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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1956)
Ms Back Plan To Ban A-Tests Britain, U.S. Voice Opposition MOSCOW m Tke levies Pr lament ndtrml Maaday a plea tram Japanese lawmakers thai parllameata aU ever lha werld strive lor aa cad U Icsli ef clear weapons. The actlaa was taken after Foreign Minister Dmitri She lie laid the Supreme Soviet, ar parliament, that the Soviet Valaa was willing ta ead tha trata but eanld moi abtala agrre ment from tha failed States ar Britain. The tailed States and Britala are appowd ta aa agreement aa ending aucirar tests unless it li , made part a( an aver-all disarm amrnt plaa subject ta cantrels and Inspection. Tha two Western powers took this posilloa la teraing dawn Fri day in the U.N. disarmameat eeitimissioa Indine-Yagoslnv pro posals for banning tests. Jamet J. Wadswerlh, the U.S. ambassador, said the Ualled Sale Considered by Big Dallas Factory Gerlinger Firm Studies Plan By CHARLES IRELAND v Valley EdlUr, The Statesman DALLAS, Ore. Sale of the Gerlinger Carrier Company of Dallas to Tow motor Corp. of Cleveland, Ohio, is under consideration, Ger linger management announced Monday. "Nothing has been signed," declared Victor 0. Williami, Ger linger' general manager, in releasing a brief statement that both companies are considering the proposal. Ike Bounces Defense Bill, Raps 'Strings' WASHINGTON Wl -President Eisenhower Monday vetoed a two-billion-dollar military construction bill and the House took immediate steps to strip the measure of pro visions he found objectionable. A revised bill satisfactory to the President Is expected to be passed by both tha House and Senate this week. The vetoed measure authorized the appropriation of up to $2,131, 000. 000 for tha construction and expansion 'of military bases and housing units In the United States nd abroad. Guided Missile Key The key point of dispute was provision which would forbid the Defense Department to pro ceed with the development of the Talos guided missile program without prior and specific ap proval of both the Senate and House Military Appropriations Committees. The President also objected to a section which would forbid the Defense Department to make con tracts to construct or acquire family housing units without the agreement of the Senate and House Armed Services Commit tees. larludes Wood bom Rasa Eisenhower called these sec tions violations of "the funda mental constitutional principle of separation of powers." Chairman Vinson (D Ga of the House Armed Services Com mittee immediately introduced a new bill, stripped or the sections to which the President objected but otherwise identical. A $2,400,000 appropriation design ed to get construction underway on an Air Force base near Woodburn is included in the bill. Neuberjrer Asks Three-State Vote On Hells. Canyon WASHINGTON If) A three state referendum to settle the Hells Canyon Dam issue was suggested Monday by Sen. Neuberger ID Ore.) In a Senate speech, Neuberger proposed the referendum be held in Oregon, Washington and Idaho in November, and meanwhile, the Idaho Power Co. would stop work on its three-dam project on the Snake River. The suggestion was opposed by Sen. Goldwater iR-Ariz J who said It would be "improper" and "un democratic" to let the three North west states "decide how the other 45 states' tax money is going to be spent." (Add. details Page 11, Sec. II WILBERT "Jurt ane aootlo) lap on tho ifal Is eui yaw nood ta moke knight, Wilbr1l" ill ' States weald eeatiaaa ta work far agreement aa Umltatlaa of tests aad safefaardlag m a a k I n d against daagers at eieesslvs radlatlaa. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. WW Tha West pushed aside Rasalaa abjeetiena Moaday -t rammed through tha U.N. disarmameat commission n Western eompra- misa resolntfoa calling aa the disarmament sabcammittea to resume talks. The vale was M-I. Russia vatrd against It aad the ltth member, Yugoslavia, abstained. The resolutloa was described by Its barkers as a compromise ta avald a showdowa vets be tweea East aad West aa con flicting principles of disarma ment. But Soviet delegate Aadrel A. Gremyke protested It eadoraes the set of Westera principles aad Igaered Russia's pealtjoa. ' Possibilities are being explored and details discussed. the Ger linger statement said. One of the mid-valley's indus trial giants, the Gerlinger plant here is a multi-million dollar oper ation. The firm currently employs 230 men in the manufacture of fork-lift trucks and straddle carri ers (often called lumber carriers in this area). Single Factory Tow motor Corp. was described by Williams as "one of the three or four biggest" builders of small l:r a I ra. r . Cleveland and employs approxi mately , 1,200 men, the Gerlinger manager said. Stressing that he could only speculate, Williams considered it most doubtful that sale of the Gerlinger Company would remove us big factory from Dallas. The Gerlinger firm has a sub stantial investment in its buildings here. A $450,000 addition to the plant is in final stages of com: pletion, scheduled lor occupancy next montn. Na Cotaectioa Williams said there was no con nection between construction of the new facilities and the proposal to sell. Lift trucks currently comprise 75 per cent of the production at the Gerlinger plant. Straddle carriers, once the main Gerlinger product, account for the balance. Williams said the' lift trucks manufactured .by Towmotor are smaller than the one Gerlinger builds. Started by the late Carl Ger linger in 1919, the plant here com menced manufacture of lumber carriers about 1920. The first lift trucks were built about 1933. Tots Frolic On Ledge as Parents Sleep BALTIMORE W Two children clad in their pajamas were hauled from a fourth floor, window ledge Monday after policemen awakened their sleeping parents. For nearly five minutes Patricia and Thomas Anders, 4 and 5 years old, frolicked on the two-foot wide ledge almost 70 feet above the street corner". .... .rue-, me lownKHor nrrn;job, M ,. pickerfi iaid, has a single assembly factory at si minnr (ir we .. More than 100 horrified specta-1 , f ' ,UT- , ,'5 tors watched while policemenood ' 10 Thes .re " on the sidewalk below to break theuntl1 Pd enough to crea,e fall of the children if they should ,moke tral1- - topple. A third policeman pounded on the locked apartment house door to awaken the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lcroy Anders. Finally Anders awoke, saw the children and snatched them from their narrow perch. He told police he worked late last night and both he and his wife were asleep when the children crawled out on the ledge about 9 a.m. They were spotted by motorists who had atopped for a traffic light . Silverton Board Reelects Schwab UUmaa Mtwi aorvlct SILVERTON Fred Schwab of Mt. Angel was elected to his third term as chairman of Silverton Union High School Board at its first meeting of the fiscal year Monday night Schwab remains the only chairman the union high school board has had. The board ' voted to employ Charles Caplinger from Virginia as an English teacher. Elementary District 4C will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Eugene Field School. The Weather MatMia. Prep. M 41 M SAXKM Portland Bakar ) Med lord North Bnd noaabtira . .. as u .ST 4S fS t ... at M tl 4 ... M S4 ... 7S M .. ss San Franrlaco Lna Angalea Chlraan . NawaVnrk 7T St WMamatte Kim -I S fttt. 106th Year Santiam Claims Wader Dryin or X.pntlifi If XWvala. Forces Added V- Forest Closures Fire danger will remain high to day in Western Oregon with hu midity below 30 and dry lightning storms spreading north from Southwest Oregon. Associated Press reported. Ninety-degree beat which con tributed to one drowning death Monday at Jefferson was due to continue today and Wednesday. The fatality at Jefferson wa an U-year-old Arkansas youth who stepped into deep water while wading beneath Santiam Bridge at Jefferson, state police said. He was identified as William Parks of -Neworp, Ark. The body was not recovered Monday and dragging was to resume today, police said. State police also re quested the aid of Hood River County authorities in a search for Parks' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eliza Eskew, also of Newport, who were believed in the Hood River area looking for work, they said. Step la Deep Hole The Negro youth and three com panions were wading about 10:30 a h. beneath the bridge when he and Raymond Phillips of Nadavall, Mo., got into deep water, and tried to swim across the river, witnesses told police. Phillips reached the opposite bank, they said. Parks, companions, besides Phil lip., were listed as Carl Tate, Tex as, and George Jones, Milwaukee, Wis. Parks and his companions were camped east of Marion waiting for Six minor forest fires were re ported Monday, mostly in South western Oregon, state foresters said. All were reported out or un der control Monday night. Causes were listed as lightning, campfire, smoking and I debris fire. Rath of Fires Usteol A rash of 43 fires. 