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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1949)
Lfrage 4A, Registe r-Guard, Eugene. Ore., Thurg.. July 21, 1949 Allies Launch Red Purge 1 "BERLIN UP) The Allied-con trolled press end radio fired their heaviest guns Monday in a West ern campaign against the Soviet . secret police network in Eastern Germany. ' The British-licensed Socialist ! newspaper, Telegraf, began publi- KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES THE MAN'S SHOP BYROM I KNEELAND 12 East lOtb cation of a list of 300 Germans allegedly hired as agents by the Russian MVD (Russia secret po lice). It said the list disappeared sev eral months ago from the Bran denburg headquarters of the MVD and had been the object of a frantic but unsuccessful Russian search. The U. S. military government radio station in Berlin, Ria, con tinued its twice weekly program! exposing alleged local German spies of the MVD in Soviet zone towns and villages. Allied intelligence officers claimed the glare of publicity on east German collaborators of the MVD, which Rias started last month, was undermining the pres tige of the Socialist Unity (Com' munlst) Party. Pro-Allied political sources In Berlin said all signs pointed to purge In the Communist leader ship in the near future. and ie Se&if v- ' iuumi i witBtn mm Wnn't a ratOA vtiy mot bridtt war Afi-torvd wadding rbf Mi any oftWf AH-oorfd tingt or mortty ityUd , , , ood) riotnol dadga h km 9arm4 to pntkm tal le Jocf tfiravgh a ttfttml America 't Mm Oftd largtt rfftgnatW performs vry stop to w naktoj of your Arleorvti rtog. W wfll b fiad f thaw you ftw mm Art-eorvMt' to rtogt ot tttv tag. ovr oofloctlon todoy rt VV- MI1H.1S SrfCJMOO Tl,ll PrtoH iKtadi Mmi tn ttoffi trttwd tl kow stun HOFFMAN'S JWIltB Broadway and Willamette AUTHORIZED ART-CARVED JIWIIBR inj n :Mm NEWLY RENOVATED, the Dotson Photo Shop, 111 11th Ave. E presented this view to. the hundreds who attended the open house held last wek. Visitors were amazed at the spaciousness 3000 feet of the completely modernized plant and at the number of per sonnel 23 required to operate the establishment. B. D. Dotson, owner, has been in busi ness in Eugene at the same location for 18 years. He is at present the president of the Columbia Empire Division of the Master Photo Dealers and Finishers Assn. Portland Attorney to Head ksr5 State FEPC Commission SALEM (IP) David Robin-1 must use "common sense to the son, Portland attorney witn a long utmost. He sam it must prove record of battling against racial that fair employment practices and religious intolerance. Is the. can benefit all. chairman of Oregon's new fair employment practices commission. Robinson, president of the Port land City Club and a Jewish lead er, was elected to head the seven-member group when it held its first meeting here Wednesday. Will Advise The commission, which will ad vise state Labor commissioner W. E. Klmsey in enforcement of the new law, elected as its secre tary Ulysses Plummer, Portland, the only Negro attorney In Ore gon. The law makes it illegal for any employer, labor union or employ ment agency to deny a job to any person because of his race or re ligion. Governor Douglas McKay told the commission Wednesday that It The governor warned the com mittee to guard against perpetrat ing one injustice in the hope of correcting another Injustice." Will Take Wisdom "It is going to take the wisdom of a Solomon to meet some of these problems. But I feel this committee is capable of fair and impartial dealing with all the sit uations it will be asked to resolve. "This is a great experiment. Oregon and civil rights are on trial. So I urge you to do a job that can be looked back upon as a monument to Oregon's far sighted approach to the task of bettering human relations." Oregon Is one of only six states to have an FEPC law. It was passed by the 1S49 legislature. I Forresfal Paper Still Held Up WASHTNOTON (IP) Con- .UaraViia mvsterv surrounds a de lay in releasing the report made by a special Naval investigating board which inquired into the sui cide of James V. Forrestal, for mer secretary of defense. Forrestal. who had retired from office in March, was admitted to the Naval hospital in tsetnesca, Md., April 2 suffering from what Naval authorities described as "nnerational fatigue." He leaped to his death the morning of May 22. The five-man Naval medical board was convened May 23 by Rear Admiral Morton D. Willcutts, head of the National Naval Medi cal Center at Bethesda. Naval press officers gave the impression that at least a summary of his finding would be made public. Reoeated lnauiry as to what has become of the report has elicited various replies it was being read by the Navy surgeon general, by Undersecretary of Defense Early, by Matthews. Daily for the past fortnight Navy and national military estab lishment press sections have been promising its release. Explanations for the delay generally nave oeen that the report needed "to be re viewed by one more person." ' ww ' ow Discusses Detention HnJ Six members of the Circuit! court Qflf Court Advisory Juvenile Council and will h 011 i J met Wednesday noon at the Os-Uh. ,. e a csr..,i!f Sherman iu 3l "ling as " met Wednesday noon at the Os burn Hotel to coordinate work on the proposed Juvenile detention home for Lane County. Meeting for the first time since it formation a year ago by Cir cuit Judge G. F. Skipworth. the committee heard juvenile O Vcer Louis Sherman outline plans for coordinating Juvenile aid. The committee will act in an advisory capacity between the Butcher Birds Butchered For Pecking at Scalps BATON ROUGE, La. (U.R) The police department has advised pedestrians, especially bald ones, that they can use Government Street again without having their scalps lacerated by butcher birds. Two butcher birds built a nest in a tree on the street. They soon became terrors. Their first victim, a bald man who wasn't wearing his hat, fled with two birds scratching and pecking at his dome. But bald or not, any one who passed was pounded upon by the butcher birds. When police were called, they were attacked, too. But they brought along a shotgun 1 and killed the birds. meetine a- me,f.,in.S is PlannM J " is now VT5! Women's Uelm priaint. , .s:on t $.1 County. ""U,K, Membert .i Deane SeegS. sJ League of OrwJ cation for Eu,l.M mer Mrs Jo: On Sale: At MTLLBt Sponsored by Qpftm J Korean Papers Tell Shooting SEOUL (IP) Korean newspa rjers have published a purported statement from an Army lieuten ant that he killed Him Koo be cause the veteran political leader had joined Communists in a plot against the government. Kim was shot to death in his home June 26. The report was issued through the government's department of public information. It was the first time Korean newspapers nad Deen informed officially of the circum stances of the shooting. The report quoted Lt. Ahn Doo HI, who presumably is recovering from a beating given him after the assassination, as saying he shouted "You are an anti-national" as he fired four times at Kim with a U. S. ,45-calibre revolver. Kim was the last president of the Korean government in exile in China. 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