4 ,' -T - i .aft.-. -: ,L- t ';i:"1t , r'"l V1',"i" 'f DREW PEARSON SAYS: ' Holifield Is Pressured To Hush War Propects TRUSTED GUIDE Jess L. Bork is shown with his Labrador retriever guide dog. Bork graduated from the Guide Dogs for the Blind School April 4, and is now at . home in La Grande where he manages a farm. In San Francisco Bork and eight other -. members of his class practiced in every type of traffic condition while learning to use 1 1 their dogs. They hiked across the Golden Gate Bridge, walked through China Town "" with its irregular streets, and visited downtown San Francisco during rush hour. Banker Succeeds With Pakistan And India Diplomats Baffled By ELMER C. WALZER UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK UPI Kugene II Black, president of tlio World Bank, armed with n hillion-dollar water project, has been ablo to bring Pakistan and India . to an agreement, a feat that lui.xliiif fled diplomats fur yenin, . The two nations have agreed on a plan to harness the Indus Itiver Which has its source in I lie iliina la.van mountains in romantic Tibet and Kashmir and flows through j'akistan lo I ho Arabian sea. . Black brought the ,nal ions to wther after the World Hank had Jvorked out a plan for the Indus alley after years of study. The rroject colls for building storage J-escrvoirs. canals, and Irrigation eystem, and -rower development. )t is estimated to cost a billion dollars and take 10 years to Jniild. His plan would give India and Pakistan water, anil waler means to much that the two countries, at least temporarily, havo for gotten their enmity to agree, .on Jhe formula. - "- Born at Bratton Woods ' All this was brought out in, a Visit to the World Bank head quarters ia Washington. Tho bank Officially designated as tho Inter national Bank for Reconstruction find Development, was born in Bretton Woods as a twin of the international Monetary i- unci. It t)s grown over tho, years and today is among tho' lew quasi government agencies that makes money. : There are many, things to be done before the giant Indus Valley program can get under way and give employment to thousands, use vast amounts of material, and lay the basis for a big lift in the standard of living of the two nations involved. Black has sounded out friendly nations for help in financing the project. lie is convinced several will join the United Slates and the bank in making the plan a reality.. Those nations outside the U.S. that may help arc the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Black is convinced there will be enough credit for the work lo be completed. Under his formula no project is attempted unless fi nancing is assured. I he method lo be used would be to havo tho friendly nations supply a fund which would be added to and administered by the World Bank. Ag Demonstrate ainst Funds For Catholics PARIS lUPIi Left-wing parties announced today they will stage a mass demonstration Sunday in the Paris suburb of Vinccnncs lo protest government plans to In crease financial aid lo Roman Catholic schools. i The long controversy over relig ious schools in France threatened again after a precarious truce of five years. J ,The dispute erupted on the eve of President Charles do Gaulle's Hcparturo Monday for Italy lo nl (end ceremonies commemorating the .100th anniversary of Italy's Unification. i The mass protest Hireling was called after reports from the tapi! al that I)e Untitle would dis cuss the church school problem with Pope John XXIII. Passion fared up in left wing circles when Premier Michel He bre told conservative politicians last spring that the government was ready to Increase slat? aid to Catholic schools. . The Catholic schools have been getting government aid since ll51. After the rlghtwlng victory in last year's parliamentary elections, conservative groups put up a strong effort q obtain larger aid. Decree Ends Suit Against Oil Companies WASHINGTON tUPD A con- sent decree has ended a nine' year-old anti-trust suit against six major West Coast oil companies The consent judgment filed Fri day in U.S. district court in Los Angeles, Calif. was approved by federal judge James M. Carter It bars tho oil firms from price fixing and controlling production ol crude oil. Consenting to the negotiated settlement weref Standard Oil Co. of California, Shell Oil Co.. Richfield Oil Corp., General Pet roleum Corp., Tidwalcr Oil Co., and Union Oil Co. of California. One defendant, Texaco, Inc., did not participate in the out-of-court settlement and the case against this company will go lo trial. In the settlement, the govern ment backed down on its Insist ence that the oil companies dis pose of trw'r owned and leased retail outlets. The judgment cov ers activities of tho oil firms in California, Washington, Oregon, Nevada and Arizona. It will run for 15 years. The oil companies are prohibit ed from setting prices of their retail dealers and forcing deal-rs lo handle their products exclu sively. The firms also aro barred from entering into any ngreemnt lo (ix the prircs of crudo oil or pet roleum products and from partici pating In any organization which aims to control tho production of crude oil. EN ROUTE TO SIBERIA MOSCOW UPI Former