The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 12, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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Cured to tl Crvwth f Ortf
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The words, "Guy's in trouble"
work like magic back in Wash-j
ington these days. The, Cordon
Ellsworth bill to settle the status
of the O & C controverted lands
sails through both houses, though
its predecessors have regularly
got lethal gas of dying with the
close of the session. Appropria
tions to keep Northwest dam con
struction on schedule have been
restored in the Senate where Sen.
Cordon is a member of the pow
erful appropriations committee.
When the House trimmed the al
lowances for Bonneville Power
Administration and the Interior
department. Cordon pulled Mc
Kay's horse- out of the mire and
got the cuts restored. The Cord-on-for-Senator
publicity bureau
sends out a piece telling how
Cordon got another million dol
lars for access roads.
Cordon has functioned qui-e
regularly as savior of appropria
tions for Northwest power enter
prises, and is credited with get
ting The Dalles dam started, al
handed. This year his
luck has carried through hand-;
nmolv for the report tnat t-oru- ;
stiff nnnosition in the ; f
fall election has stirred up j
Washington Republicans, even in
the House. It really is too bad
that we aren't ready with a new
dam project because this migni
w inst the time to get it. For the
GOP isn't going to lose that Ore- j
gon Senate seat (having lost me
other one already), not if good
appropriations will save it.
Dick Neuberger is out cam
paigning for Cordon's job. He ac
cuses Cordon and McKay of be
ing in on a big "giveaway" off
shore oil. Hells Canyon power,!
etc. Dick says he is campaigning
on principles, challenging Cord
on's voting record on major is
sues. Well, Dick, there's another
P in politics; and that is pork
Most congressmen figure that it's
safer to rely on Pork than Prin
ciples. Cordon has his principles
too, which are directly opposite
to those of Neuberger. But his
campaign organization seems to
be stressing his ability to bring
home the bacon. However you
slice it, it still is pork, speaking
in political terms. j
Record Crowd
Gobbles Up
Big Shortcake
Statesman New Serrice
T FBANON The biggest crowd I
, t: . k., Kctival :
1 ii ua&J vii WM" j -
historv Friday devoured 5,358
pounds of strawberry shortcake
in 2 hours.
"The world's largest shortcake"
is an annual feature of the com
munity honoring the strawberry
harvest.
Festival officials and newsmen
estimated peak crowd Friday at
15,000 during the cutting of the
shortcake, with a total attendance
of nearly 30,000 throuf h the day.
Weather threatened but held off
until evening.
Sweepstakes winner in the
grand parade Friday morning was ;
Britton's Department Store, with j
depicting the old woman who liv
ed in a shoe. Miss Dorothy Duer
ing rode the float with four tots,
Mary and John Parham, Steve
Johnson and Amy Bressler.
Division winners iu the parade
were First National Bank, First
Christian Church, Crown Z er-;
bach and the Linn County Pio-
neer Picnic Association. The lat
ter group, planning its celebra
tion at Brownsville June 17-19,
will select its queen Saturday at
the festival here
Other Saturday features are an ,
11 a.m. children's parade, follow
ed by motorcycle races, youth tal
ent show and a night folk danc
ing exhibition.
V. S. to Fly French
Wounded Via V. S.
WASHINGTON The U.S.
Air Force announced Friday night
it will evacuate about 1.000 wound
ed French troops from non-combat
areas in Indochina.
They will be taken to France via
the United States.
FREAK CHICK HATCHED
DALLAS A four-legged chick
was hatched by a white leghorn
hen Thursday at the C. L. Rich
ards home on Pioneer Loop but
lived only about 30 minutes,
Richards reported. The chick has
been preserved in a formalde
hyde solution, he added.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
1 1
"God but food if high ths
fill
104TH YEAR
Legion Chief in Salem
1 Jr '
I i- I I W n A' I
! L. - -a LDri I j
Mark Earl of Portland (at left), newly-elected boy governor of Bea
ver Boys State, chats (above) with National American Legion ;
Commander Arthur J. Connel! of Middletown, Conn., when Cou
ncil visited the youth activity on the Willamette University cam
pus Friday. (Statesman photo.) (Story on page 4, sec. 2.)
Terms for U. S. Aid
Set Down by Dulles
LOS ANGELES (.Secretary of State Dulles listed five condi- j
tions Friday which he said must be fulfilled before America and
her allies would intervene militarily in Southeast Asia:
"1. An invitation from the present lawful authorities.
