AA. ., ' V -J,,v"' '' Mm New S mm West Berlin Near, WUNDHD 1651 105th Year 0 SICTIONS-41 PACES The Oregon Statesman, Salam, Ortgen, Sunday, December, 4, 1955 PR1CI 10c N.252 w Georg Governor (Pictures on Wirephoto Page ATLANTA (Jl Gov. Marvin Griffin's official residence and the Georgia State Capital were stormed early Saturday by a howling mob of Georgia Tech students angered by Griffin's move to keep Tech out f the Sugar Bowl. The demonstrators, who several Triplets Prepare for Tonsilectomies 111 1 t i ' llT gill M ' URBAN A, nL The eight-year-old triplet daughters ef Mr. and Mrs. H. Paul Linciceme, left to right, Anita, Becky and Cathy, have temperatures checked by Mrs. David Ports, nurse at Mercy Hospital before they had their tonsils removed. (AP Wirephoto) DIP OTCEQ3 TIME magazine in its issue for Nov. 28th printed an extract from a contribution of Editor William Zukermiq fat, the bi-weckly "Jewish Newsletter."' Headed "U.S. Jews Hysterical oyer the Middle East," Zukernun was sharply .critical of the "state of mind" prevailing among American Jews with refer ence to Israel. This "hysteria," he aaid, is "entirely without roots in the realities of American life." He called it "completely artificial, manufactured by . Zionist leaders, and -almost foisted on a people who have no cause for hysteria by an army of paid propagandists as a means of avowed political pres sure and of stimulating lund raising." - Zukerman, as is evident, is not a Zionist. The non Zionists are definitely in a minority among American Jewry. The American Council for Judaism is non-Zionist, and while it ia quite vocal it does not represent a large proportion of the Jews in America. Among American Jews there are, however, - varying degrees of loyalty toward Israel. Some ot its advocates are most intense (n their loyally; others moderately so; others na turally sympathetic withsrael but not involved deeply with its future either emotionally or financially. With the differences among American Jews over attitudes res r uiiuiKS lev pecting Israel non-Jew Americans (Continued on editorial page 4) 3rd Iloilfeyniooii la Eight Months vw" V'F- peiMale, pretty 3u-year-oici nru- nette, left Saturday for a honey. moon with her third husband within eight months. She became a divorcee in Ap- ril. married again and became a widow a few months later when her soldier husband died, and wed again in October. Three days after her marriage Trie U.N. Assembly called on the 'in 1952, and California 433 corn here to John Chippendale, he was Union of South Africa for the ninth pared with 104. There will be recalled to his job in Malays. She time Saturday to place the terri--11,304 tickets issued, plus 4.000 took a plane to meet him for tory of Southwest Africa under the seats for newsmen and 2.600 for their honeymoon. U.N. trusteeship system. I delegates and alternates. : : ". : r ... , . .. i What Clmstmas Means to Me itetwrt tef-T th( silrm' area ini Ik wrla vr. C hrlit ii ku a 4ea liatflcanc. Ta redact thai alcaiMraaea Taa Or faa Sutnmaa alien tala tarlra al tmtul aparaltalt at tha Baaalnr f ChrhtasM. Rear aantaUv Salca aaareaa wra ke ta kava tha aukjact t lr4 i a aaaakar ! Uatr ra (resatiea). , Vy Mrs. Lloyd Reilly (aaaawilt: Maaiker rirat CkrlatUa . Caarch As I have been thinking about what Christmas; means . to me, memories of the happy Christmaser I experienced as child crowd my mind. ' I recall the excitement that built up as we planned for our Christmas programs at school ia Tech Mob Storms Capitol After Seeks to Rule Out Bowl times burned Griffin In effigy, broke through a cordon of Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents and smashed their way into the Capi tol. But police lines reinforced with 25 cars of state troopers and held back the crowd of more than 2,000 ! at the governor's mansion. IIHH III I 6 JInebriate Finds Service Prompt. A Salem man who staggered In the rear door to the back room of a well-known local establishment found service as prompt and ef ficient as he had ever received. Police officers on desk duty greeted Dim with open book and in sisted that he stay overnight on a drunk charge. State Okehs Federal Grant For Hospital - PORTLAND lift A federal grant of $563,000 for a new 78-bed hospital at Medford was recom mended Saturday by the State Board of Health. -The board said the money is available for this fiscal year under the Hill-Burton Act. Additional funds must ; come from local sources. The board also recommended: $12,030 to complete an addition at Holladay Park Hospital in. Port