Scientist Claims Russia Can Build Hydrogen Bomb if Needed Editor's Note: The United States is now reported to be considering whether to manufacture a hydrogen bomb, which has been estimated to be up to 1,000 times more powerful than the atomic bomb which leveled Hiroshima. Two big questions are posed in connection with this decision: Would Russia make a hydrogen bomb? Can Rus sia make a hydrogen bomb? In the following interview with United Press Pavlo D. Lysenko, brother of one of the top Russian scientists gives his views on these questions. By GENE D. SYMONDS (United Pitts Staff Correspondent) New York, Jan. 28 OJ.R) A top Ukrainian scientist who broke with the Soviet Union says that atomic know-how as the western powers and would not hesi tate to build a hydrogen bomb if the Kremlin thought it nec i u , F J A Charges Lie Longshoreman Bruce Barrow Jones (above), first defense witness in the San Francisco perjury-conspiracy trial of longshore leader Harry Bridges, opened the de fense attack by shouting from the stand that John H. Scho maker, who swore he heard Jones recruit Bridges into the communist party in 1933, "is liar!" Outspoken Jones also termed the trial "a frameup." (Acme Tele photo) School Staff Member Speaks The program of cooperative, part-time training schedules to prepare Salem senior high school students for the business world ware described Friday for mem bers of the Salem Credit associ ation by Theodore K. Pierson of the school staff. The school's plans were pre sented to the group in answer to questions posed at a meeting a week aeo when virtually all members complained schools failed to prepare students for work. Pierson emphasized efforts that were being made to guide students toward employment not only in high school courses but through a follow-up system after they graduate. The Instructor invited mem bers of the group to come to the school to discuss problems and to call upon the school when em ployes were needed. To under score his Idea that suggestions were welcomed, a questionnaire containing two problems was given to the association. Mem bers were asked to list, In order of preference, the most import ant things they considered in hiring a new employe, and to suggest how Salem high could assist In locating suitable and employable personnel. Relief Needs Mounting Portland, Jan. 28 MP) Relief needs are mounting fast in Ore gon, the state public welfare commission reported yesterday. The commission said the num ber of families on relief rolls jumped 20 per cent in Decem ber. Payments mounted to $2, '200,000, highest of the year. The commission set UD a bud get of $7,654,000 for the next quarter. Linn County Bank Deposits Decrease for Second Year Albany Linn county bank deposits slipped for the second eonsecutive year during 1949, and were slightly more than $1 million below the 1948 mark, a survey of statements of ten Linn banks and two post offices showed. The deposit figure as of December 31. 1949, was $34,786,989.42 or 2.6 per cent under tne isio deposits, a compilation of bank statements revealed. The drop of deposits over the Previous year amounted to $1,010,212. Deposits are up, however, by nearly $2 million over the July 1, 1949 figure. Bank deposits in the four Al bany banks were $17,830,993.23, and the deposits in the remain der of the county were down to $17,155,996.19. In line with the deposit de cline, loans by Linn banks swell ed 5.4 per cent last year. But the increase came almost entirely from three Albany banks which showed loan increases of 9.9 per cent. Overall the banks of the rest of the county showed a 2.1 per cent drop in loans. The biggest bank in the county remained last year the First National of Lebanon, which showed $8,990 817.40 in deposits and $3,529,286.33 in loans on its books. 1U resources at the end Russia has "as much nr mnrp" essary. Pavlo D. Lysenko, once one of the top Soviet industrial chemists and a brother of Tro fim D. Lysenko, leading Soviet biological theoretician, said in an interview yesterday that the Russians would not be stopped from building an H-bomb be cause of moral or financial rea sons. He said that if Russia decides, or already has decided to build an H-bomb, they have the tech nical knowhow to do the job. , Lysenko said Russian experi ments with atomic energy, com bined with what tney had learn ed through espionage, placed them at least on a par with the western powers in atomic knowledge. Lysenko broke with the So viet regime shortly before his capture by the Germans in 1942. He was brought to this country last year by the International Rescue committee to enable the government to make use of his knowledge. Since that time he has kept himself informed on scientific developments in Russia through