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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1951)
ysc.....26 0SC.....13 UCLA . ; . 41 Oregon.... 0 4 I usc.....2r California. 14 fflinbis . . . 27 Indiana ; . . 32 OhioState.10 ..16 Stanford . . 21 Santa Qara 14 L9 OA Texas .... 14 (Complete List of Score on Sports Page) Weather Max. Min. Precip. Salem Portland San Francisco M 4S 57 47 , .16 63 48 .00 54. 38 V .05 YTvC Chicago Willamette river -J feet. FORECAST (from U. S. weather bu reau. McNary field. Salem) : Partly -cloudy with a few light showers this morning; gradually Increasing cloudi ness with light rain tonight. High to day near 62 and low tonight near 48. SALEM PRECIPITATION Since Start of Weather Year Sept. 1 This Year Last Year - Normal 8.11 " 6.56 2M Tha Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Sunday. October 21, 1951 PRICE! 10c 101st YEAR TWO SECTIONS CO PAGES No. 207 Homes Auctioned to Clear Bypass Route L&G . . 1 .41 7fflamette 12 Arkansas yasningi JOisr ysfia ' ' ' " ' ' , ' ' .. Gears. I tat Grewta af OrtgM . i ...- - It' i ---V .-. i POUNDDD .1851 .":" -'5 - 'l ' : H , .-. .. . . . ourns: if i J' red otp BY NATE POLOWETZKY ji MTJNSAN, Korea, Sunday, Oct. 21-(AP)-An offi cial release said United Nations and, communist liaison officers reached an "agreement in principle? today on terms for renewing the Korean armistice conferences. The U.N. announcment said the two sides had worked out both a "basic agreement? as well as "mutual understandings" to govern the full scale talks aimed at stopping the fighting, i This agreement was reached at the 11th meeting of the liaison of ficers at Panmunjom where the armistice talks are to be resumed. The officers settled today the only remaining isue that of allied planes flying over I the neutral zones. i To Sign Agreement The .two liaison teams will meet tomorrow to sign the final agree ment . ; i The agreement, if finally adop ted, would permit full delegations from both i sides to .get together in a renewal of the talks sus pended by the communists Aug ust 23. I ..- . . The U.? N. command said its liaison officers had introduced the English-language texts of the bas ic greement-and of mutual under- satndings at this afternoon s ses sions. 1 J Other Versions The communists are expected to provide Korean and Chinese versions at 1 8 a. m. tomorrow (3 p. m Sunday, PST). The two sides Saturday agreed on a security corridor astride the road to Panmunlom. where re- thr manners. . I newed armistice talks would be iAmericani'are 80 busy seelngj hed. (Map n page 6). I Marlon county taxpayers can ex- thines with their-own eyes that At the i Saturday session, the ect to receive their property tax often they att to realize that they I communists accepted a U. N. com- statements during the latter part are being observed ana stuaiea, i promise proposal to establish a J of this week, it was indicated Sat too. ; One or two Americans in 1 4uu-meter wwe (7-yaro saietyiUrday. village in Dalmatia are a curiosuy, zone along the road uniting ran-p i. wilj give approximately and something 01 a tarny m munjom wun rea truce neaaquar- & k for payment in time smaller communities in i Italy (ex- ters at Kaesong and the aUied f 3 r 'ceni disc0Unt cept ior me reium ui . tl,r' -ti T. "-"" v T I granted up to November 15 tives) ana ouwr . f" ?ZZrV T Statements cannot be mailed out Sev wear how they act must be- Agreement was reached earlier until the complete tax roll is turn they wear, now wyau oiJnn ?ho aetaM5e,Ter,t f cirit I ed over to the sheriffs collection SoTtl Xr hey tova taken he r zones of the assessor. Mailing will hosts alter tney nave v9Knn, -nH M n n e n n with . be about two weeks earher this departure. 