land; $6,883 for an addition to the Blue Mountain General Hospital at Prairie City, and $175,000 to re model and enlarge the Hood River Memorial Hospital. . ' Bandit Fires Shot At Store Manager During Kobhery PORTLAND ( Two men made off with an' undisclosed amount of cash Friday night in fh . )h rohbrv o( , cafewav , . .., Jack L. Metcalf, assistant store manager, started to pursue them when the robbers left and one of them fired a shot at him. The shot missed, but Metcalf quit the pursuit. The two men forced cashiers to -mntv three raxh reifislers lorl r:,' " " There have been no arrests In ".tl.L LT. w" the Safeway robberies. The total ""T" . RWEST MADE I UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. tffi and "al church;' the Joy express ed in the singing of beautiful Christmas music; the fun of choosing little gifts for my family; the excitement of help ing decorate our tree; the sus pense of living through that long, loqg night before Christ mas as we looked forward to opening our gifts in the morn ing; and the happines that radiated In our family all Christmas Day. What was it that made our Christinas so wonderful? I know now that it was the spirit, of love thit bound our. family together. Today . I pray , that that same spirit of love will "",tt.Vf.,:vr,..- 1 " i L r. ; r . - The demonstration was touched off by Griffin's request to the uni versity system board of regents to bar state colleges from playing op ponents having Negro players or in games where spectators are not racially segregated. Pittsburgh has a Negro. Bobby Grier, a reserve back, on its foot- v ... ! - ' A Si ia 4 r ... f vr4iiit,iii,iitf2' - Averejl Raps Ike for Farm Price Decline OKLAHOMA CITY - New York Gov. Averell Harriman, a "good faith" candidate for the Democratic presidential nomina tion, Saturday night rapped Presi dent Eisenhower by name on ag riculture and foreign policy. Departing from his text Harri man told a crowd ef 2.000 at the national convention of Young Dem ocrats that Eisenhower, not Sec retary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, is responsible for the ad ministration's farm program.. The New York governor aaid earlier his name will be submitted as a presidential candidate at the Democratic National Convention in "good faith" not as a "favorite son candidate. Lei s not tarn anout ine Benson. farm policy." Harriman declared. "Let's talk about it in its proper light the Eisenhower farm ooli cy." Later he left his text a second time to declare: "It was a very unhappy exper ience to me when the President let it be known at the Geneva conference he considered that the Russians equally with us, sought peace." At a third point he declared "Eisenhower has done nothing" about protecting average families against high costs of major illness es. His advance text had not includ ed direct references to the Presi dent. GOP Allots 111 Tickets to Oregon PORTLAND I Oregon will get 111 tickets for the Republican National convention at San Fran cisco next summer, Mrs. Marshall .. .'. t. Cornell, Mamatn rails, nation al committeewoman, said Satur day. The state received 27 tickets at the 1952 convention in Chicago Mrs. Cornett, who returned from a national committee meeting at Chicago, said Washington. ould 'get 121 tickets compared with 36 ,mke Christmas meaningful al ways tor my own cnnaren. . To me the wonder of Christ mas is that each year, it re kindles the spark of love that may have lain dormant in our hearts too long ss far as any outward expression ia concern ed, anyway. . In choosing to send His Son, Jesus, to earth as a little child,' God expressed himself as the Father of all mankind, and if we, as His children, can cele brate Christ's birthday ; by showing love to all. His chil dren everywhere, in the ways thst are open to us, there will Indeed be "peace oa earth good will to men.". Game ball squad. And segregation will not be practiced in sale of Pitt s block of tickets to the Jan. 2 game in the Deep South Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. Expected U Play However, a few hours after the student demonstration broke up, a source close to the governor, who declined to be quoted by name, said "Georgia Tech will be allowed to play in the Sugar Bowl." There were other indications that Tech's Sugar Bowl contract will not be disturbed. Regent Quimby Melton, editor of the Griffin Ga., News and a close friend of the governor, first de clined to comment on the matter, but later suggested that Tech be allowed to carry out its Suga Bowl contract, but t hat the regents adopt Griffin s suggestion for all future athletic events of state col leges. Tech President Blake Van Leer told John Earp. Chicago NBC sports editor in a telephone inter view, "I'm 60 years old and I have, never broken a contract and I'm not going to break one now." From the Tech campus, where a handful of students began voicing their protest, Saturday's demon stration snowballed. 