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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1956)
' i-(4cc I) Statesman, Salem. Org, Sat, July 28, 5Q t "No Few Swayi Vt. No Fear SJuifl Awt" frees flrrt gtolwa, Marcfc tt. 1S51 Sutesmaa Publiahing Company CHARLES A. SPRACUg. Editor & Publisher PublUh.4 every nornlnl ataelneae eftlf. tee Siena Chunk at. OaJem, Ori. r.lapboan i-MII i Ik hMHMi at M)M. cUas mittf itiKf tl 1 Wiwi eaaree i. loia. Measker Aaaadstea' rreea TM 1mIiIH Prose W eautios exeliuavel to the taw m reaufcUeetaoa a all bwal Mwa pnataS la Sale aawepaper . The Magnet Line From Pari comet news of a new French Magnet line. Thii U not to be confuted with the famous Maginot lint, which, designed to keep the German!. out of France, leaked like a sieve under the swift Impact of Hitler's panter di visions. The Magnet line is an entirely dif ferent conception, a creation of Christian Dior whose "creations" set half the world the feminine one-half, that is to talking and looking ... and buying. The Magnet line gets Its name from the shape proposed for a new style in women's dresses, with the broad horseshoe curve at the hips, tapering to the ankle-height opening. If the style catches on as did Dior's famed "new look," the Magnet title will be deserved for its power of attract ing female favor. The AP's lady reporter in Paris, Nadeana Walker, wrote this description of Dior's of fering at his Paris opening: The magnet lint, clearly intended ie draw malt eyes, round tht shoulders, bust and hips, and often drops neckline daringly low. Skirts art wider at the hip than at tht hem, being tet-ia in soft folds at the natural waiitline. Dior calls them Dutch skirts. Gone Is the stringbean, flat-chested figure of the flapper age. Generous busts and well padded hips are in favor. Women may be women again as the Lord made them and males prefer them. And all the publicity Dior's showing has received adds to the "draw" of the Magnet line. End for Pathe Rooster One rooster is going to get his neck wrung, but not because ho la destined for the cook ing pot That la the rooster whose familiar poea opened the nightly showing of Pathe News at motion picture houses. He It a vic tim of corporate reorganization In the waka ' of revolution in the entertainment world. Pathe News is the pioneer newt reel, launched in Paris in 1909 by Pathe Freres and Introduced in the United States in 1910. The name derives from Charles Pathe, one of the early experimenters in motion pictures. The past nine years Warner Newt, Inc., a subsid iary of Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., baa operated Pathe Newt. The old Warner organ ization waa split under federal decree soma years ago and recently ownership of the sur viving producer company has changed hands. The discontinuance of Pathe News set for August 23, is one of the moves of the new proprietors. Familiarity may breed contempt, but that was not true of the Pathe rooster.' His ap pearance on the screen was always welcome because he really had something to crow about a fresh pictorial of world newt. Manager of Harold's, famed Reno gambling club, says a roulette wheel has let the house down some $96,000 this summer. He blames a group of college students, unidentified, for working out a system to beat the house odds. The manager seemed philosophical about it, however, remarking. "It's wonderful what a college education will do for young people." If the winners are attending the University of Nevada on Harold's club scholarships that is grim irony. Cartoon caption: "Another good thing about newspaper ads rr.' we don't have any singing commercials." nam StassenV Abortive Effort to Dump Nixon In Favor of By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP . WASHINGTON Tht inside story of Harold SUsstn's abor ttv effort tt start a "dump i. Nixon" mere- ment Is so vary ' atranaa ami aa it richly comic that it deserves' to be told in fuU and is oetau. Like any good comedy,- A is can ' bt divided kite highly tet ania scenes. SCENE I: Tht f , grand Organiser of tht drivt tt renominate Vict President Nixon, Republican Na tional Chairman Lea Hall, tele phones Nixon's obvious strongest potential rival, Massachusetts Gov., Christian Hertar about 12 daya ago. Hall says at wants Herter to put Nixon's name la nomination f t r tht Vice Presi dency, and inti mates that Presi dent Eisenhower - L ,k- .i.k PI Wm WWII, ., Herter. who is perhaps not qulta turt about the second part of Hall's statement, says that he is not adverse to tht Waa, but would likt to think it ovor and talk about It with tht President