The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 21, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    4-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem,
, hlo Faior Swoyt V$. Hp Ftat Slull Act
' Frtas flnt iliteiMi, Mtrcfc Xt ltSl
- Statesman Pnblithinf Companj
CHAKLES A. SFRAGUE, Editor k Publish
rutmahea every mfa Bumimm alllce in
: Mortal Cttarck it. talem, On. relapw t 4-ttll
tntaret al Um puetaffica at Mteit, Or earona
aieaa mattae miw art af Caajr a Maira a. Hit
v Mttabtr AtMdalH fret.
Tht Amiiiih h at aautiet taeluaavaJ I lit naa
tor npwkUnHM a aU tort) mm pi-iata) to .
. taut Manpapar.
Service Unification
Tbt Eugene Register-Guard, like others ap
palled at inter-tervice antagonisms, joins with
"a few brave people" who are advocating a
single military service. This would mean that
the Army, Navy, Air Force "would wear the
same uniforms and take orders from the
same comsnders." The R-G says this "would
save money, give the integretation necessary
for a unified system of national security, and
might just might stop bickering like the
Battle of the Pentagon."
The country will look that one over care
fully before buying it Certainly a general
cant comand a submarine nor a petty of
ficer head a platoon on a night reconnoiter.
Functions are different, yet there is consid
erable overlapping; the Army developed the
Nike for land defense, but other services
have been devloplng similar weapons for use
In offense, with ensuing squabbling over
which is the better.
The Air Force is the major air arm, but the
Navy has won its right for Navy planes op
erating from carriers. It isn't just the uni
form that creates frictions, it Is also the
chain of command and the differing philoso
phies of how to fight the next war.
Unification would not end the rivalry of
combat services nor the controversy over
plans and strategy. The country hoped that
the postwar unification under a single Sec
retary of Defense might end the bickering,
but It hasn't Sweeping the disputes and the
disputants under the rug will not end strife
in the defense establishment cither. Some
of that, as President Eisenhower says, is
healthy. When it goes to extremes the civil
ian authority has to exercise discipline. End
ing the bickering is squarely up to Secretary
Wilson and President Eisenhower.
Award to Phil Brogan
' At the annual meeting of the Oregon News
paper Publishers' Association in Bend last
week the Voorhies Award for distinguished
service in journalism was made to Phil Bro
fan, associate editor of the Bend Bulletin.
J hit was In recognition of the splendid work
one by Brogan not only as reporter and edi
tor, but at specialist In the fields of geology,
anthropology,' paleontology and astronomy.
He has combined most successfully his vo
cation as a writer with his avocation ef study
,ef natural sciences. He is a recognized author
ity on the geology of Central and Eastern
Oregon where uplift and erosion have open
ed up many back pages of earth history, and
an authority also on the life forms in plants
and animals of prehistoric times.
; He has reported each uncovering of signs
e-f human habitation in the caves and around
the playas of Central Oregon which antedates
the day that Mount Mazama blew its top and
left the blue gem of Crater lake in its cald
era. He has succeeded the late J. Hugh Pruett
as observer and reporter on astronomy sub
jects. . Both the makers of newspapers and their
readers join In congratulating Brogan on this
well merited recognition of his distinctive
work In regional journalism.
Israel Converting Ghetto-Bred Jews From
Backward Nations Into Skilled Workmen
By JOSEPH ALSOP
' JERUSALEM la a whole at
, lit. of different ways, it is an
' eye-opening experience to visit
Israel. After a long struggle
with red tape, you pais through
the at a ad e l
baum gate from
Arab Jerusalem
to Israeli Jeru
salem. Instantly
you art breath
ing a new air,
observing a new
landscape aad
teeing the fu
ture in a new
perspective.
Essentially,
Jaoep AUt.
1
in
a
Israel Is to different from the
surrounding Arab lands, and
Indeed from the countries of
the West too, because this is
a place where they believe in
miracles. They believe In mir
fades, in turn, bcause they havt
' accomplished miracles.