32 of them caused by lightning, wer reported over the week end. Assistant For ester James H. Walker said. Nine teen were in Central Oregon, with the others scattered throughout the state. All were controlled with no damage, he said. A 225,000-acre nrea In Lane County was closed to entry except by permit Monday by Gov. Elmo Smith at the request of State Forester Dwight L. Phipps. These closures outside national forests include 92.000 acres in the McKen zie and Mohawk river and Mosby Creek watersheds, and 132.000 acres in two areas east and south east of Cottage Grove. Permits are available at headquarters of the Forest Protective Association at Springfield and various warden headquarters in the district Other Areas Closes Willamette National Forest was closed Friday by Regional Forester J. Herbert Stone. Permits and rules regulating their use are available at Detroit. Cascadia. Mc Kenzie, Lowell and Salmon Creek ranger stations. Salem's 90-degree heat was reached about 4:30 p.m., Mc-Nary Field weathermen said. It was exceeded by the 95 degrees re corded at ,The Dallas and 91 . at Roteburg. Eugene, Redmond and Burns reported tops of 99. Forecast humidities ranging from 20 to 30 in the mid-Willamette valley sre "a little lower than it has been," foresters said. A spokesman for the U. S. Forest Service said a number of "sleeper" fires were smoldering in EXPLAINS CD ROLE PORTLAND l This city's part In the nationwide alert will be limited to Civil Defense per sonnel, Jack Lowe, civil defense director, said Monday. Death Knell Sounds on Giant Ringling Circus (Plrture aa Wlrephoto Page) I North emphasized the circus will PITTSBURGH - Ringling continue, in different form. He Bros, Barnum k Bailey circus t al"j , ,. ' '. ..' ended its rosd tour Monday night ' The all-new 7th presentation In a fanfare of glory as It played of Ringling Bros. Barnum fc Bail to an over-capacity crowd. t combined shows i will open as u .... .-. ik. ,-.. uual " APri 1957 "t Madi A few hour, after thadreua llare Garden in NfW York abruptly cancelled its per orm-1, wi , ,he .(,,on , ances lor iw reramnm ui "i- season, more than lO.ono persons turned out at nearby Heidelberg to see "the greatest show on earth." performance Monday night's wss nearly 90 minutes late start ing but long before the scheduled start all 9.600 seats were filled snd hundreds of persons sat on the ground. . John. Ringling North, head of the circus, announced' the dosing shortly before the afternoon per formance started. "The tented circus as it now ex ists Is, in my opinion, a thing of the past." North said. "We are considering plans for the future which may involve an completely mechanically trolled exhibition." almost' con- 2 SECTIONS-14 PACES Now Twist to v. ! A ' r - CHICAGO Year-old Allen Castle, the Idea af hospitality by nipping ear gammed, merely rolled aver Boot Training At Trial of Drill Sergeant By BEM PRICE (Plctare aa Wlrephoto Page.) PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. ( How Marines are trained -.and what 27,000 Marines think of those methods became a sharp issue in the court-martial of S. Sgt. Matlhew-C. McKeon here Monday. McKeon is the 31-year-old drill instructor from Worchester, Mass., who led six Marines to their deaths last April I in water-covered marshland bordering this 3,000-acre Marine training center. Interracial Sports Banned In Louisiana BATON ROUGE W- Gov. Earl Long Monday signed a bill banning interracial athletic contests in Louisiana. The governor weighed reaction to the bill outlawing Interracial athletics and social activities be fore signing it - The bin tates effect Oct. 15. . Long said, "the comment I've had over the state has run about four to one in favor of the bill. I'm going along with the majority that I've heard from. 