Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 04, 1955, Page Seven, Image 7

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    Ikes Setback Only Temporary;
New Bulletin Says Condition Good
I H\\ \ I ;di f A I ’) I ’resident I'.isenhower -cheerful again ;
afl<T a worrisome period of fatigue Monday sent a letter to
\ ice President Nixon ami handled another small hatch of
official business. »
I he chief executives physicians reported hi-, condition
“satisfactory” and without complications Monday, whereas
he didn't feel "as well as usual" Sunday night.
Monday, however, in a 10-niiii
Ute humiiPHu conference with his
top lieutenant, Sherman Ailanm,
Klsetihower:
1. .Signed a letter to Nixon
laying he hoped the vice pres
ident would continue to hold
and preside at meetings of the
t'aldnet and National Security
Connell as he has done In the
past during presidential ab
sences from Washington.
'i. Signed a memorandum to
Secretary of Treasury Hum
phrey which, In effect, makes
■lapun a member of the tien
eral Agreement on Tariff and
Trade («ATT).
3. Put Ids name on another
routine memorandum author
izing John B. Hollister, direc
tor of the International Coop
eration Administration, to send
to six congressional commit
tees a report which will say
that no additional decisions
have l>een made since June Stl
on continuing foreign aid for
various nations.
1. Approved an extension of
time, from Oct. I to Oct. 21,
for a presidential emergency
to rc|u>rt on a labor dispute be
tween the Pennsylvania Kail
road and S6.000 non-operating
employes.
These actions were announced
by presidential press secretary
James C. Hagerty, who told re
porters that "of course" Kisen
hower is cheerful.
Concern Sunday
A period of concern had set in
Sunday night when his doctors
found the chief executive tired
and feeling under par. The phy
sicians. trying to determine the
cause, took an X-ray of his dam
aged heart Monday to sec wheth
er there had been any enlarge
ment. They found none.
Still further evidence of presi- |
dcntial Improvement who the
half hour, Hagerty said, the chief
executive spent Monday morning j
playing h plrturc quiz game with
t lie help of a nurse.
Relief Kelt
And in Boa ton, the internation
ally-famed heart specialist, Dr. i
Paul Dudley White, said that “I
feel relieved."
He had hcen suspicion;! earlier
that Kiscnhowcr's weariness!
Sunday night meant something
might he wrong.
Bulletin Says “flood Day”
The chief executive's doctors
summed tilings up as "a good
day" in their latest medical bul
letin at S 45 p ni. (MST). It said:
“The President had a good day.
He was in a cheerful mood.
“There was no evidence of fa- j
tigue.
"The President had supper
and again visited with Mrs. Kis
, enhower.
“llis condition continues to be
satisfactory without compli
! cations."
Brazilian Election
In Mud, Muddle
RIO DK JANEIRO, Brazil (iff
Brazilians elected a Peraident
In drizzling rain Monday. The
turnout was poor and a court
battle loomed to settle the final
results because of closeness of i
the race. 4
Supporters of the three letyl
ing candidates proclaimed vic
tory for their nominees but re
sults will not be known for 10
days or 2 weeks. The count starts
at noon Tuesday and communica- j
tions with remote interior areas 1
are poor.
AEC In New Drive
To Harness H-Bomb
WASHINGTON (J’l Top US.
atomic scientists arc Joining
force* at five research centers in
an effort to harness the terrific
power of the hydrogen bomb for
peace-time energy purposes,
Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of
the Atomic Energy commission
announced Monday.
Scientists connected with the
long-range program, known as
“Project Sherwood," said it holds
the promise of supplying man
kind with all the energy it will
need for all time to come.
'I Shall Return'
Says Peron From
Paraguayan Exile
ASUNCION, Paraguay iff)
Juan D. Peron implied Monday
he plans to return some day to
his Argentine homeland. Until
then, he said, he is through with
politics.
"I will not, move a finger in
political affairs, but will live a
purely private life as Juan
Peron,” the deposed dictator said
in a handwritten statement to a
group of newsmen who asked an
interview.
“When I do indulge in political
affairs,” he added, “I will re
turn to my country.”
The former Argentine strong
man who arrived here Sunday to
begin a life in exile, gave no in
dication when he might try to go
back home.
Stratus told a news conference
he is hopeful of success perhaps i
within 20 years. The AEC chair
man cautioned in a formal state-:
ment, however:
"Our work is in the research
stage and many years of intens
ive effort may be required before
the first prototype of an operat
ing thermonuclear machine may
be developed."
Strauss disclosed that “Proj
ect Sherwood,” which seeks in
j effect to tame the terrible force
unleashed when light atoms fuse,
has been under way since 1951.
Prof. Lyman Spritzer, in charge
of Princeton university research,
said the energy now locked in a
light element found in sea water
could, if released, "provide many
times the present rate of world
energy consumption for more
than a billion years."
Typhoon Margie
Dies Near Japan
TOKYO t.T) — Typoon Margie
hlew itself out on Japan’s
doorstep Tuesday with winds
of diminishing velocity crossing
Southern. Honshu at Hiroshima.
Little damage was reported.
