m tV i Iks Lien Play Leading Roles in Racial Wrangle in Texas Court By GARTH JOXEJ TYIXK, TfX.. Oct 11 lH-JSne nea fcv spoken most of the es t .ma ted K7.500 words recorded ta the attempt here U outlaw tbt IvAACP in Texas. TJ critical case h tttla legal phraset and will cootinae to be through tht expected appeal whichever side wins ta the V. S. Supreme Court. ' The htrirL3 piiciHy a re quest by tba atate u inaka per manent a temporary restraining rder against the Texas National Asst. f the Advancement of Colored People recessed yester day until Monday. ; , , Tht atata reated Thursday after nine daya of testimony and 47 ex hibits. So far the defense baa questioned I of its expected 2S wit nesses. - ' rk.Ker VUatlaa " ' ' The itata claims the NAACP v.. vtniatMt Hi iuta charter br what the state charges ia political activity, making a profit and ao liciting school integration suits. The stat i says these activities art nlawful because the haaw a j-haHmd at a charitable Bon- ttrnfit arranization. So far. the NAACP has sought to provt that plaintiffs in NAACP lawsuits vera intimidated by state officers, and that tht state had no right to collect soma roe en Dead Marine's Parents Wait Body of Son ' MIAMI JTa., Oct. 11 1 - The parents of i Marine who died while takinc recruit training at Parria Island. S.C were unde cided today whether to take the word of doctors that he was the victim of brain ailment. "We doo't know what we're go ml to do now. We've got to wait until we view the body," said the father of Pvt. Thomas L Dillard Jr' 11 "Then we will see if we should take further steps." The elder Dillard said he re ceived a letter Sect from his son. who was then in the Marine ' hospital with pneumonia. The next word we got was a telegram Oct. U saying he was ' deal" Dillard said. They bad re turned him to active duty Oct. a. I'm no doctor but I believe they called him back to active duty too , soon after ha was in the hospital. Dillard collapsed Thursday while taking exercises and died half an hour later. Marine spokesmen at tributed the death to dead tissue in the brain, and said It apparent ly resulted from natural ,-causee. Survcy.Fails to 1 Reveal rA-Ore in Central Oregon PORTLAND. Oct. 11 W-Aerial aurveys of Central Oregon have failed to reveal any radioactive areas indicating uranium pros apecU not already known. Atomic Energy Commission officials said tooay. . Donald Hetland, chief of the Xpokane district AEC office, said -five areas around Bend were ex ; amtaed from the air, but none cave promise of commercial quantity deposits. , " Kelland said the AEC was disap pointed In the inactivity of pri vate prospecting during the past winner, i. , . . ,-. c St. Paul School Paper) Honored NEW YORK, Oct 11 tsV-The Buckaroo, St. Paul Union High School publication, was one of sev eral Oregon prep yearbooks to re ceive an award today in the 16th annual conference on school year bock productions at Columbia Uni- Tersity. - The Buckaroo received a fourth place for senior high schools under , l enrollment .Other awards, in various divisions went to schools in Portland, Grants Pass, Beaver ton. North Bend, Baker and Bep " pner. - ; .. '-,. : r cc::c7rics' TICKETS KCWONSALC Portland Symphony Strlei Willamette AadltorinU First Concert October U . , WIllAMITTI 1"3 57 Sesson - r cslj - i ' Core Hours :S35:3 Every Cay Tor r-'Tvuf'ons r i 4 l;::r.