Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 16, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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    C apital it Jobf nal
THE WEATHER
SHOWERY, SOME clearing this
evening; mostly cloudy, rain to
night, Tuesday moraine; show
ery by afternoon. Little change
in temperature. Low tonight, 36;
high Tuesday, 48.
FINAL
EDITION
65th Year, No. 40
Enuro m Mood din
matur at ala. Ortcoa
Salem, Oregon, Monday, February 16, 1953
""J
Price 5c
Senate Passes
Amendment to
Referendum
First Prolonged De
bate of Session to Re
quire More Signatures
By JAMES D. OLSON
In the first prolonged debate
fn the senate this session, an
,1
effort tn renuire a nercentare'quor by the drink was passed 51
of signatures from three of the to 8 Monday by the house and
four congressional districts in Mnt to the senate,
the state to enable placing of the j Since the bill contains an em
referendum on legislative acts or jergency clause, it would become
initiate measures was voted down I la w as soon as the governor signs
by vote of 17 to 10. lit.
The debate centered on a mi- There was little discussion of
nority report which concurred ; the measure, which provides for
with the majority report in set- selling of liquor by the glass in
ting the yardstick of signatures restaurants and hotels; private,
on the total vote for governor in fraternal and veterans clubs; and
place of the supreme court jus-Ion railroads and boats,
tice but which opposed the re- At tne ,ame ti it aUow$
quirement of obtaining signa-lciubs to keep thelr ,ystems
districts.
Non-Partisan Line-l'ps
The vote was non-partisan
with many of the republican sen
ators joining wiin senator
the majority report.
"The members of the majority
committee are trying to ham
string the initiative and refer
endum," Senator Robert Holmes
declared. "I think that when you
require 5 per cent of the legal
voters or any other percentage
of signatures from any section,
you will play right into the hands
of special interests."
Cites Referendum History
Senator Gene Brown of Jose-
u: ... ...U ika
outline of the initiative and ref
erendum in Oregon, telling of
the corruption and graft In the
legislature during the last two
decades of the 19th century
which he said led to such men
as William S. U'Rcn, and former
United States Senator Jonathon
Bourne to work for direct legis
lation by the voters.
(Concluded on Page 5. Column 8)
Reprisals on
Stale Witnesses
Washington VP) Sen. McCar
thy, R-Wis., accused State De
pumc IUUIIIJ, wuu auHpvucu nv; COStinB $10(1 to $400 tnnpll
majority report, gave . hlrfift,,8 400' t0 sel1
partment officials Monday of!boo2e and j.m too oId to ,tart
taking reprisals against witnesses;
In a senate investigation, une oi
them flared back that McCarthy
was destroying morale in the
foreign service.
The angry exchange was be
tween Boykin, acting director of
the department's bureau of secu
rity. It capped an inquiry by Mc
Carthy's Senate Investigations
Subcommittee into how it hap
pened that a State Department
security agent was shifted to a
new job soon after telling the
senators mai uutuuicwa the week of March 9.
disapopcar from the department s federal Judge Irving R. Kauf
secrct files. man scheduled the new execu-
John E Matson, who said he tjon date for tne hu
was shifted to a "pavement ...,, .... , ...
Bounding" job. testified he bc -
ieved the only reason was that,"
his superiors
"felt possibly
I
might disclose the truth"
about
department files.
Mixed Effects
Of Decontrol
New York VP) Decontrol
headaches trouble some indus
tries and leave others untouch
ed. And the same goes for con
sumers. Consumers in some areas are
paying more for gasoline to
day. In other areas oilmen are
more worried about price
weakness and surpluses which
may lower fuel oil prices
shortly.
The auto industry seeking
more steel and other metals
may still have to wait Its turn
a while longer. Washington
says that all priority tickets
for the second quarter must be
Vnnnrnd first, whether they've
been presented to the steel; Both gasoline and fuel oil
mills yet or r.ot. ; prices have gone up In Salem.
And since it takes nearly I With increased gasoline prices
two months for steel orders to i becoming effective today auto-
turned into delivered metal. lm.ob,lc ownors probably will pay
few steel users will be getting!
any more than at present be
fore April and not much
more probably before June.
.,..,, nK,,.j ,onn
few price changes are predict -
4;n ulll lake care of that.
