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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1954)
S Tho Statesman, Salaau. Tito Ousts Djilas, Party iJeader, in Stormy By ALEX H. SINGLETON BELGRADE. Yugoslavia UR President Marshal Tito, and the central committee of the Comma nist Party Sunday fired Moiovan Djilas, one of Tito's , top lieuten ants, in Yugoslavia's stormiest domestic controversy since the war. 1 vK. i: ; f Tito personally took the floor in an ' extraordinary 'session of the Stirs Storm BELGRADE Yugoslav film star Mllena Vrajakava, 21 yearld wife of armv chief of staff Peko Dapcevic, is the central figure in one of the hottest controversies which have arisen in President Tito's communist government. Yugoslav Vice President Milovan Djilas, :de- nosed Sunday by Tito, has charged that ranking govern ment leaders and their wives have been giving Milene "the cold shoulder." (AP Wire - Photo) U.S. College ! Editors End j Russian Tourl MOSCOW I Seven American college editors returned to Moscow Saturday from a two-weeks, 5,000 mile tour of the interior of i the Soviet .Union, from Leningrad to Tblisi (Tiflis), and reported they met great friendliness and furi osity everywhere. J "...So much that we were fol lowed by swarms of people every where we went," one commented. The Americans said they fere deluged with questions from Soviet students, many of whom expressed hope that they could go to the United States. f In some places Soviet school girls pinned peace pins on.! the Americans, fastened peace doves on their cars and bombarded them with questions such as why; the Americans are building air bases around the world. The group includes Dave Barney, Reed College, Portland, Orel One group of the editors got an unusual privilege to visit Baku's oil refinery. Ail seven visited farms and numerous schools where they found many students! who could speak English. An unusual event occurred at Tblisi in Georgia where an English speaking student at Stalin Univer sity invited the group to a basket ball game. The Russian students rounded up a team and the Amer icans plac ed in their leather shoes or galoshes. I The Russians won, 22 to 91 "but the sportsmanship was excellent and I bet the game win be! long remembered in Georgia, I said Dean Schelkopf, one of the editors. "When we left they all came out to shake our. hands and wave goodbye. I bet we did mote to make friends with those people than 10 ambassadors." I Teen-Age I Lessons 50c Hr. Special : Learn How to Swing Now Too Woltx Fox Trot Samba Rumba Tango Mambo! Hew (lass Men., Jan. 18, 7:30 P. M. WE ALSO TEACH ADULTS i PRIVATE or CLASS REASONABLE t J DOS! ALLEN STUDIOS i Formerly Armstrong's US 8. Liberty Ph. 2-7S23 Oregon. Monday, Jan. 18. 1954 Squabble committee and accused his friend. the slight. 41-year-old Djilas of at tempting to "liquidate" the Com munist Party and seeking to adopt the capitalistic system.. Shaken and repentant, onus de clared himself willing to renounce his published criticisms of party policies and high ranking Commu nist wives and promised to "be have" In the future. His self - confession was not enough. Expulsion Ordered A stern party decree fell, order ing him expelled from the Commu nist Party's central committee, stripping him of rank in the party executive, barring him from future functions in the Communist league and giving him a "final warning" to mend his views. Djilas then promptly resigned as chairman of the Yugoslav parlia ment over which he was sched uled to preside Jan. 27. Whether he would be allowed to continue as one of Yugoslavia's four vice-presidents was not dis closed, but it appeared doubtful. The hearing by the central com mittee apparently dealt only with party matters and not the govern ment Storm Breaks The storm broke over Djilas a week ago when the party's execu tive committee disclosed it was going to give him a hearing over a series of articles he wrote in December and early this month in Borba, the party newspaper, and the magazine, New Thought The articles accused administra tion leaders of seeking special pri vileges, proposed that the Commu nist Party become more of a "dis cussion group" than an active or gan 'of administration, and called for a revaluation of the principles of Marx and Lenin in the light of modern developments. Incurred Wrath These articles incurred the wrath of other leading Commu nists, but their angry resentment remained more or less passive un til Djilas published a long article in New Thought attacking the wives of other high officials for giving the cold eye to the beautiful recent bride of Gen. Peko Dapcevic, army chief of staff. Without mentioning names he said the wives were denying the bride admission to their ' inner cir cle" because she was an actress and on the pretext that she did not participate as a partisan in the war. Djilas said she was only 13 at the time of the war, and protested in plain terms that the pre-marital behavior of some of the wives gave them little ground on which to set themselves up as critics Doctor Notes New Relief For Asthma BALTIMORE UR A Johns Hopkins allergist says he has found a successful method of relieving severe asthma without putting the patient in a hospital. Dr. Leslie N. Gay of the Hop kins School of Medicine reported successful results in 95 out of 100 patients treated during the past year with injections of the hor mone ACTH in a gelatin solution. He discussed the treatments at a regional meeting of the Ameri can College of Physicians here Saturday. Dr. Gay said each patient re ceived one daily inje'tion of high ly purified ACTH in a muscle each day for four, six or eight days the number depending on seventy of the disease and re sponse of the individual. Gay said that after the ACTH treatments, some patients who had been incapacitated for years by asthma were able to function in complete comfort" Some of them had had asthma for as long as 50 years. The patients ranged in age from S to 80. Gay said the most diffi cult cases were in an age group above 40, where the disease had been established in a long time. Some of his patients got relief within two hours after the first injection, be said, and others with in 24 hours. Some of them report' ed they could sleep comfortably for the first time in years. Leave Town On Birthdays TAIPEH. Formosa tfl Nation alist China's Premier Chen Cheng and Formosa Gov. O. K. Yid cele brated their 57th birthdays this weekend with the delicate touch of Chinese gentlemen they went out of town to spare well-wishers the supposed trouble of calling on them. ; . LEON'S 2 for V Shoe Sale ; Now in i Progress Bay the first pair at regu lar price . get the second VJ pair FREE! Boston yets Ask Apology From Pentagon Brass BOSTON D Veteran leaders Sunday night demanded an apol ogy from Washington for an armed service, decision to withdraw fed eral troops from the March 17 Evacuation Day parade tmless liquor places are dosed. Ou parade marsnal PamckF. ouccuou iu hw;ibiuhwi iw insinuated our people are drunks I . . I demand an immediate apol ogy, otherwise I will cancel our invitation to the armed services. The armed services provisional I Dan on sowien, sauors ana im-i , n - ? v, ' Z -Z wmVrjr t2 vegetable and stones during last year's parade, f i . , south Bon refldents deny the troops were attacked. Winter Eases Snowy Grip On Northwest I By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (Storv Also on Pace One) Winter relaxed Its icy grip on .la. mjt Itm imn AMI o.lTn. Mhlt most of Sunday,although much of the area num. iiwuinn, still had a white blanket of snow. The Weather Bureau said tern- perature, would JjW?tttttt& ffKS uVBerlin Jan?2s! .J. X: vSiwS ZjLJZSESEi iZZZJ""" ouuuay iufcuiiU: iuuujr. xuc raw uuu. nuiui I down from Canada Friday, bring- ing ue xirsx snow w ue wuuer A - At I to many sections of the Nortnwest is now slowly breaking up, the bureau said, and no new cold air is moving in. Meanwhile, telephone company crews working through the night Saturday repaired a damaged co axial cable and restored network television Sunday to the North west Service was knocked out Satur day by water which seeped in after a slide 50 miles south of Roseburg, Ore., had put a strain on the eight-tube cable. The cable pipes network TV pro w tii.Tn viSnX, and Or. TV outlets in Washington and Ore- grams from California points to rnntin., uJ rim, mix h Hi- , 7-,ie T r " u uPn u5 wms -ZJmv.Wi dectronicaUy- .uicvaoi i.iuv.. v 8 a ...vJw ....... :.V ';u 1 :J ?r ,Lv Z,a " T iZZZ ThaV rZr S ivS! rn s S,yJ rJJmLXJSte pected to. create, additional traffic problems. ? JJHZTtfVi rZl,i3 w. from the streets almost twice as budg6ted lty cTf. rnrttut a ..rin... hiStfvfdJa?. 