1,000-yard zone around the circus year than last. .one iecn" u"""h7-t tent in Panmunjom ! where the The record levy, whose details correspondence to e Mchester hateenot yet been announced by Americans are the world's fore most travelers. They have the monev. and airplanes have short ened the time required, if not the exrjense. for travel. Exchange rates are favorable for Americans to go abroad, and so adverse for foreign ers that few of them can return the visits. We have Americans running all over Europe, west of the Iron Cur tain, visiting Asia (except China), the Pacific islands ana Ausu-aua and rfoinff the continent of Africa. They are eager to see how other rwvmlM live: and are welcomed abroad for their dollars if hot for ; . - - - 4 .y r. . .... .......... . fi. -. ' . v. f.-- ,. . " . -, - w- ' jCL" --r- ; ;je - p10 ' ' - f.J " '-Tr? wm... $1 3 Billion Sp enton Last fa SoIonsQose Session Which Started Jan. 3 ' ' I " : 1 - r . Sen. Clark ' Appofnted An auction of two houses by the state i highway commission drew a big audience but few bidders Sat urday. Auctioneer Claude Kilgore is shown knocking oown ine nouse tinsei; ior o neaiior Claude Murphy. A second house went to Jack Henningsen, 3115 Willamette dr. for $1700. The buyers must relocate the homes, now on the right-of-way for the proposed truck bypass just east of Salem. (Statesman photo). ' i Marion County Tax Statements Expected Soon Willamette Near Top as Producer of Scientists Reed College Heads list of 438 of American students visiting Europe. It is a factual and friendly report by one who served inetrartnr for a croup returning to the United States on the Dutch steamer Volendam. Comparing this year's students witn tnose 01 isu , --A the correspondent found that they MgJ aJ gj)7()U ,r. much less interested in poll-1' T V V- Value of Loot in Stayton Theft the assessor, will be paid in a new location. The collection office was moved a few months ago from the courthouse to the public school of fice building (old high school) -to make way for a new circuit court, It now is in room 115, available through either the Church or Mar ion street entrances. Harold Domogalla, chief tax deputy, said he has added three TTa writes: ; ,t TtrorP Theft of $769.43 mostly in checks, , T" Thpv were avid and a varied haul ox meat ana extra clerks ior preparation ana .T7, ni,t the Marshal smokes from Girod super market collection of the statements. The 'SertsociaUsmi in Stayton was being investigated work will be speeded this year by Plan, the effect oi soaausm upo Saturd by M CQunt her. d h register which ar. JUirope, uie -;llfr, npnntv Larrv Wrieht. Uivnl inct - the rush was ending thi rnrnt or na.iv. uic 1 - . - . . . - - . - uwuj,-. r " .u'.iJ Trie store was enterea oy DreaK- last vpar. ivVntti. I rne store was enterea Dy DreaK- strange oodol, etU- locfc tiiria rir linvernmcuu w v. " i, z j- j 1 1 minorities. They .began to ex- Jg-Sia Popcorn to DlSCUSS tnrinn iiifit uwu - mini it w vnnr whether (Coritinucd on editorial page 4.) Detroit Man Put In Jail for Sitting On American Flag DETROIT, Oct. 20-GTVA man whom police said sat on the American flag to keep his clothes from getting dirty was sitting In Jail today. Poiic arrested Orvffle Wallace 29. of Detroit, after they saw him In his parked car with the flag narpfiillv tucked beneath him as a seat cover. He was charged with defaming and desecrating the flag. Police said Wallace explained he used the 4 by 8 foot flag to keen his clothes from getting stained from the-dirty car cush ions. , i Man Accused of Bilking Ticket Taker at State Fair work Saturday morning. Only about $51 of the loot was in cash. The merchandise stolen included 80 cartons of clgarets, a box of cigars, three or four boiled hams, two or three large cans of pork and an 13-pound turkey. The money sack ana tne zo checks wore discovered by work I men at Big Cliff dam site on the North Santiam river Saturday and School Condition j Statesman Newt Service POPCORN Question of consol idation of Popcorn school with the Salem svstem will be dicussed in a meeting at 8 pjn. Tuesday in the school house. The meeting for general discus sion of the question was called at returned to the market by state I Popcorn Community club meeting police, Wright said. I Friday rugnt. PORTLAND, Oct. 20 (jP) Reed