The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 31, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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    Taft in Coma; Family
Called -to His Bedside
OUNDBD 1651
103 YEAR
roaDCDura
In various congressional inves
tigations a procession of witness!
es have refused to testify, talc-
ins shelter under the Fifth
Amendment which reads:
"No person . . . shall be com
pelled in any criminal case to
be a witness against himself."
Gangsters, cheats and suspected
Reds have taken advantage of
this exemption and kept silent as
to their activities and associa
tions. Often it has been difficult
to see in what possible way they
might incriminate themselves by
answering some of the simple
questions asked them. In quizzes
into alleged subversive activities
witnesses have learned to parrot
Tifth Amendment" from the
start o, the questioning. In this
way they avoided being cited for
contempt for their silence, be
cause courts have ruled that such
resort to the amendment is not
a case of contempt
In the effort to get around
the exemption of the Fifth
Amendment and force witnesses
to testify, Senator McCarran of
Nevada has for a number of years
been pushing a bill to give con
gressional committees power to
promise immunity from prosecu
tion to- witnesses. Thus a balky
witness could be assured no crim
inal proceedings would lie against
him if he testified. If he then
declined to testify he could be
cited for contempt.
Late in the session of July 10
the Senate, without a record vote,
passed McCarran's bill after it
had been amended to require first
the assent of the attorney gen
eral or a majority vote of the
House or Senate if such assent
was not given in a week. Ten
Senators rose to say they
(Concluded on editorial page 4)
Reds Step Up
'BeKindTlaii
For Austrians
VIENNA, AsutriaS m The Rus
sians announced Thursday they are
going to start paying their owp oc
cupation costs in this country Aug.
I, as the United States had done
for the past six years.
Austrian officials speculated this
drastic concession on the part of
the Russians may mean a Soviet
step toward settling the five-year
deadlock j over an independence
treaty. r
Vienna buzzed with excitement
over the : latest move in the cur
rent Russian "Be Kind to die Aus
trians" campaign.
Former Klamath
Officer to Join
Silverton Force
i
lUteimai Ntwf Service
SILVERTON Robert T. Lewis,
to, former member of the Klam
ath Falls police, has been ap
pointed , to the Silverton police
department, City Manager Robert
Borland said Thursday.
Lewis succeeds Howard Robin
son, who resigned from the force
effective Saturday.
A veteran of five and a half
years in the Navy, Lewis served
in the South Pacific during World
War II. He and his wife have
three children.
Today's Statesman
Section 1
General news 1,2,5,12
Editorials, features 4
Sports 6,7
Radio-TV 8
Markets 8
Classified ads 9,11
Section 2
Food news 1,5
Society, women's 89
Recalcitrant balloon 9
Comics 11
Valley news 11
Animal Crackers
Bv WARREN COODRICM
6o$M.' IS THAT At- VVSVE
oar.m
-'? - y
2 SECTIONS 2i PAGES The Oregon
Delay In
Recess
Forecast
WASHINGTON W President
Eisenhower asked Congress today
for a 15-biIlion-dollar hike in the
federal debt limit in view of red-
ink figures which he said have
piled up despite vigorous efforts
to reduce expenditures."
The present limit, fixed by Con
gress in June, 1946, is 275 billion
dollars. The debt is 272 billions.
Shortly before Eisenhower sent
the formal request to Congress,
Secretary of the Treasury Humph
rey told newsmen that if the gov
ernment failed to pay its bills and
meet federal payrolls under re
strictions of the present debt limit
it might cause "near panic."
Adjournment in Doubt
Eisenhower's 11th hour request
threw congressional plans to re
journ this weekend into an uproar.
There were some forecasts the ad
journment plans would be delayed
at least a week.
Grumbles of protest both at
the prospect of cancelling vacation
plans and at raising the debt lid
to a point only 10 billion dollars
below the World War II peak
arose from Democrats and Repub
licans alike on Capitol Hill.
While many Republicans have
said the present fiscal situation
is a heritage from 'the Roosevelt
Truman regimes. Democrats today
raised a cry of "waste" and ac
cused the Eisenhower administra
tion of staging a "political man
euver" by waiting almost until the
eve of adjournment to spring its
proposal.
Criticism Also from GOP.
