The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 28, 1956, Page 14, Image 14

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    l4-(Sec, II) Statesman, Salem. Ore.', Frl, Sept. 28. '58
Saleiri School Board Uneasy
Oyer Future Pupil Numbers
I New Army Device Tracks Missiles
J j A third-week enrollment report
1 tnd.'VredicUoni of nunils yet to
"j, I com gav Salem School Board
I i members little comfort at their
regular meeting Thursday night.
But, they were advised that di
vision' between north and south
waa providing somt almost un
believable balances. A report by
Sup. Charles D. Schmidt showed
totals of Junior Ttigh pupils north
bute Paid
IBte Teacher
rI5i Officials
t dal tribute was naid Thurs-
! day by the Salem School 'Board
to -Mrs. Madeleine Hanna, Salem
; scBoof ; teacher - for 2S years and
; dun. of firls and Leslie Junior
Hnl School, who died Monday of
j cancer. 1 : - ..- .
i :'esoIution passed by t h e
: bosM'said "the Salem Pablic
I Sch ..-a have lost m her a truly
mi ' teacher and. the entire
tea ag and administrative staff
! and, ftidents will greatly mia her
; wiM-nd kind council, her excep
i tioCftlhr fine approach to teaching
: and,' students, and tha inspiration
i she- '.afforded others." f
Mrs. Hanna was under contract
ta teach this year, but ill health
; kept her from her science class
room. During recent years she hsd
undergone surgery frequently, but
was on the job when ever her
health permitted, school officials
sail
. - t .
- i j
Barber Shaky
While Giving
Nixon Haircut
lOUTSVIUJE. Ky., Sept.' XT (-
L. J. Ford,-a barber, opened his
three-chair shop for a normal
day's business today and then
Vice President Richard Nixon
dropped in.
trd suddenly - found himself
cutting the hair of a headline
figure in the glare of photogra
phers flash bulbs, reporters'
questions and a, traffic-stopping
crowds stares, .i..t
"Maybe I was a littla shaky.'
Ford said later. "It waa the
crowd, though. It wouldn't have
bothered ma just cutting his hair,
The tmprompta haircut created
surprises for newsmen follow
ing Nixon, an unpredictable Call
forniaa who also stopped ' his
csiavan for a chat with welders
Ofl -bulldinf construction project.
"It's par for the course," they
said. . He might stop anywhere.
Ha works one side of the street
shsldng hands and Pat takes the
outer side."
Pat is Nixon's wife. T
Sitting in the barber chair.
Nixon carried the conversation to
roM. He asked him if he had met
Sen. Carle Clements or his Repub
lican opponent, Thruston B. Mor
ton: er former uov. Lawrence
Wdtherby. or bis senatorial foe,
John Sherman Cooner.
ford replied he met Clements
one but none of th others.
"Surely you hsve met Happy
Chandler," Nixon said. "1 under
stand he gets around a lot. I bet
he-has covered this territory."
ford replied no, he had only
sera-.the Kentucky iovernor.
Nurtm wouldn't let Ford answer
a reporter's question about his
party, affiliations but Ford volun
teered ha was independent.
Talking to the welders, Nixon
first, caught Charles Strange of
Louisville and Donald Nowlin of
Lexin gton. An unperturbed
Strange told him: - .
,. ?I think , you've got a good
chance to win here, fellow.";, . ,w
Comparisons quickly were
drawn between Nixon's visit and
that of the Democrat who is trying
tomnseat him, Estes Kefsuver.
An official police estimate act
Nikon's crowd at "about one-third
larger" than Kefauver's of yester
day at th University of Louis
ville. I ..,::.':, .. ,-..,'.,.. .' :. . .,', .
Botji men also spok at the Flag
Rood of the, Kentucky Hotel, The
Republicans sneaked in a punch
here by setting up extra tables in
adjoining rooms. The hotel cater
er) said they ted 1.023 at Kefau-
- m's - luncheon and 1,139 at
Nixon's i)i,4 ;
- Nixon won applause by praising
tht late Alben W. Berkley, a Ken
tucky Democrat who was vice
president for four years under
former President Harry Truman.
