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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1956)
rf!RF.CAT If mm y . baf'u, M. Nary f;e,ij, Sjlex,), 1V af'rr-ror: fr'y ciourtv t H th today. 42. and low tonij t. Tfmrwraiura at 1J 01 am. today .14 W'ilimtta RSver 1 1 fret I4I.EH PFC1P!T TI01 Smre Start of Wratrr Year Snt. 1 Trin Year Lan Yar NormJ 41 M IS S3 34 ij i.i .is I -Ki wail imti H Iks Grtwtk af Ort PCUNono 1651 . 105th Year 5 SECTIONS-40 PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem Oregon, Sunday, February 5, 1956 PRICE 10c No. 313 'j-i'eiA i- N ! ,v,i I f p Con Claims China Birthplace, Calls For 'Repatriation' uupree roc, whose prison antics have been as sensational as the cold-blooded killing that put him there two decades' agohas petitioned the State Supreme Court to send him back to his "native China" in his latest bid for freedom. The cunning convict has fought a running legal battle with courts during all his 23 years behind.' bars of Oregon State Penitentiary, in " Chinese? - - Duprre Poe, one f (he slate's most notorioui convicts, is seek ing "repatriation" to Communist China which he ui claims Is his birthplace. Since this picture, take in 1951, Poe has lost his mustache, victim of a decree! gainst beards of any kind by Warden Clarence T. Gladdra. On Tuesday last Juscelino Kubits chek was inaugurated President of Brazil That seems an odd i name for head of a Latin Ameri can state, but it does reflect the multiple origins of Brazil's popu lation. The "Juscelino" is of course Latin, and comes from Kubits chek's maternal line. The sur name is Czech -,the .President's grandfather was an immigrant from Czechoslovakia. Brazil is noted not only for the mixture of its population but also for the lack of prejudices based on color or national origin. The prevailing language 1st Por tuguese, though Spanish is the national language in most other Latin American states. The Portu guese settled in Brazil in the 16th century, and the demarcation line drawn by the Pope .to divide the new world gave Brazil, which lay east of the line, to Portugal, land to the west eoin? to Sn.nin There' was a considerable native popu-j lation of Indians, and they retain1 their racial identity in the western part of the country. In colonial i days Kegroos were imported from j Africa to work on the plantations! and slavery was not abolished un-f til comparatively late in the lmh ' J DIP r ""si" iiTrrr v? M H a II hi ceniury. ine negroes were, now-r . "" v. ever, of a superior class and after; fe,R" ,ver th,e annual Hi-Y Sweet- . mi ... . achieving freedom soon partici- ru"'" adimuay nini. I pated freely in the life of theLJ'Jf3' selec'ed, from country. Racial intermarriage is common. In size Brazil ranks next to Canada among Western Hemis phere countries and ahead of the United States (exclusive of Al aska), with over three million square miles. Immigrants have been pouring into the country ((.pntinucdon editofia Engineer Meets Own 'Locomotive Little Too Soon SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -Robert B. Tolcr, 55, Frisco Engineer, was driving his car to the railroad yards to begin his shift on switch engine No. 238 Saturday night. He met 238 a few minutes too Soon at a grade crossing. The resulting collision sent Toler to a hospital with injuries of the chest, head, 'ribs and arm. Where to Vote Seventeen school buildings In the Salem School District will be used as polling places hen registered voters of the district east their ballots Mon day from 2 to 8 p.m. on a pro posed $3,900,000 bond issue to finance two new junior high schools. . Because a rearrangement of the school voting pre cincts has added many new polling places, a map show ing .the precinct division and a complete polling place list is presented in Sec. 3, Page 9 of today's edition pf The, Oregon Statesman. --- , Your HOME Newspaper the meantime building an almost legendary list of escapades Though presently "deep in segre gation", the killer of a Silverton night policeman has at times been king of the cons, and always chief troublemaker for wardens, guards and judges. Hazy History Latest dhapter in the Poe legend turned up this week with the fil ing of a motion by ther convicted murderer to have the order set "aside which sentenced him to life in prison back in 1932. In it Poe capitalizes on his hazy history to cjaim that he was born at Talien wan, Kuanlung Chou now Dairen',. Manchuria) and should be repatri ated as a citizen of the Chinese Peoples' Republic (Red China)- Reaction among authorities, who have