" When you consider the mas
elvt counter-forces that were
'overcome, the creation of the
state of Israel was in itself a
, miracle. So was the transforma-
tioa of this once barren and
..unfruitful land into a rich and
'Smiling landscape of vineyards
) and orchards, fertilt fields and
'grassy meadows, populous busy
i town and productivt Industrie.
J Agala, Um trtttiarmitttt (
the petple tfcenielves alM
Itwscked with atirartltMt. Ptr
here the Jei of the Diaspora
, have bee. gathered, for beta
i tides tf the Irtt certain, from
f Africa and frost Asia. Peddlers
from the Casablatea catkah
I nave beet made lata tttrdy
J ranters, as I saw at a tew co
) operatlri far St. Long-locked
; Jews treat the tre-snedlenl
' ghettos ef the Tenet have te
- coast steelworkers tf a high
f technical category, it I wtt
tbewa la a new pipe extnuion
; platt Aad tkeae ttd all tat
' then la this eatrttoot gita
ring la of th. biaet are belag
rapidly merged taU the at
.'tloaal watle, aad tareed lata
laraellt la th. fall seas, ef the
word, -1 '
Ore, Thurs., June 21, 5g
Opinion in Lane Jury Case
The majority opinion in the case brought
by District Attorney Venn seeking discharge
of the April grand jury in Lane county,
written by Jutsice Latourette, bases rejec
tion of the writ sought by Venn on proced
ural grounds. It was directed against Judge
Frank Reid, presiding judge of the circuit
court, to discharge the jury as one improp
erly drawn. However, since Judge King of
the same Judicial district had overruled the
district attorney's motion,, no motion was
pending in Lane county requesting Reid to
discharge-the jury. Judge Latourette empha
sized that the court was not passing on the
truth or falsity of the allegations.
Justice Lusk in his dissenting opinion
wrote that it was the court not the defend
ant judge which was asked to rule on the
legality of the grand jury.
Whether Venn can find in the court opin
ion a basis for a fresh legal attack is a
question for him and his "amici curiae" to
decide. Now that Governor Smith has asked
the attorney general to inquire into the im
panelling of this jury the latter official may
initiate proceeding if he feels that action
is warranted.
At least the interested public got an opin
ion from the court setting forth the ground
for its action, which appears to be -strictly
a legal technicality. It may be possible to
obtain discharge of a jury illegally drawn,
but not" the way Venn tried.
Gov. "Happy" Chandler has found the go
ing rough since he crashed through the
electorate last year to win another term as
governor. For one thing he got the Legis
lature to double the tax on whiskey stocks,
and now distilleries threaten to leave the
state. Tuesday the state Democratic commit
tee nominated a political foe, Ex. Gov. Law
rence Wetherby, for the seat in the Senate
that was held by the late Alben Barkley.
Maybe Chandler isn't going to coast through
for another term in the U. S. Senate as he
planned. The governorship may be the end
of his come-back trail.
Now Its the doctors rather than Len Hall
who are pushing Ike into the rare for re
election. Why not let the man decide for himself?
Tbt state, tht land, the peo
ple, In short, all in different
ways represent achievements
which any rational, practical
forecaster would have held to
be utterly Impossible only 10
or 20 years ago. Therefore
there Is t mood here going far
beyond tht mood of the old
Scotch song "What other men
dare, we. can do." Here the
mood la "We can dare and do
far beyond other men."
The prtvaleaca af that uotd
makot tht wry air tf Israel
quite remarkably exhilarating
to aayoat aecastomed to the
aitedt of titer lands, where
defeatism and materialism, self
Itdulgeace and despair, tusnl
eita and aelf-seeklfl so oftet
teem tn comnete for domin
ate. But while this Israeli
mtod Is ta exMlerttln It Itself,
It Is also a hard political tart
that must he judged roH hlnod
edlv. like all ether hard politi
cal facts.