'However, there are some fea tures about it that I wasn't too pleased with and I hope it won't work any hardship. . "In my opinion," he said, "it will wind up in court." The new law will prohibit "danc ing, social functions, entertain; ments, athletic training, games, sports or contests and other such activities involving personal and social contacts in which the par ticipants or contestants are mem bers of the white and Negro races." The measure further requires segregated sseating and "separate sanitary, drinking water and other facilities for members of the white and Negro races ..." The Sugar Bowl and the Texas League joined forces last week in urging Long to veto the bill. Both said it would hurt their programs. GOP TO BEAR HOOVER SAN FRANCISCO I Former President Herbert Hoover, who observes his (2nd birthday next Aug. 10. will adoVess the Republi- ' can national convention here Aug. 1 21, It was announced Monday. other air-conditioned arenas .ii. :.;. . . over the I'nited States." Labor troubles, bad weather and rising costs sounded the death knell af or the road show under the gjant umbrella of canvas. Earlier this year, two other cir cuses shut down for similar reas ons. They were the Clyde Beatty and King Bros, circuses. The announcement of the end of the "sawdust trail"" for Ringling came as . thousands of .children and adults, thronged, the midway for an afternoon . performance under the acres ef canvas "big top." There was no Indication of what .will happen to the show's payroll of SOO to 1.000, including top-billed aerial stars and clowns, animal 1 keeper and roustabouts. P-OUNDMD .1651 The) Old Story-Baby . Bites Dog ... '-NO af Schneider, lad., who Is visiting the ear ef Boner pnp. The dog, who seemed ta enjoy having his aad granted in contentment. (AP Wlrephoto). Sharp Issue The charges against McKeon include involuntary manslaughter' er, "oppression of recruits by mass punishment and drinking on duty. McKeon's defense attorney, Em lie Z. Berman of New York City, demanded that the Marine Corps produce the results of a question naire asking Marines and form er Marines what they thought were the best methods of train ing. Direct Bearing Berman said the results of that survey had a direct bearing on the training methods employed by McKeon and others the night he led his 74-man boot into the dark waters. platoon Only 68 came back alive. The lean defense lawyer said he had asked Navy Secretary Thomas to produce the survey, but that the secretary had refused unless he was ordered to do so by the law officer for the court martial, Navy Capt. Irving N. Klein. Corps Chief Cited Klein said he would reserve judgment on the request but sug gested to a startled courtroom that the most direct way of as certaining the results of the poll would be to put Gen. Randolph McC. Pate, the Marine command ant, on the witness stand. It was Pate who ordered the survey aft er the tragedy. Klein also asked Beman If he intended to call Pate as a witness. I have no answer to that at this time,' Berman said. The argument became so In volved that Klein excused the court martial panel until Tuesday. Lo$ of Tip of Thumb Ruing Safety Record L. C. Edwards, Silverton Road stockman, lost the end of a thumb Monday in what he said was his first injury In 70 years of handling horses. The thumb tip was removed at Salem Memorial Hospital after it naa oeen almost severed by a horse's hoof while Edwards. 70, was loading animals onto a tmck at his farm 4725 Silverton ltd., his wife said. He was to remain over night in the hospital, she said. COLLISION SINKS SHIP ROTTKHDAM, The-Netherlands The Dirkswager Shipping Agency said Tuesday the 4.1177-ton Costa Rican cargo ship Mapda collided with the Norwegian tanker Salsaas and sank iolhe North Sea. The collision occurred In a heayy lot M mile off the hnnk nf Hnl. ".land. The Meada's crew was taken aboard the tanker. NOKTHWaST t.tACl'B At 8a)am f, Eugrna S At apokan 4, Trl-Cllv I -Al Wtnawtaa. 