Capital JJIotoM. THE WEATHER MOSTLY FAIR tonight, Friday Little warmer. Lew tonight, SI: high Friday, . FINAL EDITION 65th Ytar, No. 79 252.? Ur4 aad Um Salm. Oraaon. Thundav. Aoril 2. 1953 3C": . h , r 0w - w i If I Allies to Meet In Truce Talks Plans for Exchanges Of III POW Sched uled at Panmunjom (Bt Th Aoclttd PrH) '.; While Western leaden con tinued to found words at can- ; tion, the Communists delivered :W to the V. N. Command In Ko- rea Thursday their latest pro s' posal for endlnf the Korean fighting. ' . 'V f; The U. N. Command agreed .! to a meeting at Panmunjom on I Xbnday to -discuss plans for ex changing ilck and wounded . :J prisoners an article of busi ess Gn. ' Mark. Clark say i'4 must be disposed of before re sumption of truce talks. It was Clark who made the original proposal on the prisoners. ; 1 Bed Tactics Reversed , : l In Washington, responsible officials and Western diDlomats -f"saw increasing evidence that Mussia s snowDaiiing peace 01- ; tensive was a reversal of, cold -! war tactics aimed at stalling the ""f West's defense buildup and K,'. wrecking the anti-Soviet's 1 world's unity. i 'J ; This confronts leaders in the Eisenhower's adminis- ., tration with the critical prob- . lem of negotiating settlements Z with Moscow while maintain 4 lng the military power that en "l ables them to negotiate from 4 strength. I1' Russians Bisk , But some authorities say the Russians are running a risk, too. If the Western world maintains its unity it may be able to create a stability which the Soviets will find difficult to upset. The spotlight remained foc used on Korea, the scene of the fighting. More light will be shed on the situation when the prisoner of war talks open on Monday. If the Reds resort to their customary haggling, the Western, world will have the grounds 'for questioning their iincerity. ; -. i. (Concluded on rate S, CoiamM B Britain to Keep Export Bans : London W) Britain's Con ' servative government served notice Thursday it will not ease its ban on exports of itra teglc goods behind the iron curtain despite recent dicker ing by Communist China. Peter Thorneycrof t, p r e s ! dent of the Board of Trade, told the House of Commons that "circumstances have not changed so dramatically as to warrant a substantial altera- . tion" in Britain's strategic con trols. He turned down a suggestion by Harold Wilson, former Labor Party president of the Board of Trade, that a revision In the list of controlled exports was "long overdue." Reds Abandon .Traffic Control ' Berlin W) Russian Zone bor der guards virtually abandon ed controls on the East-West express highway to Berlin Thursday and interzonal traf fic sped at an unprecedented rate. The Soviets obviously had instructed the guards to deal only perfunctorily with car goes and credentials. Giant trucks, hauling as much as 12 to 15 tons of goods to West Berlin, were not even subjected to customs inspec tions at the border. The vanguard of Easter hol iday traffic, including German and Allied passenger cars, re ported such speech and court- esy in passing through the fron tier had not been seen here before. Sunny Weather With Light Frost Thursday turned out to be bright and sunny, but the morning temperatures were stiU on the chilly side, the low dipping to 28 degrees. The weather bureau says more spring-like temperatures re due .'or Oregon over the week-end, although the nignt readings will continue cool. Forecasters are calling for increasing cloudiness In west ern Oregon Friday, but they are being a bit careful about predicting rain lor Easter Sunday. Soviet Threat Undiminished Says tlidgvray Warns That. Russia ' .Continues to Increase Military Capacity. Supreme Headquarters, Al- lied Powers in Kurope, JPi Gen. Matthew B. Bldgway warned Thursday that Soviet Russia's threat against the Western Allies "has not dim inlshed one iota." NATO's supreme command er in Europe said nothing about the current peace moves in a speech at the second anni versary of SHAPE, his head quarters here near Paris, but he warned that Soviet Russia has "increased and continues to "increase" her military ca pacity. Appeals to Allies v Then Ridgway made a strong appeal to the Western Allies to. bring West German troops into the defense of the 4,008 mile West European Front. . - "For the defense of this vast region," he said, "one signifi cant contribution the partici pation of Germany is still as yet withheld. ' ' . ' "It would welcome this addi tional military potential. A Western German contribution would not only strengthen the whole edifice of Allied Com mand Europe. It would lighten proportionally the burden of the cost of this defense." (Concluded on Pate 5, Column S) Seattle Metal Workers Strike ' Seattle W -Workers num bering 8,000 ; In three- AFL unions struck at metal fabri cating shops, and foundries in Seattle, Tacoma and Ever ett Thursday in wage dis- oute. :. . ' .... ' The work stoppage idled another 5,000 workers In other unions not on strike who ob served