Portland City
Pay HikeUrgetl.
In Spite of Vote '
' ! ..-
t PORTLAND. Sept V Ft
nancf Commissioner Ormond R.
Bean recommended today that the,
pay of city employes be raised
even if the voters fail to approve
st the November election tax
increase to pay for lit.,
Bean said the increase could be
rvrn without the additional tax
if 13 employes were discharged.
i . h action would eliminate some
f rvirfj. ht said. Th proposed
r -j boost would total $1424,748.
T ." TTI KILLS POLICEMAN
r.' " TLAN'D. Sept. 27 (JrWack-
t n Lamrnt Carter, 35. a Port-
! 1 p.' e n'.'icer, was killed out
t t t v In a two-car collision
of th dividing line at 1.540 and
those sttending Leslie School at
1,544. And on top, of that there
were 501 ninth traders enrolled at
each Leslie and Parrish.
The figures that worried tht
board most for the future, how
ever, were in the first grade and
senior levels. Th report showed
first grade enrollment just slightly
below double th senior clsss
totals. But the big problems of
the present wer in between where
new residences in the area south
of the city continued to increase
elementary enrollment
Jf (Hag Sees '
-Some juggling appeared certain
before the school year advanced
very far for Liberty School, Assist
and Supt. Arthur Myers told the
board. One teacher . has alresdy
been added there sine - school
started and it won't take many
more pupils to require another, he
saioj,: :
Growth of two other schools re
quired a shift of emergency fund
money Thursday night to take
care of increased administrative
and custodial costs. The board
authorised an additional two hours
a day custodial time for Morning
side, now a 19-room school, and
an: extra hour a day secretarial
time for Highland School which
has 15 classrooms.
Water Contract i
Additional negotiations toward a
contract with Salem Heights
Water District for supplying the
new Judson Junior High School in
that area was okehed by the
board after the water district re
jected the board's earlier contract
offer.
A clause by which the school
district would be reimbursed SO
per cent of the cost of construction
of an eight-inch line to the site
inside a 19-year period was turned
down by the water district board
as against their operating policy.
Brief Meeting '
In one of its briefest agenda's
of the year th board also:
- Turned ever to the transporta
tion committee with power to act
on a request by residents of s
section of Larden Lan east af
Middle Grove School for transport
ation of half a dozen small young
sters. All live over two miles from
th school and are not on or near
a regular bus route, Supt, Schmidt
reported.
Authorized use of west Salem
athletic field by Willamette Uni
versity again for Saturday use for
its intramural football program.
The university's own intramural
field on the campus has been de
layed by the 13th Street improve
ment project, according to a letter
from Dr. G. Herbert Smith, president.
Playgroaad SengM
Discussed without decision a re
quest from 11 residents of Madi
son, 20th, zsrd and 14th streets in
th north Englewood area to have
the Faye Wright school sit pre
pared as a neighborhood play
ground until construction of t h e
school is begun. Possibility of the
dry acquiring a seven-acre play
ground and recreation site en state
property in that area prompted a
postponement of any decision.
Accepted the resignation of Miss
Donna Reed, third grade teacher
at Keizer School, effective Sept.
34. Miss Reed taught second grade
for the past two years at Washing
ton, but Is now moving from the
city her letter of resignation said.
Heard a request by Ben Cave,
Salem architect formerly associ
ated with the firm of Clark, Groff
and Cave, to be considered for
any future school projects. Cave
told the board he had been prac
ticing In Salem for th past "three
years.
Approved employment of Helen
S. Beck, interior dee-rating, Ola
L. Clark, mathematics. Ralph Da
Metz, jewelry making. Edward
Gottfried, cake decorating. Kerby
Johnson, welding, Robert P. Mob-
ley. Spanish, Frank Schrarti teen
age program, and John Schukart,
upholstery as instructors in t h a
adult education program.