4. Yakima 1 r urine toast i.raovb No famra Monday. AMfmiratf xntiv""'"'-''''"' At Botlon 1, ClavalaAlt T 1 Naw Ynrk-Chlrain, rain. 6nly imra ichrriulrd. NATIONAL l.HAOr. Al Chicago 1; Brooklyn 4 (call. sih. mini At Milwaukee 1. Pmhurih 1 At Clnnnnattl in. N-w York 4 At at. Louu 0, Phlladalphia a . Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, .it ' ' i - relatives In Chicago, a re rate pi $156 Million Phone Stock Issue Okehed A $156,726,700 common . stock issue was authorized Monday for Pacific Telephone It . Telegraph Company by the State Public Util ities Commission. The company will use the pro ceeds for payment of service ex pansion and improvement projects It proposed to sell the debentures at competitive bids. At the same time Commissioner Chatjes H. Heltzel said the firm was authorised to sell $71,000,000 In 32-year bonds to come due August IS, 1968. Issuance of the slock Involves 1,507.267 shares of PTT's $100- par-value common stock. The company will offer the stock to its present stockholders on the basis of one share for each six preferred andor common shares outstand- ing in the name of each share holder. If all the common stock offered is sold the total proceeds will aggregate approximately $234,226, 700, the PUC order estimates. Court to Air Kcizcr Water District Plan A second hearing In the pro-' posed formation of a half-million dollar Keizrr Water District will be held at 10 a.m. today in Mar ion County Court. The first public meeting on the proposal was June II, when sev eral residents voiced objections. At stake is an estimated $450, 000 water district that would in clude about 1,800 acres and would contain both emergency and drinking water systems. A Salem engineering firm, commis sioned to drsw the preliminary plans, predicted the proposed district-would be entirely self-supporting except for a four-mill levy to be imposed for the first live years. MAGICIANS TO GATHER SEATTLE I The 21st annual convention of the Pacific Coast A;.sn.of Magicians will open here! Wednesday with between SOO and 400 delegates attending. The con-! vention will last through Satur- day. Arsenic Poisoning From Paint on Ceiling Termed Source of Ambassador's Illness NEW YORK (IP) A bltarre diplomatic secret was reported Monday night: A long series nf illnesses of Clare Booth Luce, U. S. ambassador to Italy, was caused by arsenic poisoning. The arsenic came from paint on the ornste ceiling of her bed room in Rome. It sifted down In tiny amounts of dust during the first 20 months she lived there, getting into her breskfast coffee. Ip hot weather, she.in haled it daily. The disclosure was made by Tima magazine, published by Mrs. , JLuee's husband. Henry , I.uee. The marsiine told , thu , story! The ceiling nf Mrs. Luce's hrirnom 'n Villa Taverna, the 'ambassador's r e 1 1 d n r e in Rome, wss heavily beamed and decorated and many coats of whit lesded paint were on the Tuesday, July 17, 195 Shot Subdues Stayton Man; Policeman Hurt In Blast of Gas Bomb State Hospital Parolee Defies Officer's Attempt to Seize Him After Property Destruction Complaints STAYTON-A knife-wielding state hospital parolee was before he was shot in the leg Wounded in the right leg lunged at Marion County Sheriff Denver Young with six. returned to the state hospital at Tn Santiam Memorial Hosni bomb was Stayton Police Chief Everett Norfleet. The bomb ex ploded in Norfleet's hand after first attempt to pitch, it into a room where Crabtree was barricaded misfired. Complaint Received. Events that led up to the shoot ing incident started when Nor fleet received a complaint that Crabtree was walking around downtown Stayton carrying a knife and destroying building dis plays. . When Norfleet drove up snd ordered Crabtree into the police car, the man allegedly reached through the car window and slashed at the officer. Norfleet radioed for help, but by the time Sheriff Young and Deputy John Zabinski arrived Crabtree had locked himself la his bouse. Etforta to bring him out drew re peated threats front Crabtree, Sheriff Young said. Tear Cas Bwnb Finally, Norfleet attempted tear gas, but the hand bomo nil a window bar and bounced out. Nor fleet lunged lor the bomb to get it in the house before it went off, but it exploded driving fragments into his hand, spattering bis face with powder burns and temporarily blinding him. ' ' Sheriff Young, who was standing