strikers' picket lines. Hope - Lodge 79, Interna' tional Association of Machin ists, with 3,000 members, was the largest union on strike. Its workout affected 82 plants. - Three locals of the Molders & Foundry Workers union struck SO shops in the Puget Sound area, with 1,000 work ers Involved. . The third union on strike is Local 289 of the Automotive Machinists' union. A spokes man said 400 to 800 members walked out. U.S. and France For Safety Meet Berlin W -The United States and France accepted Thursday a Russian invitation to join in current Soviet-British talks on air safety over Germany. The Invitation from Gen, Vassily Chuikov, chief of the Soviet Control Commission in Germany, came after the Brit ish had met twice with Rus sian Air Force experts to dii cuss ways of avoiding such air incidents over Germany as the destruction of a British bomb er by Soviet jet fighter March 12. Weather Details Mailmust rHtcrdsvy, Hi mint nam day, U. Total I4'km rtclpltailvni i for mosith; Oi nrmIt .IS. Snm ro elpttatloti, M.tli aormal, MM. River helrht, I.S fetl. (Beporl br U.S. Wmther BMreaa.) Ike Plans to Reorganize Defense Mobilization Washington JP President Elsenhower Thursday sent Congress a plan to reorganize the Office of Defense Mobiliza tion. He said it is intended "to achieve the maximum degree of mobilization readiness at the least possible cost." The plan would merge the functions of the mobilization agency and those of the Nation al Security Resources Board. It also would give permanent status to the ODM, which has been operating as a temporary emergency agency. The plan to create a single, central Defense Mobilization Office will go into effect au tomatically In 60 days unless either the Senate or the House veto the plan in the meantime, or unless both branches vote . In.- Affant Aa-lfn. IU UV FM In a special message to Con- gress, Eisenhower said the plan 4 GLAD TO It was home again for, Mrs. Douglas McKay, wife of the Secretary of the Interjor, shown above at the door of her Jerrls avenue home. With her is her constant com- . panlon since her arrival, her little grandson, Danny Green. Mrs. McKay arrived Wednesday night for a 10-day stay at her Salem home. . . . , . Mrs. McKay Hated as She Greets Neighbors By MARIAN LOWRY FISCHER ? ' f'Ifs wonderful to be home. I have been enjoying Washing ton. It is an interesting and wonderful place but there's no place like Oregon and Wilson Cracks Security Slips Washington ff) Secretary of Defense Wilson has cracked down on security slip-ups he blames on into-service rivalry and lax handling of secret doc uments.. ... The nation's security has been - affected and "countries hostile to the United States" have picked up vital intelll gense, Wilson said, because of recent "leaks." Two orders by Wilson, dis closed Wednesday by the Pen tagon, call for: , - ' 1. "A higher degree of se curity for our - official docu ment." 2. Closer checks on disclo sures of technical - military data, through "inter-service ri valry in the weapons develop ment field." The directives, dated March 26, were addressed to the sec retaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force, the Joint chiefs of staff and other top level offi cials. Wilson said his instruc tions "specifically include key executives and military per sonnel" in Washington. "will permit better organize tion and management of the federal programs relating to ma t e r i a 1 s and requirements and will thus help to achieve the maximum degree of mobi lization readiness at the least possible cost." He said it is not practicable at this time to try to itemize savings which he expects to re suit In addition to merging func tions of the ODM and the Na tional security Resources Board, the plan calls for: Appointment of a director to head the ODM, and a deputy director to serve as top aide. Arthur S. Fleming is acting chief of ODM at. present, but the White House declined to -fi -T tuhothof ha lunillft Kf. nnitlli oj .... nated to head the agency usr der the proposed new set-up. BE HOME Skfx;! "trim 4 7 ir home' was the comment irom Mr. Doualas McKay, wife of the- Secretary of the Interior, as she greeted newspaper peo ple at her Jerris avenue home Thursday morning. Mrs. McKay arrived in Sa lem late Wednesday night It is her first visit home since she left for the national capital in early January when former Governor McKay became Sec retary of the Interior in Pre sident Dwight D. sisennowers cabinet. Mrs. McKay will be here until April 10, visiting her sons - in - law ana ' aaugniers, Mr., and Mrs. Wayne Hadley antl, Mr. and Mrs. Lester D. Green, and the five grand children. The former first lady of Oregon confessed she has been very lonesome for the grandchildren Danny - Green, Eileen, Allan, Bruce and Nan cy Hadley. , ' One of the first things Mrs. McKay did this morning was to dress young Danny Green, two 'and one-half year old grandson, and she was chuck ling over Danny s remark to his mother: - "Oh, we have to move. Wa have to call the