County Grand
Jury Probes
4Sex Parties'
Six persons were indicted Thurs
day by the Marios County Grand
Jury. The jury wiu continue in
session today, hearing reports of
several "sex parties" in to Sil
verton area. ,
More than 30 youths from Marion
and Clackamas counties, including
a 17-year-oM boy cnargea wim
statutory rape, are slated to testi
fy today : concerning the parties
reportedly held st several Silver
ton homes recently.
Among indictments reported out
bv the grand jury Thursday was
that of Clifford Brannon. 41, of
Los Angeles, Calif., charged with
larceny of clothing and other
articles from a Salem apartment.
Also Indicted were Lester Mason,
on a charge rape, ana joe
Charles Blansfield, on a charge of
escaping from the state prison last
May 21.
Henry winner Kernes, riooa-
water, Minn., and John Henry Vin
ton. Seattle. Wash., were indicted
jointly on a charge of attempting
to burglarize the Jewel Box in
Salem last Aug. 10.
Edward Cook, 2125 Myrtle Ave.,
was indicted on a charge of con
tributing to the delinquency of a
minor.
Acquited by grand jury action
of a charge of non-support was
James Carr. A charge of assault
with a dangerous weapon against
Robert Elton Newton was dis
missed because, the district attor
ney's office said, Newton hsd pre-;
viously pleaded guilty to a lesser
; ;: : "r - i ' f V - "N 1 -
' : . i V j" (.
: . m t v t
I''' T" , ' , J r '
, ...
The Weather
FT. MONMOUTH, N. J., Sept 27 This Is Army Signal Corps optical tracker developed at
Fort Monmouth, N. J., to trace moving missiles. The giant telescopic tracker, now being
tested at White Sands Proving Grounds, N. M., can trace a moving missile 300 miles away
In natural color on Its scope. The new ton-and a half optical Instrument also takes black
and white photographs of rockets, jets and other flying objects automatically. It has a 400
pound lens of 160-inch focal length. (AP Wirrphoto)
Aitortt . HI
Baker SS
Mfdford 7
North Bnd St
PortlanS M
Stlta SS
Chicago
Denver
Mas. Mia. SUI
SS
Fori Worth M
Lo Angeln . S3
Miami ..M
Nf York M
San Fr.nciico 71
Sraltl SO
Spokanr as
Washington. D. C. . S3
44
41
I
M
41.
41
M
U
i
4.1
71
it
S.1
47
SO
47
.00
.OS
.00
.00
., 00
trarf
.00
.00
.00
no
.27
.44
.00
.00
00
1
Totlay'i forrrait (from U. a. Wtath
r Bureau, McNary Fir Id. Salem I :
Mostly cloudy with occasional rain
today, becoming partly cloudy with
a few scattered showers tonight;
moat'.y cloudy Saturday with periods
of clearing; high today Si, low to
night 44.
Willamette River: 1.1 feet.
Temp. 1101 am. today M.
Salen Precipitation: Trace
Since Start ef Weather Year, Sept. 1
Te at Last year Normal
S3 130 l.
Bolivian Prisoners Seize
Plane, Land in Argentine
SALTA. Argentina, Sept. 17
A planeload of Bolivian political
prisoners overpowered armed
guards and seized their airliner in
Might high over RMivia today.
They then turned the plane around
and landed in Argentina, seeking
asylum.
4.1, former Bolivian military at
tache in Chile; Saul Pintos Landi
val, a veteran pilot reported fired
from the government airline sev
eral years ago, and a Capt. Za
mora. Five minutra after takeolf at
7:15 am.-at s given signal
the men jumped and disarmed the
gunrris. Pintos escaped being shot
one cuarn s gun
40 ct 8 Makes
Peace Move
With Legion
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. V W
The executive committee of the
British, French Still Push
For Wide Control of Suez
here between Premier Guy Mollet
and Prime Minister Eden and
their foreign ministers.
