WEATHER Cloudy through Sunday; showers tonight or early Sun day; high Sunday 60-70; low tonight 40 50. 45th Issue 64th Year LA GRANDE, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER MTiwT Mehru Pledges J; Battle "... u LA GRANDE OBSERVER No . ' 1 FARM BUREAU OFFICERS New La Grande Farm Bureau officers elected recently are, back row, left to right, Ronne Sands, director; Ben Robinson, chairman, and Sylvan Rasmussen, director. Seated, left to right, Mrs. Guy Spence, women's chairman, and Mrs. Marvin Fager, secretary. Other officers not present when picture was taken are Harlow Speckhart, vice chairman, and Mrs. Harvey Bergeron, co-chairman for women. (Observer Photo) Ike Hopes Today's Talks Will Settle Steel Strike AUGUSTA. Ga. (UPD Presi dent Eisenhower expressed hope today that resumption of industry union peace talks in Pittsburgh this afternoon would lead to set tlement of the steel strike. - The White House also disclosed that when and if an injunction in thd steer strike hi-granted un der the Taft-Hartley law, Eisen hower intends to reconvene the Medic Loses License After Sizzling Suit PORTLAND (UPH-The Oregon State Board of Medical Exami ners Friday revoked the license of Dr. Norman D. Coleman. Prineville, to practice medicine and surgery. Coleman, earlier this month, was the defendant in a sensational $200,000 malpractice suit brought by a Prineville woman. -- Dr. George H. Lage. board president, said Coleman's license was revoked for "unprofessional and dishonorable conduct." r Lage said the hoard's action was not based on any malprac tice. He explained the charge of unprofessional and dishonorable conduct as a violation of the statutes of Oregon. ""While it may involve negli gence on the part of the physi cian,'' he said, "it may also in volve acts which require proof of litcrem lacis in uiuci iu suuoian- tiate the charge." Coleman's case first came up before the board at its quarterly July meeting. The ruling had been withheld until now. POSSIBLE PERJURY Quiz Whiz Van Doren Under Close Investigation From DA NEW YORK (UPD - District Attorney Frank Hogan today stud ied the possibility of seeking a perjury charge against Charles Van Doren in connection with the TV quiz whit's testimony to a Grand Jury. Hogan said he would take no action against Van Doren in any event until the $129,000 "Twenty One" winner who became a SM.-OOO-a-year network consultant has testified before the House Special Subcommittee on Legislative Over sight next month. Another big money show, NBC's "Tic Tac Dough," was cancelled Friday when network officials "clearly established" that it was rigged as much as 75 per cent of the time before NBC took over production from the Barry 4 En right firm a year ago. Tho popular five-doy-a- week r special fact-finding board headed by Dr. George W. Taylor. Press Secretary Jnmcs C. Hug erty labeled as incorrect a story that Taylor had requested White House permission to re-enter the efforts. to mediate the steel strike. Hagerty said in the President's behalf: "He sincerely hopes I hut when both sides renew their negotia tions this afternoon in Pittsburgh, that they realize fully the obliga tion that they owe the United States, and that they remain in consultation and negotiation until they settle it." The White House also said the President plans to return to Wash ington tomorrow, taking off from Augusta at about 3:30 p.m. e s t The persistent rain that has marred the President's vacation continued on and off this morn ing but did not deter him from playing golf. After working brief ly at his office at the Augusta National Golf Club, Eisenhower began playing shortly before 11 a.m. e s t. It was not raining at the time. Hagerty, in his morning meet ing with reporters at White House press headquarters in downtown Augusta, said the President was keeping in touch with the steel situation through his special coun sel, David Kendall. Explaining the situation as it applies to the board of inquiry created originally by Eisenhower under the Taft-Hartley Labor Man agement Act, Hagerty said the same law provided that the chief executive should reconvene the board once a restraining order against a strike is granted in the courts. The U.S. court of Appeals in Philadelphia has stayed the en forcement of an injunction against CHARGE daytime show will