WEATHER Fair tonight anal Friday with am valley faa lata night and naming; highs JM1; law IS- LA GRAND OBSERVER 79th Issue) 64th Year LA GRANDE, OREGON, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 3, 1959 14 Page Fiva Canti E Ike Confers With Military Heads Before Leaving For Foreign Trip WASHINGTON iUPI Presi dent Eisenhower conferred today with his, top military and diplo matic advisers before leaving to night on a fateful peace mission along the perimeter of Russia. Eisenhower called his National Security Cou-.c I into session aid went into conference with Secre tary of Sta!e Christian A. Herter several hours later. Herter leaves later this month for the NATO ministers meeting in Paris. The President presumably dis cussed his trip and the nation wide radio-TV talk he will make before taking off. He is expected to tell fellow Americans to com pose their economic differences lest the entire free World suffer. Eisenhower and a relatively ! small staff leave by jet transport j from nearby Andrews Air Force Base about S p.m. e.s.t. for Rome , on the first leg of his 22,370-mile journey to 11 nations. TV-Redie Address Shortly before boarding his pi are. Eisenhower will address the nation by radio and television at 7:15 p.m. e.s.t., outlining his trip and po'nting to the unbreak able connection between economic stability at liome and the main tenance of peace through strength in other lands. He leaves the country deeply . concerned over the steel strike which is now in abeyance be cause of a federal court order. The President intends to stress again tonight the importance of steel management and labor com ing to an agreement to prevent a resumption of the walkout next month. He will base his appeal for sue-, ccssful steel negotiations on his firm belief that the United States cannot do a good job of helping her friends stand firm against expansion if America is torn by serious economic strife. Step in Labrador Eisenhower will land at Goose Bay. Labrador, late tonight for refueling. In Rome he will be met at noon Friday by President Gio vanni Gronchi. Prime Minister Antonia Scgnl and other high of " flcials of the Italian government. The arrival in Rome- will set the pattern for the rest of the trip a brief speech at the air port, a ceremonial drive into the center of the city and a black tie dinner Friday night in Quirmale Palace. This schedule will be standard first-night procedure at every stop except in India where Eisen hower will spend most of five days and not get into official en tertaining until his second evening in New Delhi. Local Men Answer 'Alert' Called By National Guard First call was issued at 7 p.m. yesterday. It was terse in its military sim plicity. Young men, seated around TV sets in their homes or who were present at various functions such as the EOC basketball game or Blue Mountain Masterminds foot ball banquet, probably grumbled inwardly. But they filed out for the local National Guard Armory. Local and area men were an swering a state-wide Army tend Air) National Guard a'ert that lasted until 11 p.m. Col. David Baum. commanding Driver Draws Citation A Pendleton driver was cited for 'violation of the basic rule near the Second Street overpass yesterday. Robert Franklin Nirschl was Issued a citation for traveling 33 miles per hour in a 20 mile zone at 2:46 p.m. Nirschl posted $13. bail and was released. HOW SHELTER PROTECTS This inset drawing of shelter built in basement of mod ern American home shows how persons can take refuge safely and survive nuclear fallout from atomic or hydrogen bomb explosion. Radioactive dust particles are car ried downwind from blast and settle on the roof and grounds. From these particles, radiation rays (arrow like figures) shoot out which penetrate most substances. The ravs cause radiation sickness to people without their realizing it, ince radiation can not be detected by the senses, niaterials ot fallout shelter are dense enough, howev cr to absorb most radiation and prevent it from reaching the occupants. 1 ft w mm i( i.v i -Jt - I . L, X NEW FIRM Workers install sign on the front of the La Grande office of Pioneer Federal Savings & Loan Association which opens this month.. The firm, with home offices in Baker, will be managed by Donald R. Guyer. The remodeled offices were formerly occu pied by the Mode-0 Day store. . (Observer Photo) i:iunc:rTfB OILUSTKUSSEaUS officer of the First Battle Group of the 196th Infantry here, and his fellow officers and men were justly proud today. At H-plus four hours they had a 91 per cent representation of Guardsmen, well above the state wide attendance average. And at Hplus two hours. Headquarters and Headquarter Company of the First Battle Group, commanded by Capt. Willard Car?y, had 61 per cent present. H plus four saw 93 per cent of Capt. Carey's men in attendance. tt Per Cent Lt. Col. George Boyd. Regular Army, with lhe National Guard here, said this morning that the tttendanc? average on the state level was 86 per cent for both Army and Air. The practice alert was called by Oregon