2,500 ia Mob Estimated by police at approxi mately 2,500, the crowd marched to five points in downtown Atlanta, then to the State Capitol a few blocks away, and finally to the huge old gray granite pile in the prado which is the governor's man sion. The marchers, bore signs pro claiming "we play anybody" and Griffin sits on his brains." They also sang "We'll hang old Marvin from a sour apple tree." ' At the State Capitol, the demon strators smashed two ground floor doors, overruning the lone guard. J. E. Rooks. Didn't Use Gaa Secretary of State Ben W. Fort son Jr., said the guard "wrestled with a few of them but didn't try to use his gun or anything like that." Fortson reported sand-filled ash trays were overturned and some damage done inside toe building wnue . shrubbery was pulled up historical markers overturned and big, can put on the head ef the statue ,of John Gordon, Civil War hero. Griffin took a light view of the mansion demonstration, which he said came in two waves, the last at 2 a.m. "It was an orderly demonstra tion," he said. "They hooted and sang and hanged me from a sour apple tree, but it was Just a bunch of college boys having a good time and I never get excited about that.- Clouds, Rain, Fog Forecast Mid-valley areas should have oc casional rain tonight with partly cloudy conditions today, according to U.S. Weather Bureau forecasters at McNary Field. Some fog is ex pected early this morning. Today's high temperature should reach about 51 degrees while the low reading tonight is predicted to be around 36, somewhat higher than Saturday night's low of 32. Safe Driving Day Accident Victim Still Unconscious Slateimaa New" Service STAYTON A victim of a "Safe Driving Day" accident re mained unconscious and in "poor" condition here Saturday night, Santiam Memorial Hospi tal reported. Richard A. Brown, 81, Lyons, suffered concussion and a frac tured leg in the accident which occurred Thursday when he walk ed slong s road at Lyons. Hospi tal attendants said his condition had not changed during the put 24 hours. ' Bullet Wounds Woman Hunter BEND m Mrs. Shirley Rieper, 29, Portland, was shot throueh the leg near here Saturday, the i7th deer hunter to be wounded - in Oregon this year. Five other deer hunters have been killed by bul lets. State police were trying to find the person who fired the bultet. The t Weather Mas. Mia. Frecla. II M T SS M 34 - M T , , 45 as .00 si as ... .oo . Saleea PorUand , Baker ....... Medford , .. North Bend Roeeburs HUM San Tranclaco S3 42 .0 .00 Lm A me lei ... so . 44 Chicago i SS 3$ new York: M - J T Willamette River 11 4 feet. FORECAST from V. 8 wetthar bureau, McNary fl'ld. Salem): ' ' Palcha of morning fog, otherwlae partly cloudy today. Increaaing cloudineei tonight followed by occa alonal rain. High today near SO and not to cool tonight with low near 3S. Temperature at 1101 a.m. today waa 11. ' SALEM MBCIPrTATlO! 81 net Start ot Weather Year 8pt 1 Ibh Tear - La Year Mermal - U.tB , - Mi Big Yawn Snaps Left Eyelid Open HEREFORD, England UB -Farmer Jim Langford yawned Saturday and then discovered he couldn't close his left eye. "It ' was a big yawn." he explained, and something seemed to " snap in my face. Then I found I couldn't close my eye. The lid simply wouldn't budge." , The farmer hurried to a doe tor and was told a nerve had snapped and that he was suf fering from a temporary form of paralysis of the eyelid. ."The doctor said it'll be about six weeks before my eye re turns , to normal," said Lang-ford. Salem Office Cuts Income Tax Service . New policy of the Internal Revenue Service will place the emphasis on enforcement with only oni day a week set aside to give taxpayers information and advice on . filling 'out returns, District Director Ralph C. Gnn quist announced Saturday. Mondays of each week will be set aside for that service, but Internal Revenue ;nployees will not prepare returns for taxpayers except for those persons who are physically or mentally unable. Under the new program estab lished by the regional office in San Francisco, local service of fices will be closed other than Monday except at the. Salem, Portland