be replaced Dy iruth or Consequences" be ginning Monday. The District Attorney inter viewed Van Doren Friday and said the suspended NBC consult ant had made "substantjal chang es in an earner statement to Hogan in which he denied that he was fed questions and answers on the now defunct quiz show "Twen ty One." Hogan noted that Van Doren gave sworn testimony last spring to two grand juries and empha sized that "corrections" in Van Doren's story "had to do with hit appearance before the Grand Jury." At no time did Hogan say Van Doren had lied but he admitted that a perjury presentation to one of the four grand juries now sit ting is "a qution we will have lo decide." the strike which was granted in a lower federal court. Hagerty said the story alioiit Taylor wanting to re-enter the case at this point was not cor rect, but that the President did expect to follow the law and re convene 4U-lurd of inqui.7 if an injunction is granted. Eisenhower neared the end of his five-day golfing holiday in Georgia still dogged by bad weather, but playing when he could. His putting was improving Georgia's golfing immortal, Bob by Jones. Al Capone TV Picture Basis For Lawsuit CHICAGO (I'PH - Descendents of Ch'caso mob king AI Capone laid plans today to sue producers of a recent movie and television show based on Capone's life The first move came Friday when Capone's estate was re opened and letters of administra tion were issued in probate Court naming the late gangsters' sister, Mrs. Mafaldo Maritote, Chicago, as administrator. Atlorney Harold R. Gordon said the Capone family plans to sue Allied Artists, producers of the movie, "Al Capone," and Desilu Productions, producers of the tele vision drama, "The Untouch ables." Neither company received per mission to use Capone's name and likeness from either Mrs. Mai note. Capone's widow, Mae, or his son. Albert, Gordon said. "It requires some reflection and whether it would serve any use ful purpose." he said. Hosan said Van Dorn had un dergone a "harrowing ordeal,"' which he further defined as "a m-ntal slrucgle." - "There might be any number of persons who might wish to correct statements made to this office which may cause me to reflect on their Grand Jury testimony," he said, adding that a number of oth er quiz snow contestants had called his office indicating a de sire to change previous state ments. Van Doren. who still has his job as a $4,400 a-year instructor at Columbia University, told news men Friday that he did not tell Hogan he gave false answers. He said he would tell his "whole story" when he appears before the Congressional subcommittee. Against Reds India Will Not Give Up Border NEW DELHI. India UPI Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru said today India will not go to war over a Communist Chinese raid on the border state of Kash mir, but neither will she yield to "threat or intimidation." The Kashmir area of Ladakh where 17 Indian policemen were ambushed and killed by Commu nist soldiers "is our territory and will remain our territory," Nehru said. "But even assuming it was a disputed area," he said, "this was not the way to settle the matter. "Our country will not give up her path or territory under threat or intimidation." He blamed the Peiping govern ment for actions "which have poisoned our relations" and said the dispute was causing "grave anxiety." Nehru, speaking at Meerut in Uttar Pradesh Province, begged the Indian people to control their emotions and not be swept away hy fear or indignation over the latest border incident. The Indian government today or dered fresh army reinforcements rushed to the northern frontiers in the wake of the Red raid into Ladakh in Kashmir. The raid put a heavy strain on already-tense relations between India and Com munist China. The Chinese were believed to be still occupying the site of the raid,. Hot .'ty'-in'j in the Chang Chenmo Valley, but Indian troops were believed to be only a little south of there. Hot Springs is a mountain-top 18,000 miles above sea level. The Chinese were believed to have moved up modern weapons and the personnel to man them at Hot Springs. Indians were outraged and there was speculation that Nehru might be compelled to break off diplo matic relations with Communist China unless the Reds ended their aggressions and agreed to settle the