The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 05, 1955, Page 1, Image 1

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    . i. I
Rumors
of Kremlin
Shakeup
LONDON Hi-Rumblings of a
' shakeup brewing inside the So
viet Union reached the diploma
tic colony here Sunday. Some
analyst of Russian affairs pre
dicted a new struggle within the
Kremlin, with Communist Party
boss Nikita Khrushchev possibly
ready to make a bid for supreme
power.
Moscow radio has reported
"great political activity" in the
Soviet capital Khrushchev'
closest associates are making the
rounds of district party confer
: ences presumably to lay down
the future line.
Two important meetings have ,
Rumbling
been set up. The Supreme Soviet
has been called Into extraordi
nary cession Dec. 23; the all
Soviet Communist Party con
gress meets in February.
Diplomats are inclined to link
the two. And either could pro
vide the forum for a major pro
nouncement. . Khrushchev, as the acknowl
edged strong man in the Kremlin
hierarchy, was regarded behind
any reshuffle that may be in the
making. Since Stalin's death
Kremlin leadership has func
tioned more or less as a collec
tiveor committee with no one
man holding the whip as Stalin
did.
Crescendo Opposes
'-Out
Tech Bowl Puli
at she
pound no 1651
105th Year
2 SECTIONS-JO PACES
The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, December 3, IMS
PRICI S
Ne, 25J
ATLANTA Georgia Tech's football future hangs in the
balance as the board of regents prepares to meet Monday amid a
crescendo of opposition to Gov. Marvin Griffin's attempt to prevent
the Yellowjackets from meeting Pittsburgh at New Orleans Jan. 2.
. Criffin has requested the board to orevent Tech from comortins
With the University of Pittsburgh in the Sugar Bowl because the
I latter has a Negro on the squad.
It is generally accepted that if
the board approves the governor's
request. Tech's future football en
gagement will be limited to South
ern teams where racial segrega
tion is practiced both on the play
ing field and in the stands.
Voices Added
Students and alumni groups have
added their voices to the rising
tide of opposition to Griffin's pro
posal. George, Harris. 21-year-old pres
ident of the Georgia Tech student1
Scientific thi-orlM am r nn. i body, apologized to Pittsburgh fori
itant target and even "laws" may j nat ne termed the governor
become suspect, under question- '.'unwarranted action." !
ins of Mopr minris. Newton's: In telegram to the Pitt stu-1
laws of gravitation and of motion dcnt Harri Mid:
. "Th - l u .. .... . r- .
Sports Cars Vie in 'Hare and Hound1 Race
.:-V
,( . tt 1 m m. f"eT j-"! 'y i yim in t wiif a jyei mm
were badly twisted by the quan
turn theory of Max Planck and
other researchers in what is
called the new physics. But last
month each of the two top "qual
ity" magazines published in this
country had articles from repu
table scientists which pointed to
ward restoring to favor theories
that had been tossed aside. Pre
viously this column called atton-
iinn in "0(hji Wnrlli Than
Ours" bv Donald H. Menzel. di-lTech apologizes for the
rector of the Harvard Observa-! unwarranted action of Georgia's
tory in the November Atlantic f overn- We are looking forw.ird
Monthly. His speculations on the i 'n yur nt'r ,Mm
ATLANTA If) The Bear, af
regents may deny Gev. Marvla
Griffin's request that Geargla
athletic teams be araaiblteeV
from playing ppoaents wne ae
at maiataia segregation. Chair
maa Rabert 0. Arnold Indicated
Sunday night.
-far
L.V
. . ,i:y
s
S-D Day
Accident
Fatal
origin of the solar system have
led him to accept the "unitary
hypothesis." Earliest proponents
student body at the Sugar Bowl."
Mroag Words
Also opposing Griffin's action
Aa array ef sports cars are pictured at the starting line prior te a Sunday "hare and hound' event
which covered same 52 miles la the Salem and Polk County areas. Approximately 21 cars ef varying
types, each containing driver and navigator, vied la the rompetitioa which started and finished at a
sports car firm Just south ef the city. The event was sponsored by the Salem Sport Car Association.
(Story in sec. 1, page 4.) .
of this as the "nebular hypothe- wiln trongly-worded statements
were Ksnt and LaPlace in! J"ier ueorgia
the 18th century.
The second article, in Harper's
Monthly, by Prof. Loren C. Eise
ley of the department of Anthro
pology, University of Pennsyl
vania, inquires: "Was Darwin
Wrong About the Human Brain?"
