The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 09, 1954, Page 2, Image 2

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    I CSec I) Statesman. Salem, Om. Sun May 9, 1954
Laniel,
Pleven
Jeered
By PRESTON GROVER
PARIS UTi Parisians jeered
Premier Joseph Laniel and De
fence Minister Rene Pleven Satur
day during an Armistice Day ob
servance held while French Union
soldiers were being led away to
prison stockades from Dien Bien
Phu.
Stones were hurled into Commu
nist offices in Paris and firebombs
into the plant of a Communist news
paper at Nice.
It reflected the bitterness many
Frenchmen felt at the new defeat
in a faraway war they have long
learned to hate and whose mistakes
they were seeking to lay at the
door of the nearest one who could
be held responsible.
Police lined the Champs Elysees
from end to end Saturday morning
long before the officials and col
umns of veterans made the tradi
tional march to the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier at the Arch of
Triumph marking the ninth anni
versary of the surrender of the
Germans in the ceremony at
Rheims May 7, 1945.
Mild Applaase
President Rene Coty got a mild
burst of applause as he made his
automobile pilgrimage to the
tomb.
But when Laniel and Pleven
drove by the limited number of on
lookers along the street hissed and
hooted.
'"Send him to Dien Bien Phu!"
they shouted at Laniel. Others
cried "Shoot him!"
Pleven drew angry outbursts of
"Resign, resign" and "Shame on
him."
Trouble Before
It was the second time Laniel
and Pleven had run into trouble
at the Arch of Triumph.
Only a few weeks ago, after they
dismissed Marshal Alphonse Juin
from his advisory military func
tions for insubordination, Laniel
was kicked and Pleven was slapped
and had his hair pulled by a small
band of demonstrators.
Rite of Silence
The Cabinet ministers had come
to the tomb for a ceremony of
silence during the early defense of
the ill-fated fortress in Indochina.
But the limited number of police
around Saturday was only a frac
tion of the number to be called out
Sunday for a solemn ride by Gen.
Charles de Gaulle, who himself will
silently salute France's Unknown
Soldier at the arch.
His followers expect De Gaulle's
appearance will result in a resur
gence of opposition to the European
army plan, which he opposes, and
which the present Laniel govern
ment is pushing toward a vote on
ratification. - .
Police- were" called "back- "from
leave and the full force of Paris
peace officers was expected to line
all approaches to the streets.
There were some who thought
the Communists might try to pro
voke a demonstration by the De
Gaullist followers who have been
Invited to gather around the great
circular plaza at the arch.
Party Tuesday
For Inductees
Twelve men from Marion
County will meet at the Salem
YMCA Tuesday for farewell cer
emonies prior to leaving for
Portland where they will be in
ducted into the Armed Forces
the following day.
Salem men scheduled for in
duction are Benjamin O. Pitzer,
Lawrence T. Cherry, Thomas L.
Snethen, Norman L. McDonald,
Darwin D. Smith and Don T.
Radley.
Others are Clarence L. Med
ack, ML Angel: William W. Mai
er, Silverton; James L. Bristow,
Prineville; James L. Choquette,
Woodburn; Henry L. Credille,
Turner, and Owen E. Albin, Dal
las. Albin was transferred from
the Marion County office to Polk
County.
HORSE RACES
TODAY!
At
THE KIDDIE RIDES (
2234 Fairgrounds Road (
(SCflDHA
T
Mother's Day Special
Chinese and American Food
Prepared Orders to Take Out
Facilities Available For
Banquets and Parties
Open Daily, 1 1 a.m. to 3 a.m.
2055 Fairgrounds Rd. Ph. 26596
At Hie Hollywood Stop Light
One-Day Trip
Turns Into
PORTSMOUTH. N. H. UP A
feeble whistle at sea Saturday
brought help to George Ramsdell.
30, whose one-day sail in his tmy
sloop turned into a 20-day night
mare of cold, exhaustion and hun
ger on bleak, rain-swept Atlantic
swells.
U.S. Rejected
Asylum for
MIG Designer
NEW YORK A refugee air
craft expert said Saturday designs
for the famed MIG 15 jet fighter
were lost to the West in 1946 when
American military authorities re
fused to grant asylum to its Germ
an designer.
The swift, deadly MIG 15 was one
of the most effective weapons used
by the Communists in Korea. The
United States finally obtained its
secrets last year by paying $100,-
000 to a defecting North Korean
pilot.
Saturday's statement on the
plane was made by Valentin Soko
low, 41, who was identified before
the House Committee on Commu
nist Aggression as a high-ranking
Soviet aircraft expert before his
defection in 1946.