"2. Clear assurance of complete
independence for Laos, Cambodia
and Vietnam.
"3. Evidence of concern by the
United Nations.
Collective Effort
"4. A joining in the collective
effort of some of the other nations
of the area.
"5. Assurance that France will
not itself withdraw from the battle
until it is won."
The secretary's speech, before
the Los Angeles World Affairs
Council was devoted exclusively to
Far Eastern conditions. It came on
the eve of a confidence vote which
Premier Joseph Laniel's govern-
ment faces in the French National
Assembly on handling of the Indo-.
china crisis.
Aggression Denied
Dulles termed "clearly false"
any idea that the United btates ;
desires war with Communist Chi-
na. But he warned that if the ;
Chinese Communist regime were
to show in Indochina or elsewhere
that it is riptprminpri in nui-siip thp
TC. t V 'iri '
path of overt military aggression ;
that would be a deliberate
threat to the United States itself."
T t l
I 11381168
School; Five
Persons Die
MEMPHIS W
A powerful jet
piane faltered on takeoff and
smashed through a Memphis naval:
air station aviation mechanics' j xjm. M..jji3
school like a flaming meteor Fri
day! PORTLAND An Eden Rose.
Five persons died in the furious a new varietv in its first year of
nre tea Dy mei sptasnea irom me
stricken F7U Navy cutlass. Seven j
were injured, one senousiy.
The dead included George F. , jtet by Mrs. Nat Schoen of Van
Hurlburt. 36. Portland. Ore. i couver. Wash., a three-times win-
The school was destroyed by ; ner
fire Nearby structures were dam- A McGredy's Yellow, entered by
aged by the intense heat. Three i Charles Leon of Portland, was run-
e i 1 ! I t . I
nremen were nospuaiieu iui ncai- i
ment of burns and smoke injury.
Looks Like Rain
In Valley A lain
It looks like clouds and . how
ers for the weekend, according to
predictions by the U.S. weather
man at McNary Field, and Fri
day previewed this outlook by to
taling .31 of an ini of prec
tion in Salem. Highest
ture in Salem Fridav was 68 and
the low was 50 degrees. The
range in
expected
today.
Salem and vicinity is
to be about the same
Min.
53
38
49
SI
48
SI
65
63
55
Prec.
.31
.04
.03
.15
.05
trace
.00
.00
Salem
Portia na
Baker
Medford
North Bend
Roseburg
San Francisco
Chicago
New York
63
97
89
Los Angeles 72
Max
C8
69
66
71
61
70
Willamette River 00 leet.
FORECAST (from U S. weather
bureau. McNary field, Salem):
Cloudy with a few showers this
morning. Partly cloudy late this
afternoon and through Sunday. High
today 66 to 68. low tonight 45 to 47.
Temperature t 12:01 a.m. today
was 53.
SAl.EM PRECIPITATION
Since Start of Weather Year Sept. 1
This Year Last Year Normal
43.7S 43.07 3846
2 SECTIONS 14 PAGES
Eden Voices
Warning on
Korea Talks
GENEVA ifi British Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden, who
Thursday declared the Indochina
peace talks were foundering, per
formed the same task Friday for
the long-deadlocked negotiations on
unifying Korea,.
Eden said he was ready to ex
plore every means of reaching
agreement on Korea, but that
"there must be some siffn that
agreement is possible."
no way Cm be found f
soiving the differences of these two
.. r Aar, r; A ....
shall have to admit that this con-
. . . .
terence nas not Deen able to corn-
, t jt t . ..
In this event, Eden added, the
proper procedure would be to re
port back to the United Nations on
the deadlocked negotiations. The
search for a political settlement in ;
! Korea then could be resumed !
"whenever the right moment
came."
New Variety
n n
rkfCT Hi KACAC
general use. Friday won the sweep
stakes award at "tne mih annual
Portland rose show It was pvhih-
nerup.
ythe Eden Rose was developed
by Francis Meilland of France,
who also developed the highly suc
cessful Peace rose a few years
ago. The Eden Rose is a deep
cerise pink with the underside of
the petals silver.
Dien Bien Pirn
Efforts Back to
By JOHN RODERICK
SAIGON. Indochina CP Several
Vietminh battalions which marched
more than 220 miles to help destroy
Dien Bien Phu last month were
back Friday at their old posts on
the Thanh Hoa plain, part of a
steel arc the rebel high command
is welding around the Red River
delta.