himself befort giv ing his decision. SCENE II: Oa Friday a week as, tie greatest edgeMate taer-teilt't-tUUca! pktares la recent Aaaertraa blatory, Bar aid Staaaea, treat la Ie Ma Ike Prtaideat. aad Mia kin that he Iklakt aa Eieeahtwer Herter ticket weald bt a let etreager tkaa aa Elaeaaewer-Nliea IkkeL Tea President presamably aa awera "am mm, amana." (Wfcat tht President la fart aa awered Ie the taly part tt tht aury that la Hill avsttrtoaa. Bat i r Or.. M eecma Hertor Termed ha Mist have audt same sert ef snlaleadlag aaa tammlttal Belt, aless HareU Statsea alae de serves the title ef ear history's freateet peUUca! day-dreamer.) SCENE III: Stsssrn then tele phones Gov. Herter, to announce that h has broached the Idea of aa Elitnhoww-Herttr ticket to tht President. Tht President's response, declares Staasen, was decidedly tncourtging. Gov. Her ter also aaswtra "ummm, ummm." Ht still wants to set tht President face-to-fact and makes plans la come to Wash ington for that purpost immed iately after tht President's re turn from Panama. SCENE IV t Edger-la Massea balds Us Mw-e Iterated press etafereare. prapaitag tht daaie lag ef Dirk Nlsea la later ef Chris Harter. Total eeaateraatlea aaaaes, talk at the White Haase aad at tht Repaallcaa NaUaaal Cemnltiee. The PrtsideM's Paaama trip has baea planted, by the very keel Madlata Aveaaa tiperts, as a splendid exhlbltlea ef a Preal dam glewlng with health la his great rale aa peace-maher. The President hlmaelf, by admitting that ht feels leasy la Panama, has teased eat part af the 1 Mediate Aveaae plaaa to "gaag a-glea-" Aad new here Is Slat aea, net ealy gelag artei Nlxea, bat alee eeblag the precloas speillM at the very memtet whea Ike damage already daae la Paaama aagkl to he aadeat by lbs haaaer headlines aaaeaae lag Ike sareesa at Ike Prealdeat's salaslee. SCENE V: The news of Stss ' ten's press conference finally catches up with Cot. Herter on the golf course. As soon as he can get to a telephone, he calls tht President's Chief of Stall. Shermsn Adams, Herter explains that h had no warning whatever of tht great tdger-ln'a Inten tions, and asks what the devil Rescue at Sea There is this difference between the crash of a plane and" the collision of trains or ships, those aboard the latter have a far better chance at survival. The high velocity of a plane and the pull of gravity, if it is disabled in flight, result In a crushing impact when the plane strikes the earth. Steel passenger coaches give good protection to those aboard if the train is derailed. With ships life pre servers, rafts and lift boats give passengers and crew at least a fighting chance for res cue. Thus only 10 lives were lost in the collis ion of two ocean liners off Nantucket Wednes day night, though one went to the bottom. Nearly all the 1,709 persons aboard the ves sel were saved. Ten lost their lives, but whether by drowning or by injuries from the crash is not clear from the news accounts. Wireless signals brought many vessels to the . side of the stricken ships. Their crewmen picked up survivors and brought them safely ' to land. What might have been a disastrous loss of life was thus averted. Court Teat on Pdton Dam Attorney General Thornton is on a better track to get a determination on state author- lty over Portland General Electric's power de velopment st Pelton site on the Deschutes river. He has brought a proceeding in the state supreme court seeking to halt construc tion of the dam because the company lacks a license from the state hydroelectric commis sion and because the company's action ad versely affects the public interest in use, con trol and distribution of public waters. His previous move was to prod the district attor ney of Jefferson county to Initiate criminal proceedings against the company. The coun ty grand Jury considered the case, but re fused to return any indictment. We have a-pretty, good idea what the su preme court will say in the new proceeding: but It is entirely proper to have this state is sue tested In the state court. Chairman Len Hall says the GOP conven tion in San Francisco will not be cut down to three days as was talked. It will run on through four days, even though the nomina tions are well known in advance. Hotels and merchants in S. F. who have pungled up to help meet convention expenses objected to a three-day cutoff. Delegates may rue the ex pense, but they will not regret spending an extra day in August in air-cooled San Tran Cisco. Editorial Comment ACHIEVEMENTS OF CI RIGHTS BILL Tht orifinal CI Bill of Rights expires tomorrow with general acknowledgment that Its educational