They expressed full agreement
on the line to be followed in the
By DAVID MASOV
PARIS, Sept. V Ofi-British and
French spokesmen reiterated to
day their government's determi-
natini! Ia nrarl fnr intorno'inrnl
40 i I fun-making orgamration . con,ro of ,he S,JM Cangl whjf Security Council's pending
of the American Legion tonight , main,aining a jjn, mi,tarv build- debate on the Suez 1Ssue even as
withdrew charges of dictator- jn triking distance of ' KevdI : President Kisenhower indicated in
ship made against me Legion in The Frfnch.Brjtisn stan(i wa, Washington he would be willing to!
a move, designed to bring peace ; .mphasizej after a conference ; compromise on the kind of inter-1
to the two battling veterans
groups.
Adoption of the conciliatory res
olution by the full 40 k I Con
vention Friday was expected to
be automatic. The 40 8 is hold
ing Hi first convention independ
Hospital Says
Colombia Man
Widow Said
Raising Boy
Like Chicken
BELFAST, Northern Ireland,
Sept. 27 ii A black-clad 4year
oid widow was brought into court
today on charges of ill treating her
7-year-old son by raising him like
a chicken.
Mrs. Margaret Halpenny spent
only four minutes in court while
the prosecutor asked a delay to
permit him to collect further evi
dence. She was then remanded until
Oct. 11 and whisked out of a side
entrance to avoid a crowd mostly
women drawn to Downpatrick
courthouse by reports of the
strange ?e. I
Mrs. Halpenny's son Kevin was j
found two weeks ago by a group of i
children playing hide and seek.
He was perched on a roost in a
henhouse near a cottage where
the woman lives with two grown
daughters.
Police Sgt. Hugh Ross said the
boy "cannot walk and he cannot
eat human food. He has been 1
reared like a chicken. He gets,
around by hopping like an ape
and replies to voices with grunts
in a half-human fashion.
The boy has been taken into pro
tective custody while the trial proceeds.
The 47 prisoners, smong them
several leaders of the Bolivian So
cialist Falanee party, immediate-1 only because
l noro nriWerl interned bv the iammed.
Argentine army. i The prisoners ordered pilot Mar-
"We preferred death in an aircel Kstenssoro to change course
plane to life in a concentration
camp," the prisoners' spokesman
said.
The i?roup had been arrested in
Santa Cruz. Bolivia, after last Saturday's-
antigovernment riots.
FaselsU- Blamed
The Bolivian govtrnment
blamed the Saturday riots n
Fascists encouraged by the Social-j y Jd'illl p lllTi
Vive crewmen and three Boliv-i i -fj
ian policemen were with the jQWOOV XlClU
prisoners on the Lloyd Aero Boliv- j .
iano DC4 commercial airliner ; T nPliraft rValint
when it arrived at Salta airport XH 1HC11 ViOUIll
The mutineers turned over their i
guards" sub-machine gun and two MKMI.HS. Sept. 27 if - Lash
pistols to Argentine federal police Ruti Neieran cowboy moyie ac-
I I . I. ,UM n Arrrnntina Ua
anU IdRC limn iw niBViii'im. nw
refused.
Pintos, who claims more than
3,000 hours of flying time, slid into
the pilot's seat, banked the plane
and brought It the 450 miles to
Sail a.
The mutineers talked freely wilh
tor. was arrested by city police
LaRue, 34. who has been ap
pearing at the Midsouth Fair here
was picked up along with two per
sons identified by police as Alfred
( Fuzzy i St. John. Western char
acter actor, and Carla Gilbert.
St. .lohn. M. and Miss Gilbert,
held as material
Death Claims
Mrs. Cxirbett
....... .. . . .
Mrs. Cora Corbett, M, died
Thursday afternoon in the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Grace Black-
man, 5275 Silverton Rd., Salem.
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m. in Clough-Barrick Chapel. In
terment will be at Rest Lawn Me
mory Gardens.
Mrs. Corbett was born en April
I, IMC in Marshall, Mich., and
lived in Columbus, Neb., for so
years. She was a resident of Sa
lem for nine years and a member
of the Lutheran Church.