French military sources told of
the arrival of these seasoned Red
! troops at Thanh Hoa, 80 miles
i south of Hanoi. Thev were de-
variety of regiments to reinforce
Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap's assault on
the French fortress which finally
fell May 7.
The return journey southeast
ward over jungle roads under har
assing air attacks took about a
month. Other rebel veterans of the
siege in the meantime took up pos
itions in strength opposite French
POUNDDD 1651
chine
Fireworks at Hearing; Threat 'to Get9
Jackson Told; McCarthy Curb Urged
Flanders in
Senate Hits
At McCarthy
WASHINGTON UP Sen. Fland
ers (R Vt) demanded Friday that
the Senate strip Sen. McCarthy of
his investigative powers as a com
mittte chairman until McCarthy
purges himself of "contempt" by
answering "charges" made against
him in 1952.
Before delivering this open chal
lenge on the Senate floor, Flanders
confronted the Wisconsin senator
at the McCarthy-Army hearings
and served written notice that he
intended to make the address. It
was Flanders' third speech against
McCarthy in recent weeks.
Hadn't Lirtened
McCarthy's first comment was.
"I don't have enough interest in
any Flanders speech to listen to
it." Shown a copy of the address
later, he remarked:
"I think they should get a man
with a net and take him to a good
quiet place." t
In calling for McCarthy's ouster
as chairman of the Government
Operations Committee and its in
vestigations subcommittee, Fland
ers asserted McCarthy is in con
tempt of "the whole Senate'" be
cause of his refusal to appear two
years ago before a Senate group
which investigated his finances and
other activities.
Fireworks at Hearing
There was a good deal of fire
works when the Yermonter strode
into the glaring lights of the McCarthy-Army
hearing to notify Mc
Carthy of the speech and invite
him to be present for a reply if he
wished.
With the air of a man crossing
Times Square against traffic, Flan
ders entered the jam-packed hear
ing room and asked a Senate em
ploye: "Where is the junior senator
from Wisconsin I mean McCar
thy?" When the senator was pointed
out, Flanders exclaimed, "there he
is!" then walked over and handed
him the notice. For a moment Mc
Carthy appeared dumbfounded.
Asked to Testify
Then, as Flanders appeared
about to retire, McCarthy shouted
that he remain and, if he had any
information about the McCarthy
Army row, "take the oath, raise
your right hand."
If Flanders had "nothing except
the usual smears," McCarthy went
on, he should air them there and
not on the Senate floor."
Abandoned Ice
Boxes at Colonv
Draw Criticism
Ice boxes, left in the wake of
house wrecking in the Veterans
Housing area, 1700 block of Hines
Street, brought a sharp criticism
by city police Friday who classi
fied them as highly dangerous
when left near where children
are at play.
A policeman on routine patrol
spotted two of the boxes standing
near where young children were
playing and, in view of the re-;
cent nationwide deaths of young-,
sters being trapped in similar .
boxes, he made his report ad-:
vising they be moved or destroy
ed. Police noted that William
Rice, who is doing the wrecking
in that area, advised them he
would get rid of the objects. j
Victors Shift
Red River Arc
(lines northwest and southwest of
j Hanoi, the French war capital.
The old fight goes on between
j Vietminh guerrillas and garrison
i forces within the rice-rich delta.
jA "human sea" assault is expected
eventually. But r rench sources
said it is premature to conclude
! the battle for the delta is under
I Gen. Paul Ely, the new French ;
commander in chief, flew to three i
strategic zones of the delta Friday
to check defense preparations. Cov
ering nearly 300 miles, he studied
reinforced concrete fortifications
and conferred lengthily with field
commanders west, southwest and
south of Hanoi.
The French, pouring thousands
of reinforcements into the delta,
guess that the big Vietminh as
sault may come before the mon
soon rains hit their peak at the end
of June.
The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon,
Plan' to
Victim Names eLost Pwspectorf
As Kidnaper; Ransom Missing
PHOENIX, Ariz. OP Mrs. Eve
lyn Ann Smith Friday night " posi
tively identified" a suspect from a
police lineup as the man who ab
ducted her from a busy downtown ,
street and held her 24 hours until '
$75,000 ransom was paid. I
The suspect had staggered into
a farmhouse near where Mrs.
Smith was released. His name was
given as Daniel Marsin, 41, an un
employed welder.
