Monoid Bmr O tons? &M $a9y Tan Major Rail, Street Changes Proposed In Planning Report A long-range plan (or Salem, graphically illustrated in an at tractive 84-page magazine report, wu presented to 300 city and county officials, civic leaders and prominent out-of-town guests at a dinner meeting in the chamber ot commerce rooms last night. Described by James Walton, chamber vice president and pre siding officer at the session, as "the result of a really intensive ! tffort." the progress report is- I II LJ I I I II J 1 i L J I J I I 0DDOJJ3 TPCDCEDCa present course on Capitol, per il will take men of extraordi- haps near Lancaster drive or in nary qualities of tact and foie bearance to make the compromise plan of integration of the army navy and air force succeed. Foi it sets up four secretaries instesn of two, gives each access directly to tn president, and makes all eligible for cabinet status. The Dlan axreed to by the heads of the secy ices provides were under consideration for for a single secretary of national ' possible future sites of the state defense. Then there would re- : prison; explained a suggested de ma in the separate departments of' velopment of Bush pasture and rmy, navy and airforce. headed j proposals for new parks in and by secretaries. The secretary of j near the city, and described pos national defense would have sible changes in the city's ar-over-all charge of the three serv- 1 terial streets to improve traffic Ices with authority to lay out flow. common policies and programs. The speaker closed with the With men of the right type in i hope that "we catch some of the these four high offices the plan j vision that was Mr. (C. B.) Mc may work. But stiff-necked as Cullough's," late chairman of the gold braid usually is, we may commision. and declared "we have have just a continued wrangle the opoprtunity to build a great behind the doors of the capitol, city, a beautiful city, and now is frequently spilling out the win- ( the time to do it." dows. Walton, presiding in the out-of- If men of the cooperative type I town absence or chamber pres get the' top positions when thelident Keith Brown, turned the plan is initiated a plan of co- meeting over to J. N. Chambers, ordination of work may be estab- who as acting chairman of the lished which will prove effective. Under this the secretary of na tional defense would coordinate the purchasing, both standardiz ing the items to be bought, regu- lating the flow of orders and delegations from Portland and maintaining a proper control over I Eugene, and several railroad of inventories. One of the strongest I ficials. as well as members of arguments for consolidation has i the Salem and Marion county been the chance for great econo- j governmental groups, mies in purchase of supplies for j Centinaed Sapport Urged the services. I Carl Hogg, commision mem- The secretary of national de- ber who sparked the $65,000 fense also would be the one to ' campaign which made the group's approve (Continued on Editorial page) rflllAf r4 lm Y M. tI III Oarw- -m w fi i iiljxzi mi y lltlallt I rst'llnffl sprinkled with maps. charts, lllJJlll 1UU11LU architects sketches and pictures described Salem as a city of Total v alue of crops produced j 38.000 "growing by leaps and on the Colony farm in Polk coup- bounds." ty owned and opeialed by the' The city was declared defi state hospital amounted to $53,074 nitely in need of a scientifically in 1946. accocding to the report of arranged program to chart that Dr. John C. Evans, superinten dent, to the board of control. Principal crop from the stand point of value wa stomatoes. at $16,959. Next came potatoes $9297, alfalfa- hay, $8890 hi ps i ; $8418. Most of the produce is con- fumed by the institution, the hay '. being used in the hospital dairy. Hogg, vice chairman; Clay Coch The hops are sold. ran, secretary, and Charles A. The 400-acre farm was pur- j Sprague, William Hamilton, chased in 1942 at a cost of $60,000. i George Putnam. Paul Wallace, Institution inmates perform the farm labor under supervision. The hospital also' operates the Cottage farm southeast of Salem where the chief activity is dairy ing and poultry-raising. Stork 'Margin' To Return Feb. 1 WASHINGTON. Jan. 17-P-The Federal Reserve board to night restored security trading to a credit or -margin", basis effec tive February 1. Chairman Marriner S. Eccles announced that postwar "infla tio nhas largely run its course" provided government debt re duction continues and "further wage Increases" are avoided. The marjjn for buying and carrying stocks and bonds will be 73 per rent of the value of the securi ties. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH Td watch him U I were you nVs rtally a black sheep a bleach. j-ued by the chamber's long-range course of re-zoning, transportation re-alignment. public buildings. parks and a general program of orderly, efficient expansion, i Charles A. Sprague. member j of the commission, explained in : detail the recommendation and 1 suggestions thus far growing out of the efforts which started nearly two years ago. He cited the group's major recommendation ! a new bridge at Division street; disclosed that the highway com--mi;ion was studying possible re location of highway 99 east of its the area of nth street closer in; and told of conversations with Southern Pacific officials regard ing possible tunneling of main line tracks, as the commission favors, or under-passes for east west streets. Street Changes Proposed Sprague also said four tracts planning commisison presented the magazine-report to the chamj ber via letter in the book's fore word. Guests weer introduced by Sen. Douglas McKay, including work possible, urged a thorough study of the progress report and further support of the continuing n i Prefaced with an in-memoriam to Mr. McCullough. who died last Ji V II tft-tA ww 1 . i-.. II.. growth in regard to expansion and zoning, transportation of all kinds, public buildings, private construction, parks and play i ounds, public services, industry. municipal goernment, taxation and education. Serving with Chambers on the planning commission are Cail W Douglas McKay. W. W. Chadwick. Guy Nugent, W. M. Bartiett and former Mayor I. M. Doughton. Andrtorlnm Proposed Planning engineer for the com-r.-ission is C. A. McClure of Port land, who spoke briefly last night. Among specific ideas men tioned in the printed report is a municipal auditorium, the build ing .and grounds occupying the space between State and Court streets from 14th to 17th and pos sibly extending jwest to 12th to connect with the statehouse grounds. Still another is a sports arena, proposed for the fair grounds if those facilities ever are moved. New pants, to the north, north east and between State and Ferry from 19th to 21st treets also were suggesed. as well as county parks, community groves and a water front park in West Salem. Parking areas in the middle of business blocks were mentioned as a partial answer to the park ing problem. The magazine-report was con cluded with a description of all soils found in this part of the val ley and a weather-precipitation chart showing the area's equable year-around climate. Butter Below OP A Price in New York WASHINGTON. Jan. 17 -uP)-Further drops in food prices cheered housewives in many sec tions of the nation today. Butter again headed the list, falling as low as 65 cents pound in New York compared with the $1 -a-pound peak for the golden commodity last winter. OPA't old ceiling price was 07 cents a pound. In Washington, government of ficials forecast a fairly general reduction in the price of milk by f -February 1. On the other hand. OPA authorized an increase m the cost or sugar which it said would amount to about one Quartex cent a pound at retail. NINETY-SIXTH YEAR 10 Rebuffed WASHINGTON. Jan. 17 Sen. Hash Batter (R, Neb), whose t A J - - JLAI. ! a trade agreements with fer elgn eeantries pending the fsr matioa ef a new tariff policy , by the GOP was rejectesl today i by the state department. ! GOP May Use j Present Trade Pact Program j WASHINGTON. Jan 17-JP-A j proposal by Senator Butler (R- ! Neb) to suspend negotiation of ! trade agreements with 18 coun- ! tries until the new republican I congress could write a new for eign trade policy was rejected out- I risht tswav hv th state rtenart- ...... j j , ment. At the same time Senator Taft j (R-Ohio) told reporters he did not think the republicans would attempt to repeal the reciprocal trade program' "if the state de partment does not go too far in cutting tariffs." : The existing law empowers the administration to cut tariffs as much as 50 per cent in return for concessions from other countries. Taft's predicuon reinforced that of Chairman VandenDerg (K Mich) of the senate foreign rela tions committee that the adminis tration's trade policy would be continued in some form. jDorm Building j Hopes Raised Virtual assurance of permission to go ahead with construction of I Willamette university's new men's 1 dormitory was received yesterday '. by Robert Fenix. university bus i iness manager, in telegrams re- ceived from both Senators Guy Cordon and Wayne Morse, i The messages stated that the ' appeal of a previous unfavorable decision had been granted by the federal housing project adminis tration in Washington. D.C. Since rules and regulations gov erning projects similar to the one contemplated by the university have been materially liberalized, it is entirely probable the appeal will result in favorable action, and that construction will begin this spring. Fenix said last night. It is hoped to have the 100-man dormitory completed within a year, Fenix said, and added that preliminary sketches for the dor mitory, to cost between $400,000 and $500,000. have been drawn by Pietro Belluschi of Portland. Company Ships Flax Rug Carload The first full carload of flax rug ever to leave this area was ! dispatched yesterday via South ! ern Pacific to the Fay Carpet com ! pany in New York. Clyde