Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 04, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    Capital A Journal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher
ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che
meketa St., Salem Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want
Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409.
. Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and
The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also
news published therein.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
By Carrier: Weekly, 25c; Monthly, SI. 00; One Year, $12.00. By
Mail in Oregon; Monthly, 75c; 6 Mos., $4.00; One Year, $8.01).
V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mos., $6.00; Year, $12.
4 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, August 4, 1949
What Has Aeronautics Board to Say?
Governor McKay's confidence in the state board of aero
nautics is receiving a severe test,
The board became the target last week of charges of
"flagrant waste of money." The charges were made by
three groups of flyers in Oregon. Critics wanted the
scalp of the board director, W. M. (Jack) Bartlett.
The question raised by Claude Williams, president of one
of the protesting groups, was a piercing one: "What we
want to know is what the board has accomplished with the
$200,000 and more they have spent in the past two and
a half years."
Instead of asking for some kind of a public hearing on
the matter, the governor met with board members and
came away with the announced conviction that the mem
bers themselves would take care of the complaints.
In the board's "self-appraisal," two heads were lopped
off. These were victims of an attempt at justification of
the board's reason for existence. These sudden firings,
coming right on top of the complaints, pointed to a too
hasty self-analysis by the board.
If the board has reason for existence, it should so state
that reason, without any head-hanging or sudden head
lopping. Why should two men be bounced just at the time
the complaints were raised? Defendants of the two men
immediately raised the cry that they were certainly as
able as many on the board. Bartlett said they were the
last members put on and were let off for economy reasons.
Such an abrupt cutting of the board's staff at the par
ticular time it came was a definite sign of weakness. Be
cause of that fact, the governor should have the "read
justed" board make a report on its new way of life.
. Unfortunately or commendably, depending on the view,
the governor took the complaints against the board upon
himself by his action. The board should justify his confi
dence by speaking out in self-justification.
Smashing Monopolies in Japan
General MacArthur has announced the completion of his
controversial program for breaking up the economic giant
corporations that have dominated Japan, stating that it
has been "accomplished effectively."
A five man review board which came from Washington
15 months ago to make recommendations tagged 11 giant
corporations for deconcentration and 325 firms as "exces
sive concentrations" and recommended divestment of cer
tain holdings for nine others.
The 325 companies were selected for board action out
of about 1200 which had been affiliated with the Zaibatsu
holding companies. Through this powerful setup, head
quarters said, "a small number of families exercised all
pervasive control over the industry, commerce and finance
of Japan."
The decentralization program was under heavy fire from
Its start, and aroused both international and domestic
criticism. In the United States as well as Japan it was
dubbed by some as "socialization" and by others as "frag
mentation of industry." A press statement issued by
MacArthur says:
"The elimination of monopolistic economic power which
dominated prewar Japanese life has been accomplished effec
tively without adverse effect upon, and no 'fragmentation' of,
finance or Industry. On the contrary, competent observers
point to the 50 percent increase in production along with con
siderable progress toward stabilization during the past year
as evidence of the growing health of the Japanese economy."
Some observers in Japan have called the program a suc
cess. Others have labeled it a failure. But it is claimed
that monopoly has been dealt with successfully without
adverse effect on finance and industry. The industries
affected included heavy industry, steel, beer, paper, min
ing and electrical.
Expanding the Capitol Zone
The recently appointed new state capitol commission at
its first meiiting recommended expansion of the capitol
grounds, following recommendations of the Salem long
range planning group, which includes the extension of the
zone and the closure of some streets. The recommenda
tions are listed in the news story elsewhere in this issue.
At the rate Oregon is rapidly growing and state bureau
cracy is expanding in population and provision must spe
cifically be made for required site expansion ere property
cost be so further inflated as to be prohibitive. Delay will
be costly, and the main proposals are essential not only to
care for the future but to provide an attractive and beau
tiful site befitting a beautiful city and picturesque state.
Of course there will be opposition, there is for every pro
posal to meet future conditions in Salem, by special inter
ests too myopic to vision coming events and their require
ments, but the public welfare is more essential than imme
diate group interests and in the long run should prevail.
A good start has been made to make as fine a capitol
center as any state can boast of and every effort should
be undertaken to materialize it, not losing sight of the
esthetic possibilities.
