The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 23, 1975, Page 13, Image 13

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    Inside TV
LA. May Pay to See
Ball Games on Video
Br EVE STAKR
HOLLYWOOD, AprU H STARR
REPORT: The good citiiena of Lot
Angeles, who have beca getting
lot ef Pacific Coast League base
ball quite for fret via television
lor tome years now, art goinf to
(tart screaming Ilka aa angry
I lock of wounded eaglet if a plan
now being hatched in Brooklyn, of
all placet, cornea to full flower,
Under cover of
darkness, t h e
Skiatron toll-TV
people nave re-
portedly tigned
an agree meat
with the Brook-1
lya Dodgers to I
televise via pay- V
at-you-tee TV all "
77 of the Doag
ert ' home lamet
IF the Dodgers desert Brooklyn
next season in favor of Los Ange
les. The Dodgert art supposed to
be guaranteed $26,000 per game,
or $2,000,000 per sea too, in what
has been described as a $10,000,000
deal, ever i period of five years.
tt also meant that a total of
14,000 homes in Los Angeles will
have to be wired Into the Skiatron
cloted-circuH system, and that's
the bare minimum figure "needed
to collect me $26,000 guarantee lor
the Bums. It doesn't take into eon-
sideratloa any profit for Skiatron,
which most assuredly Isn't going
Into this thing out of the kindness
of Us heart.
HOT OtOTSi Tat "Mia Cen
ter?" Hear baa one a cut feted
ap far He aaceaalag "The Mar
riage Tefctr" BUI Blshwe. Barry
Mergaa, Jeeee Walla, Lee Palriek
and Bey Reeerts. all of wheat
have regalar relet la five differ
eat half-hear TV eerlea . . . Deat
anew where the Usee gees.
Jeaaae Woodward, who was dle
eevereelby Dies. PewtH at a 'Tear
Btar Plarkeeee'' film, la amw start
ing ber third yeareaeer esdashre
eeatratl le tOU Ceatary-Fex.
Seems like ealy yesterday, tt tela
a phrase, gae'a sew stadriag aet-
g Baser Teay Qatea.
ICopyrisht ItST,
General reetures Corp.!
Scientists Ask
Radiation Dose
Records Kept
Patience Theme
Of Dulles World
Policy Speech
- - The.- Bkialrea
waking a earvey ef Ike Lea Aage-
let area, deahtlete ta aa effort to
Had maybe ttt.tet rabid baseball
faaa who wUI be willing to have
their TV acts tampered with, 8eie-
Irea aaeo breaght nto their
-aad a aict Uttle eeis I
tailed ae that they wax have the
rare privilege ef deeeeluag a total
at a beat tzt per aeatea la
that they might aee tat Dodgers'
tatlre heme schedule.
Frankly. I think it's a good deal
especially for the viewer. The first
thing you do, of course, is make a
working arrangement with your
neighbors. They bring tbt food and
drink and you pay for the game,
or vice versa, or split it all down
the middle. Whichever, yoa can
only win. A hot dog at the bell
park costs 15 cents, s glasa of
beer $0 cents. Not to mention park
ing, gat and oil, admission ticket-
and lips. You can take a small
boy to a ball park and wreck
five-dollar bill beyond all repair.
Whs happens to attendance at
me games is tomeuung tiae again,
and the entire experiment if it
ever comes to pass will be eager
ly watched by every ether major
league team in the country. Ball
players are performers, and ae
performer likes to work without
aa audience. Movie actors do It all
the time, of course, but they're
. a different breed. They work from
a script.
, The greeted script a ball teaas
eaa have b a eUdlaas faB at
screaming tans. Aad wbta yea eaa
tee a game far U teats lay
comfort at year ewa beats, who
Is geiag te speed $1 to ge aH, the
. way eat to the par? My aeaafclaa
H that eaee the Lea Aagelea faas
get ever the shock ef tetlag their
free baaebaU ea TV, they'll cat-
lea la a harry to the prospect ef
walehiag staler leagae baaebaB
for a mere eaarter.