Adjutant General Alfred Hintz. ' This is a oncc-a-year ''mock alert" and serves to test the readiness of the NG in 39 towns and cities throughout the I stole r-pfRTvPMS 3 CTTlNC)l95y jv. I r rt TO OPEN IN LiJJj Ike Trying To Knock Out Religious - Issue? WASHINGTON (UPI) Pres ident Eisenhower may have dimmed the religious issue as a force in the 1960 presidential cam paign but there is no sign that he has pushed it out of sight. The President appeared to be trying to knock religion out of next year's campaign with his Wednesday news conference com ment that the U.S. government has no business providing birth control help to countries with overpopulation problems. The religious issue, already an unknown factor for 1960, erupted in public debate following the re cent statement of U.S. Catholic bishops that government funds should not be used for birth con trol programs in underdeveloped countries with population prob lems. Asks Candidates' Position The Rt. Rev. James A. Pike, Protestant Episcopal bishop of RADIOACTIVE DUST IS 'SILENT KILLER' FALLOUT WHICH FOLLOWS ATOMIC SHOTS (Editors note -The Observer newspaper Is presenting a series of articles on U.S. Civil Defense national, state and local level in the interest of . the public. Today's article deals en the dangers of radio active fallout.) By GRADY PANNELL Observer Staff Writer Radioactive dust particles result from every nuclear evplosion staged above ground in this coun- j 'n J a 1 . ; I -r J, 1 .0 I -fii, mi ij j C3 LA GRANDE California, immediately asked if Catholic candidates for public of fice were bound by the declara tion. Prospective presidential can didates of Calhol c and Prolestaj-t faiths were asked how they fel'.. There was some belief that the controversy had seriously dam aged the chances of Sen. John Kennedy (D-Mass.i, front -runni.ig prospect for the Democratic pres idential nomination. Kennedy, a Catholic, said the birth control issue should be left to the other countries but that if any such question should come before him he would decide it in accord with his oath of office. Coming from a Republican president, Eisenhower's remarks Wednesday may have taken the heat off the specific issue of birth control for Democrats like Kenne dy and Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California, another Catholic and prospective candidate for the Democratic nomination. try and abroad, the deadly matter following the cloud patterns hii!h above the earth. From time to time, the radio active dust sifts silently in deadly fashion from the clouds and scat ters hundreds and thousands o' miles on the earth from the origin al nuclear detonation site. A human being cannot delect radiation by smell, sight or touch. Detection is the job cf trained technicians who either work wilh the Atomic Knergy Commission or Civil Drfcn.se and carry radio logical detection instrunr-nts. Fallout, the most sil-nt death now known to man, eventually kilts its victims who are exposed In Iare doses of the dust particles or ashes. ' I -co A. Hoexh, "director of the Office of Civil Defnse Mobi'iia tion. says radioactive fallout would be the greatest killer eftT a nu clear attack unless the nation's people are prepared against it Dogs, goats, pigs, rals and mice died both swiftly and slowly during several series of test affect nuclear shots he'd et the Nevada Proving Grounds at Yucca Flats, 70 miles from Las Vegas. Hiroshima Maidens The animals caged to ground lero disappeared from the melting heat and shattering ex plosive force o th blasts. Thoe further away from the heat circle received extreme doses of r-jdia lion and died within hours. Others far out and which were dusted genlly Ml ill davs after the shot: A MIRACLE DID HAPPEN SAN MARCO DURRI, Italy ( U P I ) Th 284 residents of this mountain village Itarnad ta d'y that miracles reap divi dend!. The simple (oik of San Marce Durri finally learned the full meaning of a "miracle" visited on them last month by two benefactors they have never seen Joseph and Victor Sa turn) of Reno, Nev. The Saturnos, en the 40th anniversary ct the death of their father, an American im migrant from San Marce Durrl who made good in the new world, mde a gift of mora than SWS.OCO in Bank of Am erica stock to the people of this poor village. That meant every man, woman and child gat stack werth $1,111.10 each simply because ol the accident at their place of residence. Muddy Creek bchool Flan Under Study NORTH POWDER (Special) I'nion County's School Reorgani zaticn committee refused last ii'ght to accept a plan which '. would nut the Muddy Creek school district in the Baker dis trict. Chairman Tom Ijmpkin of the I'nion County group said that all plans required further study be fore the I'nion members would take final action. Muddy Creek voters have twice rejected proposals that they join the Union County district and have petitioned the Vnion County committee for permission to join the Baker district. Joint High School Muddy Creek students present ly attend a joint union High school which is in Union County. ? The