Police Chief Charles Thomas said
the 23-year-old mother identified
Marsin as the man who kidnaped
her Wednesday afternoon drove her
FDR Jr. Joina
N. Y. Fight
ForG
overnor
NEW YORK iJFi Rep. Franklin
D. Rooevelt Jr. definitely entered
the running Friday for the Demo
cratic nomination as governor of
New York an office his father
held before becoming President.
Roosevelt's commitment to the
campaign, after months of pre-.
liminary maneuvering, came at a 1
meeting with Carmine G. de Sapio. j
leader of the Tammany political
organization and Democratic na- j
tional committeeman, and Bronx 1
County Democratic leader Charles 1
A. Buckley. j
Buckley said later that Roosevelt
had neither asked nor received as-1
surances of support at the confer
ence. "It's a little early, yet," said
Buckley.
Roosevelt himself could not be
reached for comment.
First Power
Generated at
Biz Cliff Dam
c
Statesman News Service !
DETROIT Commercial power
output of a 18,000 kilowatt gen
erator at Big Cliff regulating
dam began shortly after 5 o'clock
Friday evening, according to Wal- j
ter A. Mackie, project engineer. ;
The generator which is operat-!
ed by a 26,500 horsepower tur-'
bine turned for the first time on
May 13 and has been undergoing
numerous tests since, Mackie
said.
Big Cliff Dam, part of the Det
roit project, is located about 24
miles below Detroit Dam. The
new generator will operate, con
tinuously while -two 50,000 kilo
watt generators at Detroit Dam !
wilt be used only during periods
of peak load demands, the proj
ect engineer said.
Midshipmen Cleared
By Security Checks
WASHINGTON Secretary
of the Navy Charles Thomas Fri- j
day announced 'the security clear-;
ance of three midshipmen whose ;
officers' commissions were with-;
held when they graduated with
their class last Friday from the
U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. :
Thomas expressed regret that-
the task of investigating the back- j
grounds of all 854 members of the i
graduating class was so large that i
it could not be completed before
graduation day.
MOTORIST KILLED
WALDPORT W Mrs. Rose Y.
Helgeson, 74, of Portland, was in
jured fatally Friday when an auto
mobile driven by her daughter ran
into a bank six miles east of here.
WESTERN INTERNATIONAL
At Spokane 1. Salem 9
At Vancouver 5-11. Wenatchee 4-9
At Lewiston 10. Tri-City 2
At Victoria 5. Yakima 14
At Calgary-Edmonton (rain)
COAST LEAGUE
At Portland - Seattle (rain)
At San Francisco 4, Oakland 5
At Sacramento 2, San Diego 5
At Los Angeles 2, Hollywood 4
NATIONAL LEAGUE
At Chicago 5. New York 4
At Cincinnati 8. Brooklyn 10
At Milwaukee 1. Philadelphia 0
At St. Louis 5. Pittsburgh 8
AMERICAN LEAGUE
At New York 3. Chicago 2
At Boston 2. Cleveland 6
At Washington 9. Baltimore 8
At Philadelphia 3-2. Detroit 16-1
Saturday, June 12, 1954
Sell Democracy Starts
into the Superstitution Mountains
and . held her at gunpoint.
The ransom was paid the nexl
day by her husband, Herbert
Smith, a wealthy Phoenix P:pe and
Steel Company executive.
Marsin was naked to the waist
when sheriff's deputies arrested
him al the farm house for investi
gation. He had but a few pennies
in his pockets He pleaded for wat
er, saying he had become lost while
hunting for the fabled Lost Dutch
man gold mine.
Marsin refused to deny or con
firm that he was the kidnaper.
He was quoted by a police officer
as having said that he once was
convicted of a car theft in Brook
lyn but "got free by paying a little
money."
He has an 11-year-old son and a
daughter. 14, and has been living
in Phoenix for the past two and a
half years.
"It shouldn't take much to break
this rap," he told a reporter.
The suspect is 5-feet. 4-inches tall
weighs 123 pounds and has brown
hair. He has a light growth of
beard.
Mrs. Smith told officer after her
release that the abductor was 35 to
45 years old. about 5-feet 4-inches
tall, with dark brown hair.
She had said he wore a white
sport shirt with figures, a T-shirt
under the sport shirt, a jacket,
dark brown trousers, black shoes
and a tan cloth cap with a large
visor.
Her husband told officers after he
found his wife in the Superstitution
Mountains late Wednesday after
Rose Parade
On Tap Today
PORTLAND iJP The grand
floral parade, climax of the Rose
Festival, will wind through down
town Portland streets Saturday
morning. Roy Rogers, Hollywood cowboy,
and his 14-year-old daughter,
Cheryll, will be marshals of the
parade which is to be made up
of nearly a hundred flower-decorated
floats and marching units.
