t-(Sec I) Statesman. Salrm. Ore., Tups., Jan. 21, '58
Quake, Landslides
Hit South America
LIMA. Peru. Jan - The , rains and earth shocks continued
death toll mounted today (mm! in Peru today
earthquakes and landslides in the! At least ?o persons were killed
Pacific Coast countries of South, and 300 injured at Ksmeraldas,
America and record snow in Me x-; northern seaport in Ecuador,
loo h here bodies were still being
; ReporU (rem Callao. Peru, and pulled Irom rums left by the Sun
the Colombian island of Tumaro. day quake Tremors shook Quito,
said tidal waves followed an earth- the capital, and vural Chilean
quake in Ecuador Sunday. Heavy cities, including Santiago, the
camtal
The Weather
Mai. Mm.
r,cp
Aa a
14
Baker 3d II trrt
atona-ltaomand ..... 4S 25 0)
Eufan. 4S j;
Kiamath rails . M
Madford .10 ill
Newport 4 IS
North Band .... so 41 lu
Portland . .i 3" 27
Jem ii
PRKSS
Mm Prrp
25 0
24 .1.1
IS -
21 -
12 -14
24
12 .1
24
14 "I
1 .02
M J2
4S 1
10 -
ZS .4S
2
47
2
is T
S? J 07
IS
m .02
its
17
3
4T -
44
24
Anchor a 27
Albuquerque .12
Atlanta S2
Boise M
Boston V
Cnieaan .1
Cleveland 42
Denver 27
Dttroit J7
Tairbanki 4
Karen in
Tort Worm
Galveston H
Helena 57
Nnoftlulu II
Kansas City .1
Las Vegas S3
Lna Ana-ait i
Miami ft.
Mnpla-St Paul 24
Haw Orle ant 4
Kew York 37
Omaha 2.1
Phoenix SI
Bene 4S
Sacramento 47
Salt Lak City 17
taa Diego as
Saa Franrlace M
Washington 44
Today's forecast i from V Waath
Or Bureau. McXarv Field. Salfnu:
Partly cloudy ith acat'.ered show
ar today and cloud v with octagonal
rain tonifM and Wednesday Litil
erianfe in temperature with the
highest today near 4S; and lowest
tonifM near 3S
Wuiamattt River: 1 1 fret
Tamp. UN am. today: 37
SALEM PRECIPITATION
late aurt a steatker year. Seat. I
ta data Last Year Meraul
It SI 1X5 a 12
Tide Table (Taft, Ore.)
Caen plied by U S Coast Geodetic
' Survey. Portland. Or i
Rih Waters Lew Watara
Jan. Tims Helens Time Htifht
SS tm am iS log am 22
1 ZJ pm S 4 1 37 nan 0 0
SI 1 4) am IS lii am JJ
. Ifflw S OS im I J
M 1 IS am I I .it am II
1 43 pm SI 41 om II
tt 1 SO am 11 10 3 am J
141 pra 51 10 IS cm II
IS 4 2S am S I Il iS am I
4 1Spm 47 19 S3 om 1 1
IT SITS am IS 1734 nm 1 7
S 3 pm 4 J 11 3S Dm 1.1
Gigantic Jet
Seaplane Gets
Test Flight
sifnunnr i.
The
Kavy'j SeaMaster. huge jet - en -
fined seaplane touted at a possi
ble candidate for atomic flight in D-4.L-.L-. D-.I-the
future, was flowg today by DalinrODe Dell
ine Martin Co.
ne aiarun to.
Two previous experimental
planes crashed in trial flights and
were destroyed. , The model flown
today is the first of six evaluation
planet Martin is building. Eight-
m vuier pnwucxion moaeis also
are being produced by Martin at
. .IT- ..j,.
iscaiiu .n tuuir nivrr plant.
The world's first Jet seaplane,'
the swept-winged SeaMaster is
classed as tOO-m.p.h.-plus and was
designed for minelaying and photo
reconnaisance.
The Navy has said it will have
a lead role in its concept of mobile
seaplane striking forces which
would be able to operate from the
waterways of the world.
