Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1955)
-.- '.-I ' !'.'"'. The Weather . FORECAST (from weather hureM. HkNary field. Salem): : Showers ' and period of partial clearing today. Rain tonight btcom trig showery lata Monday. Cool witK kh InAmM M in SO Innr tonlrii 4t tan $m ? ids yaia 6mtW I Km Crawla f Orfa to 47. . - . Temocrature at 11.-01 a. m. today ' was 54. . j SALEM PRECIPITATION Siaea Start af Weatker Year Sept f Tnii Tear Last Tear ' Naraaal 4.03 1.M 1.13 105th 3 SECTIONS-32 PAGES Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Sunday, October 9, 19S5 PRICE 10 No. 196 Ike R ooks yme ui - hp i vra; iti wn mv ' w .V.-. ' '. POUNDQD 1l65I . Good, High Spirits,? Nixon eports 2-Week Assembly S imports Faure Reform Plans For Morocco Win 477-140 PARIS Ul The French National Assembly early Sunday gave a strong endorsement of the govern ment .program ; for reforms in Morocco but warned Premier Ed gar Faure that it did not fully .ap prove the way be is applying the program.' The vote was 477-140 for "the gov ernment J ' The Vote climaxed three days of debate on the government's poli cies for rebel-ridden Morocco. Earlier this week, especially after the resignation of four Cab inet members, there had seemed to be no hope for survival df the Faure government Political maneuvering and back stage intrigue continued right to the end, through an overnight ses sion of the Assembly. Victory for the government twice seemed en sured along the way and twice tie calculations were upset at the last minute. Only a concession by the Social ists, wno approved r aure s oro- gram but were violent in their criticism of government weakness in applying it saved the govern ment. : The Socialist! agreed to with draw from the resolution finally approved a paragraph critical of the government- - Tty lax Forecast For Dallas ; Statenaaa New Service DALLAS. Ore: A droo in taxes for Dallas property owners was forecast Saturday by Polk County Assessor Ed X, Dunn. Dunn said it appeared the miH age for Dallas residents would be 140.5 mills, down nearly 17 mills from last year. The drop was attributed in part to overpayments which were made in some instances last year when a portion of the assessed valuation was left off the tax rolL . Dunn .said mechanical difficulties with tax-computing machines have been' hampering his crew, .but it appeared that the tax roll would be turned over to Sheriff Tony Neufeldt bout Oct 15. Four Aboard Stricken Tug Near Newport NEWPORT, Ore-. to The 48 foot tug Saltair, .with four men aboard, was floundering in heavy seas 33 miles off the Central Ore gon coast Saturday night Two Coast Guard boats were en route to the stricken vessel. ' The four were identified by the Coast Guard as Ray Roberts, Cory Srank, Robert Pinchem and Nor man Watt It was not learned im mediately where the men were from. Howeve, it was believed the tug was en route from San. Diego to Vancouver, B.C. The Coast Guard station at near by Westport reported it received this message from the Saltair tt l:ep pjn.: "Our pumps have failed and we are shipping water badly". If we don't get aid by night fall we, will be in desperate trou ble." . , . At Seattle the Coast Guard said the sender probably was referring to the stamina of the four aboard who were believed fighting to save the vessel with bailing buckets. - Enzio Pinza lital NEW YORK m Enzio Pinza, singing star of the Brodway hit musical "Fanny," , is in Presby terian Hospital with ; pneumonia and pleurisy. - " ' . The former Metropolitan Opera singer entered the hospital after Friday night's performance. There was no indication today now long he would" be out of the show. - His place was taken by Nicola Moscoma of the Metropolitan, who has been his standby and sang his role recently "while Pinza was on vacation. . CARDINAL DIES raP?A' Anstria - Tnor Cardinal Imutzer of Vienna, head of the Roman Catholic Church in Austria, died of a heart attack in a hospital here early Sunday. He rrope InHosr 1 Football Colorado 13 Oregon 6 Willamette 10 Whitman 0 USC O Washington ; I ;; ' -California 20 WSC 20 j : Michigan; State 38 Stanford 14 26 Michigan Army- 2 Oklahoma 20 Texas 0 .... i I Additional Scores Air Force to Supply Station at South Pole (Map on Wirephoto page.) WASHINGTON (JPt The Air Force said Saturday