program, the largest single educational venture In tht history of this country or the world, was a uccesa beyond tht dreams of Its Initiators. Under the GI bill. 7.800,000 vtterans of World War II, N per cent of them men, went Into train ing for civilian lift after coming out of the service. Tht government has spent tt4.l billion to give them this schooling, an average of $1800 to keep each individual in school tor an average period of It months. While many might atsumt that the GI bill was primarily a college-education benefit, tht (acts art that almost bait of tht veterans who enrolled under It, 1.300,000, went to schools below tht college level. Twenty-nine per cent, or l.JOO.OOO, went to colleges and universities: It per cent, or 1,400.000, took on-the-job training in Industry, and t per cent, or 700.000, farm training. No one would contend that every man and Uncle gam got their money's worth In every case, for there wtrt gold-bricking and racketeering on the part of many ex-GIs and many fly-by-night schools that sprang up to fleece them. But those who made good ua of the government's aid by legitimate study at legitimate schools were able to pick up tht threads of their interrupted careers and regain their places In tht economic race. Reintroduced to the ways and ideas of a free society after expoturt to the regimentation and brutality of war, tht veteran became an adjusted civilian. Because Congress and President Roosevelt Uunchtd this gigantic undertaking at the high pitch of global wax June 22, 1944. wt hear today no talk and read no novels of a "lost generation" as we did after World War I. -San francisco Chronicle 'Rich Comedy' he ought to do now. More than ont conversation is needed for Adams and Herter to decide that . Herter must now agree to be come Nixon's chief nominator. SCENE VI: Herter Idea tele heart Lea Hall, la dlarlete thai ht has , aew made ap his - mind to grant Hall's earlier request wtlhoal further delay. The ever toyed HaH agrees with Herter ea the plaa for saeeeasive state ments aa aaaeaacemeat by hlmaelf thai Herter will plaea Nlxea's aame befart the Saa Francises eanvenlloa. aad a sub teqaeat, renflrmatory ttatement by Herter. Hall alae suggests that Herter eaght to break lha glarleut aewt to Nlxaa la pertea aad Immediately. Herter Ihea calls Ntiea wha la, art unnatur ally, evea mere overjoyed than his great aad goed friend Lea. e That wrs the real end of tht comedy, although Harold Slassen has been playing a tort of oh.li nate epilogue, telling everyone who will listen that he has un- ' named but powerful co-consplra-tors, boasting of unidentified but fervent support for his proposal, and so on and so on. If he had wanted to do everything possible to Insure Vice President Nixon's ra nomination, . ht could havt found no better way. Herter, meanwhile, has handled his difficult position of tht man-in-the-middlt with con spicuous good sense. Last Spring, ht sent word to the President that he did not want to run attain for Governor of Mass., but hoped to return to service in the Eisen hower administration on the foreign affairs front. Vict Presi dent Nixon was the chosen mes senger, and Nixon was also asked to persuade tht President not to press Herter to make another campaign for the Governorship. After this episode, Herter seems mora than ever likely, to get what he really wants after tht election Is ever. VW-'-' ' mm mm mm mem Suez Seizure Puts Nasser In Bad Spot By J, M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst Gsmal Abdel" Nasser, Egypt's dictator-president,- has pulled a fast one which is even more sen sational than Iran's oil expro priation attempt In 1951. Now ht It In much tht aamt ' position as Iranian Premier Mo hammed Mossadegh . got Into then, and the result may be even more serious for Nasser and for csn operate the Suet Canal, where Mossadegh could not operate the Iranian oil wells, but the situstion is fsr different. The world, almost by the flick of the wrist, was able to replace Iran's all praduclloa at the lime. The Sues Caaal, af vast Impac ts are to all aaltoas, eaaaet bt e quickly replaced, aad aa Fraact aad Eaglaad, particu larly, art under pretsuri to take dratlle peUtkal action perhaps evea military acttoa immed iately, ar else submit la heavy charges against their shipping. Nasser, with no economic background, has done two things. To fortify himself as the leader of the Arab ststes in their con flict with Israel, he has given Russia a lien on a large part of Egypt's income in return for arms. And he has promised the people to build a big dam at Aswsn, on the Nile, to