' m v w Ym '
fiPy'' E w ajf ay"ai i
t-(Sec. I) Statgsmtn, Salem,
British Urge NATO Settle
Cyprus Row; Plan
By STERLING SLAPPEY
LONDON, March 20 (iH-Britain
proposed today that NATO try to
mediate the British-Greek Turkish
dispute ever Cyprus but the plan
vat turned down quickly by the
Greek government and Greek Cy
priot leaden. '
There was no Immediate official
Neuberger Says Attack
By Morgan Unjustified
WASHINGTON, March 20 m
Sen. Neuberger D-Ore said to
day Oregon Public Utilities Com
missioner Howard Morgan has
made him the target of an "un
justified" attack for testifying in
the Senate rackets investigation.
"Any fair minded analysis of
my testimony will indicate that
attack was not justified," Neuber
ger said in a statement.
He added he hopes Morgan will
withdraw his remarks after study
ing a transcript of the testimony,
"as last year he withdrew an
attack on two other loyal Demo
crats, Gov. Averell Harriman of
New York and Sen. Estes Kefau
ver (D-Tenni."
Neuberger testified last week as
1 volunteer witness at hearings
Into an alleged alliance between
Teamsters Union officials, public
officeholders and underworld fig
ures in Portland. Neuberger said
he testified for these three rea
sons: "1. To defend the good name of
the city of Portland, where I was
born and raised.
"2. To urge that any responsi
ble evidence which might furnish
additional information on the rep
utations of the late Gov. Paul
Patterson and Mayor Terry D.
Schrunk (of Portland) be received
by the committee, in fairness - to
these men and their families.
"3. To pay tribute to the integ
rity of former (Portland) Mayor
Dorothy McCullough Lee,, whose
untimely defeat in 1952 set in
motion the whole regretable chain
of events culminating in these
hearings."
At no point was T critical of
Howard Morgan or his testimony'
be added.
Neuberger said Morgan "wsi
Opposition to
Bruce Eddy
Project Seen
WASHINGTON. March 20 U .
Stiff opposition wis predicted to
day for the proposed Braces Ed
dy Dam. which has cleared its
first hurdle in Congress.
Sen. Dworshak (R Idaho) said
an effort will tie made to elimi
nate the Idaho project from the
public works bill approved yes
terday oy a senate committee.
Dworshak is advocating a fed
eral Bruce Eddy Dam in the
north fork of the Clearwater Riv
er. The dam. along , with other
flood control and water projects,
would be authorized for federal
construction under the bill.
Sen. Neuberger (D Ore) has
announced he will seek to delete
Bruces Eddy from the omnibus
bill on grounds it would adversely
affect fish and wildlife. But Dwor
shak expressed confidence the
Senate will keep the dam in the
measure.
Serious opposition is expected
to turn up in the House, which
will take up the biU after the
Senate has disposed of it, Dwor
shak said. .
"An ill-advised campaign of
propaganda has been inspired. Jjyl
ina national wildlife organizations
to arouse opposition to Brucei Ed
dy Dam in many states," he de
clared. Dworshak said although the pub
lie works bill carries a 24-million-dollar
appropriation authorization,
no construction money will be re
quested for Bruces Eddy until cur
rent studies into how the project
would affect fish and wildlife are
written, into the bill by Dworshak.
. The federal Bruces. Eddy . dam
would cost an estimated 123 mil
lion dollars.
Schrunk Probe
Said Commenced
In May of 1956
PORTLAND. March 20
Stat Police Capt. Vayne M, Gur
dine said today that he began
Investigations f accusations
against Terry Schrunk "some
time in May." 1956.
The tip on the matter came
from Portland police officers-not
from Portland gambler Big Jim
.Elkins, he said.
Yesterday th Oregon Journal
said in a copyrighted story that
Clifford 0. Bennett had signed an
affidavit stating that a bribe
accusation against Schrunk was a
"frameup" by Elkins and his em
ploy, Raymond Clark, aimed at
defeating Schrunk in his pmiyoral
ity campaign.