The children's parade was held
on the East Side Friday with junior
queen Marilyn Kirigin and prime
minister Jerry Nizich as centers of
attention.
Thousands of parents and chil
dren lined Sandy Boulevard to
watch the parade.
In o'her events Friday, Queen
Jan I knighted a number of visit
ing celebrities and later officially
opened the 66th annual Rose Show.
Ride on Borrowed
'Bike' Ends in Death
MYRTLE CREEK. Ore &
Jerry Lenn Smith. 12, was killed
outright Friday when run over by
a truck which struck a bicycle he
was riding.
The boy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Smith of Myrtle Creek,
had borrowed the bicycle from a
neighborhood friend.
The driver of the truck was iden
tified by police as Hugh Eskridge
of Myrtle Creek.
HOOVER AIDE DIES
BOSTON Charles Francis
Adams, who went from skippering
racing yachts to steering the U.S.
Navy in the Hoover administra
tion, died Thursday night at the
age of 87.
Powerful Radioactive Element
But Quick-Thinking Scientist
RICHLAND. Wash. LP
A sci-
entist's close brush with disaster
in research on a new element at
the Hanford Atomic Works was
disclosed hefe Friday.
A highly patent radioactive ele
ment kicked back through a tube
and sprayed on the gloved hands
of Dr. E. M. Kinderman. one of
the two scientists conducting tests
under extreme precautionary con
ditions. Dr. Kinderman's quick ac
tion, however, saved him from in
jury. The incident was reported in a
paper read to a regional meeting
of the American Chemical Society.
It was disclosed in a General
Electric report on how a new iso
tope (or species) of element 99
which itself is a new man - made
element from University of Califor
nia laboratores was separated
chemically by G. E. chemists and
PRICE 5c
noon that he saw her abductor only ;
at a distance of 200 feet. WASHINGTON Sen. McCar-
That morning. Smith said, he had i thy crossed swords with Army
received a mysterious telephone counsel Joseph N. Welch for the
call from a man w ith "a new or ; second time in three days at the
Brooklyn accent " McCarthy-Army hearings Friday
The caller advised Smith, he j and the proceedings were further
said, that his golf clubs could be j enlivened by a serio-comic dispute
p;cked up at a service station at ; about the "Schine plan" to' sell
Apache Junction. Smith said he , democracy through the world
hadn't used the clubs recently but I Welch, who accused the Wiscon
remembered they had been in his ! sin senator of reckless cruelty two
w;fe"s car. He called the police. days ago, pleaded with him Fridav
In the bag deputy shertff Paul afternoon to give a clean bill o"f
E. M. Mullenix found a sealed ran- health to Pvt. G DaviH Qok;-,
some note to "Mr. Smith" demand
ing the $75,000 in cash.
Young Gains
Control of
that he has nothing against him
IVVP "Pl-J except that the colonel once was
1 1 I L RailrOad reported 10 have called a McCar
r vrciw th. mvestigation a "witch hunt."
v.,v vnp v T?,f x Th,e 3211(1 da' of storm v pro
NLV ORK , - Robert R ceedings also brought on a new
oung has won his fight for control ! personal row between Sen Jack
of the mighty New York Central i son -D-Wash) and Roy M "
Railroad by a margin of 1.0,0.000 ; regular chief counsel off the McCar
shares. it was learned Friday from thy investigations committee
an authoritative source which de- Tangled With Aide
clined to be identified. It stemmed from a statement bv
The results o the election , are to McCarthy during the hearing that
be announced officially by the elec- Schine whn h , t7.t-
tion inspectors at 10 a. m
EDT,
Monday at Albany.
The official results will announce
the election of Young's slate of 14
men and a woman to Central's
board of directors, the source dis
closed, unseating the old board
headed by Central President Wil
liam White.
Young thus ends 85 years of dom
ination by the financial and family
descendants of the last century's
titans, Cornelius Vanderbilt and J.
Pierpont Morgan.
The war for the Central was the
biggest business struggle in a gen
eration and the greatest victory
Young ever scored in his career.
The 57-year-old, Texas-born fin
ancier began his attack by de
manding Central's board chairman
ship last February. When the Cen
tral board refused he launched a
UK... : t IJ
blistering attack against his
time enemies the "Wall St. bank
ers."
