I The Weather Today's forecast: Mostly dowdy today and Tuesday with Mitii fah rain. High today SO. Low tonight M.. i (Cemplete Report J.) ',v't U G'cXIK J "S . 6 o WUNDID MM 106th Yoar 2 SECTIONS-14 PAGES Hit Oregon Statoaman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, December 3, 195t PRICI 5c No. 2S1 " ' : ' ' . '; A A 0 WW -TV. . C ' m ' 1 ' -r- . TS - --v SP&S Strike Closes Salem SQGDDQa IKDCGOG From this safe distance I enjoy the frequent editorial passages at arnu between the urbane and literate Bob Ruhl. editor of the Medford Mail . Tribune, and hia neighbor colleague. Frank Streeter the rugged individualist who does the editorial writing tor the Grants Pass Courier. On things political they art almost never in agree ment; but last Thursday, (or once, they were. Each chose that day to do an election post-mortem. The common impulse however was as far as their agreement went, and was of course pure coincidence. Streeter, otter laboring as hard and as consdentiousl as any ed itor in the state for the men and principles be espouses, took his vacation immediately following the election; but his analysis shows neither the poll nor the subsequent interval have leavened bis views. And Bob Ruhl, who except on President played tho winning team, naturally finri. aaiUfartion la the Oregon results. Ruhl's explanation of "What Happened?", written for some of his "dared" Republican friends, cites as a "chief factor": "Tho superior quality of the Democra tic candidates, not only "man for man .... but a superiority over tho Democratic average of tko past." He gives credit also for the "Independent vote." the ones who Just balk at voting the ticket straight. He asserts too that the Democratic candidates represented JCatMiaed so Editorial page, 4.) Boat Tips, 2 Drown; Six Feared Lost CRESTON, B.C. CP)-Hopt for the safety of sis men lost when their boat sank, in Kootenay Lake, M miles northwest of here, dwindle rapidly Sunday night. The bodies or- tw mrt already; Bad 'been recovered, . , A boat with six lifebelts lashed Inside was found floating upside down oa tho ley lake at 11 a .pi. nunoay, . t The men sawmill workers are believed to have beta lost late Friday night oa their way from Tye, on the west shore of the lake, to Twin Bays, oa the east shore. The body of Cecil Stoughton, a lifebelt strapped around it, was found Saturday near the center of tho lake and Sunday morning that of Hugh Eilard, owner-operator of Ellard Contracting Co. and the men'a employer, was found Sun day morning. . Later, pilot Ken Huscroft spotted the boat from the air. Nearly 200 persons and dozens of small craft, as well as aircraft searched Sunday for the sis re maining men. Spray from the pro pellers of mot or boats taking part in the search froze on the vessels. Yule Parry 4 Hours" Too Lite for Lad KINSTON, N.C., Dec. S Ml - A special pre-Christmas party to have been held here today for a little leukemia victim baa been called off. Six-year-old Charlie Kennedy for Whom all the plans had been made died at noon, four hours be fore his last party was to havt started. Triggcr-Happy Half-Brother in Manhunt (Picture oa Wlrephaie Page.) SHAMROCK, Tex., Dec. I (II 'A posse cspturtd a trigger-happy gunman today crouching beside the slug-torn body of his half brother, whom he said he shot by mistake: The capture came arter an all-night manhunt for the pair In this Oklahoma Texaa border area. .. , ' - Family Car Vy rTally Falk "WtYt going to get a aew ear and Mnrti't ftiaf to stage Wage Demands By Engineers Bring Walkout; Freight operations of the Salem office of the Spokane, Portland 4c ' Seattle railroad shut down Sunday as result of i strike called in Portland. The ' stoppage idled more than 30 employes here and forced custom ers to seek other means of ship ping. Associated Press said the strike was precipitated by locomotive engineers of the company. The engineers reportedly were main taining picket lines at facilities in Portland Sunday. Roger C. Tetzlaff, Salem freight agent for Oregon Electric Rail way, which is owned