Ev j erett. manager of Oregon Flax Textiles in West Salem where the rug was manufactured, said the material was in 30-foot rolls varying in width from 27 inches to 12 feet and that the shipment totaled 55,000 pounds. Everett also said the market for the material was expanding rapidly. Most of his plant's out put thus far has gone to San Francisco. REDS DRIVE FOR VOTES WARSAW, Jan. 17-P-The Communist - supported govern ment bloc parties mobilized their entire enrolled membership o close to 1,000,000 tonight for an intensive house-to-house cam paign to bring out the vote in Poland's parliamentary elections on Sunday. Weal her Max. - S4 34 Min. S3 Proip Sain. Portland 23 M S3 .00 23 .00 San franciaco M Chicago 43 Nrw York 41 33 SO Willamette river .1 feet. FORECAST (from US weather bu reau. McNarr Itekt. Salem l: Partly cloudy today, with local valley foe. Highest temperature today 40 aod low est tonight 33 PAGES Satan. By WILLI AM R. SPEAR WASHINGTON, Jan. l-JPy-The adminisration plan for uni fying the armed services provides for a single cabinet officer, it de veloped today, to act in effect as rn umpire over self-operating army, navy and air forces. No activity carried on now by the separate services would be "automatically cancelled by the plan," explained Vice Adm. For rest P. Sherman, deputy chief of naval operations! The way would be opened for one service to use another's fa cilities duplicate army and navy airfields in the same" locality, for example, might be eliminated and the proposed new secretary of national defense would have complete authority to decide. Officials who explained the proposal at a White House news conference said no estimate had been made of expected savings but declared there would be econ- omies "in the long run" as a re sult of greater efficiency. There was no suggestion that the $11, 200,000,000 budgeted for the armed forces in the fiscal year starting July 1 could be trimmed. Charles G. Ross, presidential press secretary who presided at the conference, said the plan contemplates that only the secre tary of defense will be a regular cabinet member, although the army, navy and air force will con- ! stitute individual "departments" and the head of each will be called a "secretary." Ross added that these three secretaries may be invited to attend cabinet meet ings from time to time. Elmination of Boys' School Farm Studied Elimination of farming operar tions at the stale training school for boys near Woodburn, as a pos sible means of reducing operating costs of the institution, was sug gested at a meeting of a sub-ways and means committee Friday to consider the school's 1947-49 bud get. Members of the sub-committee are Sen. Howard Belton and Carl Engdahl and Rep. William B. Morse. Figures presented showed a to tal appropriation of $833,553 ap proved by Gov. Earl Snell for the two-year period starting July 1, as against $255,056 for the cur rent biennium. M. D. Woolley. school superin tendent, said much of the increase was due to salary rises, contribu tions under the state retirement law, advance in commodity prices and additional operating person nel. He said the farm operations constituted part of the training program for the inmates. "It looks to me as though it would be economical for the state to do away with the farm and dairy operations and purchase these products in the open mar ket," Rep. Morse declared. Sen. Engdahl also said that the new budget appeared out of line. Russians Told U.S. Practicing for New War in Aleutians MOSCOW, Jan. 17-(P-The Communist party newspaper Pravda carried a Tass dispatch today under an Ottawa date giv ing an account of "intense" mil itary activity by the United States in the Aleutians "the American territory closest to the Soviet Union." The dispatch quoted a Fair banks. Alaska, correspondent of "World Letter" as saying that despite almost "impregnable censorship" he was able to get out a story of the American mil itary "working on the problems of a new war." Merger Sets Up 'Umpire' Antarctic Scouts Find Little America Buildings Preserved in Glacial Ice By Alton L. Blakeslee WITH NAVY EXPEDITION AT BAY OF WHALES, Jan. 1 (De layed) -JPy-1 dropped through a skylight today into the subzero buildings and tunnels of Little America, buried under 20 feet of snow where everything was per fectly preserved and untouched since the camp was abandoned six years ago. Eleven men in our scouting par ty came to the old camp of the 1939-1941 expedition and for three of them, this was a gleeful home coming. By light of a flashlight and lanterns, they shouted their discoveries of old bunks and for gotten supplies in the camp they left on February, 1941. No one hadTet foot inside the NUNDBD 1651 Oregon Saturday Morning. January 18. 