Russian publications and "oth er sources," presumably other eastern European expatriates. He said that through Russian technical publications available here and the "other sources" he was able to have a fairly com posite picture of scientific stu dy in Russia. He said recent "acquisitions of huge portions of China by Russia would give it the great amounts of uranium needed to build a large stockpile of atom bombs. Asked whether he thought the manufacture of the hydro gen bomb now by the U.S. would help to prevent war, Ly senko said the Soviet govern ment "does not take the hydro gen or atom bombs as decisive weapons and thinks the way to victory will be through political blunders' committed by the western powers." Asked if he though war was inevitable between Russia and the western powers, Lysenko said "the key to war or peace lies with the United States." He said he would elaborate on how the key to peace lies with the U.S. in an "open letter to Stalin" which he plans to pub lish in the near future. Lysenko said that unlike the psychological situation in Am erica whereby the atomic wea pons are looked upon as abso lute weapons, Kremlin planners think of them merely as subsid iary weapons to be correlated with other methods. Lysenko is living in the New York City area with his wire and two young children under the protection of the Interna tional Rescue committee and a security agency of the govern ment. Larson Is President Fruit Growers Group Woodburn A L. Larson of Woodburn, Route 2, was elected president of the Woodburn Fruit Growers Cooperative association during the organization meeting of the board of directors this week. He succeeds Harry Wilk- ins Other officers elected were Oscar Greaerson of Woodburn Route 2 as vice president and Mrs Ina Mills of Woodburn. re elected secretary treasurer. Elec tion of a manager was postponed until a later meeting of 1949 amounted to $9,552,322. Second largest was the Bank of Albany with $5,588,343 in de- oosits. and third is the First Na tional Bank, Albany branch, with $4,794,171. which ended up the year barely $4,000 more in deposits than the Albany branch of the U. S. National. For the whole county last vear, commercial deposits total ed $23,612,923.38 and savings deposits totaled $10,046,213.04 Loans outstanding December 31 totaled $13,333.005 17, and the resources of the 10 Linn banks were $32,791,149.16. Koreans Plan Trip Seoul, Jan. 28 W) The five members of Korea's national as sembly who will seek continued U.S. economic aid in Washington will leave for the United States Feb. 1, their chairman, Shin Ik Hi said today. They plan to re main in Washington three weeks. I'WII I IUL .LIJULIU ljJm'jlM.tL.HIIILIl HyMU..Wi W"W)W" I'l ltfPWI" ' 'jli i .LIJJ.III V IIUIJIMJII ,WI IJfU V P""jm Hopeless Youth Wins Diploma Chicago, Jan. 28 (IP) Friday was graduation day for an 18-year-old paralyzed youth whose doom was pronounced by phy sicians more thari two years ago. Lying helpless in bed at his home at 2746 Windsor avenue on the northwest side, Paul Nel son, Jr., received his high school diploma from Dr. Herold C. Hunt, superintendent of Chicago schools. The former Amundsen high school athlete has been com pletely paralyzed since August, 1947, when his spine was sever ed in an automobile accident. Doctors said his case was hope less, that he had only a few weeks to live. So Paul, who has never given up hope of complete recovery, was taken home to die. Paul's father, a clerk, said his son never has been informed of his hope less condition. Three times since physicians pronounced him doomed, the plucky youth, who has shrunk from 195 pounds to a mere vu, has observed birthday anniver saries which medical men said each instance would be his last. But Paul has hung on grimly never losing hope, a fact which the elder Nelson believes is re sponsible for his son's contin ued survival. Paul is graduating with i straight "E" (excellent) average. Since his accident, he has taken oral instruction from a special teacher. The Twentieth Century Fund reports that the largest part of America's wartime increase in total output came from the fact that more people worked rather than from increased productivity. One-Punch Brawl Involves Singer and Actor Hollywood. Jan. 28 (U.R) A one between singer Johnny Johnston Jr., was blamed today on "ancient history" and "nasty" stories. The husky Kirkwood, "Joe to have felled Johnston on the Country club late yesterday, but- the singer denied he went down with the punch. Screen beauty Cathy Downs, Kirkwood's wife, said the brief fisticuffs stemmed from an old feud. 