by SPM, said the strike would lay off 10 switchmen, nine office personnel. roadmaster, lineman and about 10 trackmen in Salem. Several en gineers presumably would havt a vacation also. EleM Tars Daily The alem operation handles an average of over eight carloads of 1 freight a day, according to Tetz- I ,a"- Bu,k of. ,ne shipments from are iruii, wmoer ana paper mm proaucu. i wo irognia mui round trips daily through Salem Monday through Friday. One round trip is made daily Saturday and Sunday. As far as could be determined, no pickets were at Salem faculties Sunday. The Salem office and depot is at North Front and Chem eketa Street. Operations at Salem area firmi apparently will bo little affected by the shutdown. fUlt AHeraatt A-spokesman-at-rjregon-Pnlp j r.. . ..- .i... and Paper Company said that firm ships much of Its product! vis Southern Pacific railroad Other firms which might hsve been hurt can turn to SP or ship by truck , Shutdown of the Salem agency brings a quietude tt that usually bustling sector of North Front Street. , Engineers of SPAS struck Sat urday night as a climax to months of negotiations between tho rail road and the companri 239 mem bers of the Brotherhood of Lara motive Engineers. Demands in volved wagt increases. ' KackJeM Nariag . J. C Moore. SfU vice-presl dent, was quoted by tho AP ai ssying the strike wss "a reckltu playing with the economy of the Northwest." He said n would force the' company to lay off hundred of other employes. The AP said the atrike left only the Union Pacific railroad with service out of Portland to Spo kane. Moore ssid no conference be tween the railroad and the union has been scheduled. ' Moscow Claims Siberia Diamond Field Located LONDON. Dec. t Moscow rsdio claimed today the discovery of diamond deposits in Siberia "at least .as great as those in Africa and Brazil." The broadcast ssid the recently discovered - diamond fields were along the upper reaches of the Vllyujr River, a tributary of the Lena, center of Pussia'a biggest gold mines. It said the total Volume of the depoaita already , found is estl- mated as many nunareas ot I thousands of carats." Man Slays The pair earlier killed a ranch er's teen-sge son, who wss a posseman, and wounded twt offi cers in blazing gunfigbts. Officers named the slain gun man aa Junior Bard Myers, 32, with numerous aliases, including Robert Earl Hunter and Robert Myers. He waa from Greeley, Colo., and bad a long arrest rec ord In the Southwest and on the West Coast The captured gunmsn ' tjavt the name of James William Whitetrd, 21, Phoenix, Arts. Officers ssid he spparently had ne record but also went under the name of James Hunter. , Killed yesterday at dusk while hunting for the pair was Victor Lee Stephens, 19, son of a ranch owner on whose plact the shoot ing occurred during a fun battle. Texas Ranger Jim Paulk said Whiteard had signed a statement ssying be shot Myers during the night in the belief be was firing st an officer after tbe two fugi tives became separated in the darkness. Whiteard said he blasted away with a "aa wed-off shotgun at a figure he saw in the brushVand stayed where ha waa until officers found him today. . He denied knowing anything about tbe tbootuif al Stephana, Plans Approved for New St. Mark's Lutheran Church s -TBts sjqa) """i.r y vi we wht n yawy ; .as o" wmpt. mw 'ty . q'-rt ;v;v,; .4-4-v, : r , g; , Architect's sketch of new half-million dollar St Mark Luther aa Church shows the one-story building at It will look oa completion next fall. Congregatloai members approved building plans Suaday evening. To be constructed ea the Dulles, Ike Say Peace Outlook Good AUGUSTA. Ca.. Dec. J Un-Secretary of State Dulles ssid today believe the DrosDcctsTOf peace rn- the still tense Midlt East are "reasonably good.' At the same time. Dulles said after a conference with the Pres ident hert that the need to "re build unity and strength" of the North Atlantic Alliance has. been "tragically demonstrated by. Soviet action in Eastern Europe, par' ticularly in Hungary." ' The Cabinet