Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1958)
2-(See. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sat., June 21, '58 Chrysler Charges Employe Sabotage DETROIT. Mich. UR Chrysler Corp. charged Friday that tinmen tified employes sabotaged two overhead cranes at its Dodge truck plant here by putting sugar in gas oline tanks and in hydraulic sys tems. The company said this halted work In the export shipping de partment, idling 85 employes. Chrysler was the second of the Bie Three car makers to charge sabotage following expiration of labor contracts with the "United Auto Workers three weeks ago. General Motors Corp. charged Thursday that unidentified era ployes had damaged 58 car bodies at its Fisher body plant in Kansas City. Mo. On Normal Schedule The Fisher body plant operated Friday on a normal schedule. The UAW disclaimed any respon sibility for the incidents. Commenting on the Chrysler charge, Arthur Hughes, UAW ad ministrative assistant, said "They will probably blame us for any thing that happens now. Ford Motor Co. reported its plants- have been operating with out incident. UAW members are under in structions from union leaders to keep on wdrking pending further contract negotiations and not to do anything that would provoke a strike or cause the companies to shut down their plants. Meanwhile, the union is going Pope Names Cardinal to High Position VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope Pius XII Friday named Gregory Peter Cardinal Agagianian a mem ber of the Congregation of the Holy Office, high governing body of the Roman Catholic Church. It was the second high honor this week for the Armenian patri arch and it brought mention of his name, along with those of several other cardinals, in talk about who might be the next pope. On Wednesday, Pope Pius ap pointed 62-year-old Cardinal Agag ianian pro-prefect of the Vatican's Conereeation for Propagation of the Faith, succeeding the late Samuel Cardinal Stritch, arch' bishop of Chicago. The cardinal also retained his post as head of the Vatican Con gregation for the Oriental Churcn, with nominal jurisdiction over Roman Catholics in the Soviet Un ion. , Three Hurt in Auto Crash Three persons incurred minor injuries about 4 p.m. Friday in a two-car collision at 12th and Hines streets SE, city police said. Officers listed drivers as Mrs. Miriam Withers, Salem Rt. 1, Box 516, and Mary Augusta Maurer, 896 16th St. SE. Three passengers in the Withers vehicle who sus tained slight bruises of knees and elbows were identified as Mrs. R. M. Fillmore, Gridley, Calif.; her daughter, Karen, 9; and Mrs. Clarence Shimer, Marysville, Calif. The second driver, Mrs. Maurer, and a passenger, Alice Davies, 85, were shaken up in the mishap, but no one required hospitaliza tion, officers reported. Man Charged In Burglary George Emory Droddy, 43, of 2065 Berry St. SE, was charged Friday night with the May 16 burglary of Hand-D Market, 404 High St. SE, city police reported. A Marion County District Court John Doe warrant had been filed in the case following theft of ap proximately $60 worth of cigar ettes, wine and other items from the market. Detectives said Droddy was ar rested as he was walking near his home. Bail was set at $2,500. DRIVER HANDED FINE Paul Paralta Arnada, 39, Salem Rt. 2, was fined $100 Friday in Marion County District Court after pleading guilty to a charge of driv ing while intoxicated. Arnada was arrested by state police Friday morning. Quality Education Weighed At Citizen Council Meeting TIMBERLINE LODGE, Ore. (AP) Quality education was the theme of a half dozen speakers at Friday's session of the West ern regional meeting of the Na tional Citizens' Council for Better Schools. Federal aid was their most' debated point Preceding group discussions, Herb Roberts of Evansville, Ind., a trustee of the national group, said one of the principal stum blinff blocks in discussing federal aid to education is that the role of the federal government has never been defined. Federal money is going into ed ucation steadily, be said, through the departments of Agriculture, Defense and others. But with no policy statement on either state SQUARE DANCE SAT. MIGHT, JUKI 21 FAILS CITY WOf HALL Easy Squares & Rounds Ada. 50c Potiuck Lunch , ' Verbecks Orchestra ahead with strike votes among 500,000 members employed in the Big Three plants to lay ground' work for strike