nearby, also was spattered, but not sufficiently to require hospital treatment. A few moments later Crabtree emerged with the knife and began walking toward trie center of May ton. the sheriff said. Young and a Stavton resident. Ralph Ricard, followed on foot, trying to persuade Crabtree to enter the patrol car being driven by deputy Zabinski. Fall-wed aa Feat i "We followed him about three blocks." Young said, "then he fac ed us and said he wasn't going any farther and wasn't going with us. As we talked he slashed at me with the knife and I shot him in the lrK- . ... The shot didn't even knock nun down." Young said, "but apparent ly it knocked some sense Inte him because when I told him the next one would be through his head, he threw the knife away." However, as the officers stepped in to handcuff Crabtree, the 260 pound six-footer started swinging, snd it took several blackjack sp oliations and the combined efforts of the officers and Ricard to sub due the man. Crabtree was paroled from the State Hospital Dec. 21, IBM. This was his second parole since first becoming I patient Sept. 2.1. mi He la unmarried, and lived in May Urn with his mother. Rescuers Search For Woman, 82, In Washington fXMA., Wash. A posse searched brush-covered ' country almost west of here Monday for a partially crippled 82 year-old woman who vanished Sunday after going out lo seek a new-born calf. The missing woman ia Mrs. Mary Drawsky. She and her husband, Stanley, have been living on a dairy farm operated by a son. Sheriff Richard F. Simmons said the elderly woman loft the farm home at 2 p.m. Sunday. A aearch party was organized about four ihours later.. decorations. After a year's residence Mrs. Lure began feeling vsguely tired and 111. Nervousness and nausea followed. She discovered she could hardly . manage to dance a wait, at an art festival because her right foot had be come numb. In the summer of ISM Mrs. Lure came home for thorough medical checkup In New Jfork hnspitsl. The disgnosis wss furi ous anemia and nervous fatigila. After two months, she felt bet ter and returned to her poat.. Soon the symptoms rrtumeoy tsnd became even. more, disturb-,, ing. Her hair began In come out and her fingernails became brittle. Her teeth began loosen ing. She .was forced In take to her bed more and more. v Late in 1954 she went tn a U. S. Navy hospital in Naples. PRICI Sd By CALVIN D, JOHNSON , 8Uff Writer, The Statesman and a police officer injured by an was 28-year-old Neal Crab tree Salem where his wound was jtal for treatment of powder bums and cuts from the tear-gas Ex-Air Aide Says Russ Leads in Missile Race WASHINGTON (ft Trevor Gardner, an outspoken figure in tha dispute over Air Force funds and policies, says he believes this country may develop an intercontinental ballistic missile ahead of Russia. i But the former assistant secretary el the Air Force testified June 14 that the Soviets "are ahead of us now" on development of $1,000 in Loot Recovered, 4 Boys Arrested Sutasaaaa Ntwa sank GATES-Close to 11,000 worth of loot from at least four burglaries was recovered Monday in the arrest of four Gates boys, ages 10 to 14, Marion County Deputy Sheriff Amos Shaw said. The boys were apprehended and the large assortment of stolen articles were found by Shaw and Gatea Police Chief P. L. Mulligan in Investigation following the re port Monday of the second burglary la recent months at the Harm home of Mr., and Mrs. Wil liam E. Fearheller, west of Gates, Shaw said. . Articles recovered Included three shotguns, a 13 caliber rifle. $200 set of carved ivory, fishing equip ment, books, two bicycles and other children's play, equipment, Shaw said. They were found in the boys' homes and hidden in the woods, he said. Some of the items were Identi fied as articles taken In the two burglaries at the Fearheller house snd another recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Choln, on the gravel highway south of North Santiam River, but other articles were unidentified Monday, Shaw said. Several other Gales boys were expected to be implicated Tuesday and other property is expected te be recovered, Shaw said. The boys apprehended Monday were cited to Marion County Juvenile Court. Power Outage CutsKincwood Water Supply