Family Found
Dead in Home
EDMONTON, Jan. M.iCP) - A
husband wife and their four chil
dren have been found dead at their
I . iliuifr nunc wiiivMucia.
farm home near Brawnfield. Aka , wjH be in Dallas Cemetery.
120 miles southeast of edmonton. .Nora died apparently of pneu
RCMP here said Monday night ' monia following a three-week ill
Melvin Douglas, the husband. and,ness.
the four children were found in She was born in Dallas on Feb.
bed, shot to death by a 22-calibre 18. 19M.-
rifle. j Survivors besides the parents
The wife, police said, committed are three brotehrs.- Dean, Eldon
suicide in a car in the garage, ad--
ding that she had been suffering
from a nervous condition for some
time.
Nixon Says
Of Nation
(Story alse aa page )
NEW YORK. Jan. 20 - Vies
President Nixon said tonight the
Democratic party is so divided "it
k incapable of effectively leading
the nation" tn the spsct sge.
Nixon said in a speech prepared
for a "Salute to Eisenhower" din
ner that since the Republicans
gained control of the White House
in 193 "the American people have
enjoyed the most prosperous
times, the greatest progress, and
the beat government the nation
has bad ia any five-year period in
our history."
.1 . M ,1 ! i .
Ana an M una ou Deep ac
complished without having Mr.
Truman around to tell President
REGULAR MEETING
CADV LOCAL 670
Wednesday-January 22-8 P.M.
at the LABOR TEMPLE
Teruuan authorities still were
trying to set through to two re
Eions where at least 128 persons
lost their Ines in earthquakes and
i landslides last Monday.
Rescue crews (ought their way
a Ions roads blocked by floods and
landslides to reach the Andean
hamlet of Pachaco where a land
slide killed at least 100 The may
or of Huaihibamba. the nearest
large town, telegraphed that 80
are missing, and rescue workers
A three-loot snow, heaviest on
record, blocked roads and trapped
several hundred persons in a wide;
circle south of Mexico City. Eight
persons who had died of cold;
were picked up in Mexico City's
streets. The Red Cross reported;
several children had been found '
frozen to death 20 miles from the '.
Mexican capital on the route to
Toluca
Snow blocked the roads from
the capital to Toluca. Cuernavaca.
Pur-Ma and Morelia. and a heavy
snowfall continued today.
Butler Jeers
GOP Speeches
WASHINGTON. Jan. M
Democratic National Chairman
Paul M Butler jeered tonight at
the Republican speechmaking
which marked the fifth anniver
sary ot rresioem tisennowerii isury alto Pae 1.) .build the Mountain Sheep-Pleas-becoming
president. "WASHINGTON, Jan a) - A ant Valley project."
"Tonight's Republican orations pjfic Northwest Power Co. ' "The Pacific Northwest Power
are somewhat , confusing." Butler fpp, official tonight expressed Co.' has spent 21? million dollars
said in a -statement. "Assistant ,orf today's Federal Power in engineering, drilling, design
president Sherman Adams says commission FPO denial of a and hearings in connection with
itt?ck in
e lag of
Adams'
le wants
ed as is-
the last five years. Mr.
It was interesting that Chair-
man Simpson of the Republican
Congressional Campaign Commit
tee was on the televised program
with the President. He suggested
last September that Republican;
candidates dissociate themselves 1
from the Eisenhower record. T
night Mr. Eisenhower went one:
step further. He suggested that the1
entire country just forget the
. lw;
I I J a, Ca, I
USBQ TO JlTa! 1.016
'n .1 s .
Portland Woman
PORTLAND. Jan. 20 uP An
apanmem nousc manager w
found strangled today by the belt
, t t. '
inxn nrr Dainruue.
Mrs. Bessie Vivian Hammonds,
36. was found on the floor of the
living room in her basement
apartment at the Douglas Court
Apartments at 1915 S. W. Park
Ave
Rites Arranged
For Dallas Child
Statasaaaa Newi asnka
DALLAS. Ore.. Jan. Final
ntea for Nora June McBee three-
year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert McBee of Dsllas. who
aiea samraay in a uaiiai uoapiiaii.
i wtu be Tuesday at I p m in mil-
,mss runerai l nape 1 wun tne nev.
and Irvin; four sisters. Wilms.