aid irri gation and provide power for in dustrial development. He thought he could get out siders to build the dam by play ing off Russls against the West ern powers, but nobody took tht bait. Infuriated, Natter teems to think he caa Just expropriate tht Sees Caaal and gel tl00.t0e.O0e a year far werk ea the dam. But ba'U either have to pay the ratal's awaers er outlaw him self, and the canal's ael Income actually la lets that l5o.0O0.0O0. He's up a stump aa that arere. In addition, the canal It rap Idly becoming obsolete, and a aew ane through Palestine has already beta dlerueted. Egypt could be froira aut ef the ahlp-plng-lall business loug before aha caa finish the dam. France is already applying the clamps by freezing Egyptian de posits in her bsnks, and Britain has far larger ones in. her con trol. Britsin could virtually squeeze Egypt out of the so called silver bloc, ruin her cur rency and wreck- her economy. And If Nasser expects new eco nomic connections with Russia to balance all this, then he'd better study the records of countries which havt tried it. All In all, this Inexperienced statesman, while perhaps cap able of causing the powers a lot of trouble, seems to have worked himself and Egypt into quite a swivet. too. He micrit do well to remember Mossadegh and Hitler. Swsajiusae Better English BY D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Tomorrow is the 22nd of May, snd my condition should be some better." 1 2. What Is the correct pro nunciation of "prairie"? 3. Which one of these words is misspell"!' Resurrection, reitsurant, rasusitate, restitu tion. 4. What does tht word "de monstrable" mean? B. What is s word beginning with fee which means "tht power of bringing forth in'ab undsnce"? ANSWERS 1. .Say "Tomorrow WILL BE the 22nd nf May, and mv condi tion 'should be SOMEWHAT better." 2. Pronounre pray-ri. 3. Resuscitate. 4. Cspshle of positive proof. "The things I have told you are demonstra ble." a. ftcunditj. St aW l I a ini MMfe ifej 1 V f m ViKorvi ill fit esrW7& j' LOSING WEIGHT 9& fcEFORE o WORLD WAR V? W 3J Y .. . . HH r,H H j I tCaatlnued treaties with Britain and France. Nasser's promise of compensa tion to owners of the canal com pany stock does not establish security for the operation of the canal, which is the primary con cern of western Europe. Short of resort to force or to other sanctions there is little that Britain and France can do in this situation. Egypt has oc cupied the offices of the company along the route of the canal and operations of the canal are being continued as usual. Unless there is some breakdown in service or some threat of seizure from the outside the controversy will prob ably be confined to diplomatic channels. Of course the western powers have non military weapons they could use. They could break off diplomatic rela tions, putting Egypt outside the fiale. They could withdraw bank ng credits and put embargoes on commerce with Egypt which would bring a quick paralysis to Egypt's weak economy. These steps are extreme and are not to be taken unless the provocation becomes acute. What we have here Is another episode In the eruption of nation alism in countries long under Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago v July tt. INI Scenery, industries and impor tant buildings in the mid-Willamette valley soon will appear on a color documentary film now being prepared by two Hollywood cameramen. The pair, Tommie Rraatelien and Ed Drews, ar rived in Salem and plan to spend two weeks reproducing highlights of the district on 16mm. color filmsf ; 25 Years Ago July 2. 1U1 Governor Julius I,. Meier an nounced the appointment of Wil liam Hanlry, Harney county stockman, to ' succeed M. A. Lynch, of Redmond, as a mem ber of the State Highway Commis sion. 40 Years Ago July 28, 1511 Ex-Governor Miles C. Moore of the Royal Air Force base here Washington, a former resident of Friday, killing four crewmen. The Oregon, but flow of Walla Walla, plane had been practicing take Wash., was in Salem looking into offs and landings. Names of the the possibilities of the flax indus- victims were withheld pending try, notification of kin. (;UIN AND HEAR IT Hy Liclily Their parents make it really MOT AS 5TR0MG AS YOU USED TC BE,B0y TKDCD33 frem page 1.) European domination. Frustrated by failure to obtain grants and loans for his big Aswan Dam project from the United States, Britain or Russia, Nasser has seized the most profitable foreign asset in Egypt and announced his intention to finance the dam out of profits from the canal com pany. His hopes in this regard may not be realized, but that is