Sokolow told the committee the
MIG 15 was designed by Prof. Seig
friend Guenther. former head of
the Henkel aircraft plant which
built crack fighters and bombers
for Nazi Germany.
Sokolow said he drove Guenther
and a German gir! to West Germ
any in an attempt to surrender in
1946 but he was accused by Amer
ican Military Police of being a spy.
After three days of questioning
by American and British officials,
he said he and the girl were per
mitted to remain in the American
sector. But he said he was
convinced that Guenther was re
turned to the Russians.
Rep. Charles J. Kersten R-Wis
chairman of the comrnittee, said
after Sokolow's testimony that an
effort would be made to learn the
identities of military police officers
involved.
"This is a great tragedy, if true."
commented Kersten after the com
mittee voted to pursue the mater
further
Transit Strike
Scheduled
In Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH Iff! Residents of
Pittsburgh ?t eg I . capital of the nav
tion and thousands of suburban
dwellers prepared Saturday for the
city's most crippling transit tieup
in history as trolley and bus oper
ators threatened to walkoff the job
Sunday at 1 a. m. PST).
Harry Butler, president of Divi
sion 85, Amalgamated Assoc. of
Street Electric Railway and Motor
Coach Employes set the strike
deadline after employes of Pitts
burgh Railways Co. rejected a
company offer to add a cost-of-living
increase to the basic pay
rate.
Portland Man Killed as
Car Plunges Off Road
MADRAS, Ore. OP An auto
mobile plunged off Highway 26, 10
miles west of Warm Springs, early
Saturday and killed William Ray
mond Koyhka. 42, Portland.
Two other Portlanders in the car
were unhurt. They are Clarence
Harold Olson and Jesse Lucius
Cowan.
MAN, 80. HOSPITALIZED
George Morford, 80, of 615 S.
12th St.. was taken by Willamette
Ambulance Service to Salem Me
morial Hospital Saturday night
after he apparently suffered a
stroke, according to hospital au
thorities. His condition early this
morning was listed as "fair.
HONEYMOON IRS W1LCOMH
Com in od YO" orrbf
SEASIDE
rttlMOfUT
in Tiny Sloop
20-Day Nightmare
"My feet are still numb." Rams
dell murmured sleepily from the
cozy warmth of a hospital bed as
he recalled his last six days with
out food on the mastless, helplessly
drifting craft.
The Medford, Mass., electric
company executive dropped from
a 160 to 120 pounds during his epic
trip but Portsmouth hospital offi
cials said be was in good condition
except for exhaustion and malnu
trition. Ramsdell gave this account of his
voyage that began with "a Sunday
sail" April 18 to try out his newly
acquired 22-foot sloop, Kickapoo:
After leaving Essex, Mass., har
bor, Ramidell said everything was
going so well he thought he might
as well keep on sailing and headed
for Nova Scotia.
Ran Into Gale
Twenty miles north of Portland,
Maine, and 75 miles off shore,
Ramsdell ran into a gale that
snapped a rope supporting the
mast. He unstepped the 25-foot
mast to repair the halyard and
then found he didn't have the
strength to put up the mast.
Ramsdell rigged a temporary
mast six feet high and attached the
spinnaker sail but it was insuffi
cient to give it enough speed to
steer.
The Kickapoo was "drifting like
a son of a gun" and taking water
as she wallowed sideways in the
rough seas.
Ramsdell said he had only a
pocket compass to guide him and
tried to keep the boat heading
westward toward land.
Ran Out of Food
For food he said he started out
with "10 gallons of water, 12 boxes
of graham crackers, some biscuits
and a couple of boxes of raisins."
When he ran out of food, he tried
fishing but "I didn't get even a
nibble."
Several times in the days and
nights of helplessness, Ramsdell
sighted fishing trawlers but none
spotted his tiny, storm-tossed craft
or noticed his frantic signals with
a whistle and bulls eye lantern.
Asked if he prayed for help,
Ramsdell told a newsmen, "No, I
did what had to be done and then
sat in the bottom of the boat and
bailed."
Finally, shortly after daylight
Saturday morning-ron the 20th day
a lobster fisherman. Dana Knight
of Kittery, Maine, heard the feeble
whistle call from the exhausted
Ramsdell. Knight radioed the Coast
Guard station here to pick up the
helpless craft.
Ramsdell said later from his hos
pital bed:
"When I saw the fishing boat
pull alongside, I thought for a min
ute I was seeing things. But when
I heard the fisherman sing out to
me. I knew it was the real thing.
"I was too weak to cry."
New Restrictions
On Dissemination
Of A-Data Sought
WASHINGTON uB Rep. W.
Sterling Cole (R NY) said Satur
day tight new restrictions on the
dissemination of atomic informa
tion have been added to a draft
bill now before Congress.