officer, ending month's convalescence from an In testinal operation- act forts-that view la a prepared - statement which he said had been approved by Eisenhower. His remarks that both he and the President feel the chances for peace art reasonably good in the trouble-ridden Middle East were made at a news conference where he discused the statement. "Certainly I think anyone must be far gone in pessimism if he thinks the danger of war ia the Middle East today ia as great as it was a month ago." Dulles said when a reporter declared the pros pects for peace in that strategic area havt been painted somewhat gloomily in some quarters. Dulles flew hers this morning from Key West. FU., where he bad ben convalescing the last two weks from a Nov. 1 operation which disclosed intestinal cancer, Hia physicians said at the time they had removed all traces of the malignancy. . Rain, 'Warmer On Forecast The long spell of clear weather that began in Salem on Nov. II, will be broken today with some light rain, the U.S. Weather Bureau at McNary Field aaid Sunday. Forecast is for some light periods of rain today and Tuesday and slightly warmer temperstures. A high of SO is expected with a low 35 tonight. Temperatures rose generally in Oregon Sunday, the Associated Press reported, ending a severe cold spell of several days. Rain la also expected to hit many parts of the state because of a Pacific storm front, behind which aeversl small disturbances are spread out at 12 to 11 hour inter vals serosa the ocean. ; Soviet Units Raided VIENNA, Monday, Dec. 3 (AV-Well-armed Hungarian banda art striking nightly at Soviet unita in southern Hungary, reliable re liable reports from Budapest said today. Car Spurns Driver's Commands in Wild 'Flight' WINDSOR, Conn., Dec. t Seventeen-year-old Cynthia Moran set out today In the family car to drive her 14-year-old brother David to church. They never got there. Here's ; what police said hap pened: About a mile from home the engine started rsctng madly. Cyn thia put on the footbrakt, then tht hand brake, but the car con tinued to pick up aped. She came to the top of Broad St. Just before 10 a.m., and the car began to ract the aix blocks downhlH towsrd the center of townUpop. 12,000.) ' v Salem Church Okehs i . New Structure Plans St. Mark's Lutheran Church approved plans Sunday night for a new half-million dollar church building to be erected on the southwest corner of Marion and Winter streets. Bids will be let early, this week by William I. Williams, Salem architect who assisted Harold E. Wagoner in cTesTgimijeTtfiierure.- i AnnrAval wll at Missing Boy Found After Hounds Called aiataaataa News tWrtao ; - DALLAS, Ore., VtcJ J A year-old Falls City bay came came tut of the woods with hiidog Sunday evening after an absence of more than 27 hours. Norman . Wilson's bloodhounds had been on his trail It minutes and Polk County sher iff's deputies had been searching almost two hours when be wslked home unharmed shortly after, 7 30 p.m. Francis Hurst, IS, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Hurst, left his home two miles southeast of Falls City on Grant Creek Road about 4 p.m. Saturday with hia dog and hia deer rifle. Chief Deputy Robert LeFors aaid. The boy told deputies he had been unconscious for some time sfter slipping from a log. . France Gets 1st U. S. Oil SETE, France, Dec. 3 ufl-The first of the U. S. oil shipments promised to France in the Sues crisis arrived at this southern port today from Texas aboard the American tanker Silvan Arrow. The ship carried 2,0OO .tons of oil for tht refineries near here. Three other American tankers, carrying a total of 52,500 tons, art expected. Morse Declares U.S. to Avoid All-Out Conflict LOS ANGELES. Dec. I UuSen. Wayne Morse (D-Orti said todsy. we il avoid aa all-out war in the Middle East." He told a newt conference: lit we didn't have the United Na tions, we would have war todavk The U.N.'s procedure of letting ff steam hsi prevented a war." Meeting with reporters before sddressing a banquet of the Jew ish National Fund, Morse