Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1953)
' 4 . -2 (Sc 1) Statesmen. SoJtmv Ore, Wed, Oct 21. 1933 Dulles Assigns Special En voy To Korea Meet 20Year Pacts Approved by McKay Office of State Dulles Tuesday assigned ' a special envoy to open prelimi nary peace talks with the Chinese and Korean Reds in Korea begin ning next Monday. I A few hours later be bluntly nb--tified the Kremlin that a new TWestern proposal for negotiations "xn Germany constitutes, in the U. 'S. government's view, a critical WASHINGTON (Jl The Inter. ior Department Tuesday approved the sale of power from the Bonne ville Power Administration to four private utility companies under 20- WASHINGTON if) f Secretary , test of . Russia's intentions about year" contracts much longer dealing with the free world. J than usual. These fast paced developments, I up until now, the big federal designed to feel out Communist I power development in the Pacific readiness to do business on con Northwest has not contracted with crete issues, highlighted 8s day of private . power firms for longer great activity for Dulles in the than five-year .terms, with renewal wake of his return Monday from provisions. the Western foreign ministers The new contracts were negoti- meeting'in London. ' ated by Paul J. Raver, Bonne- Reports to Ike ville administrator, with the Pa He reported to President Eisen- one Power Light Co., Portland; hower at the beginning of the day, Washington Water Power Co., then announced at a news con r Spokane; Mountain States Power ference his assignment of- Ambas- Co., Albany, Ore., and the Port- sador Arthur Dean to go to Korea, land General Electric co. Dulles also officially disclosed Announces-Appreval suspension of aid allocations tol Details of the contracts were an- Israel for its defiance of a United nounced Sept. 18 and secretary or Nations Commission ruling on use the Interior McKay announced ap of Jordan River waters. proval of . the 20-year agreements Tuesday night, at the Herald Tuesday, emphasizing that the Tribune Forum in New York, contracts are subject to legislation Dulles summarized the signifi- which would permit diversion of cance of the proposal to Moscow I the power to defense purposes if for a foreign ministers meeting necessary. on Germany. . McKay, former governor of Ore- Awaits Reaction , gon, has frequently said that ln- Russia's reaction, he said, will 1 dustrial and preference customers show whether Russia "is willing I of Bonneville have previously been to have a meeting on terms which granted 20-year contracts but the will provide an actual testing of private utility firms were denied UN. to Inquire Into Israel ;Bor ssue CARPENTER ! By FRANCIS W, UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. t .The U. N. Security Council de cided Tuesday to inquire fully into -Arab-Israeli border incidents in cluding the recent killings at -Kibya, Jordan. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Amen can delegate, told the council the its intentions in terms 'sufficiently them. umieo aiaies i msmrwea Dy re- concrete to be significant. We Morse Opposes pons oi iruce violations aiong me hope that the answer will be af- Sen. Morse Und-Ore) Issued a Doraer. we saia me councu must firmative. In any event it will be statement late Tuesday saying the act if these reports are confirmed I revealine." . . contracts "constitute a sell-out of ;by Maj. Gen. Vagn Bennike, Den- Dulles opened his news confer- the public interest to private utility mars, cniei oi.suui ot me rruce ence by announcing the dispatch monopoly. .bupervision Organization in Pales- 0f an envov to Panmuninm tn I Morse said thev "undercut the tine, who is coming here to report talk about arrangements for a con- public preference which has been ,vn me suuauon. ference on Korean oeace. la part ot lederal law lor close to v "Nations should nof lake the a month ago Dulles delegated 50 years. . . these contracts will law into their hands," Lodge said, to Dean the principal responsibil- hurt the industrial growth of the be A-aos lunea I ity for achieving a Korean settle- Pacific Northwest. .Their effects . A raid last Wednesday bV Is- i mnt if rwtcihla will he Mt throughout the national .raens on tne joraan village ot jo Leave bv Air economy, Kibya tilled 66 Arabs. Jordan Dean will leave bv air Wednes- Long Negotiations charged the raid was carried out dav and mi with the HeH Mnn-I . Administrator Raver has been by Israeli armed forces but Israel (dav. Dulles announced that thev I negotiating the contracts for more aeniea its army was involved, is- had accented an American nro- than seven months, at the direc rael said the raid was in Tetalia- nosa! for the session and h railed tion of McKav. He told the com. a: - 111: . i . i 1 . - 1 . ..... . . .uon ior me uning Dy Araos oi this one more practical step to-1 panics that McKay and Defense an Israeli mother and two chil-1 ward a Korean settlement, j Mobilizer Arthur S. Flemminz had -dren. .There i a tn-nwinv feelin both stressed the imoortance of Abba Eban, Israeli delegate, In- amone officials her that the cm. sufficient Dower for slants nro- formed the council it should con- nese Reds probably want a Ko- ducing strategic materials'' in the .biuci Tiuuuuiu mav nam rwiii comerence or soma Kina ann raciuc nunawesu at the general armistice agree- that despite bitter differences over "Whenever required for national menu ana oi oecuniy uiuncu res- the question of what nations should defense," Raver's letter to the UiUUUiu reidUJiK urcrew. ,ne attend. Dean and the Other MS fnnr mmnanot caul -nnowr Triair charged that, regular and irregu- eotiators will succeed lar Jordan forces attacked .civil- for a full dress conference: Power Administration contracts in lans m Israel, and that brutal as- The Reds served notice In a accordance with the terms of this sauiis Dy raiaers irorn joraan message which Dulles received (defense production) act. wC,c luesaay tnrougn me weaes mat Thp Pevnnld. MeaU fn ha they wiU insist on including neu- nrotMtwl that nw r la- Israel. Urgent Session tral nations in the talks. might affect power needed for pro- ::;The council met in urgent ses- Dulles said that Dean cannot Zrt on at its bia nlant m toe Mm vnnri it ii ruiiuit r ti UM. k i ; auction at its Dig piani in tne - -t iictii uiciii iiviu vi up I Rnnnevill area tT,tj ct.u Dn;. Ul. i-- t. ...- r ., . I xsonneviiie area, to discuss an item listed as "the States position is that the ques- .raiesune quesuon. ieoanons tion nas been decided by a United rr-rw.7 A ! 'Charles Malik objected that the NaUons ruling excluding neutrals. I V AllfllPlirP. Western powers should say what ' xm.iavi.AVAJ.iyV they. want. H proposed Uieoun-f "miffi " ro 1 J C ' ' ' Jf 3Ma-S?2E Mother Gives Pees t-odfrey K The council tangled for more .-than three hours Monday and sue .ceeded only in asking Bennike to Icome here. The meeting Tuesday 'was delayed 40 "minutes while del- ' 1. at J. J A - 1 .-! A- ThanltsforPW Firc Sincr NEW YORK Uh Singer Julius was oeiayed w-minutes wnue aei- ) J La Rosa struck out on his own gates tried to persuade Mahk to NfT1 G I IPPlQinil Tuesday after getting his walking .accept a compromise wording putUJVll O JLULlOlUll -.a'n- fmm the Arthm- ndfrev up by Alexis Kyrou, Greece, with 'approval of the Western powers. 