'Johnny kept going around for months telling nasty stories about Joe. Johnny didn t wan; to fight so there wasn't much to it," she added laughingly. " don't blame him for not wanting to fight my husband." "Our original trouble was an cient history," Kirkwood said, reluctant to talk about the inci dent. "It was all a misunder standing anyway. Johnny just The Kings Men Monday through Friday, 9:45 a.m. KOCO- 1490 KC. Big Noise in Wyoming Contractors on the Boysen Dam, Wyoming, needed 150,000 cubic yards of rock fill so they exploded two carloads of TNT in the side of a mountain along the Wind river. The roar could be heard 50 miles away. Scientist Predicts 9-Hour Moon Trip by Rocket Ship Lincoln, Neb., Jan 28 (U.R) Some day about 50 years from now, a space ship may make the 240,000-mile trip to the moon, and return to the earth within 24 hours. That is the belief of J. P. Colbert, professor of civil engineering at the University of Nebraska. the problem of fueling a giants- rocket ship for the expedition by about the year 2000. According to Colbert's predic tions, the ship will take off at an almost perpendicular angle and hurtle through the air at the necessary seven - miles -per - second "escape speed." Once the plane is clear of the air surrounding the earth, he said, its rockets can be cut off and it can coast through space a large part of the time. He estimated the journey will take about nine hours. - ... The aircraft will have to land stern-first, Colbert said, using its rockets to break the impact of the landing. The arrival on the moon will be timed for the "dawn line," just as that planet's 336-hour "day" is beginning, Colbert said. The temperature there reaches the hotter-than-boiling point of 214 degrees when the sun is di rectly overhead, he noted, and the two-weeks-long "nights" get as cold as 215 degrees below zero. Therefore men must plan to arrive at the most temper ate time, he explained. Astronomers believe men can remain safely on the moon one or two hours before beginning the return voyage, Colbert said. The takeoff from the moon will be far easier, he said, since its gravity is only one-sixth as strong as the earth's. Unmanned, guided missiles undoubtedly will be used on on Golf Course - punch brawl on a golf course and actor-golfer Joe Kirkwood Palooka" of the movies, was said second green of the Riviera talked too much at the club to too many people. I really had no alternative." Johnston, husband of Film Actress Kathryn Grayson, claim ed Kirkwood swung at him but missed. They scuffled a bit and both went down, he said, after Kirkwood had been "abusive." "I talked to him later and told him to stay out of my life. Johnston said. "I also told him that in the future whenever his name came up in a conversation. I would change the subject and he'd do me a favor if he'd do the same." Clough-Barrick Company CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO LISTEN TO HYMNS OF THE WORLD BEAUTIFULLY SUNG FOR YOU BY and He is confident science will solve test flights before a staffed ex pedition tries it, Colbert said. If these rockets were filled with an explosive, colorful sub stance to spatter the surround ing area, the landing could be seen by strong telescopes on earth, he thinks. Colbert said it is reasonable to assume the last half of the century will see development of the fuel needed for the trip. Look what we ve done in the first half," he said. "If any one had tried to describe tele vision or radio or jet planes in 1900, people would have thought he was crazy." Scio School Holds' 'Day' for Moving Scio When the four lower grades resumed their school work Monday, they found them selves located in the new mo dern grade school addition. Since there was no school, most nf the week, the erarie hoard and principal, Ralph McDonald worked hard to get "moved in." The new desks have not yet ar- rived, but it is hoped they will be here soon. Some of the teach- ers and other interested citizens also helped with the moving joined in cutting the Ameri processes. cans down. Profs. May Have Been Sacrificed Manila, Jan. 28 (IP) Two U.S professors, hacked to death on a hiking tour, may have been t he blood sacrifice of primitive tribesmen. The superstitious natives were trying to restore the fertility of their barren soil by this slaughter. That is the strange, blood- chilling story that reached the U. S. embassy today from the old head-hunting land 150 miles north of Manila. Robert F. Conklin and Marvin Pittman, members of the Philip pines university staff, were slain with spears and knives on a lonely mountain trail Christmas day. Robbery at first was given as the motive. James L. Meader, public af fairs officer of the embassy, said the new version was brought in by investigators who question ed six Ifugao tribesmen charged with the willings. By this account, the profes sors wandered into a primitive village at the wrong