de scribed Israel as I "child of the U.N. and the only foothold of free dom in the Middle East." At the bottom of the hill Cyn thia taw some 40 churchgoers about to cross the street. Patrol man 'Robert Chriitensen stood in the street directing traffic. She turned off the ignition on the car, but the engine still roared. While ahe was racing down the hill she tried to fight tht shift lever into neutral but it wouldn't go., ' - - So she drove the car up on the esplanade, 'straddling' tt, and roared down 1 the middle of the boulevard, the horn blaring, ,U1 ward the crowded intersection. picking up speed all the time Christeiutn shouted for tbe poo-1 Depot, vU, i ... southwest corner of Marlon and Winter streets, the church wlU face MarioB Street Main building has 120-foot tower rising on far left aide and house Christian education unit ' Philadelphia church architect Approval was given unanimously at the fourth annual congregational fellowship dinner at Hotel Marion. Church building committee met Saturday afternoon to . approve final building plans. Planned exterior for' tbe one story building is Colorado pink stone. Structure includes tht main building, 70 by 15 feet, and a mailer win tar Christian educa- Uhloa activities. '.-V " " a.j .-' ----- a w iw T -- -Main floor of the building will include a nave which will seat 700 people, small chspel seating 120, and tht administration wing for office and conference rooms. Chu dren'l room with glassed-in front is planned for the nave balcony. Large social hill, Sundsy school facilities, kitchea and youth room will bs located in the basement. Thirty-one foot stage also is in cluded ia basement plans. Features of the building's ex terior include a 120 foot tower with a cross set Into tbe stone and a section of raised marble between the front windows facing Marion Street. Early Coastracilaa Congregation of 700 adult mem bers plans to occupy the building in tht early fall, according to the Rev. John I Cauble. Construction work should start in January. Acceptance of building plana climaxes three years of fund rais ing and planning for tbe St. Mark congregation. Group purchased Marion Street property in October, 1954following tht tale of the old church building at 343 N. Church to the Commercial Bank of Salem. ' Since that time, the church has remained at its Church Street locstion. leasing the property from the bsnk while swaiting comple tion of building plsns. Statesman Newsman Named Holmes' Aide , (Pteturt ta Pagt S.) ' Apsotntaitat af Thomas C. Wright Jr., as his administrative suliUat ta ehsrgt of press rela tlaas waa aaaaaseed Sunday by Caveraor-elect lUber) D. Hairnet. Wright, M, Is aa eight-year vet eras on the sewt ataff of The Orrgaa Statesman. Hia appoint ment was the seeaad to be snade by Holnaes flare he waa elected la tht governorship Nav. t., Selee , tlta of Harry -R. Swansea Jr., Ailarta awhile relatlaaa mas, alaa pie to get back, then jumped him self. Ht eatimaled the car was doing between 70 and 75 m.p.h. when It went through tht intersection. Just then Cynthia managed to Jam the gears into reverse. Tht car spun around, Jumped over tho esplsnade backwards, and hit an oncoming ear head-on. Cynthia and her brother, shak ing, got out, as did tht other driver, Albert Turgcon 07, anoth er churchgoer. the motor of Cynthia's car was till racing and its rear bumper was hooked with the front bumper of Turgoon't car, . Ides 30 smaller wing on the right will Seattle Bus Drivers Vote To End Strike SEATTLE, Dec. 3 uft-Members of the Street Car Men's Union who have been oa strike against lhjrjujLicjpaiJransitys Nov. 23, voted today to return to, work. " .! The union meeting wss called to give the mea a report on the union's .unsuccessful ettempt yes terday to persuade the stato Su preme Court to delay a King Coun ty Superior Court ; injunction or dering the - men to stop their strike. The Injunction was-against the union and three of lta officials. Ir compliance with the Injunc tion, Walter Nord. president of the union, asked tho men to return to their