night its planes will drop "500 tons of building equipment and supplies at the south pole from October 1956 through March 1957. The material will be used to build and provision a station for civilian scientists who will make Antarctic polar observations during the International Geophysical Year. ' . The Tactical Air Command (TAC), assigned the air-drop task, appointed j the 18th Air Force, at Greenville, ' S. C.t to carry out . the 'mission. . Aircraft and crews of the 18th will fly to Christ Church, New Zealand, a year from now, and set up a major 'overhaul base there. j - . From Christ Church the planes will fly 2,300 miles to- an ice strip, to be. built by the Navy's Task Force- 43 f at McMurdo Sound, 400 miles west of Little America. , I An aerial port unit, of the 18th will be stationed at McMurdo Sound to tie and rig the air-drop bundles, and the transport planes will wait there j for favorable weather over the polar area. There will be a series of drop missions, each of them more than 1,700 miles for the nonstop round trip. i ' Air Force experts pointed out that the flights will be much more rugged and 'hazardous than those conducted by the 18th in the Far North last winter in sup port of the "Dew" line the dis tant early warning radar line being 'constructed along Canada's northern 'rim, because of the peaks which thrust upward to more than 14,000. feet The polar -station will be one of three built for U. S. civilian scientists in Antarctica for the observation .periodL r The south pole station will be built entirely from materials dropped by the Air Force. These will include all the food, gasoline and other tup- plies in addition to the construc tion equipment required. , EDEN GIVES WARNING . BOURNEMOUTH,' England UK Prime Minister Eden warned Sat urday that any large scale flow of arms from a great power to the - Middle East would intensify "grave risks" of an Arab-Israeli war. .': Five Trainmen Killed in Georgia Wreck I- matfihiirst Gat WV-Five'tralnraea were killed and 13 persons injured Saturday in a headen HAZELHURST. ua. vn-'fc Raawty passenger train and a freight train ea a blind curve in a -VitT-'t- iB" telescope together and were demel fJSSS' he train piled int. the Ungled wreck- SSSiSSrSi pJ.eaVer.ear. and the remain freight em stayed the tingle track. AP WIrephote M - - " - , . ; Scores Wisconsin 9 . Purdue 0 Ohio State 27 Illinois 12 Georgia Tech 7 Louisiana State 0 Navy 21 Pitt 0 Maryland 28 Wake Forest 7 COP 20 Idaho 0 OCE 36 Portland State 14 Sports Pages.) England to Cut 100,000 From Armed Fortes BOURNEMOUTH. England to Prime Minister Eden Saturday an nounced, a 100,000 cut in British military servicemen over the next three years. . The long expected decision was in line with defense reductions that started in March, 1953. It was in terpreted by British diplomatic sources" as a contribution toward easing of world tension, increasing military efficiency and financial saving to the nation. When, the full reduction becomes effective. Eden told the conserva tive party conference, British armed strength will be at 680,000 men and 20,000 women. He said that : total reduction since 1933 would amount to 170,000 "or more than 20 per cent, a very substan tial figure by any standard." ' Eden's statement came about two months after the Soviet -Union an nounced a cut of 640,000 men in its : armed forces and started a series of similar announcements by the Soviet satellites. , Fish Gasp as Statue Stolen DERBY, England m Thieves early Saturday stole a 300-pound statue of Mercury who, in myth ology, was the , patron god of thieves. . To remove the statue the thieves drained the water away from a fountain pool in which it stood and left nearly a hundred fish gasping. Police refilled the pool in time to revive the fish. 1 Molotov Admits 'Error' 1 - "V. Confession Stirs Speculation Over Diplomat's Fate; By STAN JOHNSON v MOSCOW to Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov confessed in the magazine "Communist" Saturday an - ideological error in a speech Feb. 8. lie said the slip was theo retically' and politically dangerous to the Soviet Union. In brief he wrote that he erron eously referred to the Soviet Union as a nation "where the foundations of a socialist society have already been built," jvhen he should have said