Survivors are two daughters,
Mrs. Ray Freeman and Mrs. Grace
Blackmail, both of Salem; son,
Leo Corbett, Salem, and 17 grand
children and II great grandchil
dren. ' a A "; 'j :
tEVL IN HOSPITAL
Kenneth Bett. 4225 Shoreline Dr.,
business manager of the Unem
ployment Compensation Commis
sion, is under treatment at Salem
General Hospital for a heart con-
aiuon. laaea to tne nospnai wea
nesday night. Bell was reported
in "fair" condition by attendants
Thursday. - t
ent of the Legion following s ver- --.j f.
bal battle that started almost two 111 f I
charge of assault and battery. The years ago. I
charge Involved the knifing of The executive committee's res- (Picture Pare in
lempie jonn rresjiar wai juiy a oiuuon, siinmuieu oy juimi a. u-c-
t I l -1 r'i.: .. -... A : ,r tn-
Meanwhile Ruby Toquero and, the best interests of peace and 1 .1.. . .1"'' , ' - 1 c"ula
national operation which would be
worked out Tor the waterway.
Annoyed at I'.S.
The British and French have
insisted the canal must be run
irrternAtinnnllv and thev have Hi.
played annoyance at what theyjj Il(jn Usillnr
ie'i is i. .o. reiuciance on mis
point.
Kisenhower expressed hope at
! A flpu rnnfirfn-p that a nrm i.
NEW YORK. Sept. 27 bP-A New SU)na m,.,i1()f of ,.anai or.r.ilmn
be worked out. perhaps
Striking Miners
Poison Arrows
reporters, bitterly denouncing the-(oday and cnargPd wjth buyjn
regime oi rjuuvian .... gnd recflving st0Cn property.
nan anes iunio.
They said they learned last night
they were being sent to a concen
tration camp at La Pai and de
cided to risk everything in an at
tempt to escape.
Plaa Outlined
The plan to take over the gov- 2n, were being
ernment-ownea airliner was mane ; wltr)PS,0,
by Lt. Col. Andres Saiifedo Lanza, i i)otective Chief M. A. Hinds said
Miss (iilbert contacted a Mem
phis merchant and tried to sell
him three sewing machines.
A businessman had reported
earlier that three sewing ma
chines and a calculating machine,
valued at $1,200. had been stoken
from his car parked near the fair
grounds. Police alerted possible
buvers
PORTLAND. Sept. 27 Fire The merchant, who had been ad
danger remains high in some vised hy police ol the reported
wooded sections of Oregon, forest- theft, called officers who quev
I'matilla. Ochoco, Malheur. De- tinned Miss Gilbert and later La
high on the Wallowa-Whitman, Rue and St. John.
I'matilla, Ochoco. Malheur. De- Hinds said LaRue admitted the
schutes and Fremont National four machines were in his pos-sos-Forests
in Central and Eastern ; non and said he bought then'1 Irom
Oregon, a federal forest spokes- an unidentified person for 5105.
man said. I LaRue and Miss Gilbert listed
He added that a very heavy, weir nomes as tionywooo. st.
Deer Hunters
Warned Fire
Danger High
Daniel Mesa, both of Salem, and
both charged with contributing to
the delinquency of a minor were
bound over to the grand Jury when
they appeared In circuit court
Thursday.
Also bound aver waa George
Kenney, Salem charged with ob
taining money and property by
falsa pretenses.
Bonn Limits
Draft to Year
BONN, Germany, Sept. 27 iff
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer s
government decided today to limit
the draft period for West German
youths to one year.
It pinned on the United States
primary responsibility for the de
cision to scrap plans for lt months
compulsory military service. A
special government announcement
said Adenauer ordered the shorter
draft period after reading Amer
ican newspaper reports that the
United States plans a big cut in
its military forces.
The announcement did not men
tion that the opposition Socialists
art campaigning for next year's
general election with a promise
to abolish the draft.
The 12-month draft will five
West German youths the shortest
training period In any country in
the alliance aspect tiny Luxembourg.
harmony between the American
Legion and the 40 k S that the
charges ... be withdrawn."
