Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, January 21, 1952, Image 2

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    Rcgister-Liuaru, Eugene, Ore.,
Page 2 Mon., Jan. 21, 1952
Talt to Support
Ike If He Wins
Presidential Bid
Believes 2 Could
, Reconcile Policies
WASHINGTON (IP) Senator
Taft (R-Ohio) said Sunday that it
General Eisenhower is Republican
candidate lor the presidency, "I
will support General Eisenhower."
He told newsmen on NBC's
"Meet the Press" television pro
gram that if Eisenhower were
president and he in the Senate the
two could reconcile their policies.
After saying he would support
Eisenhower, Taft turned to the
reporters and asked: "I might ask
whether you know whether he
will support me if I should be
nominated?"
He was asked by reporters for
his views on a statement made at
last week's GOP National Com
mittee meeting in San Francisco
by the Taft campaign manager,
David S. Ingalls.
Ingalls said to Republicans there
that "hero worship is no substitute
ior faith based on known per
formance, neither Is glamor nor
jsex appeal."
4 He added: "If we as a party at
this late date propose to risk our
political future on such slender
attributes, then I say that the party
"js dead and we are met here today
jnerely to select a good looking
.piortician to preside over the final
ites."
j? The statement was widely ac
cepted as a reference to Eisenhower.
J Taft commented Sunday:
"For months, the people who
re trying to draft General Eisen
hower have been going around the
Country saying that I cannot win
the election. I'm a good candidate
or president, good qualities and
all that, but I cannot win the elec
tion. 5 "Mr. Ingalls, in effect, I take it,
sis saying exactly the same thing.
sWhy, now, the Eisenhower people
Should cry to high heaven because
Spe's making the same argument
they've made for the last two
gnonths, I don't understand."
IChurchill Talk
Slated Tuesday
g NEW YORK (VP) The mayor's
office said Sunday night that
Winston Churchill would "address
Jjhe nation on matters of import
ance" here Tuesday,
g But the British Prime Minister's
ijiost, Bernard Baruch, said later
e understood that Churchill
Would have "only a few words to
Jfeay" when he meets Mayor Vin
icent Impellitteri at . City Hall
Tuesday to receive the city's med
Lja'l of honor.
British officials in Washington
indicated also they did not expect
irtitj1 hi it j u r developments
(Churchill's speech.
Churchill leaves for England
Jearly Wednesday after a two-week
wvisit in the United States and
Canada.
Crash Survivors Pra y in Unison
As 26 Others Slip to Icy Death
McCHORD AIR FORCE BASE
(IP) Seven survivors told Sun
day of praying in unison as they j
watched 26 passengers of a crash- :
landed Korean airlift plane swept
one by one to their deaths in icy j
North Pacific seas. j
One soldier told of baptizing a
youth just before he slipped be
neath the battering waves.
Thirty-three of the 43 persons
aboard got out of the plane safely
after it hit the water off the Brit
ish Columbia coast.
But only seven remained huddled
on the half-submerged wreckage
when fishermen arrived with a
skiff.
Cling To Wing
The seven survivors, flown here
Saturday night from Sandspit Air
port in the Queen Charlotte Is
lands, told of a 80-minute struggle
for survival in the icy seas.
They described how, numb with
cold, they clung to a slippery wing
until the rescue boat arrived.
The four-engined plane, inbound
from Japan with troops en route
home on emergency leave, crash
landed a mile off Sandspit Air-
sL.- UNITED
r7 STATES
'so Up 'Jo " '' -'
o logo PV
Families Return
To Flooded Area
Authorities Fear
Typhoid Outbreak
LOS ANGELES (IP) Evacu-
Sandspit in an attempted emer
gency landing.
"We ran part way down the
runway," Baker said, after he
(the pilot) touched down, evl-
.1 II.. U U 1.1..II '
i. - i ii. u:i ik. 1 i- in, lUlO
indite 11. ill iiil me uiiuiue. xiieie
was a good deal of vibration ini
the nose. The plane would not 'n i years.
climb. When it hit the water, ! But threatening skies warned of
the left wing hit first but the more rain. The Weather Bureau
plane landed pretty flat on the
port early Saturday after it devel
oped engine trouble.
The survivors said ten were kill
ed in the crash. The others man
aged to reach the wing.
Lt. Donald E. Baker, 26, of Glen
dale, Calif., said the plane was
"flying well on three engines
when it touched the runway at
$24 Million Loan From U.S.
Accepted By Iran's Mossadegh
TEHRAN, Iran (IP) Premier, hesitation to accept commitments
Mohammed Mossadegh announced which might bind it too tightly to
Sunday Iran's acceptance of a 24- j the West in the current East-West
million-dollar American aid proj-j struggle
ect under President Truman. s
Point Four program for technical
assistance to underdeveloped coun
tries.