BOD 8ERLINO, who was broke
only a few years ago. has now
added a Peabody Award to his
connection for his remarkable
"Requiem for a Heavyweight,"
which appeared en CBS' "Play-
bouse 10 early last fan. It's
. an the more remarkable because
It marks the first time since the
Pat body Awards were stablished
IT years ago that a writer has
been singled out for the honor.
Other winners this year art "The
Secret Life of Danny Kays," "You
Are There." "World in Crisis" and
"Youth Wants to Know."
IF NOTHING ELSE. Joseph
Cettea hat a alee tease of
mer. With ha "Oa Trial" eerlea
already havhsg beca rates led by
Ma speaasr, at baa aeaelheleat
agreed to appear ea Iht May I
Teaaeatee Ernie Ford anew aa the
gaeet star. Tat foraaatl a satire
ml -nm Trial
STARDUST: Having teen Tom
my Sands on the Jack Benny
"Shower of Stars." I will risk
Irritating aO the teenagers in the
house by offering him the follow-
ing free and entirely unsolicited
advice: Get a haircut, and then
go find a tailor who knows bow to
make clothes Instead of soot suits.
Those elongated horse blanket
Jackets that button at the waist
line went out ef style years ago
-and were never in style for my
money. Besides, one Elvis Pres
ley is more than enough , . .
NBC's two big color specisls next
October will be "Annie Get Your
Gun," with Mary Martin, and "The
Irving Berlin Story," . . . The new
hour long CBS show, "The Big
Record." originally scheduled to
have gone into the Jackie Gleaaoa
time on Saturday nights next Bea
ton, has now been set for Wednes
days, replacing' "Arthur Godfrey
and His Friends." The "Perry Ma
son" film aeries, With Rsymond
Burr, takes ever the Gleasoe spot
fStory alee ea page esse.)
NEW YORK. April 22 in -
The theme of patience ran
through See. . Dulles' 1.500-word
speech to the annual Associated
Press hincheoa here today.
He dismissed Red threats
against free world collective se
curity with - the assurance that
collectivt measures are here to
stay."
He held out hope for eventual
disarmament and said "It is not
essential that controls should en
compass everything at once."
He professed to see progress to
ward aa ultimate goal tf sell-fov
ernmeat and independence for all
nations desiring it
Dulles admitted that the ques
tion of how to deal with revolts
such at that staged in Hungary
is not easily answered."
Ha declared: "We seek the lib
eration of captive nations. Wt
seek this, however, aot la order te
aaclrclt Russia .with hostile
but because peace is in
Jeopardy and freedom a word of
mockery until the divided nations
are reunited and captive nations
are 'set free. , ' -,"
Net laeMag Violent Revert J.
We revere . and - honor those
who as martyrs gave their blood
for freedom. But we do not. our
selves, incite violent revolt. Rath
er we encourage aa evolution to
' By FRANK CAREY)
AP aVteace Reporter
WASHINGTON, AprU Ml-
member ef the genetica commit
tee ef the National Academy
Sciences today criticized what be
called the government'a failure to
carry tut a year-old academy rec
ommendation for national sys
tem of individual record-keeping
ea radiation exposure.
Dr. H. Bentley Glasa of Johns
Hopkins University did so in
report te the NAS't spring meet
ing. Ht declared that last year
estimate ef the average reproduc
tive cell exposure ef Americans
to medical and dental X-rays and
ether medically used radioactive
substances has since been revised
upwards from tbt original esti
mate of $ roentgens from concep
tion te age 30. The revised esti
mate for that key reproductive pe
ri oa, nt taw, is that the "probe-
ote ooet ' it 4.1 roentgens.