This concerns not only Salem but all of Oregon and the
Capital City owes to the commonwealth to extend the full
est cooperation in its creation of an outstanding capital
Bet-up.
Twins Admit They Still Get
Mixed Up After 84th Birthday
Seattle U,R) Identical twins who look so much alike they .
sometimes get mixed up themselves, celebrated their 84th
birthdays Sunday.
Mrs. Annette Howard and Mrs. Juliette Powers said they
were not "Joshing about getting their own Identities con
fused. "I once left Annie In a department stose waiting room
while I went to do a little more shopping and a minute
later saw Annie walking towards me," Mrs. Powers said.
"Goodness, I was embarrassed, I was talking to myself.
It turned out to be a full length mirror," she laughed.
The two gracious, merry-eyed ladies, who have lived In
San Mateo, Calif., the past five years, are visiting Seattle
members of their family.
BY BECK
Popular People?
TS mfavtffir7 YOU KIDS MAY BE IN V 1
SSV 'lilSk Mi I HAWAII BUT WE'RE STILL 1 ?1
iii iiy i K2ffcV HERE IN MAINE fltT J
If BALMY BEACH OF f THAT FIRE. JatW.J.
H TROPICAL BrSL W ARTHUR GODFREY
BITROPICAL JglO ,gpHWtlELE.
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND BY GUILD
Vaughan, Maragon Helped Wizard of Odds
Race Track Out on Building
By DREW PEARSON
Washington In the spring of 1946 when building materials
were scarcer than hens' teeth and several million veterans were
pounding the pavements looking for homes, this columnist pub
lished a series exposing the mysterious manner in which the
Tanforan race track at San Bruno, Calif., was able to flout the
U.S. government and spend $2,-
time, however, U. S. Judge Dal
Lemmon in California proceed
ed with the prosecution.
Result: Guy Standifer, front
man for Joe Reinfeld, plus Tan
foran contractors got three
months in jail and fines of $90,
000. Joe Reinfeld and the other
two real owners, never appear
ed In the picture and were never
prosecuted. In fact, their own
ership was not known.
SIPS FOR SUPPER
000,000 on new grandstands,
stables etc.
Indie a t i n g
they had
"friends in
Washin g t o n,"
Tanforan offi
cials thumbed
their noses at
court orders
and went blithe
ly ahead with
their building.
No one at
that time knew
the reason why.
Drew Pearson
IT'S 4- TO I THAT A MEMBER
OF YOUR FAMILY IS A
MA6AZINE-READIN6
ADULT.
WHEN
AUTO TROUBLE
MAKES YOUR CAR
STOP, ODDS ARE 9 TO
YOUR IGNITION S
TO BLAME.
,'TMms, winptu T)u,
HAWWSVIUl, 6A.)
ODDS 0F9 '
LE6ALLY-WITHOUT -ST-'1- TL
STATE-REQUIRED W0RKIN6 PAPERS. fUMB&06-
Our Cold War
By DON UPJOHN
It seems when last evening we heralded our friend Harry
Brians as the first drug store soda jerk in Oregon and the late
Dr. Brewer's soda fountain as the first drugstore soda fountain in
the state, we
hurled ourself
into the middle
of what might
appropriately be
called a cold
war. Now comes
word from an
other old friend
of ours, June
Drake at Silver
ton, that he was
the first drug
store soda jerk
quite a few firsts to his record,
including being first' to give Sil
ver Falls to the world pictorial
ly, he being a photographer of
note who pioneered picture tak
ing in that cataract laden paradise.
We found out today why the
people voted years ago to let
nine jurors decide a civil case
instead of requiring the unani-
Don Cpjoho Mn,, nnnnnt n nll 4.,,A1,,A niv-
- . , luuua LuiiacLi. iti a.. lwcvc
in the state, predating -rry uy cu(t Judges George Duncan and
several years. June says that J. Rex Kirnmcll u were consulting
D. Guiss installed a soda foun- wHh the counly court this a m ,
tain in his Silverton drug store gs tQ adding a new set of jurors.'
in 1895, which would be about chairs SQ both courtrooms could
11 years ahead of the claim for hear jury ca5es at once The
Dr. Brewer. The fountain had ,ype Qf chajr was under discus.