Darwin contended that the hu
man being, including hi brain,
wis merely the product of natural
evolution which derived its in
centive from tbe struggle for
existence, . His great colleague
and co-discoverer of the principle
of natural selection, Alfred Rus
el Wallace, however, finally re
jected that hypothesis as far ss
the human brain is concerned
and, as Eiseley says, "turned in
stead toward a theory
(Continued on editorial page 4)
Tech Club and the Georgia Tech
Foundation Inc.
EUGENE - - An effigy of
Georgia Gov. Marvin Griffin was
found hanging from a tree near
the Faculty Club on the University
of Oregon campus Sunday morn-
tag.
Eye Lost by
Mt. Angel Lad
UtMmu Ntwi krrvlet
MT. ANGEL A Mt. Ancel youth
lost an eye Sunday fallowing in-! Hon of the industrialists and mili
ary while he and friends were wrists in West Berlin, the. NATO
playing with pointed slicks. stronghold, is based on Weak foun-
Leon Schiedler, 1, son of Mr. dations and will not last. The poli
and Mrs. Bernard Schiedler. was cy of the cold war will fail."
listed as in "fine" condition at 'Neumann's reference to Berlin
Reds Renew
Demands for
BerliiTCapital
Brooks Youth,
12, Victim of
Polio Attack
Dallas Lumber
Firm Announces
Timber purchase
ALBANY, Ore. Willamette
Valley Lumber Co. of Dallas. Ore.;
Sunday announced , purchase of
I, 06t acres of timberland in the
Snow Peak area east of here for
II, 460,000,. , .t-if. , ,, . ...
' C. fTand Helen Watzek of Port
land were the seller.
Watzek reseeded the area, knowh
BERLIN UH A Communist
leader Sunday called West Berlin 1 initial attack
a NATO stronghold' which will YounJ Lindsay , , MVenth
surely be eliminated. -r.rf .i,.A-nt it Rrnnkj irhnol
Alfred Neumann, . Communist
IUIumii NWS Brrvlc
. BROOKS A 12 year-old Brooks
boy was reported in-erious con
dition Sunday it Silvertoe Hos
pital, where he is under treat-
. . . ..'as the Roaring River tree farm.
The boy, Jack Lindsay, son or)durj and a(ler WorW War K.
Mr. and Mrs James L ndsay, The j d b Wst.
Brooks, reportedly wss stricken R
Fridsy night and hospital attend-! ..
ants said he was suffering from5.. '
partial paralysis of the spine. His ;
present condition, which does not -- - p
require an Iron lung, was report- I Iprl li'mimi HI
ru ftiigniiy improvru mm iik
Party chief in East Berlin, de
clared in a speech to a worker's
rally:
"Berlin is the capital of the Ger
man Democratic Republic. The
position of the DDR (East Ger
many) is unshakeable. The posi-
Salem General Hospital following
removal of his right eye.
The accident happened about
11:30 a.m. Sunday in the barn at
the Schiedler Nursery . and farm,
two miles south of Mt. Angel.
Leon was playing with a brother
and tWo neighbor boys when he
was poked in the eye with a stick.
Doctors Mid the eye had to be
removed to prevent injury to the
remaining left eye.
Coffee Price
Dip Feared
WASHINGTON Ofv-Now the sur
plus problem is bothering world
coffee growers.
The U. S. department of agricul
ture estimated today that all coffee
production in the 1955-56 marketing
year will be 46 tt million bags,
about 13 per cent more thait the
previous year and about 12 per
cent more than the prewar ever
.age. ' v
The department estimated there
wnnlit ha about M Vi million bans
available for export from produc- which Ilea within the Wood Village
ing countries but world import j iy umns.
consumption would ne orwy aoout
12 million bags.
Coffee producers now fear large
stocks will result in low prices.
as the capital of East Germany
followed a pattern set last week
when the Soviet commandant, Maj.
Gen. P. A. Dibrova, exploded his
bombshell about, the Western sec
tors of the divided, four-power
city.
Replying to an American protest
over the detention of two U, S.
congressmen at gunpoint in East
Berlin last Sunday because the
two-way radio in their military car
allegedly violated East German
laws, Dibrova asserted the sover
eignty ef East Germany over the
eastern sector.
The Communists thus laid the
legal foundation, to their own sat
isfaction, for a return to the block
ade conditions of 1948-49 if they
desire.