college has turned out more scientists in proportion to its male enrollment than any other college in the nation. That was the report today of the; Journal of Higher Educa tion, an Ohio State university publication. ! Willamette university of Sa lem placed 14th on the list of 438 colleges. The Journal said Reed pro duced 11.1 future scientists per 100 male graduates from 1032 to 1941. Willamette had a rate of 5.2 per : 100. A scientist is defined in the study as a person earning a doctoral degree in any of the natural sciences. There' were no institutions In the west, other than 1 Reed, ahead of Willamette. WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 -W)-The 82nd congress quit for the i year tonight, voting $13,133,150, I 952 in appropriations as its swan j song. ; It had been In session since last January 3, barring recesses, and will meet again next Tanuary 8. In the sometimes busy and some times idle final day, congress com pleted action on: A $7,328,903,976 bill to finance military and economic aid for non-communist nations. A i $4,128,000,000 military con struction bill. And a $1,676,246,976 supple mental bill to help run the econo mic controls agencies and; various defense activities. In the meantime, President Tru man signed the $5,691,000,000 tax increase bill that congress sent him yesterday, but said it wasn't enough. He said he would ask congress in January to come up with better tax legislation. (Story of tax bill on page 2.) House Speechless Today saw little of the hoopla and high jinks that marked other final adjournment days, but there was Dlenty or speecn masing However, after almost 10 hours of oratory, the house became speech' less there were no speakers at all wanting the floor at 5:30 p.m and the members sat around wait ing for the senate to clean up some final details. Finally, the house members got tired and adjourned at 5:46 p.m. The senate lingered on, with Senator Neely (D-WVa) scolding senatorial "windbags." "The Lord laid down his entire law in the Bible in 77,692 words, he said, but the congressional rec ord of this session totals 11,780,000. "We have wasted our time blow ing hot air here from morning to night," he said. Finally the senate adjourned at 6.36. The great overshadowing - sub ject cf debate during the year was how to strengthen the United States and its allies against Rus sian communism. Draft Ace Cut In addition to the huge defense and foreign aid appropriations, the session lowered the minimum draft age to 18, provided for a svstem of universal military train ing in the future and extended price-wage and other controls on the home front. However, the control bill was far from what Mr. Truman wanted, and congress left town without making chances in it which he kt k curxm-priM nn a vent a recurrence oi Tiaay morn-1 asKecu AOniHUlUil, wv. u vri i , . , . , . ' I nn nnl m : -! j recent "neasant revolt" in the So- mI Qua- UT- Aivm . graves ine ,Oi:o,uo,io ioreiKu iu E?r..i!- m and his scientists won't want that bill passed today compared with l ceuuBi -nsum iuux". . ui I i: J I niA Tr,,m,n'. rvnt frvr LtTviJ! CL -Lj,. t tn;nf o mn-w ti be spent on the mutual security break in Russia in a decade. tower set in a carefully asphalted Program in the fiscal year ending The uprising reportedly came in section of Yucca flat. The haraer ,aM T5lA.,ffct :hn Ka79kh:tfln mrfars Is MnMted to reduce dan- ivwc, lt-Bmv,,..v. uua u0mu i - i x I stt1sl fTAff QAi m collective farm peasants clashed ger of radioactive oust, with? communist MVD troops Troops from nearby Camp Des carrying out forced requisition un- ert Rock will not be employed In the first test WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 -- Gen. Mark Clark, an Episcopalian who liberated Rome from the Germans in World War II, was ap pointed by President Truman today to be the United States ambas sador to the Vatican. . . i The selection brought a prompt blast of criticism from many pro- testanf church leaders on the ground that the church should be