and Eugene offices. Those ofices will furnish only counter and telephone service except for Monday. Granquist estimated that the new policy of releasing enforce ment personnel for collection of past due taxes will bring in an additional $1,000,000 in taxes. The new policy will begin Jan. 9. Camera Trick Brings Arrest For Burglary PHILADELPHIA ( - Richard Bianco, 19, was arrested Friday night on a charge of burglarizing his neighbor's home on the basis of a picture taken of him standing in the bedroom of his victim, po lice said. Detective Charles Hogarty said Joseph Bjauk set up the picture taking device after his home had been burglarized six times in the past year. n Bjauk told authorities he bored a hole In a panel of his second floor bedroom closet door big enough for the lens of a camera. Then he rigged it to a flash attach ment which would take a picture of anyone entering the room through a window. Knowing a burglar would seek the camera, he placed a dummy on a ledge attached to the outside of the closet door and adjoining the flash mechanism. It worked, said Bjuak when he returned to his apartment after another burglary, he found the dummy camera gone. When the film was developed it showed a clear picture of Bianco. Cart Replaces Horse at T ---.ii a , T . T I J. ,' ' " -HI .L Oregon's Horsemen Association can't be accused of putting the tart before the bone, kat they caa se ot putting ine can inswaa the horse. lU.anaaal eenveatioa here, Saturday and Suadav was positively horseless, but it wasn't earrtageless. Several vehicles of the harae-elrawB variety and era were en display at the armory where sessions took place. Features ef the display was this ladles Crisis Due Canal Permits -. ,.-.) Expire Dec. 31 BERLIN A new squeexe on West Berlin threatened Saturday night from East Germany's con trol of inland waterways traffic. The Russians have turned over control of permits for canal traffic between the city and West Ger many, It was disclosed, and the German Communist regime ap- oeared determined to use its new authority to wrest some kind of recognition from the Bonn repub lic. West German officials said the problem may be acute when all old permits expire Dec. 31 and appli cations are made for new per mits at the beginning of the year. These officials said East Ger many is insisting mat prooiems concerning the canals be handled between the transport ministries ot the two rival Germanies, and not on the level of lesser agencies. The object thus, appeared to win quasi- recognition Part at "Saverelgaty" Transfer of authority over barge traffic by the Russians to the East Germans was agreed upon in Mos cow Sept. 20 after the Soviet East German "sovereignty" treaty was signed. Subsequently. West Berlin trans nort officials said, the Russians re turned several British applications for canal traffic permits with word that East German officials were now responsible for issuing per mits. Apply ta East When the West German water ways administration at Hamburg, a liaison office, sent the appli cations to the East German ship ping administration, it was told the Bonn Transport Ministry must make application to the East Ger man Ministry. The West regards these permits as a technical matter, to be dealt with on a lower level. Canal barges, carry virtually all of Berlin's coal and about one third ol its other supplies. How ever, city officials said West Ber lin already is supplied for coal for the winter. The East Germans, too, would suffer from a barge stoppage in asmuch as about a fourth of the goods brought eastward by barg es is for East German delivery. Opera Star's Hands Scalded LOCUST VALLEY, N.Y, (Jf - Opera star Patrice Munsel Satur day canceled a Monday night ap pearance, after severely scalding both hands in a kitchen mishap at her Long Island home. Roberta Peters will replace the 30-year-old coloratura in the Metro- Dolitan Opera production. Miss Munsel. with both hands bandaged, was ordered to bed byH her doctor. The singer s husband, Robert Schuler, offered this expla nation of the accident Friday night: "It was cook's night out. She (his wife) went to the kitchen for tea. The kettle was on the stove, empty, even though the burner was turned on. She picked it up turned on the tap and put it under to fill it with water." Steam bil lowed up and scalded her hands. 