The Israeli mood, for in
stance, makes nonsense of the
State Department's complacent
trumpeting about the "suc
cess" of UN Secretary General
Dag Hammarsjold's Middle
Eastern peace mission. So far
as can be observed Hammar
tkjold had no long range success
of any kind.
He certalaly did not succeed
la persuading the Arabs te ac
cept the existence of I he state
tf IsrteL More Immediately im
partial, he certainly did aot
succeed la persuading the Is
raelis to abaadoa those politic
which may lead It ta tutbreak
tf wtr with the Arabs.
On the contrary, from Prime
Minister Ben-Gurinn to the
simplest private in the army,
tht Israelis art til but unani
mous that their national secur
ity depends en meeting Arab
terroristic acts along their bor
ders with stern military re
prisals against the Arab govern
ments. And from Prime Min
ister Ben-Gurion to the poorest
farm worker, the Israelis are
all but unanimous that their
national futurt dependa on go
At the Summit
Another 'summit" conference is in pros
pect. It will not be at the high altitude of
Geneva, but close to sea level on Brioni,
an island in the Adriatic. Principals will be
Prime Minister Nehru of India, Premier Nas
ser of Egypt and Marshall Tito, boss of Yugo
slavia. Ostensibly their purpose is said to be
to build a neutralist bloc which will exert
pressures for preserving the peace of the
world, though not one to be erected into a
formal organization. The meeting will be
held when Nehru gets through his visits in
Britian and the United States and when Tito
gets through strutting in the Soviet Union.
Nasser has been in Cairo entertaining the
new foreign minister of Russia, Dmitri Shep
ilov. One can understand the desire of nations
to preserve peace because in this age a
country finds it hard to keep from becom
ing involved in global wars. Neutrals may
be of some service as "honest brokers" be
tween the two great protagonists, the USA
and the USSR. But Egypt and Yugoslovia
seem more disposed to work both ends for
advantage to themselves. Just now Nasser
is "taking bids" from the USSR and the
West on help for his big Aswam Dam. He
probably is too smart to let Russia get a
toehold in his country for if -poverty is a
breeding ground for Communism Egypt is
surely a most fertile spot.
We can respect their policy of neutral
ism if it is based on principle, as seems to
be true with India, but not if it is actuated
chiefly by self-interest, trying to play the
winner.
ing forward with the Jordan
water diversion scheme, which
the Aribs have said will mean
war.
The Israelis are-people, more
over, wha think very little
about risks. Including evet tht
risk of war, when they are con
vinced that their national se
curity and national future are
genuinely at stake. They must
further be expected tt be even
more careless af all risks. If
Soviet Foreign Minister Shenl
It ellmtxet hit Calrt visit by
announcing the Kremlin's sup
port tor i reduction of Israel
tt the frontiers proposed In the
I N pa-iltlon scheme of 1047.
That will be a threat ta end
Israel as a workable state: and
the lsnell will be all the more
Inclined towards an early show
down. In another way, loo, viewing
the mood of Israel as a hard
pnlitical fact makes nonense
of the opinions now prevailing
in Washinelon and London It is
hichly unlikely that the Arabs
will ever make peace in return
for the little bits of Israel that
Prime Minister Eden and Sec
retary of State Dulles have
tried to persuade the Israelis
to sacrifice. The effort to per
suade the Israelis tn make seri
ous territorial concessions was
even more unrealistic. As Prime
Minister Ben-Cunon bluntlv in
formed Prime Miniter Eden,
the Israelis will fight first
There should be no mistake
about that.
In short, grim courage and
ruthless self-denial make Israel
Intensely admirable at a hn
maa accomplishment, but this
time roars e and self-denial al
so make Israel highly intrtet
bte a a political fact. There
Is no tse saving shout the Is
raeli. The- ought to do dif
ferently." The will not be
have at man? Western toiler
makers think they should be
have, because that Is aot their
nature. Aad tne must add, they
tnlv exist today bee ate that
It aat their nature.
(CopvMt'ht 19SS.
Wtw York tWrald Tribun Inc.)