a glass dome with a jet of wa- sjon and Judge Murphy jestir
ter shooting into it which made ly remarked that maybe it woufd
a pleasant sound that could be not be too good an idea to have
heard about a block away. June ,hc chairs overly comortable.
said when he was installed as He sajd if he were a juror ,n
a soda jerk the late Dr. Brewer tQ0 soft a chair he,d g0 iQ sleep
was still just a kid. June s fa- It onlv takes nine iurors to
Just when the Maragon-Vaughan-Hunt
team stepped in
to the Tanforan picture also is
Now, three . years later, the not known. According to in
backstage story becomes clearer, formation so far unearthed by
The Tanforan race track did senate investigators, their activ
have friends including the ity may not have started until
Sr"idevLm"itaL.atte; Sith fh l?1' POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
. .., o ...... ........tint lUOCVUUUIl, tl
his mysterious sidekick, John any rate, the triumvirate was
Maragon, and the now famous remarkably successful,
lobbyist, ex-Col. James V. Hunt. For, in October and Novem-
ber, 1947, a new inside lobby
Just when they started help- ng drive was started in Wash
ing the Tanforan track is still ington to help Tanforan. This
not clear. Nevertheless, Gener- time, it was stated, Tanforan
si VonBhnn has hpen serving as had changed owners. William
coordinator for veterans affairs, Helis, Greek-American oil op- lingerie over her head. Another held up a live squawking
and, as such, his job is to pro- eraior in jLouisiana and race-, chicken,
tect veterans. track owner in New Jersey, They were
Information before the senate evinced an interest in the track trying to- at-
Investigating committee, how- and considered buying it. tract the atten-
ever, shows that he used his in- In the end, it was purchased tion of an an-
fluence to help a race track get by Eugene Mori of the Garden nouncer selec-
building materials supposed to State Racing association. But ting contestants
How to Get on Quiz Shows
Told by 2 Young Experts
Bv HAL BOYLE
New York W) One lady in the radio audience waved some
want to avoid people who are
off balance. There is a very
thin line between the pleasant
extravert and the real screw
ball, who may do anything once
he gets on the air!"
The art In getting selected as
a contestant lies In attracting
the announcer's eye without
scaring him away by being too
brash or anxious.
"A bald man is more likely
to be picked, for example, than
a man with hair," said Goodson.
"But if he is wearing a neck
tie that flashes off and on like
an electric sign, we don't want
him. He's trying too hard."
Women wearing white gloves
ther also was a doctor. June
says he made and sold the first
ice cream over a counter in Sil
verton in 1896 by turning a
crank, chugging chunks of ice
and keeping it sprinkled witn
decide most cases now so there's
always a chance for three of
them to go to sleep," as jest
ingly remarked Judge Duncan.
"Yes," said . Judge Kimmell,
"they can rotate." So the court
rock salt. So there you have it, ,,, lho uci ..-. v,ti
June vs. Harry We ve always abl as they are to serye g long
been intrigued by the sign over t,me in the new courthouse as
Harry's Crown drug store en- well as a short time in thls one
trance here in Salem which And a llule later cushions wiu
reads, "Crown Harry Brians fee added for the benefu of the
Now, since we ve got mixed three soporific ones.
up in this controversy, maybe
Harry will come over and crown
have been reserved for veterans. Helis happens to be a close from the audi-
For, when his friend, John or ien. narry vaughan, ence to appear
Maragon, couldn't get govern- sant has used his fellow Greek, on qujz pr0.
ment building restrictions raised John Maragon, to run errands gram
to help the Tanforan track, in Washington. "But that
Vaughan sent his other friend, 0nce Vaughan and Maragon, isnt the way to
James Hunt, to the housing ex- a(ter visiting Helis's Rancocas Bet on a aulz
pediter. "r m. -New Jersey, brought show agreed ,.