'Me accepted it after talking with delegates of other Arab countries. ' Sharpened Sabre Ready for Combat WASHINGTON The IT. S. Air Force's new North American F-100 "Super Sabre," successor to the battle-tested F-86 Sabrejet. speeds through the air in a test flight The F-100 is the Air Force's first operational jet fighter to exceed the speed of sound in level flight The Super Sabre, with sweptback wings and tail, is 45 feet long, 14 feet high, and has a 36-foot wing span. It has a service ceiling above 50,000 feet and a combat radius of over 500 miles. (Department of Defense photo via AP Wire- photo to The Statesman.) ' Air Force Demonstrates Super Sabre LOS ANGELES tf) Accom panied by sonic explosions that shattered windows, the Air Force Tuesday gave the first public dem onstration of its powerful, swifter than sound F100 super Sabre fight er, f Test pilot George Welch of North American Aviation, builders of the swept wing craft, put the successor to the Korea famed F86 Sabrejet through its paces at speeds great er than 720 m.p.h. - 12 miles a minute. . As he pulled out supersonic dives over the .Palmdale airport, at the northern edge of Los Angeles County, the pressure waves gen erated by the faster than sound runs boomed to the ground with explosive force. Six big plate glass windows and 27 smaller panes in the airport administration building were shattered. ; Glass flew and a 4 x 4 upright was cracked in the building used by the CAA and occasionally by passengers when the field is pressed into service when Los An geles airports are fogged in. No one was hurt, a North American ents. 11 P-51, ROK Airman Missing; Plane May Be in Red Hands TOKYO UPi The U. S. 5th Air Force acknowledged Wednesday that a Mustang P51 fighter plane belonging to the South Korean Air Force was missing, but failed to confirm reports the plane had been flown to North Korea Mon- WaiametteU. PledgesTallied PORTLAND m Pledges of money for construction at Willam ette University now total $219,520, officials of a fund raising drive were told here Tuesday. Pledges from Portland are $65,970; from Salem, $135,510; and from other areas, $18,040. The goal of the drive . is $500,000 to match a similar amount pledged by two anonymous donors. The money will be used to finance construction of a fine arts-auditorium building and a women's residence hall. G. Herbert Smith, president of the university, said similar drives soon will be started in Seattle and the San Francisco Bay areas. lomecoming papers from the Arthur Godfrey shows in the presence of a nauon- (Story also one page one.) wide radio and television audi- BIG STONE GAP, Va. I ence. Well, thank God. . .1 knowed; he Saying he always would be was coming home if they'd let grateful to Godfrey, who plucked him." . him from obscurity two years ago So spoke Mrs. Bessie C. Dick- and made him a star. La Rosa enson Tuesday night when The nevertheless professed to be "a Associated Press told her that her very confused guy" as a result of son, Edward S. Dickenson, a Ko- his sudden exit from the shows. rean War Prisoner WhO at first Maanwhile iirnmsntt were bad refused repatriation, had keimr tn- t , pn.a .-.near changed his mind and decided to A Sullivan's "Toast of the Come home, after all. Town" on CRS television Snndsv Mrs. Dickenson and. her bus-Uih And Tji Rm-'i newiv band Van'Buren Dickenson, were j signed manager said the 23-year- 3icCh in uicir remoie od -jneer's contract, wh ch was Leaf Rake to launch W.U. Willampfte Ilnlversitv't 32nd . ' - Old singer s contract, wnicn was :JSSJSSkM& "m'n near here en with CBS rather than Godfrey. Man Held After Tavern Robbery, Loot Recovered Two Jiourf after Seven Acres Tavern at Canby was burglar ized of $100 in nickels and three half cases of beer early Monday morning a 24-year-old Canby man was arrested by state police and charged with the crime. He was identified by police as Robert Franklin, Morse, on parole from Oregon State Penitentiary. Police said they found $92 in nickles made up in rolls in the trunk of Morse s car. The rest of the money was found just outside the tavern where it had been dropped, police reported. Morse was turned over to Clackamas County sheriff's of fice. Ohioan Added to White House Staff WASHINGTON OB