observed with persistent mo notony the filing of writs and mo tions and petitions by Poe, is summed up in the statement by one that "Poe and the Commu nists are deserving of one an other." Geneva Agreement i Poe asks the court to contact the ambassador of India, the na tion which has acted as intermedi ary for U. S. -Red China relations, to begin action toward his repatri ation which he says he is entitled to under terms of the agreement reached at Geneva, Switzerland, last Sept. 10 between ambassadors of the Chinese Peoples' Republic and the United States. "He is a citizen of China by right of birth and a subject of the Chinese Peoples' Republic by right of birth and choice," the motion reads, "lie desires to return to China. But he is confined in the Oregon State Penitentiary and re strained of his liberty and denied his right to be repatriated. (Rights of said citizenship can be proven by documentary and material evi dence and witnesses in the Chinese Peoples' Republic.)" 1932 Murder ' j Poe was tried In Marion County Circuit Court in 1932 for the gun slaying of Silverton police Officer James Iverson the year before. He,, w as found guilty and sentenced to uie.in prison, mow at S3 with a long record of escape attempts and riot activities. Poe may be on the way to serving it all unless cx-; asperated authorities decide to put him on that slow boat for China. No Prior Claim Though present police files are thirl, probably as a result of the State Capitol fire in 1935 which destroyed case records, there has been no claim before ,.from Poejing a dance north of Eugene that he was not a U. S. citizen. It I Portland recorded its sixth traf is considered likely that the grisled fic death of the year when Mrs little convict may have Visited .lessvca Moore Rrvnnf u:.e till.wl Manchuria as a sailor. Salem Hi-Y T,fft PiL UlVlo 1 (Cfi . ll'ppf 7 a pit vtQ - ' 11111111 IS (Pictures Sec. 3, Page 8) Salem Hi-Y voters elected Mari mil a nn nnn I? Anmin I'd. a in' finals, three eachfrom North j and South Salem High Schools, by the votes of Hi-Y members at tending the dance at Crystal Gar dens. Miss Allen, South Salem High School senior, is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Allen, 1344 S. Lib erty St, Miss Carlisle, North Salem a brother. Walter L. Carlisle, 1911 N. Front St. Other candidate, each elected by one of the six Salem Hi-Y chap ters. Carol Bocsch and Betty Pres sley. both of North Salem Hijjh School; and Donna Meyer and Nancy Denton, both of South Salem High School. Unexpected Democrats By THOMAS G. WRIGHT Staff Writer, The Statesman Oregon politics, given a twist by fate in the unexpected death of , Gov. Paul L. Patterson five days ago, Saturday continued to bounce as crazily as a football on tbe Saturday afternoon turf. No one in either of the state's two major parties appeared ready to grab the ball for fear of being thrown for a political loss. Major speculation, and a good share of the. confusion, shifted Saturday from the Republican party which had lost its powerful standard bearer when a heart at i tack cut down Gov. Patterson jtwo days, after he had announced i he would seek the nomination to the U.S. Senate seat held by j Wayne L. Morse, i The Democrats, faced with the ! unanticipated task of settling on" i a candidate for governor this I year,, seemed to be in as much turmoil as the Republicans there i with at least four getting prom jinent consideration. I Democratic party leaders met Jet Age Meeting Draws Uninvited Red Air Officer WASHINGTON - iff) A Russian air expert looked in on the Air Force Assn.'s Jet Age Conference here without any of the conference partici pants being aware of his pres ence. Apparently the only persons who recognized Russian Ma. V. V. Kolentser in his dark business suit were a few news men who had met him before. Kolentsr.v is an assistant air attache at the Soviet embassy. James Straubcl, AFA exec utive director, said no invita tions were issued to any rep presentatives of Iron Curtain countries although there was no objection to their attend ance, since the conference dealt t only with non-secret problems. . , Kolrntsev was wearing a conference bad?e. He had res istered as a major but had left blank the section in which his affiliation was supposed to have been written. For the two day conference there were only three affairs requirine tickets two lunch eons and a cocktail party cost ing S5 each. The Russian's card showed that he had paid " $5 for a cocktail party ticket. Accidents Kill 7. Including 4 Teenagers By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Accidents