A power failure Monday night resulted In a water stoppage in the Kingwood Heights section of West Salem, John Geren, manager of the Salem Water Department, re ported. The 100,000 gallon water storage tank that feeds Kingwood Heights was emptird, Geren said, when pumps that fill the tank were stopped by a burned out transform er. Geren was not certain when the pumps ceased functioning. How ever, water stopped flowing about 9:30 p.m. - . - About 200 homes were effected, by the stoppage, The transformer i was repaired again 'pm., Ueren said. arwui "' ! A Navy doctor examined her and asked if any of her medi cines contained arsenic. Later she reported the poison theory to a friend in the Cen tral Intelligence Agency. In the meantime Navy doctors on their own ' sent laboratory speciments to the U. S. Naval hospital at Bethesda, Md , using a ficticious name for the pa tient: Seaman Jones. The1 report came back: Sea man Jones was a victim of ar senic poisoning. It the news wa made public, delicate "" diplomatic '-relations ktnii!ht be jeopardised. Investigators checked Amer ican and Italian employes at the embassy. Nothing suspicious de veloped. Within a week the srsenlc hsd been traced tn the paint on tha bedroom ceiling. " poktr ACT (rram V. . weatast ; kamaa. Mr Nary ' Conunuod lair today. toniifct ana , Wadnaaday, the huh today and Wodmdar aoar PS aad Uia low ton i mi so. It aporaswa as li:t Hay Was M. mmmrnrnvw aalAlf Ultra Suit of WaaUiar Ttu Ba4. t Tali Taw La laar sail st.u Na. 112 subdued here Monday, but not exploding tear-gas bomb. of Stavton, shot when h inch switchblade knife. He was described as not serious. shorter range missile traveling from 1.000 to 1,500 miles. 'These opinions, given ia closed door testimony, were released is) censored form Monday by the spe cial Senate subcommittee investi gating relative air power of the United Slates and Russia. Sharp Clash Among other things,' the report documented a sharp clash of opin ions between Gardner, forme Air Force civilian chief of research and development, and Secretary of the Air Force Quartet. Just be lore Gardner resigned Feb. It. Gardner, who has complained that the Air Force lacked ample funds to push work on newest air craft and missiles, said there ia no question in his mind that Rus sia is "ahead of us on the IRBM." BackahaMUng RH IRBM it a Pentagon term tor an Intermediate Range Ballistia Miuile with a range of from a few hundred to 1.500 miles. ICBM means the Intercontinental Ballis tic Missile, with a range of from 1.500 to l.ooo mile, enough ta spaa oceans. Jackson asked Gardner If tha Soviets would get the IRBM "be fore we dor" "If the management structure doesn't slow it down we might get one about the same time they do," Gardner replied. "But wa can't do it by buckshooting.n He explained "buck-shooting" meant trying to push too many missile project at the same time. Venn Seeks Continuation Of Lane Quiz PORTLAND III Dist. Ally. Eugene C. Venn of Lan County appealed to stats officials te "fin ish the Job" of investigating charges of judicial misconduct la his county. , Venn, who conferred here with Gov. Elmo Smith, and Ally. Gen. Robert Thornton, said he asked the governor to return Thornton to Eugene to completa the Investi gation. Venn said Gov. Smith Indicated he would discuss the matter with his aides and announce a decision, possibly on Tuesday. GI Asks Shift of Japanese Wife to Salem Hospital Effnrts of an Army sergeant ta get his Japanese wife transferred from a Tokyo Hospital to the Ore- JSSJST ,day from the State Board of Con- trol. The board Is rxpected to approve a request for the transfer of Yaeko Young, wife of Sgt. Robert W. Young of Springfield. Young, a member of the Fifth Cavalry in the F-r East. Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Newman, Spring field. The sergeant, who has been In Japan for five years, said he would come bark to the V S. a i-oon he can bring his wife with him. Today's Statesman Pago Sac. Classified 12-13 II Cornea tha Dawn ... 4.., I Comics ....-.M II Crossword 1 J II Editorial Homo. Panorama. - Make..i,,,v,, Obituaries ' .4. II... .12.. .14... ..I ..U ..II II .11 .l . I ,..H Radio, TV Sport t-10.. Star Cater 7.. Valley News 7.. Wlrephoto Pago ..14..