25I highway accidents as a result of as nnrm i Xn. ; . , ... . They also reported that most roads in the state were passable. Bend, with a low of 12 degrees, was tne coiaest jspoi in tne state over tneween eno. uuier muu- mums: Redmond 13. me units I 14, and Pendleton 15. Silverton Justice, of Peace Won't Sfipk Re-Klection- n j ... xt.i whohal MrveV iutke Tthe peace years, reports that he will not be a candidate for re-election. Quintin EitelL young Silver- ton attorney who was recently ap pointed municipal Judge, has al M-J- 4r.m rha iWMm fiSfwffiSl both nositioni at the same time. ius appointment as municipal judge was f or such a time "as W" TT w'" If elected to the justice job, csteu wiu automatically resign Drastically resign ipal police judge from the munici position. In stating that he would not be position, Nelson added that num- SS of his friends had been urging him to file for the legis- latoe but that he had not reached Hicion ah ? tn matter, al- though he was' considering it Prison Guard Hi ' Struck by Car A guard at the Oregon State Penitentiary was struck by a car late Sunday night while walking to work along the prison drive. W. H. Stout, 480 N. 24th St, was taken to Salem General Hos- pital where Jhe wasj suffering from muluDle head and. face lac - rations, aid 'a possible hip in- Jury, poUce saidV pnver ot tne car, EUery Arn- old Dearinger, Independence Route l uh s guard at the prts- Zr Jr r:c!!!a Jr.". . "i"" who was walking in the road to avoid water on tho walk. Kansas Firemen Fight Fire From Gas Main LEAVENWORTH. Kan. Ml Al 10-inch gas i main ruptured here Sunday rnorning and firemen fought 50-foot flames for about S hours before controlling them. Three workmen were overcome by gas at the scene but were re - vived. The break in the main was attributed to the cold spelL Search for Coon Hound In Hole Halts WWVtTTP Irut i im Thai t .inner tonh fnr mm KautuI I . ann ffU twrrrf dim I agam Sunday night, even thougb Gov. George N. Craig personally - u. - anfj! navment for anv nroo-1 ertv damages. i l Plans to resume digging at dusk mkmtA h rtw IT or! I . h,i .frhirin who m . ' - I .v. farm, attached two coo-ling ltlM to hia MrmlniMi fnr rfitf. I ging no digging at night nor on . Lester Jackson. 54. a railroad brakeman from Indianapolis who has spent most of the week look ing lor ine aog oeiongmg to nis lit Then state trooper Charles 0. Williams, who had delivered uov. Craig's $1,000 bond to Dr. Ferree, came out and told Jackson the re strictions Ferree had insisted upon Some of the 30 volunteers on hand wanted to go ahead and dig anyway. But Jackson told them, "that would just mess us up." Last Friday Jackson ana otto m m formula for holding a four Ray, Indiana president of the So- power conference on German unity aety ior rrevenuoa oi urueiiy 10 . , . ' I Aniraais. were arreea ior ires- nassin? wnue inv were aicsine on Ferree'. farm." S I Still think the dog's alive," t,,. $d H mm tW 10 "e ,rcIK We e T" month-" hound ran into the out- let 01 tile week ago m puTSUlt Ot a raCOOn. i iir i" err ee nas contenoea tne I do im't in the drain. Expansion of Interceptor Planes Slated WASHINGTON Almost nil of the billion dollar increase for the continental defense program in the next fiscal year will be osed ta Pandin tte interceptor pIaM force( it was learned Sun. ll W . i equipped lor finding and hitting an enemy in dar or 8torm. " United States must depend prt-1 By tor heading off any Amen- can-bound mission of atom bomb- er rom RussU , - relatively small portion 0f the increased spending, said: of- fidals in a position to know, will required for allocation to the radar warnm net Program, nous- - u nmnnrHnif mmh Expansion of. the tearly warning S'siena max mouaes oeiewon stations Arci!c eter Nortn