border dispute peaceably. The Indian government charged Friday that Chinese troops am bushed an Indian police patrol 40 miles inside India's "traditional'' frontier in the disputed Ladakh Area Wednesday. In addition to the 17 policemen killed, the government said three others were wounded and two cap tured by the Red Chinese raiders. Communist China immediately counter-charged that armed Indi ans encircled and attacked Red Chinese troops inside "China's ter ritory." The Peiping foreign min istry said both sides suffered cas ualties in a fierce two-hour fight. New Delhi and Peiping ex changed protests which contra dicted one another on almost ev ery detail of the latest incident in the long-smoldering border dis pute. The Indian government dis missed the Peiping protest, de livered to the Indian ambassador in the Red Chinese capital, as "not in accordance with the facts." Peiping's protest accused the Indians of violating "Chinese fron tiers and provocation against Chi nese frontier guards." It demand ed New Delhi "Adopt measures at once to prevent the recurrence" of such incidents. LONG EARS? GOOD SIGN TOKYO (UPI)-Got unusually long ears? Don't let it trouble you, A municipal official in Isesaki City, northern Japan says it's sure sign you'll liv to a ripe eld age. The official, Fusakichi Igara shl, said he surveyed all It per sons in his city who are at least M years eld and found that all of them have ears that are two centimenters (four fifths of an inch) longer than th average person's. "I am not a doctor so I cannot explain scientifically the relationship between long ears and longevity," he said. "But from the survey I con ducted It appears to be a fait." Hour's Power Shortage Hits La Grande Area Power trouble out of Bonn vill and trcm cut-in sub stations caused mors than on hour's Ht of pew,)- to the La Grand ara today. Th , failurt lasted from about 11:50 a.m. until 13:58 p.m. California Pacific Utilities told Th Observer that thoir Information as to exactly what happened was tkotchy. They said, however, that following th Bonneville failure forth r troubl developed from th McNary line. "We switched over to Idaho Power at Baker and relay troubl developed there," they said. Partial power was re stored to th East dams Ave- . nu section of Town. General power recovery followed snon ly afterwards. COLLEGE FOOTBALL United Press International FRIDAY GAMES Boston U. 8 Connecticut 7 Auburn 21 Miami fi Oachita "Baptist 20 Southwest of Memphis 10 St. Thomas (Minn) 12 Duluth Branch iMinn.) I'. 12 Morehouse 6 Tuskegoc 0 West Chester 'Pal Tchrs 14 Shippcnsberg Tchrs 0 Eastern Ky. 21 Austin Tcay 7, Superior St. 9 Stout St. 0 Air Force Academy 20 UCLA 7 SAURDAY GAMES Princeton 20 Cornell 0 Brown 6 Rhode Island 0 Amherst 6 Wesleyan 0 I.rh.mn Vallev 6 Moravian 0 Syracuse 44 West Virginia 0 Delaware 30 Marshall 6 Tufts 28 Williams 0 Haverford 6 Hamilton 0 liuffalo 22 Western Reserve Z Yale 21 Colcgate 0 Millersville State 20 Bloomburg 14 Howling Green 25 Kent State-8 Wnrrostpr Twh 20 Coast Guard 13 Rochester 27 Kingspoint 0 Scranton 19 Albright 6 Juniata 27 West. Maryland Col. 0 Wnnslpr 41 St. Lawrence 20 Cornell College 33 Knox 0 Northwestern 30 Notre Dame 24 Duke 17 North Caroline Mate is Oberlin 16 Kcnyon 14 Vanderbilt 33 Virginia o Butler 27 Ball State 0 Delaware State 38 Lincoln 13 Davis and Elkins 6 Concorn 6 Uraes One Space Head WASHINGTON UPI Assist ant Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield (Mont.i called to day for a single civilian "czar" to direct all U. S. space and mili tary missile projects. Mansfield said such a powerful space-missile boss would elimi nate ''waste. . .duplication and overlapping" and permit the country to get "more value" for the money it spends on rockets and satellites. He said in an interview that all missile and space activities should be centralized "under one roof" in an organization like the Manhattan Project, the World War II atom bomb program. Mansfield's proposal came on the heels of a suggestion hy Rep. Victor Anfuso D-N.Y.) that the Senate and House space commit tees meet early next month to try to put all space research and de velopment programs under a sin gle boss "to avoid unnecessary duplication and to surpass the Russians." In a related development, Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.i, a member of the Senate Armed Services and Space Committees, said in a Louisiana speech that "waste and duplication in our de fense and space programs exceed 100 million dollars a week." He did not elaborate. Mansfield said the shift of Wernher Von Braun's team of rocket experts from the Army to NASA waa a "good first step" to ward a single missile-space agen cy. He said the German-born Von Braun's favorable reaction to the move "augurs well" for quick congressional approval of the! shift. f. ' , fix v ' ; . -:'.