As a result, the office of hous- ac a P'g which they turned Mark Goodson and Bill Todman.
ing expediter, also supposed to loose in J. Edgar Hoover's of- i.re aren't looking for screw
protect veterans, sent a memo lce as a joke on the unsuspect- balls."
to the justice department in- ing FBI director. Th'ese tw0 young men both
structine them to lift the iniunc- was after Vaughan, Mara- ,!,.
tion which a federal judge in 8on and Hunt came into the
how to be chosen to appear on and a large hat also are likely
California had placed against Picture that all of Tanforan's the radio giveaways. They've to be chosen merely because
Tanforan's unauthorized use of troubles suddenly vanished. picked thousands of contestants they stand out to the announcer
building materials. Maragon and Hunt made some for tbe flve network quiz as he passes through the audl
The Tanforan track was own- fme calls at the office of hous- shows thep produce Stop the ence in the pre-program warm
ed by Joseph H. Reinfeld, one in8 administrator and shortly Music, Winner Take All, Hit "P Period looking for contest
of the biggest bootleggers ever thereafter the justice depart- the jampot Beat the Clock ants- But a woman wearing
to operate rum boats off the ment was asked to lift its order and Spin to win , flashly jewelry is automatically
New Jersey coast during pro- banning Tanforan from the use what do they look for? rejected.
hibition days, and once indicted of building materials. , .. .' "People don't like to see any-
for the murder of Louis Lafera, More about the mysterious were not looKing lor me Qne w-n money who already
a prohibition agent who had team of Maragon, Vaughan and greatest Drams in trie """'o. looks as if he had more than he
seized his rum boat "Herreshoff" Hunt and what they accpm- " " V.1; needed," explained Goodson,
,ith 75 nnn wnrth r,f ,hiv.v dished inside the eovernmpnt for nlce people the audience will . ,, ,nV
will follow tomorrow.
(Copyright 1049)
us. At any rate both of the boys
By gum, there were some of
got started far enough back in the liveliest old codgers in that
the world so they should each 40 and 8 parade last night we've
be able to turn out a right nitty seen since Rip Van Winkle came
snack of fizz water, June has down out of the, hills.
POLIO AND YOU
Decrease in Crippling
Main Gain Against Malady
(Editor's note: This is the first of three articles by AP
Science Editor Howard W. Blakeslee, explaining what Is
known about infantile paralysis, how you can take precau
tions ngainst catching the disease, and what to do if it strikes
your family.)
By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE
(A.uoclate! ptfsA science writer)
New York, Aug. 4 W1) Children have had polio infantile
paralysis since ancient times. Today a higher proportion recover
without crippling. ;
This is the only gain, and all range from 40 to 70 per cent,
in the present century. The Sometimes there will be 70 per
with $75,000 worth of whiskey plished inside the government
aboard.
Came the end of prohibition,
and Reinfeld became the exclu
sive distributor of Haig and
Haig, King William scotches,
Martini and Rossi Vermouth;
plus regional distributor for Sea
grams and Schenleys.
He also became the owner,
with two others, of the Tanforan
race track. All three, however,
remained in the background.
On June 2 and June 22, 1948,
this columnist first called ; at
tention to the Tanforan violation
of housing regulations. A re
view of these columns show that
as early as May, 1946, the Tan
foran crowd seemed to have
mysterious influence in Wash
ington, which ruled that they
like.'
"Yes,'
The producers make every at-
said Goodson. "We J,emp' to ,eeP from Puttin8 on
with little to do who go from
studio to studio trying to get
nn ae manv nmDram, oe . nn..
....... ag
sible. They also turn down any
one who, when asked why he
wants to be a contestant, replies
"to win a prize."
"He may be completely hon
est," said Goodson, "but th
listeners often get the impres
sion such a person is too selfish."
Over the years the producer!
have found that housewives of
ten make better contestants than
college teachers.
"The housewife doesn't feel
she has to prove she's smart,
so she is more relaxed," aaid
Todman.
They also learned that men
or women from the South or
As I pointed out yesterday, never forget to avenge those sac- the best contestant on a ge0.
Wrong Kind of Room Service
Monterey, Calif. W.R) The man called 4141, but he didn't
listen to the answer he got. Instead he Insisted on a room res
ervation. He hung up quickly when he was told that 4141 Is the
number of the Monterey jail.
MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
China Reds Rage at Way
British Sloop Escaped
By JAMES. D.WHITE
(Substituting for DeWltt Mac Kenzle, AP Foreign News Analyst)
Cimnta rnrta nn 4ta lnn1 nrlrl com i.nff iiol 1 (arol i IrlO -fircf
were merely demolishing former reactioHn ot fne chinese communist, to the escape of the British
navy construction. . Am(uof
however, ruled otherwise. And
on May 31, Gilbert Kneiss dis- worth watching because it may and pardon
istration representative, refused
gain comes from better nursing,
and not from anything else.
cent complete recoveries with
out any medical care whatever.
polio, but only a few ever be
come sick. How the disease
Almost everyone has had Sometimes the death rates and
crippling are hign, despite care.
