The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, April 13, 1956, Image 9

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    PAMPHLET! MAILED
SALEM If! The first of 850.-
ww a 0 hi jiiiit. is were
placed in the mail Thursday by
David O'Hara, chief of the State
Elections Division.
Make a Date
- vlth the Newest
COME IN AND
7w
OR 'ROUND THE TOWN
IF YOU LIKE I J
SEE YOUR
NEAREST
(
nin
ULUd.ff
DEALER
mill
Bulganin Denies
Plot To Divide
Britain, U.S.
MOSCOW I Premier Bul
ganin says tne trip he and Com
munist Party boss Khrushchev are
making to Britain is
tempt to drive a wedge between
muain ana tne united States.
Bulganin said in an interview
that the chief aim of their 10-day
Visit, which hppine nnv Wailnac.
day is to discuss increased trade
ana Droaaer cooperation.
The Premier's comments were
made in an interview with Tci.inn
R. Levine, Moscow correspondent
of the National Broadcasting Co.
anu iue Lonaon umes.
While emphasizing trade and co-
ODeration. the Premier caiH Hie.
cussions in Britain also would in-. I
ciucie "some other international
problems, the solution of which
Will be COnHlirtivP tn further eae.
ing of world tensions and the
sirengmening of peace all over the
world." He said the Soviet Unioi
would "spare no effort in order
that the visit to Britain should
serve the cause nf easing inter
national tension."
"Increased trad e," Bulganin
saifl. "linrimihterllv umuln loan nnt
only to raising the welfare of peo-
pit.-s in uoin countries out also to
clearing the political horizons."
OSC Student' Newspaper
Editor Is Announced
CORVALLIS Wl Jack R.
Rickard of Brownsville, Ore., was
named editor of the Oregon State
College student newspaper, the
daily Barometer, this week.
' He was selected by the OSC
publications committee, a group
of students and faculty members.
uougias J. Beito, Portland, was
named business manager.
Rickard, a junior, succeeds
James Lattie, Medford. Beito,
also a junior, succeeds Robert
Scott, Salem.
Both will assume their new pos
itions in the last week of the
spring term. t
JOY POWELL DANCE STUDIO
ANNOUNCES
2nd' ANNUAL RECITAL
8 PM--CENTRAL JR. HIGH-MAY 25th
TAPBALLETTOE ACROBATIC
HAWAIIAN 'BATON
You Won't Want To Miss hi
Again! It's Different. It's Variety!
? . )w -, ry ,yv ?j is
rB
Gay Warren Barbara Ladd Carolyn Schemer &
"THE TAPPING TRIO" K j
I vv fe f&
V w 17H .
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NU TtlplwT
TRAINING DISASTER Norman Alfred Wood (left), of
Bay Shore, L. I., and Jerry Laraont Thomas, two of the
five Marine recruits who died in a training maneuver at
Parris Island, S. C. General Randolph Pate, Marine Corps
commandant, was en route to take personal charge of an
investigation into the deaths.
Agriculture Areas
Will Have Ample
Supplies Of Wafer
PORTLAND Wl Oregon agri
cultural areas will have ample
supplies of water this year, W.
T. Frost of the U.S. Soil Conser
vation Service reported.
He said that above - average
snow packs and near record wet
ness of watershed soils assure a
better than usual late summer
strcamflow throughout the state.
The mountain snow pack in
creased 1 per cent from March 1
to April 1. The snow cover above
5,000 feet is 130 per cent of the
15-year-average and below that
level 173 per cent average.
Snow cover in the major river
basins ranges from 170 per cent
of average in the Willamette Bas
in to 91 per cent of average in
the Owyhee Basin of Eastern Ore
gon. Seasonal .streamflow forcasts
at 69 per points in 21 major riv
er basins foretell average to well
above average April through Sep
tember streamflow, he said.
In Eastern Oregon, private res
ervoirs and stock ponds are full
and the state's 20 major irriga
tion reservoirs average 80 per
cent full and contain 17 per cent
more water than average.
Excellent grazing is forecast for
Oregon's rangeland as soon as
warm weather boosts grass
growth.
Washington And Oregon
High Up In Fish Products
WASHINGTON Wl Alaska,
Washington and Oregon were well
up in the forefront of the nation's
producers of canned fish and fish
ery Dyproaucts in lasj, lea oniy Dy
California, the Fish and Wildlife
Service reported.
The California total was set at
$147,350,000, or 3fi per cent of the
nation's total. Alaska's contribu
tion was 6u miliar dollars and
Washington 2iV. Oregon was
grouped next with Maine and , c
isiana, each wi'.ii il million dollar
totals.
The na'iunal Mai i n c 1 ' d o i
$303,575,000 wri'i ot canned f'j.l
and 82V4 million cellars wn-tn it
nyprpducts. Tuna and tun.-i-liko
fish were worth 125 million; salm-j
on 81 million, and Pacific sardines
10 million. . I
Hoover Reports
Statements Based
On True Events
WASHINGTON Wl FBI Direc
tor J. Edgar Hoover said this week
his latest report to Congress on
Communist tactics was based on
actual happenings in recent secret
Communisty Party meetings. ,
Hoover made the statement in
a letter to .Malcolm P. Sharp, New
York City, president of the Na
tional l awyers Guild. Alty. Gen.
Browncll is attempting to place
the guild on his list of subversive
organizations on grounds that it
has been "the legal mouthpiece"
of the American Communist
Party.