1947 T 1 P Scores IrOooirt 6OwP Train Derailed Near Bakersfield BAKERSFIELD, Calif., Jan. 17-(P)-A broken rail sent five cars of the Southern Pacific Owl, San Francisco-Los Angeles passenger train, careening into the ditch 12 miles northwest of here early to day, killing seven persons and injuring scores. Coroner Norman Houze said it is unlikely there are any more bodies in the wreckage. The railroad placed the number of injured Ex-Department Of State Aide Labeled Red WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 - UP) -Carl Aldo Marzani, 35, who worked on state department in telligence for a year, was indicted today on charges of falsely stat ing he had never been a commu nist. At the same time, the state de partment disclosed that intensive loyalty checks are being made on 53 employes who came to the de partment in 1945 from temporary war agencies. Attorney General Clark an nounced the indictment of Mar zani by a federal grand jury here. The specific charge is fraud upon the government. Possible penal ties run as high as $10,000 fine and 10 years in prison. "The indictment," said Clark in a statement, "is the result of an intensive inquiry that has been under way by government offi cials for some time ac to federal employes suspected of subversive affiliations." Marzani joined the state depart ment in 1942 as an economic edi tor in the division of research and analysis. He went on a military status with the office of strategic services in 1943, then returned to civilian status in September, 1945. From then until Dec. 20, 1946, when he was removed, he was deputy chief of the division of presentation which prepares charts and such material. This is part of the office of intelligence collection and dissemination. Fog Blanket Veils Salem Fog slowed traffic in Salem and most of the Willamette valley last night and this morning, but state and city police late last night re ported no mishaps in the area. In Portland, a freezing Friday fog caused eight cars, all skidding in the same spot, to pile up near the St. Johns bridge, and in an other multiple-car pile-up, four cars crashed into a bus, injuring one passenger slightly. Thermometers were slightly higher in Oregon yesterday, ex cept at Baker, where the mercury skidded eight degrees to two be low zero. Other minimums yes terday: Pendleton 24, The Dalles 16, Bend 21, Klamath Falls 6, Eu gene 26, Med ford 20, Roseberg 31, Salem 23, and Portland 25. Ramadier Nominated Premier of France PARIS, Jan. 17-iP)-Socialist Paul Ramadier was nominated as French premier tonight to try to form a coalition cabinet to direct the Fourth Republic. Leon Blum had turned down the post despite reported last-minute American urging. The 69-year-old Ramadier, tapped by France's new president, Vincent Auriol, will consult with party leaders to tee if they will endorse his nomination. If they do he will draft a program and present it to the national assem bly. 3 BURN IN HOTEL. FIRE WATERTOWN, N. Y., Jan. 17-(JP)-A fire attributed to a lighted cigaret today swept the upper floor of the Graystone hotel, burning three persons to death and injuring, two other guests. buildings and interconnecting tun nels since then until today, when we pierced through the snow co ver. The buildings are now com pletely buried in glacier snow and ice. We couldn't stay long inside, where temperature was below zero, possibly 10 to 20 degrees be low, while on top of the camp it is perhaps only 25 degrees I had lunch inside, consisting of a seven - year - old graham cracker. Icicles of beautiful crystalized design hung from the ceilings. The narrow tunnels are jumbled with huge stores food, pails, dyna mite, nails and junk. We found a couple of chickens and hams well frozen and in the galley there were steaks already cut, waiting at 71 and said only a few of those were seriously hurt. Three of the dead were not identified. The known fatalities: James Leroy Hall, Kansas City, Mo.: Bessie Diles. Richmond, Calif.; Pvt. Joseph Bernavich, 18, 15th and Broadway Sts., Rich mond, Calif.; Mrs. Erma Hall, Beaumont, Texas. The unidentified dead. Southern Pacific officials said, are a white woman, about 30 years old; a ne gro woman of 20 to 30, and a negro man of approximately 30 years. Highway Patrolman Jack Bor deau credited two soldiers Mar vin .Stansberry, Moulton, Iowa, and Orvis Humphrey, Kiddf Mo., with heroism in rescuing passengers. Bordeau said the two men, themselves hurt, smashed in windows and broke down doors of the over-turned cars and drag ged rqany passengers to safety. Bordeau said their prompt action probably saved the lives of some of the more seriously injured. Dr. Robert J. Dowds, Southern Pacific district surgeon, who ar rived shortly after the tragedy, said he saw one man's leg crush ed from his body by an over turned car, and another small boy with his arm torn off. Robert Crowley, 29, Miami. Fla., a combat war veteran, said, "I never saw such a mess," even on a battlefield. He had been con versing with a man across the aisle, Crowley said, and the lat ter was killed instantly. Texan Would Levy 100 Tax On Portal Pay WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 -fP)-Senator O'Daniel (D-Tex) today introduced legislation to recover for the