This contradiction is due to
works in most of us who don't tne virus being diflerent from
get ill is entirely unknown. year to year, sometimes virulent
But what happens in the sick "d sometimes mild,
is well known. It is in your In epidemics, hardly more
spinal cord. This cord is the than one child in 300 gets visi-
cablc carrying nerves from the ble polio. The highest suscep-
brain to branch out. like switch- tibility is from ages four to nine.
board wires, to all parts of your Bllt P"lio can hit adults, and
going to be rificed. They will never forget graphic basis.
icause H may ana paraon . . . mj. icn,t t. f 4.
disclose the true temper of the He demands punishment,
.Mrauon represen auve, reiusea chinese Reds oyer issue that apology and compensation from formed " remarked rHnn
Tanforan a permit for new con- , , ,. . . ririn-u lormea, remarned Goodson.
struction, despite which a CPA noncl P "re Simply more triendlf
inspector on June 5 found Tan- fUtUre P' Cy; " . 4 Th. aeencvs commentarv an? homey-talking.
foran continuing new construe- Their first reaction points Jf6" ' ( "The New Englander i. often
tion. but strikes no hammer blow. It alon8 "e same line, calling for too laconic too brief in his an-
In fact, Tanforan, for reasons shows signs of having been com- ,"V;" ' ' " !ers- . .n tne other hand the
i ew x oncer tends to be over
aggressive."
best known to itseif, continued hastily and none too ex- "5;,
to ignore both building regula- P"". wa'a broadcast by ou4 "f the incident
!i"rU"S- f nreociad otltJJ Chinese'
n California. Between je. Fr-isco by the Wh, tt. W
recently in the United States
the adult victims have been in-
body
One sot nf nprvps in this rnrH
creasinc
governs muscles. Polio chooses, s' 1
to attack these particular nerves
and no others. These nerves Nursing care, to help the body
are made of horn-shaped cells, fight its own battle, is all that
Polio damages or destroys can be done In polio,
horn cells. Among all nerves, There are two special aids,
these horn cells alone are un- One is heat. The other, move
able to regenerate themselves, ment of stricken muscles. Both
Once gone, they break the mus- are Sister Elizabeth Kenny's
cle-nerve cable for life. ' contribution and have done more
Without these nerves in the than anything else to reduce
spine, muscles shrink. No other crippling.
part of your body is damaged. Others than Sister Kenny
knew the merits of these two
Polio can strike at any point treatments, but she was the
along the spinal cable. If it person who did most to con
hits high up, It paralyzes arms vince doctors. Both treat the
and hands. If in the mid- paralyzed muscles and not the
spine, polio hits the muscles of horn cells. Nothing now known
breathing. If low down, it does any good for the stricken
paralyzes leg muscles. cells in the spinal cord.
There is an additional point Early diagnosis detecting the
of attack. In the "bulb," a disease is the most important
rounded thing, half the size of single thing to be done. And
a thumb, at the top of y.our the most difficult. The only
spine. This location of polio scientific proof is to use spinal
brings most of the deaths. cord fluid to make a monkey
The cause of polio Is a virus, sick. This test takes weeks and
a very tiny particle made of hundreds of dollars. A recent
protein. How this particle does French test promises to do
its destruction Is unknown. something similar with mice in
Two kinds of polio virus are two weeks. Both are too slow
known. More are suspected, to help your child.
You can have polio more than Keen doctors and nurses have
once, one attack for each kind to make the decision with the
of virus. eyes of experience.
In epidemics, those who re- (Tomorrow How to Keep
cover without any bad effects, from Getting Folio.)
'1
sy ana sname essness ot lmperi- "Oh, I'd say it would be a
alists, no matter who they are." younr, mn 4nm irn JZ.u
oucn language, in Doth Items, Tex., studying to be a doctor
is threatening but only vaguely and married to a girl who was
T . ... .. . working to help him get hii
It might merit serious con- rii.
cern if written in less obv ous "Tt ,i, ......