kept separate from the. state. T . cf i ? i 1 ft 1 V vC " SS; jK.; - , v-y.f. .r:;.i': v , J - ::-:V:::y":":.:-:::: V . ' ' " - GEN. MARK CLARK 'Liberator' Returns Bkaver Seen hi Mill Creek A "basebaU bat with eyes" turned out to be a beaver, swim ming; in Mill creek near the South 23rd street bridge, it was reported to The Statesman Saturday night by a nearby property owner. The man. who declined to give his name, said he soon revised his first estimate of the animal, revealed by light from his flash light; He and several neignoors watched the animal for some time. He was sure it was a beaver, he said.! althoueh the baseball bat appearance was a fit description. 'Peasant Revolt' - In Russia Reported Atomic Test Blast Due in Nevada Today LAS VEGAS, Nev., Oct. Atomictest directors returned to day to the Yucca flat site to make final preparations for a Sunday morning nuclear blast. The weather forecast Indicated clear and calm conditions, favor able for the first explosion In the atomic energy commission's new est test series. All electrical circuits In the complex detonating mechanism were carefully rechecked to pre vent a recurrence of Friday morn ing's dud. Dr. Alvin C. Graves der a new Stalinist farm policy. , World Trip Convinces Dr. E. Stanley Jones In Salem on Speaking Tour, War JNpt Imminent The joint AEC-army maneuvers, it was learned reliably, probably will not come until after several $816,727,304 of carry-over funds from fiscal 1951 which ended last June 30 so that more than $8,000, 000.000 will be available. In one of its first actions today the housft overrode. 223 to 53. Pre sident Truman's veto of a bill to help certain war veterans buy preliminary detonations perhaps I automobiles. The bill now becomes extending through next week. I i w. since the senate voted to over- I ride yesterday, 55 to 10 far 1? x T 'L11-f I more than the two thirds majority ruuiuuu inutile necessary. nished .President .xruman ' in announc- 1 ing the appointment said he' acted , j in the interests of "diplomacy and ! humanitarianism" and 1 to coordin ate the struggle against commun ism. , - ' ' '. - -. ; ' )-. Clark disclosed . that he had agreed to take the post several" weeks ago after the president had ' called him to the White House. Mr. Truman told him, Clark said, at Fort Jackson, S. Cy ho : considered the position a "highly x important one. f ... Clark said he was pleased and honored by the appointment. The appointment was announced a few hours before the senate ad journed until next January. It took no action on the nomination, ' An interim appointment would enable Clark to take j the Vatican ' post in the meantime. I The reaction of some of th Protestant leaders to the sending : of an American ambassador to thi Pope was sharp, j-4" Dr. J. M. Dawson, executive secretary of the Baptist public affairs committee, called it "per- : haps a frantic bid for holding machine-ridden big cities in the ap proaching hot presidential race." He said it was "disruptive of na- tional unity." I Said "Logical" Francis Cardinal Spellman, a . leading spokesman for the Roman Catholic church in the United States, said in New York that hm was very pleased. He said that the Vatican and the U. S. held 'identical objectives of peace" and it was logical to have a practical exchange on how to achieve it The United States had consuls or ministers to the Papacy from 1798 until 1868, when congress eur- off funds for the .mission. It has Atom Breeder Plant Fii At Arco, Idaho WASHINGTON, Oct 20 - (JP)-A new atomic researcn jremuurcui known as an experimental breeder reactor has been completed by the atomic energy commission at Arco, Idaho, congress has ; been toia. , f i The senate-house atomic energy committee said in a formal report I never had a full ambassador there, thatthe new reactor "went crlU- I although Myron C Taylor served pal" a few weeks ago. I as nersonal renresentatlve of I "This last," the committee said, presidents Roosevelt and Truman "even represents a kind of land- f rorn 