March 19 Biggest
Day for Family
MIAMI, Fla.. March JO I
March 19 is the biggest day on the
family calendar for the Andrew
J. Novaks.
Their older son, Michael, was
born that day three years ago.
Two years ago. it was the birthday
of Keith Novak. Yesterday Donna
Lynn Novak was born.
And Puddles, the family cocker
spaniel, proved herself a real No
vak, too. She tad four puppies
yesterday.
Ore., Thur., Mar. 21. '57
reaction from Turkey.
All three nations involved are
members of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
In Athens, Greek Premier Con
stantine Karamanlis rejected the
proposal because, he said, nego
tiations must be between Britain
and the Cypriot islanders them-
criticiied by Sen. Mundt (R-SD).
He added that "in answer to Sen.
Mundt. I repeatedly defended Mr.
Morgan as a person of 'reliability,
integrity and honesty.' "
The senator did not give details
of the attack on him which he
attributed to Morgan.
Spellers Get
Too Good for
Word Lists
(Story als Page 1)
AMITY, March 20-The semi-finals
of The Oregon Statesman
KSLM Spelling Contest here to
night added two new competitors
for the Grand Finals and con
firmed a growing suspicion.
The suspicion was that those
who chose the basic word list pub
lished in The Statesman under
estimated the ability of the youth
ful spellers of the Mid-valley.
For the second successive night,
four semi-finalists were still in the
running when the semi-final word
was exhausted. So again, as at
Keizer, the word caller had to use
less familiar words to determine
the winner.
WIDE WORD KNOWLEDGE
Representatives of the two spon
soring organizations said after the
contest it appeared more than
ever this year that Grand Finals
winners would be students who
had a wide knowledge of words
and who could think words through
without relying entirely on me
morizing a published list.
To some extent, that has been
true in the pask J mlJob. jpellers
in most Grand Finals have faced
unfamiliar words. But there prob
ably will be more need for them
than ever come the final event
April 3 because the 1057 published
list apparently has not taxed some
contestants'- abilities. "But . there
still are some difficult words in
the published list; it is no 'breeze,'
by any means," one sponsor de
clared. Our spellers are just get'
ting better."
Host principal tonight was Albert
Yoder and it cost him, too. As in
former years, he had promised
the Amity contestant tl for every
speller who dropped by the way
side before Amity's. Since Betty
Mae Ingram of Amity out-lasted
her five opponents to take first
place, she won S5. Second -place
winner was Ronnie Wells of Sheri
dan. Both go to the Grand Finals.
TWO CONTEST JUDGES
Judges tonight were Mervin Jen
kins, valley editor of The States
man, and Dave Hoss. manager of
KSLM, who was also master of
ceremonies. Wendell Webb, man
aging editor of The Statesman,
called the words. ,
More than 100 spectators and
participants were served refresh
ments in the Amity school base
ment after the contest.
KSLM will broadcast an Inter
view with the three top spellers.
all of . whom won special certifi
cates of merit, at 3:45 p.m. Thurs
day.
The semi-finals Thursday night
are at Washington School in Wood
burn at 7:45 p.m.
Doctrine Study Due
KARACHI, Pakistan. March 20
(President Eisenhower's Mid
dle East doctrine will be the
main question before a Baghdad
Paet Council of. Ministers . meet'
tor 'here-In May." " -
Portland to Raise City
Bus Fares on Sunday
PORTLAND, March -City
bus fares will go up Sunday.
The City Council granted the
increases today, averting a threat
ened stoppage of Portland's mass
transportation system.
The Rose City Transit Co, had
said it would halt bus service j
unless the council authorized the j
boosts. '. " i
Under the new schedule, tokens, j
which now sell I for 50 cents, will I
be eliminated, and single fares
will be 20 cents. The weekly pass j
will cost S3 instead of the present '
$2.75. Fares for school children j
will remain cents a ride.
R. L. Clark, company president,
said the company now wants to
negotiate a 20-year operating fran
chise, and City ' Commissioner
Ormond Beaa said be hoped talks
could start soon.
Commissioner Stanley Earl
asked Clark if the company would
be willing to write the new fare
schedule into a future franchise. '
Gark replied that any fare pro
vision would have to be "flexible."
