The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 29, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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Qi
Warniii
Pulling Power!
The finest market place in
the Valley is the Classified Ad
section' of The Oregon States
man. Telephone 2-2441 from
8:30 ajn. to 5:45 p.m.
Tow COMPLETE Newspaper
On VC
Given to .
Russia r
By FRANCIS W. CARPENTEST
PARIS WVThe United Statesy
Britain and France served fine,
notice on the Soviet Union Mea
POUNDQD 1651
101st YEAR
M
immea
Expected to Reach 17
Freeze Slows Flood,
9 EDie, 7,000 Homeless
MARIETTA, O. P)-Freezing temperatures slowed the surg
ing waters of the Ohio River Monday night as the brunt of a flood
neared this Southeastern Ohio area, leaving nine dead and 7,000
homeless.
The Weather Bureau forecast cloudy' and colder with occa
sional snow flurries throughout Ohio Monday night and more of
CRT
3HD0
During and after the Civil War
currency (greenbacks) was quoted
at a discount relative to gold. The
first entries of deposits at the old
Ladd and Bush bank which opened
in 1869 were under separate heads:
Currency, Gold. In the adminis
tration of President Hayes, how
ever, in 1879 our government re
sumed payment in specie. In
other words the greenbacks could
be exchanged for gold. The slogan
at the time was "The way to re
sume is to resume."
Our modern financing has not
resulted in a two-level circulating
medium. Instead the Roosevelt ad
ministration .called in gold (it's a
crime to reiftur more man in
golds coin) - and that- left federal
reserve notes to circulate as cur
rency. There is no early prospect
of resumption of specie payments
in the United States, though it is
noted that Harold Stassen in his
campaign for president calls for
an "honest" dollar based on gold.
What the United States has been
spared is a discount on its money
in foreign countries. Of the cur
rencies of the great trading coun
tries it has been most stable. De
valuations have occurred from
time to time as foreign currencies
deteriorated in exchange for the
dollar.
We have now one example of
recovery to equality: Last week
the Canadian dollar came to parity
with the U. S. dollar. Some months
ago the Canadian government
threw off the shackles it had used
to protect its dollar. Previously
that dollar had been subject to a
discount of about 10 per cent in
U. S. exchange. After that action
the Canadian dollar rose till It
touched 100 with our own.
The trade between Canada and
the United States reaches large
Eroportions, over $5 billion total
totally the trade balance has run
in favor of the U. S., but recently
there has been a great flow of in
vestment money out of the United
States into Canada. This has gone
for investment in oil and natural
gas development, in
(Continued on editorial page, 4)
FCC to Lift Ban
On TV Stations
CLEVELAND (JP)-A three-year-old
government ban on permits to
operate new television stations
probably will be lifted in a month
or so, Wayne Coy said Monday.
However, Coy, Chairman of the
Federal Communications Commis
sion, said it was his "rough pre
diction" that no more than "10 to
20 applications for new stations
may be granted before the end of
the year.
Animal Crackoro
y WARREN GOODRICH
1 brewgfie the beat Home to eWor
ld e mey sfey far the sight.
10 PAGES
DOllS
JL
the same Tuesday
The Ohioi, out of its banks in
Pennsylvania, West Virginia and
Ohio, failed to reach its antici
pated crest at Wheeling, W. Va.,
but it struck hard at industrial
districts on both sides of the river
in that area.
Hundreds of persons refused to
leave their homes, although wa
ter ran through first floors. They
climbed to the second floor and
sat on stacked-up belongings.
Damage to homes and factories
was heavy.
The crest measured 43.8 feet at
2 p.m. at Bellaire, O., across the
river from Wheeling. It had been
predicted at 44 feet.
This slight weakness in the tur
bulent Ohio, however, held little
happiness for down-river cities
Extraordinary rainfall in Central
Ohio, topping four inches in 36
hours at some spots, gorged
Southern Ohio tributary streams
beyond capacity.
They soon will begin to pour
fresh flood water into the Ohio
well below the present crest.
Next major flood-threatened
spot below Wheeling and the Ohio
group across the river Martins
Ferry, Bellaire, Bridgeport and
Shadyside will be this bustling
college town, home of Marietta
College.
Flood stage here is 35 feet. The
latest crest prediction calls for 47
feet at 3 p.m. Tuesday.