Pgl Adlal
" 77
Weather UetClllS
M..in, w.tr. i:i mMmmm -
,,, 11. tui ti-knr rrtinuiKn: n
Tain i,ii.ti. n
"" r"i "!':
h.i.nt. s im. ,iw..n .t i . nr.m.r
House Passes
Liquor by Drink
Bill 51 to 8
Emergency Clause.
Makes it Law as Soon'
As Governor Signs
By PAIL W. HARVEY, JR.
(AsioeUted PrtM CorrMpondnt)
Legislation to give Oregon II-
out of their own bottles. This
provision was fought by the res
taurants and hotels, which want
ed an end to this club system.
.
tucn-ilocal Option Elections
The bill permits any commu
nity to vote out liquor by the
drink in local option elections.
The people voted last Novem
ber to amend the constitution so
as to permit liquor by the drink,
instructing the legislature to set
up rules and regulations to ac
complish it.
The bill passed Monday was
drafted by the house alcohol
committee in cooperation with
the state liquor commission. The
commission will grant the licens
liquor by the glass.
'Excellent Start'
Chairman Russell Hudson, The
Dalles, of the house alcohol com
mittee, said "this bill is an ex
cellent start toward giving the
people their wish to have liquor
by the drink in a conservative
and orderly manner. We put
the emergency clause on the bill
because it is the wish of the peo
ple to have it as soon as pos
sible,
Without an emergency clause,
a bill doesn't become a law un
til 90 days after adjournment
of the legislature.
The only voice raised against
the bill during the debate was
by Rep. Joseph E. Harvey, Port
land, staunch prohibitionist, who
said
I'vo never vpt vntorf frival Air Station at St. Louis,
now
(Concluded on Pace 5, Column 4)
Atomic Spies to
Die in March
New York VP) Execution of
atomic spies Julius and Ethel
."":: 7. " -,-1". ? l"e "esl
. "n
jeeted.
The couple was convicted
nearly two years ago of con
spiring to transmit atomic
formation to Russia. They have
been in Sing Sing prison's death
house ever since.
U. S. Marshal William Car
roll said the date of the electro-1
cution may be March 12, and
the hours 8 p.m. (PST).
Rosenberg, 34, and his wife,
36, originally had been sched-
uled to die in the electric chair'
tnere January 14.
But the judge postponed the
execution to permit time for
the President to act on their
clemency appeal.
President Eisenhower last
week turned them down.
Prices of Gasoline
And Fuel Oil Go Up
131.2 cents a gallon for regular
fuel and 33.7 for premium. iwithout direct information or;aboard 62 passengers and 57 Report by two of his colleagues
This is on the assumption 0f instructions from headquarters, crew men from the Italian shlp cnticizing what it called extraya
most companies operating here But all said they would go along before it was abandoned in pnee in the U. S. overseas mill
that the increase will be 3 cents I with the increase. It might Demounting Mediterranean seas. Iry base Prgoram challenges
However. Standard of Califor -
!nia - whose Irad " being follow-
located the increase might
mcatea tne increase might be are- nas come ai a very ..y ana ,,,r ncip. , outposts, Gore said In an General McGrancry had approv- shortly be fore he retired as pres
from 2 to 2', cents. The in-'inopportune time for those per- The " 000-ton Muir operated ln?erviewP Ru'ia mlgM r.gard ed the Truman order "on the ident. While president, Truman
Idividual Standard retailer may. sons who use oil for heating by the U.S. Military Transport ;,ha. nn ,.,... ! understanding that it did not In-had twice vetoed legislation de-
set his own price, it was said.
. The wholesale price has gone.
up about m cents, bringing the
wnoiesaic prire to an average oi
wholesale prire to an average of
about 25 2 cents for regular and
i,. mr preu.iuiii.
nit rciau price paiu oy uie
If I ,
mini Iff II 1 1 riiiMMiuh
r
New Capitol Lawn Monument Replica of the Liberty
Bell, dedicated to "You, Free Citizen in a Free Land,"
recently placed on a granite base at the west approach to
the capitol. This bronze bell, one of SO cast in France and
donated by a number of the nation's leading corporations,
was presented to this state under the direction of John W.
Snyder, secretary of the treasury.
All 46 on Crashed
Airliner Die in Gulf
New Orleans VP) A fourth
liferaft from the National Air
lines DC-6 plane that plunged
into the storm-tossed Gulf of
Mexico with 46 persons aboard
3 Die in Crash
01 Navy Plane
Bedford. Pa. W Three per
sons were killed Sunday night
when a twin-engine Navy air
plane crashed Into a mountain-
side and burned, 18 miles west
of this Western Pennsylvania
community.