America, began sev- erai years ago ana nuwiuuu ,.mri, r. .vflahle for Ummc a a i & j. v ITrnm nre finn. M - - president Eisenhower, in I his d Union message to I congress on Jan. 7, commented that continental defense measures are being strengthened, and said I that in the fiscal year beginning July 1 the government will spend nearly a billion dollars more' for that purpose than was spent in 1953. The Air Defense Command of tne ait orce currenuv is nrocur- in three all-weather fichter tvoes the F89. F8S and F94. with de- liveries, of the latter model now via oruer oy uie ait xxenae Command, and now in production, is the F102, newest of the fighter family. t is capable of sonic speed, (more than 700 MPH) has I at 111211 TBlt OI CUITID. BTIQ IS Illtea with radar equipment to make it in ting oow" anu cioam in on an enemy I bomber in clouds or at night Kx-rnl A rant j n m rit ggg EJeQU , rillsiLuTnu? " Ma" Yveu.c: FB de Sy h candidate for Republican rumination in the " wmgrewHHm vuvku The district, made maae up vi u pu s 9t Pittsburgh wards, by Rep. Herman (D). I Cvetic has testified before nu- on bU .ctWUM. He uld tt to- learned many of its secrets sev eral years ago. 15 Purses Stolen From Church eg JACKSON. Mich (Jl " Two jackson churches - the First 1 dni. . p- rnnn.n.ttn.ni rSS-rSd cmedttefta" women's purses coiitaining; over oo during services Sunday. The nurses had been left with cotiX. The Jackson Citiien patriot meanwhile reported that thieves rnrST-S LESS: made off with bundles- containing more than 2,000 copies of its Sun day newspaper. The thieves were oeuerea to nave zouowea aeuTcry tracks in a car. picking cp the bundles as they were scattered I about tho city. I GOAL AT 50t,oM NEW YORK (A Tne National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis I said Sundav it hooea to have j enough trial polio vaccine for at 1 least 500,000 second grade, school I children before the start of the I polio Sice Star to Wed LONDON (A Vhreca Lindfors. beautiful Swedish film star, ar rived from Hollywood! Sunday and said she plans to marry George Tabori, author and playwright Sha said thv would ho wad in shout a vear. when i her divorce from Don Sievel. film director. h- comes final She was first mar- nea u a swetusn attorney ana nas three children. j miss unators came nere to act in J. B. Priestley's Whit fVuintPM She told reoorters she was train- Tabori to help with the house- ---- . . WAT. !? l"f T firillUia Wl ril-l 11 Berlin 1 alks By TOM REEDY BERLIN ID The: Western Big xhree and Russia agreed Sunday night after 10 days of wrangling, jjj an Austrian lindeDendence treaty. i m. - u i iwi .imUSTKi -iSdS1 PTtpA to th rfsmkiv ranitalu "il ''"JZJZ? IdenUcal communiques issued by each of the four prs after than 50 hours of deliberations dis- rlnoH hat Knfh th !at and Wrf j - r Rass Demands The Russians had demanded that half the meetings be held in their sector of the quartered city, The Western powers had wanted three-fourths of the talks to be held in the former Allied Control Authority building Jn the American sector. The Americans, I French and British regard this; as the only truly neutral ground in Berlin. As finally settled, the Russians get a third of the meetings in their sec- tor during the first three weeks, "Let the Russian! have a tiny triumph if that is what they regard it to be." one Allied snokesman .aid. ..We believe lhat the main .t Jg to KmM 0Q Germany and Austria and see if some international agreement can ound j schedule for Talks The agreement provides that the first week's talks will be held in the ACA building, the second week at the U. S. S. R. high commission- er's residence on Uhter Den Lind- en in East Berlin.! and the third hack at ACA. Thereafter. the progress of the1 talks will de- Knrng STe compromise was dictated by It , r..i. ' ter Dulles, BriUsh JForeign Secre- tary WVnthony Eden and French ForeignMinister GeVges Bidault in three are expected here Friday " a pre-parley meeting on West' I ZiZZSz Z' STsSL T-J ster V. M. Molotovi is expected to arrive Saturday or Sunday. Snow Depletes Feed Stocks Statesman Newt Srric SILVERTON Snow which fell Friday night and had melted Sat- urday and Sunday to thick patch- es in many of the lower places to aiuwc.ca ji ami uniu; vMuiku the Silverton countryside Sunday night with several inches covering the hills to the south snd east of Miverton. 