its socialist society is already built and the U. S. S. R. is ready to progress to communism. The 63-year-old diplomat, long one of the Communist Party's top theorists, cited decisions of the par ty as early as 1932 to pinpoint his error and support his self-criticism. ; ' He said in a letter to the editor al board of the magazine Commu nist that part of his Feb. 8 speech to the Supreme Soviet contradicted decisions of the Communist Party. Effect Net Clear What effect this public confes sion of mistakes would have on Molotov's future career was not clear to anyone outside top party circles. Whether it would affect his going to Geneva for the Big Four foreign minister's conference later this month was also shrouded in mystery. However, it should be noted self criticism is highly esteemed in Communist circles. Officfais Uncertaia WASHINGTON Wl V. M. Molo tov may be on the way out as Russia's foreign minister but American officials are by no k means certain that is the case, j ; Molotov's public "confession of error in Moscow Saturday on a point of Soviet ideology stirred up intense speculation here about his fate.' . , The point of Communist doctrine on which Molotov confessed error, officials here noted, does not ap pear to have any direct and im mediate bearing on relations be tween ' Russia and the western powers. 1.06 Inches of Rain Recorded McNary Field weathermen re corded 1.06 inches of rain Sat urday" and more is in ..store for the area today, forecasters said early this morning. Some pe riods of partial clearing are ex pected, however. Saturday's rainfall brought the total since Sept 1 to 4.03 inches, well above the 1.30 inches re corded during a similar period last year. Normal is 2.13 inches. Cooler temperatures are ex pected today, weathermen said with today's high near 56 and tonight's low near 45. More rain is expected Monday. STEWART 'STAR OF YEAR LOS ANGELES Of) The Thea er Owners of America organiza tion tonight gave its "Star of The Year" award to actor James Stewart.. ... - v Pair to Add 6 - ST 4 I i I r r There will ke three R's in the France Cesce family ef Salem next month when Roselinda Titina (phota at right) arrives from Italy for their adoption. Pointing out Roselinda's pictures (above) is Ramona' Lisa, 4-year-old daughter ef the Coscot who are looking en with their youngest girl, Rhonda. The family has worked four years on the adoption of Roselinda, who was abandoned as a baby to the care of Cosco's mother. ' ' I Coupl To Adopt T, By ROBERT City Editor, For a jSalem sehoolteaching long determination and afiectiop will result soon in the addition of their third daughter in the person of a winsome Italian 8-year-old. Arranging to bring the once-abandoned child to this country for adoptien has required the Coscos ,to unwind enough red tape to launch a second-class post office.! UF Progress Encouraging' In First Week progress - continued to be en Saturday as more re couraging sults of the) first week of Salem's $205,000 United Fund drive reached campaign headquarters. In the I residential division, quota of Which is $16,000, chair man Mrs. Leon Perry reported $5,916.50 or 37 per cent of the goal collected through Friday. More than ,700 women volunteers are soliciting! under. direction of Mrs. Perryi. : Mrs.- Max Page, veteran . cam paigner who headed the advance solicitation work for the women's division of the drive, said over $4,200 already had been pledged, compared with $3,878 last year. Over-all campaign figures show Salem one-fourth of the way to ward its goal with a $51,238 totaL Workers in 'the drive will make their next Ire ports Tuesday noon at the Marion HoteL Wallet Used To Fix Car. Nearly Lost I" :. Robert Hullette, Salem Route 3. Box 592, must recently have felt like the surgeon who leaves an instrument jnside his patient. Hullette Heft his wallet under the hood of a friend's car after he volunteered to tinker with a stalled motor on a downtown street. He got , the motor running and watched hi grateful friend drive off but forgotten was the wallet Hullette had laid it in the engine after using jit to handle some hot wiring. : When he discovered his loss a short while later, Hullette phoned the friend. The. friend said he would look under the hood, but be crossed his; fingers because he'd done a lot bf driving since. The friend looked under the hood and there was the wallet It was balanced delicately on a slen der cross-rod with plenty of day light showing beneath. ; The wallet and its $2 in cash and important papers were returned to good Samaritan Hullette. . . The Weather Max. Mln. Prerp. Salem ... Portland Baker '.. Medford st as ; l.aa 5S 49 .77 M 3 .M 71 , - 41 .00 61 4S .21 71 . 