Navy officials at Lambert Na-
home base of the plane, identi-
nome Dase oi in
tied the dead as:
Lt. William G. Schaufler, 29,
of East Greenwich, R. I. He was
attached to the Bureau of Aero
nautics representatives at Mc
Donnell Aircraft Corp., St.
Louis.
Lt. Edmund J. Stulce, 29,
Wellesley, Mass., who was sta
tioned at Lambert.
Lt. (Jg) Arthur I. Rule, 29,
civilian employe at Maiden Air
Force Base, Mo.
The Navy spokesman said the
Beechcraft plane was en route
back to St. Louis from Atlantic,
City. N. J., after a routine cross-
country training flight when the
crash occurred.
Gerhart Eisler
in-L., , , n .
Micrjnn in Kprljn
I Wl
t, ,: ,, m, till
i"',r-'" , , ,t
trace of Gerhart Eisler in Westj
Berlin Monday.
Allied and German officials 1
as well as the Jewish community
here said the deposed Soviet
Zone propaganda chief has not'
turned up anywhere in the West, I
as far as thev know.
The West Berlin Telegraf
quo ed informed circles Sunday
as assuming wmi lie uau ueu
to West Berlin to escape possible
arrest in the spreading commu
nist purge.
consumer for gasoline In Oregon
includes 8 cents sales tax, of rean war, rescued all 119 passen
which 6 cents is a state tax and ers and crew members today
2 cents federal tax. i,rom tne sinking Italian liner.
Except Standard of California,
all distributors in Salem were
ltoday or day or so later, they
indicated
nuiuiii ui tuiu wcamcr louiiy .ju mnro souineasi oil Oi-
their homes or office buildings.
Salem Fuel Oil Dealers as-
sociation Monday morning an -
nouncca an increase in o I
nounccd an increase in
prices effective at 8 a.m.
Mon-
ud).
(Continued en Paf S, Column 1)
u ;
l
was found empty Monday, "ap
parently ending all hope for sur
vivors." Three other life rafts all emp
ty were found bobbing on the
choppy waters Sunday by an ar
mada of planes and ships that
combed the waters and recovered
17 mangled bodies.
The Coast Guard said the
fourth raft was recovered "ac
counting for all of the rafts and
apparently ending any hope for
survivors." The raft had never
been Inflated. , '. -
The Coast Guard said even if
survivors had managed to get
on the rafts that the rough wa
ters would have probably wash
ed them overboard.
The 1 1 1 f a t e d four-engined
plane, flying in 100-mile-per-hour
winds, was en route from
Tampa, Fla., to New Orleans
when it crashed last Saturday af
ternoon less than five minutes
from possible safety.
Alaska Crater
In Full Eruption
Kodiak, Alaska, (Pi One of
Alaska's slumbering volcanoes
awoke with a roar Sunday in
an eruption that sent a column
of smoke nearly six miles into
.the air.
Ash and smoke filtered into
.....
Jl.l'?Jly region." Mondav "thi w
fabled Mount Katmai in 1912.lslr" moving In over the week-
r,... ...u..i... , end.
wiicuier uiu vuicano was
Katmai or one of two other long-
threatening peaks in the Valley
t innnn c, 1 . .
" uiiiunra was nui uc-
crmincd Immediately,
nur whs mere inimeuiuie
ZZVLX'L "llZu? 'I1
!;:"" ."h "'H-hour period ending at 10:30
.. , . . 'a.m. Monday, .79 of an Inch be-
'T"1':1" measurer, .oi oi an men oi
the eruption. They said it was,
"'-"" muu.u imuihi.
r,i.o-.,..-. ...i.n i..... ... ..!
cjnj f h Jmok mountain
,atcr Sflid jt would8be Moun,
Trident or Mount Mageik.
Troopship Saves'
119 on Liner
Naples. Italy U.B The Amcrl-
can troopship Gen. H. C. Muir,
loaded with United Nations sol
diers coming home from the Ko-
l "pomania, radio reports said
The Muir reported it tcokl(u- lenn.) said Monday that a
I The liner's operators here said
.1, ' S.. , a i c r
Z ., ,,S " " . c '
'rvice had intercepted the Tri -
pomania s sua.