There was some criticism of the
administration from the Republi
can side also. On the House floor,
Rep. Coudert (R NY) said the
administration had put Congress
in "a cruel and bitter dilemma"
by failing to slash government
spending so that an increase in the
debt limit would not be necessary.
The result, he said, is a threat
of permanent inflation."
Sen. Morse (Ind Ore.) told the
Senate as it started a night session
on other matters he believes con
gress will be called back in Octo
ber to consider the debt limit situa
tion. Morse said there are two ways
of dealing with the problem: Either
raising the ceiling or scaling down
congressional appropriations. He
said he favors the latter alterna
tive. Fine Weather
In Prospect
Next 2 Days
Sunshine, clear skies and mod
erate temperatures is the forecast
for mid-valley regions today and
Saturday, according to the Weath
er Bureau.
A slow moving low ceiling off
the coast may bring some clouds
Sunday, says the weatherman,
but it's still a 50-50 chance.
The mercury today is predicted
to move up a bit from Thursday's
high of 78 to near 82 to 84.
Chance Remark Breaks
Big Salem Check Case
A chance remark at a police
convention last May cracked an
eight-months-old check forgery
case for Salem police and led to
the suspect's arrest this week.
Arrested in Olvmpia, Wash.,
was T. J. Short, about 38, of
Littlefield, Tex., who Salem po
lice charge with cashing over
$2,000 worth of bad checu here
last September.
Marion County Grand Jury
returned a secret indictment
against Short and a Circuit Court
bench warrant was issued against
him charging forgery.
Police said Thursday Short is
being held in Olympia and has
refused to waive extradition, but
District Attorney Kenneth Brown
said extradition proceedings
would begin against him immedi
ately. According' to city detectives,
several sheets of blank checks
were stolen from the Oregon
Gravel Co. at 1405 N. Front St
last fall and forged with the
names of company officials, as
well as being stamped with the
company's check protector.
Twenty-nine of the checks were
cashed in Salem beginning Sept
6 and totaled $2,059.90,
Police at first thought it was
an "inside job." but analysis "of
the firm's employes' handwriting
proved nothing.
After several months of fruit
less investigation,, the break in
the case came at a May conven
tion in Tacoma, Wash of the
Northwest Check Investigators.
, A Salem detective overheard a
captain of the Olympia, Wash
police remark that be had just
extradited a Texas man to face
forgery charges in Olympia.
Further swapping of informa
tion., showed the . Salem . and
Olympia forgeries bad ' similar
patterns.
Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Friday, July 31. 1953 PRICE 5c
Br
No One Crowded In On 'em
w i wwV " :smm4
In order to prove to James Walker, an assistant state forester, that
there are rattlesnakes in The Dalles area. Bill LiRose (above) of
The Dalles brought this one to Salem Thursday merning alive
and poisonous. La Rose's method of handling the reptiles isn't
standard however he Is an ex-circus snake handler. (Statesman
photo.)
Well, You Should
Stay Out of Jail
In the First Place
PORTLAND m Someone broke
into the apartment of Abe Altman,
a bail bondsman, here early Thurs
day and smashed and slashed to
pieces belongings he valued at
11,800.
- Scrawled across Aftman's mir
ror were the words: "Leave me
in jail, huh".
Mrs. Renshaw
Heads Clinic
At Silverton
Statesman Newi Service
SILVERTON Mrs. B. M. Ren
shaw will become superintend
ent of Silverton Hospital Satur
day, pending a "permanent ar
rangement," Dr. A. W. Simmons,
chairman of the hospital board
announced Thursday.
Mrs. Renshaw, a full-time nurse
at the hospital for six years,
replaces Miss Ruth Barber who
announced her resignation last
week and ascribed it to ill health.
Mrs. Renshaw, a graduate of
the University of Nebraska School
of Nursing, came to Silverton
10 years ago.
Olympia police forwarded a
picture of the man and samples
of his handwriting. A Salem
tavern operator identified the
picture as that of the man who
had cashed a check at his place.
This identification plus testi
mony by a handwriting expert
proved sufficient for the grand
jury and an indictment was returned.
Valley's Bean Harvest Begins;
Most Yards Will Start Monday
By LILLIE L. MADSEN
Farm Editor, The Statesman
Bean picking in a number of valley yards got underway this
week, with the bulk, however, to start next Monday.