Medical, Dental Eipetaree
Glass told a reporter that while
the academy's genetics commit
tee had used "broad' terms in
recommending a national system
of radiation record-keeoinf. the
primary intention wat to promote
keeping of lifetime records on
medical aad dental radiation ex
posures. .
Ht said it was "presumed" that
i regards exposure from atomic
fall-out, all people would get more
or lets the same exposure, where-
thtrt are individual variations
with regard ta medical and dental
radiation exposure. Also, he not,
ed, radiation records already are
sept ta exposures of workers in
atomic energy plan's.
May Be Near M Per Coat
Clearly referring te medical and
dental usee of radiation, be told
the academy la prepared re
port:
"Our uncertainty as to the ere-
ciae levels of current exposure te
aruiiciti sources of radiation, and
UM : , rough estimates which
indicate that the level mav wen
oa approacnin s ner cent ef the
total recetnmeMed (averaaal
'permissible dose' for the aenaral
population (10 roentgen from an
man-made sources of radiation in
cluding- fall-out from conceoUoa ta
age mil mace K imperative to set
up. some sort ef pemanal retard
ing of txpoauaes. difficult though
that nsy be from every practical
rutin ml 1m
And Dulles addressed the follow
ing question to Russia: "Soviet
rulers are supposed te be hard-
headed. For how long, we may
ask, will they expend their re
sources ha etmbatiag histor
ic forces for national freedom
which are bound ultimately te pre
vail?" . .
Of the Middle East crisis. Dul
les said he supposed it wasn't a
popular decision for the United
States to stand with the U. N. in
opposition to Israel, Britain and
France wbea they attacked Egypt.
Yet it vu smperative if the
world was not to go es it went
when the League covenant vu
disregarded," he continued.
Of this country s commitment to
the U. a., Dulles declared, "Wt
are not ashamed as a powerful
nation to pay the tame decent re
spect for the opinions of mankind
that we thought proper when,
young and weak, we sought our
indepdendence . . .
Ceaferaa to World Law
"But, as wt have teen, the char
ter prescribes not merely peace
ful settlement, but settlement ia
conformity with justice and inter
national law.
"We must, and do. seek also to
advance that goal. For example,
we are now striving to bring about
conditions in the Middle East bet
ter than those provocative and
dangeroua conditions out of which
the recent violence was born,
This cannot be done quickly or
tu at once. When .emotions run
high, and a tense ef grievance is
deep, those moat directly involved
are more eager te gala partisans
for their cause thaa te heed im
partial counsel.
''Wherever such situations oc
cur, they are always worsened by
Soviet Intrigue. ...
We know. In domestic affairs,
that R Is hard to apply just solu
tions when racial or class passions
run high. The task Is equally hard
in international affairs and some
times war seems to offer a short
cut to the desired end.
"But that seeming is an illusion.
The only dursblt solution is
which comes by patiently, i
lutely and resourcefully seeking
justice and the rule of law. That,
at least, is the faitn and decuca-
tioa of your government.
Salem
Obituaries
Dog fight Tourney Set
KYOTO. Japan. April 8 laV-A
dof fight tournament is being ar
ranged here despite animal lov
ers protests. The rules lor uree
minute matches specify a dog is
beaten if it begins "paieed ' yelp
ing" or retreats three steps.
Steak P. Wise,
lO'e 'feafilMtK n . k ...
Salem, la the city April ta, et the
if ' fMre. Services will be htld
Wednesday. A aril Mth mt lean .
Co, with concluding services at Le
iwhi, vwneterjr. .
Pee bM ' "' . " '
uii ran ant of Sfl V. Liberty St.
A?H' ot St. Leaves
rJS"- "fu ? Infold. Salem.
Services will be held Tuesday, April
SS at I D m. in Mm fIumI h
HeweU-Edwarda Funeral Hm. n.
nrwu moot win oniciate. later
ate!. City View Cemetery.