action this sum mer if union leaders decide to abandon the present no-strike pol icy. Bean Packers Not Hunting Growers Now (Story also on page 1) This is the first year for several years that bean packers have not "been out in the field hunting growers," it was agreed Friday sight at the annual meeting of the Oregon Bean Growers Association, However, while reports from the USDA early this month indicated a 16 per cent increase In acreage in Oregon, processor-fieldmen pre sent at the meeting said that they were making no increase in tneir own contracts. Only Kolstad Can nery at Sflverton was reported as showing an increase in planting contracts, and this covered but 100 acres. Floyd Bates, fieldman for Paulus Bros., Salem, when asked for his "personal" opinion on the drop in price replied that "selling beans isn't as easy as it was a few years ago." Housewives, he said are more price-minded and not so quality-minded as they were. No One to Explain "If you put a fancy bean at 33 or 34 cents a can on the shelves in a supermarket, and right along side this, a bean for a few cents less, there's no one now to explain to the housewives that they are ac tually getting a much better buy with the higher-priced bean, so they take the lower priced," Bates said. While a few growers expressed the belief that "if we all pay less, we'll still have plenty of pickers," the majority of the growers be lieved they were "facing quite a picker problem." Lack of tran sients or migratory pickers was being greeted with considerable alarm, growers said. Walter Collette, Clear Lake, who was elected president during the session, spoke strongly in favor of organizing bean growers' bargain ing agency. However, a "show-of-hands" vote indicated a slight ma jority favoring no action on a bar gaining agency at this time. Heated Meeting Threatens For a brief time the meeting threatened to become heated when a grower asked "how come pack ers are -always at our meetings and we are never invited to the packers' get-together." Packer rep resentatives offered to leave, and some did ' rise to their feet and start toward the door, when other growers suggested that they "sit down again. Bates, taking up the cudgel for the packers, said he felt there was "lack of understanding between the packers and growers. We feel that the growers need to understand uie packers' problems just as the pack ers need to understand me grow- s." Howard Fuji, Farm Bureau rep resentative, said that growers were hoping that the labor camp sanita tion problems be left with the coun ty health departments, rather than be placed in concentrated commit tee which would cover all districts. There's a move to put farm labor on an hourly basis rather than on piece work, and there are those who want to make a social problem out of farm labor camps, rather than the economic problem which the farmers face," he said, as he urged the growers to work toward retention of farm labor cam pinspection in the hands of local health officers and to retain labor on a piece basis. . London's Busmen Go Back to Work LONDON (AP) Lendon's aoubledeck red buses began to roll Friday night after the end of a seven-weeks-old bus strike. The 48,000 busmen voted to go back to work after London tran sport chiefs promised pay in creases will extend to 12,600 men who work on buses in the suburbs. or national levels, education is thrust into emotional and political debate and decisions are made for unsound reasons. Typical of later discussion was the view of George Dewey of the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation that federal aid poses a threat to schools, and that of Tom Scan- Ion of the Oregon State Labor Council that it does not Lack of federal help in school construc tion and scholarships is a major deterrent to school improvement, Scanlon said. i SATURDAY NIGHT WITH tarry V Cascade Range ADMISSION . ...... 90t One lady Admitted free WITH EACH PAID ADMISSION BEFORE 9:00 VM. AUMSVILLE PAVILLION It Short Miles g. E. of Salem o'm Santlam Highway The Weather Max. Mln. Prep, .00 .00 .01 .00 .00 .00 M trace .00 .Of Aitoria Baker 86 Bend-Rdmond M Eugwie U Klamath FaUi 81 Medford 1 NewDOrt 69 54 S 47 SS 57 57 62 17 North Bend 87 Portland S2 Salem . M By The Aaeoclated Preae max mm rrcp Anchorage 70 99 f .01 Albuquerque 94 Atlanta 87 Boise Boston 57 Chicago 75 Cleveland 75 Denver - 68 Detroit 75 Cairbanke 90 Fargo , ...... 