SSSglfeu' "SaJflsi
nr? nH H H I i
(Coatlmied Irom
middle class general strike."
However, the welfare state "and
nationalization (of health serv
ices' forced the organization of
professional associations. Then
came a coalition of these associ
ations, aU the health associations
Joining in a single Amalgamated
Medical Union, engineers and
technologists in a union of their
own, with the teachers' union
most militant of all-and finally
they wert affiliated in to a Con
gress of Professional Associations
(CPA.
After the Labour victory the
."massed brain-power unions."
worn down by the grinding of in
flation and the steep prores
aion of taxation, headed for a
strike. When Hugh Gaitskell as
TM promised more welfare slate
tuff which meant more. work for .
the nationalized doctors and mora
' work for the school teachers tht
"middle classes" went on strike.
Ttira waa no tduraUon In iMi,
oxropt for middle-class families,
and partnts aiifforod torribl hard
hips. . . But the (ovornmtnt wai
preparing rountr-action, . . It had.
It said, completed a arhemo to fit
the empty classrooms with electron
ic teachri which would be operat
ed Jointly and remotely by the Min
istry of Iducatinn and combined
BBC and ITA television icrvn-e "
There upon tht technicians' as
sociation, "without whose mem
bers' cooperation it was impos
sible to mount the greatest piece
of automation of all time." said
unless the government stopped
that, it would call out its entire
membership. Bevan, chancellor
of the exchequer, was determined
to "face the wicked threat of
these misguided men and prove
at whatever cost in blond and
treasure, that the nation is great
er than the class." When the
strike broke Bevan was caught
in a dental chair, hut with his
jaw wrapped in a silk scarf "he
was everywhere the fight was
thickest."
'Farlory ftr?t aid wai a crude
substitute for 1 1 a t t-df tnnng.
teeth wert txtrecled by Anlo-Sa-on
methodi; In Whitehall clerki
speeded up atate busineta by trans
ferrins' files from in to out t ra-s
without the Intervening ritual of
minuting."
What broke the strike, however,
was Nehru's decision that this
was one dispute in which he
could not stay neutral.
"At it happened, he pniaeed an
enormous stockpile nf professional
talent, which had been produced
for yean by the Indian universities
In bulk; it had votes, but no jobs.
Nehru saw his opportunity. In a
famoiia telegram, sympathising with
Brttish sufferings, be offered Gaits
kell as.oeo doctors. 270.000 certificat
ed engineers, 700 nno tenlor civil
servants, and 550.000 teachers, de
livery to beam within 24 hours by
air, and the balance tn b complet
GRIN AND HK Alt
". . . The party is something
mrrnoranlr occasion . . .
it a day his mother wiH
THERE'S THAT BIRD AGAIN
'iKDQirH
r.1
MS ate.)
ed at fatt as transport could be
chartered or commandeered "
. That frightened the strikers and
the working class "about equal
ly." The strike was called off.
"The nation had learned a new
respect for its brainpower. By
tying middle class salaries to the
cost of living, the government
shrewdly removed one of the big
gest middle class grievances
while, at the same stroke, con
verting the trade unions decisive
ly to wage restraint.
But it didn't save Gaitskell
from the swing of the political
pendulum in 1964.
Quite a fairy tale. Perhaps the
leaders of the new monolith AF1--CIO
may read it with some profit.
Even in the ISA the middle'
class worm may turn some day.
Time Flies
FROM STATESMAN FILES
10 Year Ago
June 21, 14(
The Clyde Beatty circus, with
added aerial trapeze acts aug
menting its program of previous
years, plays its final two per
formances in Salem today. The
Big Top went up at the Leslie
school field and played to capac
ity audiences.