He said the company hopes to
improve the bus service, but that
city officials will "have to take
our word for it."
Clark rejected Earl's proposal
that the company continue oper
ation under present faces until a
rates accountant hired by the city
completes a check of Ros City's
financial condition. " j
-
Attacked
solves under a U.N. resolution.
The British plan would not set
tie the political future of Britain's
eastern Mediterranean island bas
tirm but is aimed to end deadly
violence and strife.
The Greek-speaking island ma
jority people want independence
from Britain and union with
Greece: the Turk-speaking minor
ity people want the British to
continue ruling the crown colony.
Colonial Secretary Alan Lennox-
Boyd told the House of Commons
Britain has agreed to let Cyprus
Archbishop Makanos leave his ex
ile in the Indian Ocean Seychelles
Islands if he will call for a stop
to anti-British violence on Cyprus.
Lennox-Boyd disclosed that, an
offer by Lord lsmay, the retiring
British secretary general of
NATO, to conciliate the differ
ences had been accepted.
Greek Cypriot nationalists in
Cyprus immediately attacked the
British plan. They said the issues
must be settled directly between
Makarios and the British govern
ment.
Themistocles N. Dervis, Greek
Cypriot mayor of Nicosia, said the
Cyprus problem is not a question
of NATO member differences.
"NATO is mostly made up of
colonial powers who would not
even agree to raising the Cyprus
Question before the V S.," Dervis
said.
City Official
Charged With
Halting Recall
YAKIMA. March JO I - Fi
nance Commissioner Kenneth
Schutt today was charged in Su
perior Court with stealing three
recall petitions seeking his ouster
from, office.
The charge of grand larceny
and violation of the corrupt prac
tices act was filed by Yakima
County Pros. Don J. Clark, who
alleged Schutt stole the petitions
March (. Two of the petitions still
are missing but one was found in
a storage room in the city clerk's
office.
Schutt, released on $2,500 bail
after arraignment in Judge Dolph
Barnett's court, refused to com
ment onjhe action, referring jiU
questions to his legal advisers. "
The recall was started by the
Citizens Committee for Better
Government after Schutt, as act
ing mayor, had fired the police
chief and appointed a Tacoma
man in his stead. The action was
nullified by the city's Civil Serv
ice Commission, which ruled the
firing was illegal
The corrupt practices charge al
leged Schutt interfered with the
rights of the voters to vote for or
against his recall by stealing and
concealing the three petitions.
Schutt will remain in office
pending his trial.
Meanwhile, all Yakima County
judges disqualified themselves to
day from bearing Schutt'i plea
for a restraining order designed
to stop the recall action.
Schutt asked for the order on
grounds too much time had
elapsed between filing of the peti
tions and their checking by the
city clerk and because they were
not stamped on receipt.
An outside judge will be called
in to hear the case.
Police Fund
Aids Youths
Salem police department's juve
nile fund came to the aid of three
youngsters from Washington Wed
nesday night when it was found
they had no money.
The lads, ages 15 to U, were
stopped about 10 p.m. when they
were seen carrying suitcases. Offi
cers telephoned the mother of one
Of the youngsters in Washington
who said they had permission to
go to Denmark, Ore.
After' they said they had no
money police sent' them to the
YMCA where .rooms were obtained
7 with police Tunds.' " " '
"I do not intend to lose one
more dollar," Clark said.
The company has said declining
patronage and rising costs make
the increases necessary.
THEY TURNED A SCHOOL
INTO A JUNGLE!
The shocking experience of a pretty teexner;
the lad with the switchblade knife-all the
startling drama of the novel U on the screen!
f)
M-G-M't DRAMA
BLACKBOARD JUNGLE
GLENN FORD km FUNC1S im tkm
3S
PIUS
GUY MADISON
aMes-.iMga.ge
Metropolitan Insurance
Pictured Is architect Ernest L. Weber's sketch of a proposed $45,000 Salem I story structure will have 4,000 square feet of floor space with a 70-foot
district office for Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. on Center street at the frontage on Center street and 61 feet on North Cottage street. Construction
northwest corner of Center and North Cottage streets. The L-shaped one- Is expected to begin within 10 days with occupancy expected about July 1.