Kevin Mc- Cann, president of Defiance Col- ege at Defiance, Ohio, Tuesday joined the White House staff on a temporary , part time basis. Press Secretary James C. Hag- erty said McCann, an old friend will assist in the preparation of presidential speeches, statements and messages and in the handling of White House correspondence. McCann is- keeping his position at Defiance College.. sound -graduates of the university's law ZZh "t," w" " sxuoiea wun a view to school, will beein Fridav at 5 a.m. V1" " " planning personal appearances - . i mil wa wprptn i PiariiT siir i . t ana Qincr activities, rtriCAH eatrf tha. wf K Ate ltefl I Following the traditional morn- 5" . Lr " '7: 'l,r". The apparent family fuss in the Ing's preparation for visitors will t,.f k-. v. j Godfrey organization also resulted I be a 7 a.m. breakfast at Lausanne 1 ' " v. Vv :J"K I in the departure of band leader .trii nH .k- """ ..tj nA-. . " cav what ni name w hut mvi ",VJ . j :men. Friday evening at 7:30 E!v!2, ' my time and Wednesday night shows. I o'clock a competitive homecoming .. .r,.:. , w f i i;v. hnr. Bleyer's contract on the Monday m"6 ... . - Gave Nn weiuier side speued out details l ne paraaers win end at tjusn s . . v --nee f the niit hit h ' Tactiire where a hnnfire ralW I ilrlI- reie raorria, WHO p -j. . ,. . Tn mlnwir. dan... T Th. live two miles down the mounUin servers drew tne mierence mat will precede a dance at the gym . . , Codfrev wa disnleased over La r naeinm W nner nf the whicker. "'viaiaiu, uvyuvu ui . - . . . T. r.-. j rrruL meir car and drove to the Dicken- Kosa i and Bieyer s outside acu- inO W1U UC 1UUUUUCCU ai UU ".C I -H Sn-l4;n K- m.tri.- - . . i son caom to unu aions u siaa i ww - w . nBnr . I - . i . . . Traffic Signals To Favor Drivers Over Pedestrians PORTLAND tfl Traffic signals in Portland will be set to allow less time for pedestrians and more time for motorists, traffic engineer Fred T. Fowler reported Tuesday. The new system, which Fowler hopes will aid traffic movement during rush hours, will go into effect Nov. 2. nl will berin at 9 ajn. and a ore- ".L00 L?e.vr wdd wake luncheon get-together will be held fu "V f tfc. r.r. i-ei .t ii . r-. I know how long they blowed their fn-.n .inm-i At ii -A the jiinm. horn and hollered and banged on ni banquet wUl be "held at the toe dir before I waked up and lintel fnllntsuf hv the Tjori ind K 111 J uuauouu. . . ' m,-v win,m.tt. fnnthaii oame "I wish you could a-faeard what " 1IMHIV A W WVB HtUV I f 1 1 -a at McCulloch Stadium at 2 n.m. my nusDana saia wnen mey 101a : A reception for alumni will be- gin. Had to holler in his ear, tnn at a-5ft n m in T ononna Hall He S deal, YOU DO. " anrl festivities will ennrlurie with I " kuiu i uvc a dance in the gymnasium begin, burden to place on the Lord. I just nm at O n m Winner nt the iffn felt like Ed Was Coming home. ;eontest, living organization com- " .it'8been hame the way I petition with this vear's theme womea. - : - . . I ."W ell Leave Our Mark on Lewis and Clark," will be announced FAVORS U. N. REVISIONS during intermission. - UNITED NATIONS,' N. Y. W The United States threw its sup port Tuesday behind a plan to lay groundwork; for a general confer- ence on revising the U. N. charter. The plan has been bitterly assailed by the Soviet bloc phonograph records. .. a tDock Injunction Made Permanent NEW YORK (-Federal Judge ! Ed ward Weinfeld Tuesday made permanent an iniuction outlawing .an Atlantic Coast longshoremen's 'strike for the full 80-day period . provided by the Taft-Hartley Law. . ; The action outlaws resumption -of a five-day strike which began ' Oct 1 until Christmas Eve. STARTS TODAY - OPE C:45 THE CEST tH 3-D! X f- - I I rlr I OIKEKIA Co-Feature TAR OF TEXAS with Wayne Morris Cherrs Plantation $. 