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The Daily Herald du lieu suivant : Provo, Utah • 1

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The Daily Heraldi
Lieu:
Provo, Utah
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1
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Herald Telephones For Ads, News, Circulation: Provo Office, 190 W. 4th N. FR 3-5050 io be Increasing this afternoon, becoxainjr cloudy with lijht rain, chanxfeif to snow tonight, becom-, inr intermittent Wedneidar morcinr. Clearing late Wedaes- day. Warmer tonirfat.

Rich day, to '43. Low tonUrht SO to i 43. Wednesday S3 to 43. Orem Office, 741 N. State AC 5-1605 For Society 8-4684 EIGHTY-SIXTH YEAR NO.

128 PROVO, UTAfi COUNTY, UTAH, TfUEsDf; JANUARY 27, .1959 PRICE FIVE CENTS CLYDE IN WASHINGTON Legislature Ike Set To Offer Labor Appr Legislation s.DinrDo -vH i -i ON BUSINESS OF STATE WASHINGTON (UPDr-Oov. George D. Clyde -vfas scheduled' to meet with reclaination officials, and members of Utah's congressional delegation today to discuss filling of Glen Canyon Dam and study possible legislation to obtain much needed tax revenue from federal lands in the state. I Jay R. Bingham, director; Utah Water and Power board, accompanied the governor to the nation's capital.

I Clyde, said he was concerned that privately-owned industry on Utah's federal reservations was not shouldering its share of municipal, school and other tax burdens. Says Ba Association Offers Cou For Plan 1 ..1 rt Revamp 'it mm St Feels Russ Trying to NIKITA CONFERENCE Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, front, opens the Communist Party! Conference in Moscow today. In his keynote speech, he promised the Russians more of everything. (Herald-UPI Telephoto) Delude U.S.' Dulles Favors Biq 4 By United Press International A Utah Bar Assn. committee today) recommended setting up two separate system handling criminal prosecutions in Utah.

Further study of the proposal and of a series of bills to abolish the office of district attorney also was called for during a hearing conducted; by the Senate Judiciary Brigham Roberts, chairman of a bar committee set up to study the proposal to abolish the district 1 attorney office, recommended a full-time prosecutor fr the populous counties of Weber, Utah, Salt Lake and Davis. For the less populous counties "he recommended that tiie present system of cooperation between coun- Agency Shop Bill Before Lawmakers SALT LAKE CITY (UPD An agency shop bill, considered a compromise to repeal Utah's right to work law, was introduced today in the state -'House of Representatives. Under an agency shop workers are required to pay union membership, fees and dues as a condition of employment, but do not have to become actual members of a union. Annual sessions of the legislature be held under provisions of another bill introduced in the house. The bill provides for 60 day legislative sessions each year starting the second Monday in January.

The Legislature now meets only onfodd number years. Another bill Which would impose an excise tax on oleomargarine purchased outside of Utah and brought into the state also was introduced. 'The. tax wquld amount to five cents a pound on uncolored margarine and 10 cents a pound on colored oleo. Woman Arrested oves 8 New Bills Receives Measure To Make Weber Four-Year College By RICHARD B.

LANEY United Press International I The Utah i Legislature moved into high gear Monday by passing eight Dills, defeating three 'measures; and receiving new legislation to make Weber College a four-year institution. Two other bills were tabled, a third was sent back to commit- A iee ior iunner siuay, ana neatea debate was -produced by a bill to create at Coordinating Council on Higher Education. A Senate committee also held public hearing and heard testimony that a bill- re- or form of government for Salt Lake City might be 'dictatorial" and that it would "modernize the machinery of government." Defeated were bills which would have 1 increased tax. on diesel fuel from 6 cents to 7 cents a gallon; established a civil1 service system for county peace officers; and, provided a 40 hour work week for state, employes. I The House nassed bills whih if passed by the Senate and 'sign-, 1 11.