42 T M S4 ' T 71 M ,oe 7 44 -.00 71 SB .4S North Bend) Roaeburc San Ttanciace Lot Angelei Chicoga New - York I - : i Willamette Rivtr -1.2 fceU Year - Old Daughter to Family , r - e Winning Fight Italian Girl E. GANG WARE ! . The Statesman couple, Mr. and Mrs. Franco Cosco. . Into their four-year effort has gone constant planning, scrutiny of the fine type ii government regulations of two countries, aca demic study 'and teaching work, a trip to Italy and a . steadily mounting affection for the. girl who is not yet theirs. - Proud ef Effort " r They are proud of their effort because they want to give a home to a little girl who particu larly needs one. They like to tell their story because they feel the opportunity and the need for adoption ' of homeless -'children from abroad, are well worth the patient planning , that many American couples might be will ing to undertake. , Franco Cosco is a naturalized U.S. citizen lnoW in his second year as Latin teacher at South Salem High School. f . He 'first saw the girl he is now in the process of adopting as a three-months old baby, sickly with pneumonia and abandoned by her youthful mother to the volunteered loving care of Cos co's own mother. , , Love Grew Franco was to leave soon for the United I States on a study scholarship, but he was to come to love that homeless child too and, as it happened, he married in this country a girl who had already made up her mind that one day she would adopt a child who needed a home. These 5 developments, after many complications, are leading to, the arrival in Salem early next , month of Roselinda Titina Cosco from, Italy, as third but oldest daughter of the Franco Cosco family. . ; (Additional details on Page 7, Sec.2.) ( ' j ; ENROLLMENT UP ' - PORTLAND to Enrollment in the eight, state-operated institu tions of higher, learning has reached 16,807, a 14.8 per cent .in crease over last year's final total of 14,809. i v . . Hitler's Pilot Xonfirms" I dictator, Mistress Dead CAMP FRiEDLAND, Germany to Hitler's-jersonal pilot Gen. Hans Baur. returned Saturday night from 10 years of Soviet im prisonment and said: "I can con firm that Hitler and Eva Braun are dead." i "Hitler said goodbye to me and then shot himself," Baur said. "Eva Braua poisoned herself." i Baur s testimony may be vital in the new German government effort to declare Hitler legally a suicide. Litigation . ever property disposal and other : matters are awaiting that declaration.' I An officer of the S. S. elite guard), Baur was with Hitler the last hours in his Berlin bunker as Soviet divisions closed in on the capital. t I Though Baur" affirmed that both the Fuehrer and his bride were dead, he said be did not see their bodies. ' ' - j He was one of 32 former- Ger- - Jr ' , ". ft - ... i i Wo' Mother Kills Son, Herself At Oswego OSWEGO, Ore. to Mrs. Mar garet Schoonmaker, 46, whose husband committed suicide last month, murdered her 8-year-old son and killed herself. Coroner Lesley Peake reported Saturday. Peake ' said that Mrs. Schoon maker .used the same .32 caliber revolver which her "dentist hus band,- Dr.' Harry Schoonmaker, had use&when he shot himself in his car near Multnomah Falls on Sept 28. - Mrs. Schoonmaker left several notes, one of which said: Tm sorry, but I can't go on. The pain is there almost constant ly now. -1 can't leave Dave behind to live with all the trouble he has. Harry had begged me to do this. For the three of us this world is no place for anyone who can't stand dust like Dave." David, the son, had been treat ed for an asthmatic , condition, Peake said. Mrs. Schoonmaker also was in, 01 health. The bodies of the woman and her son were : found by ' a neighbor, John W. Vanderlaag. He was sum moned by . Mrs. - Schoonmaker's mother who had called at the house and became alarmed when she was unable to get an answer to her knock. The shooting apparently took place Friday night. man higher officers