i'a matter for the future. The one clear point is the threat which the seizure poses to the economy and security of Britain, and the problem confronting Britain in this revolution of backward coun tries seeking desperately and sometimes by wrong methods to attain equal status, politically and economically, with the ad vanced nations. The Suez canal was really a French development, the head of the enterprise being Ferdinand de Lesseps who later tried to put through the Panama canal. Begun in 1856 when Egypt was under Turkish rule it was not completed until 1SH9. Its cost ran to 432 million francs. In 1875 Disraeli made his famous coup for the British Empire when he bough . a substantial block of shares in the compsny from the khedive of Egypt to give Britain a dominant position on its im perial highway. In 1888 a convention of the powers at Constantinople agreed that the canal would "always be tree and open in time of war as in time of peace to every vessel of commerce or of war, without distinction of flag." This rule has not always been observed however. For example Egypt bars the movement of oil tankers destined for Israel which forces this struggling country to pay much more for its petroleum products. The csnal company's conces sion ends in 18 when its prop erty and rights revert to the gov ernment of Egypt. Nasser's move of nationalization, which has numerous precedents in recent history, Is more than socializa tion. It is a violation of solemn treaties with other nations and thus invites reprisals from them. The world awaits developments in this situation with a measure of anxiety. U.S. Jet Homhcr Crash Kills Four LAKENHEATH, England (i A U.S. Air Force B47 stratojet bomber crashed and burned at uurUiwhJe, don't tlioj? , Northwest GOP SolonsTcom With House Demos, Nearly Save Atomic Power Bill By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Cerrespeadent WASHINGTON A little band of Washington state Republican con gressmen teamed up with House Democrats this werk in an al- V I eiion w a a t a ' ,'. I r 0 m dctcat a eW. ',f mill, atnmir power bill under I which the Pa cific Northwest could have got a kilowatt . pro ducing reactor for the Ilanford works, Richland, Wash. 1 The project, now apparently doomed for this year, would have supplied the power-hungry North west with some 2O0.000 KW of electric energy had the Atomic Energy Commission gone through with the plan of General Electric Corp. to build a dual-purpose re actor at ilanfnrd. The Hanford project could have been carried out under the terms of the $400,000,000 atomic power reactor program which got caught Nehru Target Of Bombay Demonstration NEW DELHI. India OPHun drecls of Bombay demonstrators marched on Parliament Friday demanding inclusion of that city in the new Marathi-language state to be created under the state reor ganization program. They came from Bombay by train. Steel - hclmeted police armed with rifles and tear gas ringed Parliament, where members were debating the program. Riots over control of Bombay city resulted in more than 100 deaths there earlier this year. The marchers' main target was Prime Minister Nehru. His was the decision, they ar gued, tbat caused the government to announce Bombay would re main a centrally administered city for at least five years, going to neither of the two linguistic factions claiming control. These are the Indians speaking Marathi and those speaking Gujeratis, the language of Mohandas K. Gandhi. The demonstration was delayed several hours because, one leader explained, "most of us had never seen the Indian capital before. We were likely to be arrested af ter the demonstration so we postponed it to spend a few hours sightseeing first." The throng was estimated to number about 2.000. Small groups of demonstrators who crossed po lice barrier lines were arrested. They accepted arrest quietly. Of ficials said they probably would be freed in a few hours or placed on trains to Bombay. Divorce Try Ends, Couple To Try Again LOS ANGELES un The, di vorce hearing of June Haver's mother and her fourth husband broke up in a hurry Friday and, the couple walked away arm in arm. The happy ending came after' Siinprior JtiHpp l-'lmer n nnvlal interrupted testimony and called a conference between the actress" mother, Mrs. Maria M. Ottestad. and her fourth husband. Andrew Ottestad. She had alleged cruelty. "Did you sleep together last night?" the husband's attorney asked her. "Well, there -is only one bed In the house," she replied. The attorney then asked if Ot testad had kissed her goodbye Friday morning.. She responded: "No. he just gave