The storm had headed for Ja
pan in the wake of destructive
typhoon Louise. Blit by the time
it reached Hiroshima its winds
of 115 miles per hour had di
minished to 58 miles an hour.
’ I
Ike Illness Sends
Stock Down in
$4-Million Loss
NEW YORK >m — Price*
dropp'd 95 a share and more
Monday a* selling came into
the stock market on renewed
concern over President Elsen
hower's illness.
.More than four billion dol
lars was estimated to have
been wiped from the valuation
of all shares listed on the New
York Stock Exchange despite
the fact only briefly did the
selling show much urgency.
The Associated Press aver
age of 60 stocks declined 93.H0
to dose at 9160.50. That was
below the closing figure of
9170.10 a week earlier, when
tile market plummeted on news
of President Eisenhower's
heart attack.
I,ack of encouraging reports
on President Eisenhower's con
dition was cited by some Wall
Streeters as a factor in Mon
day's decline. However, many
analysts have been predicting
lower markets over the next
few weeks because of nervous
ness engendered by t he size of
last Monda>'s fall.
FBI Head Urges
Public Support
PHILADELPHIA I/Pi—,1. Edgar
Hoover said Monday that iaw
aliiding ritlzcns most mobilize to
help "take the handcuffs off law
enforcement.”
The director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation told the
0‘Jnd annual meeting of the Asso
ciation of < hiefs of Police that
the crime picture in the I'.S. is
a ^‘national disgrace” and de
clared that the problem is pri
marily a youth problem.
Morocco Riots
Flare Anew
RABAT, Morocco French
troop* supported by plane*
*tnick back hard Monday at an
estimated 2,000 Moorish rebel
horsemen in the North near the
Spanish Moroccan zone and in
the Ka*t along the border with
Algeria.
Sketchy reports reaching here
gave a picture of reinforcements
swarming over the rocky moun
tain roads to relieve hard pressed
garrisons in the Beau Oeste type
forts which the French have
manned since the Riff wars of
the 1920's.
The fighting broke out Satur
day night a few hours after Ben
Youssef’s successor, Sultan Mo
hammed Ben M o u 1 a y Arafa,
bowed to French wishes and
withdrew to retirement in Moroc
co's international city of Tangier.
Commando Group*
Well organized rebel com
mando groups, each 100 men
strong, made surprise attacks on
three small French posts along
the French-Spanish zonal bolder
in the Riff Mountains.
The posts were abandoned,
then retaken when French re
inforcements arrived. Seven
were reported killed, including
two Europeans, and six missing
at one of the posts. Losses in
flicted on the rebels were not
known.
New Fights Flared
As Fiench military command
ei s dispatched troops to the fron
tier with the Spanish Zone, new
fighting flaied on the high pla
teau of the middle Atlas Moun
tains 63 miles southeast of the
Moslem holy city of Fez, along
French Morocco's eastern fron
tier with Algeria.
The French-Moroccan garrison
of Imm o u z e l -Des-Marmoucha
fought more than 18 hours to
repulse an attack by hundreds
of Marmoucha tribesmen.
Fighting •‘Fierce’*
Authorities in Fez described
the fighting at Immouzer-Des
Marmoticha and nearby Berkine
Power Debate Continues
ONTARIO, Ore. Rep. Coon
(R-Ore) told farmers of this
Eastern Oregon region Monday
night that his “partnership” bill
for construction o£ John Day
Dam would mean more power
sooner for domestic uses and in
dustry.
But Sen. Neuberger (D-Ore)
said that what farmers of the
region really need is expanded
markets for their produce. And
he added that this could be ac
complished only with low price
federal power bringing new in
dustries to the Pacific North
west.
The two Oregon legislators re
peated many of their previous
arguments as they launched the
second of their series of 10 de
bates on Coon's bill for construc
tion of the proposed Columbia
River project.
as "fierce.” The rebels were
armed with submachine guns,
they said.
Eievc n of Immouzer's 50 Eu
ropeans were killed, including
three women and two children.
Military casualties, although not
disclosed, were said to be high.
French Heads
Cancel Trip
PARIS ft Premier Edgar
Faure and Foreign Minister An
toine Pinay cancelled Monday a
scheduled "courtesy and friend
ship visit” to Moscow, with the
explanation that the atmosphere
is not favorable now for this
type of trip.
The French action reflected the
bitterness in Paris at what -vas
apparently considered a gratuit
ous blow to French prestige in
the United Nations General As
sembly’s vote to discuss the Al
gerian situation.
In Moscow, Communist Party
boss Nikita S. Khrushchev, in ef
fect the spokesman for world
communism, announced the Sov
iet Union suppoits the independ
ence movement in North Africa.
He called it the “national libera
tion'' movement.
READ EMERALD WANT ADS
STARTS SUNDAY,
"To Hell and Back"
Audie Murphy
"COMBAT SQUAD"
John Ireland
Lon McAllister
ipmoium
STARTS SUNDAY, OCT. 2
"The Beachcomber"
Robert Newton
Glynis Johns
Donald Sinden
STARTS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5
"LIMELIGHT"
Charles Chaplin
Claire Bloom
Nigel Bruce
"THE LADY
VANQUISHED"
Michael Redgrave
Margret Lockwood
the future resides/in MEN WITH
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