BesMvlavs rarfcer .
talent, April Itth, at a local hoapl
tel. Survived by daushtera, Mrs. Ilo
iae Evens. Salem. Mrs. Betty Marr,
Salem. Mrs. Caroline Wtlrher, Ora-
ton City, Ore. Slaters. Mrs. W. C.
fileon, Temple City, Cell!.: Mra.
John Jttareon. Decatur, Ind. Six
Rranoaona, ene arenaaaufnter. erv
ee will be held Tuesday, AprU I
at lt:M a m. In the Chapel of the
VlrsU T. Golden Co. Commits I serv
iree will be et l:M jn.. Portland
Memorial Mausoleum. Or. Brooks
asoore enicieuns.
Beatrice Skk
Leu resident of Lskeview. Ore.
at a local hoepiteL April gist. An-
aouneemenu or aervires will ba
made Isler by the VtriU T. Golden
te.
Behest Sunlay
Late resident af 17 Rose at..
this city April It. Survived by wife.
mre. Joanne n. Stanley, seiem,
MOW
ly GLADYS FAIKII
ACCORDING TO THE MAP, WE HAVE. TO
CO LvrAtK AN INCH AND A HALF AND
uEFT.A QUArcTEp? 71
A
DAILY CRpSSWORD
g. Bucket neop 31. rabu.
a. Eye
10. Xxsmlna
tioa IT. turn up
1. Jostle
20. Scandi
navian JlAttie
Inhabitant
12. Cuido't
highest note
21 Mttal
IS. finch . "
2. Girl t name
2T. Lair
2f . Continued
stories
ACROsM
1. Accumulate
a. Venetian
navigator
It. Kindled
again
II. Custom
IS. Packing boa
14. Departs, as
a ship
15. Pronoun
la. Rodent
U. Permit
It. Type ef tar
21- Cirri
nickname
24. Mummed .
it- Assumed
name
10. Urge
onward
It. Type ef
SS. Reach across
24. Appearing
as if eatta
4 'Hawthorn
It. Frece
water
40. A wit '
lOreettitf
1H.M
43. Marine
mammal
4T. (hade ef red
41. Kind ef duck
41. Peru of
ships '
16". Place again"
DOWN
1. Bow
1. Sheer (obs )
I. Wlnglikt
4. f treb
.Cubic meter
a. A deaeert
1. tfan'a name
bird
25. Con.
duit
it. Cut ..
17. Genua
ef
the
' Illy
IS. Had
en.. - - '-
40. Lumps
41. Toward the
sheltered
WW lP
i S ifisiierlii' jRjj
aaeare :
Vesterear's ,
4l.Gna
- - nick.
v name
44. Man t"
nicknama
44. Hasten
1 I I4 I' I' I I' !
TT ypiz
JT ar
Tt WtG
Manufacturer Will Tell
Of Alleged Union Payoff
i.u.i,..,. m , u.i itm 14, .iiKwiiari,
Tuceon, Arts, rather, Orrln Stan
ley. Portland. Brother. Howard B.
Stanley, Portland. Services will 'be
1:10 p.m. Tueeday, April SI, at
Clousn-BarricK runerai Home, 'or.
Paut Xewtoo Pellns efticUUns.
Lena aausceeb WhlU
Lete resident ef Pendleton. Ore..
April SO. Mother of Mies Mary
Louise White. Portland: Mra. Prencei
lienor Moon, Pendleton. , Suiter of
Moras Snead, Portland. Grand'
mother of Larry Moon. Corvellls,
and Mary Anne Moon. Pendleton.
Services will be held Tuesday. April
si at H 3S a m. In the chenel el
the- W. T. Rladon Co. Concluding
sevrleee St City View Cemetery. Key.
noy ash wiu emciaie.,
Famine Menacing
Million Indians
NEW, DELHI. April 21 (A-Fam-
ine menaces a million people ia
eastern India.
Floods, hail and thunderstorms
destroyed much of Bihar State's
winter food crop, officials of that
section ssid today. More than
109,000 bead ef cattle nave died.