70 Forf Worth 95 Galveaton 90 Helena Honolulu 85 Kaniai City 78 Lai Vega J03 Lot Angelei 84 Miami 89 Minneapolli'St. Paul 68 New Orleant 91 New York 61 12 It S3 S3 62 SB 54 8 8 41 7S S3 SO 69. SS 71 61 78 SS 77 88 98 S3 94 98 60 a 80 61 M Omaha 61 .03 Phoenix 81 Reno 86 Sacramento 90 Salt Lake City 91 San Diego 75 San Francisco 71 Washington ti 1.M Today'! forecast (from U.S. Weatlv er Bureau. McNarv Field. Salem): Patches of low cloudiness this morning, otherwise fair through Sunday. The high today near BO, the low tonight H. Willamette River: 1.5 feet. Temp. 12:01 a.m. today: 66 SALEM PRECIPITATION Since start of weather year. Sept, To Date Last Year Normal 40.98 33.89 38.71 Tide Table (Taft, Ore.) (Compiled by U.S. Coast Js Geo detic Survey, Portland. Oregon) June Time Ht. ft. Time Ht ft. High Waters 11 1:02 ar Low Waters 2:02 am 6.2 1:33 am -1.1 3:50 pm 9.5 12 2:57 am 5.7 4:35 pm 5.7 S3 4:01 am 6.2 5:14 pm 6.0 24 6:15 am 4.7 6:15 pm 6 3 IS 6:40 am 4 3 7:07 pm 8.6 H:4B pm 1.9 10:17 am -fl.7 10:56 pm 1.7 11:04 am -0.3 12:11 am 1.3 11:56 am S.l 1:27 am,0' 12:53 pro 0.1 Berserk Dog's Body Wanted By Officials Marion County Health Depart ment officials still are anxious to find the body of a -dog which bit one man and tried to attack two others after going berserk Thuri day near Wallace Marine Park. The animal's savage spree ended when It fell in the river and pre sumably drowned. Its body was last seen floating downstream. , What officials want to determine is whether the part German shep herd suffered from rabies. F. W. Taylor, 969 Cottage St. NE, who was bitten on the hand by the dog, was given precautionary treatment by doctors. Jaycees Plan Safety Check Salem area motorists are offered free safety inspection of their cars in a traffic safety program coming up next week under Salem Junior Chamber of Commerce auspices. The safety check will be made Thursday and Friday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., in special lanes along side Willson Park west of the Capi tol, both on State Street and on Court Street. Mechanics will be on hand to make 'a 10-point safety check and report findings to the driver. The Junior Chamber will call at tention to this program at a cere mony in City Hall at 9:30 a.m. Monday. Unemployment in Jobless Insured Ranks Declines WASHINGTON (AP) The government reported Friday night that the volume of unemployment among workers insured for job less payments declined slightly by 10,000 to 2,817,600 during the week ended June 7. But the Labor Department s Bureau of Employment Security said initial claims, representing newly laid off workers, rose by 10,600 to 332,300 during the week ended June 14. A year ago insured, unemploy ment was 1,322,400 and initial claims were 214,400 for the com parable weeks. Device Eliminates Manual Handling Of Press Plates PLAINFIELD. N. J. (AP) The Wood Newspaper Machinery Corp. Friday announced development of a' device that can cast, shave, trim and cool press plates at the rate of four or more per minute. The Ultramatlc Autoplate ma chine will eliminate manual han dling of newspaper press plates, John H. Shea, president, said. Lightning Strikes Governor's Plane Lightning struck the plane re turning Gov. Robert D. Holmes from Washington, D. C, Thurs day night, ha told a press confer ence Friday. The lightning destroyed the aerial on the plane as it was leav ing Denver. The antenna banged against the plane all the way to Portland. V Riders Thailand. Group Visits State Officials rrr I XL' Y i -4 M Pausing during visit Friday to son, personnel director, State Industrial Accident commission (left), ana Labor Commis sioner Norman O. Neilsen (seated), are these Thailand labor chiefs: Suthon Thanyajareon (second from left), Brapandh Menakongka and Prasert Reechareon. Balloting Indicates Wheat Quotas Will Marion and Polk County wheat farmers went along with the nation Friday in apparently approving the continuation of federal marketing Quotas on the 1959 wheat crop. Associated mss reportea tnai returns from 29 states gave 54,666 for an 14,201 against the control program. It was a 38-state agn culture department referendum. Oregon fanners gave a whopping endorsement of continued quotas Arnold N. Bodtker, adminlstra tive officer for the stabilization pcagram, said the Oregon vote was 1,492 in favor and 218 against Quotas on the 1959 wheat crop. The favorable, vote was 87.3 per cent. In