1 1 I ea oy ine governor wouia i empower cities to tax, regulate or prohibit pinball machines and: punchboards require he names of the governor and secretary of state to be printed on notary certificates: and Dermit transfe an heir of motor vehicles worth up to $4,000 (instead of the present $1,000) wjthout going through nrobate brocedure. (The state representatives also -approved a Senate -Joint Resolution expressing' condolences to xov. ieoree u. ciyae on tne death of his brother. Bills passed by the Senate and sent to the House for action would: Permit counties to accumulate reserve 'funds for capital improvements; make it grand larceny to use false pretenses to obtain serv- ices worth more than $50; make it a misdemeanor to transmit wilfully" any false or' libelous information to a radio or Television station; and, exempt from the state income withholding tax persons who are in Utah less than 60 days.

Tabled were two House bills Which would "tablish a State Coordinating and Advisory Plan- ning Board, and increase the fees of notaries public' House members also decided to recommit, to committee HB 17, which would bring examiners of driver license applicants under civil service. This measure, was passed by the House in 1957 but died in the Senate sifting committee. The bill to make- Weber' Col- -lege a four-year institution was sponsored by Sens. J. Francis Fowles (D-Ogden), Frank Brow'n- ing (D-Ogden), and Haven Barlow (R-Layton).

i I The, public; hearing on the hill wac nnHiif- ed by Sen. Alonzo Hop'in (D- who. said he was chos-ren for the post because he comes from a t9wn of 300 jwhich would not be affected by' the proposed legislation. i Chief supporters of the measure were Dil worth Woolley, vice president of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce; Webster Adams, "also a chamber representative; (Continued on Page Four) WKXmk mm Will Seek Change In T-H Lqwf Curbs On Racketeering 1 WASHINGTON, (UPD Republican congressional leaders said today that President Eisenhower will submit to Congress Wednesday an over-all labor legislation program' 'calling for some amendments to the Taft-Hartley Law and curbs on racketeering in' unions. They also said after their weekly White House conference that the President concurred in their feeling that the time had come "blow the 'on Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon? B.

Johnson's predictions that Eisenhower planned frequent use of the veto in this session of Congress. The leaders said the President has no intention of threatening in advance to use his constitutional veto powers. They said he would pass on legislation only af ter comprehensive study once a measure is passed and before him. Message On Agriculture Eisenhower and his Capitol Hill lieutenants also dfecided that his special message on agriculture would go to Congress. Thursday if both houses are in session that day.

Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell and Secretary of Agricul ture. Ezra T. Benson sat in on the leadership meeting along with Budget Director Maurice F. Stans.

Senate- GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois and House Leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana said the administration felt amendments to the Taft-Hartley Law were needed to deal particularly with secondary and extortionate picketing. Safeguards For Workers They pointed out, however, that a number of other proposals would be made to counter what they regarded as deficiencies in labor legislation sponsored by Sen. John Kennedy Dirksen said -'the administration Labor ball would be an over-all total approach to labor-management problems that prevail at the present time with the complete accent on safeguarding the rights of the public and the worker:" Dirksen said; the proposals would be an intermixture of Taft-Hartley amendments and non-Taft-Hartley provisions.

Halleck said the disclosures of the Mcdellan Rackets Committee had Brought "a stench to, the nostrils of everyone in this country." He said legislation proposed, by Kennedy treated only symptoms, not real causes of this problem. Halleck said the administration would propose legislation designed to free unions of racket control and provide full reporting of funds so dues paid by members could not be misused. Italy President Seeks to Avert National Crisis ROME (UPD President Giovanni Gronchi launched efforts to find a new government today, hoping" to avert a "crisis which could plunge into chaos. Gronchi called jiu Senate President Cesare Merzagora for the first" of a series of talks with prospective premiers that is expected to last at least five days. Political observers saw no prospect of Gronchi's finding a new premier until sometime next week.