Floods nearly immobilized
cross-country traffic in Southern
and some Northern Ohio sections
The State Highway Department
reported about 100 Ohio roads cut
by high water.
About 2,000 persons were home
less from Steubenville, O., south
to Wellsburg, W. Va. Another
2,200 or more were avacuated in
the area from Wheeling to Shady
side and Powhatan Point, O. Two
thousand more fled from their
homes here.
Three Girls at
North Santiam
Top Spellers
NORTH SANTIAM A 12-year-
old 8th grade girl, Marjorie Van
cil, will represent North Santiam
School in the
semi - finals of
The Oregon
Statesman-!'
KSLM Spelling." ;
Contest at Tur- V -ner
on Monday,! '
March 24. . K
Marjorie, who k
M hi
J,
of Mr,
A. M.
and Mrs.r Ow" V
VanciLI
1. box 23.1 I
route
a,ion. was Marjorie Vancil
t i f i e d as the
school champion by her principal
and teacher, Mrs. Grace Roach.
Her hobbies are reading and
music.
Second-place in spelling at
North Santiam School was won by
Betty Lou Bethell, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bethell of route
1, box 116. Aumsville. and third
place by Janice Wheeler, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wheeler,
route 1, box 27, Marion. Both Bet
ty Lou and Janice are 12 years
old and in the 7th grade.
Certificates of merit will go to
all three girls. ;
New Egyptian Premier
Given. Waftist Support
CAraO, Egypt (iip)-Premier Aly
Maher Pasha's new Independent
government got a pledge of sup
port Monday-rwith a big "if"
from the powerful Wafdist Party
it replaced at the climax of this
country's bloodied relations with
Britain.
The "if was that the new gov
ernment must follow the Wafdist
Policy for throwing the British out
of the Suez area and the Sudan.
Maher Pasha took over the reins
of a country under martial law
from the two-year-old Wafdist
government of Mustapha Nahas
Pasha, who was ousted Sunday
night by King Farouk after un
checked mobs put the torch to Cai
ro Saturday and lulled at least 62
persons.
The Oregon Statesman. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, January
Fire Toll
Two Bodies
Recovered in
Apartments
MINNEAPOLIS (JPh Firemen
Monday night recovered the bodies
of a small boy and girl, two of 17
persons missing and presumed
dead after flames roared through
a three story business-apartment
building here earlier in the day.
The bodies, those of a boy about
6 and girl, 3, were not identified
immediately.
Nine young children and two
teen-agers are listed on the Red
Cross missing roster, along with
six adults.
A wrecking crane worked seven
hours knocking down tottering
walls and floors before firemen
were allowed to start the search
for bodies.
Brilliant floodlights played over
the ice-caked rubble when crews
with shovels started their grim
task at 11 p.m.
Fire Chief Donald Malmquisf
said he was convinced now that
all the 17 missing perished in the
quick-spreading blaze. He said
his men expected to have a night
long task digging into the rear of
the building, where the roofs,
walls and floor collapsed into a
tangled mass of debris.
The mercury dropped to 14 be
low as the shovel-carrying crews
moved into the wreckage.
New Edition of
Gty Directory
Issued in Salem
The handy guide to who's who
in Salem and Marion County was
issued Monday.
It is the 1951 edition of the Sal
em City Directory, published by
the R. L. Polk Co. of Seattle,
Wash. The last edition of the di
rectory was published in 1949.
Compilation of the 1951 directory
has gone on since early last year.
No major changes have been
instituted, although there are dif
ferences in listings of names for
better readability. The publishers
do not guarantee the accuracy of
all information in the new book, a
statement due in part to the fact
that many people have changed
addresses or businesses since the
original compilation was made.
The directory has five major
departments. The alphabetical
list includes names of residents,
and business firms for Salem,
Aumsville, Aurora, Brooks, Chem
awa, Gervais, Hubbard, Jefferson,
Marion, Monitor, Mt. Angel, St.
Paul, Scotts Mills, Silverton, Stay
ton, Sublimity, Turner, Wood burn,
West Stayton and West Woodburn.
Publishers point out that this
is the only record in existence
which shows the name, marital
status, occupation and address of
each adult resident of the area,
and the name, official personnel,
nature and address of each firm
and corporation.