-t . r , ,4 , , .''ii' i QUEEN'S CROWN TO BEAUTY Lovely Gail Fisher, Haines, wears the crown that is symbolic of Homecoming Queen at Eastern Oregon College here. She was selected Friday afternoon. Her equally love ly attendants are Marcia MacPherson, Union, left, and Judy Wardell, La Grande. Cor onation exercises were held at 6 p.m. Friday. (EOC Photo) Store Lodges Protest On Traffic Sign Attorney S. II. Burleigh, repre senting Albertson's Market, teld the city commission last night they wcer entirely beyond their juris diction to place "no left turn" signs on Adams Avenue between Third and Fourth streets. Burleigh, who investigated the action at the request of his clients. termed the action "unconstitutional and discriminatory." The attor ney pointed out th.it two-thirds of the city is east of Albertson's and that the- signs prohibit making turns into the parking lot. "Al- Ibertson's management feels they are handicapped," he said. the placing of the signs after Police Chief Oliver Hcvc had recommended the signs lo prevent traffic congestion. Commissioners authorizing the placing of the signs and they were tnstalli'd by the state highway department, according to Reeve. No Law Burleigh said that he could not find any law, city or state, that gives the commission authority to prevent left turns at that point. 'There is no law that says you can't make a legal left turn across a double yellow line," Burleigh added. W'e feel it is discriminatory to prohibit left turns on one block in a town ot 12-15 business diocks and we ask to have the signs taken down." Burleigh continued. If it was necessary to protect the pub lic safety we wouldn't protest, he concluded. Soviets Would Have U.S. Aid In Bering Strait Dam MOSCOW (UPI A prominent Soviet scientist today" proposed Russia and the U.S. collaborate on building a dam across the Ber ing Strait which he said would radically alter the climate of Alaska, Canada and Siberia. Stalin prizewinner Peter M. Borisov, writing in the Literary Gazette, proposed linking Asia and North America by a gigantic concrete dam across the 50 miles separating Alaska from Siberia. The dum would block the icy waters of the Arctic current from flowing south and allow warm gulf stream waters north into the sub-Arctic area, he said. Would Change Climat Such a dam, he said, would reclaim hundreds of millions of square miles of territory on two continents from permanent frost and would also improve the cli mate of Europe and northern Asia. Soviet engineers have proposed Two Trial Before Circuit Court Jury Soon Two jury cases will be argued before Judge W. F. Brownton in Union County Circuit Court next week, one Tuesday and the other Thursday. The State Industrial Accident Commission is being sued by Dewy M. and Shirley J. Kleng, husband and wife, this action to be heard Tuesday. Louis J. and Elizabeth M. Dierks, husband and wife, are plaintiffs in the action against Vclma K. Baker, this case to be gin sometime Thursday. Water Source Gone Kleng charges that a construc tion firm - the Durbin Bros. Con struction Co. - employed by the State Highway Commission on a road job adjacent to their Upper Perry property damaged their Castro May Seize U.S. Naval Bases WASHINGTON (UPD The fate of the big U. S. naval base at Guantanamo. Cuba, was in doubt today because of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro's in creasingly bitter criticism of the United States. In his latest attack, Castro charged in an angry five hour television speech that an airplane leaflet raid on Havana Wednes day originated in this country. He made a veiled threat regarding the Gualanamo base. The FBI said Friday night that Maj. Pedro Luis Diaz Lanz. for mer chief of Castro's air force, had told federal agents the flight took off from U. S. soil under his command