Although the implication was
clear in the Hoover letter that the
FBI had listening posts- in the
"secret" meetings referred to,
Hoover did not elaborate. He said
only that his testimony followed
"information from within the
Communist Party itself."
The FBI director testified pri
vately before the House Appropri
ations Committee Feb. 1. The
testimony was made public last
monm. Hoover tola tne committee,
among other things, that Commu
nist tactics changed after the 1955
Geneva four-power conference.
and since then the policy has been
to arrange for "eminent" court
appointed counsel to defend party
members accused of Smith Act
violations. Previous party practice
was to employ defense counsel.
Hoover said a National Lawyers
Guild letter to President Eisen
hower indicated a view that
Hoover's testimony constituted
"an attack upon the independence
of the bar." The FBI director said
no such attack was mvolved.
High Court Upsets
N.Y. Right To Oust
College Teacher
WASHINGTON Wl The Su
preme Court here has denied New
York City the right to fire col
lege professor who invoked the
Fifth Amendment before th Sen
ate Internal Security subcommit
tee. The decision applied to Dr. Harry
Slochower, who told the subcom
mittee he had not been a Commu
nist since 1941, but refused to say
on the ground that his answer
might incriminate him whether
he had been a Communist Party
member in 1940 and 1941.
Justice Clark delivered the 5-4
decision. Others who made up the
maioritv w rhiof Tciina vn-
ren and Justices Black, Frank-
luner ana uougias.
JllStirM Harlan anA J nnA
; huu WIUIC
dissenting opinions. Justices Bur
ton and Minton joined in Reed's
dissent.
Slochower was fired in 1952, two
weeks after he appeared before
the subcommittee. He was a
Brooklyn College teacher who had
27 years of service.
der Section 903 of the New York
uy naner. it provides for dis
charge nf ritv nmnlniriu ...1,A
fuse to answer questions of author-
ueu investigative bodies on the
ground of possible self-incrimination.
Brambletf Loses Plea
On 'Kickback Penalty
WASHINGTON (A - In anllnn.
this week, the U.S. Supreme Court:
1. Denied Ernest K. Bramblett,
former Republican representative
from California, a review of his
cunvicuon tor making a false
statement to the government in a
payroll kickback si-li- ma Rrnm.
blett was given a suspended 4-
lu-i-iiiunui prison sentence, fined
$5,000 and placed on probation for
a year.
2. Ruled 6-2 a state may make
truck sellers who repossess ve
hicles liable for highway-use taxes
which purchasers failed to pay.
SLIDE CLOSES ROUTE
SALEM Wl The South Santiam
Highway was closed Thursday
when 150 feet of the route caved
in 58 miles east of Albany, the
State Highway Commission re
ported. The route will remain closed
for a week.
The slide is four miles east of
Upper Soda.
Frl., April 13, 1956 The Newt-Review, Roieburf, Ore. 9
Airline Service Over Polar Route From West Due
NEW YORK Wl Pan Ameri
can World Airways said this week
it and Trans World Airlines could
now operate profitable and time
saving passenger, mail and cargo
flights direct from the West Coast
Customers Buy
Wooden Indians
NEW YORK Wl-A lot of people
went shopping yesterday for
wooden Indians.
Customers made like bargain
basement enthusiasts in paying an
average of more than $500 apiece
for the old cigar store statues.
1 ve never known a sale to gen
erate as much interest as this
one," said Louis J. Marion, veter
an auctioneer for Parke-Bernet
Galleries. .
"People love those wooden
Indians."
A hundred of the rare figures.
once familiar landmarks of the to
bacco store in America, sold for
$54,700.
"I'm very satisfied," said Carl
W. Haffenreffer, of Providence,
R.I., whose father accumulated
the redskins.
What did the buyers want with
them?
Well, some plan to put them in
their living rooms or hallways, or
stand them in front yards, set
them in lobbies of business build
ings or showrooms, display them
in museums or for sale in antique
shops.
over the polar route to Europe.
The two U.S. flag transatlantic
airlines have applied to the Civil
Aeronautics Board for permission
to fly the polar route.
Time savings of the shorter pol
ar route would amount to from S
to 15 hours, or from a two-night
trip to a one-night trip, Pan Amer
ican said.
Pan American said polar service
from the West Coast to London
would represent a saving of 1,074
miles from Seattle, Wash.; 1,013
miles from Portland, Ore.; 659
miles from San Francisco and 432
miles from Los Angeles.
The statement said Scandinav
ian, British, German and Canadian
airlines have rights to fly the polar
route between the West Coast and
Europe, and Scandinavian Airlines
has been operating the service
since 1954. It said 50,000 people
flew to Europe from the West
Coast last year.
The company's exhibits said
that Pan American will Invest
$8,500,000 in equipment and pro
motion of daily one-stop flights by
5,000-mile range Douglas DC7C
planes to Europe from Los Ange
les. San Francisco. Portland and
'Seattle.
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Plane For New Ford Car
1 Disclosed By Official
,' PORTLAND Wl An official of
this week that the. firm will invper I
250 million dollars in development
of its now medium-priced automo
bile. A new dealer organization
will market it.
Richard E. Krafve, general
manager of r ord s special prod
ucts division, told the Chamber of
Commerce that Ford will spend
an additional 100 to 150 million
dollars for tools, special facilities
and working capital before the car
goes on the market..
Krafve also said Portland might
become the Northwest sales head
quarters for the new automobile.
ft.
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