me a pat on the shoulder." At this point Judge Doyle inter posed, "I'm not satisfied these people want a divorce," and called the couple into his cham bers. Ten minutes later they emerged srm in arm and said they would try to kerp their five-year mar riage going. Plane Stolen hv 0 Refugees Hetnrns To Red Hungary Ml'Nirif. Germany 0H-A state owned Hungarian airliner, com mandeered by seven desperate refugees who flew it to freedom in the West, was returned Friday to Communist Hungary. The refugees overpowered the crew and passengers of the two engine American-built I)C3 on a flight from Budapest July 13 and crash-landed in West Germany. The -jCommunist crew and six of the plane's passengers decided to return to Communist-ruled Hun gary and were shipped home by I car a few days ago. , The seven refugees and two of the plane's passengers who de cided to remain in the free West I are now awsiting permission to emigrate to the t'nited States. jUJS. Writer to iReeome Rrilon I LONDON iff John Dickson iCsrr, U.S. -born mystery story' j writer," said Friday he plans to 'become a British citlien. ' "I've lived here for the last 2S iyenrs snd the country suits me," 'he told a reporter. I Cnrr who also writes under : the name Carter Dickson is 4!l. I Sponsors in his petition for : naturalisation are R. L. Jackson, hend of the Scotland Yard Crimi nal, Investigation Division, mys Mery writer Dorothy Sayers and theatrical producer Val Glelgud.j I 1 - iWaii In a squeeze between congres sional Democrats who were trying to put it through and Republicans who were waging the Eisenhower administration's fight against it. Killed la House After having cleared the Senate by a 49-40 vote, the bill was killed off In the Tiouse this wee by a vote of 203-to-lfll. All four of the Pacific North west's senators backed the pro gram, which was championed by Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D-Wash.). who is on the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. Another strong advocate of building the atomic power plants was Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), who went before the committee to urge its adop tion. Sens. Warren G. Magnuson (D-Wash and Richard L. Neu bergcr (D-Ore.) both voted for the bill. Farcea Muttered ' By the time the bill came up In the House, the administration had mustered Its forces to stop the bill, which was opposed by four of the five members of the Atomic Energy Commission as well as most private utilities. One of the major objections raised by the GOP was that the bill "authorized and directed" the AEC to carry out the program, instead of simply giving AEC the authority to do it. Democrats said without the word "directed" it was simply "a pious bill auth orizing the commission to do something it doesn't wsnt to do." In short, they argued Congress had to make it mandatory in order to bt sure AEC would implement the program. Word Kaerked Out Rep. W. Sterling Cole (R-N.Y.). leading tht administration's fight, offered an amendment to knock out the word "directed" and got it through by a vote of 133-to-l05. Supporting this move were Reps. Sam Coon and. Harris Ellsworth (R-Ore.i; Thomas M. Pelly (R Wash.) and Hamer Budge R Ida.l. Opposing it were Rep. Hal Holmes and Walt Horan R Wash.); Don Magnuson ID- Two AF Jets Collide Over Utah Town M1LFORD, Vtah iTwo Air Force Jet planes collided in flicht over this central I'tsh town Fri day and one of them spun into the ground, apparently killing the pilot. - Officials at Wendover Air Force Base, Utah, where the planes three-craft group from Clovis Air Force Bsse, N.M. The Air Force officials said that planes No. 1 and 2 in the forma tion collided at an altitude of 35.000 feet and plant No. 2 im mediately plunged to the earth. They said no one saw the pilot of No. 2 parachute and it is believed he perished in the crash. Plane No. lm anaged to fly to Wendover, where it landed suc cessfully with a gaping hole In its tail pipe. The pilot was not hurt. Plane No. I of the forma tion wss not involved, officials said. Base officials said the No. 2 craft crashed jSbout 10 miles west of Milford. Af helicopter Is flying to the scene to investigste. The nsmes of the pilots were not released by.the Air Force. The plsnes were attached to the 3121h Fighter Bomber Wing at Clovis. They were to psrticipate in the ninth Air Force gunnery competition at Wendover next week. Shipment of U.S. Animals Round For Soviet Zoo SAN DIEGO. Calif. if-An air shipment of American animals (or the Moscow Zoo in Russia is scheduled to leave soon. In the shipment from the San Diego Zoo were a pair of