3X111 CI" 1U U1C OUTC WCfC OUSy Sunday hauling fray and other feeds to the Pastures for Jhe cat- "H. are now lambing in the area. The ranchers report that many days of this will certainly deplete feed stocks in the vicinity, as calls were heavy Saturday at various hay and other feed supply houses. So far winter j pasture condi tions have been very favorable in almost all sections of the Willa mette Valley thisjyear. Woman Held -v k. On 2 tharges A Salem woman was arrested J"? J? JLSJWit f.J conduct charge at the station. Fern Mae Gross. 3740 Silverton Rd., was stopped in the 800 block of Broadway, police said. She resisted when told to come to the station after being quest ioned on her driving, arresting officers said. I Bail was set at $183. SEEK JETLINER LONDON tl -r The Admiralty said Sunday four; warships will try to raise the Comet jetliner which plunged into tho Mediterranean last Sunday with n loss of 35 lives. MONDAY LUNCH . At NORTH'S In Capitol Shopping Center SPACHEni WltTa - ) - MEAT BALLS Hot Rolls and Batter ge Cole 81w ; Fast Service, Delicious Food Try Salem's Best Place to Eat Wins Approval Neg otiators Meet in Korea, PANMUNJOM OH Allied and Communist negotiators met -! for more than three hours Monday but failed again to agree on reopen ing talks aimed at starting the long delayed Korean peace con ference. The liaison officers agreed to try again Wednesday to break the deadlock that halted negotiations last month. ! Forvthe third straight time, the Allies asked the Communists to withdraw charges that the United States connived with South Korea in releasing 27,000 anti-Red I war prisoners Just before the armistice. The Reds have refused. U.S. envoy Arthur Dean, who broke off the talks, attached that as his chief condition for resum ing the sessions to clear the way for the full-scale conference.!; The Communists Monday again stood fast on their demand i that the liaison secretaries discuss only the date for resuming the prelim inary talks. . i "There's not much news today," Edward Martin, Allied liaison : of ficer, told correspondents after the 3 hour, 10 minute session. Martin asked the Reds during the meeting "to correct the; rec ord" in secret session. "We cannot see why you should object to rectifying this matter in executive session in order to start on a constructive basis," he told them. Ike Expected to Ask Expansion Of Health Aids By FRANK CAREY I AP Science Reporter i WASHINGTON 1 President Eisenhower's "health" message to Congress Monday is expected to recommend creation of a system of federal "re-insurance" of pri vate health insurance plans and expansion of government research on cancer, heart disease and other major ills. ; j The President also may call for increased government financial aid in the vocational rehabiliation of disabled persons. . j j Authoritative sources who said they had received advance word, in a general way, of what the President has in mind, told a re porter it is possible he might urge increased appropriations under the hospital construction act and a broadening of its provisions. This would be to allow construc tion of nursing and convalescent homes, diagnostic clinics and re habilitation centers not now! avail able.' ' - j More facilities for the care of the chronically ill is another possi bility, these sources said, in addi tion to the following: 1. Setting up a federal re-in surance agency which ; would guarantee, up to some maximum limit, payments for hospital and medical care beyond a point where private insurance companies and voluntary health insurance associ ations cannot go without suffering financial loss themselves. Tht idea would be to enable pri vate plans to give subscribers more benefits than are now possi ble. Parents Fail to Get Two-Headed Son at Hospital i INDIANAPOLIS UR Indiana University Medical Center! officials waited in vain Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hartley to