Other departments are a direct
ory of householders, which include
tenants of office buildings and
business places and a street and
avenue guide; a buyers guide, con
sisting mainly of advertising; a
classified business directory, simi
lar to that in a telephone book;
and the Marion County rural route
directory.
Copies of the new directory are
available to the public at the
Chamber of Commerce and in both
city and state libraries.
Violence flared again in the Suez
Canal Zone Monday when Egyp
tian saboteurs blew up a train,
wounding four British soldiers.
One Egyptian was killed in the
gunfight that followed.
The Wafdist-dominated Parlia
ment accepted Maher Pasha's non
party Cabinet and Voted to keep
the country under martial law for
the next two months.
Tanks and armored cars contin
ued to patrol Cairo's streets and
infantrymen were stationed at im
ported intersections. But rigid cur
few restrictions were relaxed and
passes were issued to newspaper
men and others whose work re
quired them to be on the streets
at night.
Washington Mirror
UMTto
Rate Hot
Debate
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Statesman Correspondent
WASHINGTON Congress will
tackle what may become the most
controversial issue in this elec
tion - year ses-
"' lsion when the
House this week
or next begins
debate on Uni
versal Military
Training.
The House
Armed Services
Committee is ex
pected to con
clude hearings on
UMT this week,
according to
A. Robert Smith Chairman Vinson
(D-Ga.), and draw up a final draft
for House debate.
Rep. Walter Norblad (R-Ore.),
a committee member, declined to
predict what form of UMT the
committee would recommend to
the House, saying there was great
division of opinion among the
members.
The committee has in the past
three weeks heard UMT lauded
by defense leaders as necessary
for America's national security in
the fight against Communism,
and condemned by farm, labor and
church groups as a threat to the
Nation's economic and moral
strength.
Farm Groups Active
The big three farm groups
National Grange, American Farm
Bureau Federation and National
Farmers Union joined forces
last week to contend that UMT
would drain off more manpower
from the national labor pool than
the economic vitality of the cqun
try can stand. They warned that
UMT would take millions of young
men for initial and refresher train
ing during the summer when most
needed on the farm.
The UMT plan recommended to
Congress by the National Security
Training Commission would place
each 18-year old into six-months
basic training followed by IVx
years in the reserves subject to
immediate call to active duty. Dur
ing the first four years of this pe
riod he would be subject to an
nual refresher training, probably
during the summer.
Congresman Norblad believes
that the threat of world aggression
demands U. S. military readiness
on the one hand, but that military
expenditures must be reduced on
the other.
UMT "Only Way"
"This can only be done through
a strong reserve program so that
the standing armed forces can be
reduced, thereby cutting heavy
military costs," Norblad explained,
"and UMT is about the only way
of getting these reserves."
Norblad said he thought there
were still many problems con
nected with a UMT program that
have not yet ben resolved, par
ticularly the question of when it
should be implemented.
Vinson has proposed starting
this year with a pilot program of
60,000 volunteers.
Sentiment in Congress appears
largely divided. A few are open
advocates of UMT, such as Sen
ators Wayne Morse and Harry P.
Cain, both members of the Senate
Armed Services Committee. An
other ,hard core is unalterably op
posed to it in any form.
Most Congressional offices, like
that of Norblad, report mail on
this issue from constituents is in
creasing and running anywhere
from 80 to 99 per cent against
UMT.
RITES FOR MRS. RILEA
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary
E. Rilea, 80, mother of Gen. Tho
mas E. Rilea, adjutant general of
Oregon, will be held at the Colon
ial Mortuary in Portland at 2:30
pjn. today. Vault entombment
will be in Riverview Abbey. Mrs.
Rilea died Friday.
State Tax Refund
List Released
Some 386 Mid - Willamette
Valley persons are due tax re
funds from the State of Oregon,
according to records of the
State Tax Commission. Names
of persons due refunds from
Marion, Benton, Linn, Polk and
Yamhill Counties appears on
page 4.
The list which Is printed in
today's Statesman is complete,
in so far as records show. No
additional refund list is
planned. They are part of 4,
354 persons listed throughout
the state, who will get a jack
pot of about $50,000 on income
axes paid during the past three
rears.
29, 1952
Still Free
if ;-.
(
4
W J
if
(
"4 -j.