They believe the choice probably will fall on ex-Premier Antonio Segni or outgoing Interior Minister Fernando Tambroni. Former Premier Amintore Fan-1 fani, who had governed for nearly seven months without ever having ure majority in. Parliament, gave in Monday to a combination of pressures from left, the center and the light. Soloris rge WASHINGTON (UPI) Thirty-nine senators from both parties tossed a new challenge at President Eisenhower's economy campaign today by; calling for a 375-million-dollar program of aid to depressed areas. The measure is patterned closely alter one the President vetoed as too costly last It contrasted with the administration's request for 55 million doHars next year to help areas hard hit by unemployment.

Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-Rl.) who 'planned to introduce the bill on behalf of 32 Democratic and In including Berlin. At the same time, Dulles warned that Russia is trying hard to delude the United States into thinking it wants to end the cold war. Actually, he said, he Soviet is seeking military and political advantages, As for a Big Four foreign ministers meeting, he told his news conference, there is always a possibility of persuading the Communists into making agreements which do not give undue advantages or disadvantages to either side.

Cites Past Agreements Dulles cited the. Korean armistice, the Austrian peace treaty and las' year's Soviet-American agree-) ment on cultural exchanges as evidences of worthwhile agreements that have1 been reached, between the East and West. Dulles said' the worth a Big Four foreign ministers meeting would depend on whether the Russians are willing to discuss German and European problems on a broad basis or make the as they have I in the past, to restrict the 'italks to items on which they alone are Interested. Dulles made it clears however (Continued on Page Four) Spring Plan Thwart War 7-Year, Plan Told At Congress of Communist Party By HENRY SHAPIRO United Press International MOSCOW (UPI) Nikita Khrushchev launched! the Soviet Union- today on an! historic eco nomic offensive he. said would win "millions i toj socialism and vanquish the forces of Khrushchev was buoyant and Joyful as he; put forth) his tax-free seven-year plan bef ore a cheering Communis Party Congress and it was aimed at ending the cold war by making supreme over the capitalist world.

With it her put an implied Communist doctrine that neither hot war nor- cold war is inevitable in the face of growing Communist economic power, and a plan that will increase Soviet production 80 per cent by 1965. Stage The seven-year plan is a decisive stage in the economic competition of socialism and capitalism," he said. "This plan wiU greatly' influence the entire international situation and prove 4 new triumpn of Marxism-Leninism. "Our successes in the fulfillment of the plan will attract to the side! of socialism millions of adherents' he said. "They will lead to the I strengthening of the forces of peace and the weakening of the forces of war, As a token of the Communist system's rising strength, he said, the -direct I taxes on the; people will be abolished in the "near future." He then called for an' 80 per cent increase in overall production to bring Russia abreast of the West.

The smilingwisecracking Khrushchev mentioned that Russia had rockets) and intercontinental ballistic missiles, but his aims appeared to be to convince the world the Russians and Communism would I win out by replacing military force with economic power. 0 I 'Counting On 1 Peace The immense scope of the plan higher industrial production, higher agricultural output; higher wages-for all indicated the Soviet leadership is banking heavily on uninterrupted peace through 1965. Russia's national income will rise 62 to 66 per cent! over last year at the end of the seven year period, he told the 1,275 cheering delegates, It will be almost six times higher than 1940, he said. And in doing this, he said, taxes wiU be done away with by 1063. (Continued on Page Four) to the Supreme, Court's integra tion order, His amendment would vest "ad-any ministrative control of lie school public' educational institution or public educational sys tem' the state or political subdivision which operates I it.

It also declares that "nothing contained in this Constitution shall be construed I to deny to: the residents thereof the right to determine for themselves" the manner, of administering the schools. Co-sponsors' of 'the amendment are Sens. Harry-F. Byrd A. Willis Robertson Olin D.

Johnston Lister Hill John SparkmantD-AIa'.) James O. Eastland (D-Miss.) and" John C. Stennis (D-Miss.) Meanwhile, two Southern congressmen questioned a government plan announced Monday to set up an integrated school next month for 500 Navy children who live on the. Norfolk, naval base unless Norfolk's closed public schools are reopened before then. Rep.