claimed seven lives in Oregon Friday night. Highway crashes accounted for five deaths and two died in a fire, An automobile plunged off a road into the Siuslaw River, and the four teen-aged occupants were drowned. (Picture, sec. 2, age.31'.') Dead were John White, 19; Jan nett May Garrett, 17; D a n n y Poppe, 19, and Sharon Singer, 18, all of Eugene. - ' George Johnson, a rancher who lives across the river, noticed headlights shining through 32 feet of chill water and this led to dis covery of the tragedy. One girl's wrist watch had stopped at 10:45 p.m., and police believe that is when the accident happened. W. T. Moon, Florence police chief, said the automobile veered jmto a ditch, h.t a power pole, then; means for heating because their hurtled across the .highway into winter normally is mild. Snow i the river. Isoread over th M.nshim. ni. The burning headlights helped In recovery of the car and bodies at the accident scene near the town of Mapleton, 60 miles west of here. Moon snid the four were travel ing toward Florence after attend- in the crash of a car into a traf fic light stanchion on Harbor Drive. Her husband. James R. Rri-OTlt AO U'llA III., rfpltiinri . ... j v, ti nu naa unvuig, wila .j.op.uuuea w.m injuries n man onu Mis wile, DOin 01 whom had been ill, died in a ire which swept through their small house south of Roseburg. The vie tims were Forrest M. Ream, 62, and Marie Ream, 63. Coroner L. L. Powers said Ream apparently tried to help his wife escape, dui Dom were overcome by smoke. The bodies were on the - , . . .. charred floor of the bedroom when a neighbor and a passing truck ' se was not determined immediately, TV Comic Berlc Hurt During Show BURBANKr-CaiifH 6 Milton Berle suffered a painful leg injury today while rehearsing for a guest appearance on Jimmy Durante's NBC television show Saturday night. .A heavy wooden camera platform-bumped against Berle and a five-inch splinter gashed his right leg. . Governor Race Finds Uncertain of Candidate Saturday in an afternoon-long ses sion of the executive committee of the IState Democratic Central Commit tec. but spokesmen denied candidates were the chief topic of j concern at the meeting, Howard Morgan, reached by telephone at State Democratic headquarters in Portland, said "There is nothing I can say af this time." He confirmed, how ever, indications that party choice was among State ' Sen. Robert Holmes of Gearhart, Attorney General Robert Y Thornton, Multnomah County Sheriff Terry Schrunk and party wheelhorse Henry Hess, Priority opinions were almost as diverse as the number of potential candidates. The only apparent reason that Democratic complications were not, as severe as those of the Re publicans was that they had only one top office to worry about be tween now and the Jday 1$ pri mary. The Republicans were con cerned as well with securing a new candidatt for th Senate race. Snow Drifts Nine Feet .. Freezing Storms Kill Battle of Wind Over Atlantic May End Cold (Picture on Wirephoto Page) LONDON - A possible break in Europe's worst cold spell of the 20th Century depnded on the outcome of a gusty battle of two rival winds over the Atlantic Sat urday night. At least 126 persons wefe known dead in a giant freeze-up stretch ing even into the normally sun shine spots of Southern Italy and the French Riviera. Water was at . a premium for hundreds of thousands of British householders whose pipes froze. Fuel shortages threatened bitter hardship in the satellite countries of Poland and Hungary. Knife-like gales scattered coastal shipping. Ice and snow made roads perilous and snarled rail transport. Shopgirls skated to work oo Hol land's canals. Warmer Air Bitter east winds from Siberia which brought on the cold spell five days ago, have run head on into warmer air streams spread ing from the west over the At lantic. The British meteorologist office predicted the winner would dom- ma,e Europe's weather for the next three weeks. Cuts in gas supplies forced cold meals for many people in Hesse, West Germany. In Frankfurt, de liveries of bottled ' milk were stopped because the milk froze and burst the bottles. Bonn and other cities had strpetlamp blackouts from gas failures. Deaths by Countries Death tolls from exposure, fire, storm and crashes attributable to the weather by country: France 35; Britain 26; Italy 16; Denmark 11; Germany, the Soar and Turkey 10 each; Austria 5; Holland and Switzerland 4 each; Yugoslavia 2; Spain 2 and Belgium 1. Peasant families in Southern I Italy shivered In houses with no