WASHINGTON Judith Coplon,
former government employe
who was eonvicteS en a charge
ef spying for Russia, remained
free Monday as the result of s
supreme Court decision which
refused to review conflicting
court decisions in her case.
Court Rebuffs
Efforts to Jail
Judith Coplon
nonw,uiu m me au-
preme Court Monday rebuffed the
Justice Department in its efforts
io jan juaun opion on cnarges
of plotting to spy for Soviet Rus-
ia-
Justice Department officials
would not say what steps, if any,
they would take next. By their
own previous statements, their
task was much more difficult
The Supreme Court refused to
review conflicting opinions by
lower courts in the case of the ex-
fZT n?'rS
tned and convicted on related
.oiSca.
One of her convictions had been
set aside, and in the other an Ap-
peals Court held she also may be
entitled to a new trial.
"Judy" Coplon, 29, was con-
victed, along with Valentin A.
Gubitchev, a Soviet engineer and
U. N. employe, of attempted es-
pionage and conspiracy, after a
six weeks trial in the U. S. Dis-
trict Court in New York. The gov- ground floor space or a store, ln
orvt n,., nnKifxhau I stead of one-third as at present
turn to Russia.
She was convicted in Washing
ton of stealing confidential gov
;
emment documents to give to
foreign agent.
Convictions Set Aside
Conflicting opinions by the U. S.
Circuit Court in New York and
by the U. S. Court of Appeals here
set aside her convictions in the
two trials.
After the Gubitchev-C o p 1 o n
New York trial the U. S. Circuit
Court in New York set aside her
conviction and 15-year prison
sentence. The court said her ar-
A 1 T7Y-T A. 1 1
resi oy we rox a w3
legal, since tney naa no arrest
warrants with them when they
wwn.
At the same time, the Circuit
Court said her guilt was plain, and
she should be tried again.
rne justice uepartment sougm
from the Supreme Court and
lost a declaration that the JJew
York Circuit Court decision was
wrong.
Second Trial Held
Miss Coplon's second trial as
in Washington. She was convicted
on charges she stole confidential
government papers to give to a
E'Src'" "
New YorK sentence.
She appealed the theft convic-
tion to the U. S. Court of Appeals
here, and won a ruling that she
was entitled to a new trial if she
could prove that FBI agents Us-
tened in on her phone conversa-
tions with her lawyer.
This court said her New York
arrest was valid directly in con-
flict with the Circuit Court de-
cision in New York.
Washington Clergymen Invite
President to Graham Revival
WASHINGTON WVMore than
200 Washington clergymen joined
Monday in inviting President Tru
man to attend a giant revival
meeting on the steps of the Capi
tol next Sunday afternoon.
Evangelist Billy Graham hopes
to deliver the Invitation to the
White House personally Tuesday.
The 33-year-old preacher will
conduct Sunday's meeting as part
of his four-week evangelistic cru
sade here. He said he aims at
making it "the greatest demon
stration of Christianity in our
time."
The local ministers met with
PRICE 5c
City Employes to Shift to
Federal tSocial Security
By ROBERT
City Editor.
A move by city employes to
erage to federal social security
Council Monday night at City Hall.
At the request of an employes' petition the Council adopted a
resolution calling on the Public Employes Retirement System of Ore
gon to permit the withdrawal of those city employes who signed the
petition.
Under a 1951 state law, such
withdrawal may be accomplished
if at least 75 per cent of the cov
ered employes petition for it. The
Salem petition was signed by 178
of 230 regular employes. Not
counted in the computation were
the 88 city firemen who have a
departmental retirement plan ap
proved by the Salem electorate
some years ago.
Employers were represented be
fore the concil by Attorney Law-
rence Brown, who said the city
workers had studied the relative
merits of the pension plans for
many months. It was only recently
that the federal plan was amend -
ed to include state and city em
ployes.
The Council also approved an
nexation of a small area north
east of the city limits at Park Ave
nue and Center Street, provided
that electors of the area vote the
annexation in a special election
March 18. It will not be necessary
for city electors to vote on the
issue.
Public hearing was set for Feb.
25 on another proposed annexation
affecting an area along Stortz
Avenue just north of Salem.
