stubborn barriers," said the 23page document issued Sunday night. The commission urged all Americans to devote more of their time and. energy "directly to the solution" of this and other national problems. Three commission members went further in the civil rights field my calling an end to all discrimination in education, employment, housing and public services by 1970.

They were Clark Kerr, president of the University of California; James R. Killian formerly Eisenhower's science 'adviser, and George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO. Defend Right to Vote The commission declared that "the right to vote is basic" and should not be thwarteci by traditional "state control of voting qualifications." The report was deliberately withheld until after the Nov. 8. presidential election to avoid any embroilment in partisan politics.

The bipartisan commission of 11 distinguished Americans was appointed by Eisenhower last February to chart broad goals for the (Continued on Page Four) ber County Kepuoncans. xivery quiet pniooKers. mere were about 30 persons at Frantz, jeering when the Negro girl went in. ard see what you will give us" he said. four days.

Most of the action cen Sometime this week- a ruling is tered near the Andres Bello High expected from a three-judge court School. "They are going to fight with everything and I tell you gentlemen, we have to fight with every on whether New Orleans must Buses Set on Fire Students at Andres Bello poured Traffic! Accidents Claim 7 In Black Utah Weekend continue integration. The school Salute Proclaims Independence Of Mauritania NOUAKC Mauritania (UPI) A green flag bearing a gold star and crescent rose to the top of this sand-dune, capital's highest flagpole today, and a 101-gun salute 'proclaimed Mauritania's independence. At midnight, with sheep-slaughtering and other celebrations already underway, Premier Moktar Ould Daddah officially informed his 800,000 countrymen that this former. French colony had become republic.

About 200 delegates from 28 nations, including the-. Aga' Khan and American ambassadors, attended the ceremonies which freed the last of France's African possessions, Daddah, a 35-year-old lawyer trained in Paris, pressed for Mauritanian independence in cooperation with France against the bitter opposition of Morocco. Claiming Mauritania as its own territory despite the absence of a common frontier, Morocco fought independence unsuccessfully in resource right down the line." Favor Different Program into the 'street and set a bus on board has asked that integration be stopped because the schools fire. Soon vthe disorders spread. are becoming a "battleground" for At least three buses blazed in the Howard spoke during a seminar on implementing the federal-state the fight over states' rights.

center of the city. Other students MOSCOW (UPI) Pravda fired another broadside today in Russia's ideological battle with Red China, employing some of the strongest language it has used in The Communist newspaper marked the 140th anniversary of the birth of Red pioneer Friedrich Engels with a lead editorial waging against "dogmatism, sectarianism (and) attempts to turn living creative Marxism-Leninism into a collection of cut-and-dried formulas torn away from life." Meanwhile, reports circulating here indicated that the Communist "summit conference" was still in session behind closed doors. (This report from Moscow startled western observers, who had thought the Moscow designed to heal the breach between Russia and Red China ended over the weekend. (These observers speculated that the reports of continued sessions might mean that some Red delegates were at work en the word-continued on Page Four), (UPI) A oung program for providing medical ST. GEORGE The ruling has been expected Tvnlirj stations.

Thev fl j' benefits to the elderly, approved today, but court sources indicated were driven back by tear gas and rifle fire. I 1 1 it might not be forthcoming until at the pre-election session of Con gress. later. Agitators rather than students State legislators had two moves The AMA favors this program were in the vanguard of dis-t St. George aiea ounaay when thrown out and under his car near here to cap the weekend with a total of sevens traffic deaths in scattered- Utah ac- cidents.

Wells Harrison, 20, a Dixie College studeni was killed in- atoot Sunday to prevent which was enacted after the Sen orders. Rafael Caldera of the ate defeated Kennedy's proposal Christian Party, the government Louisiana's 10 electoral Votes fronv going John. F. Kennedy to provide medical benefits for snokesman, said the disorders when their car plunged down a mountainside at 5400 S. Wasatch Boulevard.

The victims were Edward Boyer, 17; Arthur James Done, 18; and Kenneth R. Lofo-dell, 18, all of Salt Lake City. Dale Sly, 79, of Beaver was killed later the same day when his car thit the rear of a truck and semi-trailer in Iron County. Other accidents Saturday claimed the lives of Joy Peterson, 12, who died in a collision in Grants-ville, and Edwin Larson, a 60-year-old Sandy man killed when hit byl an auto near his home. unless he declares himself satis the aged through the Social Se were being instigated by leftists faqtorily on federal intervention eurity program, financed by high seeking to overthrow the (consti in public education.

tutional' government. cident on Utah i Highway 18 about one mile north of St. George. Proposes New Electors National guardsmen armed with er Social' Security taxes. Kennedy criticized the" federal state program during the presi Rep.

