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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1952)
Ln Stands 948 Ticket LMedi'ine n:""r i "'..I . U.Kf uuv. Iu.'V,iifornia cam- V". spDublican pre - lwas teamed as frftm waJ,L in 1948 P? las E . Dewey ol t latest o President I ..A VlCC 1t. ... v: nun and E2SS M of the Si pitform; ..,i.n k a eulde islY.Taltforniaand Republican govern b2t "?? fhion for- and progressive 438 81 .mi o.,hlinn n0Ar ; vetoed it "HX fatal Sican Party to aban 2 he platform prin ts !.19 he listed b. wane" .-.. " Pr expansion of old--:M' u..Mani insurance lw COSl "s ty the Government not be unau ;- " j...nl nractices t flexible support prices ,prs: extension of Unification. iCiHAS not yet taken a At a news raun lurrfused to be drawn Mut.saidL... . no nesuanty -tinn in cnPPhSS M qucsii"" , times before the nom mvention." proposed a state FEPC 51. The California Legis Id it in committee. the most controversial ... ..limAc 1 fnr 9 ctatp ijj punw.. ... :.n,ni.Q nlan which he tijted since 1945. The b'splan always is coupiea Wement by him that "I alitve in socialism. Lis CONTENDS it is the :-;lily ot the state, not or rial Government, to medical insurance. The has not made specific itnls. He is for economy stent. He said recently Stwere president the fed Ati would be balanced, mother world war. Am 'Hunger Marchers' Evicted were escorted or carried bodily out of Gov. Arthur B. Langlie's omce weanesaay nignt. First to leave was William Pen nock, president of the Washing ton pension union, who was car ried out in the arms of two husky state patrolmen. The hunger marcners applauded each mom- KENNETH J. O'CONNELL, professor of law in (he TJni. versity of Oregon, will be a Sunday night speaker at one of the university's alum ni firesides. His talk is en titled "Adam's Rib" and will concern women's rights under the law. The fireside is at 7 p.m. Feb. 24. Texan Offered PosfafWSC 3 Men in Running For Presidency SPOKANE - m The presi dency of Washington State Col lege has been offprpri in n- Charles Clement French, vice! her as about 30 patrolmen calm- Piesracni ot Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College, the apoKesman-Review said Wednes day night. In a long distance phone call Dr. French said he met last Sun day in Chicago with James Mc Cluskey, president of the WSC ooara ot Regents, the paper said. It added that although Dr. French would make no statement about a possible job at the Pull man, Wash., campus, he said his resignation as vice president of Texas A and M is to come before me Board of Regents of that school on Feb. 29. OLYMPIA, Wash. U.R) About ' ed to spend the night in his of- luu angry "hunger marchers ' : fice. be air to Start Prison Camp IBTH FALLS () Irieral prisoners from Mc l;:J will be at work by lixing up the wartime Relocation Center, de ll handle subversives if II ever starts a roundup of ration and repair will mmei' and at the peak u many as 100 prisoners i'til may be on the job at louth of here in Cali- ilit was reported here til by C. F. Hlser ad- at manager for McNeil ad Tom F. Butterworth. F for the Bureau of pvtmment announced a ?o ago that the Bureau "J as to prepare several Pi for possible use ln Ebversives. aid the Tulclake camp, aaij World War II ; me 20.000 .Tanans.se ld be prepared for 600 Only the old military usea. nij, McNeil correctional temporary caretaker. lozi Leader in Bonn Germany P) Deputy a leader of the Socialist Reich Party, -Wed Wednesday on -it he was a wartime -i.U-ho switched identi 1 ' and won election to - under a false name. '.ft annparpri u i ;Anby Chancellor Kon- ".5 conservative gov- tp lne new Nazis Lwraian politics. Tele-fun Warren Goodrich Youth Rescued From Depths Of Punchbowl NEWPORT, Ore. HP) Coast Guardsmen rescued a 20-year old Portland youth Tuesday after he fell 45 feet down a cliff into the Pacific Ocean seven miles north of here. Gail A. Nadeau was standing with a companion at the edge of the Devil's Punchbowl, a rocky cavern on the rugged shoreline watching the ocean, when he slip ped and plunged down the cliff into the water. The tide was coming in and he managed to cling to a rock. ills companion, whose name was not learned, ran to a nearby grocery and telephoned the the Coast Guard station