The new-style tall mercury va
gtree Ughtg wiu installed
on downtown Liberty Street,
it was reported by City Manager
j. l. Franzen after the aldermen
approved h i s suggestion that
widening of Liberty Street be post-
poned indefinitely. Before trie one
way street plan went into effect,
the Council had tentive plans to
widen four blocks of Liberty Street
several feet, in which case the new
uh '"JZL 1 1
New bills intiduced nhi
eDto appeal the iaw for
SSSce of spial parking per-
t f delivery trucks; for allow-
ing an apartment zoning of class
j residential property including a
building of the old Poor Farm on
North River Road; with public
hearing set for Feb. 11; a bill to
change drunk driving laws to
cover driving on parking lots and
similar areas as well as on public
streets; for amending the build-
log code to anow mezzanines w
occupy space equivalent to nail tne
(Additional Council news, Page 2)
State to Slow
Commercial
Street Signals
Klnwinff of signal - controlled
traffic alone South Commercial
Street is planned within the next
few days, the State Hignway ue-
said Monday.
- adjustment will help heavy
trucks which have unable
to keep up witn tne 30-mue-per-
hnur nroeression. and also will re-
duce truck noise by eliminating
some stops and starts, it was
pointed out.
f. B. Crandall, state highway
traffic engineer, said the speed at
which the signals, from Mission
Street to the Legion Club, pass
traffic would be cut by three or
four miles per . hour He f aid this
will have little not'Ll.6"
on passenger car ov """'
n .the JAJ?, ?le
SrSUTald some .dJurtoKnt.
haye been made Qr are stu.
died at other spots in the one-
way highway grid activated last
October.
"
LEGION MEET JULY 25-28
PORTLAND (JP) The 34th con-
vention of the Oregon American
Legion will be held at Klamath
Falls July 25-28, Hollis C. Hull,
Albany, Department commander,
reported Monday.
Graham Monday morning and,
after asking divine guidance for
the President, his Cabinet and
Congress, decided to invite Mr.
Truman to appear at the big week
end demonstration.
Graham announced the theme
of the meeting would be world
peace.
He preached to an estimated
10.000 people in the National
Guard armory Sunday, asking
them to be on hand next Sunday,
each bringing five more persons
with him.
Graham started his evangelistic
crusade two weeks ago.
No. 309
E. GANGWARE
The Statesman
transfer from state retirement cov
gained the sanction of Salem Citr
$300 Million
Aid Given to
Great Britain
WASHINGTON (JPy-A S00 mil
lion dollar aid grant to Britain
"to support the United Kingdom
defense program" was announced
Monday night By Mutual Security
Director W. Averell Harriman.
The funds, from the new $7,328,
976 Mutual Security Act, will be
used almost entirely for "raw ma
terials and components" pur
chased up to next July 1.
Britain had asked for 600 mil
lion dollars, pleading that because
of her current financial plight,
the British defense program oth
erwise might have to be curtailed
unless U. S. aid were forthcoming.
Harriman said that as part of
the arrangement for the grant,
Britain agreed to supply an equiv
alent amount in sterling currency
to the maintenance of its defense
production program.
Portland Police
Seek Motive in
Death of Child
PORTLAND (vP)-Police arraign
ed Mrs. Jada Z. Kader Monday
on a charge of killing her 3-year-
old daughter, but admitted they
still had not uncovered any mo
tive. The 21-year-old woman sobbed
quietly at the brief arraignment.
Police said she still denies the
charge, and insists that' another
daughter, 4-year-old Vickie, ac
cidentally killed the 3-year-old
Sherrie by hitting her In the head
with a chunk of concrete.
Mrs. Kader was held without
bond. A preliminary hearing for
her is scheduled Friday. Held as
material witnesses are her step
father and mother, Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Sing, with bond set at
$2,500 each.
Later bail for the Sings was
lifted and they were released.
Vickie was removed from the
women's protective division and
placed in the Waverley Baby
Home.
Railroad Union
Rejects Offer
WASHINGTON 0T-VThe Broth
erhood of Firemen and Enginemen
Monday rejected an emergency's
board's recommendations for set
tling a two-year dispute with the
nation's railroads.
A union statement said it had
expected the board to "try to ram
down the employes' throats the
destructive proposals of the rail
roads and the unwarranted poli
cies of the administration and
that is exactly what it did."
The brotherhood had refused to
participate in the board's hear
ings, charging that board mem
bers were biased in favor of the
carriers.