cougars, s pair of black bears, a pair of racoons, two dc-sccnted skunks, two opossums, a crate of rattle snakes and a crate of king snakes. The San Diego Zoo hopes to get in return some Marco Polo sheep, s Siberian spynx, some Siberian tigers and a couple of Saiga ante lope. Storm Anna Runs Inland NEW ORLEANS 1 - Tropical storm Anna broke up in the moun-1 tains of Mexico Thursday night after hitting Tampico In (he cen-l tral Gulf of Mexico. The storm had stirred up thun-i dcrstnrms and high tides along the Texas gulf coast. ; The weather bureau yesterday I estimated Anna's highest winds at about 60 m p.h. near the center. Gales extended outward about 100 miles in the eastern semi-circle. I You, Too, Can Wear The Ncjjd Fluidless Completely Invisible Corneal Contact Lenses SO SAFE! SO PRACTICAL! SO SMART! Do Away With Heavy Unsightly Glasses - fnoir - NORMAL NATURAL APPEARANCE look Better Sao Better Consult DR. SAM K. HUGHES OPTOMETRIST Wash.), Edith Green (D-Ore.) and Graeie Pfost (D-Ida.). Cole lost several other attempts to change the bill, especially en one motion to trim the authorized , funds down from $400 million to only t'iO million. In narly floor move to kill the bill by striking out everything following the enact ing clause, supporters of the meas ure won out by a 199-195 vote a margin made possible by the fact that four Washington state Repub licans crossed party lines to vote with Democrats. They were Con gressmen Thor Tollefson, Jack Westland and Holmes and Horan. Shewdowa Motlaa But the showdown came on a motion by Rep. James Van Zandt (K-Pa.) to send the bill back to committee, where it would bt ex-' pected to die for this session. When this tarried by a vote of 203-to-191, the fight wss all over. Those congressmen from tht Northwest who teamed up to help kill the bill were Raps. Walter Norblad 1 It Ore ), Russell V. Mack (R-Wash.i, and Cooa. Ells worth and Pelly. Those who tried to keep the bill alive on this vott were Holmes, Horan, Tollefson, Westland, Magnuson and Mrs. Green. Holmes, Magnuson. Horan and Mrs. Green went down the line for the bill as It came from tht com mittee, opposing every attempt to change or kill R on the floor. Grecian Maids May Get New PortlandHome PORTLAND on - The two Grecian maids who adorn tht old Skidmore fountain in one of Port land's oldest and faded sectors may soon find a new and more admirable home. Principal Hal York of Portland's -Roosevelt High School suggested to the city's Fine Arts Commis sion that the fountain recently disfigured when city workmen at tempted to clean it with acids replace the Theodore Roosevelt "Rough Rider" bronze in the down town park blocks opposite tht Art Museum. '1 The "Rough Rider", appropri stely would be moved to the Roos evelt High campus. V'ork said Franklin, Jefferson and Lincoln high schools here all have statues of the men for w;hith they were named. The Skidmore fountain was pre sented to the city in 1R88. The "Rough Rider" statue wes given to the city by Dr. Henry Waldo Coe in 1922. It was unveiled by Gen. John J. Pershing, command er of the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe in World War L Unfair Labor Practice Ruled Against Firms SAN FRANCISCO - National Labor Relations Board examiners held Friday, in separate cases in volving Oregon disputes, that two employers had been guilty of un fair labor practices. In one case, Examiner James R. Hemingway held that Vancou ver Plywood Co. at its Springfield, Ore., veneer plant had improperly interfered with its employes' right to' join the Lumber and Sawmill Workers t'nion. In the other, Examiner William E. Spencer held that Howard Cooper Corp., st'its Central Point, Ore., plant, had refused to bargain with the International I'nion." Al lied Industrial Workers of Ameri ca. In each instance the examiner recommended that the employer be directed to cease discouraging union membership and be directed to bargain with the union on re quest. Phont 4-6811 ' Subscription Rates Br rarrl.r la. rltles: Daily only ... 1.2.1 per mo Daily and Sunday l.4S p.r mo. ' Sunday only ,U weak By mall. Dally ant Sunday: I in arivanrei In Oregon S t Pr mo S SO tlx mo ' 10 50 tar By mall Sunday only: 1 in advance 1 1 Anywhere In U.S. I .50 per me S 7S aix mo. I no year In V fl. nutuda Or.fnn - $1 .40 per mo. Member Audit Bureau nf rlrrulatlon Bur.aa al Aav.rllalnt ANPA flretnn Kewipaper Publishers Asaorlallna Advertising Bepreientatlvea: Ward-Cirimth Co. Writ Hnllldar re. New York Chlrase San rranrltre Detroit New location 112 Center Acme freei Owl , Drui PHONf 4-0747 , COMPIITI OSTICAl . iiivici Dr. Sam K. Huhee