' The American vessel changed
course ana racea to tne aid oi
the crippled Italian ship.
i ne Muir was the Iirst ship
I to reach the liner a side
House Group
Rejects Funds
For Defense
Asks Use of Unspent
Money for Army,
Navy and Airforce
Washington, UP) A Defense
Department request for $1,200,
000,000 in new fnnds for the
current year was rejected in
full by the House Appropriation
Committee Monday.
The committee said the De
partment should use available
funds to finance the programs
for which the new money had
been requested.
Most of the new money sought
was for Army, Navy and Air
Force military pay, increases In
which were voted by Congress
since the last defense depart
ment budget was approved.
Cleared for Debate
The request for additional
funds came from former Presi
dent Truman before he left of
fice last month. In some cases,
President Eisenhower revised
the requests, but In others he
made no changes.
The defense fund requests
were considered along with rec
ommendations for additional
money for numerous other agen
cies. The committee action clear
ed for floor debate Tuesday the
first appropriation bill of the
83rd congress.
In aU, congress was asked to
aprpove $2,313,719,590 In sup
plementary appropriations for
the current fiscal year.
(Continued on Pact 5, Column ()
Winter Again
Routs Spring
(Br TIM A4MCUU4 Pru)
The worst storms in years
brought an abrupt end to balmy
weather across the nation's mid
section Monday, whipping up
dust and snow blizzards in the
Midwest and Southwest.
Sub zero temperatures were
; common in the Northern plains
and upper Mississippi valley.
Wfnds up to 80 miles an hour
casiicd dust more than 12,000
feet into the skies above West
ern Kansas.
Hill city, Kan., provided a
graphic example of the sharp
downturn in temperatures. It's
Sunday high of 66 degrees con
trasted with a morning record
of 17 Monday.
While wind-blown dust and
snow plagued Nebraska, Kansas,
Colorado and Oklahoma, three
inches of snow fell in Chicago
and zero forecasts for Monday
night.
Wind and Rain
In New Storm
Heavy showers of rain and
iirnno uinH kv
. . ..
inas were up 10 ao miles an
hour velocity In peak gusts in
Salem Monday morning. At1
noon Sunday the velocity was up
to 45 miles in peak gusts.
Better than three-quarters ofiCorners or sat in tea shops dis-
an Inch of rain came down In the
that amount being in the 24-hour!
jji-nua.
Forecast is for more showers
tonight and Tuesday.
Motorlsts are warned to carry
chains on routes through the
mountains, new snow falling
over the week-end.
Storm warnings were ordered
hoisted again Monday morning
all along the north Pacific coast
from Tatoosh, Wash, to Cape
Blanco, Ore.
Senator Gore
Raps Report
Washington VP) Sen.
Gore
ness. and with this I strongly
disagree."
... ,, . ....... u ....
1. jn tcnd to nor dld ,t ln fact or in
) Tne idta o( muU.biHion law create a naval petroleum re -
dollar overseas air base program'serve within the meaning of the
i. in . Cnui Pm,i mn in
enable the U. S. to hit back with1
jj i Qcvasiaiing atomic diows u mejiuu, is ui me upn.iuu uic urui-r
enemy launched an attack. jdid not create a naval oil re -
i devastating atomic blows if theitoo, is of the opinion the order
1 88GU r Mf
u.j. tone Planes
Fire on 2 Soviet Fighters
Who Flee From Japan
Tokyo (U.I0 U. S. Air Force
Thunderjets fired on two Russian-made
fighter planes over
northern Japan today, damaged
one and sent both Invaders flee
ing back toward Soviet-held ter
ritory.
Sabrejets Hit
11 Red Mig 15s
Seoul VP) V. S. Sabre Jets
Monday shot down three Rus-slon-built
MIGs, probably des
troyed another and damaged
seven while screening a massive
air raid on a big communist
troop and supply buildup area.
The U. S. Fifth Air Force re
ported the communist Jet fighter
losses after announcing earlier
that 200 Allied fighter-bombers
had turned the supply area
southwest of Pyongyang into a
boiling mass of smoke and
flames.
It was the second straight day
of jet dog fights in far North
west Korea.
Vote 10 Percent
Income Tax Cut
Washington VP) The house
ways and means committee ap
proved a bill Monday to cut per
sonal income taxes 10 per cent.
cut the chairmana of the rules
committee said the legislation
will be pigeon - holed until at
least May 1.