1 Janice, Donna and Lor a; and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H.
1 McBee. sll of Dallas.
Democrats Not Capable
Leadership in Space Age
Elsenhower what to do," Nixon:
said. Former President Truman!
'recently said Eisenhower was a'
great military commandtir in Eu
rope, "when he had snrhejrne to
tell him what to do." The former
president was critical of Eisen
hower as a budget, and policy
maker. I
Nixon said Republican differ
ences "are infinitesimal compared
te those that plague our opposi-'
tion." I
"At one and the same time."
be said, "responsible Democratic;
leaders are saying increase the,
budget and reduce it. Increase for- j
elgn aid and cut H. We are too
tough on the Russians and too
; ' V
Mars Men
i - M
; &- u j& inft M
mm
" v-a. n;A-x- :t , , it. 'n
aW - --4diasJa4t'-.i, '. -J--S - k -
EL PASO, Texas, Jan. 20 Readying ballistic missile's tank-car-sized
load of liquid fuel are Army specialists in pro
tective clothing. "Men from Mars" shown Include John
Martial, Bristol. Conn.; Brvan Ilentschel. Watervliet,
Michigan: Franklin D. Ketron, Kingsport, Tenn.; Vernon
Kelsev. Fairbault, Minn.
Northwest Power Official
Shocked at FPCs Denial
(,o and Oregon.
k m Robinson, chairman of the
bogrrf of PNP. said "the four
members companies 'of PNP...
were shocked to learn that the
denied the company a license to
Bank Reports
Near Record
Profits in '57
PORTLAND. Jan. 10 i The
First National Bank of Portland
today reported the third highest substantial increase in power costs
net profit in the bank's 9J-year,0 cust0mers aimply because
ni.Mory. i someone minus a nigh dam at
Net earnings for 1957 were $5.- z perce may built.
389 885. amounting to $3.37 per j - The invitation in the FPC order
share. President C. B. Stephenson (o fje on tne Nw p,,.,., gjte wjll
said at the annual meeting of , have to be considered by the corn
stockholders. I panies but such action will be aad
He said this wss 11 per cent.
. . ti :,h nMt.
, " fd ii L
ed at the end ol 195.
European
Unemployed
Increases
LONDON. Jan. 20 IP Unem
ployment is on the increase tn Eu-
I Ms. aaaaai iam at Aan-lJk SaaaarS tal Kat7tr.
!""
" ."TL. ZL .
, buBm tni alljfd
dujtrje, are tt6 by mu ,u(hor.
jtjet (or the trend that
,nowei uo. jn the
SS-ts
...h. ni iac7 ln(i mntinued
tne new vear
i
tnemolovment increased
in Great Britain, West Germany,
Belgium. Sweden and Finland.
There were a few more Jobs in
Italy. Austria and Yugoslavia, al
though Italy still had W million
out of work. 0
Nations with largely agricul
tural economies were unaware of
! any change and a few nations,
notably France and Switzerland,
, reported they had practically no
I jobless.
easy. Push a civil rights program;
and scuttle it. Get the government !
into business and take K out. i
"The Democratic -party today Is
so divided it Is incapable of ef
fectively leading the nation in'
these times. I
"We have a better record and a!
better program than our oppon-f
ents. The trouble is that, as usual,
Republicans do better and Demo-j
crats talk better. It is time for us;
to start talking not about what is
wrong with our Republican ad-j
ministration but what , is right,
about H. And we have to talk;
hard a soft sell won't do the
Job today." 1
ml
Ready Missile
area." Robinson said, adding:
""rhese sites in the area between
Hells Canyon lite and the mouth
of the Salmon River downstream
avoid damage to the salmon
supports more than 23 per cent of
the salmon run of the Columbia
River. Fish experts have been un
willing to state fjhat there is any
means of moving flngerlings
i small fish i down over high dams
such as Nez Perce.
"These private companies must
have their own greatly increased
power supply in the early l0s.
