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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1955)
11) lo e go OO c o 4A ReRlster-Guard, Eugene, Ore. Frl., May 13. 1955 Scelba Keeps Shaky Grip on Premiership '. ROME 11 Premier Mario Scelba set about clearing up strife in his party Friday !o save to 13-moth-oId government. , His stay in office was continued Thursday night when the new Italian President, left-lndincd 8iovanni Gronchi,. rejected his resignation. By custom, premiers always submit a resignation to a new president. Cronchis clcioion April 29 rockc Scelba and Ms center co alition government. Although the new President is a mengbcr of the Premier's Christian Democratic Oppenheimer In California PASADENA. Calif. Wr-Scionce is still remarkably ignorant of the deeper nature of the atom, ays Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer. "We've got a little, bit of order .In one liny corner but we have a re.-il shambles in other parts," he said in an interview Thursday while here to lecture at California Institute of Technology. "Atomic physics has never been in such a disorganized, enaolic slate. There ore more things we don't understand than we do un dcrstand." "Specialization has gone so far, said Dr. Oppenheimer, "that mathematicians no longer under stand physicists and vice versa." Some of the mysteries of the sub-nuclear particles that make up the atom are beginning to show up in the laboratory, Op penheimer said, "but we don't as yet understand them." It was once thought, he said, there might be as many as 2,000 of these particles. But he now believes the number is "finite" and may be even as lew as "a couple of dozen." The first director of Los Ala mos Laboratory made no refer ence to nuclear or thermonuclear weapons. Now head of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton N.J., Oppenheimer said his col leagues arc gathering notes and papers of the late Dr. Albert Ein stein for possible publication. Dr, Einstein worked for years at the institute. party, he advocates bringing more leftists into the government. Scelba h.d backed another can didate, CONTINUED SUPPORT-. Scclba's retention of the n.-c-micrship was assured by state ments of continued support Wed nesday from' the two minority parties. In his coalition, Vice Pre mier Giuseppe Saragal's Itight Wing Socialists and the Liberals. With the Premier still in com mand of a parliamentary major ity, Gronchi had no alternative to rejecting the resignation. It aly's President cannot unseat a government chief; he only names a new one after the Chamber. of Deputies deposes. However, Scelba appeared to have averted the threat to his government only temporarily. Some observers believed a tem porary truce had been called un til after the Sicilian regional cle lions, in early June. Then they expected the Premiers foes to seek a showodwn vote of confi dence in Parliament. CHIEF TASKS The Premier's chief tasks are to heal a split within his own par ly and quiet the restlessness of his minority allies. One Christian Democrat faction would like to replace him with Party Secretary Amintore Kanfani, who is to the left of the Premier. yrx - U - V'l ! i. WW- Uhtti i V';" t. A A) . !Artillery.I;iifei; HerTs MieJcw "IrapcriaI-112" FRIGIBAIREl ft DOING THE 'PRINCESS MARGARET'S FANCY' Fun loving Princess Margaret joins in the spirit of a folk dance especially devised for her and named ''Princess Margaret's Fancy" by the. English Folk Dance and Song .Society at its exhibition in London. Ilcr partner is Peter Kennedy, son of the society's director. He has been Princess Margaret's companion in recent public gatherings. "Comrd uiintittt r ff radi 'Imtaad of inventing nw flying iuc'l. mora inv print t d'teovar tcrtt of OLD Mr. IOSTON VODKA'." i No S tell -Ma breath S ?T. 'PUT. MOM 100 GRAIN ; N E U T B A I. SPIRITS so POOF MR. BOSTON niST., INC , BOSTON Atomic Sub Back at Sea CROTON, Conn, up The atomic powered submarine Nauti lus lcfl here at 8:30 a.m. Thurs day in a second try at starting on her first long shakedown cruise She is scheduled to arrive at Puerto Itico on Sunday, and then head for the Virgin Islands. The Nautilus returned In her berth here Wednesday after a steam pipe hurst off Block Island, 11 I. She had started on the cruise Tuesday with Adm. Rob ert Carney, chief of naval oper ations, on board. The spokesman said the pipe break occurred after Adm. Car ney was transferred to another ship oft Long Island for a flight back to Washington. The break was so small, the Navy said, that the submarine could have continued on its jour ney. But she was so close to her base at the Electric Boat Division of the General Dynamics Corp. that Cmdr. Eugene P. Wilkinson decided to lake