Food prices are soaring.
Bihar seeds 400,000 tons of food
grains te tide the papulation ever
until new crops come in, officials
said.
The food minister in New Delhi
said he would survey the situa
tion. , ,
TEXARKANA, Tex.. April 22 Iff
Manufacturer Earl P. Betten
dorf today, said that he would ap
pear before the Senate Rackets In
vestigating Committee next Mon
day afternoon to give his story
oa alleged payoffs te a labor un
ion. ..
Bettendorfs name came up la
the bearings last Thursday when
member of the committee asked
why Bettendorf was not indicted
connection with the alleged pay-
offa while some union men report
edly involved bad been indicted.
Bettendorf, wbt operates a
White House
Lawn Packed
For Egg Roll
(Mctare ea Wlreehete Pagt.)
, WASHINGTON, AprU 22 -The
south lawn of the White House wss
turned into a teeming playground
today as 1S.11 youngsters and
adults fathered for the annual
Easter egg roll. ,
Somewhere ia the crush, once
again, the idea of aa egg roll
rot lost
It turned into a ballplaying, rope
skipping, sunbathing romp.
There Is no planned bunt, no egg
race, no program, except for mu
sic by the four service bands. The
White House Easter egg roll,
steeped in Washington tradition of
the last century, is Just a do-it-
yourself snree. The msin idea
seems te be simply to roll eggs
down a hill at Easter time.
Attendance was not up te par,
despite the warm, sunshiny day.
This wss sttributed to the absence
of President and Mrs. Eisenhewer,
who are vacationing in Augusta,
Ga. .Last year,' when the Eisen
howers greeted the guests, the at
tendance was M.037.
Youngsters were standing in
lines when the gates opened at
a.m. and they . kept coming and
going up to the 4:31 pjn. closing.
warehouse pallet manufacturing
plant at Ashdown, Ark. had dis
patched a wire on Thursday to
Sea. McCleUan (D-Arkl asking to
appear before the group "ae that
your committee can correct the in
justice done me at today's bear
ings ..." v-
Bettendorf today said that be
had received a telegram from Mc
CleUan, asking him to appear next
Monday and that he had wired his
acceptance.
Joseph McHugh end Robert M al
loy. Teamsters Union' business
agents who have appeared before
the committee, are accused of ac
cepting S4.2M from Bettendorf in
Scranton, Pa.
Bettendofi told newsmen that
"we were forced to pay" ia or
der to get trucks into the Toby.
hanna Signal Corps depot which
wat then under construction in
Scranton. The only settlement we
made with the union was above-
board," he added.
He said that the committee
members "do not know the true
facts," but said the FBI "under
stand this case 100 per cent." -
France-Facing
Money Crisis
Amid Prosperity
PARIS, April 23 UK At the
time of its greatest prosperity,
France is facing ene ef its
severe financial crises.
The trouble, experts arree.
that the nation is living beyond its
means. -The government already
has started the bett-Ughtening
process, but there art fears that
the limited government action
may not be quick enough or se
vere enough to ' avoid trouble,
Factories are running at a rec
ord clip and the production rate
ia still going up, unemployment is
almost nonexistent, stores are
bulging with merchandise and. de
spite gasoline rationing. . traffic
jams have never been so bad ta
Paris. But France must import
heavily te keep this prosperity go
ing, and is running out of money
to pay lor imports.
Reserve Owladlee Sharply
The figures tell the story. In
December IKS, France had cur
rent , balances of 11,120,000,000 in
gold and dollars. By Feb. 2S. 1967,
this operating reserve had
dropped to S17t.S71.SS0. The na
tion's deficit in the European pay
ments union in March was almost
4 million dollars, trimming the
margin in working - funds still
more.
A privsle loan wat floated In
the United States for a million dol
lar! to help pay for oil imports
after tiie sues crisis. la addition,
France has drawn 1M million dol
lars from a credit of 26m million
opened with the International
Monetary Fund.