Their wish, apparently. Ik to
drive a hard bargain for some
form of recognition that would
harden the division of Germany.
urged parents to closely watch
other children in the school. The
stricken boy reportedly first com
plained of a backache Friday.
. Contact is planned with Marion
County Health Olficer W. J.
Stone in regard to polio shots
for children possibly exposed to
the disease. Pete Lindsay, broth
er of the stricken boy, received
a shot this weekend, but Jack
reportedly has not received polio
vaccine. '
Candalaria
School Set
Violence Mars
Picketing of
Air Engineers
SEATTLE UB A brief flurry of
violence marred picketing ef Unit
ed Air Lines facilities at Seattle
Tacoma International Airport Sat
urday night but peaceful picketing
was resumed by members of the
AFL Flight Engineers Union Sun
day.
A I'AL guard was struck in the
face and the windows of several
cars were broken as mombers of
three AFL waterfront union Joined
flight engineers on the. picket
lines. Two men .were arrested.
After the violence, the air line
obtained a temporary restraining
Death of Lyons
Resident Mars
State's Record .
IUIubm Nti StrvWt
LYONS Richard A. Brown,
81, who received a concussion
and broken leg when struck by
a ear while walking along the
. ' r r r J : I
roaa on aaie urivina uy, aim
Sunday in a Stayton hospital. He
became Oregon's only S-D Day
fatality.-
His injuries were received
about 6 p.m. Thursday on the
Santiam Highway near Lyons.
Driver of the car was listed as
Donald Huber of Lyons, who said
he was blinded by the lights of
an approaching car.
Area Farmer
A Lyons area resident more
than 90 years, he had engaged
in farming and logging before
his retirement several years ago.
He was born June 12, 1874, at
Taylors Falls, Minn.
He leaves a daughter, Mrs.
Agnes Brotherton, Lyons; a fos
ter daughter, Mrs. Maxine Hill,
Mill City; a granddaughter, Mrs.
Natalie Schradle, Salem; and two
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
- Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Tuesday in the Weddle Funeral
Home chapel, Stayton. Burial
will be in Fox Valley Cemetery.
Four persons met violent deaths
in accidents in Oregon over the
weekend, the Associated Press
reported.
Leland Joe Wilkinson, 17. Maple
ton, suffered a fatal wound in the
head when his gun discharged
near Florence. -
John B. Diamond, 21. a Navy
sailor on leave from the U.S.S.
Wright, now berthed at Bremer
ton. Wash., and Peggy Ann Wick
man. 19, Glen EUcn, Calif., wore
fatally injured In a traffic accident
near Klamath Falls Saturday.
Richard Brown, 11, died at a
Stayton hospital Sunday from in
juries suffered when he was struck
by a car en Safa Driving Day.
Stickup Suspect
'Mowing Lawns'
In Winder Snow
DENVER Wu-Detectives
Earl Rice and Chris Herrera
.donned overshoes Sunday and
sloshed through two inches of
snow to the home of a stickup
suspect.
c The officers were informed
by the suspect's wife that hubby
was "at work."
"And just what is he. doing
for a living now?" asked Rice,
"Oh, he mows lawns," said
the 'ever -loving spouse.
Succumbs
. .'' '
t '
mi
WW
Storm Moves
East; Snow
Buries Plains
GLENN MARTIN
Air pioneer dies.
Death Claims
Air Pioneer
Glenn Martin
BALTIMORE W Glenn L
Martin, aviation pioneer whose ca
reer ranged from production of 33-
cent box kites to fantastic man
made earth satellites, died here
Sunday night. H waa ..,
He was stricken by a cerebral
hemorrhage Sunday morning at
his farm. .. . ; . .
Martin, whose namesake com
pany recently was awarded the
orimarr Defense Department ron-
tract to build and launch earth
satellites, had been ill since late
in October.
Ha was hospitalized Nov. 4 after
a heavy cold or virus iniection
developed complications involving
the vascular system.
Although he had largely relin
Union
Debate 1
Rages
.Tempers Flared
On Placement of
Teamsters' Unit :
NEW YORK m Controversy
raged in the newly merged AFL
CIO Sunday Bight an the eve ot -tbe
1-million -member federation'! :
opening convention Monday.
. The argument centered around
the giant 1.300.000-member Team-.
stera Union, largest unit In the
former AFL, and It dominated
conversation of the more than !
400 delegate here for the week
long sessions.
President Eisenhower is to he
the principal speaker at the initial
meeting Monday. His voice will be
relayed from his Gettysburg. Pa.,
home by a special circuit to dele
gate here in the regimental
armory.