99E CLOSED FOR VACATION WATCH FOR RE-OPENING DATE DAIICE T0UIGHT Crfsial Gardens Modem & Old Time Music by Pop Edwards 74 LEARIl TO DANCE All types of dancing taught 9 80c Z. ' Srwdio Open s 10UA.tolOPJA. ;.. Jen -Msr' - Dance Studies 474 Ferry Street Phone 44962 W av DniVE-IN TIIEATll Jt UIISN SAKBEIU. MWHWAT ft Ft Gates ;4S Show 7:15 STARTS TONITEI Two Top Technicolor -Action it Adventure Hits' , . Jeff Chandler Faith Domergne The Great Sioux Uprising" also Joha Payne Donna Reed "Raiders of The Seven Seas" WATCH FOR "SALOME ttA LIAS DRIYE-IN THEATER GATES OPEN : HOW STARTS 7:15 4 - , Phone SHI I NOW SHOWING Bing Crosby, Nancy Olsoa la "MR. MUSIC -alM Gee-rfe Montgomery ia - "CRJPPIE CREEK , Commission Stands Pat on Zoning Code day by a defecting Korean pilot. There was almost no doubt that the report was 'true. But the American -Air Force did not feel it should break the bad news be fore it was announced by the Re public of Korea, for 196 yards: A Fifth Air Force " spokesman insisted that' all information on the reported defection would have to come from the South Korean Defense Ministry. Search Abandoned However, the spokesman said search for the missing Mustang had been discontinued. Word of the defecting South Ko rean pilot was revealed by a re liable source in Seoul Tuesday night to The Associated Press. The incident was reported as similar to the case of the North Korean pilot who flew a MIG to Seoul last month. There was this difference however: The U. S. was able to get a lot out of studying the MIG. From a standpoint of value to the Reds, the South Ko rean might as well have driven a jeep to North Korea. Kept Mum One Air Force man said: "We feel, put of politeness, we should keep mum about the Mustang un til the Rhee government decides to tell the story. After all, it was their plane and their pilot. And South Korea is their country." In Seoul, a high Korean gov ernment source admitted Wednes day that a Mustang plane had been missing since Monday. But the source refused to say whether the pilot had defected to the Reds. Instead, the source called the Pilot "an unlikely candidate for Communism." - The Mustang was one of scores of World War II planes given the ROK Air Force by the United States. t (Story also on page one.) - Salem Planning and Zoning Coixnission stood pat on most of its new sone classifications of properties figuring in petitions! now before the Ciy Council in connection with final action on a completely revised zone code. Robert Stanley, who headed the revision committee which drafted the zone code, said most of the late appeals before the Council should go through regular zone change procedure so that others of the neighborhood could be heard on the subject Stanley re ferred to petitions which came to the Council after the zoning re ferred to petitions which came to the Council after the toning group's public hearings had been held. In the capitol zone, however, zoning commissioners indicated they wouldn't object to a City Council action to allow a restrict ed business zoning for three lots north of Union Street at Cam' tol Street if the Capitol Planning Commission reaches an agree ment with Rieck Bros., the own ers, ove. the type of construction which might go there. Herman Rieck's had planned a restaurant project at one time, but the city "froze the property use at the request of the state when expat sion of the Capitol MU1 north ward was started. The zoners also indicated no objection if the Council decrees R-l instead of R-2 residential zon ing for SimpsonVAddition east of 24th and north of Simpson Streets. The grocery store property it South Commercial and Lincoln Streets would be a matter for lat er consideration by a variance committee under the new zoning law, commissioners indicated. The store was in operation before the old zone law went into effect, but the neighborhood has remained residential Nearby residents have protested a commercial zone for the