treasury all money work ers may receive from portal-to-portal pay suits. The Texas lawmaker's bill also would allow employers to charge off on their income tax the full amount of any portal claims they are required to pay by court or der under the fair labor standards act. O'Daniel took this action after the American Federation of Labor and a CIO union joined in oppos ing anti - portal - pay legislation previously introduced. The AFL said it 'would deprive "millions of workers of their rights. The suits were mostly filed by CIO unions. The AFL leadership frowns on such court actions but takes the position that the legis lation is not the answer to them. Group Passes Excise Tax Bill WASHINGTON, Jan. 17- fP) -Legislation freezing indefinitely the .high wartime excises on li quor, furs, jewelry, theatres, transportation and many other goods and services was approved unanimously today by the house ways and means committee. The bill would continue the li quor tax at $9 a proof gallon, pre venting an automatic drop to $6 on July 1. The excise bill was hurried to the house floor, where quick ac tion is expected next week. Knut son predicted it would pass unani mously. The senate then must act. DO REN A DAM BIDS DUE PORTLAND. Jan. 17-(P)-A call for bids for construction of the Dorena dam and spillway a job estimated at $5,740,000 probably will be made February 3, Col. O. E. Walsh, district army engineer, announced today. only to be grilled when 30 men abandoned camp after spending 13 months there. In rooms each with a pot-bellied stove, there are notes scrib bled on the bare wood walls, a poster advertising the movie "Love Affair" starring Irene Dunn and Charles Boyer. Cans of peaches, socks hanging from raf ters, a big box of candy, cans of graham crackers, and memories which thrilled veterans of the Byrd expedition. I brought out to the surface a Tuesday, Dec. 3, 1940, issue of the Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, Okla., with news of Greek victo ries over Italians. The paper was still as fresh and white as the day it was printed. - "No. 253 Am all in f Pro Tern Capitol' ATLANTA, Jan. 17 -JP)- Ellis Arnall lost his temporary offices in the statehouse rotunda today as rival governor claimant Her man Talmadge took charge and Arnall promptly set up a capitol J of his own in a downtown office j building. I Arnall was barred from his ro ) tunda office, established yester day after Talmadge seized control of the executive offices which Ar nall had occupied for the past four years, by a Talmadge lieu tenant when he showed . up for work this morning. Reiterating his claims that he is the "legal governor" and that he was ousted from the statehouse by a "military coup d'etat,", the 39-year-old Arnall said he would function from the business sec- i tion office building "until the ! courts remove the pretender who j by force and storm troopers" de I nied him a desk at the capitol. Troopers Assigned Talmadge, 33, a former lieuten ant commander in the navy, made no comment on Amall's charges at a news conference but asserted "everything is quiet." He said earlier that four state troopers were assigned to Arnall on his capitol visit today because "the temper of the people is such any thing might happen." Rep. Jimmy Dykes, a Talmadge aide, blocked Arnall from trie ro tunda desk set up yesterday when Arnall .was denied entry into his former offices. "Jimmy, I'm governor," Arnall said as he asked for the desk. "You remind me of a hog," Dykes retorted. "You got your head in the trough and you just can't stop." Dykes Retorts "You have no more right to be governor than I have," Dykes re plied when Arnall asked "Have you taken my office?" Hisses and cheers echoed through the corridors when Ar nall, speaking to the crowd that surrounded him, declared that he was moving downtown "to func tion as chief executive" in order "not to discredit the people of Georgia and to create a disturb ance." Fog Blamed as Cars Derailed The derailment of eight cars of logs last night at Gerlinger station-, at the iunction of the Southern Pacific railroad's Dallas j and west side lines, was blamed by railroad officials on the fog and low visability of the area. The railroad's Salem yard of fice reported that the eight carsj were up?et when two trains sideswiped, one hitting the rear car of the other at a juncture in j the track. The accident caused no injuries to employes on either train, nor did it occur in an area whu5n would hold up highway travel, company officials said. They added that a wrecker had been called and predicted that both lines will be clear early this morning. Keizer District to Discuss School Consolidation Plan KEIZER, Jan. 17 Community growth and its possible bearing on the move to consolidate Keizer" school with the Salem dis trict, will be discussed at a tax payers meeting called for 7:45 p. m. Tuesday, January 21, at the school house. Herman Rehfuss is chairman of the board and other members are Andrew Beardsley and