i ground of the French Riviera and irosi DiacKened Holds of spring flowers worth millions of dollars. Worst Since 1891 Sunny Spain had its worst cold wave since 1891. Rome's spectacu lar fountains froze over. The ca nals of Venice kept free of ice but only because 75-mile-an-hour gales lashed them into waves. Holland called off Saturday school sessions so the kids could go skatine on the iced canals. ? . '. ! UUtCh C Aildren can skate as sooni' were, violated hy , ma; se,"e can walk. I reported $2,500 offer to Sen. Fran.;" ne Vnrl',ma sca!" .l?Pte as tney can wa,k Rain Breaks LArea Freeze- A light freezing rain fell on the Salem area Saturday night but changed. to .drizzle and fog before ice reached a danger stage. Tamperature at midnight had risen three dagrees in four hours and was duel to continue rising, McNary Field weathermen said. Midnight temperature was 34. A 'silver thaw" was reported from Portland to Hubbard, Marion County sheriff's deputies said. United Air Lines operations-at" MeNary Field were closed during the freezing rain and had not re opened at midnight. Air traffic was being routed to Seattle. Warm weather was predicted to continue through tonight, with a low of 32 predicted, and possible rain Monday would hold the tem peratures up, weathermen said. Republican activity Saturday centered arounjLnew Gov. 'Elmo Smith. State GOP Chief Wendell Wyalt and Sec. of Interior McKay; though none of. the three was ready to fake any firm state ment. - , Wyatt voiced the confidence that the party would settle on, and give solid support to, strong candidates for all positions, but still had some conferring to do before indicating any "starting lineup." Gov. Smith spent part of the day Saturday in jiis office going over mail and signing a number of official papers. He said be ex pected to confer with several per sons, presumably on the political situation Monday. Sec. McKay, who has apparent ly ruled himself out of state politi cal office; spent Saturday in Port land. He was scheduled to spend Saturday night in Salem with his daughter Mrs. Lester Green and family, before leaving' early today for Washington. (Additional Details in Sec. 1, Pge$) . State Ooerators Channel Flood of Calli V , ,...' ( y- v h One of the busiest telephone switchboards in Oregon is the board at the state Capitol In Salem (shown above) which handles the daily flood of incoming calls for hundreds of state offices. Operators shown at work at the board located la the old state office building are (from left) Jennie Madison. Cleo Surprenant, Peg Ritchie, Preal Pack and their supervisor Mrs. Irene Cross. Swinging files above their heads holds names and extension numbers of some 4,800 itate em ployes. (Statesman photo). Capitol Switchboard Girls Keep Tab on Pulse of State's Affairs By CONRAD PRANG E Staff Writer. The Statesman Talk about weaving conversa tion! : That's exactly what the busy women operating the state Capitol switchboard do. The hundreds of daily Incoming calls from all over Oregon and the nation are tunneled to various state offices via a twist- FBI Enters Senate Bribe Charge Case i WASHINGTON ID - The FBI stepped into the gas bill furore Saturday to determine whetheri cis- Case (R-SDi. Senate leaders meanwhile announced plans for a formal Senate probe. . . i, , . m , Case, who implied in the Senate rrioav me campaign conmnuuon was offered for his vote in favor of the natural gas bill, said he would "welcome" the Senate inquiry. Case indicated he had given the name ot me person or persons in-' iong t,e Capitol flag would fly at volvcd to two FBI agents he said . half-staff. We often have to ques had called on him. j ion caers in ord,,r to mp them "They are a responsible agency, And a lot of them resent it. They1 and I said I'd give them to any ; think we re just being nosey." responsible agency," Case told ; Most active time (or the switch newsmen. I board in the eight-year tenure of But despite demands that he Mrs. Cross came when former give senators the name of the man Gov. Douglas McKay was appoint- wno maoe tne oner, ne said l see no good to be accomplished oy my giving tne name m aa- vance of any authorized investi gation. The limited FBI Investigation was announced by Asst. Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers. Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas announced after a conference with GOP chieftains that unless there are further de velopments he will move in the Senate Monday to set up a select committee to inquire into Case's charge. In the balance hung the fate of the bitterly contested hill to cx exempt producers of natural gas from direct federal regulation. PRODUCTION TO RESUME LONG BEACH. Calif, i Pro duction will resume Monday at the Ford Motor Co. assembly plant which was damaged by flood, fire and explosions last Jan. 27, an official said Saturday. Today's Statesman Sec. ..III... Page 911 Classified ...... Comes the Dawn Comics Crossword ........ Editorials ..... Farm Home Panorama Obituaries Our Valley Radio, TV Sports ... Star Gazer trrr:; Valley Wirephoto Page ..IV .... I ...IV ...IIL., ...Ill .... II ....IV ...IV ..v: I IS 1,2 II 1-3 . I I ry .. t t--wf . ed network of wires, lights, but tons and dials, Telephone people say the Capi tal switchboard is the second busi est in the state. The busiest is in the Meier Frank atort build ing in Portland. "If we lost our sense of humor on this job we'd be sunk," says Mrs. Irene Cross, a stunning bru nette who has an unslnkable sense of humor. She is supervisor . of the four operators. Few Routine Calls Because few of the calls are "routine," the operators have to be on their mental toes. They have to. keep up on current events state, seasonal and " otherwise. They must have ah intimate knowl edge of who does what at the 700 office extensions the board serv ices in a half-dozen state buildings. "Callers often know what they U..4 IL . J..-, I. I. y ' 1 "nuw wno iu iaiK io, says nir. cross, uur :i " ni" JZS J .nrf Mm. VCM .J , f' u . r . . months visitors ask about Cap.to tours. Right , now we get a lot of fcaMl on inco'mp ,axes . ,. j"" S"M":? "Once, during State .Fair time, IIIU. a lady called to ask us what shei""'" ' . '". ' ""r should wear to the Fair. Last pr"s 8ny sutfh. "''"" u , week a man wanted to know how' lhe P0"'"1 U' S: 6th ed Secretary of Interior. On that j day calls to the governor's office Monday Heavy Day In general though. Legislative sessions cause most work for the board. Monday is the heaviest day of the week. And on most days the hours just before noon and just before 5 p.m. are busiest. The girls call these "bread and butter calls" because many of them are "wives calling to tell husbands to t bring home a pound of butter or loaf of bread." Because it keeps its collective ear on the "pulse of things" the switchboard often knows, before anyone else, when a big political move is in the winds. Example: For several das before Robert Johnson was announced as the new director of the state finance department his office received an unusually large number of calls. Two Boards ActualIythcxAare two Capitol switchboiirtliT The main one on the first floor of the old state'10 downtown Tuscaloosa office building-is operated by Mrs. Cross and Preal Pack. Peg Ritch ie, Cleo Surprenant and Jennie Madison, most with prior telephone company experience. Tbe other board is "girled" by Ruby Hatter. It' Is located at the state forestry office on East State strect'and handles messages to the forestry office, prison, state hos pital and some state highway shops. More Calls - ' " ' ' The state highway department, by the .way- receives more calls per day than any other state de partment, Mrs. Cross estimates. So fast has the state's phone sys tem grown WOO additional exten sions during the past two years) that soon, probably before the next High in Texas 126 in 4 1 ,'-Try? 'fv f Legislature, the system will use four-digit extension numbers be- cause the three-digit list is being exhausted, "Speed and accuracy are our watchwords." (ays Mrs. Crou. Anyone who watches the gals at work though, might be tempted to add "cheerfulness," and "zest for job." Allies May Flex Muscles In Mid-East WASHINGTON on - The United States anaVBritain are considering making a classic "show of force" in the Eastern Mediterranean to dissuade Israeli and Arab states fr.,m Minister Eden are reported to have agreed at their conferences here lust week that they simply can not tolerate an outbreak of war in the Middle East. They are said to i . . . . ' ii .1 iiiM'iMixi m nrevnni 'r vnn. uuui arouna iwo carriers ana in cluding cruisers, destroyers and submarines, may be put on ma neuver in the area as part of the "show of force" plan under study. British forces on the island of Cyprus and U. S. air units based in the Mediterranean-" area could also be used in a display of strength. These and other measures will be discussed In detail at three- power talks beginning here in a few days-among U. S., British and French officials. France accepted an Eisenhower-Eden bid to partici pate and is expected to share their views. i i 'F ?! n- rf t. i f1 A I a b