Beck Jold
To Furnish
Records
(Story alse oi sage .)
WASHINGTON. March 20 (U
President Dave Beck of the Team
sters Union was ordered today to
appear next Tuesday before Sen
ate rackets investigators and to
bring his financial records for
1949 through 1955.
This key development, heralding
events that could be spectacular
interrupted testimony of Frank W.
Brewster, a vice president of the
Teamsters and chairman of the
union's Western Conference.
Brewster's financial affairs, in
tertwined with those of the Team
ster's Western Conference, have
been under searching scrutiny
Today's installment of the story
involved Brewster's personal and
financial ties with the broker,
George Newell, a racing stable
partnership with a Seattle pinball
machine operator and Teamsters
member, and a political donation
which Brewster said the Team
sters made to Republican Gov.
Goodwin J. Knight of California
NO RECORD CITED
Knight said in Sacramento "we
have no record" of any Teamsters
contribution for any of the gover
nor's campaigns.
There was testimony also that
Beck's son Dave Jr., and Beck's
financial adviser drew $750 apiece
for expenses at a Teamsters con
ference in Los Angeles 'in 1952
although they were not on the of
ficial delegate lists,
Brewster said he thought Beck
Jr. might have attended as a dele
gate from some local other than
his own and that the financial ad
viser, Simon Wampole, might
have been doing legal- work for
the union at the time. He said he
wasn't so sure the two weren't
delegates.'
Brewster testified that Newell
paid him a salary of some $5,000
a year in stocks for three years
for managing their stable he said
he got up every morning at 4:30
when he was in Seattle to walk
the horses.
Brewster said H "is not true
as the counsel for the inquiry con
tended, that these payments were
"commissions" ' Newell paid to
him.
RACING PARTNERSHIP
Subsequently, Brewster said, he
went into a racing partnership
with John Sweeney, the late secretary-treasurer
of the Teamster's
Western Conference, and - Fred
Galeno, juke box and pinball ma
chine operator, who is from "one
of the first families of Seattle."
Galeno is a member both of the
Teamsters Union Local 174 and
of the Seattle Assn. of Pinball Op
erators with which another local,
353, has a contract. Brewster said
he saw nothing wrong there, ei
ther. He spoke of a Teamster politi
cal contribution to Knight but
didn't specify the amount or give
any date for such s gift.
Brewster said Knight appointed
Harold Lopes, business manager
of Teamsters Local SS, to the Cal
ifornia State Board of Harbor
Commissioners. ,
And he said he might hav writ
ten or talked with Knight about
the qualifications of Charles Tait
of Seattle, who was appointed di
rector of the . San Francisco Port
Authority sr m.OOO year.'"
Knight issued a statement say
ing, "'W have no record of any
financial contributions by the
Teamsters union to any of my
campaigns.
"All labor activity In my behalf
wa handled by groups within la
bor itself. "
'The appointment of th port
director of San Francisco wss
made tr uie isoara oi naroor
Commissioners and I had nothing
whatever to do with n."
In March 1955, Knight's office
Of TEEN-AGE Jgrfjf
IN REPRISALI
rrmn
I J ....... .. . r.- n .. ... . 7. t
Portland Firm Low Bidder for New
Building; Work to Start in 10 Days
E C. Owen Construction Co. of
Portland, with a bid of $21,882.31
was apparent low bidder Wednes
day for construction of a proposed
Salem district office of the Metro
politan Life Insurance Co., at
Center and North Cottage streets.
Other bids were: Morrow Con
struction Co., $21,109; E. E. Bat
terman, $29,955; H. G. Carl, $30.
974; Mills Construction Co., $31,.
924; C. W. and Willis A. HiU, $32,
738; and George Johnston Con
struction Co., $38,122. All bidders
except Owen were Salem firms.