Cole is chairman of the Senate
House Atomic Energy Committee
which begins open hearings Mon
day on e detailed new blueprint
for controlling atomic energy.
It is designed primarily to carry
out President Eisenhower's pro
gram of sharing more atomic in
formation with allied nations and
to lower barriers against private
operation of atomic facilities.
But the committee - written
measure also includes new clauses
designed. Cole said, to impose "ab
solute liability" on officials who
reveal "restricted" information
and any person receiving it, in
cluding newsmen, who pass it on
to unauthorized persons'
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STERLING
Man Held in
Brutal Killing
Of Woman, 82
BREMERTON, Wash, m
Bremerton police arrested a young
man Saturday- in connection with
the savagely brutal slaying of .an
82 year oJd woman, in whose blood
sodden clothing $470 was carefully
pinned. . , '-
Robbery apparently was the mo
tive for the fatal attack sometime
late Friday "on the elderly victim,
Mrs. Pauline K. Dahj, said Det
Lt. John Plouf.
Plouf said it was probable the
would - be thief was frightened
away from Mrs. DaM'i small, two
room house before he could find
the money.
Pinned to her clothing were $400
in currency and $70 in traveler's
checks. Another $25 in cash was
found in her purse.
The house, where Mrs. Dahl
lived alone, had not been ran
sacked and her garments gave no
indication they had been searched.
Plouf said the young man picked
up for questioning had blood stains
on his clothing, but explained it
came from the extraction of five
teeth Friday.
An autopsy showed Mrs. Dahl
was beaten and stabbed unmerci
fully. Her chest was crushed, her
spleen and liver ruptured, her jaw
fractured and she ; had been
stabbed inumerable limes about
the chest, back and head. The
room in which she, lay was com
pletely spattered with blood. A
broken - handled knife was on the
floor near the body.
Boy Wounded
By Ranclier
ROSEBURG OP A 14-year-old
boy was shot north of here Friday
night by a rancher who said he
thought he was firing at a sheep
chasing animal.
The boy, Charles Dossey. was
struck in the head. He underwent
brain surgery, in Eugene. Attend
ants at the Sacred Heart Hospital
there said he withstood the surgery
well, but was in serious condition
Saturday.
The rancher, Robert S. Borland
Jr., said he saw his sheep running
up a lane. He took a .22 caliber
rifle along with him when he went
to find what was chasing them.
He said lights of his truck dis
closed something in the grass be
side the lane. He thought it was
an animal with brown fur. and he
fired.
He said he was horror-struck to
find he had shot a boy.
There was no immediate expla
nation for the boy's presence in
the lane.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Myrl Dossey of Winchester, the
community where Borland also
lives. . . ;
Streetcar Wreck
Kills Car Driver
PORTLAND UFi An Interurban
streetcar and an automobile col
lided at a crossing here Saturday
night and Maurice D, Young, 66,
the driver of the car, was injured
fatally.
The streetcar, knocked off its
tracks by the impact and running
on the ties, pushed the car 232
feet.
Young's foot became caught un
der a pedal in the car. The pedal
had to be cut off with a hacksaw
before Young was freed. He died
shortly after arrival at a Portland
hospital.
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Two Angels-
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ATLANTA, Ga. Attractive
Avis Flury, 18, whose leg was
amputated when she was 10
because of cancer, poses in
front of her Lakewood Heights
home near Atlanta, Ga., with
her golf club. Her story is one
of those prepared for the
Americaji Cancer Society tell
ing how three people stood up
to the dread disease and won.
Avis, who has an artificial leg,
has boy friends and is active
in school and church affairs.
Her biggest thrill came when
her senior classmates chose
her as "prettiest girl in the
class" at Atlanta this year.
(AP Wirephoto)
18 Initiated
Into 40 et 8
Eighteen men were initiated in
to the 40 et 8, fun and honor soci
ety of the American Legion, dur
ing the annual Spring Wreck of
the Marion County Voiture 133
held Saturday afternoon and eve
ning at the Senator Hotel. Formal
initiation took place during a din
ner Saturday night.
Included in the initiation were
new members from Salem, Toledo,
Coos Bay and Astoria. John Crock
att, chef de gare of the Voiture
153, said men from the latter three
towns were included in the Salem
activity because no initiation
ceremony is held in their own
vortures.
POLICE ARREST TWO
State police Saturday night ar
rested -two- persons on charges of
driving while intoxicated. Held in
lieu of $250 bail each were Gale
Alfonse Buchheit, Silverton Route
2, and Glenn Ray Smith, Portland.
The Red Mill
Victor Herbert's
Ever-Popular Musical-Comedy
PRESENTED BY
Salem High School
Choir and Orchestra
May 11 and 12
Adults, 75c; Students, 50c
Salem High Auditorium 8 p.m.