Acting in opposition to Presi
dent Eisenhower's go slow ad
vice on tax cuts, the ways and
means committee approved, 21
to 4 a measure by Chairman
Reed (R., N.Y.) which would re
duce income tax payments for
SO million Americans at mid
year 1953.
Under present law, a 10 per
cent tax cut is scheduled for
Jan. 1, 1954.
Chairman Allen (R 111.) of
the house rules committee said
shortly after the ways and
means action that his group
"will hold all tax reduction le
gislation until at least May 1."
Reed is expected to seek an
order from the rules committee
barring amendments to his bill
from the house floor. That would
give the rules committee the
power to delay floor action.
Financial Crisis
In South Korea
Seoul, Korea U.R) A financial
and economic paralysis gripped
South Korea today as the gov
ernment prepared to issue new
currency in a move to stem in-1
flation. i
fcightv Dercent of Seoul's mer-
ant, closed their shop, andl
Prices skyrocketed 400 percent
on some Items. Police began
,n.,nHl ,,n , 1 . 4
' ,uuu ,".,,,n,o ,u
Iorce "lem lo reopen.
In Pusan, police patrolled the
streets with rifles. Most of the
residents stood around on street
'cussing the currency measure
Two-thirds of Pusan's buses
were idle. Work in government
offices came to a standstill
The panic was prompted byl
a government announcement'" oy ur. w. u. nay, Astoria
that it would beoin rallinir in
jthe old currency, the won to-
morrow. Officially worth 6,000
to one U. S. dollar, it has been
selling on the black market at
20,000 to $1.
Truman s Order Did
Not Create Oil Reserve
Washington VP) Attorney i serve to be administered by the
General Brownell held Monday!
that an order issued by Prcsi-
dent Truman in January did not:
convert offshore submerged
lands into a naval reserve.
Browncll's opinion, set forth
tn a letter, was read by Senator
Cordon, R-Ore., as the Senate
Interior Committee opened hear -
Inn on leinOatlnn rinnllno with
ownership of the controversial
" o n
oil-rich area.
n,...ll 4i, ,.,
.tntutp "
The attorney general said he.:cept In the case of Texas where
The Air Force presumed the
planes were units of the Russian
Air Force. They came from
Russian territory and fled to
ward it. But lacking positive
proof, Far Eastern Air Forces
Commander Gen. O. P. Weyland
said, he could not identify them
officially as Russian.
Two Thunderjets on patrol
were guided to the two unidenti
fied planes over Japan's north
ernmost Hokkaido island by ra
dar. The Japanese government had
warned the Russians Jan. 13 that
henceforth the U. S. Air Force,
in its behalf, would fire on any
invading Soviet planes.
The Thunderjets intercepted
and closed in on the two invad
ing planes, Russian-made Lav
ochkin 11 siglne-engine propeller-driven
fighters tn the 400
mile an hour plus class.
Pursuant to standing instruc
tions, our intercepter planes sig
nalled the intruders to land," an
Air Force communique said.
"The landing sigal wnas ignored
by the LA-11 fighters.
"Our leader then opened fire,
scoring hits on the fuselage and
wings of one of the Intruders."
The foreign planes turned and
fled northeastward toward the
Russian-held Kurile islands. The
Thunderjets broke off the en
gagemetn to avoid flying into
Russian territory.
Taylor Hopes for
Chiang's Troops
Seoul, Korea U-R Lt. Gen.
Maxwell D. Taylor, new eighth
Army commander, said he
would welcome Chiang Kai
Shek's Chinese Nationalist
troops in Korea "with open
arms in the United Nations
battle against Communism.
Taylor said yesterday at his
first press conference since tak
ing over his new command
that he would welcome the
help of any member of the U.
N., "even on a token basis."
'I'd like to have the help of
all our friends," he said.
Early in the Korean war,
Chiang offered up to 30,000
Chinese troops, but the offer
was declined.
Taylor also was as confi
dent .as his predecessor, Gen.
James A. Van Fleet, that the
U. N. could defeat an enemy
offensive.
"I hope that he does attack,"
he said, "I'd like him to come
In, any time. Any time he does
come in, we are ready to take
him on."