a m a U. Paraders Protest Negro Student TUSCALOOSA, Ala. Wi Resent-1 governor will read about this to ment over presence of the first morrow. We're in Accord with' the Negro student at the University of Alabama exploded Saturday in a shouting demonstration of 1,000 men students during which a car occupied by Negroes was dam aged. The excited students burned a cross on the university campus and then about 500 marched two miles singing "Dixie" as they paraded. Some' shouted "Keep Bama white. To high. hell with Authrine" the Negro tn- Autherine Lucy, 26-year-old Bir rollee. ., - mingham secretary, attended The demonstration went on for classes Friday and Saturday afer nearly three hours. the university lowered its racial All off-duty city police were! bars in obedience to a federal called out to - help control the crowd, but the students forced their way past a blockade of police cars to reach the flagpole in the heart of the city. The university news bureau said that- initial leadership of the rally came from "a few inebriated fra ternity men." The bureau said fra ternity officers helped keep "the general , situation from becoming more difficult." A student who addressed' the crowd at the flagpole said,' "The Europe Blizzard Sets 50-Year Mark In Panhandle fLUNVIEW, Tex. (AP) -The worst blizzard in 50 years, with stiff winds piling snov drifts as dcrp as nine fect, par alyzrd much of thf Texas Pan handle and South Plains Satur day. Most inter-city buses quit run ning after a number were strand- -, AMAKILLO. Tex. IP Twen ty four persons wert reported stranded in snow aboard at cross-country bos without heat r food about IS miles west of the Texas border la New Mex ico Saturday night First report of the stranded' passengers came from the but driver, John Herrea of Ama rillo, who staggered en foot' Into the border town or Glen rlo, about 15 miles from tho snow bound vehicle. ed and passengers had to be res cued by tractor. j Many stores closed and soma' main streets were blocked in Plainview. Hereford, Amarillo, Canyon and Borger. Amarillo and Lubbock City buses had quit run ning Friday. The snow piled up in broad areas where farmers had been receiv ing federal drought aid because oC prolonged drought. The heavy sno held out promise of restoring long depleted sub-soil moisture. The storm also came as Texas Baptists, in accordance with plans made last month, prepared to pray e,hor Saturday and Sunday 'or n endli0 Jdrou-hl- J"' ftyel;?iPb! "cred Khed uic. i.iuiM vi win Been moisture and one blizzard won't " end the drought i , Hardest Hit , Plainview and Hereford, boH . with two feet or more of snowfall, ; were hardest hit by the blizzard which blew through the Panhandle. The snow continued falling Satur day. The new snow was heaviest in the area from the Canadian River, which cuts across the Panhandle, and south into the Lubbock area. Most Panhandle ' and PlainH ' schools closed Thursday and Fri day for the weekend and it now appeared likely some would be un-i 1 able to reopen Monday. 30 Cars Rescued National guardsmen In heavy trucks broke a path to rescue oc cupants of about 30 cars and ont bus stalled In drifts south of Plain view. Tractors reached loaded buses stranded In drifts between Hereford and Bovlna in the Pan handle and highway patrol cars evacuated occupants of a stalled bus near Vega on U.S. Highway M. The storm caused near blizzard conditions and drifting snow in Eastern New Mexico. PUN 'SUCCESSFUL BERLIN Wi Communist East Germany said Saturday its first five-year plan has been "successful ly" ended, but acknowledged that vital targets were not reached. The Weather Mat. M 31 , 2 . 40 - 4 84 ' ' .. SI - 37 . 34 Mm. as -3 ! SO 37 41 ' IS Silrm : Portland ....... Baker Mediurd North Bnd San Franrinco Let Artfelea .-. Chlraao Nw York .no .no .14 m .00 .00 .U state of Mississippi and 'former) Gov. (Herman! Talmadge of Georgia. We're setting the exam ple for Auliurn." -aThe student luter identified him self as Leonard Wilson, 19, a soph omore pre law student from Sl ma, Ala. He told a reporter he "wouldn't be surprised to see fur ther similar action" because "ten- sion here at the university is very i court order. Mrs. Polly Ann Hudson, anoth er Birmingham Negro, was denied enrollment on the grounds of her "conduct and marital record." She called the action a "smear" and has asked U.S. f)ist. Judge Ho bart Grooms to hold Dean of Ad missions William Adams in con tempt of court. There had been Utile apparent reaction as Miss Lucy went from class to class Friday, accompan ied by police olficua. - i