Porter Hardy Jr. (D-Va.) questioned whether the Navy had legal authority to operate a base school that would serve children living outside. Rep. Edwin E. Willis (D-La.) said was "curious to know-how the school would be staffed or how.

deep the government is going to gzt tlia field of education." -r- Will Will ties and district attorneys be retained while a committee studies the matter further. The Legislature also has before hit five other bills which would emphasizethe powers of district attorneys at the! expense of county attorneys. These measures are sponsored by Sen. Marl Gibson (D-Priee), who said county attorneys, are usually young lawyers and! that decisions on a case should be prosecuted should be, made by the more experienced district attorneys. Testimony favoring the Gibson bills, was presented by Rep.

Ferdinand Erickson (R-Monroe), who served two terms as a district attorney and two terms as a attorney. Fourth Attorney Jackson Howard also testified for the Gibson bills. He said the bills to abolish D.A.'s "would complicate the problem rather cure it." He said present code of criminal procedure was "archaic" and added 'the -histice of peace system "also needs Former District Judge John A. Hendricks of Ogden spoke in avor; of the 17 bills to abolish the D.A. office.

He termed the district attorney office-, "a hodgepodge of expense." A-Sen. Luke Clegg (R-Provo), one of sponsors of the 17 measures, said the Legislative Council should have studied the matter. He said Utah's criminal procedures should be chan ged but he did not say in what manner they should be altered. Eleanor Backing Adlai-Stevenson NEW YORK (UPD Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt said today she would favor Adlai Stevenson as secretary of state in a Democratic "national administration.

Mrs. Roosevelt made the statement in her question and answer column in McCall's Magazine. have thedr baby back after more than four days of pleading and praying for his return. The child was recovered in a basement apartment only seven blocks from the scene of the kidnaping as the result of a tip from the Spanish-language newspaper, El Diario, police 1 said. Johnny was abducted last Thursday afternoon from the Tavarez apartment on Manhattan's West' Side.

The cosfessed Mdnaper, was identified as' Mrs. Asuncion Ortiz, 25. She told police she had been pregnant since last May and had lost her child xbyi miscarriage within the past 10 days. Thus, she said, she was able to pass off little Johnny, who weighed only 8 pounds, as her Own baby. Ortiz, a short, heavyeet woman, said she fooled her hus band, her in-laws, an4 her own reia lives Dy texung tnem tne Dany was delivered by police while she was alone in her apartment.

A police spokesman said her husband, Angel Ortiz, believed her story and never suspected that Johnny was the kidnaped Tavarez child. Johnny was positively identifed by his jubilant parents, Doralisa Tavarez, 31, and her husband, Jose, 30. The baby's footprints proved vto be identical with those taken at Metropolitan Hospital wheiThe was born. Chief of Detectives James Leg-gett Mrs. Ortiz would be charged with kidnaping but no charges would be lodged against her husband "because we have no reason to suspect him." Storms Ice Highways i Over Nation By United Press Interaattonal A istorm belt girdling the nation's midsection glazed highways with freezing rain, show and sleet from the Southern Plains to the mid-Atlantic.

However, the precipitation produced no further flood threatsto Ohio and Pennsylvania where swollen rivers continued to drop. Flood refugees were returning to their water-damaged homes and states of emergency were lifted in most stricken communities. The treacherous ice storm broke out- Monday night in a band, stretching from Kansas to Oklahoma across Northern Arkansas and Missouri and into the Ohio Valley and the mid-Atlantic states. Snow Hits Oklahoma Two to three inches of snow blanketed the Oklahoma Panhan dle and freezing rain glazed roads in the northwest, central and south central portions of the state. A car-truck crash blamed on the ice killed two persons late Mon day on Oklahoma's Turner Turn pike.