25 Years Ago
June 21. 1931
Senator Charles L. McNary,
reached at his summer home i
here, indicated a year's mora- j
torium on Kurope's debts to
us accompanied by a similar
moratorium on Germany's re- i
paralion debts to the allies, met
with his approval. This was also
with President Hoover's ap
proval. 40 Years Ago
June 21, 191ft
Capt. Max Gehlhar, com-j
mander o( Company M. Oregon j
National Guard, is believed to be
the first soldier in the United
States to be mustered into the
federal service, and the other
members of Company M, of
Salem, to compose the first com
pany of citizen soldiers in the
I'nited States to be translated in-'
to federal command. I
IT Bv I.iolitv
to make Billir's birthday t
Not something to make
long remember , ,
, '
Better English
BT D. C. WILLIAMS
1. What is wrong with this
sentence? "I met up with some
friends who told me they value
your friendship above any
other"
2. What is tlfe correct pro
nunciation of "extricable"?
3. Which one of these words
is misspelled? Oscilate, annihi
late, ventilate, mutilate.
4. What does the word
"proneneis" mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with ha that means "calm;
peaceful"? '
ANSWERS
1. Omit "up," and say,
"value your friendship MORE
THAN any other.'' 2. Accent
first syllable, not the second.
3 Oscillate. 4 Inclination of
mind, heart, or temper. "There
was a crtain proneness to self
gratification." 5. Halcyon.
'Scientists
(Say Pre-Man
Bones Found
GROSSETO. Italy of A team of
American and European scientists
says it has uncovered fossilizcci
bone fragments of what may be a
ten million year old pre-man that
did not descend from the apes.
The discovery was disclosed
Tuesday night in a coordinating
conference of geologists, paleon
tologists and archaeologists who
have been digging into the slag
heaps of the Tuscan coal fields
near here for almost three months.
They said the fragments were
too incomplete for positive identi
fication, but appeared to be from
the man-like creature for which
they are searching.
If so, they pointed nut. the find
will help them identify the strata
in which it lived and thus facili
tate the hunt for further fossil
evidence.
Scientists leading the search are
Dr. Helmutt De Terra of Columbia
t'niversity. New York; Dr.
Johannes Hurzeler of the Basel
Museum of Natural History; Prof.
Alberto Carlo Blanc, secretary
general of the Italian Institute' of
Human Paleontology,
In the coal field where they
are searching fossil remains were
found in 18fi9 of a creature then
identified as "creepitheous." be
lieved to have been some sort of
early ape.
Later studies convinced some
scientists, however, that the crea'
ture was not "creepitheous" but
"oreopithecus." Dr. Hurzeler said
further fossil evidence might show
that "oreopithecus" was a pre
man, and that man and ape might
have descended side by side from
some common ancestor that re
sembled neither
TOO MANY KIDS
OMAHA (INS i- Firemen had
more trouble counting heads
than fichting flames at a blaze
in a building on the city's near
north side. Three families lived
in the house with 17 children
among them.
Prion 4-1811
Subsrriptioa Rates
nrtifi ib mini
Oailv niy I 2S pn ma.
Dall.v ann Sunday I 1 itt Oft mtt.
lunriav nmv jo wttk
By man Sunda.t only:
lin advancai
Anvwhrt in U 8 I fit) prr mo.
2 75 iix mo.
I 00 vir
By aiill. nallT ait taatayi
'in advancal
In Oregon i hi pet mo.
5 SO ii x mo
10 30 vr
tn U S outald
Oregon
-I I tt per ma.
Mtaikvr
Atl Hnrrae ef ctrruiaimn
areas M Agtertttlm AVf
oreiua Neapaar
Fukltahera AMorlatlna
Atveniiing HepretmUttTtai
Wara-nrtmik Co.