Amemysis era- h.s). nri .-,. , , ,. u , . . . ""H " "ie TO
Feb. 14, matic escape. The second is the herent EnB,,h ' "h """J"!1 n?,l a bab,y" la"ghed
.. " - luuuiau, ine a inipnpA inum
young fathers."
Playing Dead Is Hard
On a Man's Health
1946, and Feb. 14, 1947. there rress
were 18 violations of CPA regu-
latlons. In that period, the There were two separate
track put up luxurious new con- items. The first was a "news
struction despite orders to the story" from Nanking by corn
contrary, munist New China news agency
Finally this was too much for giving the Red version (and it's
U.S. Judge George B. Harris in a lulu) of the Amethyst's dra-
San Francisco and
lie issued an injunction agency s own comment. ping radio usuaUy dispIay
banning further construction. The account attributes every- '
IT. TAn Ui U i thinrf tn a flan Vnaii Phnntf.
jvcii una, uunevn, was ignor- " ' - B i rsirrisstti
ed. The Tanforan bovs seemed Hsien, who is hot identified in AIUi DIFFICULT KIND OF ACTING
iw iiiiur. nicy nau proieciive -ff--'"0 " ...- -friends
in Washington. writing. Later, in the commen-
. . tary, the agency names Yuan as
. ... . , . ,. the "commander of the people's
Significant excerpts from the liberation army at the Chin
Washington Merry-go-round kiang front
puuiwi. ai ...ai ume reaa: It was from near chinkiang By PATRICIA CLABY
"The Tanforan boys continued that the Amethyst escaped. Hollywood U.R)A man who played dead for a . .
to fix up their race track at a Gen. Yuan is apparently the re- the hardest kind of acting there is 8yS U S
total cost of around $2,000,000 sponsible officer who has to ex- While everybody in a movie cast wraneles ovor tv, v, .
. . . their flouting of the gov- plain how she got away. dead man, the poor guy li v u, wrangles over the body of a
ernment appeared so willful According to the agency, he lie there holding his breath un- "You can't move a muscle '
that rumor got round they had lets himself go. til he really turns blue. Bettger complained "You even
an in with somebody very high The Amethyst, he says, forced "You have to play dead exact- have to be careful between
UP ; contempt citation a passing steamer, the Kiang- ly right," Lyle Bettger said, "or scenes. Maybe you'll foreet and
was initiated by Judge Harris ling, to serve as a shield as she you look like the phoniest corpse show up with your hands folded
himself. CPA officials appar- started her "infamous" escape, imaginable. It's no cinch to re- in two different wavs "
ently were standing on the side- The Amethyst then sank her, as limpness." A dead man has to be careful
lines doing nothing about Tan- well as a number of junks try- ,o ,uiod au, o, a-duioo Bt too, not to laugh at any of th.
forans continued violations of ing to rescue survivors in the Bettger is tne blackmailer jokes he hears his co-worker,
building materials, so the alert water. Several hundred were whom Barbara Stanwyck plans make
judge decided to move . . . CPA drowned, says Yuan, who also to kill in the Paramount picture "It seemed to me that while !
officials, when asked why they charges that British Naval ne- "The Lie." But when Miss Stan- was plaving dead every funm
hadnt recommended prosecu- gotiations for the Amethyst's re- wyck sneaks up to shoot him, story I d ever heard came tr
tion, said: All our reports have lease were merely to stall for Bettger already is dead. mind," he said "It took som.
gone to Washington We have time while she prepared to John Lund, believing that control to keep from burstin
referred everything to Washing- escape. Miss Stanwyck did the dirtv out laughing." '
ton for their decision' ... In "Categorically denied," Is the deed, drives around town with
l8SmCF,t, ZITh1. ?': ,,rf"tfru,h.e? ll' ?. Be lasfday dead, th,
: . t , : """ y lu aump n. eventually script called for Lund to earn
Yuan is quoted as concluding: he does, off a bridge to the rail- him over his shoulder up a lorl
foran report was on his desk
""u ""'e lu 5,UQy i nrmiy oencve mat tne peo- road tracks below. flight of stairs Lund did it V
... , ple s liberaton army and peo- All that running around is times before director Mitnh.r
While Washington marked pi. of the whole country will hard on the body. Leisen okayed the f scene