Iranian' Cabinet approval of a
working agreement for the coming
year ended more than a month of
negotiations marked by Iran s
water,
Nobody Used Life Jackets
Baker said he tried to distribute
life jackets, but apparently no
body used them, and also helped
the pilot and co-pilot in a futile
attempt to get a liferaft out of the
plane s nose.
He said the co-pilot, Kenneth
IN MOST FLOODED areas wa
ter was draining off rapidly.
Closed schools were scheduled to
roonen Monday.
Thn 1IT.1.,., knn.n .,(.,. innn.ll-
Kuhn, 32 Seattle, apparently wasUtjon of re'sidents in the nard-hit
Bullfight Crowd
Cheers U.S. Girl
JUAREZ, Mex. (U.PJ Blonde one ring veteran said, "and she'll
Patricia McCormick, the 22-year- be tops."
ik" trrr '" 5 : fih, hllJ SHARP-EYED FANS praised
atea lamines were moving dbck fight ring was the toast of Juarez' "vl; """", iour lined
into their homes Sunday after ; aficionados Monday. : passes naturales and series of
Southern California's worst flood I She brought a crowd of rabid ;'e" 1?"? UsMJ
u..itr;nv. rnn in ihmx tnor in ur n w v. vn. uiovtiy aim
! acclaim in her professional debut gra."fuI.ly',.an?. the nervousness
Sunday I v'wlc " v,lw eutuumcr was
Pat had a tough time with her completely absent in the second.
first bull in the slippery arena, The manoletina, pass naturale
soaked by a heavy rain. But she and ehicuelina are specialized
came back to win a coveted ac-1 passes made with the cape. They
colade two ears from her bun are namea mostly ior great mata
in her second fight in the corrida. ; dors. The manoletina, for in
stance, memorializes Manolene
predicted light showers Sunday
night and ' light rain Monday.
However the forecaster said there
shouldn't be enough to cause worry.
lost while trying to "reach the
wing-tip after the fuselage sank.
Baker said survivors on the
wing "slowly fell away- about
three minutes before the boat
came, there were 10. We were
numb with cold .and they kept
slipping away from us. '
"God was there, all right. I
don't think I could have lasted
much longer."
Holds Hands In Chain
Pfc. Demetrls G. Apostolon, 23,
Hinton, W.Va., said those on the
wing held hands in a chain to stay
there.
"I baptized one boy," he re
called. "He said he believed in
God, but hadn't been baptized. He
slipped off and drowned a few
minutes later. . . ."
Turn man in 'fh flshlnff skiff
Steers Middle Course L.nnh.H th. wrorknae and-took
Iran, despite mounting internal the seven survivors to shore 90
troubles arising out of nationallza- minutes after the plane came
60 Below Zero
In Alaskan City
FAIRBANKS, Alaska-W)-More
than 20,000 residents of this busy
center in the interior of Alaska
shivered in 60 degrees below zero
Sunday as the second cold spell
in 10 days gripped the Far North.
Most residents were riding taxi
cabs as the bitter cold stalled
private cars.
Dense ice fog which settles when
the mercury drops under 45 below
zero reduced visibility to about
30 feet.
The ice fog halted scheduled air
line runs, isolating interior Alaska
from the States as far as air cargo,
mail and stateside newspapers
were concerned.
tion of oil, has tried to steer a
middle course in the divided
world.
Mossadegh's government is at
tacked by both political extremes,
the outlawed but active Commu
nist Tudeh Party and the terrorist
Fedayan Islam. The latter has
been blamed for the assassination
of the late Premier Ali Razmara
and other killings.
Mossadegh Threatened
Fedayan Islam's second in com
mand, Seid Abdul Hossein, threat
ened at a news conference Sun
day, "We will kill Mossadegh if
our leader, Navab Safavi, is not
released from prison immediate
ly.'"
Safavi was imprisoned early this
month by the government on un
disclosed charges. His hundreds
of followers have been demanding
his release. They formerly sup
ported Mossadegh, but have turned
violently against his government
since Safavi was arrested.
down.
Killed in Accident
GRANTS PASS (IP) One man
was killed and two injured one
-seriously-when a car plunged off
Redwood Highway south of here
Saturday night.
Dead is Bud Keith Norman, 35,
Victor Masters, 27, was critically
injured and Tom E. Stowcll, 37,
suffered minor injuries. All are
from Grants Pass.
Norman is survived by his wi
dow and twin daughters, born
Dec. 22.