Certainly it is not in the public
interest to forrs thm tn ilsim
power generation and brinir ahout
,,., t0 the fish interests. The
if00 000 ved. by the
lour orsamzini comnaniM will
four organizing companies will
certainly be disappointed that the
companies are not being assured
of the firm power supply that
would result from favorable FPC
action, which would produce pow
er on time and as needed by them.
"The statement of the commis
sion that the denial of the Moun
tain Sheep-Pleasant Valley license
need not affect adversely the pow
er situation in the Northwest
seems not Justified by the record
of the hearing."
Mrs. Johnson
'Dies at Salem
Mrs. Sadie Prunty Johnson. IS.
1 ded Monday night at the home of
,her son-in-law and daughter, the
Rev. and Mrs. Wayne Greene, 1595
Jefferson St. NE
Mrs. Johnson had resided with
the Greene's since moving here
four years ago from Veatrice,
Neb.
She Was born Aug. , 1(72 In
Bondurant. Iowa.
A graduate of Drake University
in Des Moines, she taught in the
public schools there for many
years.
She was a member of the First
Christian Church in Salem.
Survivors besides the Rev. and
Mrs. Greene, are a sister, Mrs.
Harriet P. Munsell. Kansas City,
Moi; two brothers Bert S. Prunty,
Des Moines, and B. Frank Prunty,
Charlotte. N. C; two grandchil
dren and three great-grandchildren.
Arrangements of services art
pending at Howell-Edwards Mortu
ary. Woman Driver Cited
. Ball for failing to yield the
right-of-way to pedestrians was
raised from $1$ te $25 last Thurs
day and a 24-year-old Dallas, Ore.,
woman was the first to be charged
under the new penalty, city police
Mid. Mildred Ann Stamford wss
dted to appear Jan. 27 after she
was stopped Monday in the 100
block of High St. SE. officers said.
Willamette University
Dlsttnf vlshedl Artist Series
LEONARD WARREN
The Metrepolltin Opera'
leading larlten
January 22, 8:15 P.M.
fine Arts Auditorium
tassVwa $ Tka $1.1 4)1M
New $! '
iQuatemala
Electing
Rightist
GUATEMALAN Jan. Gen.
Miguel disoras Euenles, 2 year
old rightist, tonight appeared to
hae won a commanding plural
ity in Guatemala's presidential
election.
The presidential press office
said unofficial returns from1- all
but about 30 of the country's'' M2
municipalities gave Ydigoras
140.1102 votes
The figures showed leftist Mario
Mendez Montenegro running sec
ond with US 118 votes and Jose
Luis Cruz Salazar, a moderate,
third with 97.768.
Alt Small Districts
Press officer Fernando Molina
said the voting areas
still unre-
ported were all small districts and
their count presumably would
have little effect on the results.
Earlier. Cruz Salazar and a
spokesman for Mendez Montene
gro said they still held hopes of
surging ahead.
Congress is scheduled to meet
Friday to start checking the offi
cial result. The job may take as
long as 10 days. If no candidate
gels SI per cent of the total vote.
Congress will elect the president
from the two front runners.
Ydigoras said he expected Con
gress to elect him.
Sec. Mitchell
Outlines Ike
Labor Goals
VANCOUVER. Wash.. Jan. M
Secretary of Labor Mitchell to
day outlined for a group of Repub
licans what be said was the labor
program President Eisenhower
would call for later this week.
Mitchell said the President will
ask Congress for:
Legislation requiring unions to
make public their financial rec
ords on union activities and pen
sion programs. Penalty for viola
tion would include lost of tax-free
status and loss of certification as
a bargaining agent by the Nation
al Labor Relations Board. j
Elimination of the "illegal hot i
cargo" practice under which union j
members refuse to handle ma-i
terial from a struck plant. I
Modifying the Taft-Hartley Act!
so that "blackmail picketing" to
unman pleading io
ganization-could be
enforce or
eliminated.
Slate courts to take over in cases
of labor disputes in which the
NI.RB does not take action.
L'nion officers to be elected every
four years by a secret ballot.