corner store property. Commercial Fishing Banned On Five Streams PORTLAND tfl The State Fish Commission has closed five coastal streams in Oregon to commercial fishing operations. - The closures are to permit silver salmon to pass upstream to spawn ing grounds. ' The closing order on four streams the Nehalem, Yaquina, Alsea and Coquille rivers bee ami effective last Saturday and on the Siuslaw Sunday. , Commercial fishermen wiHno be permitted to take silvers front' these waters untu Nov. 1, except for the Nehalem, where the closun wiU extend to Nov. 20. Church Holds Dedication Ceremony STARTS TODAY! 1 UNA TURNER MTHE UMSOf THE MATES! Of... - i if 'LATIN 1 lOVERS ii 2nd Big Hot 2 ' , NOV PLAYING Kinc most a dramatic role! yfj fA BING CROSBY, f CLAUDE DAUPHIN Bush School I Group Forms The Merry Mixmasters," new ly organized 4-H group from Bush School, held their first meet ing Tuesday at the home of John Nuber, 1230 S. 17th St, and elec ted Patsy Browner president Also elected were Marilyn Co vey, vice president; Marcia Mun ger, secretary: Joyce Hanshaw, reporter; Kay Nuber, son leader and Sandra Sa ville, yell leader. It was decided by the members to meet each Monday at the Nu ber residence. Present at the first meeting was James Bishop, 4-H Club agent St John's Evangelical Luther an Church continued dedication ceremonies in its new edifice. Court and 14th Streets, Tuesday with a Fellowship Night program attended by about 300 of the con gregation. . In a program with emphasis on the layman's viewpoint Christian fellowship was the theme of aq address by Dr. E. S. Wengert, bead of the political science de rjartment rf Ilniversitv nf fh-ffnn George Peper Sr. showed rnov ies he had taken of the progress of construction of the new church. Another dedication week event will come Thursday at 8 p.m. when all organizations, of the church combine in a meeting t hear a message by the Rev. EmiJ Becker, institutional missionary for the Northwest area of Mis. souri Synod Lutheran Churches. Bruno P. John, Furniture Firm Founder, Dies PORTLAND bn Bruno Paul John, 79, founder of the B. P. Johi Furniture Corporation here, die at a hospital Tuesday night H j suffered a heart attack two week! ago. A native of Hermstorf, Germany, he came to the United States at a boy. and was educated at Man. istique, Mich. . He was associated with ' th Ludinehouse Sash and Door Co. Chehalis, Wash., from 1890 to 1891 Later he became vice president o the Doernbecher Manufacturing Co. of Portland. He established hi own firm in .1928. Early this year the plant wai purchased by C H. Nyssen an R. C. Bourdon. John was mad j chairman of the board of the ne4 firm. The widow, a son, Lester, Johi and a daughter, Mrs. Imelda Coa don, all of Portland, survive. Wff ! miw w MfcrtmtrMagAT0 2nd Big Hit HtaecTJ.VATtS METHEAKIS ON PARADE TtOCOlOB fey Cffsoli4ttv4 A tfjutuc nerval Today i1 Today! WO OUTLAW GANGS C0KTOG8)...tie Eitkt WestHdibsBrtatlil 5 mvim mini crain dale ro:ertso:i KICHARD BOONE ILOYD BRPGES CAROL! MATHEWS Co-Feature YcaVt Krcr L!ct a Cc3 l&s Ecr! ADISEGPuiirjTr L1 To The Patrons of the Cily Transit lines Re-Rouling for One-Way Street Erid Only the following routes will be affect ed and ONLY in the Downtown Grid Area. The rontes affected and changes- lfiL . TT..1.I Outbound Only From liberty and 1tn U liarKei- state, via Liberty, Court, and : apitoi St. n.A.1.l Outbound Only From liberty & State UneaeKeia - via Liberty and Center Sts. A riM.MA.. Di1p f Outbound Only from liberty' 4-U0rnerS - ranU- sute, via Liberty, and . , V Center Sts. 19lk Clwaal Outbound only from Liberty and State, laUfl direei via Liberty, Court, Cettage and SUte Sts. p.n9 Inbound Only From Church to Union, UaplIOld- to Cottage, to Chemeketa All other rentes operate as at present. . NO CHANGE IN DOWNTOWN TERMINAL 1 ON ANY ROUTE NO CHANGE ZN SCHEDULES EFFECTIVE TODAY!