The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 24, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

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    A-Scientist Doubts
U.S. Has H-Bomb
: - I'M
H v V i ' V. Vv I
; WASHINGTON Wi Dr. Vanne
var Bush, one of the nation's top
atomic scientists, said Sunday be
does not think the United States
has the- hydrogen bomb.
Bush, head of the wartime of
fice of scientific research and de
velopment, ; was Questioned about
the H-bomb on a television inter
view CBS "Man of the Week.'
He Was asked whether he thinks
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DR. VANNEVAB BUSH
Doesn't Think U. 8. Ha H-Bomb
the U. S. has the hydrogen bomb,
"I don't think we have," Bush
said. !The Atomic Energy Com
mission said only that we had an
experiment and that it was suc
cessful.
Bush was referring to last Sun
day's announcement by the AEC
that tests I on themonuclear hy
drogen i weapons had been con
ducted at Eniwetok AtolL
Bush, now president of the Car
negie Institute of Washington,
recalled that development of the
atomic i bomb was preceded by
years of experiments, saying "in
1942 we had an experiment and
In 1945 we had the atomic bomb."
"How practical it the H-bomb
will be they didn't . say," Bush
added.! i - : - '
Bush said' that the superbomb
or H-bomb would be of more use
to the! Hussions than the U. S. in
a war between the countries "be
cause 'there are many more con
centrated targets here than in Rus
sia I. v
PCUNDDD 1651
lC2d TEAR
12 PAGES
Thm Oregon Statesman, Salem, OrexjocC Monday. Havernber 21. 1JS2
nucr u
JCo. 244
2 on ifenrS (D.24 m A
n I
Gd
Rada
Seeks
Ghosts
in
British Haunted House
- HOVE, Eng. (yp-5unday "morning, a few minutes after the clock
struck midnight, five men tiptoed down the gloomy, cobwebbed hall
of Hove's 200-year-old haunted mansion, and began ghost hunt
with radar. - - .
Boards creaked and outside fog and snow swirled about the an
cient building on the bleak channel coast, whose ghost is reputed
to delight in moving paint. 'pots,
ornaments and other odd paraphe-
naiia through locked doors.
The five electronic - equipped
' spook trackers, all members in
good, standing of Sussex Ghost
Hunters, quickly set up a radar
screen and beamed it down the
. Hove ghost's favorite rickety pas-
j sageway.
Chief hunter Ted Henty taped J
vp doors and keyholes and flanked
the radar machine with cotton
. threads tacked to adjoining walls.
An assistants-Bruce Conen. eot
t his electronic magnetic pendulum
and divining rod into position.
Then the ghost hunters . settled
down and here is a reported log
of what happened:
12:12 a jn. Radar screen sud-
denly comes alive and blips (sort
of images) start to dance across.
One of the hunters lets go with
a camera flash bulb, but nothing
Is seen In the eerie light. Screen
continues to register. I
12:15 a.m. A. creak, is heard,
then ' a noise' like a cough. Feet
shuffle. Loud bang an radar ma
chine's beam shifted without be
ing adjusted. Silence.
12:35 ajn. Hunters turn on
lights, see nothing. Check ghost
trans, find nothing, visibly dis
turbed. ,!'' !
That's the repojt from Hove
mansion; where three caretakers
have been frightened out by the
strange goings on, and .which no
one would rent for ZO years.
May Head AFL
7 " : 7a4
i , , ? -
?' " , y
: . V
WASHINGTON George Meany
(above), secretary - treuorer of
the American Federation of
Labor, Is a likely candidate' for
president of the hare labor or
ganization. He - long has been
No. 2 man vnder William Green,
who died Nov. 2L (AF WIRE
PHOTO) -
Valley Industry
Feels Effects of
Power Cutback
Sharp cutbacks in Pacific North
west electrical power are being
felt throughout the Willamette
Valley with hints of personnel lay
offs unless some improvement is
realized.
Failure of rain and consequent
lessening of water power has ne
cessitated a 10 per cent reduc
tion in power use for industries
consuming more than 8,000 kilo
watt hours of electricity per week.