W.t Hollltay
New Vera rhlrag
laa fraaetae Dattati
Ex-Chief of. U.S. Agency Denies
High-Power ed Drinking Charge
WASHINGTON OP Robert B.t
McLeaish, denying charges of cials of the agency,
high-powered drinking and poli-! The 57-year-old Texan told the
ticking on the Job, said Wednes- Senate Post Office and Civil Serv
day he quit as head of the Farm-, ice Committee Benson had id
era Home Administration at Cr.t vised him it probably would be
"strong suggestion of Secretary ; better "it I got out of the picture "
of Agriculture Benson. ' McLeaish credited the picture,
McLeaish resigned his 114,800- as" drawn for the committee, to
a-ycar post suddenly Tuesday in 1 disgruntled former employes,
the midst of a congressional in-1 RicktB( Time"
vesusauon mio t"""F"""";
Pineau Urges
Ideas Swap
With Russia
WASHINGTON i - French recommended by McLeaish and
Foreign Minister f'nristian IVicau after nr ignored a siisgcstion that
Wednesday said Russia has start- the company deal with more "Re
ed to raise its Iron Curtain and publican" agents
that the West must encourage this j Th commiltw heard othfr wit.
by big scale cultural-economic w,rfn,ri,.v rferihe Mr.
contacts
with Communist coun-
tries.
i w.. .
"ready to make a certain number
of unavoidable sacrifices."
France's Sl-year-old foreign pot
He urges mat me uniiea aiaies i ..,, j.ut. !- ..n .,.. I
lead the Western world in such "a,',fd drinks in rapid succes
an "experiment" because Rus-1 1 ' '
sia's current leaders now are ! Epld Denied
icy chief spoke out bluntly before testimony bv Mrs Ka'thrvn Car
reporters at a National Press Club ' ,(T, a jorm(r FA en,p0v. m
luncheon after ending three days Mnian, that he out drunk .it .-.
of intensive diplomatic talks with
Secretary of State Dulles.
A 700-word communique sum-
mmg up the results showed Dulles
and P.neau apparently had failed
to settle sharp differences on how
to meet Russia's new softer pol-
jcjM
Bo'th agreed, however, that if
effective world disarmament is to
be guaranteed Russia must a?re
am at tlM u.ktk inL tn .tA
c.rH th. woelH .oaintt .nrnr.co
atomic attack
B .... I
Dulles gave what appeared to
be a cautious endorsement of
France's drive for a "liberal and
just solution" in revolt-torn Al
geria. The Joint French-American dec
laration reaffirmed hope the Unit
ed Nations would settle the Mid
dle East dispute between Israel
and Arab countries. It also re
stated "strong interest" in aiding
less developed areas everywhere.
Baby Born
To Pa rah zed
Young Mother
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich - A
22 - year old housewife, paralyzed
from the waist down for six years,
has given birth to her second son
in 10 months.
Mri Thnmat .Tarlr Wilcnn nf
Sparta'said, "babies are no trouble
.i .it-
Her youngest son, Steven Allen.
weighed in Monday at se v e n
pouna, tour ounces, ine oldest Doy
Thomas .lack Jr . ,s a husky :o
months old.
Wilson, a truck driver, said -f bra(jon hey banncd cosmetics
his wile, its wonderful how she ,nd jewelry for women without per
gets the housework done. She's ail mits fanlc0 pins 8re on salc as
courage. permits, the proceeds going for
I Mrs. Wilson, who was paralyzed centennial expenses Violators will
j after an auto accident, carries out be taken before Ye Awful Judges
her household duties from a wheel-1 of Ye Kangaroo Court by Ye
chair
Again We Are Offering . . .
Our
Vacation Package
THE
,x
f M
' ft "J 'tit
j fiVQ Cllfj
r
fS, y'.
JW'
Saw sit w m
against him. and other high off!-
Previous witnesses ex -em-
ployes of the agency have told
the senators some upper-crust of-;
ficials drank prodigiously, had a
rollicking time kissing subordi
nates' wives at parties and talked
about getting rid of "communist
ic" Democrats. ,
A Texas insurance executive
testified Tuesday the Farmers
Home Administration canceled his
company's insurance contract alt-
pr he failpH tn hire a salesman
Leaish as a man who imbibed be
! lurr anu aiitri suiiuuwn inu
I . J - r I..... - I
It also received a denial of a
reported kissing episode.
McLeaish sncrificallv disnutrd
5lalP nwimg. there two vcars ago.