Th Legion's national commit
tee, meeting here last summer,
expelled the fun-making group as
a subsidiary. But it made the pro
vision that the 40 4 t would im
mediately be taken back into the
organization should its charges be
withdrawn.
A 40 Ii I spokesman said the
return of peace between the two
groups did not necessarily mean
they would meet together again
in the future. The squabble was
originally provoked by the Le
gion's placement of 40 It 8 units
in a national convention parade.
Miners' Pay
Hike Reported
that peppery little Javier Pereira
is a very old man, and "possibly
he may be more than 150 years of
age."
Even if he is the world's oldest
man, the report added, the tiny
Indian from Colombia ia sprier
and better preserved in some re
spects than many men.
Pereira underscored the finding
when he broke up a news confer
ence by taking swings at a couple
of reporters. He hit one who re
ported: "Believe me, it hurts."
Pereira. 4 feet 4 was brought
here from South America two
weeks ago to try to test the claim
of some people that he is 167 years
old.
Methods Lacked
along the lines of the 18 mitinn
majority proposal at the first Ixin
don Suez conference for interna
tional supervision.
Rejected outright by Egypt's
President Nasser, that proposal
remains a main objective of
French-British poljcy, official
spokesmen said.
Kden, Mollet, British Foreign
Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and
French Foreign Minister Christian
Pineau. who met for about nine
hours during the past two days,
closed their conference with a
communique saying French-British
solidarity in eery field had
been reinforced.
Not Necessary
The communique made no men-
CAI.C1TTA. India. Sept. 27
Three thousand striking coal min
ers were reported using poison ar
rows and spears in a clash with,
West Bengal police in northeast
India today.
Reports reaching here said po
lice fired on a mob, killing on
striker and injuring six others.
Some police were reported injured.
The striken attacked non
striking miners. The police went
to the defense of the non-strikers
and met the poison arrow and
spear attack.
About 50.000 miners have been
on strike since S-pt. 17 at 2
British-owned rollirnes.
stand of drv grass would make
any fires difficult to control and
he asked hunters to be particu
larly careful of camp fires and
warming fires. The deer season
opens Saturday.
The only closure still in ef
fect on these national forest lands
is in the Summer Lake area on
the Fremont forest, he said. Klse
where no camp fire permits are
John gave North
as his residence.
Ridge. Calif.,
Posse Kills
Eugene Bear
El'GKNK. Sept
A
a
area
required but campers must havt ( p,,,,, ni!nt(;d down ,nd ynM
a snovei. a ana Ducim anu must back bf,r , , re,,rre ntial
noi smoxe wnne traveling in "or- here early today.
Mt- I The full-grown bear was flushed
At Salem State Forester Dwight 1 out of a neighborhood wading pool
L. Phipps said these lands are by dogs. Herbert A Ranch re
still closed to entry without per-: ported to police Off duty pohce
mit: Klamath County: Butte Falls I men went after the brar and Sgt.
area of Jackson County: an area i John Baptiste of the f ugene no
on the Coos-Douglas County line;, lice department killed him with a
and two small areas on the Wil- shot from a lo-wt rifle The hruin
lamette National Forest weighed i.vi pounds
New York Hospital sail in its ' ,ion of anv continue pressure for
report: 't , international control of the canal.
"Although medical science pos-1 nationalized by Egypt July 26. But
sesses at present no methods of a French government spokesman
determining the exact age of anylsa'(' wasn't necessary in view
adult, nonmedical evidence indi-!nf lne positions already taken,
cates that Mr. Pereira is indeed a 1 lie British spokesman said
very old man. and that oossiblv international management re-
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 he may be more than 150 years of mains a primary objective of
A new agreement giving soft coal age. . . British- rench policy
miners a new $2 a day wage boost j "Examination has revealed him
was reported tonight to have been , to be vigorous, alert and observ-
School Board
Needled Over
Bobbin' Bobbins
Salem's School Board cot some
needling Thursday night from its
junior high school home economics
teachers over a problem it thought
was sewed up several months ago
when It awarded contracts for 13
new sewing machines.
