2-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., Nov. 21, "55
Senator
Demands
ffiSX Immigration
Ac Be
: j 'JOHN CHADWICX
- WASHINGTON (JP) S r n:
Kennedy (D-Mass.) urged Sunday
that, the" McCarran-Walter Immi
gration Act be scrapped. He said
its "obvious weaknesses and dis
criminatory features . . , cry out
lor correction."; '- ""
Kennedy's statement was pre
pared for submission to a Senate
immigration subcommittee that
will start Monday the first public
Scrapped
. - ' . i , --- - - :
NMAOkehs
Layoff
Pay
Suggestion
-.NEW YORK Oft The National
Assn. of Manufacturers Sunday ap
proved a form of layoff .pay.
The NAM said the plan differs
in two major respects from that
agreed to by Ford and . the CIO
United Auto Workers. - t
One is that the NAM plan is
based on an individual fund for
each worker, whereas the Ford
clan provides for a pooled fund
The other is that Ford benefits
would be paid only to workers eli
gible for state unemployment com
pensation, whereas the nam pun
has nothing to do with state pay
menu, i :
The NAM -type plan, already in
use by two large glass manufactur
ers, provides for an employer-paid
individual savings account for. each
worker, to be drawn on in periods
of sickness or layoff. The money
would be earmarked for a particu
lar worker and would belong to
.him if he left the company. '
Because it is divorced from state
unemployment, payments and , is
not a pooled fund, the NAM said.
"if a laid-off employe uses . his
plan to stay out of work longer
than is necessary, he will be using
money he otherwise could keep lor
The NAM contended its plan also
would strengthen the feehng that
each worker ! has a personal re
sponsibility to help safeguard his
own financial security.
The alternative plan is in effect
between the' United Glass and
Ceramic Workers CIO) and the
Pittsburgh Plate Glass and Llboy-
owens-Ford companies. It calls tor
a company contribution : of , five
cents an hour for each employe.
as" does the Ford plan. '
congressional hearings on the leg
islation since its enactment -in
1952 over former President Tru
man's veto, r - '-.
Sen. Kilsors JD-W.Va.). the
subcommittee chairman, said in
scheduling the hearings last Sep
tember that he was going ahead
with them regardless of whether
he t Eisenhower administration
was ready to submit recommenda
tions far revising the law. '
Ike Asks Action ,,
President Eisenhower, ' shortly
after his : inauguration in 1953,
called on Congress, to reconsider
the act, the nation's basic immi
gration and naturalization- law.
He said it was discriminatory and
contained injustices.
Kireore said, however, that ad
ministration officials had "ducked
every invitation" to testify before
his subcommittee, that he had
been trying since last April to ob
tain their views on proposed
changes m the law.
Numerous bills have been In
troduced to revise the McCarran-
Walter act, but none of them has
made any headway. .
Kennedy, in a statement made
public Sunday, asked the subcom
mittee to junk the . McCarran
Walter act and recommend pass
age of new immigration -legislation
introducedby Sen. Lehman
(D-N.Y.J.
Like other critics of the Mc
Carran- Walter act, Kennedy cen
tered much of his fire on its re
tention of the system of assign
ing immigration quotas on the
basis of the national origins of
the U. S. population in 1920.
He described this national or
igins' formula, first adopted in
the early 1920's, as "perhaps the
most blatant piece of discrimina
tion in cur nation's history."
Kennedy said this system dis
criminates against southern ' and
eastern Europeans and against
Asiatics, while giving northern
and western European nations
quotas far in excess of their
needs; v
Officials Fetef
Trial Clearance '
Of Joan of Arc
i. - . j -
PARIS I Government officials.
Roman Catholic dignitaries and or
dinary Frenchmen crowded the
Cathedral of Notre Dame Sunday
night for the fifth centenary of the
trial which cleared Joan of Arc
of wrongdoing; '
The Maids of Orleans, who led
the French against the English' in
the 15th century, originally was
sentenced - to life imprisonment
for heresy, practicing magic,-disobeying
her parents and wearing
men's attire. In 1431 she was
burned at the Stake by the English
after, she was tricked into wear
ing men's clothes again. Novem
ber, 1455,-she was cleared of the
charges in a new trial. Later she
was canonized as saint.
7
Saudi Arabia
Denies Arms
Buy
ing
Boy Charged
With Try to
Poison Coed
Sale Error.
Nearly Ends : -In
Disaster
ROCK, FALLS, HI. Wl - Andy
Chambers, 24. walked Intir a fill
ing station Sunday with a five-
gallon can In his hand. He ordered
fuel oil and, when the can was
filled, .left. .
Twenty minutes later the sta
tion-attendant discovered that he
had given Chambers whom he
did not know by name five gal
lons of high test gasoline.
The attendant notified Fire Chief
Russell Maynard and Police Chief
Glenn Keime of his error.
Maynard and Keime asked Ra
dio Station WSDR in adjacent Ster
ling to broadcast emergency warn
ings every 10 minutes for the pur
chaser of the fuel not. to use it in
a furnace. The station quoted Ke
ime's warning that ignition of the
gasoline in a furnace "would cause
a terruic explosion.