Mr Car,.,r had said V .,
t .ai,h .nj r,,i 0 Hansen then
,h, FHA riir(.cl()r for M()nlana
bccame ..hlsh,y im.briaU,d" at the
, jatnfrjni
,, . ,
Hansen who has since re-
,i,nc' at McUaish's request -
ctiMi t if m i u nr tn mm in rxr tS3
at the merting H. W Brawley,
the comnutlce s executive direc-
t"l askfd l( it V, (TO IrUC - as
....
Mrs. Carter had said
that he
and McLeaish "waltzed aro
klssln" wucs of onc' ""P1'
round''
oyes.
"It absolutely isn't true about
Man, 85, Attacks
Wife With Knife
At Grants Pass
GRANTS PASS ifv-Frank Todd,
1 5, was in jail here Wednesday
' alter his wife, Mary .lane, 70, had
siiflorrd knife wounds that re
quired surgery.
A charse of assault and battery
was filed, and Police Chiel Carl
Dallas said there unuld he a
sanity hearing for Todd.
I Police went to the Todd residence
j Wednesday morning after neigh-1
bors reported that Todd was beat-'
ing his wife and had a knife. I
Bernard Mesman, one neighbor, I
I ran in. disarmed Todd and forced I
him away from Mrs Todd, who'
'y hlood covered ob tht kitchen
floor. ..
'
painting PERMITS!
; M0REHEAD, Ky. .Th, mfn.
foIk were-n t content w.th just grow,
in KHc , .,',,..
Female Keystone Kops
a (JDrejftoa?! statesman
tUa.t.t
vtcotiori and deliver thtm
all in
ONE PACKAGE
Just clip this coupon and bring it in:
j t'REDIT M CARRI1 R K)K
:
:l will be gone from
j (Signed)
I Vddrrss
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the kissing, because that's some
thing I don't believe in," Hansen
said.
"Boat Imbibed"
Wylie Reed of Verden. Okla.,
ah assistant to McLeaish in 1JM,
testified he had seen his former
boss imbibe "to quite, an estent
during the day as well as in th.
evening" while on official trips.
But Reed said McLeaish asked
for his resignation alter complain
ing "that 1 had been drinking."
McLeaish denied he was a
"drunkard" and said he had abid
ed by his own office order that
employes lay off liquor while on
duty.
Kisenhower appointed him to
the Farmers Home Administra
tion post In 1953. The agency, a
part of the Agriculture Depart
ment, makes loans to farmers and
participates in such programs as
emergency drought relief.
Paper Says
Marilyn to
Wed Writer
NKW YORK Jf - The New York
Tost said Wednesday in a copy
righted story that film star Mari
ln Monroe and playwright Arthur
Miller will be married in a few
days.
The wedding will occur soon
after his appearance tomorrow be
fore the House committe on Un
American Activities.
The Post said Miller wants tht
ceremony to be held it his new
Milford. Conn . home but the cou
ple fear publicity might make a
quiet ceremony impossible and so
are still discussing the time and
place.
The House committee has called
Miller to question him on the rea
sons his request for a passport
was turned down. The State De
partment rejected his request on
the grounds that he had been as
sociated with alleged Communist
dominated ogamzations. Miller
has denied he was a member of
any subversive organisations.
Without a passport. Miller would
be unable to accompany Miss
Monroe tn England next month
where she is to make a picture
with Sir Laurence Olivier.
Miller. 41. recently was di
vorced in Reno from his first wile.
The hlondc. curvaceous Marilyn,
who is 31. has been married and
divorced twice Her second hus
band was baseball star Jot Do
Maggio. Davidson Given
Demo Convention
Alternate Position
PORTLAND - Monroe Sweet
land, Oregon Democratic national
committeeman, announced Wed
nesday that C Girard Davidson,
Portlands will be his alternate U
the party's national convention in
Chicago.
Davidson was elected May IK to
become national committeeman
after the convention. Sweetland
did not seek re-election and was
nominated instead for secretary of
state.
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