TODAY!
r
CO - FEATURE
"QSf toil
Dulles Opens
Talks on Asia
Alliance Plan
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON OP Secretary
of State Dulles, following up an
unusual Saturday meeting of the
National Security Council, Satur
day opened diplomatic talks on
proposals for a southeast Asian
alliance to block the Communist
drive in Indochina.
Dulles is prepared to urge po
tential southeast Asian allies t
and the U.S. Congress to un
dertake firm pledges of action
tegic area. These pledges could
tagic area. These pledges could
lead to intervention in the war by
the United States and pther mem
bers of the coalition.
Dulles conferred Saturday with
New Zealand Ambassador Lexlie
Knox Munro. to push forward plans
for a conference of proposed alli
ances members as quickly as pos
sible. Munro is New Zeland's deputy
member on a three power south
west Pacific alliance which pre
sumably will be one of the corner
stones of the project new coalition.
The alliance is composed of the
United States, Australia and New
Zealand.
Dulles also talked with British
Ambassador Sir Roger Makin
about the situation in southeast
Asia.
The Security Council meeting at
the White House under President
Eisenhower's chairmanship lasted
90 minutes. It brought together the
President, Dulles. Defense Secre
tary Wilson and other high admin
istration officials for -a new look
at the Indochina crisis in the light
of the fall of Dien Bien Phu.
Siamese Twins
Joined at Head
MEMPHIS, Tenn. ( Siamese
twin girls, joined at the head, were
born at the city's John Gaston
Hospital Saturday.
Condition of the Negro infants
is good, doctors said, and X-rays
indicate they are normal in every
other respect.
Doctors said it was too early to
determine if they can be separated,
like the Brodie twins of Chicago.
The twins are joined so that they
lie face to face at an angle of
about 45 degrees. The forehead of
one is connected to the top of her
sister's head.
RIVE-IN THEATIi
Ph. 2-7829
UII1H MINKS. RMMWAT ftf
Cafes Open 6:45, Show at Dude
Starts Today
Academy Award
Tor Best Actress
AUDREY HEPBURN
GREGORY PECK
"Roman Holiday"
ALSO
Filmed on the Battlefield
of Korea
"CEASE FIRE"
Brine the Whole Family
See a Movie From Tour Car
G( M
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WONDWUS ADVEHM! BREATH-TAKING SPECTACLE AND PAGEANT!
The Swashbuckling
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STERLING
Vs-' ' ,-4. '
yai
McKay to Use
Teleprompter
PORTLAND in Secretary of
Interior McKay's power policy
talk will be carried by a Portland
television station and 20 Oregon
radio stations Monday night.
Station KPTV on channel 27 will
make the telecast, in which Mc
Kay will use a teleprompter. a
device that is attached to the tele
vision camera. It presents one line
at a time to the speaker, and can
be speeded or slowed as the speak
er desires.
Among the radio stations carry
ing the talk will be KSLM, Salem
and KW1L, Albany.
NEGOTIATIONS ADJOURN
NEW YORK ( Negotiations
were adjourned for the weekend
Saturday after a three-hour session
between the Western Electric Co.
and two CIO unions.
1S4 N Commercial
TB Wilkinf up
srer Paint Stor
Beat Chinese Cook
YE SING. Prop.
IT !ft is - chinM
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Open Iflfjotlier 6 2Xuf
Bring Mother to China City
for a Special Treat of our
Exotic Chinese Dishes or a
Delicious American Dinneij
Open 12:00 Noon-1:00 A.M.
3555 South Commercial Phone 2-2117
MOTORCYCLE RACE
Sun., May 9th f
SALEM MOTORCYCLE CLUB'S
ANNUAL
SNORKEL SCRAMBLES
Thrills -Speed -Spills
TIME TRIALS - 12:00 NOON
RACE STARTS AT 1 :00 P. M.
Follow the Signs on Mecleay Road
50c Admission - Children Under 12
Accompanied by Parents Free
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Train-Auto j !
Crash Kills !
KLAMATH FALLS W l Twe
men were killed outright and an
other was injured seriously Satur
day night when an automobile in
which they were ridinj Collided
with a moving freight train at
Hatfield on the Oregon-California
border. I
The dead were Identified by Ore
gon state police as James E.
Hurst. 38. of Merrill. Ore,, and I
Harry Edick, 47. Pomeroyi Wash.
The injured man was listed as
Jesse Byrd, 54. Mcintosh, Fla.
Ten freight cars in thi outb
ound Southern Pacific train were
derailed. The car was 'carried
some 300 feet before the train was
able to stop. J ' -
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