-n, Sa!cn, 0:?., SizL. Oct 14 Z3 denca the state has presented here. Slate Dirt. Judge Otis T. Puna- ran. 47. a Slow laisini native East Texaa baa ruled the 7th Dis trict State Court for 14 years. Easily the most dominant E e in the walnut-paneled, air- conditioned courtroom is Thur- Gales Whip Dust Across Plains Area By TEE ASSOCIATED PRESS Southerly f ales Saturday whirled large clouds of dust over much of the water-hungry Great Plains area. Scattered showers dampened southern Texaa and most of Flori da but warm air moving across the mid-Mississippi Valley pushed thermometers over M from the eastern Dakotat to Michigan. -. Other scattered showers were reported as far east as the Mis sissippi River. , The weakening cold air invasion la the East limited mercury read ings to the cool Cos as far south as the Carolines. Readings Just west of the Appalachians were in the 70s. Western North Dakota, shivered ia 40-degTee temperatures. Some afternoon temperatures were Boston 57, St. Louis SI, At lanta 70, Tampa II, New Orleans as, Minneapolis tj, Bismarck (3, Denver C7, Phoenix 17, Saa Fran cisco 17 and Seattle U. faf !fr 6RANDI lAKOOUt IO$E POINT ' WWHINfl STAR flLVEISWIM. . a ill 9 1 t I m Wtllaee "Third Nmmi laewtf " Storlinf i at :"-;;';, "The Diamond STATE AND LIBERTY Wccdh'ra Drive-In Friday Satordty Monday iw cosn unr , Danny laye s ' . i-i.-'-mi v--f.; TH! SPOURT ' ( JeffChaadler Opea l:4S- Starts 1:11 DALLAS I10T02-YU Gates Opea 1:45, Shew at T:M Bob Rone, rr Marie Saint la "lull OKUi fiatM" VUUVIslon . SECOND FEATURE Jane Powell, Debbie Reynolds -m m lar ia Clnemisce M tala Visors for Your Car rimAUC9NCnr Portland ,i. Symphony Orchestra TUES:, OCT. 14 . 1:15 .M. ItlLlBffiTTE liivhxnsiTY T'xkeH el Itevena 9 good Marshall. 4t. chief NAACP counsel and nationally prominent spokesman for his race, l-ahgaied Cigar On the other side of the counsel table k state Atty. Gen. Join Bea Sbepperd, 40, who bypasses Duna gan's ao smoking edict by chew ing anhghted cigars. His almost constant presence, although be has said very little for the record, iadicatea the importance be places ea the hearing. r The principal courtroom spokes man for tba atata is Davis Grant, 41 first assistant attorney gen eral Backing Sbepperd and Grant are twe young assistants, person able Wi3 Davis. 20, and Elbert Morrow. 21 D. 5. Meredith, a for mer district Judge and district at torney, completes the state s court room team. Working with Maraaali art three DaHaa Negro attorneys, one of them a defendant in the, suit W. J. Durham, 5L is a stocky. constantly smiling attorney with 24 , years experience berore the bar. - MkbJcaa GraeJate C. B. Bunkley. IS, a 1944 gradu ate of the University of Michigan law school, represents the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Inc.. which he and Mar shall contends is entirely separate from the NAACP organization. Listed as a defendant, but an important-member of the NAACP defense is U. Simpson Tate, 57, regional NAACP attorney recog nized and respected for years both by friends and enemies of the or ganization. The atate accuses him of soliciting school integration suits. WALLACE STERLING it rich n4 Tt!' ; at iadiaa $ty't aitllsai ai x Aatama tntbf tic . . tamper : " craa f haatf. tcalffartd I " lelid iff tr mttU-itrntit """ V rleee era fee aia po. t-ieet) etunia, Ineludlnf r4. Tax ' -Tr: Store of Salem" Sait . ach U.tUT,anyD ; TKe Weather Mai. artm. Rata St JO " M 43 Ms Attorla Baker . Med ford North .a .3 Portleaa Cnitaea as as SS M 41 at m treca ss .ea Denver Fort Worth . Let Ana-ele . n ss Miami SaB Seattle SS 41 trr si at .as Spokas WMhinftoa. a C JS 4 jOS To tart forocMt (tnm V. S. WotUwr Butmii. UcHtry rtoM. S lorn): Vanablo ttoudlm wiUi oo rastonal liht rua VMUv: partlv ciowdjr . tanlfht ant atoodir; hifh both fy aar SO, low tonight 4tu wmaiMttt Mvori II ton. Ttma. 11 01 a m. today S. S4LKM BCimaTHN Slam Start of Weather loaf, Sept. 1 to ata Saat yt Koeaaal ui sat a.ta R. J. Smith, 83, Succumbs; Rites Tuesday Prof. Robert John Smith! S3, a former longtime' resident of the! Independence area, died Friday at Azusa, Calif., according to word received here. Bora ia Iowa in 1171, he taught for many years at Jefferson High School in Portland. He lived in Oregon for 40 years and waa long a resident of Route 1. Independ ence. His wife, Mrs. Alice Smith, died in Salem in 194S. Prof. Smith was affiliated with the Christian church. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Ann Raphael, Azusa, Calif., and one granddaughter. Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at the W. T. Rigdon Chapel with the Rev. Wayne Greene officiating. Interment win follow at Belcrest Memorial Park. 3r ' Wofch and Jewelry "v"'' Kepoirinf ' ' . Special Order Work it Setting ' k Engraving w Kemodeling x uenrf niaa ti (- jjxoomiield Conducts 'PROGRAM rr-r-,:...... Ike to Give " Go Ahead for Atomic Ship WASHINGTON. Oct 11 ID -President Eisenhower m afonday wiD. give the go ahead for coo itructioa of a nuclear powered merchant ship, which Congress authorized at the last aesuoo. A White House ceremony baa beta set for 10 sjn. EDT, for the occasion. Invited are Secretary of Commerce W e t k a. Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of the Atomic Energy Commission, Chairman Clarence G. Morse of the Mari time Commission Undersecretary of Commerce Louis Rothschild, asd K. E. Fields, AEC general manager. White House press secretary James C Hagerty said the atomic powered ship is expected to be completed ia about three yearly. Now-At Salem's family Show Center - ' COMING SOON ."War and Peace" Elvis Presley in "love Me Tendei" MOW PLAYING! .TECHNICOLOR aMMiaaawmtwcnai -PLUS- riCLDiiacit ' :!nVX'j John PAYNE Mona FREEMAN m aw atiiat aawtan Hftatj Cent. From 1 P. fA. , v Theatre Time Table : KLStNOBl " (ConUnnooa from 1 sum.) ' Th Bert THiaf la Ufa Are free": I m. ju 1.-4J, Hat -Abdullah's HaranT; 14a, I:1T, M . CAFITOL (CoaUaooua from 1 ajn.) The Tint Texaa": 10. 0, T li it II "Hokl Back the Niht": lS. IM. l ot MOaTI SALBtf DSIVI-IX (Catw epea at t:tS. Show at t The King 1": Deborah Kerf "Animal World.' Documentary ' BOLXTWOOB i - (CoaUnuoua tran t:iS) "Bluer Than Lift." James Mason 'Lady Killera," Alec C ulna eaa The National Safety Council esti mates that the annual financial loss to the nation from farm accidents averages about $173 per farm family. ) CONT. FROM Ti W , m. 3eV v . " I' " r PIUS 1001 DELIGHTS "ABDULLAH'S HAREM1' "Mr. Robtrti" Mw.a FT t" V II r I Noted 3Iultnomali Judge Succumbs PORTLAND. Oct 13 (it-Oar ence H. Gilbert, judge of the do mestic relations court here from 193 to 1337, died in a Portland rest home today. i r.tlher SI. formerlv waa Dreai- dent of the Multnomah Bar Assn., and was a member of the child welfare commission before bis ap pointment to the bench. Funeral services were pending. India Congressman Dies of Hunger Strike MADRAS, India. Oct 11 -A member of the Congress party died today after a 79-day hunger strike undertaken, he said, to win agreement of his party's leaders to cut their personal expenses. The hunger striker, P. Sankara linga Nadar, also wanted the city of Madras renamed Tamil Nad. 1 P. M. J -nit ana A Jba moo B "W" . . a, -I. a Onma5coPi mm mm bkwi font mmm inm mn m nam. vm I ROOGERS &v HAMMERSTEIN'Sn aOoCenlwry-Fei - - 55 Y- ftk SPECIAL FIRST RUN! Ca "timeout Today from MS C "You've got to : ? 1 stop those pHls!"Xy i-A A motion picture to goring yvv h aui "HOW DfD THEY JAMES MASONf rt BARBARA 7 rushZ WALTER KATTHAO ai kaaaj ; tTBl Km ai tSUm FUN-FILLED SECOND HIT I "GUINNESS' ' latest frolic! . . . pirbaps till last farciealry fltnJ ckiTKUr hi kas im playid. Katie Jorrsoi aaliit i btaatif.1 EriIUi rick if iis atalnst wtick tba cinical villain lath tkimuhris Inti a ham. It't flRT -Orewrter, . v, Taaea tainiess eriitit aiatkir ran biri with kit isial finesse! Hi is wnderful tt watch. Ai anasini (arci ... full if iticiaas little touches. Katie Johesei is a captjvatini ili sparrow (who) SXCaiS IHI SR0WI " The Udrkillers' is a work if tiinlne artistry, finely tarn, out ii ivtry detail and a pleasure te erperiencer -Wlmlta, I. T. Not "Guinness is iff en one if his wildest pranks! Thi fn tnws stiadiiy lore hilarieasr Caot. WarM TtK I Sua comic satin, Handled with skid and a sharp sense f humor!" 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