Some 15 Salem firms began this
cutback when the ruling by the
Defense Electric Power Adminis
tration was e fleeted last Monday.
In Salem Karl W. Heinlein, resi
dent manager of the Oregon Pulp
and Paper Mill reported Sunday
that for the month of November
"we are little affected by the pow
er shortage." Heinlein pointed
out that the 10 per cent reduction
is based on previous year, week-
by-week, production "and last
year, contrary to now, we were
operating on a seven-day week ba
sis. However, this will probably
change after the first of next
month," he said.
In Dallas, V. O. Williams, exec
utive vice president of the Ger
linger Carrier Company, explained
Sunday that success of their future
production, during the cutback,
hinges on the cooperation of resi
dents and businessmen to follow
power rationing in their homes
and at work "We are faced with
a meticulous situation of budget
ing power," Williams explained.
"We begin our day by reading the
power meter. When we've used up
our allotted amount of power then
we nave to stop operations, it
simply means that our work week
will be lessened, which may mean
layoffs."
- Williams explained further that
his company is exercising stringent
methods of conservation of power
in the daily operation of business.
Other firms in Salem-Who
reported sharp inconvenience
brought on by the cutback are
Ray-O-Vac, which has stopped
production of ammonium sulphate
in order to continue the output of
manganese oxide for batteries;
Oregon Flax Textiles and the Na
tional Battery Company.
To Aid Mother
(;. . . ' V
I
j i
HOLLYWOOD Jill Holllngs-
worth (above), 18. the Detroit,
Mich, girl whose dreams ef film
stardom were shattered a few
weeks ago with the arrest of
her mother -Mrs. Beatrice Hoi
Ungworth, on eharces of em
bending 825,000, . U back In
Hollrwood. She hopes to land
Job and help repay the money
her mother said she embesxled
to finance the blonde beauty's
film career. (AF WIRE PHOTO)
Blizzard Stalls
Rescue Posses
In Arizona
Iraq Rioters Set U.S. Building
Afire, Martial Law Declared
Bid Opening
On Wilsonville William Green
Route Job Set
Japan Reds'
Self -Defense'
Plans Seized
Services Today
TOKYO CP) The newspaper
lAsahi reported Sunday that Ja-
nanpsft notice have seized secret
Bids will be opened in Portland r j I Communist Party documents out-
this week on a big traffic .inter- COSCHOCTON. O (fl Ex ecu-1 lining steps to be taken "in a mill-
change structure uj oe nuiii w ttv members of the Ameri- tary struggle.'
Pacmc Hignway womues nwva can Federation of Labor will at
of Hubbard where the new Wil
nnville cutoff route will start, ;
The State Highway Commission
is opening bids on this and numer
ous other hiehway projects at its
Portland meetings today and Tues
Th 4iinptlnn work will Involve
a bridge contract for a lo7-foot
concrete grade separation structure
to carry the, West Portland-Hub-
bard highway under a new south
bound leg of the Pacific Highway,
tend funeral services Monday for
their late president, William
Green, and later entrain for
Washington to pick his successor
Tuesday. ! i
Green died Friday from a heart
ailment at the age of 82. He was
the second chief executive of the
ALF. ;- H-
The paper said police had ob
tained a 13,000-word mimeo
graphed pamphlet entitled "for
unification of ideology and action
in a military struggle.
The document urged Communist
cells and "self-defense corps" to
organize farmers and laborers for
armed uprisings when the critical
time arrives.
i fUUUiiA, Ariz. vr f resn
blizzards swept across Mogollon
plateau again Sunday, obliterating
tracks of missing hunters and
turning back rescue posses in the
rugged Arizona northland.
Hope waned for the safety of
four elk hunters marooned by the
snows a week ago. The known
death tooll stood at one.
The body of Melvine Tremaine
of Globe was found Saturday.
Reports that the body of his hunt
ing companion, Louis Nichols, had
been located were unconfirmed.