Jobs. About 1.000 of the 1,500 members attended tht meeting. They agreed to return to their Jobs. . Soon alter the meeting mechan ics and maintenance men report ed for work at the transit termin als. Lloyd Graber, general mana ger of the Seattle Transit System, said "every piece of equipment will be ready to roll Monday morning." But there was some doubt that all the buses would be back aa some of the drivers are out of town and others hsve secured new Jobs. Today's Statesman Ann landers Classified Comics ...... Crossword Editorials Homo Panorama -..A Obirwarles 11. Radio-TV 7. Sports 10.. Star Gaxer 2. Valley Newt Z I Wirepheto Pago ... 7.. as aa admiaiatratlvt aaaiataat waa aaaeaaeed 10 daya ago. A native of Oregea, Wright waa bara In Sams Valley, Nav. tt, lfCI, and was educated la Jack son Caaity sad Medferd srbaala before catering the University of Oregon It stady Jatiraallam. Ho has served as a member af Ike Marlea-Polk eaanty Dema. eratle Club board of directors and aa precinct committeeman " far Preclact 4S la the Sealh Salem area, s (Add. details Pagt I.T Suddenly, both empty cars, locked together, started to move. They wheeled backwards In a circle,, bouncing over the espla nade, going in one lane and then the other, at a speed of 20 to 25 miles an hour. - . Patrolman Chrlstensen ran along beside them, and after they went by him five or six timet he mansged to jump aboard Cyn thia's car. He said it waa all he could do to stop tht car with the foot brtke. When he finally stopped it, the other came to ahalt aa well, and before they could start moving rage Sec. . 4 I 11-13 II 7 . I il j i i Hunter Drowns in Villamette River; Rail" Crossing Accident Adds to Weekend Toll Tragic accidents took the lives of three persons In tho Salem area Sunday. Caylon Dwayne Amen, 27, of .620 Highland Ave, drowned ia U'illkmette River after tl o boat in which be was duck hunting with a friend overturned near Wheatland Feny.JO milri north of Salem, ' ' .: , A Eiicene vouth ! died under tho wheels of a 'Southern Street crossing in Salem after Emerson Lyndon Harris Jr., 17, who was living with a sister, Miss Dorothy , Harris, 1130X Nebraska Ave., in Salem. I Another Marion County ac cident took the life of a youth who died early Sunday morning from an accidental gunshot wound received late Saturday night at his Four Corners home. (Story at right.) Good Swimmer Amen was duck hunting with a brother-in-law at the timt of the boat accident shortly be- fore 1:30 p m. Said to be a good awimmer, he re-"Tr portedly rescued hia companion, Roray Sandau, 2S7S Maple St, , Sandau then clung to the over turned boat while Amen attempted to swim about 20 yards to shore for help, state police said. Appar ently hia heavy hunting clothes be came water-logged and dragged him . down, they aaid, Harris was killed outright In the train accident shortly before t p.m. His death was the 22nd traffic fatality this year in Marion County and the 26th In the combined Mar ion-Polk county area. Eaaiseer Saw Yeoth Engineer Robert McCalley of the SP's northbound Klamath pas senger train told officers he saw the youth lying across a rail but was unable to stop the train ia time. - The body was badly mut ilated by the accident, which oc curred about 100 yards south ot the Msrket Street crossing.' Officers said the victim had a crutch-type cast en his left leg from some previous injury. The surmise was that awkward walk ing because of the cast may have caused young Harris U stumble to bis death. Train traffic was stalled for "more thin" half an hour because of the accident. ... Search Called Off Amen's body had not been re moved from tbe river when search by state police was called off Sunday night. The search will continue today, officers said. . Frank Heraha, Wheatland ferry man, and another hunter, T. D. Stuart, 117 Fabry Rd Salem, saw the ovtrtonwd boat- and heard shouts for help, police said, Stuart went to tho stricken boat and pulled Sandau out of the water, but Amen bad already disappeared the laid. Bin B. Amen, the dead man s brother, said