Reds Reject
PW Exchange
MUNSAN, Korea UP) The
Reds Tuesday rejected the Allied
proposal for exchanging prisoners
of war and others.
An Allied spokesman said the
Reds agreed generally, however,
with the plan for giving priority
to the exchange of sick and
wounded if a truce is reached.
Mia. Precip.
32 tne
24 trace
42 M
trace
Salem
S3
47
Portland
San Francisco 19
Chicago , 11
New York 4S
Sf J
Willamrtt River IS fct
FORECAST (from U. S. weather bu
reau. McNary field, Salem): Cloudy
today with, rain beflnaing this after
noon, and occasional rain, tonight. Lit
tle chans In temperature, with high
today near 54. low tonight near 40.
Slem temperature at 12:01 un. to
day was 44.
SALEM FMtCIWTATIOM
Sine Start Weatker Tear. Sept. 1
This Year Last Year Normal
2SSS 2S.M 2X19
day that any Communist agxrc
sion against Southeast Asia woul
be put before the U. N. for urgent
action. j ' '
. Russia's delegate Jacob A. MaW
lk replied promptly ' that - Ue
warning was the result of a new
war plot that was hatched" tejr
President Truman and Prime)
Minister Churchill at their receet
Washington talks.
These declarations came during
debate in the Political Committee v
of the U. N. Assembly on a com
plaint by Nationalist China's T. ft
Tsiang that Russia violated tke
1945 treaty of friendship Withv
Chiang Kai-Shek. S
The committee will vote Tues
day on Tsiangs request: for the
U. N. to return a "moral jud
ment" against Russia. i
Cited Evidence
John Sherman Cooper; former
Republican Senator from Ken
tucky, strongly backed Tsiang'a
appeal for a judgments against'
Russia and cited whati Coepev :
called evidence to show the Sevief
Union had violated the treaty ox
friendship. Then he referred to a speech
Jan. 3 here by Soviet - Foreign-,
Minister Andrei Vishinsky. ;
Vishinsky had charged that the.
United States was ferrying Na-.
t onalist Chinese troops to Burau,
Thailand and other Southeast.
Asian countries and that . "these
illegal flagrantly illegal actr ef
the United States, we can be quite
sure, will be declared to be-defensive
measures against I China's,
aggression whenever events begiir
to take their course on the south- -.
ern borders of China." i
Charges "False"
Selwyn Lloyd, British Ministee
of State, said his government
hoped the "ominous passage" is
Vishinsky's speech does not meajk- '
that the Soviet government has" -
persuaded the Communist -Chinese
to undertake aggression in South-' ,
east Asia.
If it does, he said, he wanted it
clearly understood that 1 Britain
agrees with the United States eir
the necessity for urgent considera
tion by the U. N. ,i-'
Francis. LaCoste, French dele
gate, said his country .is .figh tin
a defensive battle in . Indochin
and any intervention from the ;
outside to support the Communist
forces would call for immediate'
intervention by the U. N .
FairviewHome
Inspected by
Control Board
Members of the State Board eS
Control spent a large part of Mon
day at Fairview Home where they
inspected several buildings mm.
discussed budgetary matters In
volving the next biennium. v ,
Dr. Irvin Hill, superintendent.
informed the bdard he has a jvait -lng
list of approximately 200 an
said it would be necessary to eree
one or possibly two ne build
ings to cope with immediate de- 1
mands on the institution.!
A new school building, on the
site of the old hospital structures
is now under construction an "
was expected to be complete!
late this year. The old hospital
was partly destroyed by fire.
' On Tuesday the board will
visit the Oregon State Hospital
to discuss the institution's prob
lems with Dr. Charles Ei Batesv
superintendent. Other state in
stitution heads also will meet witi .
the board Tuesday. :
Governor Douglas McKay salJ
the purpose of the conferences ?
with institution heads i to get ;
some idea of the capital outlays
to be-sought at the 1933 legisla
ture next January. Other institu-
tion costs during the next bien- :
nium also will be discussed. .
Dallas Man on ;
List of Missing
TOKYO (JP)-The Far East Ahr
Forces said Monday that; a Dal
las, Ore., man was aboard a B-23
Superfort that disappeared while
on a mission Into North Korea last
Tuesday. Listed ss missing- wis
the crew of 14, including CpE
James L. Bell, .Route 2, . Dallas.
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