In Payson, Deputy Sheriff How
ard Childers received unconfirm
ed reports that four others were
missing east of Payson. He organ
ized a search party but the new
snows forced it back.
A iinai air-ground hunt was
planned Monday for four elk hunt
ers known to be missing in the
mountainous regions where tem
peratures tonight had fallen to
less than 10 degrees.
BAGHDAD. Iraq UP) Army
chief of staff Gen. Nur Aldin Ma
hmoud formed a new civilian cab
inet Sunday and took over rule of
Iraq under martial law after
rioting mobs set fire to a U. S. In
formation: Service building and
attacked two police stations.
At least 11 persons were believ
ed killed in two days of rioting
which began Saturday with de
mands for election reforms.
Police were driven off the streets
by j mobs before Gen. Mahmoud
was called upon by Prince Abdul
Ilah to take charge and restore
order.
Several demonstrators were
killed in attacks on two police
stations, and one of the stations
was burned down. Other mobs
stoned the British embassy.
Armored cars and machinegupn
carriers patrolled the streets of
Baghdad Sunday night.
Martial Law
A royal proclamation ordered
martial law throughout Baghdad
province.
The education ministry shut
down all schools in the' city for an
indefinite period.
The outbreak of violence Satur
day, in which one man was killed
and 53 wounded, forced the resig
nation of Premier Mustapha Al
Umari's cabinet.
Mobs first stoned the U. S. in
formation service office early Sun
day, then broke into it, dragging
desks, chairs, papers, pamphlets
and even stocks of automobile
tires and batteries into the street
where they set them on fire.
Office personnel took refuge be
hind closed doors and apparently
were not harmed, although the
building Itself caught fire sever
al times-
Police were unwilling to ' use
force and left Baghdad in control
of the rioters for two hours. Then
the Army was called out and
troops rolled through the streets
and appeared to be getting control
of the situation.'
Gen. Mahmoud announced in a
broadcast at 6 tun. that be had
taken over the reins of govern
ment.
Blase Kept Gelng
Many ' demonstrators remained
entrenched for a time in the U. S.
Information Service building. And
outside crowds continued to throw
all the material they could find to
154 Lost in 6
USAF Crashes
In Past 16 Days
Hopes for Rescue
Pinned on Weak
SOS Radio Signal
ANCHORAGE. AUxia tfV-A
huge C-124 GkbnaiEter with U
aboard disappeared Saturday cifts
ISO miles southeart ef here, and 24
hours later the only bop cf sur
vivors was pinned oa a rk ra
dio signal.
The Qrfl Aeronautics Adrria
Utration station at VaksUxa. Alas
ka, reported late Sunday It had
elrked un f 4t . t v
tirm vstnv -.. . . - ... . I - " uw torn
4icn iwivrw irr-ravu noumu cui snon au speculation aunoay i umaconal cistrras trr'mry mi
keep ablaze the huge fire they
suited in the middle of the street.
While this was going on, other
mobs raced to the British Embassy
and hurled stones. They also at
tacked the headquarters of former
Premier Al Umari's political par
ty. Popular dissatisfaction with.Al
Umari's government was aroused
over methods of voting in forth
coming elections, the date of
which has not yet been set.
Early Sunday the note, shout
ing "dom-n with foreign Imperial
ism and "down with forced elec
tions" careened on the U. S. In
formation Office and stoned IL
IKloihfmarni Declines
Position io Cabinet
By DON WHITEHEAD
Not Available
f
fW
vuc ui uie wu iucu must xucu-1 w-Y -n i
tioned as his successor, George UlUlter 8 Body Found
. . KO . i J - A. .1 TT I
The new leg west of and parallel ecutive Board meeting In Wash-n Jackson Lounty
TO UK x-aciin; xuguwajr iui suuui- lngton. n
bound traffic would be about .7 of J.'. J, ,
surer of the AFL made him acting
president! of the. federation ac
cording to its constitution.
Salem
Portland
San rrandsco
ChicMo
Nw York
Max.
49
- 48
89
47
SI
Mia.
