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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1954)
Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore, 28 Thurs., Oct. 21, 1954 Oil Agreement Gets Approval TEHRAN, Iran flPI Iran's lower house of Parliament Thursday overwhelmingly ratified an agree ment that will permit eight for eign companies to put the nation's oil on the world market again. Deputies in the Majlis (House) voted 113 to five, with two ab staining, in favor of the accord which ends a dispute that began in 1951 when Mohammed Mossa degh, then premier, nationalized the vast Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. The agreement will become law after the Senate ratifies it and It is signed by the Shah of Iran. The long dispute over Iranian oil approached the settlement stage last Aug. S when the gov ernment and the eight oil com panies initiated the agreement which will give the country a minimum of 420 million dollars in revenue during the next three years. Ex-Labor MP To Speak Here Wilfred Wellock, a former Labor member of the British Par liament, will be in the Eugene area Thursday for two appear ances. He will speak to the Eu gene Real Estate board at noon, and Thursday night will speak at the youth room of the Methodist Church. His Eugene appearances are made possible through the Ameri can Friends Service Committee. Wellock is a student of the Ghandi movement in India and spent a number of years in that country. He also traveled exten sively in Russia. His Thursday topic at the 8 p.m. meeting will be "Peace in a Good Civilization." The public has been invited. REDS DENOUNCE WILEY MOSCOW Gfl-The Literary Ga zette Thursday devoted three full columns to an attack on U.S. Sen. Wiley (R-Wis), calling him an "atomic demagogue." There was no apparent news peg for the article. HEAR: PANEL DISCUSSION with Independent Truckers, Loggers, Small Businessmen Conducted by JACK BUCHANAN SENATOR GUY gives his answers to his stand on issues affecting small businessmen. (ORE 8:45 P.M. cordo TONIGHT! Cordon for U. S. Senator Committee, W. II. Stelwer, Chmnr, 234 Imperial Hotel, Portland, Oregon NEIL V. GERMAN Optimist Leader Optimist Club Official Visits Local Unit Neil V. German, Optimist Club district governor from Calgary, Alberta, visited members of the Eugene Optimist Club Wednesday and Thursday as part of a tour of clubs in his district. He was a guest Thursday noon at an Optimist meeting in the group's clubroom in the Armory basement. German heads up Optimist Dis trict No. 13 which includes clubs in Oregon, Washington, Montana, British Columbia, and Alberta. In addition to being the senior partner of the legal firm of Ger man, Mackay, McLaws and Mc Leod in Calgory, German is a director of several companies. He takes part in a number of profes sional associations and has been working for the Optimist cause for 10 years. He was elected to his present office at the Optimist district con vention in Yakima last May. With a slogan, "Friend of the Boy," Optimist clubs carry out a program of youth activities, take part in civic affairs, and strive to follow a philosophy of optimism in their lives. City Hosts Conference An estimated 225 men and about 50 wives were expected to register at the Eugene Hotel Thursday for the start of a three day conference of the Pacific Northwest Sewage and Industrial Wastes Assn. The men are all sewage engi neers, disposal plant operators or city managers from various sec tions of the Northwest, including Idaho, Montana, Washington and Oregon. William Clubb, Eugene cily en gineer, is chairman of the meet ing. Most of the business sessions will be held at the Eugene sew age treatment plant, in the Santa Clara district off River Rd. Ex perts will speak and the group will inspect disposal facilities in the area. " Corvallis Junior Chamber Organized CORVALLIS Wl A Junior Chamber of Commerce was or ganized here Wednesday night with 32 charter members. Al Bailey was named first president. RalDh Todd. Eugene, past state president, presented the charter and Jack B. Lively, present state president, spoke. BURNS FATAL TO MAN PORTLAND WV Morris Christ ianson, 35, Aloha, Ore., died in a hospital here Wednesday irom burns suffered when molten car bide spilled on him in a Portland factory Tuesday. Shirley Temple Opens Business as Hobby ATHERTON, Calif. OH Shirley Temple is going into the interior decorating business on the San Francisco Peninsula. "It will be more of a hobby than anything else," said the one time child actress. "With three children, it couldn't be more than part time." The former star, whose hus band Charles A. Black is an economist at the Stanford Re search Institute, said she will "do" her first house next month. SPANISH AUTHOR DIES MEXICO CITY Wl Alvara dc Albornoz, 77, Spanish author once prominent in republican Spain, died Wednesday night of a heart ailment. Eugene Lions See Air Force Movie tt, ... T.lnn. rliih members MArlnncrlnV nnnn SHW an Air Force movie about the Strategic Air Command. TM i. iho Air Force compo nent charged with destroying an .,,. chilifv inH will to ficht by demolition of farbehind-the- lines assets. Th film tnnk (he audience on a 36-hour training aboard a eiant B-36. using a West Coast city as a target. MCnt William N HoiTffett. In charge of Air Reserve activities in Eugene, supplied tne mm. School District 19 To Host City Chiefs Springfield School District m will play host to Springfield city officials at a dinner meeting Monday night, School Superintendent E u Silke said members of the ritJ council and the planning com mission have been invited to dis cuss long-range school site nlan. : rru. j:. ...mi . iiuiK. uiuiier win start at o:au p.m. ai opnngnem high, The school board and school budget committee, City Manager L. B. Bartlett, Mayor Ed C Harms, and Planning Consultant Howard Buford have also been inviica, oiiKe saia. 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