There is a strategic reserve
which has not been touched. The
bank ef France holds am million
dollars as a backing for the cur
rency. This fund is considered
almost untouchable.
Tree Memak era Itemised
Economists have been coming
up with plenty of answers, not sl
ways the same answers. But al
most all agree that these are
among the priaelpal troublemakers:
The severs winter ef 1955-54
Lwhicb killed . many crops and
iorcva r ranee 10 uuvuii mere
agricultural products thaa
before:
The war in Algeria, which bat
drained off manpower from pro
duction, and called for internal
consumption of products that
should have gone for export and
forced importations such at heli
copters:
The Sues crisis, ' which required
oil purchases from the dollar.
area; and
General bin living.
The government has decided to
cut dowa its military forces with'
out reducing the site of its 400.000-
maa army la Algeria. By slashing
the term ef service for draftees
24 months, about 100.000 mea
will be lopped off the service rolls.
The term had been running as
long as 20 months. This is ex
pected te cut- about 200 - million
dollars from the military payroll.
Porter to
Tou t East
Ljnn County
Stslesaaaa News temce
LEBANON. April 22 - Congress
man Charles Porter (Rep.-D.l will
spend text Friday ia eastern Linn
county. Ad important item on the
day-long program will be a visit
to the proposed Green Peter dam
site on the South Santiam River,
Arranging the program are rep
resentatives of the Lebanon.
Sweet Home, Brownsville and Al
bany Chambers ef Commerce and
Linn County Democrats, beaded
oy Mrs. Eva Sylvester of Lebanon,
chairman of the Linn County Dem
ocratic Central committee.
Rep. Porter will arrive in Al
bany at S a.m. Friday after which
he will inspect the zirconium plant
at the Bureau ef Mines and at
10:11 the congressman's party will
meet for "coffee ' at Jim Chris
tie's restaurant.
A noon no-host hincheoa
scheduled at 12 nooa at The Din
ette ia Lebanon. Appearing as
the luncheon speaker will be Gov.
Robert D. Holmes who will also
be la the large contingent of
Chamber of Commerce and Dem
ocratic representatives who will
visit tht proposed Green Peter
dam site on the South Santiam
river near Foster.
The Dave Epps will entertain
with aa afternoon coffee hour at
p.m. at Sweet Home.
A no-host dinner it being ar
ranged at : p.m. at the Skyline
Inn in Sweet Home. The governor
will be unable to keen this en
gagement,' but expected to attend
are James Johnson, newly ap
pointed director of the motor ve
hicle division ef the Secretary of
State s office, and his assistant,
Kenneth Johnson. Also te be on
hand to represent Sea. Wayne
Morse will be his Oregon office
representative. Charles Brooks.
A public meeting at which Por
ter will discuss the Green Peter
Dam project will be held in the
Sweet Home Union High School
auditorium at p.m. Mrs. Syl
vester will Introduce Csngressman
Porter. r
Statesman, Salem, Ore., Tue., April 23, 57 (Sect II)-13
After inventing tht roller print
ing Dress. Benjamin Franklin said
(IS years later) that he wat retir
ing because he wanted "leisure te
read." -
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Court Ignores
Distillers'
Tax Worries
WASHINGTON. April 22 uD -Distillers
who contend they will
have to dump millions of gallons
of bonded whisky because they
cant afford to pay the federal tax
on their product before selling it,
failed 'to win so much as a sym
pathetic cluck from the Supreme
Court today. '
The tribunal refused to review
the fight of Schenley Industries,
Inc., against collection of the
$10.50 a gallon tax en whisky held
hi bond for eight years.
Schenley's appeal said the levy
was forcing distillers to destroy
whisky that could not be market
ed -before the day the spirits
reached the age of eight years.
The tax must be paid on that day
even though there is then no mar
ket for the spirits.