1940 until last January 18. mark, since, before Start-up of the experimental breeder the reactor of most advanced design and per formance operating in worm America was the Canadian heavy water nile at Chalk River, Ontario. ... m it a. i "The committee nopes xnai never again will it be truthfully said that the reactor or most ao vanced design and performance nrrates anvwhere but in tne United States." The reactor is a sort of atomic furnace. Rec Durham (D-N. C.) vice chairman of the joint committee, in discussing the reactor program, told the house the new experi mental breeder reactor at Arco would furnish valuable informa tion about possibilities of making more active material than is actu ally inserted in the machine. 1 The so-called breeder process has immense significance both for military and peaceful, purposes, Durham said. j In addition to mentioning the exoerimental breeder reactor, the committee .report commented briefly on the land-based proto- . 1 t i : He had a personal rank as am bassador but his presence at Roma never constituted! formal dkolo matic relations. " Taylor, a New York financier, - i and Clark, who commanded in Italy during World War II, ar , . both Episcopalians. Clark is now . commander ; of the " army field forces, with headquarters at Fort Monroe, Va. i Said "Regrettable'? Dr. Frederick Reisslg, executive secretary of the Washington Ted eration of Churches, and a United Lutheran minister, said Mr. Tru man was driving "the' major re ligious groups farther apart" Ha said it was all exceedingly regret table, especially that Mr. Truman "has so little regard for the feel- -ings of the majority of the Amer- ican people. 1 The Rt Rev. Henry K. SherrilL president of the National Council of Churches of Christ in thm U.S.A., said at Greenwich, Cenn- that the appointment "is bound to 1 result in unhappy controversy." He said he hopes and believes tbatj this unwise proposal" will ba type of a submarine reactor being withdrawn, ."or defeated by tba developed at Arco. ! senate. By Winston H. Taylor Church Editor, The Statesman 'I don't believe we're going to co to war." althoueh the world I may get to the edge of the abyss,' Dr. E. Stanley Jones said Saturday as he arrived to open a preaching mission in Salem. 1 He will speak in First Christian church at 3 p.m. today and at 7:30 p.m. Monday through! Friday, all interdenominational, unaer spon- sorshin of Salem Council of a Salpm man accused of bilk-1 Churches. ing a fairgrounds ticket taker of J Just: recently returned from a S500 during tne lyau siaxe iur was 1 worm -tour auu uw being held in lieu of $2,000 bail United States on an evangelistic Saturday. schedule, ur. jones viewea me wniiam Hoiiinff SDencer. aiuiwona situation in ue utni w Judson st, appeared in district! 32 years as a missionary, mostly court Saturday mornlnff in custody I to India, i of two city detectives, who made! The hope of avoiding war Dr. the arrest The complaint was I Jones saw as the-worid powers slimed bv th ticket taker who realization that atomic conflict says he handed over the money to a man representing himself as the collector of receipts to be trans ported to a bank. Spencer pleaded Innocent to the charge and preliminary hearing was set October 27 by District Judge Val Dt Sloper. would bring ruin to all. He be lives the solution to the problem is world government Just finished with successful week of preaching in Vancouver, Wash-, on bis tour. Dr. Jones said the ereat trends In the U. S. today are a moral and spiritual sax and an undercurrent of spiritual hun ger. In reaction to the jormer, he believes, more people than ever before are searching for moral help and "a lot are finding it" As part of the former trend, ne mentioned and deplored the fear and distrust created by "witcn hunting" by such as Sen. Joseph McCarthy. Individual situations as Jones saw them on his world trip: Japan "The ripest evangelistic field for the church in 100 years" with the whole nation seeking a new faith. He reported more