Then Maynard and Keime asked
the station to appeal for volunteers
to make a house-to-house canvass
of Rock Falls. Within 20 minutes
between 60 and 100 turned out.
several hundred others within an
hour. . - '
Throughout this Northwest Illi
nois town of 10,000 the volunteers
trudged, knocking on doors.
Two of the volunteers, Fred May
nard, ' volunteer fireman, and
Wayne Farrington, came to the
four-room house in which Andy
Chambers lived with his wife. and
three other adults.
Chambers told' Maynard that he
had poured the fuel into the fur
nace and was just going to light
it when you knocked on the door."
MANSFIELD, Conn (JP) A
University of Connecticut coed
was. reported in good health Sun
day, but police have charged a
boy friend with trying to poison
her. ; i
William R. Singer, 28," of WaH
ingford, is charged, with assault
with intent to commit murder..
State-Police said he denied giv
ing arsenic to Miss Elsie Treg
gcr, 24, of West" Hartford, "and
was unable to explain traces of
arsenic found in his own system.
Police say that Miss Treggor1
complained to the university phy
sician of abdominal pain about
three weeks ago. At his request.
a state toxicologist made . tests
which police said showed arsenic
in the girl's system. "'.
State police Investigated, and
on Nov. 12 arrested Singer when
he showed up at her dormitory
to keep a football date.'
Today the doctor said that Miss
Treggor hasn't missed any classes,
and will suffer- no future ill ef
fects. ' :". r" . v. ..' .
- Police said they found seven
second-hand chemistry books, in
cluding a pharmacopeia, among
Singer's belongings. .
He dated Miss Treggor occas
ionally, before he dropped out or
school last June, police said, and
started dating her again this FalL
Police said Singer was a for
mer 'soldier, who was a -mental
fiatient part of the time he was
n service. After leaving school,
he worked as a school bus driver
and as, a clerk in a, newspaper
reference room. ,
Administration
Charged With
Neglect of Poor
WASHINGTON im 1 Americans
for Democratic Action (ADA) Sun
day charged the Eisenhower ad
ministration has "heartlessly ne
glected" the nation's poor. .
-"The facts of the extent of pov
erty in America expose the cruel
flaws in our prosperity and in the
administration's policies . under
which the well-to-do have grown
richer while the poor remain poor,
ADA said. - ,
' The self-styled anti-Communist,
liberal organization voiced its com
plaints in a letter from National
Director Edward D. Hollander to
Sen. Sparkman- fD-Ala). Spark
man heads the Senate-House eco
nomic subcommittee on low in
come families, which has been
conducting hearings on methods of
fighting .poverty. ,- . - - . - .
Report Links Graham to Electric Job
DENVER UB A published re
port Sunday linked John Gilbert
Graham to employment in an elec
tric shop before a' time-bomb ex
plosion aboard a commercial air
liner that killed 44 including -Gra
ham s mother. .
The Rocky Mountain News said
it ' learned Graham worked six
days In October at a local electric
shop where he told his employer
he wanted to learn the traded '
Meanwhile, a storekeeper . at
Kfemmling, Colo., 103 miles west
of Denver, told The Associated
Press he is "pretty sure" a man
be sold 20 sticks of dynamite to
Oct. 29 was Graham. J
Graham, 23, is accused, of the
murder of his mother, Mrs. Daisie
King, 54, in the crash of a United
Air Lines plane near Longmont,
Colour Nov. l.i . . :
The News said Graham's em
ployment ' in the electric shop.
Ward Electric Co.', began Oct. 10
pnd lasted six days four days the
first week and, two the next, r
The paper quoted the employer
who hired Graham,-Damon Ward,
as saying, he "thought it peculiar
that Graham should work in the
place." . . ,
Freighter Rams
Pleasure Yacht -
, SAN FRANCISCO Ml -i- .The Ja
panese freighter Kyoei Mam, grop
ing her way out of San Francisco
Bay in a dense fog, rammed the
112-foot pleasure yacht Cannae
Sunday. . ; ,
The impact jarred loose the 3,680
ton Mitsui Line freighter's anchor
and it fell with a -crash on the
yacht ' and plunged through her
deck as the Kyoei s bow stove in
her, side. ; . 'i
.About 50 feet of heavy anchor
chain also crashed down on to the
Carmac's deck. No one was hurt.
Mrs. Woodward
To Quit Hospital
. NEW YORK OB nirS.AM
Woodward's i doctor said Sunday
night she will leave Doctor's Hos
pital Monday, three weeks and one
day after she shot and killed her
millionaire husband.
Mrs. Woodward has been treated
for shock and hysteria at the hos
pital since the early morning slay
ing of William Woodward Jr.. Oct.
30 at their Oyster Bay . estate. She
told police she mistook ber hus
band for a prowler.
"She is a bit nervous about start
ing borne .- tomorrow," said Dr.
John M. Prutting. her physician.
"Any patient would be after a stay
in the hospital."
He did not say whether "home"
would be the Woodwards' Manhat
tan house or the Long Island es
tate whsre the shooting occurred.