time. The tribe was holding a meeting Witch doctors were looking for someone to sacrifice in order to regenerate the soil. Crops had been bad. The professors wanted guides the tribe supplied them. T he tribesmen waited at a spot chos- en lor the sacrifice The headman of the village came up with a spear and plung ed it into the back of first one professor, then the other. The remainder of the savages then Capltnl Journal, SnFem, Ore.; Australia, New To U. S. to Ward By GEORGE Sydney, Australia, Jan. 28 (U.R) tralia and New Zealand over the munism and other Far Eastern political developments. Conservative governments of these countries "down under" were swept into power by the recent ousting of entrenched Social ist Labor regimes. Now they are recasting their foreign poli cies and checking their defences. Both countries are looking to the Far East and northward to America, and less to London and Europe. Both want United States protection as a cardinal point of foreign policy. ... The Communists are driving onward toward the borders of an unstable French Indo-China. The United States therefore re fuses to become involved In Formosa. Australians and New Zealanders therefore remember with growing uneasiness their predicament on Dec. 7, 1941. Unrest in Burma, Malaya and Indo-China remind these people of the frightening isolation and the "out on a limb" feeling they endured when the Japanese at tacked Pearl Harbor. Their mounting fears are re flected in the growing space de voted to discussion of Asiatic events and backgrounds in newspapers which a few years ago virtually ignored the Far East. It is reflected also by the ex traordinary importance govern ments and the press attach to the British Empire conference of foreign ministers at Colombo. ... The drift of events today is recalling nostalgically to the people how the United States came to their aid in 1942 They acknowledge that Brit ain is deeply committed in Eur ope and is preoccupied with her recurrent economic crises. These loyal British dominions there fore now hope they can work out effective defense arrange ments with the power that sav ed them once before, the United States. They also seek closer secur ity arrangements within the British empire as well as some kind of Pacific pact among de mocratic countries. But without U.S. support, ob servers say, the Australasian governments feel a Pacific pact would lack real substance. They also feel they can contribute most in the way of trained men, materiel and experience to such a pact, next to the U.S. and Canada. There has been the rise of each new nationalism in Asia and the shrinking of the British empire through the defection of India and Burma, as well as the independence of the Philippines and Indonesia. The realization has deepened, therefore, that an At your favorite Food Store Saturday, January 28, 1950 11 Zealand Turn Off Red Thrust McCADDEN Concern is mounting in Aus southward push of Asiatic Com old order has changed and plans must change accordingly. Although concern was not so keenly felt a year or two years ago, labor governments "down under" began looking to their ramparts. Their successors are building on these foundations, but with greater pace and in creased alarm because of the growing Communist threat In Asia. To date, the most marked change in foreign policy has been in Australia a decision to play down the United Nations in favor of more "realistic" poten tial allies. All-out support of UN was the favorite theme of Dr. H. V. Evatt, one-time president and a founder of UN. Girl Now Man Marries Girl Yonkers, N.Y., Jan. 28 (IP) A young woman who became a man by surgery has been mar ried to a girlhood chum. The recent marriage was dis closed today by an authority who asked that no names be used. The bridegroom, a slender, dark-haired young man, was known as "Joan" before a series of operations last spring at Yonkers professional hospital and as "John" afterward. The bride is a New York ele vator operator who was a close friend of "Joan" for some years before the operations. "Joan" was an attractive, boyish-figured 135-pounder who liv ed 23 years as a girl until a chance physical examination showed male characteristics were present. Told of this, "Joan" said: "I'd rather be a man." A two-week series of opera tions gave the girl her wish. In male clothing and with close-cropped hair, "John" went to Tennessee for a while but re turned here last fall. Doctors described him ai a handsome young man who In all liklihood could become a fatner. Club Board Called Willamina The executive board of the Willamina Civic club met Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. George King. Mrs. Harry Shipley was voted in as secretary to replace Mrs. Bob Pinnick, who resigned.