14
3S
60
S4
Preeip,
J
JDO
.00
JDO
WUImmett BItct -4 feet.
a mue long.
Also up for bidding is improve
ment of Center Street by paving
a 26-foot width on the south side
of -the Center Street bridge and its
new approach, between Front and
Commercial' Streets, and paving
22V, feet twidth on the north side.
Gravel improvements of the street
between Water and Front Streets
also Is provided.
Another contract sought in the
bidding is for nine lights, traffic
signals and warning signs at the
junction of 12th Street and the
Pacific Highway south of Salem.
Animal Crackers
By WARREN GOODRICH
4 Men Charged
With Frequenting
Gambling Came
MED FORD (flVThe body of Ir
vin C Daley, missing since Oct
19 when he went on a hunting
trip, was found Sunday in the
Lake Creek area of Jackson
County.
Sheriff Howard Gault said Da
ley, 78, apparently died of a heart
attack.
FORECAST (from U. 8. Weather Bu
reau. McNary Field. Salem): Moatl
lair today, tonlcrit and Tuesday wit
alley fogs both momlnx. Continued
cool with th highest today near 4a.
lowest tonisht near 24. Temperature at
u:oi am. was as degrees.
SALEM PRECIPITATION
Since Start ef Weather . Year SepC
This Year
SJ6
Last Year
i4e
Normal
44
Jets Check on
TrumanPlane
ALBANY, N. Y. President
Truman's personal plane. The In
dependence, unknowingly sent the
U. S. air defense system here into
high gear for a Jittery 10 minutes.
iThe plane was spotted Sunday
mornlnff at New comb in Northern
New York by 14-year-old RonaM n T?Js
Hutchinson, who notified the fil-1 L UllOO 71 lAluS
ter center here. I
No flight plan for a DC- plane f?JM I.
had been filed with the filter cen- JJ WUl II IU ILUI
ter by the Civil Aeronautics Ad
ministration, so Jet planes were
sent up to check.
Jet planes Intercepted the plant
within 10 minutes and reported
back that it was the Indepen
dence. It had been sent to Ottawa to
return Secretary of State Dean
Acheson to New York for meetings
at the United Nations. President
Truman was not aboard.
; Defense officials here said they
believed the flight plans of The
independence. Wed by the pilot "EV-sS-. m.' 1.nn
before takeoff, were delayed for UOV -.XtingUlSilCS
'office at Ottawa.
night that he would become a member of President-elect DwlgM D. I
-isennowers new cabinet by announcing be could not accept an ap
pointment -oecause ox unusual circumstances."
Hoffman said after a conference with Eisenhower that he would
continue in his present post as president and director cf the ford
roundauon.
He did not disclose the unusual
circumstances that dictated his de
cision. But Eisenhower expressed
deep regret while indicating Hoff
man might be available for an ap
pointment in the future.
Many Conference
The Hoffman statement came
after Eisenhower had scheduled a
heavy round of Monday confer
ences which increased speculation
that his choice for secretary of
agriculture may be Ezra Taft Ben
son, 82-year-old Utah farm mar
keting specialist and Mormon
Church leader.
Benson was on the calling list
for a 2J0 pa. (EST) meeting
with the general and Is known to
have been in telephone touch with
Eisenhower since Saturday.
Backer el Taft
The Utah farm leader was a
supporter of Sen. Robert A. Taft
ef Ohio for the GOP presidential
Domination.
iiamnan s , decision not to re
enter government at this time w as
relayed to reporters by Eisenhow
er's press secretary, James C
Harrrty, after the Elsenhowrr
Hoffman meeting at the general's
residence on Momlngslde Heights.
This meeting at first created a
Curry of reports that Eisenhower
had offered Hoffman the post of
secretary of commerce in the Re
publican administration as some
thing of a reward for his work in
the early Eiebower-for-presi-dent
movement.
Hoffman was among the first to
ask Elsenhower then bead of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organiza
tion armed forces to return
this country and enter the presl
dential race.
He took leave of absence from
the Ford Foundation to help in the
Elsenhower nomination fight, and
he also helped to raise campaign
funds for the general.