come and get their two-headed son. i ! The center announced Saturday that N the Hartleys had sent word from Petersburg that they planned to take their five-week-old Son home Sunday. The hospital said; there is no further need for hospital care for the baby. ; Van Fleet Asked To Enter Politics ORLANDO, Fla. (ff The Flori da Republican Executive; Commit tee Sunday asked Gen. James A. Van Fleet to run for governor on the GOP ticket this year: Tat former commander of the Eighth Army in Korea ! was not immediately available fori com ment, but G. H. Alexander, state Republican chairman, said he "in dicated a great deal of interest when approached recently." NOW SHOWING OPEN fi:45 "JACK SLADE" Mark Stevens f Dorothy Maloae ; - Comedy Co-Hit "CLIPPED WINGS" Leo Gorcey, Bants Hall "NOTICE!' brTm I Subscription Trdtt Nov for Hit CIVIC DRAMA FESTIVAL On Sale at Stevens j iSoft Sponsortd by M Salom 2030 Club Fail to Agree mm Boy Strangles in Polio Harness COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa.' (A -Tommy Smith,! IS, of Council Bluffs, who was used this year in local March of j Dimes campaign publicity, strangled Sunday in polio harness. U Smith was killed when he be came entangled in a harness used to strengthen his polio-weakened back muscles. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Heber Smith. 22-Me Walk At 38 Below EndsinRescue WILLIAMS. Minn, (ft A lost woodsman, who walked 22 miles in 38 below weather and spent lOVfc straight hours in the bitter cold, was rescued late Saturday night, numb and exhausted. But Carl Hedburg, about 55, shook off effects of the ordeal quickly and Sunday was in good condition in his home. Hedburg started out from a lum ber camp about 33 miles from here in northerly Lake of the Woods County Saturday afternoon. He apparently ; hoped to pick up a ride. At 9:30 p. m.. Ranger Ralph Thompson, at his forest station, heard a ring on his conservation telephone line, which is connected to a series of emergency phones on trails throughout the forest Hedburg was on the line, lost in thick brush. Thompson told the lumberman to keep active and stay on the trails. Thompson then organized a search. Rangers found Hedhurg an hour later, 22 miles from the camp and heading in the wrong direction. They said warm clothing had saved the woodsmen's life. 5P PttONE S-SOM friz? The man wh (banged the A MAN1FICE11TJm0T10H PICTURE FOR OUR TtMl 'CiS Mir- National Board o! Review Selects Martin Lather As One Best Films of 1953! STARTS TOMORROW LUlu ao . es Ixdlfch as ib Fcri:u$ From mo AdvenJuro- laderi Faae o , h.GrootNove4r; "lX by ten Ames'U KK'A $S fRctsrt Stewart I Ana ILOIi-eilGERiDLIUII , pa AIso V I .1 Short Sabiects I j "WINTER PARADISE" , 'LAmtENTiAN SPORTS HOUPAY" Michigan-Italy Mercy Flight Saves Boy PARMA. Italy Un A mercy flight from far-off Michigan pulled 10-year-old: Vincenzo Russo away from the shadow of death Sunday. Doctors at Parma Hospital said an injection of antihemophilic glo bulin flown to Italy by a relay of U.S. transport and jet planes had "worked wonders' for the pale victim of hemophilia. Vincenzo's bleeding, which was causing his strength to ebb slowly, has stopped. Since last Sunday Vincenzo had been bleeding as the result of los ing a baby tooth,; The package of globulin, flown from America at the request of U.S. Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce, arrived Satur day night i Vincenzo was the second Euro pean boy to be saved in this man ner within a week. Eight-year-old Gottfried Eder was bleeding to death in Iinnsbruck, Austria, un til an administration of similar serum flown from Lansing, Mich-, stopped the flow last Monday. Gottfried, also a hemophiliac, had been bleeding several days after a tooth extraction and al most didn't make it when the pack age of serum was delayed a day through a mixup. mowi soar 50c Till 5:00 Jane Russell Marilyn Monroe in "Contlomon Prefer Blondes" Also Bette Davis in Tho Star NOW PIAYINGI Prices tali tacaf eat aaly: Eves. Saa aSatti fUN. Wtk-4ay soat, aSnlts M. Chuartm, aay -ttmt. M. - nrrrr 33IB3t3 ' Louis oa RoctwBont orasaav i-LAST DAY I Robert Taylor : Deborah Kerr i i" f'QUOVADIS" 1