Biggest single harvest this week is at the 200- acre wax bean
yard at the U.S. Alderman Farms
ers by mid-week numbered 1,322, many of whom came from as far
away as the coast. School busses were among transportation vehicles.
Pickers are receiving 2H cents
a pound, and the crop is being
processed on the Alderman farm.
More 5 Tea Members
Added to the Willamette Val
ley's growing list of Five Ton
Strawberry Club members is G.
P. Conner of SL Patd, who qual
ified Wednesday.
Working on ground which had
been planted to grain since
pioneer homesteadlng days, Con
nor and his son. Jack, this year
achieved yield ox more v than
five tons per acre in their seven-!
acre Marshall strawberry tract!
During the three weeks of berry:
picking, the Connors employed
35 to 40 pickers.
Connor : will be one of the
guests at the Five-Ton Club din
ner at Portland Aug. 7. . ' t"; I
Early tree fruit and nut surveys j
indicate - that, pears, are nmnmsiry .
A
State Water
Policy Urged
By Patterson
Development of state policy on
water rises was recommended by
Gov. Paul Patterson at the first
meeting of the new water re
sources committee at the capitol
Thursday.
"Water problems in Oregon too
long have been approached on the
sectional basis without regard for
the remainder of the state," Pat
terson averred.
The governor said lack of a
water code for Western Oregon
was among the problems.
State Has No Control
"Wells are being dug and sub
terranean water is bein; utilized
without any control by the state."
Committee members are Chair
man Lyle Watts, retired federal
forester; Lasell E. Coles, Prine
ville, manager of the Ochoco ir
rigation project; J. W. Barney,
city manager of Hillsboro and
member of the Willamette basin
commission; Frank McColloch, ex
state public utilities commission
er and now practicing law in
Portland: Kenneth W. Sawyer.
Pchairman of the agriculture com
mittee of the Portland Chamber
of Commerce; C. T. Beecher,
Roseburg, retired Marine corps
general, and J. D. Bennett, On
tario. Methodists Buy Site
For Retirement Home
PORTLAND If) Oregon Meth
odist Homes, Inc., announced
Thursday the purchase of 21 acres
of land near Milwaukie as a site
for a $2,125,000 retirement home.
The Rev. Edward Terry, board
chairman, said construction will
start as soon as the ground is
cleared.
near Dayton. . The count of pick
promising. Not only is encourag
ing word being received from the
Southern Oregon pear .regions,
but growers in the Willamette
Valley of the BartleUs and fall
and winter varieties are reporting
a bumper crop expected.
Filbert Outlook Poor
There will likely be fewer fil
berts,' bat prunes - are jsxpeeted
to torn out larger than a sear ago.
Harvest time in tree fruits, like
the berries, is expected to be
considerably later than ' usual.
Bean harvest is fully two weeks
later than a year ago. However,
nut growers are of the opinion
that barring further unusual
weather, the season will have
caught up 'with itself b harvest
time.' . , i
No. 123
Siberian
Air Fight
Charged
MOSCOW UPl The Soviet gov
ernment charged Friday an Amer
ican B50 flew over Siberia near
Vladivostok and- fired on a Soviet
fighter plane which rose to inter
cept it. ' H
A note delivered to the American
Embassy here Thursday night
strongly protested an alleged vio
lation of Soviet territory by the
American plane.
The note claimed that the Amer
ican plane a four-engined B50
violated the Soviet frontier ' in the
region of Vladivostok.
It said two Soviet fighters rose
to intercept it .and the American
plane then opened fire.
It said the Soviet fighters then
returned the American plane's
fire and the American B50 disap
peared in the direction of the sea.
MUNSAN (J) TheCommunist3
charged the Allies Friday with two
new breaches of the Korean arm
istice involving Allied planes fly
ing over the demilitarized zone.
In all, the Reds bave charged
12 violations since Monday when an
uneasy truce stilled the guns of
the three-year Korean War.
The U.N. Command still bad re
ported no protest of Communist
violations based on a 5th Air Force
report that hundreds of Red planes
flew into North Korea from Man
churia Monday night, after the
armistice was signed. The Air
Force picked up the mass move
ment on radar.
The latest Communist charges
were made at Friday's 1 hour and
46 minute meeting of the Military
Armistice Commisison at ' Pan
munjom. Maj. Gen. Blackshear.M. Bryan,
senior Allied general on the Com
mission, said the meeting "went
along all right today."