Portland Zoo
Loses One
More Penguin
PORTLAND, Jan. ( Port
land lost another penguin from its
flock today. The bird, one of 67
flown here from the Antarctic last
November, apparently died from
aspergillosis, a fungus disease of
the lungs.
The disease has claimed II other
penguins here and at other zoos
where the penguins were shipped.
Portland still has nine Adelies,
smaller size penguins, and 15 Em
perors. At least one of the surviv
ing Emperors Is believed to be suf
fering from the disease.
All the surviving birds are re
ceiving special diets and anti
biotics. Pioneer Village
On Willamette at
Eugene Proposed
EUGENE, Jan. M 4) Eugene
and Lane County officials are con
sidering a plan for building a pio-
neer village on the banks of the
it;, ti - ... t - . - l -
Tfiiiainrur nivrr near nrrc.
Much of the land at the pro
posed site is owned by the Eu
gene Water and Electric Board
and the county. The Lane County
Board of Commissioners plans to
meet with the only private owner
of land in the eight-acre tract.
County Commissioner Robert !
Straub proposes that the develop- j
ment of a pioneer museum, a rep-
lica of a pioneer village, complete
with some of the county's older
buildings and a dinplay area for
antique farm and logging equip
ment, be a joint project between
the county and city
How the project would be fi
nanced has not been determined.
FOSTER'S LIFE, THEME
OF SKIT
Pupils of the fifth grade at Rich-
mono ocnoo. , n y presemeo a
A -1 I .1.. . - J -
program, n l.iiv oi oirpnrn
Foster." Included were s dramatic
skit and numbers by the room
choir.
Australia ii divided politically I
.it .i.i-. u.i. XL,
into six stales. Main industries
are wool, wheat and gold.
YOU U IE
SURPRISED
AT TH .
FAST RESULTS
WITH
CLASSIFIED
AOS
IIP"
v i a .
Comptroller Explains Operation
FP7"" ' i s i
Donald Sutherland, State Industrial Accident Commission comptroller explains tile operation
of the commission to Know
Shangle, Ted Jenny, Irwin
door Is Mrs. George Madison.
pagei 1. 2)
Most Salem
Within New
(Story ale Page 1.) i proved a new classification and:
Nearlv 90 per cent, of Salem city Pay P'an for city jobs, a step!
employes are now paid within the leading toward consideration of
range of a new salaey schedule 'PaV rISM nexl monU
now ready for final adoption. i I'nder the classification system
This was estimated for city al- drawn up by City Manager Kent
dermen Monday night as they ap-
"
Theater Time
Table
CLSINORR
"HfNCHBACK OT NOTRE
DAME"' S 4S
TRIPL1 DECEPTION.": 7 00.
10 S
CAPITOL
"DO NT GO NEAR THE
WATER" S 51
' nOCKABII-LY BABY": 1:00.
10 40
HOLLYWOOD
"OPERATION MAD BALL":
T OO 10 33
-THE YOUNG DON'T CRY";
10
Police Hold
Boys; Dog,
- mm m bssi
j-Jfj -Q fog ITI
A hat on a shelf, a barking dog,
an outdoor floodlight and a crowd
01 people sept inree oiayion area sa:a.
teenage burglars from completing Mayor Robert F. White de
Iheir intentions over the weekend, scribed the plan as "fair, good
Marion County sheriff's deputies and on the' conservative side."
said. j Department heads are not in the
The final result was that all three ; classified plan. They already have
ended up in detention at the Mar- f received salary adjustments this
ion County Courthouse after being year amounting to some $5,000.
arrested at Corvallis trying to sell Another $25,000 is on hand for cm
a six-inch iwitch-blade knife. Iployes' raises, but adjustments in
The trio, aged 14 and 15. started 1 their pay was put off pending the
their quirk-filled adventures Thurs-' aalary study of recent months.
day evening, after they kept the
mother of one of the boys busy
and sneaked a revolver and am
munition from another room.
Headed for Schawl
They first headed for Cascade
Union High School, where a crowd
of people frightened them away,
said Marion County Sheriff Deputy
John Zabinski.