The bids were being studied bjt
a contract award will be made
soon so construction . can begin
when razing of two houses oj the
site is completed, architect Ernest
L. Weber said. Construction is
Police Probe
Mistreatment
Of Youngster
MEMPHIS, Tenn., March 20 I
A 15-month-old girt who police
said had been brutally beaten and
mistreated was taken to a hospital
today in critical condition. Her
parents were jailed on assault to
murder charges.
Homicide Capt. W. W. Wilkinson
said tjie child, Charlene Brown,
suffered fractures of both legs in
a beating several months ago and
that the legs had healed improper
ly for lack of medical attention.
Wilkinson said the mother ac
cused the child's father, Edgar
Brown, 30, of administering the
beating. They are Negroes.
The baby, Wilkinson said, also
was found to have suffered these
additional injuries:
Front teeth broken off almost at
the gums.
Sores and scars on the body,
chest and head.
Body scalds from being placed
in excessively hot water.
Hospital attaches said the child
also was suffering from malnutri
tion and dehydration.
Wilkinson said Brown accused
the mother of knocking the baby's
front teeth out by throwing her on
the floor end "stomping ' her.
Police said they investiaged the
case after a relative of the mother
complained that the child was
being mistreated.
Swimming Pool Vote
Due at Pendleton
- PENDLETON. March 20 I
A special election will be held
here some time in May on a
proposed $350,000 bond issue to
finance construction of a covered
swimming pool
About 170 swimmers could be
handled by the pooj, which would
be open the year-around.
issued a press release reporting
he signed emergency legislation
allowing the San Francisco Har
bor Commissioners to "employ s
person not a resident of Cali
fornia.' In San Francisco, an aide to
Tait said the port director was Is
suing no statement, was taking no
calls, and had arranged to see an
attorney.
The Taft-Hartley labor law for
bids direct union contributions to
candidates for federal office but
not to those for state positions.--
Mccieiian told Brewster people
might "get the impression from
the way you handle your personal
matter that you might handle un
ion affairs in th sam slipshod
way.".
Brewster replied that. "I'm not
able to tell what people think."
Possibly, McClellan ssid. there
was something "improper in the
large profits Newell obtains" from
his business with the Teamsters.
Brewster said that "I see nothing
wrong."
GENERAL im ELECTRIC
APPLIANCE SALE !
Now In progrtss at Mentor, and you got (
doubio what your trado-in is actually
worth. Tho pricts aro right, tool i
' frit GifH (
GREEN MONEY V , ' .
STAMPS DOWN f (
AS ALWAYS 3 Y.rt Pay 7 f 9 F.M. ToniftJ j
Ui NORTH
Firm Reveals
. . 1 ,
expected to start within 10 days,
and occupancy is set for July 1,
he added.
Total cost of the one-story build
ing at the northwest corner of the
intersection' is expected to be
Theater Time
Table
(I.SINORI
"TITf WRONG MAN" T OO. t it
"CHASING THE SUN" t it
CAPITOL
(Continuous from 1 p.m.)
"THE WILD PARTY" 1:0. 4:01,
1:0, 10:09
BOYS AND A OUN" 1:47,
i so, s u
GRAND
"REAR WINDOW" I II
"INDIAN TIGHTER" 1:00, 10:4
HOLLYWOOD
"BLACKBOARD JUNGLE" 1.00,
1014
"REPRISAL" 10
NORTH SALEM DRIVE TS
Show Tlmt T p.m.
"FIRST TEXAN" Jol MrCrea.
"SHARK riCMTir Victor
Mature.
Senate Hearing
Set on Wildlife
Appointment
WASHINGTON, March 20 W)
The Senate Commerce Commit
tee today scheduled a hearing for
March 27 on President Eisenhow
er's nomination of Arnie J. Suo-
mela to be commissioner of fish
aad-wildlife.,.ia . the,.faterior.Da.
partment. Suomela. a native of
llwaco. Wash., formerly was Ore
gon director of fisheries.
Chairman Magnuson (D Wash)
also announced a hearing April 9
on bis bill to give President Eisen
hower authority to put merchant
shipping on priority basis in a de
fense emergency.
That proposal will be considered
by a subcommittee. At the same
time it will take testimony on an
other Magnuson bill to impose
stringent restrictions on the fed
eral Maritime Board's authority
to transfer merchant vessels to
foreign registry.