Sandau told him that Amen had swum to him and towed him to the boat before striking out for shore. . Caa Pima Worker Ames was aa employe of the American Caa Co., and a parttimt bartender at La Roche i Tavern. He was bora in Clayton, HI., and married Sept. 25, 1955, in Salem. He came to Salem from Mich igan in 1M4. , ... , ' Survivors are the widow, Mrs. LaVonne Amen,' Salem; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earle B. Amea, Salem; two brothers, Donald Earle and Billie B. Amen, both of Salem; and sister, Mrs. Wanda Let Gsrd-i ner, Astoria U.N. Troops Hear Gunfire U. N. OCCUPATION ZONE, Egypt, Dec. 2 un Twt loud ex plosions and random shooting ia tbe Egyptian sector early today intrigued Danish infantrymen as signed as U. N. police troops to euard the cease-fire oa the Sues Canal. Nobody waa hit. The Danes were spending their iecond night In the buffer tone they established Friday between the Egyptians and tbe British French forces near Qantara, 24 miles south of Port Said, prepara tory to handing It over to Indian infantrymen today. . MaJ. Niels Larsen, ne uamsn commander, ' aaid the shooting seemed to be within the Egyptian lines, . but. several bullets sang high over the heads of his men. . British officers to the north re ported the Egyptians opened fire four times with light machine guns and rifles, but dismissed it as probably "Just another case of Egyptian Jitters.'.' again he jumped out, opened the hood, and yanked the wires from the coil of Cynthia's car. That stopped the engine. Cynthia waa shaken up, but no one was injured. Police said Cynthia's car, a T950 four-door se dan, had just come back from a garage yesterday after a repair job; They believed that the link age between the gas pedal and the carburetor stuck. Turgeon drove his csr away. Cynthia's waa towed. There was no arrest. ' Officer William Vannie, who In vestigaled, said "She, did a re markable Job of handling the car." apparently tripping over a rail 1 , . , , , mm V " aa " ' hour Corners Youth, b. Dead From . StaUtaua Maws Sarvke . . FOUR CORNERS, Dec. 2 A IS-year-old Four Corners area youth died early Sunday morning at a Salem . hospital from a - gunshot wound auffered at hia home late Saturday night. State police and the Marion County coroner's of fice said the youth accidentally 'shot himaelf. ' Officers listed tht victim as Floyd Gene Elgin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Elgin, 485S State St. His parents found him In an up stairs bedroom with a head wound after hearing a shot about 10:45 p.m. A A automatic pistol was nearby. ,..-, The youth was rushed to a hos pital by Willamette ambulance but died at 2:57 a.m.' , State Police Sgt. Wayne Huff man said young Elgin apparently was lying on a bed playing with the pistol when It discharged. The bullet struck the youth in the left temple. . . Elgin wss a student at Leslie High School and was born ia Fari bault, Minn. . . - . He ft survived by his parents; six sisters, Annabelle, Katharine, Darlene, all of Salem; Mrs. Helen Apaido, Salem; Mrs. Lucille Cous ins, Portland: Mra. Mildred Foelk- er, Faribault, Minn.; and four New Ballots Ordered for Salem HcighS-sAVnterjVolo By CHARLES IRELAND ' Valley Editor, Tat Statesmaa , New ballots were ordered printed Sunday for we in to day's Salem Heights Water District election, and early voters may find the ink still wet on them. 1 ' water District Manager xioiio Wilson said tn new Daunts were scheduled to bo delivered shortly before-8 a.m. tod y when polls. open for, the spirited election at Salem Hcy.li Community HaiL The polls Oi j clou at I p.m. - Wilson said the district decided to order new ballots after objection was voiced to the original ballots having no space for writing in names. He said the new Daiiou provide apace for write-ins. With some 1.000 families eligible to cast ballots, a large vote is an ticipated. Several Electloas The Salem Heights election stands out today ia a series of fire and water diatrkt elections involv ing many mid-valley residents who live beyond city