Compr
omise
Foreign Aid
Bill Formed
WASHINGTON Wl A com
promise $6,652,422,390 foreign aid
bill was worked out late Thursday
night by a Senate-House confer
ence committee.
The total. Including $4,530,457.
999 in new cash and S2 121,964.391
in unobligated funds left over
from previous appropriations for
military and economic aid pro
gram, is $669,315,866 less than
President Eisenhower asked.
The compromise measure, still
subject to final action by the Sen
ate and the House, is $455,734,211
more than the amount originally
voted by the House but $92,895.-
812 less than the total the Senate
had approved.
(The conferees cut 60 million
dollars in new cash off the amount
voted by the Senate for military
assistance to Europe, as well as
40 million in unobligated balances
left over from previous appropria
tions.
Offsetting this 100 million, how
ever, was an equal amount added
to the bill for defense financing
for Indochina.
Long-Tim e Shop
Boss for County
To Retire Tod
ay
J. r. (rier) AspinwalL em
ployed for the past 20 years as
mechanic and shop foreman for
Marion County, retires at the
close of today's work.
Aspinwall, a native of South
Dakota, came to Oregon in 1902
with his parents who settled near
Brooks. His father was a pioneer
loganberry farmer. The county
foreman lives with his wife at
1578 Ferry St.
Replacing him will be Robert
Han, in the records office, and
Robert Hindman, in charge of
equipment repair.
Western International
At Yakima X Salem S
At Tri-CttT 7. Lwistoi S
At Spokane S. Vancouver V
At CaUrary IS. Zdnaonton 47
(Only game scheduled)
Coast League
At Portland 1, Seattle 3
At Hollywood 4. Los Angeles S
At Sacramento 1. San Diego 1
At Oakland 2, San Francisco S
National League
'At Chicago 1. Brooklyn X
At Milwaukee a. New York t
At St. Louis 10, Pittsburgh 4
At Cincinnati . Philadelphia 17
American League
At New York S. Cleveland 4
At Boston I. Chicago 17
At Washington 1. Detroit 4
At Philadelphia , St. Louis S
KyaTV Ms
lkr
7
SEN. ROBERT TAFT
Colonel Sheets
Named State
CD Director
CoL Arthur M. Sheets, Corval
lis, was appointed by Gov. Paul
Patterson Thursday to become a
state director of civil defense
Aug. 1.
The retired army colonel has
been Benton County civil defense
director since October, 1950. In
the top state civil defense post
he succeeds Jack A. Hayes who
died Feb. 21. Acting defense di
rector has been Robert Sands-
trom, the state organization's ad
ministrative coordinator.
CoL Sheets taught military sci
ence and tactics at Oregon State
College in 1940-41. In World War
II he served 38 months at Okin
awa, Solomon Islands and other
combat areas, as an artillery com
mander. He was also a World
War I overseas veteran.
He retired from the Army in
1949.
Britain Cries
'No' to U. S.
Walk-out Plan
LONDON UPl Britain served
notice Thursday she strongly op
poses any United Ctates plan to
walk out of the Korean peace talks
without first consulting -this coun
try.
Prime Minister Churchill's top
deputies told Parliament that Brit
ain is "in no way committed" to
any such unilateral American ac
tion.
Acting Prime Minister Richard
A. Butler, speaking in the House of
Commons for the ailing Churchill,
said "I want to make it absolutely
clear, x x x that we would expect
definitely to be consulted before
any such action was taken."
Angry Labor ites raised the issue
in attacking U. S. Secretary of
State Dulles. Dulles told a Wash
ington news conference Tuesday
the United States would walk out
of the post-armistice political con
ference on Korea after 90 days if
it felt the Communists were delib
erately stalling. He said the United
States would not buy Korean unity
at the price of Red Chinese mem'
bership in the U. N.
Laborite Jack Jones said "I don't
want to be rude but one could
very easily misconstrue the words
Dulles into 'dull ass.' "
Six Killed in
'Copter Crash
O'NEILL, Neb. UPl Six persons,
one of them a noted German sci
entists, died Thursday when a big
Air Force helicopter plunged to
earth and burned near here.
The scientist was Dr. Guenter
Loeser, 40, one of the doctors of
the Air Force Lower Atmosphere
Research Project.