Lumbermen. Plan
Annual Meeting
PORTLAND, March 20 Of) The
West Coast Lumbermen's Assn.
announced today that Herman, N.
Mangels, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
will be one of the main speakers
at its annual meeting her March
2T-28.
He is expected to discuss th
money market as related to the
lumber industry. ,
Annual reports will be given
March 2$ by N. B. Giustina,
Eugene, president, and H. V.
Simpson, executive vice president.
Other speakers will include R. M.
Ingram, Aberdeen, vice president
for Washington, and Eliot Jenkins,
Springfield, treasurer.
Plans are being made for 150
lumbermen from western Wash
ington, Oregon and northern Cali
fornia. Hungry Seagulls
Causing Leaks
VANCOUVER, B.C. (CP) - It
was men winter for seagulls
hereabouts, so bad they took to
eating building material.
Apartment dwellers in a plush
West End block fThe Georgian
Towers) complained that, water
was leaking in through the aluminum-framed
windows.
Contractors checked th frames
and inserted caulking compound,
but still complaints came in.
A sharp-eyed resident discover
ed why the leak persisted.
Seagulls had pecked away the
csulking.
COMMERCIAL
New Salem Office Plans
i ' ;'
1 h r .MITt oyoitTAN lift
ki ll .
wtVTlst.,ii pi
about $45,000, Weber said. The
construction bids do not include
pumbing, heating or electrical fa
cilities. L-SHAPED BUILDING
The Building will be L-shaped
with a 70-foot frontage on Center
Street and SS feet on Cottage
Street. It will have 4,000 square
feet of floor space.
The flat -topped structure will
have Arizona sandstone facing.
Some walls will be of reinforced
concrete while others will be of
frame construction with cement
asbestos board and rough cedar
backs. It will have blue laminated
beams with a suspended ceiling
and recessed lighting. The whole
building will be air conditioned.
Washrooms will have tile floors
and lobby floora will be of vinyl
asbestos tile and slate.
PARKING SPACE
An . adjacent parking lot will
have apace for 10 cars. '
The new office will reportedly
be financed by Joseph E. and Ma
bel DeWitt, who hav a 25-vear
lease on the nrotiertv ownrnt hv
Charles W. and Esther M. Brock
The DeWitts will lease the building
to the insurance firm.
William H. Velton, manager of
the Salem office, said there will
be accommodation for 20 salesmen
and a 12-person office staff,
R. J. Schmidt, manager of the
real estate department of State Fi
nance Co., and Nelson and Nelson
Realtors, represented the DeWitt
interests and will manage the
property. Ohmart and Calaba real
fr, tirn?--'Pited.tlie . Brocks,
Metropolitan's Salem office has
been situated on the third floor
of the Masonic Building for the
pasi jo years
Boating Club
Picks Officers
G. Dudley Henderson, who was
unopposed for the post, was elec
ted commodore of Salem Boat it
Yachting Club Wednesday night.
Henderson, a parole officer, sue
ceeds Robert Hullette, Statesman-
Journal advertising artist.
Other officers elected at the club
meeting in Salem Memorial Hos-J
pital chapel are Lee Dugger, vice
commodore; Melvin Elkins. rear
commodore; Leora Johnson, yeo
man; James Armstrong, finance
officer.
Hullette, Robert Elfstrom Jr.,
Al Harder and William Fersuson
wer elected to the board of direc
tors. HUH .
smn h m. m
HAS ALL THE TRIGGER -
WAMNCnCObOff
S ALANLADD A N K2 i
MINIAHO EjJ WmL)
EDMOND O'BRLEN r--
Adventure Co Hit
lrsanT"i'ra-i
rSfiV
STARTS
"A xOk
W
fF
Plas Fr
-I MAM MMMiJ
J
rr-r 1 , 1
....