NEW TOU Tail JWT
Preside at ef the Feri Fesada
Uea a 4 a le4er la the Clara
fcewer fer Presides t imirinat,
Sanday said be weald et fc
available at this time te aerre
ba a eahiaet peelU.
Marion Street
Bridge to Open
December 14
TOKYO UP) The Army news
paper Stars and Stripes poked
some gentle fun today at President-elect
Dwicht Eisenhower's
forthcoming Korea tour.
A cartoon pictured Ike In civil
ian clothes being shown the front
by an unidentified general.
A GI crouched in his foxhole
looks over his shoulder and asks
his mate: Tsst: Who's the civilian?"
w uiocrcle. xt was a dim tm
Bearings could be taken, g
Air Force authorities st Elmea
dorf Base brre. who earUcr in tha
day had listed the glaat plane a
lost and presumed to have crashed,
aaid the signal was like Uut -hida
could have come from e-nrrfrncy
equipment carried by ue C-134.
They eiutlond,
against undue hot iace ihm
"due" was so ilia j
Rubber rafts with whkh tha
Globeraarler was qu!rfd hv
-Gibson CUT radio trtnsmJtura
which broadcast eutomsUe SO
signals on the 00 kr. band. The
pUne was over the Cu!f ft Alatka
when last heard frrea. jt
It was the third UJS, irihtsry
air disastrr ta Alaska la If cari
ta vol ring SI men. and
throughout the world during t4
period. The six pla&ea rarrWd a
total of IC2 paswrrrs fd rrrw.
oca. One crash had tlttt same
ors. There is a total erf 1U crd
or missing. 3
A limited aesrth Sur.'isy, Kara,
pered by fog. ILxht raia and W
reinc turned vp on trd cf the
Clobemaner. wtich vanished on a
UD0-; f.lgtt from McChord
Air Force Ease, its L:ane reid
Taroma, Wash, Zlmr.
dorf Base at Anchorsxc
The huge, four-rrxt-it trsns.
port. largest la mUitarj um, ut
r-pond by radio at 47 pa
rST last fclgtit crrr tUldiirloa
Island, about ISO mik outherf
of here ta the Cult cf Alaska,
Oa feWale i
The Glcbemartrr. ccrstrd ly
V Military Air Tranr;rt Sen-ia
(MATS), wis Ejizt at I.DD3 ttM
altitude on achedule C xiours and
17 mlftutrs out of MrChord and
only 4f minute, front Anchor.
Then there was aer.ee.
From Ury Mtdioo tCad. V
Ut pUne's eourae look il ovre
about M t&Sltm of water and 10J '
miles cf Und deacribed by vrler.
an fiiers as araong -the most rug
ged la tha world." ii
To the rtght of it ipoute la a
mountain range studded wtia tows
trlng. glader-corerea 9 peakj ef
10.000 fret or more. On course era
smaller mountains ta ; aa almost
Impenetrable wUderoeaa.
I ftearck Ftaaea ft
Despile adrerse WTSther. Cm
search tlanes look to Uie air froct
El men dorf Sunday and snore thaa
a acore stood by. A search ef
Salem's new Ifarion Street
bridge over the Willamette Hirer
will open to traffic Dec If.
The date was announced Sun
day by Glenn Parson, bridge en
gineering division chief in the
State Kifhway Department.
At the same time as the new I area between irjdditoo Iia?l
Midge opens, ine prtamt cester I aa ue coast was be-ra by
street nver Dnoge vu oe cjoeea I uara rrora Km ik.
and, con tractors will ImmediaUiy Keanwhlla, ether Air Fcrra
tear out the west approach for tlanes continued their tntensiv
the rebuilding necessary to link hunt for a C-11S wVch isap
the two bridges into the Salem reared Nov. IS with 6 tama aboard
one-way traffic plan. on a 250-enCe flight tram Anchor
Earlier this month the Oty 1 age to KodUk. No clue to the Mp
Council had been Informed by the lag Boxcar's fata was found.