"To pay the tax at eight years
and hold the spirits -in the hope
of finding a later market for' them
is out of the question." the appeal
said. "The enormous investment
which would be requiredalmost
five times the value of the S-year-old
spirits would greatly increase
the capital required and the In
terest en the capital required for
continued holding ef the spirits.
There is do conceivably foresee
able mass market willing te pay
a price, for older whisky, baser'
upon costs (plus tax) of this mag
nitude."
Schenley said H was a virtual
certainty that between now anr
isso the industry will hsve to de
stray more than SO million ga'
Ions at a loss of some 100 million
dollars.
Rail Express
Offices Struck
By Teamsters
NEW VORK. AprU 22 lV-The
Railway Express Agency today
embargoed less-than-carload rail
snd air shipments to seven major
cities where its operations were
halted by a strike of the Team
sters Union.
The embargo does not affect
carload lots.
The strike, which began one
minute after midnight today,
came at the end of a 10-day cool
ing off period provided by tht
Railway Labor Act. "Tht union re
jected a presidential board's rec
ommendations for settlement
which the company accepted.
The strike affects Railway Ex
press Agency offices in Chicago,
Cincinnati, Cleveland, Newark, N.
J., Philadelphia, St. Louis and Saa
Francisco. The onion said "cer
tain points adjacent" to these ci
ties else were effected. Truck
drivers were reported off the job
st Paterson and Elizabeth, N. J.
About 1.500 of the company's 1.
ooo truck drivers are involved.
Railway Express President A.
I Hammell said the company of
fered the Teamster employes s
20-cent-an hour package, of which
a small part was retroactive to
Jan. IS, loss.
AP Urges Ban
On Red China
Travel Lifted
NEW YORK.- AprU It tfWTbe
Associsted Press Board of Direc
tors urged today that U. S. news
men be permitted to travel to Red
China and report first band from-
the Chinese mainland.
Commenting ea the State De
partment's refusal te permit
newsmen te travel ia Red China,
the board said ia Its report te the
annual meeting ef members of
The Associated Press, worldwide
news cooperative:
The most noticeable gas in our
coverage, and ene that hat caused
much controversy, is Communist
China.
"We were invited by the Chi
nese, along with ethers, to send a
reporter into the country. The
U. S. Department of State refused
permission and threatened seri
ous sanctions.
"The Associated Press dis
agreed with the government's ac
tion and the board at this time
states agsia that H believes quali
fied newsmen should be allowed
to report firsthand from the main
land of China."
The beard said that, despite the
ban, the AP did get firsthand re
porting from China, by commis
sioning a Canadian newspaper
man, David Lancashire, to make
a tour of the country. He wrote a
series of srticles for AP members
and illustrated them with his ewa
photographs.
Valley News
Stattsman Ntwt Service
Holy Rosary
Chapel Adds
8 Members ;
Staiesaiaa Hewe Servke
MT. ANGEL, April U - Holy
Rosary Chapel, the little Crooked
Finger Pilgrimage Church, with
a parish too small te participate
in the Holy Week services still
had a big day oa Holy Saturday.
Eight new members, four adults,
three children and one baby were
bsptited and received into the
church Saturday starting st I a.m.
by Father Hildeband Mdchoir,
pastor.
The ceremonies took shout, an
hour. Those receiving baptism
were Kurt Alfred Wiedemann, Or-
mond -Scotts, John Rice, Joseph
Darwin Morrow, Tbomss May-
nard Younts, Ruth Genesee Rich.
Linda Lou Rich, Patricia Ann
Simeral, and Dennis La Roy
MK-naei Tomiia.
Father Hildebrand also blessed
the marriage ef Or mood Scott
nice ana Kutn hsici Tomiin.
AU except the baby had been
taking religious instructions from
Father Hildebrsnd since shortly
after Hie Marian Pilgrunafe to
the chapel last Aug. IS. r
-r
Visits Injured Mother
ttatreaeaa Ntwt Service '
PEDEE. April S-Mr. snd Mrt.