0 V : . n Vl i d iv e s t Blizzard Brings Deep Snow By TBI ASSOCIATED PRESS A blizzard lathed a broad sec tion of the Midwest Saturday. . It combined snow ranging up to 'l0 inches, strong north winds of up to 40 m p h. and stinging cold. At least six deaths in traffic were attributed to dangerous driving conditions. Four were in Nebraska and two in Illinois. The Weather Bureau labeled the onslaught a blizzard and "a real winter snowstorm" al-; though winter is II days awsy by the calendar. Scottsblufr. Neb., had 10 Inches of snow on the ground. Chadron, Neb., had 7 inches, and Goodland, Kan., 4 inches. Gregory, S. D., Bid by Teamsters to I Switch to GIO Side of Union Camp Rebuffed: NEW YORK (JP) A bid by the big Teamsters Union to Join ; the CIO subsidiary of the newly merged AFL-CIO was sharply rebuffed Saturday night by James B. Carey, a top leader of the former, CIO. Several officials of the 1,300,000-member Teamsters revealed their union planned to join the AFL-CIO's industrial union depart ment (IUD). That is a unit in-i tended primarily for. former CIO unions. - Carey, asked whether the team sters would be welcome, said flat ly no. The former CIO secretary treasurer and head of the Elec trical Workers said: "Number one, the teamsters are not an industrial union. Two, they can't adhere to our objectives. Three, for other reasons they are not eligible. And four, we won't take there in." Carey declined to elaborate on these points. The teamsters have been often criticized by both AFL and CIO unions for organizing outside team- ster jurisdiction and for harboring alleged racket influences. The teamster move appeared to have stirred up the first major quarrel in the reunited labor move ment on the eve of its first con vention Monday. Walter Reuther, who had been top man In the CIO and ia due to head the IUD, was inclined to mini mize the whole situation. He Mid the IUD won't actually be estab lished until authorized by the con vention next week. (Earlier story, Sec. 3. Page 13.) Today's Statesman - See. Page Advertising See. V....M2 Classified ;.IV.r4-7 t -Comics ....VI.... Crossword ...IV.... Editorials .... I.... Farm ..IV ... Homo Panorama III ... Obituaries ...IV... 17 Our Valley Radio, TV .. III...... 13 IV 14 I 14 Sports Star Gazer Valley .. I ,7 Wirephoto Pago III.. Horsemen Convention .' '"J .1 phaeton of tha I90'g tried oat by Mrs.' Pel 0 Garrison, Oregon City, who flirts with the driver, Don R. Mcl'arlane. Salem, president I ef the association. Her companion Is Mrs. Marie McKcnney, Salem. The well-preserved phaeton Is the property ef Chris Purvis, Port land, and was formerly owned by Sea. Howe, minister ef finance fotf ; Canada- (Statesman Paste.) ' (Story, tec i, Pag It.) ; , ' was burdened with a fresh 10-lncb fall. , : ; Blowing and drifting snow, with temperatures close to zero eves at madday, dealt a staggering blow to the storm area. , Snow was forecast for Wise on ,sin, Iowa, Illinois and Indiana. - Skies began to clear in Wyo ming and Colorado after the storm dumped up to 14 inches ot snow on Wyoming and op to inches on Colorado. A mass of cold air moved Into the Midwest after dropping the temperature to 13 below zero at Cut Bank, Mont. ' Up to 10 Inches of new snow, ! was 'forecast for Minnesota through Sunday along with tern; peratures of zero to 10 above. . - Fingerprints To Determine - r-j Ancient Artist ; NEW YORK (IV- Modern finger-! print techniques will go to work on-. 15th Century finger marks next week to determine the identify of f the sculptor who created a head ot , St. John the Baptist. An anonymous, art collector sent the terra cotta head to an apprals-, er here, in an effort to find out whether the sculptor was Andrea.,! del Verrocchio, a 15th Century ' Florentine artist . i The head shows that the artist left several finger prints In the , wet clay while modeling the sculp- , ture. The collector believes that similar marks would show on other ' sculptures by the same artiat The National Art Gallery la Washington has three clays by i Verrocchio. They are terra cotta busts of Giuliano and Lorenzo de Medici, a terra cotta Infant nude and an adoration group. Copies of the fingerprints on the head of St John the Baptist will be taken by police, FBI agents or -a private agency, the appraiser, Sigmund Rothschild, said. - Rotschild then will fly to Wash Ington with the molds to take sim - liar impressions of sny finger prints found oo the three Verroc chio statues. Verrocchio was bom in 1432 or 142S. Among his pupils were Leonard! da Vinci and Lor enzo Credi. PROUD TO RUN .1 NEW YORK Mayor Robert . F. Wagner of New York said Sat urday he'd be proud to run as tha 1956 vice presidential candidate "with any good Democrat, but no body has asked me." 4 7