, ,
The Weather
Max, Min. Prrp,
Aitoria
41 SB JIT
Baker
. . S4
It
37
41
32
37
3S
41
.IS
3
.OS
.00
.30
trara
.01
.s
.so
..in
J
Bnd-RMlmond SO
Eugcn SO
Klamath rail 47
Med ford
Nawport ... 50
North Brad SO
Portland .... SI
Saltan M
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
.Mas. jnin. rrcp.
Anchorage 34
Albuquarqua 45
20
40
44
3
33
30
31
33
30
15
17
50
4
IS
s
30
45
54
M
15
57
3.1
S
13
44
31
SO
49
43
Atlanta
SS
Boisa
Boston
Chicago
Cleveland ..
Denver
Detroit
Fairbanks .
. SI
. 3.1
3S
. 34
. 59
. 3
. 31
57
. SO
7
,M
71
. SS
7
. 74
' 45
S7
37
S3
.7
lino
Tort Worth
Galveston
Helena
Honolulu
Kansas Cily
Las Val
Los Anfelei ';...
Miami
Mnpla-St. Paul
New Orleans ....
New York
Omaha
Reno
Sacramento
.7
.OS
S3
SS
Salt Lake City 63
San Ditto SS
San Francisco S
Washington SO
Today's forecast (from US. Weath
er Bureau, NfcNary Field. Salem I :
Partly cloudy today, tonight and
Friday with scattered showers this
morning. Isit tonight and early Fri
day. High today near S3. Low tonight
near.. 3e,
Willamette River: S3 fett.
Temp. 11:01 a.m. today 3S
Salem PrtrlpltaUon
Since start of wtathtr year Sept. 1
To date Lust Year Normal
35 29 SO tS 3131
Russ Author
Launches 2nd
Red Attack
MOSCOW, March 20 U-K con
troversial Soviet author has out
spokenly attacked the restraints
of a Communist society.
-The Soviet newspaper Literary
Gazette published his attack to
day but ran along with It the criti
cism provoked by his remarks at
a recent conference of Soviet writ
ers'. Th author is Vladimir Dud
intsev, whose novel, "not by
Bread Alone," caused a sensation
by Implying criticism of Commu
nist bureaucracy.. ,,-.,
The newspaper said Dudintsev
questioned whether creative dis
cussion is possible st all in the
Soviet Union.
"Why should we not be allowed
to swim, like young swimmers
do?" Dudintsev was quoted as
telling the writers. "On our own,
most probably, we would not
drown. Alas, I feel all the time as
if I'm wearing the kind of straps
children sometimes use when they
are learning to-walk,- they inter
fere with my swimming." -
Id
STARTS
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Tornadoes; ,
Heavy Rain
Hit Texas
DALLAS, March 20 WUTorna
does, snow, soaking rains, dust
and a. flash downpour made up
the weather picture In Texas to
day. The tornadoes skipped about In
west Texas. Snow and soaking
rains cheered Panhandle folk,
who have had a prolonged
drought.
Blowing dust reduced visibility .
in the Wink. Midland and El Paso
a.eas of west Texas.
The twisters that hit near Big
Spring, Crane, Seminole and
Stanton did no known property
damage and no injuries were re
ported. .
The Weather Bureau forecast
possible tornadoes tonight for a
120-mile band from San Angelo to
Bryan.
Small craft warnings for south
easterly winds reaching SS m.p.h.
and -shifting to westerly Thursday
were hoisted along the Gulf from
Brownsville to Morgan City, La.
Moving Images
Transmitted by
Phone Wires
PHILADELPHIA, March 20
The transmission of moving im
ages over ordinary telephone lines
was demonstrated publicly here
tonight. Sponsors said it was th
first such demonstration.
The demonstration was of a new
television system developed hy the
Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsyl
vania during a year of research.
It was said to have applications
in industry and government and
to cost less than conventional sys
tems.
C. Raymond Krause, general
staff transmission engineer for the
company, made the demonstration
at Franklin Institute.
The system is known as narrow
band industrial Jelevision. It-re.
quires a frequency band width of
250,000 cycles, or one-sixteenth of
the four million cycles currently
used for television transmission.
The system is said to be caoa-
ble of transmitting a clear-moving
image over ordinary telephone
lines up to 15 miles, but the com
pany described its main function
as industrial.
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