New. York Governor Avorcll Har rimnn was en route to Siberia to day on a rare Invitation to see the world's largest dam. Harri man, who has been touring the Soviet Union the past few weeks, will visit the Angara River Dam In Bratsk, which few foreigners have seen. i While the two nations have agreed on the principles of the plan, they now must get together to agree on a water treaty which will be negotiated in London some time In August. f ' . Such a treaty Isn't a simple Job. It involves many problems and obstacles. Watar Kay to Paaca In all this world, no scientist has as yet found a substitute for water. And so great is the need for water that it can bring nations together when diplomacy and force of arms rail. Providing water in ample supply for India and Paki stani means new life for the two peoples. Any cutting off of the supply would mean death to teem ing millions. The World Bank is interested also in water elsewhere. It is studying a project lo help Egypt finance deepening of the Suez Canal to permit ships of 40-foot draft to use the waterway. Egypt now is deepening the canal to allow ships of 35-foot draft to go inrougn. , Meantime, Russia Is helping Egypt finance a new Aswam Dam on the Nile. When the first Phase of this ' dam is - completed,, the bank might help In its completion it r.gypt should request such aid it was indicated. Talk of' a water system for Jordan gets nowhero because that nation just doesn't waut ene built by outsiders. Some of these days these great water developments will be com plctcd and world peace will be strengthened by their existence. And their accomplishment will stand as proof that bankers and engineers can produce a more lasting basis for world peace than diplomats and armies. QUOTES FROM THE NEWS United ' Praia International BATON ROUGE, La. Louisi ana Secretary of State Wade 0. Martin Jr., announcing that he will not recognize Lt. Gov. Lcthcr Frazar as acting governor during the Illness of Gov. Earl ' Long: "1 shall contlnuo to recognize Earl Long as governor until ho declares himself unable lo act or until his inability lo perform is declared by some official body." MOSCOW Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev, Insisting that he has issued no "ultimatum" re garding- Berlin and calling anew for a summit conference: "Let's discuss everything. Let weigh all the pros and cons." WASHINGTON President El senhower, on Adm. Lewis Strauss, whose nomination to be secre tary of commorce was rejected by the senate: I am losing a truiy vaiuaoie associate in the business or gov. ernment." WASHINGTON. A lot of back stage pressure has been applied to Congressman Chct Holifield of California to stop what may be one of the most sensational con gressional probes of the year, it will show for the first time in his tory what would happen to Bus sia if she bombed the major mil itary targets of the USA, and what would happen to the United States in turn if we bombed Rus sia's main military 'targets, In each case the radioactive poison would be so great that the attacking nation would be wiped out by its own lauout. Reason for the pressure against Holifield to hold up his inves tigation is the diplomatic spar ring at Geneva. Some Eisen hower advisors fear that if the American public becomes too anx ious for an end of H-bomb test ing, the Russians will be able to put across a half-baked treaty under which they could cheat, Ike himself, however, seems de- i tcrmined to sign some sort of agreement to end If-bomb tests He is just as vigorously for it now as he was critical of Adlai Stevenson for urging it in 1956. Reason why Rep. Holifield now has the facts with which to mea sure total radioactive fallout that for the first time the total figure for all bomb tests so far held has been declassified. It's no longer secret that a total tit 92 megatons of nuclear explo sions have been made by the USA, USSR, and UK combined This will permit the scientists Holifield will call upon to testify to pick 224 targets in the ' USA and show what would happen if they were blasted out of commis sion, tiolitclds simuiaieo. atom ic attack will use 260 weapons ranging from one to 10 mega tons. The Pentagon, a prime tar get in the USA, will get from eight to ten megatons. - Holt field's home city of Los Angeles will get half a dozen. From this, scientists will be able to figure out the complete structural damage to the United States and compute the damage done to the country supposedly launching the attack Russia. It would be wiped out by radioac tive fallout coming back from its own aggression, Unless the pressure becomes too great, the Holiifcld investiga tion is due to start on Monday. Front-Porch Front Outside the U.S. capitol the weather was steaming hot. The temperature was In the 00 s, House members were rushing in for a quorum call, among them Democratic Rep. Randall S. Har mon, who received a lot of pub licity some months ago for charg ins the taxpayers $10Oa-month rent for a front-porch "office" on his Indiana home "Tell mo, Randall," inquired Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas. "Is that porch ol yours air-conditioned?" "It's enclosed, but not air-enn d tioncd, Mr. Speaker," grinned Harmon. "Well. I'd leave It like it Is. Suggested Rayburn. "The way things are going, we wont ad- joifrn here until September. By that time you won t need air- conditioning." Haadlines and Footnotes Democrats arc blinking their eyes over President Eisenhower's latest speech calling for a "responsi ble, sensible, fiscal policy in government." These are almost the exact words he used in the 1952 campaign to attack Presi dent Truman's "mismanagement" of the national debt ... The debt was then $265 billion, the annual interest was less than $6 Couple Admits Setting Fires ST. PAUL. Minn. ( urn Po lice today investigated a bride groom s story mai ne set n fires causing sby.uuu aamage to relieve the tensions of honeymooning. The groom, Jcromo winczewski. 