than 22,000 decisions for Christ in his three months there, and said Sa bura Kurusu, former Japanese oeace envoy, has been baptized as a Christian. But communism also is moving in on defeated Japan. India. The nation "hasn't done badly" with Independence, hav ing to weather such potential ca tastrophes as revolution, civil war. division, loss of 10,000,000 popu lation, mass rioting, death of Mahatma Gandhi, father of the country. Thoueh not committed to east I or west, India's Pandit Nehru "in wardly belongs to the west" but feels I his roles is as mediator ior peace. Nehru is the world's "most honest man in public life," Jones feelsj . i The country's recent tightening of press regulation was aimed, said the missionary, at such communist-line papers as the Bombay Plays Overtime reck Leads to Capture of State ren Lseapee onmanap inarge FALLON, Nev, Oct. 20-(ffV-A VANCOUVER, B. C Oct 20- (CP) - Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philm reached the Uni- Blitz; but the government doesn't versitv of British Columbia sta-1 ,f?t7Vl v, iTo tv,P want to do away with legitimate dium today" just as an exhibition capture cf an Oregon prison es criticism. I American football game between I .- irWr-inninr n 14- The Christian opportunity was urc Thunderbirds and Eastern I r;,r.,;' 'r ' never greater than now in India, Oregon college ended. rr T Joan Hutchinson for the church can preach with- large, crowds and heavy 5 rAtSmS out the embarrassment of tape- traf f ic slowed the procession as it JX Tkidnaned by 31- 'J 3? went from Stanley to Queen J1(ft.!SL KSwhb KB'sir 0i ""rjSvw pt Se E Mo utnaMj-uue, wj auxpiiacu i hn.,r behind schedule. thati west Germany was so well off economically, with an air of comeback, and more food than in Britain. With probably not more than 5 per cent of east Germany gone over to communism, that ideology may have met its first psychological defeat, coming up against the ' German Protestant conscience. Tear and insecurity are the country's outstanding im pressions. However, the teams played 10 minutes of exhibition football for the benefit of the royal guests, who received a tremendous ova tana ranch. -I went with him because loved him," the girl told sheriffs officers today. t. The couple was married at Reno tion as they entered the stadium. I under ficticious names on August . , x m 4.mmu) 1 27. three days after Joan was re- stadium, and. another 3?000 were ported JSPSXZS-. crowded outside the gates. The regulation game ended in . . . J a 13-8 Victory ior in xauauw birds. as 18 and be said he was 26. In Salem, prison authorities said Anderson had "walked out for a cup of coffee" last May 18 while VATICAN CITY, Oct. 20UP)-A Vatican spokesman said -tonight high Roman" Catholic circles ara pleased by President Truman's de cision "to establish a diplomatic1 relationship with the Vatican." The nomination 01 ten. Marx W. Clark to be the first full-rank- working as trusty on swing shift " VaeTa stir botk he : and in the prison identification lapora- where an can -dip- tory. tie naa oeen gr f' homat described it; as "a bolt from sion to eo for a cup of coffee at . . ... . the guards' jness hall outside the "f5 U1UC' walls but lailea to return. 1 gi XTil (He was received In 1941 from 1 1 .rUSll Oil IUI1S Klamath county to serve 10 years - - for manslaughter. Anderson had Portlana JLOUDie Keen wii namlMl find both times I ? - a - Hoiations I EUGENE, Oct 20 -ih- A ear 1 i...nn nA9nwhiii rielnffland a truck crashed head oa tw held in county jail here by Sheriff! miles north of Ybncalla on Wgh- n v mm Ktawart on a rldnaD-1 way VV toaaj, aujuuiit rviuuu . mni (tciioH at Rnzpman. I counle. ; t : a nw tsVm I ntn mstnv I Drvmire. 64, and .his wife, last night after -his car rammed beth, 15, occupants of the car. Pe- v annfW mainfn rlll.l lK Saia urjiuiv?vvi.wjj -mmm rutssins another car when tha dauriiter. The victims were Mrs.lciasn occurred. Emily Allman, 81, and 13-year-old Nadine Bliss. 1 Bert L. gastham, Portland, wa unhurt. - ' 1 y 1,