Coed Will ""
Amiability and good will had
largely prevailed among union
leader last week during separata
AFL and CIO conventions at which
the long-debated AFL-CIO merger
was finally ratified. But a two
fold announcement by the Team
stera tossed a bombshell into the
meeting. ;
The teamsters disclosed they in
tend to join the AFL-CIO Indus
trial union department fIUD, a
subsidiary which had been created
; primarily as a home In the merged '
group for former CIO unions. I
The other Teamsters develop
irent was the signing of a mutual
aid agreement between the Team
sters' Western Conference and the
Independent Mine, Mill and Smelt
er Workers Union, an organization
ousted by the rIO years ago for
alleged Communist domination.
Flat 'Statement . ,
James B. Carey, secretary-treas -urer
ol the former CIO, who U
due to hold a similar job In tbe
new IUD, said flatly the Team
sters would not be allowed to join
the IUD. , .... . . .
This was somewhat tempered
Sunday by Walter Reuther, whe :
had been CIO president and 1 ta
head the IUD, that the teamsters ,
might gain' a placj Itr the IUD.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A hliziArd which itumwd as
much as 11 Inches of snow over Qmsned active management of the
the Central and Northern Plains I Glenn L. Martin Co., he retained
KahirrfAV mnvwt northeastward i his keen interest in aviation to the
oraer irom superior juage iiarjia into Canada Sunday, and threw : "u
Reindeer Due :
Here Toddy
With Santa ;
to two men at each of the six en
Tours of the school, classroom ; trance to the UAL building.
visitations snd a talk by Mrs. The flight
A. Seering which limited pickets off a cold wave behind it.
Plummeting temperatures head
ed for xero and below in much of
engineers complied! the whitened prairie region as the
VILLAGE TO FIGHT
PORTLAND ( Officials of
Wood Village said Sunday they
will fight plans of the Multnomah
County Commission to locate the
new county fairgrounds on land
tion rites for the new Candalaria
Grade School in southwest Salem.
The building will be open for
Inspection both before snd after
the program which is scheduled
to begin at I p.m. at the school.
Invocation snd benediction will
be by the Rev. T." M. Gebhard,
vice president of the Salem Min
isterial Association. Platform
guests will be member of the
Salem School Board, Architect
James L. Payne, Builder E. E.
Batterman snd Wilbur P. Green,
president of the Candalaria Moth-
INDIANAPOLIS UT Mr. Thelma ers and Dadi Club.
Kremple gave birth to a son Sun- Uri. Clara Bradec, American
day in an overturned automobile , Legion Post 8 Auxiliary, will pre-
after a live-car smashup halted i soM the school with a flag which
her husband's dash to a hospital. , will be accepted by student
Agnes Booth, Marion County who me court order and the water-snowstorm blew out. The Northern
PhnM .,nrinind.nt. will fea- i (ront men removed picket signs :Great Lakes area had the two to-
"L . . .. . . . ;from their persons but remained
lure the Tuesday night dedica- on the . .n4VI1iIir....
Baby Born
In Upset Car;
' Doing Fine9
It was her 26th birthday
Seven persons, including Mrs.
Kremple, suffered minor injuries
but she and the baby, her fifth,
were reported "in satisfactory
condition" at St. Francis hospital.
The father, Anthony Kremple, 24,
accompanied his wife and child to
the hospital for treatment of - a
bump on his head. He said it was
his first auto accident in years of
driving. .
An unidentified physician crawl
ed Into the tipped-over Kremple
car to assist Mrs. Kremple while
Wayne Metzgtr
Title of Mn. Booth's dedication
speech will be "As American as
Apple Pie."
Clackamas Road
Blocked by Slide
The flight engineers have been
on strike for six weeks to back
demands for assurance irom Unit
ed that flight engineers would be
used on any planes which UAL
might use in the future.
Weathermen
Forecast Rain
gether subzero temperatures
and the driving snowstorm.
Warnings for Northern Wiscon
sin, Northern Minnesota and Up
per Michigan were for heavy snow,
strong winds and temperatures as
low as IS below by Monday morn
lngt A drop to 18 above zero was
expected as far southeast as In
diana's Ohio River border.