William Condroa visited her moth
er, Mrs. Lloyd Guyer at Lebanon
Sunday. Mrs. Guyer, whs wss in
jured in a car accident here Feb.
14 returned to" ber home April IS
from the Salem General bosnitaL
She is ia a cast at this time.
v.
e
Back from Arizona L
ttateseaai Ntwt Bervlee
PEDEE, AprU B-Mr. and Mrs.
R. J, Smith arrived borne thit
week from Yuma, Arii, where
they spent the winter.'
Undergoes Operation
Itateaaua News Service
PBDEE, AprU 12 Ernest . ,s
Bowman underwent major surgery. S
at the Salem Memorial Hospital '
AprU 12 for a back injury and ia ' "
improving slowly. Mrs. Bowman. '
and chUdren are staying part of
the time with her brother, George
BircheU. f "
Primrose
Show Sunday
At Mt. Angel
tiateemaa Hewe Service
MT. ANGEL. AprU U - Pro
grams are available for tht tenth
annual Mt. Ahgel Primrose Show,
Sunday, April 28. from 1 to
p.m. The show will be held as -formerly
in the dining rooms of
St. Mary'a school, and is spon
sored by tM Mt. Angel Garden -Club.
, . '
Anyone Interested in exhibiting ,
and wishing a program may con
tact Show Chairman Juliana Deh '
ler, Mt. Angel. Phone No. ills or "
Mrs. 0. J. Williams, Mt. Angel,
president ef the Gardes club.
Phone No, 1035.
Any primrose grower may ea
hlbit, the- only stipulation being '
that the primroses must hsve been
grown in his garden for tht last -three
months. There is a special , .
division for children IS years and
under with its ewa Junior sweep . '
stake prise.
Gsrden Clubs and Commercial
growers .are invited. .
Cat Alive it 21
BILLERICAY, England. April
22 (in Mra. John Payne's cat, .
Gigli, has reached the age of 2L
The equivalent age for humans ia
ISO. . . i . ;
Sixty-one centenarian ia the .
United State are now receiving
Social Security payments.
ONE TIME OFFER!
(F" RCA VICTOR
rCrSOnflr TV 'UK- leag, He" high
witaeai Biaa
House Sought
For Hit and Run
' DALLAS. Tex., AprU 22 un-The
Dallas Police Department has
hit-and-run case that is going
to be hard to solve. -The
victim: a traffic light. Tht
suspect: a house.
When a traffic light on East
Mockinshrnf Lane was knocked
tut of commission, police remem
bered house movers had been
working in the neighborhood and
deduced that the bulky load have
struck the light .
A hit-and-run report was filed
with complaint desk. It ordered
pickup of "an unknown make and
model house, color unknown.
T i
SURGICAL
-SUPPORTS
' Of AH Klads. Tresses,
Abdominal apperta,
Elastic Hjslery Expert
Fitters Private Fitting
Reesss
. "Ask Ytar Doctor"
Cepftsl Drug Stort
, 0S lUtt Street
i Censer ef Liberty
JWf Greea Stamps
Death Taken Lightly
MONTREAL. April 22 On-When
20-year-old Frank Rock went fish
ing in the St. Lawrence River, his
outboard motor flooded and
stalled, the steering cable broke
and his tiny boat was sucked into
the Lachine Rapids and disap
peared.
Police, fearing the worst, called
on Rock's father, who said:
"Frank? Oh, he went back fish
ing. He's been here and told me
whet a narrow escape he had."
El
S'i e-wnew
Thle Ad Is Small Because Our
Quertfilitt Are, Tea. Na Mere
Will Be Available Al This
Price, So Hurryl
Phone orders accepted while soaatltlet last EN t-2411
Ne tales ta dealers One set per casteaier.
The Best Place Ta Shop
. . , After All
1
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