returned to their homeland Saturday night -- Baur was limping ' when be walked away from the train that returned his POW group from Rus sia. It was reported that he lost a leg in an accident. Baur is one of the few surviving Hitler aides who remained with the Fuehrer in the bunker to the bitter end April 30, 1945 was the day that Hitler and his bride; Eva Braun, killed themselves, he by firing a bullet into his mouth and she by swallowing poison. i Hans Linge, Hitler s valet, ar- rived in Germany Saturday night in with a group of 120 POWs. He was j whisked into seclusion by the Ger man Red Cross His comrades said he had been with Hitler at the end but that he had kept' close-mouthed about it. "He didn't want the Russians to get too interested in him.", one said. - IfGriticaF Era Ends Vice President y Confers With Ailing President DENVER to Vice President Nixon conferred with ailing Presi deqt Eisenhower Saturday and de clared afterward that the chief ex ecutive's "recovery has been sa is n A .1 . .1. - lunui t, aim mat uieie was do discussion whatever of politics. - The vice president told reporters he gave Eisenhower a report on how the government has been op erating in the. President's absence and told him that there is "time to make a complete recovery" and not rush on account of . govern ment business." The vice president said he avoid ed any mention of controversial the President's bedside on (he eighth floor of Fitzsimons Army HospitaL The first question fired at Nixon at a news conference at the Den- vpr Whit Mm is sn thi- . . "Did the President in any way. directly or indirectly, indicate to you whether he would run for the presidency again?" ..' ' . Ne Political -Talk "There was no discussion of the future so far 'as political problems are concerned," Nixon replied. Nixon was asked how the presi dent looked. "Well, frankly," he said. "I was surprised to see how well he looked. I had heard I'd probably be very pleased and I certainly was. He not only looked good, but in addition, bis spirit is tops. In three respects this was some thing of a momentous day in tl.e President's battle for recovery: 1. The two-week period when the danger of complications and re lapse was greatest came to an end in Saturday morning's early hours although the .Denver White House . cautioned against - undue Charting Feture c 2. . The team of doctors here, augmented once more by Dr. Paul Dudley White, internationally rec ognized heart specialist from Bos inn hpean rhartinp an immediate medical future that may allow ea increasing amount of official pres idential activity from the hospital room. . . - 3. For the first time since his illness, the chief executive was able to see. in Nixon, a top level administration official other than those of his immediate staff. . ; The vice president said that now. "the amount ef consultations with. the President on government busi ness will increase as the days ge on." : . Parents Club Organized at Willamette XL Organization . oT . a Willamette University Parents Club was a Saturday highlight of the school's fifth annual Parents Weekend. Plans also were launched for for mation of a Salem Mothers Club. ' Organization of the 'Parents Club was completed at a Saturday morning meeting of the Willamette Parents Association presided over by President William Walsh, Coos Bay. v v . " i Roy Harland; Salem, was. elect ed first president of the new group. Vice president's position was voted to Mrs. W. B. Schrock. Bend, while Mrs. Isabel Hoyt, Portland, was named secretary. Executive directors are Dr. Victor E John son, Yakima, Wash.; Herbert L. Sommer, San Mateo, Calif.; and J, R. Nokes. Portland. (Further deatQs on page 3 sec,l) Ike's Secret .Service Man Has Heart Attack DENVER to Douglas Duncan, 28, secret service agent who has been on assignment with the Pres ident Eisenhower detail, suffered mild coronary thrombosis Fri day night at his Denver residence. It was the same type of heart at tack the president suffered Sept 24. Duncan has been on assignment at Fitzsimons army hospital where the president is under treatment Today's Statesman Sec. Pago .III 1-S Classified Comics .... Crossword II 7 1-6 6 7 MO 11 6,7 12 Editorials . . Garden ... Home Panorama Our Valley . Radio, TV II llZ Sports Star Caxer I Valley I Wirephoto Pago U