The snowstorm laid a thick car
pet from Kansas through Nebras
ka, Iowa, the Dakota, Minnesota
and Wisconsin Saturday, with
fall of as much as II inches at
Duluth, Minn., and Sioux Falls,
Art. . ...b.nJ ;tk i- v. winns up io u nines an
trace of precipitation, warm wethou,r f'led. into dr.fU.
air moving In from the west and !u, t Tr!
north may bring rains the next ttriMbu'cd Lto bad, w,'a,h"
three or four days, McNary Field inL Nebraska and two n Illinois
weathermen said early this morn- whJ!re ,0 w" h"?r.1"d"?-
ing.
A storm centered off the coast
Sunday night is expected to reach
Salem early today. One that was
off the Hawaiian Islands Sunday
Shortly before death came, he
said he was working en secret
armament developments and an
invention in the field of explosives.
Martin built his first plane In
an abandoned church under the
glare of a lantern held by his
mother and later rose to owner
ship of one of the world's leading
aircraft companies.
is expected to bring warmer tern-
The new snow at Duluth brought
to 23 inches the amount on the
ground. Other accumulations
were: Sioux Falls 14 inches;
Houghton, Mich.. 2V Park Falls,
Wis., 16; Remidjl, Minn , 12; iiur
perature tonight and rain Tues- J? "1,. S D H; Schot -
day. Another centered Sunday
on the Aleutian Islands is ex
pected Wednesday or Thursday,
holding more rain snd returning
temperatures to about their present-level,
forecasters said.
OREGON CITY on - A slide
blocked the Clackamas River
Highway three niiles east of Car-
trr Sunniv t
car to assist wirs. ivrcmpio wnnei ' . TRAIN KILLS 6
policemen heaved the auto partly!' Traffic is being detoured around, .rnv-minv -r .
off the ground o the door would 'the 2,000 to .4.000 yards of dirt GREENVILLE, S.C, W The
open 'which are blocking the highway. ; Southern Railway crack passen-
' a mm train thai " amma
aj- ni nvvui, easiisii.u
an automobile at a grade crossing
near here at dusk, killing aix per
sons. "
bluff. Neb., 10; Chadron and Val
entine, Neb., , and Minneapolis
7.
Sunday morning minimum tem
peratures Included 12 below zero
at Fraser, Colo., and Cuthank,
Mont., and 9 below at Minot. N. D.
Ex-President
Truman Sick
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (IP)
Former President Harry S. Tru
man is suffering from an intesti
nal illness which his physician
says is "not serious."
Truman became ill Friday aft
er returning from a speaking en
gagement in St. Louis and has
been at home since.
His physician, Dr. Wallace
Graham, said Truman Is doing
very well and will be required
to stay home about two more
days.
The illness was disclosed Sun
day when Truman sent a tele
gram to a memorial service for
the late Eijdie Jacobson, his for
mer psrtner in a haberdashery
business.
Truman was scheduled to be
the principal speaker at the ser
vice. , ""
What Christmas Means to Me
Careful en the stairs, Dear,
1 havea't fixed Ideas yet
Dear DEAR? .
(Mar's (Mtei T th Siltm
ru ta w.rl vr, Ckrlit- '
aua ku a fUaiflcaiic. T
reflect that I'Blllraae Tlu Or
(aa SlaleuBaa Mm tali writ
af araal lapraltala af the
teaaln af thrift ajaa. Rear
arnuUve Slf ai (karrhea r
aka te tea tka aaajaat as
alarra ay a aaaaakar el tkalr tea-
srauea).
e e '
By Earl Bull
(Factor manaser: Deeeen rirat
Baptial Church). .
From my esrliest recollec
tion, Christmas hss always been
a bright and festive occasion!
Always intertwined with the
tinsel, the holly, the gifts and
Santa CLaus, has beca a sound
'teaching on' the Biblical basis
of the Yoletide season.
My mind turns again at this
Christmastide . to St. Luke'
Gospel, chapter two in verses
10 snd 11:
"All tbe angel , said unto
them, fear not: For, behold, I
bring you good tidings of great
joy, which shsll be to all peo-,
pie. For unto you is born this
day In the city of David a Sav
ior, Which Is Christ the Lord
, To me, a layman, this is a
wonderful word! A word thst
forms much' of the basis for
my personal faith in the Sav
ior, Jesus Christ Aa I tit year
after year musing before the
lovely, bauble-laden tree In our
home, f am amazed at the mer
cy and goodness of the Lord
on the one hand and the ris
ing tempo of seasonal com
mercialism on the other.
In the innermost recesses of
my heart, 1 want to esrneatly
recapture the season's primal
meaning!' Christmas, ' to me,
means a season ot commemora
tion commemoration of the
giving of ' the greatest gift of
all time; the gift of Jesus
Christ, God 'i Son, for our axi
omatic need.