Parey Branton introduced submachine guns fired into a Utan mgnwayj raxxoiman Min-aid Best said lost con- a -resolution at a one-hour meet dential campaign and announced crowd of several thousana ing of the Legislature Sunday I the United Nations and Sunday his intention to continue the fight screaming, stone-throwing rioters trol nis car ana it throwing him and a passenger out. I for the Social Security approach. neia a national day ot protest. Sunday night, killing, an 18-year- night that state election be suspended so; the- Legislature The passenger, Richard Isom, might appoint new electors un tt9, Cedar City! was only pledged to Kennedy. I 4 i Lashes Plains States -Sen.

Howard M. Jones said he Winter Blizzard 1st old student and wounding at least five other, persons. Some observers said the number of injured may reach as high as 50! persons were 'killed and more than 50 injured Saturday in anti-government rotsthat saw the demonstrators exchang- was going to introduce a House resolution asking the state's elec tors not to vote for Kennedy spread showers from: Michigan The death brought the 1960 Utah traffic toll to 227, the second deadliest year on the state's roads and highways. The record year was 1952 when 246 j' were ti Three teen-agers died Saturday despite his Louisiana vote plural ar i New York state west of the ity. But he withheld it and said he would introduce It after the Appalachians south to New Or ing Ull I Ll YV.ll.il ivm-c rr-iw iuvvt a tear-gas barrage Into the mill leans, and the Texas Gulf Legislature reconvened today a 12:30 p.m.

4 -t Coast. An east-west static front begin ing crowds. The government announced Sat-( Continued on Page Four) HOOT GIBSON FAIR i( night when he? touched a felled power In New Mexico, a woman motorist was killed when her car went out of control on an icy highway. Wyoming and eastern Colorado braced for snow and much colder temperatures. Worland, reported five inches of snow by midnight Sunday night and from one to three inches of snow was on the ground elsewhere in the two states.

Strong northerly winds pushed east of the Rocky Mountains but By United Press International Winter's first blizzard lashed the Plains States today with six inches of snow whipped by 60 miles an hour gusts. In. Kansas, tornadoes directly southeast of the' season's first major, snowstorm flattened buildings and overturned house trailers in an atmospheric squeeze-play. The Dakotas, Nebraska and northeastern Colorado were alerted for blizzards throughout the day. The Weather Bureau predicted at least six inches of snow in Now You Know By United Press International the Dakotas and central Nebraska.

North winds ranged from 30-60 miles per hour in the afflicted area and visibility in some areas dropped to zero. Stockmen and farmers from Montana east to Michigan's Upper Peninsula and south to the Oklahoma Panhandle took precautionary to safeguard livestock. 7 Authorities blamed sudden storms in two deaths in the Southwest. Leonard Murrow, Dacoma, was electrocuted Sunday were expected to diminish by afternoon with snow ending over the' central Rockies by late today. Low readings in Colorado Included 16 at Leadville and 18 at Wyoming reported 11 degrees at Casper and 15 at Lander and Cheyenne, where the mercury hit 41 earlier in the day.

Forecast Rain Elsewhere Elsewhere the weather outlook included snow in western Montana and northern Idaho, West Coast rains from Seattle south almost to San Francisco, land wide ning in central Illinois changed to a southward moving cold front in Pennsylvania and southeastern LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPD Hoot Gibson, 66, oldtime cowboy acto New York. The Weather Bureau was reported in fair conditioh to predicted Sunday's mild Midat day at Southern Nevada Memo FAIR through Tuesday, but with some cloudiness and a few snow flurries in mountains today. Warmer Tuesday, nigh today 33 to' 40. Low tonight 17 to 20.

High Tuesday 43 to 45, rial Hospital where he has under The largest chandeliers in the world are the eight installed in 1953 in the central lecture hall of the University -of Moscow. -Each has six tiers of; lights and Weighs 2Vt tons. i laDtic Coast readings would drbp during the day with a chance of scattered rain or snow in. the gone two major abdominal oper ations since entering the institu northeast. i' tion Nov.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
864,343
Years Available:
1909-2009