The teachers pinned the blame
on th fact that the teenag seam
stresses and the new machines
don't seem to be modeled for each
other. Primarily the bobbins keep
bob-bob-bobin' away and disappearing.
Board members were advised
that the specific model they re
quested, which also is th same
typo to fit most f tha avallsblc
instructional material doesn't hsve
a losabl bobbin.
' - , . . .. .
Texas College Officials Win
Contempt of Court Action
.can safari group of nine
e rers" require a
r io accorrpany
TYLER. Tex.. Sept. 27 UB Th
National Assn. for th Advance
ment of Colored Peopl today lost
si effort to have VS. District
Court hold in contempt two Tex
arkana Junior College officials.
Tomorrow the NAACP will be
the defendant in a State District
Court when Texas Atty. Gen. John
Ben Shepperd seeks to have made
permanent a temporary injunction
permitted th pro-integration or
ganization from doing business in
the state. . . , .
In today's wit, the NAACP
sought contempt of court orders
against Dr. H. W.-StilweH. presi
dent of the college, and Bill Will
lams, a member of th school's
board of trustees. The suit con-
tenrVd that Dr. Stil .-ell placed
Lir.oiif In contempt of the court's
order opening the all-white school
to Negroes by making a prosegra
gatioo flat am at Williams,
claimed the suit, was in a white
crowd which prevented two Negro
students. Jessalya Gray, II. and
S teres Posten, 17, from entering
th college Sept. 16.
UJJ. Dist. Judg Joe Sheehy,
who Issued the original integra
tion order, dismissed the NAACP
suit after th organisation's re
gional attorney, U. Simpson Tate,
of Dallas, disqualified himself In
the case. -
Tate's action cam after th two
students had testified .that they
had not asked that the contempt
petitions be filed. Tata admitted
on tha witness stand that h had
not consulted tha students er their
parents.
reached by John L. Lewis and the
coal industry.
Lewis was reported to be with
holding announcement until his
United Mine Workers Union
tUMWt convention opens in Cin
cinnati next Tuesday. UMW had
no comment.
Sources close to the coal Indus
try said they understood a mem
orandum of understanding had
been initialed by Lewis and Ed
ward G. Fox. newly elected presi
dent of the Bituminous Coal Op
erators Assn. (BCOA).
These sources said they under
stood the agreement calls for a
$1.20 daily increase on Oct. 1 and
a further 80-cents a day raise next
April 1. This is the same two
step raise given the miners a
year sgo. The present basic daily
wage is $20.25.
Additional vacation pay also
was reported to hav been agreed
upon.
The Wall Street Journal said to
night the new contract was being
negotiated secretly in Washington.
mg.
Pereira was indeed all three
The communique did not dis
close what tactics the two govern
ments had drawn up for the Secu
rity Council Suez debate, expected
U.S. Lifts Lien
Against Albany
Grocery Owner
ALBANY, Or.. Sept. 27 Wl-A
government lien against an Al
bany grocer who tried to pay off
his Income taxes with merchan
dise coupons, was lifted yester
day. Th Internal Revenue Depart
ment action was taken after Dirk
son made the final $1,800 pay
ment on a $3,M0 Income tax
claim.
Th grocer offered the govern
ment the coupons as part of his
six-year campaign against the
practice of suppliers of giving
away merchandise coupons. Dick
son was an unsuccessful candi
date for tha Republican nomina
tion for governor last May.
EGYPT GIVEN LOAN
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 HI
Egypt has been ranted a lS-mil-llon-dollar
emergency loan from
the International Monetary Fund,
a spokesman said tonight. . ,
HISTORIAN DIES-' -,
PARIS, Sept. 17 (A-Htsiorlan
Fehvrt died today at 7i. Febvrt's
works Include a study of th 111 of
Martia Luther. ;
w hen he showed up at a, hotel Ho begin next Thursday or Friday.
suite for his news conference. I ,
He observed a blonde girl re
porter who posed with him 'or ,,,, rterktt
pictures and put an arm sround j atllf V iJVUniril
her shoulder. 'When she held his !
hand, on which he wore a ring. ' I ) 4? lltirtl
Pereira warned alertly in Span
ish: Became Nettled
"Don't steal the ring "
But as flash bulbs popped and
television floodlights glared. Pe
reira became vigorously nettled,
lie took a swing at the blonde and
also at a hovering press agent.