' Here is i wonderful Savior,
a wonderful Gift,
: ' ' ''-
The Weather
.00
Nude Photography Hobby
Of English Mayor Stirs City
DONCASTER. England tt The! on the council. She is a Conserve
mayor and his nude pictures had i live. . . .
this industrial town mixed up Sun-) The Anglican vicar of this York
day in a political controversy in- , shire industrial center of 80,000,
volving his hobby. Canon Hugh Herklots, said he was
Mayor Alf Hall, whose hobby Is "amazed by the 'disclosures and
nude figure photography, got by the mayor's whole attitude to
Caught up in the row when his 14-jit."
year-eld son sneaked a few choice Mayor Hall, who is in his SO's
pictures to show some friends. The land a plasterer by trade, appears
mayor is confident ft riding out undisturbed by all the commotion,
the political storm and is sticking . Sitting In his executive- office, the
Willamette River 111 fret "Y guns inai were I ninuing mayur ioiu a rcyuncr.
forecast (from u. s. weather Immoral in his hobbv. I have assured officials to
KnVTiEdJ wnh-'Xnai rami howdown may come at the whom I owe an obligation that 1
he'innin i hu mornins: wait. red municpal council meeting Tuesday, will not discus this business with
howera toniM and ram aain Tuea- Councillor Kathleen Stirfleet has! the press. I have a civic respon-
at: warmer toni.ht wuh the loweat , threatened to propose a motipn of sibility to the town.
"no confidence in our mayor.
Politically, the pint-sized mayor
and Miss Surflcet are In rival
camp. He Is a member of the
Labor Party, which ha a majority
I
Mas. Mln. r-rrl
Salem . i 44 21 .aa
Portland ,j-....4 IS
Baker , M 17
Med ford 44 SI
Norm Bend . 51 31
Roaehurg . 4! SO
Ian Frenciaco 14 4!t
Lot Anelea i ,.. II 4S
Chlcaaa ., -.44
Nrw York 4t 4S
.00
jnn
.no
.00
..is
trra
M
today
near 3
Tamperatura at II St s m
waa 31
Ai.fM rarriPiTtiov
Star Start W Weather Year. npt. I
Tkla Vaar Laat Vtaf )tarail
17 J H " UN
"Photography Is my life-long
hobby, and nude figure photogra
phy, with special light and shade
effect, is on of my apecial inter
est." ..
Santa' reindeer In the flesh
will prance before the eye of
Salem area youngsters this after
noon and evening.
The reindeer and sleigh, of
course, bouncing Santa himself
will be situated on a special stag
at Valley Motor Co. between 4
p.m. and I p.m. Prior to that the
entourage will drive from Mission
street along Liberty to the firm at
Liberty and Center streets. .
No snow being available. Saint
Nick' party will be carried by
motor conveyance.
Today's visit will provide many
Salem children with their first
glimpse of the fabled reindeer.
The animals are from the Red
mond reindeer ranch of two Sa
lem men, John Zumsleln and Os
car Paulson, and the visit i spon
sored by Valley Motor Co.,
Oregon's Young :
GOP Decides to :
Nominate Ike
PORTLAND Oft The Oregon
Young Republican Federation de
cided Sunday to nominate Dwight,
D. Eisenhower in the May. 19.,
Oregon presidential primary.
In Oregon a candidate s name
may be placed on the ballot by
a -petition signed by 1,000 voters.
The candidate's approval i n4
necessary.
Paul Kerrigan, a student ai
Portland's Reed College and chair
man of the college Republican
club, said petitions will be circu
lated some time next week.
Eftrapoi. Wtttfla Walla
In mat Rrraptureil
GILROY, Calif. - Two men
who were arrested here Friday
night under assumed names were
Identified In the Gilroy jail Sun.
day as John RuxncII.zS , and Ed
ward L. Burkholder, 23, who cs
caped from the Washington Stale
Penitentiary near Walla Wa't oa
Dec. 1. r'
Today's Statesman
tec. Page
Classified ... II ... 7-9
Comics II. 4
Crossword ....H. (7
Editorials I.. 4
Home Panorama I....I, 9
Obituaries .. II..- 7
-Radio, TV .11.. :. 4
Sport . . II 1, 3
Star Gazer II. 4
Valley II 1
Wirepheto Page ....II.-. S
World This Week ..II
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