Police have said they have no
-reason to believe the shotgun slay
ing was not an accident, but the
investigation still is open.
Representative of
Veterans on Ike
Cahinet Proposed
NEW YORK (if5) Timothy J.
Murphy, national commander of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars,
said Sunday he will advocate that
a veterans' representative-be ad
ded to the presidential cabinet.
Murphy arrived by plane after
a three week pilgrimage to Eu
rope in which 200 veterans par
ticipated. : i
He said European countries
have a "high interest in their vet
erans, and consider them to be
the backbone of their countries.
Murphy" said he felt the na
tion's veterans should have cab
inet representation in the formu
lation of governmental policies
Just as labor, has. ,
Theater Cashier
. . .
Thwarts Rohher
WAUKEGAN, I1L (JP) Mrs
Delores Grizzle, 28, a movie the
ater cashier, had the last word
with an armed robber who 'de
manded $150 in receipts.
She told police she thought the
gunman was joking Saturday
night when he .held a handker
chief to his i face and told her,
"I want the money"
"You ant have it,? she re
plied, and slapped a wooden plug
into the opening beneath her
plala glass ticket window. The
gunman hesitated a moment; then
fled.
CAIRO, Egypt ( The Saudi
Arabian government's Information
Department issued a communique
Sunday , denying Saudi Arabia is
trying to buy Communist arms.
The communique described as
'lies; and- fabrications', reports
King Saud had suggested a: meet
ing Wijh, Soviet representatives to
discuss an arms deal. Nor is the
government sending a delegation
to Czechoslovakia to look at arms
factories there, it added.
The announcement also denied
that President Klementi Voroshil
ov. of the Soviet Union included an
offer of arms in a message of
congratulations which- he sent to
King Saud on the anniversary of
the King's accession. r -.
Saudi Arabia's Premier Emil
Feisal said last month the govern
ment was considering an arms of
fer from Russia. There had been
no official word on the subject
since. ' ' :
Two Escape
Reformatory
MONROE Wash.. Two Mon
roe Reformatory inmates walked
away from an honor farm two
miles south of the institution Sun
day morning. One was, caught near
Bothell Sunday afternoon.
Officials say the two men -were
Thomas X. Cowan, 26, and Rich
ard Gus. 24. Both originally were
sentenced from Okanogan County
lor auto theft.
Cowan was apprehended near
Bothell. Authorities said they stul
are seeking Gus, an Indian,
whose home is at Alberni, B.C.
Appearance Ordered
In Municipal Court
Dale Smithy 19, of 690 Thompson
Ave., was ordered to appear in
Municipal Court this morning fol
lowing investigation of a Sunday
morning prowler report.
Police said Smith was being
held when they arrived by Howard
Phelps, 635 N. 14th St.. who had
reported a prowler about 10 a.m.
in the vacant house owned by El
bert G. Neal next door at 625 N.
14th.
No Survivors
Reported in
C54 Crash
LAi.VEG ASNev. 4 Ground
rescue, paiiiei Sunday reached the
scene of the wreckage' ef an Air
Force transport on rugged Mt.
Charleston and reported finding no
survivors. - - - . ' : - '
An Air Force spokesman said the
C54 was identified positively as
the' plane missing since Thursday
morning on a flight from Burbank,
Calif., to the Nevada atom bomb
testing grounds. . ' "
The 14 persons aboard,- includ
ing five Air Force men, five Air
Force civilian workers, two 'avia
tion engineers and two consultants,
were found dead, the Air, Force
said. '
A' 17-man mounted posse, com
posed of "Butch" Leypoldt. sheriff
of Clark County. 14 deputies and
two Air Force officers, reached the
11.300-foot wreckage site shortly
after noon.
The rescuers radioed that they
expected to bring all of the bodies
down to the Nellis Air Force Base
resti camp at the 8,500-foot level
by nightfall. The bodies are to be
taken to Nellis for identification by
casualty! identification' officers.
The rescue parties battled 45
mph winds and temperatures in
the mid 30s and waded in waist-
deep snow in areas. i ,
EarthTumbles in
Mine, Man Killed
RUTH. Nev. (J Millions of
tons of earth tumbled into the bot
tom of Kennecott Copper Compa
ny's huge open pit mine here Sat
urday, killing one worker and in
juring two others.
The massive slide started at the
rim of the pit and plunged more
than 500 feet to the bottom, com
pletely covering a large truck and
other "equipment
iiiteA?i(ai)ii
Sterling Hayden ;
Anna Marie Alberghettl
"THE LAST COMMAND
Frankie Laine, Keith Brasselle
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usuroar .
Argument Oyer
Washing Dishes
Leads to Shooting
CHICAGO (JP) An argument
over who would wash the dishes
Sunday landed a man in the
hospital and his roommate in
jaiL ,
Suffering a gunshot wound in
his abdomen is Robert Loftus,
24, a building tradesman.
Held in jail for questioning is
Loftus' roommate, Arthur Wolf,
5p, motorman. Police Quoted
him as saying he shot Loftus
during' an argument last night
that. began when each denied it
was his turn to wash the dishes.
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