A. E. Waldorf. Genevieve Oldenburg is clerk. Keizer school census in Novem ber, 1944, was 656, an increase of 126 over the previous year. Twelve teachers compose the present school staff, an increase of three over the previous year. Ralph A. Nelson is principal of the school. QUICkTES 'Well, m admit your Statesman Want Ad said the Job was per manent bat mast ym pmi bars a all the windows: Price 5c Measures Set for Asse Tax bills proposing to raise an estimated $18,000,000 and a reso lution seeking to bar the closed shop in Oregon, will be intro duced in the 44th legislative as sembly within the next few days. Preparation of the measures was disclosed late Friday, follow ing a brief session of the state senate, and apparently presaged an early enlivening of the current assembly now one week old. Would Cut Exemptions Advance information indicated the tax bills, prepared by Sens. Earl T. Newbry and Eugene Marsh and Rep, Giles French all members f the state tax study commission would contain these provisions: Eliminating the state property tax. Reducing the state income tax exemptions from $1509 to $1000 for married persons and $750 to $500 for those unmarried. Repealing the personal property tax. Making the corporate excise tax a flat 6 per cent and eliminating property offset provisions from the corporate excise levy. Inaugurating a 10 per cent sales tax on liquor. Placing all liquor revenues in the general fund. Making the state tax commis sion responsible for the assess ment of forest lands. Giving assessors, instead of sheriffs, the jobs of tax collector. Ready for Monday The tax measures, which also may include a business tax, were expected to be introduced Mori day. Rep. William Morse of Pr;no ville said Friday he would intro duce a resolution in the house re garding the closed shop. Legisla tive approval would call for a referendum vote since the move would entail a constitutional amendment. Other labor legisla tion was being discussed, but some legislators said they were ready to follow Gov. Snell's tacit advice to avoid acti n on labor matters pending congressional moves. Also on the fire vere proposals to increase unemployment com pensation benefits to $25 a wee is for 26 weeks in any one year, instead of $18 for 20 weeks, and to eliminate the present waiting period. They were being prepared by the CIO and AFL. representa tives of those organizations seid. 11 New Bills in Senate ' Eleven new bills were intro duced in the senate Friday, in cluded one to place justices of the peace and constables on regular salaries in 'suitable" offices, bringing to 37 the total bills in troduced in both the senate and house during the first week of the session about two-thirds of the number ejitered in the comparable period two years ago. More than a score of bills al ready were known to be ready for introduction into the house Monday, however. AH daily ses sions hereafter are scheduled to start at 11 a.m.. with committee meetings scheduled earlier. Among proposals known to be in the making are bills calling for a sweeping reorganization of several state departments, and En other providing that the criminal ly insane shall be housed at the state prison rather than at state hospital. New Department Sought '! Some of the proposals would: Create a state department of conservation, combining the firrt commission, game commission and the state forestry department. Place revenues of self-sustaining state activities in the general fund, exempting the state high way, unemployment compensation and industrial accident funds. Have a single state tax com missioner, abolishing the present three-man tax commission. Combine the state banking and corporation departments. Transfer the state inheritance tax division from the state treas urer to the state tax commission. Many sports and commercial fishermen are expected to oppose? the move for the department of conservation, since neither would want to relinquish their present separate status. The plan to place revenues in the general fund would be supported by old-sga pension groups who have opposed the current arrangement whereby pensions come directtly from liq uor revenue. Follows Nebraska Plan The potential closed-shop reso lution. Rep. Morse said, would be modelled after the Nebraska plan, with this possible wording: "No person shall be denied em ployment because of membership in or affiliation with, or resigna tion or expulsion from a labor or ganization or because of a refusal to join or affiliate with a labor organization; nor shall any indi vidual or corporation or associa tion of any kind enter Into any contract, written or oral, to ex clude persons from employment because of membership in or non membership in a labor organiza tion." t Other lertslatnre pare t) CARDINAL SUCCUMBS LOS ANGELES, Jan. 17-Pr-Rodrigue Cardinal Villenueve, 63, of Quebec, Can., prince of the Catholic church who came here in quest of health last Tuesday, died of a heart attack today at Ramona convent in suburban Alhambra. mbly