He declined to comment on
the U.N. potential for an of
fensive. Astoria Fisherman
Held Lost at Sea
Astoria W An Astoria gill-
net fisherman was missing and
presumed drowned Monday af
ter his wrecked boat was spotted
on the beach at North Head Sun
day. The Coast Guard said the fish
erman, George Jokl, about 50,
had put out to sea Friday. They
speculated that the boat either
had got out of control or that
Joki had fallen overboard while
tending his nets.
The boat wreckage was spot-
while he was flying a plane
along the coast.
Joki, a fisherman for the Col
umbia River Packers Associa
tion for the past 10 years, lived
here with his mother.
navy within the meaning of the
law.
Rather, he said, the general ef-
feet of the order is merely to
transfer to the nnw such author-
lty over the area as had Prcvi"
ously been conferred on the Sec-
'retary of the Interior.
l In Kansas City, former Presi -
rfpnl Trnmnn aiH he had no torn-
ment on the attorney general's!
opinion.
1 Trun: .,rH- i..j
signed to give the states owner-!
ship of at least a part of the sub-
merged lands that part extond-
Inu pau.ar,l f,,r hr mllo .v.
mr uimhiiuc
l0',i miles.
the distance would have been
ike Wants lo
Creole Cabinet
Security Post
Leaders Also
Drafting Yalta Re
pudiation Resolution
Washington VP) Sen. Tift rn.
Ohio) said Monday President El.
senhower wants to make a cab-
inet-rana government depart
ment out of the Federal Secur.
lty Administration and has set
machinery in motion tn ereita
such a department
Taft, the senate renubllean
floor leader, gave this word to
reporters after a 40-minute
meeting of congressional leaders
with the president.
He said much of the session
was spent in discussion on the
question of repudiating certain
"secret agreements" made by
Presidents Roosevelt and Tur
mart. Some progress was made to.
ward drafting a repudiation res
olution such as Eisenhower has
called for, Taft added.
Yalta Repudiation
In his State of the Union ad.
dress, Eisenhower said he would
shortly ask congress to repudi-
aie any secret agreements of the
past which involved the enslave
ment of free peoples anywhere.
Taft said the proposed resolu
tion will be introduced in con
gress "within a reasonable time.
"I would think lt would go
through," Taft said.
Taft and House Speaker Mar.
tin (R., Mass.) met with news
men in the office of White House
Press Secretary James C. Hag.
erty Immediately after they and
other GOP leaders had held
their regular Monday morning
strategy conference with the
president
Shyness Dlseappeara
This was a departure from
past sessions, when the eonerea.
slonal leaders have been reluc
tant to talk.
(ConUnned en Page t. Cetoaa f)
Adlai and Ike
Lunch Together
Washington, (U.B Adlai t
Stevenson today accepted Pres
ident Eisenhower's invitation
to join him tomorrow at a lunch
for a group of Republican and
Democratic House members.
White House Press Secretary
Jjunes C. Hagerty said that
Stevenson, defeated by Mr. Ei
senhower for the presidency,
will confer with the President
in his office tomorrow.
Then Stevenson will loin the
Chief Executive at another in
a aeries of congressional lnnch
es which Mr. Elsenhower has
been holding for two weeks.
This morninl. Sherman Ad-
a ma, assistant to the President,
renewed the "tentative" invita
tion extended Stevenson before
his New York speech Saturday
night, and the former governor
of Illinois accepted.
Editor Planner
For Cold War
Washington VPh-President El
senhower named C. D. Jackson,
50-year-old New York publish
er Monday, as his special assist
ant in charge of cold war plan
ning. The appointment was announ
ced by Sherman Adams, chief
assistant to the President
He said Jackson would serve
as a liaison official between the
various government depart
ments and agencies active in
psychological warfare strategy.
Jackson has been given leave
from his position as publisher of
Fortune Magazine. Ralph Dela
haye Paine Jr., managing editor
of the publication since 1941,
was named Sunday night to sue
ceed him in that post.
Jackson was deputy chief of
psychological warfare under Ei.
senhower when the president
was commander in charge of the
North African campaign in
World War II.
Kinn XplarfOfl AC
iVilly JCICllvU UJ
i HAWAII UflVPmflr
"M " M" W1WHIUI
Washington 0J.B Samuel W.
King of Hawaii will be nominat-
ed by President Elsenhower to
be the new governor of Hawaii,
the White House announced to
day. King, former territorial dele.
gate to the Congress, had the
backing of Sen. Robert A. Taft,
senate Republican leader.
King will succeed the present
Democratic governor, Warren D.
Long.
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