problem facing the Union rwounty committee ia how to-dis-' .. .l ...1 I soive me joini umun nign stnuui to free Muddy Creek to jojin with the Baker district if that is pos sible. Both Baker and Union County committees must concur in the plan before action can be taken. New School? North Powder School Superin tendent Norman Vancil proposed a plan which calls for the con struction of a new school in Bak er County just south of North Powder. The plan would include North Powder, Muddy Creek, hock Creek and the Haines area. Rock Creek and Haines are cur rently being served by Baker District 5-J. A group of Haines area resi dents at the meeting protested the plan and expressed their de sire to remain in the Baker dis tract. The Union County committee will consider all of the proposals before making a final decision in the matter. some died and others recovered. It would be the same with man Hiroshima is living proof. The so- called "Maidens of Hiroshima," a group of school girls who sur vived the death blast effects of tho nuclear bomb but who came in contact with dust fallout days arier the great blast, arc dying off one by one almost 15 years aner tne shot. M.-ny of the "Maidens" have suffers other ailments such as loss of complete or partial eye- signt, acalness, facial deformity, crippling effects, etc. How docs one avoid falleul? Civil Defense could have the ab solute answer, home fallout sh- l t-rs. and the equipment and sup plies to go in them. Interested persons may acauire from CD a booklet crlled "The Family Fallout Shelter." It tells how and why the shelters would be built, and gives) detailed I drawing and specifications to aid in ouiiujnk inem. Do It Yourself The booklet also lists the equip ment and supplies needed for the shelters. Four of the d-picted fallout shelters are designed to be built by contractors in new Bouses, in more di'ficult construction arc, or as more expensive und-r ground shelters. But a fi.'th shelter, the basement concrete block shelter ia designed specifically as a do-it-yourself I pmiect io oe rreciea tor not much j more than 1150. I I'D estimates that this type Hundreds Drown When dam Bursts Fate Of Americans Unknown HAVANA UT1 No decision has been handed down by the revolutionary tribunals pondering government demands that two Americans be put to death as foes of Premier Fidel Cast-o. The verdict of a court martial in the western province of Pinar del Rio in the case of Austin F. Young, Miami, was expected Wednesday but was delayed with out explanation. It is not certain now how soon the judgment will be announced. A tribunal here, which tried a Cuban-lwrn American named Ra fael del Pino, had not been ex pected to bring in a verdict until Friday. Del Pino, who now lives in Miami, was accused of conspir ing to smuggle anti-Castro refu gees out of Cuba. A third American, British-born Peter J. Lambton of Nassau, was on trial with Young in Pinar del Hio on charges of sharing the leadership of an anti-Castro guer rilla band. The government asked a 30-year prison sentence for Lambton. City Dads Refer Property Lien To City Manager City commissioners referred the lien against "Kir Street Park" property, recently deeded to llendrix Methodist Church, for Pavement District 158 to the city manager for study at Wednes day's commission meeting. The property was sold to 'the city in November, 1936, for de linquent assessments amounting to $137.06. City Manager Dave Slaght will report to the city s governing body next week on the disposition of the matter. Koopman Attends Meet In Chicago Norman Koopman, La (irande High School vocational agncul lure instructor, is attending the National Vocational Agricultural Teachers Convention in Chicago. While in Chicago, Koopman will also attend the American Vocational Association Conven tion as an alternate delegate. Koopman, vice president of the Oregon Vocational Agricultural Teachers Assn. will give the Oregon report of the year's acti vities. Koopman was accompanied by his wife. Jewel. The convention will end Dec. 10. shelter would provide all the fall out protection needed in most of the nation, and it would have peo ple living outside probable target city areas. Every American should know that radioactive fallout can be carried by upper air currents for great distances from point of blast. Fallout's radiation can be ex tremely dangerous. It can make you deathly ill; it can kill you. (Next In caaa of attack, wht! then?) U WiO BUILDING SHELTER An old coal bin under a dwelling, as shown here, can be uti lized in many instances as a home-made n uclear fallout shelter. This type was built for less than $59 by Darrell Barnes, Ithaca, Mich , who added odds and ends of lum ber for reinforcement and with which to seal cracks. With Barnes, second from right, are eLo A. Hoegh, national CD director. Michigan Gov. G. Mennen William and Sheriff Robert Russell, who also serves as the county CD director SLEEPING FRENCH TOWN HIT BY WALL FREJUS. France (UPI) Dam burst Wednesday nitht doom and sent a 35-foot wall. town. The French news