21. told police that when the rigors of young love got to the point of lovers spats, he and his wife of thrco months wander ed through the city looking (or fires. Finally, he said, he started a fire and his wife got such a kick out of watching It he set 10 more within the next three weeks. "I guess it was just to relievo the nervous tension," Winczewski said. "I felt better afterward." For his wife, Delores, 20, watch ing the fires was "like a great pressure was being taken off me." she told police. The couple was arrested al a lumber yard Friday, the bride groom with a roll of tarpapcr and newspapers- under his arm, and the bride with a gleam in her eyes. Winczewski said his wife al ways stood nearby and watched as he touched off tho blazes be cause she "enjoyed them." Police Lt. John Schroedcr said there was "no dojubt" that Winc zewski started the fires, but he said a thorough investigation would be made before the couple was charged. They were held on I suspicion. billion, and . government ' bonds were selling at par.' After six years of Die's managemnt, the national debt is now $235 billion, the annual interest is more than its billion, and government bond are selling below ' par on the money market '. . . Ike apparent ly believes that if he preaches economy loud and long 'enough. the public will believe his fiscal policies are sound. Yet for all his talk about a balanced, budget, he has plunged the government deeper in the red this fiscal year than any president in peacetime. For the fiscal year ending June 30, his budgets will ' be" unbal anced by a whopping f 13 billion .'-. . New York's likable Cong. Bill Miller, who is working backstage to woo New York. Republicans away from Governor Rockefeller into Vice President Nixon's camp, is also trying to sew up GOP vot es in tho House against civil rights. Miller is the GOP whip in the unofficial Republican-Dix-iccrat coalition. '..'. No Influence intended Congressman Ed Hcbert of Lou isiana, a two-fisted battler to get small business a bigger share in defense contracts, has sent Fa ther's Day tics to his congressional colleagues. . . ' However, the witty Louisianan made sure that the . gift would not be construed as a concession to big business or an effort to "influence" recipients of the neckties.' An accompanying let tcr explained:' "Since last Father's Day we h'r.vc run the gamut from. Vicu na to nepotism, and now we are in the throes of finding out whether or not retired military officers ever die or - just fade away on the payroll of some de fense contractor. Take my word for it, the acceptance of this Father's Day tie is not intended to influence you one damned bit." Hebert adds t h a t the tie manufacturer, who shall be un named, is not a "defense plant, a public works project! nor Is lhc,plant located irt a distressed area. As a matter of fact, New Orleans is one of the most prog ressive areas In the nation The City CARE forgot and industry remembered'." , . ' . Obierver, trGrnd,Or., Sat., Jon 20, 1959 Pagt 6 THE PtACE IS MOSCOW Lenin Peace Prize Winner Khrushchev Is Man Of Week By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Staff .Writer Man-of-the-week: ' Lenin Peace Prize winner Nikita Khrushchev. The place: Moscow;-- . The quote: . Khrushchev pledged all his strength "to the' struggle for the triumph of the peaceable Leninist foreign policy, for the strengthening of peace and inter national friendship."- '. It had been a busy week even for the normally busy " Khrush chev, premier of Soviet Russia, No. 1 in the Communist Party, executioner of the one-man per sonality cult of Stalin and now the builder of another one-man cult, the cult of Khrushchev.! , puHng the week, above and be yond the normal duties of chief of state, he had spent many hours as genial host to visiting East IGermans. kept a finger, on events at the foreign ministers confer ence'-: fn Geneva.', chatted with other foreign delegations' and been the principal speaker, at the opening of the U S S R- s exhibi tion of Soviet economic achieve ments. IV. freditt Communist Party Now he was writing his thank you notes to those who had con gratulated him upon winning the Lenin Peace Prize. He credited "this high estimate of my activities'' to "internat'iqn- MOVIELAND'S TOP DIVER WARNS THE SNORKEL SET SAYS PUBLIC BRAINWASHED t SAVANNAH. Ga. UPI. -For-. trier Secretary of State James F. Byrnes says the public is being "('brainwashed"- Into believing the U.S., Supreme