Four Salem men were arrested
by city detectives in a local hotel
room early Sunday morning and
charged with frequenting a gam
bling place.
One of the men, William Ralph
(Tex) Moore, was lodged in city
Jail in lieu of bail. Two of the al
leged participants in the card
game, Felix Eugene Riedel, 2475
Maple Ave., and Wayne John
Frank, 1365 Hall St, posted $150
bail.: The fourth man, Robert Ezra
Weaver, 847 Saginaw St was cited
to court. ! ;
The four men are slated to ap
pear in - Municipal court this
morning. -
City police records indicate that
about $110 was involved in the
game at the time of the raid. Po- ClZ"
uce aec lea 10 con nent va uic
methods employed in finding the
game, but said they had been
watching the situation for some
time. - :'! " i. ' : '
3 Def enHants at Czech Treason Trial Take
s Blame for Billion Dollar Economic Sabotage
By RICHARD O'REGAN
VIENNA, Austria WVThree de
fendants in Czechoslovakia's mas
sive treason trial of -14 former
Communist leaders confessed Sun
day billion-dollar economic sabo
tage which allegedly slowed the
development of the nation's war
oriented industry.
By these confessions, the regime
of President Klement Gottwald
found scapegoats for Czechoslo
vakia's failure to meet her prom
ises of war goods to Russia and
explained away the country's
drastic food shortages and cold
-1 j
"She soys I neglect her
209 TRUCKS BLASTED
SEOUL, UPh-U. N. Marauder
i bombers roaring low over North
1 Korea's twisting roads Sunday
night destroyed 200 trucks carry.
ing supplies to the Red front lines
I -their biggest nightly bag in a
1 year.
The defendants who accepted
the blame for the present eco
nomic crisis Sunday were Ludvik
Frejka, former head of Czecho
slovakia's State -Economic . Com
mission; Josef Frank, former dep
uty secretary general of the Com
munist Party, and Eugen Loebl,
one of two former assistant foreign
trade ministers on triaL
Nine of the defendants now have
confessed their guilt in customary
Communist fashion. At least one
has pleaded to be hanged.
Among his admissions. Frejka
accepted guilt for payment of 18
million dollars for the purchase of
a steel mill in the United States,
on which the U. S. government has
held up delivery.
According to reports. Czechoslo
vakia wants that mill as ransom
for the release of Associated Press
Correspondent William N. Oatis.
But the State Department insists
that the disposition of the mill "is
not and will not be connected"
with the Oatis negotiations.'
Oatis is serving a 10-year term
on charges that he war a U. S.
spy. charges the West calls ridicu
lous.
Frank, one' of the three non
Jews among the 14 defendants,
confessed - to sabotaging the na
tion's agricultural program, the
Prague Radio said. He also ad
mitted causing the death of sev
eral Russian and French fellow
prisoners while he was interned
in the Nazi's Buchenwald concen
tration camp, Prague said.
Frejka, speaking in a clear, easy
manner, as if telling a story which
did not concern him, admitted all
the details of economic sabotage
contained In the 14,000 word in
dictment against former Commu
nist boss Rudolph Slansky and his
IS fellow conspirators.
Weeping like a child, another
witness, Marie Svermova. a for
mer deputy secretary of the Czech
Communist Party, Incriminated
herself as a traitor when she testi
fied against the 11 defendants.
Once the Czech Communists
most influential woman, her testi
mony made It obvious she was
under arrest and may face trial
herself soon.
. Chcking through her tears, she
said, -Yes, I am guilty before the
party and guilty before the people.
and 1 De-
Fire Under House
With Garden Hose
A 12-year-old boy took the place
of his father, who was away on
business, Sunday and by quick
thinking averted a possible tragedy
by fire at his home, 1343 Baker
SL
The lad, Robert Idler, eon of
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Miller, and Ms
mother, noticed smoke seeping
along the walla and through the
floor of their home Sunday and
called the fire department. While
they were waiting for the fire
trucks to arrive the boy booked
up a garden hose, crawled under
the floor of the house and extin
guished the fire.