Marion County, 118 votes were counted, with 112 in favor of the measure and 6 opposed to it. There were 299 voters eligible to cast a ballot. Polk County voters registered 65 votes, 56 in favor and 9 against the measure. There were 255 elig ible voters in the county. According to Associated Press, returns indicated a favorable ma jority of 79.4 per cent. Approval of at least two-thirds of the grow ers voting is required. The returns were largely in line with those cast in five previous referenda on wheat controls. De- Federal Money for Expired Jobless State Pay Okehed It is all right for the state to take money from the federal gov ernment to extend unemployment compensation payments , to those whose state benefits have run out, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton ruled Friday. The opinion had been requested by Cecelia P. Galey, Unemploy ment Compensation Commission chairman, who said the commis sion was in doubt as to its auth ority to enter an agreement for federal money as provided in a recently enacted federal law. Thornton emphasized that under the agreement the commission would act as agent of the VS. in making payments to unemployed persons. The state would assume no liability for repayment of any such funds received from the fed eral government, he said. An Ayrshire cow owned by Frank Lindley of Snow Camp, S.C., has produced 102,403 pounds of milk In ten years. Mother Says. Slain Officer Started Jo Die When He Got Job on Force LOS ANGELES (AP) "How should 1 cry now when I have no tears to shed?" Mrs. Julia Montoniere's eyes were dry Friday as she sat in the living room of her home in subur ban Alhambra. She had just re ceived news that her son, police officer Thomas Scebbi, 24, had been shot and killed by an ex convict he stopped for a routine identification check. James Hooton, his leg shattered by one of Scebbi's bullets, was caught trying to crawl away and jailed. He said he fired in panic. "How should I grieve for my son when my grief is spentT" asked Mrs. Montoniere holding the certi ficate of her son's police appoint- DANCE TONIGHT DAYTON LEGION HALL Mush by LYLE WESTERNAIRES Aim. IM (Tu bwj :I0 f lltSO i - r: State Labor offices In 'Salem Be Continued partment officials said they ex pected returns from the other 13 ftates to be as strongly in favor o the quotas as. those already tabulated. The quotas are designed to re strict production and sales when surpluses exist. Klamath Falls Man Honored By Publishers CORVALLIS (AP)-Frank Jen kins, publisher of the Klamath Falls Herald and News and presi dent of Southern Oregon News papers with, interests at RoseburgJ and Medford, Friday received the 1958 Amos E. Voorhies award at s publishers conference here. The award was presented to Jenkins, 67, by Alton F. Baker, publisher of the Eugene Register Guard, at the dinner meeting of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Assn. Baker was 1955 winner of the award. In making the presentation. Baker referred to Jenkins as the "one-man industrial committee for Southern Oregon." He also prais ed him for his contributions in furthering the techniques of news paper production. The award is 'named for the president of the Grants Pass Cour ier Publishing Co. Conrad Prange, the Salem States man's Comes the Dawn columnist, spoKe on problems of newspaper column writing. ,. The 71st annual meeting of the ONPA will conclude Saturday. bene btoller and Edward Coman. publishers of the Woodburn Inde pendent, will be given a certificate of merit from the Federal Civil Defense Administration Saturday night at the annual banquet. The award is in recognition of an emergency newspaper published by the pair during 1957 national civil defense exercises. They used a farm tractor for power, hand-set type, and other unique improvised methods. MAN FOLLOWS CHILD City police said Friday night they were investigating a complaint that a small girl had been followed from the downtown area by an unidentified man on several occa sions. In one instance the man re portedly attempted to molest the child, officers were told. ment. "This paper, K says he became a policeman in 1956. It should say he started to die in 1956. "I didn't worry when he was in the Marine Corps, or even when he did a lot of boxing and foot ball playing. .. "But when I saw this paper, I knew. "Two years now, I have known. "Full Racing MocUfied" HARDTOP AUTO RACES !K0OLJ Time Trials 8 BIG EVENTS ; 1 FEATURE EVENT 50 LAPS HOLLYWOOD BOWL Salem, Oregon ' ' Ph. EM 46990 Adm. Adults . . . 