The others aboard were military
personnel.
HE'S GOT A JOB AHEAD
PITTSBURGH Utl Jhn A.
Herron, 29, said he didn't know
why he, did it he wasn't even in
his cups but be admitted Thurs
day stealing 100 brassieres from
washlines. He was placed on a
year's probation and ordered to
restore the brassieres.
East Germans EPefy Red
Thousands Flock id
BERLIN IT) Communist bill
board warnings of death were de
lied Thursday by 200.000 East Ger
mans swarming to west erun tor
U. S. UR financed food relief, i
The total of hungry Soviet zone
residents receiving free food pack
ages soared to 650,000 in four days.
Two thousand volunteer German
welfare workers, already swamped
by the flood of needy, were ordered
to prepare to feed at least a half
million Saturday and Sunday.' i
All over East Germany, 'factory
workers were reported planning to
set -out for West Berlin on their
weekend holiday time. j
Red Police struck back at hun
dreds of East Germans returning
with Western fats, flour, canned
niilk aifd fried vegetables. ,
. . Witnesses said the police
snatched : the .food gifts from the
arms ox sobbing -women at railway
NEW YORK (AP) Sen. Robert A. Taft
remained in a coma early Friday and members '
of the family-maintained a vigil at the bedside
of the failing Republican leader A spokesman
for New York Hospital said at 12:50 a.m.
(EST) that the 63-year-old senator condition
was unchanged. , . .
NEW YORK (JP) Sen.. Taft is in a comma and is failing
rapidly. New York Hospital reported late Thursday night A 1Q
p.m. (EST) hospital bulletin gave no further details.
Three of the senator's
their father earlier in the evening was reported critically ilL
Only Thursday morning the Ohio Republican party stalwart
iad sat up on his bed and chatted with callers.
At 2:30 p.m. he took his turn for the worse. Then at 5:15
i.m. the hospital said: , '
"Senator Taft's condition is criticaL" '
This followed by two hours a bulletin saying the Senator
iad taken another turn for the worse and was breathing "with
larked difficulty."
The last report was the
in grave terms. It followed a
publisher that the Ohio Republican Is dying of cancer of the
DlOOd." , . .. .
The hospital consistently has refused to disclose the nature'
pi Taft's illness. It first became apparent weeks ago with a
lesion of the hip.
Publisher William R. Mathews of the Arizona Daily Star of
Tucson, writing from Washington, said in a dispatch to his pa
per: "Whereas originally he (Taft) was expected to live for six
-months to a year, he is not expected to live for more than weeks
at the most, and possibly days.
"The fact is generally known in Washington. "
Police Hunt
Trio of Boy
Marauders
i i
Three boys who reportedly "en
tered a Salem home and bothered
two children of i family and the
baby-sitter were the object of po
lice search Thursday.
The boys, believed to be 0, 13
and 14 years old, followed a nine-year-old
girl of the family to her
home Wednesday evening, said
polic -,' grabbed her and held her
mouth so she couldn't scream.
They forced her into the house,
then grabbed her 18-month-old
sister and carried her upstairs.
When the 25-year-old baby
sitter protested, the boys report
edly held her mouth so she
couldn't yell.
They also scattered clothes and
other articles around the house,
the sitter told police.
The trio left whe one of the
girls called police.
Pet Parade
Starts 1953
Bean Festival
Statesmaa News fcrrlre
STAYTON The Pet Parade of
the 14th annual Santiam Bean
Festival Thursday evening at
tracted 90 contestants and bun
dreds of onlookers from Stayton
and vicinity. V '
Every child entering the pa
rade was given a free admission
ticket to a ride at the carnival
now at Stayton' (through the fes
tival this week end) and winners
also received cash awards. Includ
ed in the colorful display through
downtown Stayton were the Stay
ton High School band, the city
police car and the Boy Scout col
or guard. x
Grand prize of the parade was
won by Danny and Hannah Bald
win, young children of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Baldwin f Stay
ton. The youngsters portrayed the
cowardly lion and a tin woods
man.. The children's parade kicked
off the three-day Bean Festival
and Friday the Grand Parade will
begin at 7 p.m. following judging
at 6:30 p.m. An afternoon Of car
nival acts will be held Saturday,
followed by the "bean hole bean
feed and concluded by the Bean
Hopper's Ball Saturday evening.