here. Five Coast Guardsmen arrived at the scene eight minutes later. Seaman Apprentice Morris Kent, carrying a life jacket, was lowered over the edge of the cliff on a rope. A former Cannon Beach life guard, he swam 15 feet to the rock, tied the rope around Nadeau's waist. Nadeau then was hoisted up the face of the cliff to safety. Kent was brought up later. Nadeau, who was vacationing at a nearby cabin, suffered cuts, bruises and exposure, but did not require hospitalization. Other Coast Guardsmen who aided in the rescue were Chief Boatswain's Mate William Wat kins, Long Beach, Wash.; Yeoman 3rd Class Norman Meyers, Long view, Wash. the group l.v carried or escorted out. The pension union members de scended on Olympia to protest cuts in welfare grants and to de mand that the governor call a special session of the legislature to appropriate more funds. The governor, however, was out Langlie was in Portland, Ore., for a meeting of the Columbia Basin interagency committee. Pennock charged "we have been treated with contempt so far as Governor Langlie is concerned. We will be fully justified staying here to express our burning wrath at the contempt and arrogance shown toward us." Patrol Chief James A. Pryde then called in about 30 patrolmen. Pennock was first to leave, car ried by two patrolmen. About half of the entire group had to be car ried individually from the of fice. Some walked out voluntarily. Pennock, in a corridor outside the eovernor's office, led cheers of town, and the marchers decid- and applause for each member who was carried out. But there was no outbreak of violence by the pension union delegates and the patrol's job of moving them was calm and orderly. Once out of the governor's rooms, the delegation moved to the office of Secretary of State Earl Coe. They had asked Coe earlier if they could use his of fice if forced to leave the gov ernor's office. Coe decided his office was pub lic property and he would be ob liged to leave it open for the night. Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore. Thurs., Feb. 21, 1952 Page 3 In 1939 the average retail lum ber building material dealer had 5.5 employees: in 1948 this num ber had increased to 8.3 employees. Pearson Eyes State Senate SALEM OP) State Treasurer Walter J. Pearson wants to return to the State Senate. He filed for Democratic nomin ation as state senator from Mult nomah County Wednesday. Earlier Pearson had announced he would not seek re-election as treasurer. He formerly was a member of both houses ot the legislature. Other filings: State Rep. E. H. Mann, Medford Republican, for re-election. Al Rhodes, Portland Republican, for state representative. Tour Doctor' Prescriptions Economically Filled to ; Exacting Specifications PENNY-WISE DRUG 36 East Broadway 769 West 6th STETSON n.VTS jf-i Pr.nh.tiHL When Eleventh Meets IVllUmelt SOUTH WIND CAR HEATER Sales and Service , CLARK BATTERY & ELECTRIC CO. ' 1641 W. 6th Ave.. Phone 4-3319 r McCLUSKEY refused to com ment on the paper's report. How ever, he said the field of candi dates for the presidency was nar rowed to three at the regents' last meeting. One of the three was Dr. French, he said. Washington State regents are scheduled to meet in Pullman this Sunday. McCluskey said the apDoint- ment of a new president would be discussed at the regents' Sunday meeting, but he did not believe the board would announce any appointment at that time. DR. FRENCH told the paper he visited the WSC campus in De cember and at that time "was much impressed with the people, with the board of regents and with the college." Dr. French has been at the Texas school, a land grant col lege, for a year and a half. In College Station, Tex.. Dr. French was not available for com ment. Dr. M. T. Harrington, president of AMM College, said . "Dr. French's offer is news to me." Policeman at Capitol SALEM (IP) After all these years the state Capitol has a po liceman Charles Hamilton, a dis abled World War II veteran. He was hired by the secretary of state's office to patrol the building and enforce parking re. strictions around the capitol. HI EL? "'"y of hoe.' ;,:"u'U , time en cora- at LOW PRICE fescas IIEALTII-0-I1ETER BATH SCALES MAGNIFIED DIM. 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