Court , is always right. Byrnes, a former gover nor of South Carolina, said it was 'absurd" that critics of the high court's 1954 school desegregation decision often were called "un patriotic." .' (' By VERNON SCOTT UPI Staff Writer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Recent attacks by sharks on swimmers off the California coast spurred Jon Hall, Movieland's No. 1 skin- diver, to warn the snorkel set to day never to go diving unarmed. A 30-year veteran of sea diving, Hall also manufactures all man ner of underwater equipment in cluding "shark guns." "Those two deaths in the past month or so never would have happened If the men had carried guns," the tanned actor said. "And I don't mean normal pistols or rifles. "An ordinary bullet has no ef- Retail Merchants; Hear Wage Report ,- The. Retail Mcrcnants Asocia tion, at their regular meeting, heard a report on a Federal Mini mum Wage Law of $1.25. The group agreed that the bill should be called to the attention of local merchants.' Businesmen are urged to send their views, on the legisla tion to their representatives in Washington, D. C . Assignments for the . clean-up campaign have been given to the Lions, Kiwanls and JC's. . - .The RMA has recommended the wearing of western clothes each Saturday during the centennial celebration, The meeting welcomed Francis Snodgrass. who will replace man ager Schnqitcr at the end of the month. feet on a shark. You can pump them full of bullets, and they Keep coming at you. ' Invents Underwater Gun My partner and I have invent ed a power-head underwater gun that fires a chisel with the force of a .38 caliber pistol. It can pierce two feet of solid flesh and bone. It s a perfect shark .killer, and is made for exactly that pur pose." . Hall explained that sharks rare ly attack, human beings beneath the surface of the ocean. He has encountered literally hundreds of tne sea monsters while diving in the waters off California, In Ta hiti, Samoa, Fiji and Hawaii. "Sharks like warm, tropical wa ters," he said. "A diver is pretty safe underwater, because most ijsharks will avoid anything as big as a numan Deing. .. .. Don't Splash Around . "But a swimmer splashing 'on the surface is something . else. They mistake a floundering hu man for an injured fish and-rush to the attack. They do not hit -and run.'- They grab and hang on, tearing the flesh away. , ."The only thing for unarihed swimmers to do is dive under wa ter and try not to thrash around or cause a disturbance Stay un der water as long as possible, surface quietly to gulp air once in a while and swim under water toward shore slowly." According to Hall, the oft-told story about sharks being attract- led' to blood Is true. He warned all swimmers to. stay out of the ocean . if they are cut or bleeding- al recognition of the services of the Soviet Union in the struggle for the preservation of peace, for peaceful co-existence and cooper ation of all states: and I fully credit It to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union." To the Western foreign minis ters struggling at Geneva for agreement on the future of Ger many and European security, all this could be nothing but one more added frustration. For it was Khrushchev whose threats against free West Berlin had forced the foreign ministers' conference into being in the first place and it was Khrushchev "brinkmanship" which would keep them talking in the hope that a barking dog does not bite. It also was Khrushchev brink manship which impelled British Prime Minister Harold Macmil lan to send his foreign minister, Selwyn Lloyd back to Geneva aft er a week end recess with ur gent instructions to keep the Ge neva talks going. Macrnillan visited Khrushchev in Moscow this spring and, from all that has leaked out since, came away not so much in awe of this man's physical and mental powers as in fear of the mistakes he might be capable of making. Chief among these fears was that the Russian leader might under estimate Western determination to stand fast in West Berlin. For regardless of propaganda smokescreens, of the heated words and of Soviet promises, it is true that Berlin contains the seeds of war. " Khrushchev is a shrewd bar gainer in the true Communist tra dition there is no compromise but which represents a Commu nist gain. Nike Missile Kills One Soldier; 5 Hurt NAHA, Okinawa ( UPI Special ist 4-C Frank L. Gonzalez was killed and five other soldiers in jured when a Nike missile ran wild at an air base here Friday. The Army said the anti-aircraft missile was "partially ignited" while lying horizontally on a launcher. The missile scooted across the ground for several hundred feet before breaking up without exploding. The cause of the accident has not been determined. The Army said the dead man was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ysidro G. Gonzalez, Sun Valley, Calif. (Hlott Oog. - . f J . ... X ' Classified Ads Are Real Cool Cats! Just sit back and relax - Let a - Classified Ad do all the work .jii Simply Dial WO 3-3161 Let an "ad-visor" help you place your ad -then enjoy some Real Cool Results Bargain Rate-6 Days for Price of 4 Just $1.50 (2 line ad) Observer Classified Ads Get Real Cool Results!