agency AFP reported tonight that more than 300 bodies have been counted in the disaster. The agency said 163 bodies were region of rrejus and about me. same number" in the adjacent villages of Saint Itaphcal and Hu get. The number was not officially confirmed. ' Additional scores of villagers were feared swept to their death when 45 million tons of water cas caded through the 10-mile long Reynan River Valley. The city morgue was a scene of chaos. Bodies of men, women and children, most of them naked, their clothes stripped off by the fast moving waters; lay side by side in the morgue, its chapel and neighboring buildings taken over as morgue annexes. Search for Relatives Lang lines of anxious relatives, some sobbing, some moaning, moved through the morgue, look ing for their kin and found them dead. Flood surviors told of seeing neighbors and even members of their own families swept from rooftops where they had clam bered in no effort to escape. One rescue worker, a teacher, found several of her puoils half buried BULLETIN RIO DE JANEIRO. Braiil (UPI) A group of air force officers sat off reports el a rebellion when they flew into the pi'jvincial capital of Belo Horiionte today and attempted ta take off with three DC planes of the RAL Airline. The War Ministry immediate ly announced that it had placed the army on full alert. Hood Hangout Scene Of Gangland Rubout SHERMAN OAKS. Calif. LPI A widely known bookie was shot to death Wednesday night before ex-convict Mickey Cohen and 25 other guests at a swanky rcstau rant and police said the murder scene was "rearranged" before they were called. The victim, convicted extortion ist Jack Whalen, alias Jack O'Hara. 39, was shot once under the right eye, police suid, afler he walked into Itondellrs restaurant and hit a man in the face. The slayer fired two shots at Whalen from his seal in a dining room booth, then fled. The second shot went into the ceiling. "To paraphrase Winston Chur chill, never did so many people see so little," Police Chief Wil liam If. Parker said of the slaying in this San Fernando Valley dis trict of Los Angeles. Parker said there was an "oh vious delay before police were notified. Perhaps some of the press were notilicd first. We also believe that the scene of the mur der was considerably rearranged before we arrived." Former mobster Cohen told no-, lice he was sitting at a table only six feet from the shooting but did not recognize the gunman. He said he never had met Whalen. "1 just ducked when the shout OF WATER The 200 foot high Malpassct with a noise like the crack of of water on this sleepy Riviera recovered in the immediate in the mud. all dead. Frejus. founded by Julius Cae sar and a target of the Allied in vasion of the Mediterranean coast of France in August, 1944, es enned total destruction because a slight rise of ground divided the wall of water into twin torrents that roaved through the town's cdes. But the town of 14.000 was a scene of devastation, stunned and fLoded, some of Us streets run ning in rivers six feet deep. A French army rescue team said the scene during the night was blood chilling with screams and tries for help coming from the dai kness. Power Station Destroyed The rushing waters carried away the town's new power sta tion, plunging it into a darkness lighted only by the faint starlight that followed five days of torren tial rains and gales. The night of fear and sudden death was worst in the farm houses which dot the 10 miles of valley between Frejus and the dam, along a highway where trucks and cars were swept away like matchsticks. A irking passenger train was derailed as it sped along the Riviera from Marseilles to Nice but all passengers were account ed for ulthough two cars rolled . Into the water. - lre ninny miracles of survival and one nf those was a woman found sitting dazed but unhurt under a tree 600 yards from her house. "My house was hit by a wall of water that rose above the roof lop." she told her rescuers. ing started." Cohen said when questioned at police headquarters. "I asked someone behind me If I was bleeding, then just stood there. I've been through too many of these things to go under a ta ble." Within minutes after squads of officers arrived they locked the restaurant and held the patrons inside for questioning or took them lo downtown headquarters. Police began a round-up of known l.os Angeles area under world characters, including Fred and Joe Sica. Fred Sica was at the restaurant before the shooting, police said. In reconstructing the shooting police said the victim fell in front of the booth while Cohen and oth er patrons faced him. They laid there were several versions of what happened but refused to say what the stories were. Chief Parker said the shooting occurred shortly before midnight and police arrived 30 or 40 min utes later. He said the murder weaon must have been a revol ver, because no shell casings were found. 'The two main clues We are seeking now are the weapon and Cohen's new black convertible which was taken from the pwking lot." Parker said.