Firemen said the fire was caused
from an overheated floor furnace,
possibly due to faulty Insulation.
They attributed the actions of the
boy. a sixth-grader at Englewood
School, as primary in keeping the
damage merely to charred wood
rather than a badly burnt borne.
I betrayed the narty
.yed President Klement Oott- Fall FrOlTl PlaHC
She said she worked with Ru
dolf Slansky, former secretary
general and chief defendant, to
isolate Gottwald and keep him
from getting vital Information,
Indicating that the radio audi
ence should not be influenced by
her tears -the Prarue Radio conv
fncr.tator said. "Her repentance
was a false ooe.
Hurls JIan Slightly
DALLAS. Texas OVWalter a
Selman fell out of an airplane
Sunday but be wasnl hurt much.
The plane was on the pound.
Selman climbed a ladder with a
gasoline hose. He woke up at a
hospital where he was treated for
a slight cut and released.
state that the Marion Street bridge
would be open about the first cf
December. However, the finish
ing work now In progress and the
desirability of making the change
over of the bridret on a Sunday
have combined to produce the
Dec 14 opening date, said Pax-
son.
He said the General Construc
tion Co. of Portland, contractor,
still has about 20 men working
on the a-but-corp:eted bridle.
Meanwhile, work Is moving
along on the weruide where an
other contractor, Natt McDougaL
is rreparicg hixhway and coo
necUng structures for the bridce
system. When both are to opera
tion the Center Street bridge wl
carry the earlbound traffic and
Marion Street win carry the
westbound trade across the Wil
lamette. Preparing for the bridge chasge,
Salem Oty Council at Its meeting
at 139 tonight ta Oty Hail wl
consider trafSe resolutions which
hare been mommrnded by State
Highway Ecxineer 1L IL Bald
ock. These Include V--tiwtynri f
some cf the pedestriaa crociwa-U
at Markn Street IsterMCtio-s and
others where a beery volume of
turning reUrular traffic on one
way streets creates a dangerous
condlUoo for pedestrian.
The chain cf aerial disasters be
gan rov. 7 when ano'-her C-1U
carrying If mea crashed oa Sk
aUlirerthrone between bare M
Fairbanks.
Crashes ErWwod I
Exactly a week llr a C-IU
crashed la Korea, a'-j-g 44 irmL.
and the day following a 6-3
brought death to 11 snore la aw
other Korea crash. Oa Nov. If, 4
C-llI cracked vp r.tr talker
Mont, kg eight cf 21 cI
aboard.
The GlobmarLrr, j-rlpu a a
five-room house, wit bound t,
Anchorage, but the Or Force r.
fused to say wfcether. this was a
&&ai des-naUoa or a stewwse
point !
Carrying Air Force and Arnr- ,
personnel. It left McCSord at J
pjn. Saturday. ;j
It carried 41 tsvtrtr$ ar.4 a
crew of IL The rerrrs tcl4
d a doctor and arveral ar rw
cue rersoRatL who L4 Arctic rr
viral ecuipe-ect and clothi&g.
The McChord base rtieaMd tha
names ot these three crew
irOUCE FTIX OH CXOWD
NAIROBI. Kenya W Poce
Ered on a large crowd cf Kj ... j
I tribesrnea Sunday at Klrawa. '.a
ta the Fort Hall Reserve of Er.t-
ain'a stre-torn Kenya Co:--y.
kilUcg 15 Africans and wocalisg
17.
Cap- Kaonrth J. DmS, FT. Cm
aircraft coes andrr,! of Vae)
CaL
CapL Alger XL Cbecy, XX, Scat
pilot, of Lubec Ma i
Airmail t-C Cor4 K. tprsgwa
of Segulrry, Wash.
Names cf the otht crrw
bers and the tm .-!
wttxheid.
The CAinrUT U aMa-l la
the l?Ct'J Air Trartrort Orou,
The Air Force's lTct trar,
port rlsr, lje C-IK rsa carry
ID3 f-y ecrp! rtx-brt fe-x-,.
J