limits. One of the big elections Is at Four Corners, where residents of the new East Salem Water District will decide on a trs.OOO bond is sue. The funds would be used to construct a water system. Residents of an tOO-houst area immediately south of Salem also have a 10:30 a.m. date today at Marion County Courthouse where a county court hearing ia scheduled on a proposed sanitary district Others tt Vote r Other suburban water districts electing directors today include Vista Heights. Keizer and f our Corners. ;;i, . Suburban fire districta electing board members include Middle Grove, Wallace Road, Liberty-Sa lem Heighta, Keizer, Four Corners and Eola. The latter also will vote oa a tax levy is its election at Sa lem Academy. i In most cases, polls will be open from 2 to p.m. The Salem Heighta and Four Corners water elections are scheduled I a m. to A aingle candidate, naa neen nominated for director in most suburban elections. Ballot com petition not reported previously in cludes Four Corners, where Ray mond Russell and William Zengcr art candidates for one five-year term on the water board, and where Wilbur Flood and Ivan Brown are candidates for a five- year term oa the fire board. Vatlng Arras Other elections not reported previously include Vista Heights Water District, voting at vista Market, Ted Hobart candidate; Liberty-Salem Heights Fire Dis trict, Salem Heighta Community HaU (2 tt I p.m. only), Ted Thomp son, candidate; Keizer Water dis trict Frank Hughes candidatt. and Keizer Fire District, waiter kod- inson candidate, both at Keizer Fire Hall.' i ' - Outlying rural fire protection districts also will elect directors today. .:..., Sold 1st Dty . ' Read and use the Gift . 1 Spotter In Classified - Ads for the best ia new or used gift items. . LIONKL trata Ilk aaw, tt ft. aw track. Saaia tatraa. Ph. a-ana.' This Statesman Want-Ad ran in the Gift Spotter and brought fast action . . . y Pacific train near the Market He was identified by police as V ; . ' a '. '' - I . . . 1 r Pistol Wound brothers, Raymond and Frederick, Portland; George. United States Air Force, and Donald, Salem. Services will be announced later by tht Howell Edwards Mortuary. - I a a- I Lire cnu5 FLOYD GE.VE ELCIN ' Victim of Gunshot Students Riot At University ' Over Aies " ' V ANN ARBOR. Mich., Dec. 2 l Between 1,200 and 1,500 students ia two University of Michigan dor mitory units rioted tonight over of the evening meal. Shouting, "Wt want good food," residents of tht South Quadrant's began thumping their plates ant silverware in unison at the eve ning meal of corned bocf, S" cheese, vanilla pudJ.ng and nii.i. The rioting soon spread from one South Quadrangle dining room to all four and dormitory officials closed food lines and? cleared the rooms. The students then ' started for tht West Quadrangle, another ' dormitory unit, and mingled ia the streets between the two while police squads rushed to the scene to restore order. Pub Patrons Blink But Beer-Drinking Elephant Gets Suds HALIFAX. England, Dec. 1 iff A beer-drinking elephant ahowed up outside the bar of the Halifax Hotel and stuck a long, thirsty trunk through pub keeper W Uliarn McNamara't window. "Bring her some beer." said Albert Keaa, the tlephant't keeper. ; The barman rubbed hia eyes. To customers bunked. A third dashed for a rear door, McNamara drew a gallon ot beer in pints and alid the suds in front of Jumbo. She drank It all. The keeper from a touring cir cus paid for the beer and com mented: "She likes it atrong. It keeps her happy." . Winston's Pub In Competition With Churchill's .... ....... LONDON, Dec. S IR-A aew night club named "Winston's' opened directly across the street from a aether altery called "Chnrchlirt." The manager of "WlB.toa'i"4 la a fanner partaer of "Church. Ill'a.- .. Ia Britain's fatness farmer prime minister, Sir Winston Churchill, awar af tht cluba' existence and their name ? "Yes," said eae of Sir Wia staa's secretaries Whra StUet aboat tt, "and he's set amf i." :- V-'--." 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