LIGHT
FIXTURES
CLARKE
ELECTRIC
233 W. 7th Phone 5-3231
s
9
OFFERS
I
BRAND NEW
IYM
BELIEVE
IT
OR
NOT!
at
STARK'S
702 WILLAMETTE
PHONE 5-1597
(ftp I
We purchased all the Royal
Vacum Cleaners the whole
saler had In stock.
In appreciation of the fine
way we have been treated
by our customers, we offer
you a Royal Vacuum
Cleaner, not for' the reqular
price of $49.95, but
$
29
95
Fl'LL
PRICE
No Down Payment
$1 Per Week
Los Alamitos area in Orange
County as a precaution against
typhoid infection. More than 1100
men, women and children were
given shots.
AT THE PEAK nearly 1200
families were evacuated from
lowland districts in Los Angeles
and Orange County. Flood waters
reached depths of three to four
feet.
The storms brought 7.37 inches
of water to Los Angeles in three
days. The total of known dead
reached 19 and estimates of dam
age were in the millions.
JAPANESE PRINTS
BRANDON, Man. (IP) A
collection of 150 Japanese prints
is interesting visitors to the Bran
don Public Library. The collection
includes 40 original prints by
early masters and 110 by con
temporary artists.
"I FELT MUCH better after the
second one," Patricia said. "That
first one wasn't so good."
Experts agreed that the first one
wasn't so good, and called it a
"poor animal." But the second was
better, and so was she.
"Give her five more corridas,"
the late Spanish matador consid
ered the greatest of all time. The
bull charges the cape as the mata
dor stands at attention to one side,
Iranians Close
British Offices
TEHRAN, Iran (IP) Britain
closed the doors of her nine con
sulates and vice-consulates in Iran
Sunday, In compliance with de
mands by Premier Mohammed
Mossadegh's government.
British consular officials and
their families remained at their
posts awaiting instructions from
London, ,
Iran based her closing order on
repeated charges that British dip
lomatic and consular officials had
been interfering with Iranian in
ternal affairs. The order directed
that the consulates be closed by
Monday.
-23
Hutting
Mr
WASHINGTON ,
r Win...- . ' "t.
ur-D a lirA on op tic r? a rtc ; SmokinP Ui. 1 M
ncin mmnui xnn Lnna( pre1 iajj jk I
ocuicu uiiijr Biici n tup-iugm per-
formance, thrilled her most of all. i a
"I'm going to have someone fix
them for me, so they can be pre
served," she said.
Her mother, Mrs. E. B. McCor
mick, watched the fights from a
ringside seat. Until recently she
had been strongly opposed to her
daughter's nlans for a hullff0Htincrawardincr hA.
a r-- o B , a "VI IUH l
when she saw Patricia in action,
lighted cl...,,.
togle scoring 8bal,
the cheek of C
Damasetosaidck
composure Ms, sonj?
worth in H
"I'M VERY PROUD of her
now," Mrs, McCormick said.
The former co-ed, who left her
studies at Texas Western Univer
sity to go into the arena, said her
father appeared to be taking the
whole thing more calmly than
anyone else.
Pat is the only active woman
bullfighter on the continent.
"You have to exercise every
day," she said. "It's just like the
scales on the piano."
Mr. Quintt,n(lfc
(a) quit smokin.
chewing, or (c) ,1
premium porsonu tj
"".-"immemithiW
. . . i-armenter Ima
H35 Willamette, it,.
Rcgistcr-Guatdil
Bring Quick J
oihet
311111
yjiij!S5
In the Grinding Tests that Won
it ihe Motor Trend Magazine Ami
Chrysler proved itself the Best Engine
Car in America
CHRYSLER SURPASSED ALL OTHERS
WHEN MOTOR TREND TESTED FORi
Tr Average Braking Distance in Feet
-k Ton Miles per Gallon
"k Average Acceleration in Seconds
-k Acceleration Over Standing i Mile in Seconds
"k Average Top Speed in M.P.H.
k Maximum Road Horsepower
k Pounds per Road Horsepower
fr Maximum Torque In Lbs.-Ft.
k Maximum Brake Mean Effective Pressure
k First in Total Points
15 different American stock automobiles
equipped as you buy them-were driven by
Motor Trend Magazine as hard as steel
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was first in 7-tied in 2, making a total
of 9 out of 13 . . . and first in total points!
Only by taking an engine to the limit of
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-i i. -i u, ran vnu leamj1
SHUCK ttUSUiUCio, v" j- y
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iviotor xrenu lcouj . j
Chrysler, again, proved ilsell1
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The Motor Trend Award, lite;
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l.iu iwif of and3""
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Clirysler's magnificent j
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