her bark for the repairs. U.N. Charges Commie MIGs Made 'Unprovoked' Attack JajpaaeseTke Nationalist Planes Attack Red Shipping TAIPEI, Formosa (A"1 Chiang Kai-shek's warplancs attacked a flotilla of more than 20 armed motorized junks Friday in the first reported Formosa Strait ac tion in a week, the Nationalist air force said. It claimed one junk destroyed, another heavily damaged and sev eral lightly damaged. The altark was west of Red held Pingtan Island, .15 miles south of the Malsu group and HO miles wpst of Formosa. MUNSAN, Korea OP The U.N. Command charged Friday that Communist MIGs made an "un provoked" attack on American Sabrejets Tuesday "over interna tional waters" of the Yellow Sea. Peiping Radio declared the Sab res hud "intruded over North east China." , Peiping's broadcast a few hours after the U. N. Command's pro test to the Military Armistice Commission quoted the Reds' of ficial People's Daily as declaring Tuesday's incident was a pre meditated act of aggression." The U. N. protest and Peiping radio also differed on losses in the eight-minute air battle. The U. N. protest said the Sa br6s, attacked "some 55 miles southwest of Sinuiju . . . were obliged to defend themselves and in so doing destroyer! two or more MIG aircraft while sustain ing no losses." People's Daily said one Sabre .let was shot down and two were damaged. It called the U. S. re port of hvo MIGs downed and two probably destroyed a "brazen wil ful perversion of the truth. It said, "Chinese fighters rose to intercept them, the Sabres, and shot down one. and damaged two. These are the farts." In the protest the U. N. Com mand charged the Reds were "en deavoring to utilize" Korean bases as a "privileged sanctuary. The protest through the Mili tary Armistice Commission told the Chinese and North Korean members: You are officially warned that if Ihc aircraft of our side arc at- lacked they will defend them selves. Fifth Air Force Sabre pilots said they shot down two MIGs and probably destroyed two niOKe. They said they were at tacked hy 32 MIGs. No American plane was hit, they said. The U N. protest did not speci fy the planes were Red Chinese, acknowledged by the Peiping ra dio. It did not specifically charge rither that the MIGs operated from Korean airfields. But it said, "The fact that you are now endeavoring to utilize the armistice to provide a privi leged sanctuary in Korea for your aircraft, similar to that enjoyed by your side in utilizing bases north of the Yalu River during the period of hostilities, is be coming apparent. to the world." The protest charged the "KPA CPV" Korean People's Army Chinese People's Volunteers had moved Jets from Manchuria and China into Korea as soon as bombed-out runways were repair ed after the armistice. The protest asscrtrd the Sabres were attacked over inter national waters and declared they had not approached Communist territory. Peiping radio broadcast, again the Red Chinese charge that the Sabres "intruded over northeast China." People's Daily, the Reds of ficial paper, said, "Chinese fight ers rose to intercept them and shot down one and damaged two." It called the U.S. Air Force re port that two MIGs were downed and two probably destroyed a "brazen wilful perversion of the truth." The Air Force released enlarg ed prints from gun camera film showing two MIGs burning and going down in the eight-minute battle. ;jI-YOSHIDA, Japi OP - Violence flawed Friday inthe boil ing protest against th? American Army u-g the slopes, of sac;d Mt. F'uji for arti'ery practige. The newsprtfr Asahl ro(Jted 20 injured in a clash bftween .Japanese police and some 60 demonstrators who tried to force tieir way into a restricted area. Most of the injured, none hjirt seriously, were police, the news paper said. ' The government assigned some 400 pBlice to the area to keep Japancv protestors out of areas where the Army is firing 155,mnj guns.'undcr a trainjng agreement with the government. The big artillery pieces rumbled again Friday as the furors mount ed and the number of demonstra tors swelled to more than 700. Labor union members sped to this mountain community in trucks and buses to join villagers who have clustered about the gates of the American maneuver area. Reaction in newspapers, radio broadcast and Diet parliament pecches has been feverish. One Right Socialist member was so angry he pounded the podium and shouted for mobilization of the Japanese Army to "chase out all the Americans who are desecrat ing our race s pride. The Army plans to continue the firing Sporadically through June. The shooting started Tuesday. fytparof food fneiar Stlf-dofrcttlng ReWg.rotof'S.cffon . lots of Door irorog. 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