(Additional details .page 2.)
Seattle Parley
Galls McKay
PORTLAND UB Secretary of
Interior and Mrs. McKay are
scheduled to arrive at the Port
land Airport at S:25 p.m. Satur
day.
McKay plans to go to Seattle
Sunday to attend the governors'
conference there.
stations in Luebbeneau and Scboen-
rfeld, in Brandenburg.
In scores of East German towns,
police patrols took down the names
and . addresses of returnees and
turned the Information over to
state security agents for action.
Communist billboards erected
overnight in Potsdam, Halle and
Magdeburg - warned that accept
ance of free American food would
lead "to' (Western) agents, to bomb
nights and to death."
The posters had a caricature of
a U. S. soldier and West Berlin
Lord Mayor Ernst Reuter sitting
at a food relief registration desk.
Reutherwas smirking at a fat won
man applicant ana saying - Hypo
critically, "Oh. bow starved."
The food rash was a demonstra
tion against Communism with a
psychological impace almost rival
ing the revolt of two million East
German workers June 17 a re-
.i ' ' - :
sons were at the hospital, where
first te refer to the Senator's case
report by an Arizona newspaper '
Theft at Bank
In Mt. Angel
Nets 1 Years
PORTLAND W - A Umatilla
youth who held up the ML Angel
branch of the U. S. National Bank
and took $18,000 last March was
sentenced Thursday to 7 H years
in federal prison for bank rob
bery. The mother of the defendant.;.
Glen Sulisky. 18, wept as she
beard Federal Judge Gus Solomon
impose the term.
Sulisky's attorney, Don McEwen,
said the youth robbed the bank
in an effort to get money to help
pay off 'the mortgage on a house
his mother had bought in Pendle
ton. She had planned to take in
roomers.
Judge Solomon said be realized
the Sulisky family was hard
pressed financially. But he added
that young- Sulisky used a gun
and innocent people might have
been killed. He said ' the holdup
appeared, to have been fully
planned. '
The defense attorney said the
youth got the idea for the holdup
from movies and radio. - .
Help
Voted; Aid for
North Sought
WASHINGTON UFi With a min
imum of discussion, the Senate to
day voted 200 million dollars for
rebuilding war-ravaged South Ko
rea and Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn)
proposed a like amount for North
Korea.
"Let's make a quick bid for the
friendship of the North Korean
people while the Armistice is being
celebrated there," Humphrey said.
"Let's, show them a beUer al
ternativea new ray of hope."
Humphrey conditioned his propos
al, however, on the conclusion of
a satisfactory peace, "permitting
Korea's freedom and unification."
The Korean problem proved as
perplexing in peace as it was in
war to Washington officialdom. One
possible; solution of demands by
South Korean President Syngman
Rhee that his country be unified
was seen in talk of "neutralizing"
the peninsula. . .
Max.
71
Mia. Preclp.
44 .a ,
4 .00 .
48 .00 .
71 .53 -
Salem
HortUml
14.
San Francisco 87
Chicago B4
New York V3
7S Jl '
VlHamette Htver - J 1 Scat.
FORECAST (from U.S. weather feu
res j. McNary field, Salem):
rair toaar tnrouin Saturday. Hich
today near S--M. low tonirht 4S-SO.
Temperature at 12:01 a.m. was 49
degrees.
SALF.M PRECIPITATION
Sine Start ef Weather Year pt. 1
This Year Laxt Year Normal
43-S ' - 4.S9 HUM
Threats;
Food Lines
volt that is still having repercus
sions in Premier Otto Croewohrj
Red government. ' ?
The man who has directed pro
duction of ' arms for East Ger
many's 125,000-man army. Con
struction Minister Bernd Weinber
ger, was fired from the cabinet
and demoted to leader of the So
viet zone reparations office for
defeatism la the face of the up
rising. .
He was accused of showing "a
capitulatory attitufle" toward strik
ers when the Communist Central
Committee sent him to the Baltic
port of Rstock to quell rioting. His
successor was not named immed
iately. Max - Fritsch, Communist State
Secretary for Coal and Power, was
thrown out of the government en
tirely. ' A tough Communist party
worker, Rolf Jaschonka, takes oyer
the secretaryship.
Korean
ft
V
I . i . .