"I'm going to get the hell out of
here." muttered the little man
petulantly.
Out in the hall, he took a final
poke at a male reporter before
vanishing into an elevator.
Despite the performance, the
hospital report said:
"He Is gregarious and likes to
meet peoplo.
The report continued:
"His memory for recent events
is excellent and he is able to re
call with apparent vividness many
events of hi past life. While at
the New York Hoapital-Cornell
Medical Center, he has shown a
remarkable ability to adapt him
self to new situations.
"His eyesight is impaired, but
he is still able to find enjoyment
from Westerns on television. He
likes to listen to music and can
dance in rhythm.
"His skin is like that of an old
man, but shows no more of the
effects of age than that of many
men of 70.''
Statesman Nrws S.rvlra
SJLVKR FALLS STATE PARK
I Sept. 27 One big buck who must
resent the approach of deer hunt
ing season took the offensive here
early today while he could still get
away with it.
The result: One damaged state
patrol car with cracked windsheild
and scratched-off paint on top.
State Patrolman Albert Kspey,
during his regular eastern Marion
County patrol, saw a buck stand
ing in the Silver Falls Highway
near Silver Mountain about 2:30
a.m. Kspey slowed his car, then
stopped, but the deer stayed on
the road. Next, the buck charged
at the car, damaging it as he
leaped over it and disappeared in
to the wooded area.
Albany Woman
Tries Out New
Ocean Telephone
EUGENE, Sept. 27 W - The
Eugene Register-Guard tested out
the new transatlantic telephone
cable today by arranging a con
versation of Mrs. Richard Gut
man, Veneta, Ore., with her. son.
Sgt. Rodney Gutman, in Great
Britain.
Afterwards Mrs, Gutman said
"it was just like talking to a
neighbor." She hadn't talked to
her son since h left for England
two years ago.
The new cabl went into serv
k Tuesday.
Morse-McKay
Campaign Costly
To Both Parlies
WASHINGTON. Sept. 27 ijn-The
Morse-McKay Senate race in Ore
gon is getting more funds from
the Democratic and Republican
parties than' any other ballot con
test In the West.
The Republican Senatorial
Campaign Committee reported it
had sent $14,510 to Oregon to help
Douglas McKay up to Sept. 1. The
Democratic committee said in the
same period it sent $15,000 to help
Morse.
Metal Fabricating
Plant Considered
PORTLAND. Sept.- W (AV-Con-struction
of an aluminum fabri
cating plant in this area by Rey
nolds Metals Co., is under con
sideration, Clarence F. Manning,
a company vie president, report
ed today.
He said he would make anoth
er visit to the area in about two
months ta Mow up a current
study.
to make a wish i
hopeful fun... BUT
Want Ads get
our selling
done!
"Hope w sell It, hope w sell it"
maye enjoyable-hoping, but Classified
ads bring you that buyer!
Is It real estate or a car you'd lik
to dispose of?
Merchandise or a business?
Whatever it ij-phone 4-6811 for an
ad-writerl
Sold en 3rd Day
MODERN 2-bdrm. horn, wsttsrh.
gv. i patio. Lrg. lot, furnithad or
unfurnished. $60 mo. Incl. .vsry
thing. Ownar rrsniftrrtd mutt isll
st ones. Willing I. mak. tarml en
small down paymanl.. Ph. XXXX.
Sold on 2nd Day
151 ENGLISH Ford 2dr. (125.
Ph. XXXX aftsr P.M.
Sold on 3rd Day
II FT. CriM-Oift cabin cruitsr.
Vary rtas. Ph. XXXX.
ITATIIMAM-JOUINAl
ClattrflMl Ads Oar Thbsa. Oml
,
Haf 44111
".
. M