11.50 ' Students . . . 90c Kids Under 12 Free With Parents i where they met Wayne Ander Fast-Traveling Yanks Impress Thai Visitors "America has so many paved roads and the people travel so fast," was the impression regis tered by three Bangkok, Thailand, labor officials Friday during a tour of State of Oregon Labor and Industrial Accident offices in Salem. The three, Suthon Thanyajareon, Brapandh Menakongka and Pras ert Reechareon, are in the United States for a year to study and ob serve American labor laws, tech niques ' and procedures. Their stay is under the sponsorship of the United States Department of Labor. While in Salem they are also visiting several local industrial plants. Their offices as chiefs in that labor division Department of Public Welfare in tiny Thailand is comparable to the positions of US. government bureau chiefs. Thailand, about the size of Tex as, is a country of 20,000,000 peo ple. It has many labor unions but they have only been in existence for a few years. "We have not had a chance to have the trouble with our unions that you have had in America, one of the visitors com mented. "Our unions are not very strong," another added. The visitors, who are staying at Salem YMCA, have been in Salem the past week. They will leave Sunday. Embezzler Sent To Penitentiary' PORTLAND (AP) A one-year prison term was meted Donald W. Vance Friday on his plea of guilty to embexzling some $13,000 from the Glass Workers Union. Vance. 45. had been secretary and business agent. When he was advanced to another position, his successor 'reported a shortage. Circuit Judge Charles W. Red ding was told that Vance had deeded his home to the union, re paying the loss in part. PORTLAND MAN BOOKED Laurence Oliver Keene, 27, Port land, was charged with driving while intoxicated by state police Friday afternoon on SalemPort land Freeway, Marion County sheriff's deputies reported. Bail was set at $250. He would bring girls nice, fine girls here to the house to meet me. Each time, he would ask, you like her?" "Always I said yes, but wait, Thomas. Wait a while. "I mourned him at night and I mourned him in the day, but I never told him. I knew I couldn't change anything. "And now it is done." 7:30 - Races 8:30 Fans Sit on At Rickv VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) The fans sat on their hands and hol lered like mad at Ricky Nelson's sparsely attended rockh' roll con cert here Thursday night. Just what they were hollering was interpreted differently by re viewers and Ricky's manager. The reviewers said the noise in the less than half-filled 2,400-seat hall consisted largely of boos, jeers and catcalls by a rowdy mob. Man ager Maury Foladare said it was a "wildly enthusiastic crowd of youngsters who just loved him fvery second of it." Reporters said the fans screamed and yelled through the first half hour of Nelson's appear ance on stage as the teen-age Hollywood figure "quivered and shook his legs through 20 num bers." "You couldn't hear a word Nel son said or sang. The kids Methodists Boost Budget For Oregon PORTLAND (AP) - Oregon Methodists 'boosted their budget Friday, heard that church attend ance is off 'slightly, and learned of assignment of ministers. They picked Medford for t he 1959 meeting. The budget of $415,155 is up $17,000 from that now in effect. Ministerial support is listed for $201,015 of the budget, with near ly half of it assigned to confer ence claimants and .reserve pen sion. World service and benevol ence was put down for $186,358. Bishop A. Raymond Grant call ed for more evangelism on hear ing that membership in Oregon was at 49,510, an increase of 192 in the year, and average attend ance was 19,967, down 180. The conference authorized Wil lamette University to tell in churches of the university's work. and Nov. 9 was designated Wil lamette Day on which churches may, if they wish, take offerings for the university. Washington Boy Missing Near River CENTRALIA, Wash. UV-An 11-year-old boy who vanished while playing along the Skoomumchick River was sought Friday night. The 'boy, Russell Johnston; had been play ing with his brother and friends along the river bank. He wandered downstream out of sight of his companions, idly tossing stones into the river. Some time later when they went to look for him, they, found his, clothes be side the stream. He could not swim, police were told. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. George J. Johnston. The father is a car salesman. GASOLINE CATCHES FIRE A can of gasoline spilled and caught fire about 10 p.m. Friday in a garage at the Kelly Bennett home, 2065 18th St. NE, firemen said. The fire was out by the time firemen arrived and. there appar ently was no damage, they said. MOTOR-VU DALLAS Gates Open 7:15 Show at Dusk ENDS TONIGHT! "PEYTON PLACE" "RIDE A VIOLENT MILE" STARTS TOMORROW! Yul Brynner In "BROTHERS KARAMAZOV Color Second Feature "HELL ON DEVIL'S ISLAND'' WOODBURN THEATRE "-. Wed. Thurs. Fri. . SiL "DECISION AT SUNDOWN" ' Randolph Scott PLUS - "APRIL LOVE" Pat Boone Open 7:30 Show at Dusk : Door Open 12:45 PJK. for KIDS SATURDAY MATINEE! Special Matinee Feature "My Friend Flicka" In Technicolor "Cartoon Carnival" "Batman and Robint Adults BOc Children 20 Eve. Show :45 Ends Tonite! "MERRY ANDREW" "UNDERWATER WARRIOR" Starts Tomorrow Cont 1 P.M. IviAYIIETURIIERj JwaSTKClNbiStoWUWOXOa . CO-HIT " ' Tab m James m - Lylo Hooter xArne ' Bettger NJV HisFirst aWBigMotionPictyret -m mum tMWDW fcMMtMlliU'tMri mm, . 1 Hands, Yell Nelson Show screamed through every number. But at the end of each number the silence was almost" eerie. There was no applause." The newspapers quoted Nelson as telling Vancouver disc jockey Red Robinson he had "never seen such a rotten display in his life" and said he was anxious to get back to the United States. Ex-HST Aides Given Prison Term Reprieve ST. LOUIS (AP)-Two former Truman administration officials Friday were given an eleventh hour reprieve from starting their prison sentences on convictions of conspiracy to defraud the govern ment. Matthew J. Connelly and T. La mar Caudle thus won time for a hearing in their bid for a new trial based on what their attorneys termed new evidence. No date has been set for the hearing on a new trial. The stay of execution order is sued Firday by Chief Judge Archi bald K. Gardner of the 8th U. S. Court of Appeals came just one day before Connelly and Caudle were scheduled to surrender" in St. Louis to begin serving two-year prison terms. The two officials were convicted of fixing an income tax case. DANCE TONIGHT CRYSTAL GARDENS Always a Big Crowd! 7 iNDfTONirs IJ. I. III. Ill CHILDREN r.r.r n U y MM w D.P. stmt" I y.il.ift'tfflr I 25c ANYTIME OPEN 12:45 ADULTS 65c . . STUDSNu aOc . . TILL 5 P.M. STARTS TOMORROW TEN THOUSAND GIRLS .7, DREAM b HER DREAM EVERY NIGHTI OPEN 12:45 AIR SPECTACLES TVf ; ,rtW,1uksS v. W 3 m-VJ ' imnjMKMV - nrnuiDnirc nuuuiLMi - guuwniiiu - tawmH Doors Open 6:45 P.M. ALAN UDD'OUYUdeHAVlLLrVO flCHNCOLO EAN JAGGER ' DAV10 FLEENGraE ''MELBOURNE Op.n7:15 WhjMW how at Dusk TV. TaWl'. Show Children Fro I ClASK GABLE BU$T LANCASTER bttleflld undoirl"- I th. I j IViaaaaaBBaaBaaJ mimm I GOLDEN-VOICED STAR Miaw, MARIO LANZA: I TO RENATO RASCEL- rtGGIt CASTLE Doors 6:45 r Hrl DAVID O. SEUNICrTS pr., -3 ROCK HUDSON - JENNIFER -OnbaSjp r i - colon MATuanri wnwoeope Color -wonoirs of Washington" Theater Time Table ' ELSINORE "MELBOURNE RENDEZVOUS" 7:00, 10:28 "PROUD REBEL": 8:49 CAPITOL (ContlnuoiM from 1 p.m.) "LWT HANDED, GUN": J:J7 S:SS, 8:91 "STAKEOUT ON. DOPB STREET") 1:32, 9:01, 8:30 GRAND FAREWELL TO ARMS": 8:10 "WONDERS OI" WASHING TON": 7:49, 10:90 NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN (Open ,7:15. Show.it du?k) "APRIL LOVE": Pt Boon "OPERATION MAD BALL"! Jack Lemmon HOLLYWOOD "KIDDIE SHOW'r 1:00 r "MERRY ANDREW": 7:00. 10:19 'UNDERWATER WARRIOR": l:0 Driver Cited After Crash SUteiman Ncwi Servtct WOODBURN Leo Clifford Bride, McMinnville, was charged with im proper changing of lanes following a two-car collision about 3:30 p.m. Friday on Highway 93E in Wood burn, state police said. Second driver was listed by offi cers as Raymond Henry Anliker, West Bend, Iowa. Both vehicles were heavily damaged but there were no injuries, police said. C0TT0NW00DS Dance Every Saturday Nite Tommy Kizziah And His West Coast Ramblers With Jack, George I Harvey, Plus Brady Sneed, Singing, Sweat and Hot Numbers Dancing 9 to 12:30 Admission 1.00, inc. tax NEVER BEFORE SUM LAPP BBSS RENDEZVOUS COLOR) Starts Tomorrow I EXCITING NEW ROMANCEI MARISA ALIASIO ; Qnmout colok -W5?S - I.l.. JL. t ERNEST HEMINGWAY' JONES VITT0RI0 DE SICA ;:' HPUtiW aaWrUi dtl9slU H nenm 9U9Mn i '4 FONDA STRASBERG n