A wave of cold air pushed into the northern third of the country under clearing skies. Temperatures along the leading edge of the cold air mass skidded 10 tq 20 degrees from North Central Texas northeastward to the Ohio River and Southeastern Pennsylvania. A United Press International count showed 128 deaths blamed on weather-connected traffic accidents, exposure, exhaustion, tor nadoes and floods since the -outbreak of winter's worst storms a week ago. There were 19 deaths in both Ohio and Wisconsin, 14 in Michigan, 13 in Illinois, 10 in both Indiana and New York, 8 in Pennsylvania, 5 each jn Kentucky, Kansas and Oklahoma, 4 in Iowa, 3 in Missouri, 2 each in Massachusetts, Minnesota, -Now Mexico, Rhode Island, Texas and Washington and 1 in North Dakota. More Of The Same Forecasters warned the mix-(Continued on Page Four) Kidnaped 28-Day-Old Baby Found Alive, Well Amendment to Solve School Integration Crisis Proposed s.

By: STEWART HENSLEY United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said today it would be ffimely to have a Big Four-foreign ministers conference sometime jthis spring on European and German Contempt Of I- Court Case Proves Dud MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPD What appeared to be an I impend ing head-on collision between fed eral "and state in Alabama turned out to be a near miss. Fprmef Circuit Judge George C. Wallace Monday appeared before a former law school olsissmate, Federal Judge Frank M. Johnson and insisted that h( defied the federal Cival Rights bommis-sion.

But Johnson ruled Ihtat Wallace had been merely devious, not defiant. i Johnson on that basis, (that Wallace was not in ontempt of federal court when he i'aupd to give the rights commission full cooperation in its probe of alleged infringements on tho voting rights of Negroes. Actions A "Smokescreen" Wallace said at the! cpntempt hearing Monday that he was willing to "risk my freedom" to bring the conflict of state Versus federal authority to a headi Johnson ruled that Wallace's actions had been jusf a smokescreen although he declined to five an opinion on what the state judge's purposes were. "If these devious means were for 'political purposes, then this court refuses to allow its authority land dignity to be bent or swayed by such ated Johnson said in handing down his verdict. would: Establish a 100-million-dollar revolving, fund for federal low-interest 30-year loans for industrial projects in industrial iredevel-opment areas.

Set up another lOO-milliondol-lar revolving fund for similar loans for Industrial projects in rural redevelopment areasL Provide still anotber rcsvolving fund of 100 5 million dolLurs for loans to states, Indian tribes or organizations representing! redevelopment These loans, running, up to 40 years, would be for public facilities projects to Conference icAm NEW YORK (UPD 1 Police found 28-dayKld Johnny Tavarez alive5 and well today and arrested young mother 'of three, who had a recent miscarriage, as his kidnaper, i Johnny's jubilant parents said they were "very, very happy" to admitted taking the By WILLIAM THEIS United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) Southern senators today proposed a constitutional amendment -to resolve the school integration crisis by assuring states and their subdivisions full, control over education. 1 The measure was introduced by Sen. Herman E. I Talmadge said such a constitutional change Is needed to avert the "unparalleled catastrophe" of widespread! school closings certain to follow. Southern resistance help communities attract new industries and business.

Allow federal grants totalling 75 million dollars to states and other units to develop public facilities to boost chances "for the establishment or expansion of Industrial or commercial plants or facilities." 'v: Douglas said that last November there were 80 major areas of chronic unemployment in 25 states and 183 smaller areas in 35 states, each with more than 6 per cent unemployment. He said that in May, 1S55, there were 23 major and 65 smaller, areas ia this category. Areas $475 Mill ion Aid for Jobless Vk. 6 Republican co-sponsors, denied that it would be inflationary. He maintained that "dollars spent to promote production by- otherwise idle or inefficiently employed resources.

in fact be anti-inflationary." Eisenhower's veto was a big Issue in many distressed areas in last year's congressional Democratic leaders have made it clear they intend to push similar legislation through Congress jagain this year. Douglas, in a. statement; prepared for introduction of the bill, told the Senate the legislation KIDNAPED INFANT FOUND Johnny Taverez is center of stage as he is returned today -to his happy parents. Kidnaped five days ago, the 28-day-old infant was, found in good condition. Police told a news conference that: a Mrs.

Asuncion' Ortiz (Herald-Ul'I Telephoto) 1 ,1.

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