Attempts io steal gas at Subli
mity were squelched by a barking ;
dog and an outdoor noodiignt, zaD-;
inski added. 1
Later the three entered the Tuff j
Stone Co. at Sublimity by remov-
ing part of a window and climbing
in on a stack of tires. Here a hat
on a shelf silhouetted by light from
a window caused them to retreat
with a gun aimed at the hat, think
ing it wss a watchman.
Gas Takea
Then a quart of brake fluid, a
hose and nozzle and a wrench were
taken from a tnjek. Gas was taken (
from several cars snd after sleep-!
'ing in the car at Stayton, two of i
I .. , . 1 1 1
we DOVS neaoea IO lorvaMia wnere
they were arrested on run away
charges.
The boys had planned burglaries
of a Scio service station and a Mill
City restaurant, but didn't have
time, said Zabinski.
The boys were held in detention
pending investigation, said Juvenile
officials,
'
Drag Races
End in Arrests
Three youths were arrested
Monday night on a charge of reck
less driving after five cars were
observed drag, racing on Commer
cial Street SE, city police said.
court WfJ Roberl u,
-IH
Cited to appear in municipal
ter Geer, 190 Judson St. S, and
'the two others, ages IS and 17,
I were cited to appear Wednesday
, in juvenile court, police said.
f f : ,U. iinntt.. .,.
IZJl iiT
apprehended about :M p.m. after
a 10-block chase. Drivers of two
other cars escaped, officers said.
GET AHEAD WITH A
BILL CLEAN-UP
Pay laftovw Matonal bills
ad rsstur nigh awnthlr pay.
smms sriib a prampt loan bara.
Wa sa say "YmI" whan yo
ah far a toon. FKana for yeajr
laaa ia ana viait, ar cona. la.
Leans uste OSM-UeeN Nfo-tnsra4 at lew eeot
10S SOUTH HIGH STREET. SALEM
OratmsJ rieer. Ore tan gullrflni PHeeMi 1-iiU
MNrNG$ IT ASfOINTMINT
. IW aasa) m 1H
Your State Government Day visitors, left to right, Verne
Wedrl and Mrs. Donna Martin, Secretary pictured through
(Statesman Photo) (Other pfcturei on page I) (Stories on
City Employes
Salary Range
Mathewson and Personnel Officer
--..Donald Hitchman, comparable
jobs under various city depart-;
ments were classified together and"
the classification given an as- ,
signed pay range. The spread in
most cases is between M and!
$60.
The plan does not include spe
cified pay steps toward the maxi
mum allowed salary. The actual
pay within a given range would
be up to the decision of the City
Council and Budget Committee at
the time of the annual budget.
Purpose of the new classifica
tion is "like pay for like work."
the city manager said. Besides es
tablishing standards of fair pay,
the plan is designed to help in re
cruiting and promotion of city em
ployes. The city employes' reaction to
the plan was described last night
at a City Hall meeting by Math
ewson as 'moderate." He said.
...ere was no oancing in tne
street, but on the other hand the
employes-don't seem disgruntled
over it either.'
Some would have preferred wid-
er pay ranges and some wanted
specified pay steps, the manager
Ex-Agent of
Salem Union
Files Lawsuit
VANCOUVER, Wash.. Jan. 20 I
Burt Indnn former huainosa
agent for the lem local of the
Brotherhood of Electrical Work-
ers. has filed a $90,500 damAee
suit against the union's interna-
tional.
He asks $75,000 general damages
and $15,500 special damages
tending he was wrongfully ousted
from his job in 195$.
The suit was filed here because
Washington law permits suits
against an unincorporated associ
ation if the papers can be served
in this state against one of the
association's officers, Landon's at'
torney said. He added that one of
the international's officers lives at
Wenachee.
Tk. .,,11 . l:tJ : j
"" rriuay.
Adult 50c Children it
Ends Tenite! Open :45
Filmed Entirely Off Limits!
J M KM. IATTU FN UK MUt
OM MMUB-Uiaffl Mt
imraw.ima-u
Co-Hit
"The Young Don't Cry"
Sal Mineo, James Whltmere
...