and dropied anti- Castro leaflets on the Cuban capi tal. Diaz Lanz, who Kied to Florida after the revolution and said Communists held high posts in Castro's regime, denied in Miami that he made such an admission to the FBI. He refused to make further comment. The State, Department, mean while, tried to calm the angry Castro by ordering a vast alert of law enforcement agencies along the Florida coast to prevent rebel flights to Cuba. Castro has called for a million- man demonstration in Havana Monday to protest the aerial raid in which two persons were killed and 47 injured by Cuban troops similar projects before, but never so far as Is known had they urged Soviet-U.S. collaboration. Now modern technology has made the project feasible, Bori sov said. The Literary Gazette appealed lo scientists and engineers throughout the world to contribute comments and suggestions for the realization of such a project. Responsibility Of Russ-U.S. Borisov said the dam should lie the major .responsibility of the Soviet Union and the United States, but since other countries like Japan, China, Germany, Po land and the Scandinavian na tions will benefit, they should eventually be drawn into partici pation. According lo Borisov, 47 per cent of the Soviet Union is in the area of eternal frost, and 70 per cent of Alaska is similarly frost bound. Cases Will spring water source to the ex tent that they arc unable to get enough water for domestic pur poses. The Klengs stated that the con struction firm altered and re duced their spring water with repeated blasting and excavation. They are asking $3,000 damages. Counsel lor the plaintiffs is Helm and Ncely. The Dierks Baker case stems from the plaintiffs (Dierks) hav ing served an eviction notice on the defendant. The defendant. In turn, has filed a cross complaint based on a breach of contract The Dierks claim that the de fendant has failed to pay rental money on their property since juiy is of this year and also re fuses to vacate the dwelling. firing on the planes. The flight led to anti-American demonstra tions in front of the U.S. Embas sy. Some U. S. officials believe the Monday rally may turn into an other embassy demonstration. The officials also think Castro may refer again to the Guanta namo base. Dr. M. Addy Of EOC Has Panel Topic Dr. Martha Addy, professor of education and psychology at East ern Oregon College, will be fea tured on f ancl. during tho fall conference of the Oregon Associa tion for Supervision and Curricu lum Develnpm"nt in Pendleton Monday. Dr. Addy, who will also be a group leader in the morning dis cussion session, is scheduled to talk on "Objective: More Under standing." Theme for the regional con ference is "Concept of Self." Dr. Robert E. Bills, chairman of the department of phychoolgy. Ala bama Polytechnic Institute, is the conference consultant, and will address the meetings on "De velop'ng an Attitude of Open Mindtdness," and "Human Needs in Relation to the Perceptual Self." 386 Residents Of Elgin Given Chest X-Rays ELGIN (Special) Mrs. Rose Marie Stroeber reports that 3f!6 Elgin residents had chest X-rays Tuesday when the mobile unit was in Elgin. Helping Mrs. Shroebcr wcro Mrs. Gladys Flinn, Mrs. Loretta Palm er, Mrs. t-tnei Kennedy, Mrs. Irma Trump, Mrs. Mae Rusmus- sen, Mrs. Juunita Clum, Mrs. Betty Nelson and Mrs. Ina Townsend. Clarence Calder of the California- Pacific Utilities Comuany made th; hook ups at the Western Stud mill and down town. NATIVES, POLICE CLASH LEOPOLDVILLE, Belgian Con- GO (UPD An African was killed and three others wounded in a clash with gendarmes at Kigali in the Ruanda Trusteeship Territory, according to reports here today. Be Aired The defendant, rfnmrniii k. attorney Richard Neely, claims that she tendered monthly rental payment of $60 on July 15 to the Dierks but they refused the mon ey and told her to vacate the premises. She also claims that she entered into an oral agree, ment of a year's lease on thn property for $720 to be paid at the $60 monthly rental rate. She further claims that she mailed a certified check to the, plaintiffs early in August and that the check was received by them. The acienaani is asking $1,400 special damages and $500 'ex emplary damages In her cross complaint. Representing the Dierks are Ross E. Hearing and Cochran and Ebcrbard, attorneys.