Car Thief Runs
Police Block;
Flees on Foot
Statesman News Service
SWEET HOME A car thief
ran a road block here in a stolen
luJ Estate" pXe Inciter
wrecking the
he took flisht afoot
ne iook ingni aiooi
r- .
Home street
iiuo me surruunuinK w u o u c u
- 4 4i i : ... j .
m. i uuir ac ami ccumiug
for him early Saturday morning.
The car, reportedly stolen from i
Corvallis sometime Thursday!
night, was spotted by the state
patrol car from Albany about 10
bout 10
p.m. Friday. ...
He took chase on Highway 20 j
out of Lebanon heading toward i
Sweet Home, but the culprit out- j
; ran him. The officer radioed j
I ahead and Sweet Home police j
established a roadblock which :
was crashed througn. the stolen
vehicle proceeded a short
dis -
tance before the driver, appar
ently alone, wrecked the vehicle
and took flight.
engineers in the Hanford plutonium
plant.
Dr. Kinderman and L. F. Miller
were working cautiously with a
small bit of the new form of the
element, at a recent unspecified
date. It was contained in a small
box which in turn was inside a
large box with nine-inch thick met
al walls.
Flasks and other equipment in
side were manipulated by tongs
with outside handles. The scientists
watched through special protec
tive windows. '
Soon after the chemical process
ing started, the thickened "hot"
solution plugged an outlet to a
piece of equipment called a dis
solver. A tube was inserted and
acid was pumped down to dissolve
the compacted material.
It backfired. The report said
pressure - built up within the dis
solver as the acid went to work.
.No, 77
Je"
Aide AssertT
former commanding officer
Termed Act
"Aren't you capable of a single
affirmative kindness?" Welch
asked McCarthy.
! "Vaudeville act:" McCarthy hit
j back.
i He said he's convinced that
Schine's former commander. CoL
Earl Ringler. is a zood' offir
' " " o a 3UUVUIII-
mittee consultant, saved the tax
payers 10 million dollars by forcing
cancellation of an overseas broad
casting station in Jackson's home
state of Washington.
Jackson disputed this, contending
Schine withheld technical informa
tion from the subcommittee. Conn
challenged Jackson and announced
I ne would answer the senator's "er
I roneoue statements" Monday.
onn men tangled with Robert
F. Kennedy, counsel for the Demo
crats on the investigations subcom
mittee, and Kennedy told reporters
Cohn said "we are going to get"
Jaflcson on Monday. '
Lampoons Plaa
Cohn said he told Kennedy that
he thought Kennedy "had a per
sonal hatred" and asked him if he
thought somebody with such a ha.
; tred "should sit here and take nart
t .1 ,. .
Democratic senators."
I Democratic Sens. Symington
i 'Mo) and Jackson set out to get
1 the McCarthy camp's goat with
needling questions about Schine
ranging from the alleged lonelin
of his girl friends when the Army
drafted him, to the value of a plan
Schine once submitted to the state
department for a worldwide "dem
inform" an alliance of free peo
ples in the battle "for men's
souls.''
Jackson lampooned the five-page
plan as a hodge-podge of not very
practical suggestions. One of them:
iJ'"2P& b?
I J vol ,WUJ uu U1HUIK.
and
1 HW' he in?uired amid launter. do
vm, pn aknnr cn;nr a
uciuwu dLj
democracy
, through pinUD girls
(Additional
, ,
details on Page 6,
,
TotlflV Stflt MMNN
' -
SECTTOV 1
Society-Womens .News 3
Valley News . 3
Sunday Radio-TV 6
Crossword. Stargazer 6
World This Week 7
Church News 8
i SECTION 2
Sports News 1-2
Comics-Saturday Radio-TV ... 3
Classifieds 4-
Backfires,
Averts Injury
The potent radioactive solution was
forced up the tube and sprayed on
Dr. Kinderman's gloved hands.
"Kinderman was on a ladder at
the time." said his co-worker.
"When the spray started, he
moved more quickly than anyone
I've ever seen, and yet with cool
coordination peeled off his con
taminated gloves as he descended
and threw them into a waste con
tainer before his feet touched the
ground."
The report said the fear of po
tent stuff was illustrated by the
"quarantine" imposed on the lab
oratory as a result. It couldn't be
used for a month. If had to be
washed and otherwise decontami
nated by men wearing double pro
tective clothing and masks.
It was described as having such
potency that contact with the ma
terials for two seconds would usu
ally prove fatal.