Starts Tomorrow!
'THE SUN AlSO RISES"
"THE HIRED GUN"
HI
0'
fWONS SOS IVfMNO HOOII
si sjl i
r
Ex-Reds Claim
U.S. Gave Russ
Key to Sputnik
! NEW YORK. Jan. 20 UP A
, former Red army officer claimed
today that Russia got rocket-build-
ing material from a key Nazi mis-
sile plaot abandoned by U.S.
troops at the end of World War II.
Conrrrnine- th unv affair an
American officer said written or- Purbrick was critical of the over
ders he had received indicated the j emphasis on science in President
plant and its contents were to be Eisenhower s federal scholarship
left for Soviet occupation. ' program.
The wartime German plant in-' Scholarships should go "ne
volved was at Nordhausen, in strings attached" to the best stu
East Germany, an underground , dents in which ever field they
center for producing V2's and oth-' want science or not, he said.
er rockets. I ,
Statements of the two army men 1 .
were in two articles entitled "We Inriirfmnnt Anaincf
Gave the Russians the Key
Sputnik" in the current issue of 1
Look magazine.
In one account, Vladimir Shab
insky, former Russian lieutenant
colonel and now an American anti
Communist broadcaster, said he
sent equipment to Russia.
The American officer. Mai.
Jame, p. Hamill. who then was
with ordinanr ihni-.i ini.m.
gence. relates the rnnditinna nn.
a.t .;,. h aaiH Am.ri.
troops first entered the area and
then left it.
Self Defense
Accepted in
Actor Beating
NEW YORK, Jan. 20 UP-A
grand jury today held a robust
laborer blameless in the fatal
beating of Broadway actor Gerald
Sarracini. who had a record as a
street brawler.
Sarracini, 30, who played a title
role In the current show, "Roman
off and Juliet." was beaten on
Broadway at 64th St. early Christ
mas morning by Monroe Gibson,
M. a Negro.
The General Sessions Court
grand jury accepted Gibson's
I claim he artert in slf 4fis f.
er the actor jumped him. A hear-
mg is scheduled for tomorrow at 1
I which dismiss! of homicide
i charges against Gibson is ex-1
peeled. ,
' Sarracini died the day after the
con-jbe'in and Gibson was arrested
a few hours later.
Ends Toaite
"Don't Go Near!
the Water"
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AMAZINO
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COLOR ar Of
8ABU
Professor at
WU Hits Russ
School System
Sputnik and the latest advance
in atomic energy present problems
that ran t he solved by mass pro.
ducing scientists. Dr. Robert Pur.
brick, Willamette University phys
ics professor, said Monday before
the local chapter of the Americas
Association of University Profes
sors. Purbrick opposed a frantic rush
to ape the lop-sided educational
system that brought Russia Iti
technological Jump on the U. S. ia
missile deyelopment.
America needs not more scient
ists, but "better trained ones," ha
said, "and not Just better scientists
but more and better scholars la
every field."
Makes Predletlea
Something "big" in atomic de
velopment is coming, Dr. Purbrick
said, that will require intelligent
thinking in every field, from art
to loology.
Within a few years atomic fusioa
the sun's method of producing
energy will be practical en a
peaceful scale, and "the whole
ocean will be a source of unlimited
power," he said.
This will make all countries about
equal In power, he said, and re
duce the military threat.
The big problems of this age win
come on the human level, he point-
a mil in dealine with ausv nwmla
Jho won't know what to do witk
the lajsure time technology ana"
I automation have liven them,
"Sociologists, especially, need to
' think annul Ihi'a " h. aaiH
to;""" "
Umatilla County
Official Dropped
PENDLETON. Jan. M 1 Cir
cuit Judge Philip K. Hammond to
day dismissed an indictment
against Umatilla County Commis
sioner Roscoe Keiley, accusing
him of attempted bribery.
i The motion for dismissal was
made by Kelley's attorney, Roy
Ktlpatrick of Canyonville. after
the Jury had been selected for Kel
ley's trial.
DOORS UfKN :4& P.M.
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