big moving truck." The Greens are living in the McKay home during the time the McKays are in Washington. Douglas is working hard and puts in long days," Mrs. McKay said of her husband. (Concluded on Past 5, Column I) Backs Weeks Against Astin Washington P) President Elsenhower, backing up Sec retary of Commerce Weeks, Thursday accepted the resig nation of Dr. Allen V. Astin as director of the national bu reau of standards. Astin resigned after Weeks asked him to quit Weeks mid he called for the resignation on the ground that the bureau, a unit of the com merce - department, had not been "sufficiently objective" In its testing methods. He said there also were other rea. sons but did not disclose them Astin denied the accusation that the bureau was not objoc tive. He said it must stand by its scientific findings re gardless of "pressures." Weeks singled out for spe cial mention the bureau's de cision that a battery "dope" designed to pep up aging bat teries was no good. Spent Only - ' . .. j . Ways-Means OKs Monies for State Colleges A budget totaling 128,239, 783 for the state board of high er education won approval of the Joint ways and means com mittee Thursday after Senator Howard . Belton, chairman of the subcommittee that studied the budget, announced that the committee had Issued certain ins tractions to the board that wnnld remit In a muchs clearer i. budget two years from now. . Sen.. Belton said that the board had long been following a practice of spending legisla tive funds first and then using funds derived from fees and other sources. "We have instructed them to reverse i this p-ocedure and spend the fee funds first, then the legislative funds, so that if all, funds are not expended,. the unexpended portion will re vert to the general fund," he said. : -v Hard to Understand ' Rep. Robert Root, a member of the subcommittee, declared that the board of higher educa tion budget was compiled in a manner that made it impossi ble for committee members to understand it. ' (Concluded on Paso S, Cohunn I) Oyster Men Ask For Tax Relief Washington U.R Petitions for relief from deficiency as sessments amounting to nearly $78,000 imposed by the Bureau of Internal Revenue were filed In the Federal court here yes terday by Associated Coos Bay Land Owners, Inc., ana tntree stockholder-employes of . the corporation, E. R.. Errion and J. p. Barton, both ot roruana, Ore., and Glenn R. Munkers, Salem, Ore. ... The group was connected with extensive litigation grow ing out of -an attempt to de velop oyster beds at Coos Bay, The alleged deficiencies were assessed for the years 1942-43. The Bureau claimed the fol lowing amounts, including pen alties, due the government Associated Coos Bay iana Owners, Inc., $48,180; Errion, $13,242; Barton, $6655, and Munkers, $6136. Car-Train Crash Fatal to Three Monroe. Wash. (flV-A car- train crash killed three teen agers at a crossing here at 11 o'clock Wednesday night Another was critically In jured. The dead were veima mane Burns, 15, of Carnation, Jerry E. Patterson, 18, and Herbert Anderson, 18, Monroe. Elnora Perrin. 16, was re ported semi-conscious in the Monroe hospital. She was re ported to have fractures of the skull, both arms and a broken pelvis. Her home also is near Carnation. The Burns girl was killed outright as a through Great Northern freight train smashed into the side of the car. Pat terson died two hours after the accident and Anderson two hours later. Coroner Ken Baker said An derson was driving a 1946 se dan he had bought two weeks ago. Judge Blinks; Cuts $1000 From Bail Portland ura Harold Hat cher, Klamath Indian ap pearing before Federal Judge Gus J. Solomon to ask for reduction of ball on an as sault charge, was asked by the Judge if he had ever been In trouble before. Hatcher's attorney replied: "Just once, your honor, he stole some whiskey once from a Judge's room." ' Solomon linked, smiled broadly and remarked, "A pretty heinous crime." Then he reduced Hatcher's ball from $2500 to $1500. 1" O'MALLEY ABANDONS OFFICE I hi 1! '"S 1 J i IP : Jltfeo I". Virgil O'MaUey shown papers Tuesday night, ready to abandon his office as ward-". 4 - B,.,. r,..l..inn. ri'UallAV mmm warn rM. Art . from office by a rjght order from the State Board ot Con trol, and Clarence Gladden, ex-federal prison adminlitra- ; tor,. Immediately took over in his place. ..t.. tfer Warden Outlines Oregon Prison Polities Oregon's penitentiary will get a sound rehabilitation pro gram! based on - strict, disci pline, promises Clarence T. Gladden. ltonewwardeiu. . . " Gladden, who retired from the federal prison syaterfl jast Chinese Attacks Seoul W A Chinese Com munist battalion- about 750 men hit the South Korean Capitol Division on the Central Front early today, but the snapshooting ROKs drove off the Reds with deadly artillery and small-arms fire... Eighth ' Army headquarters said 83 Communist bodies were left on the battlefield and an other 74 Reds probably were killed. - When reporting the attack earlier, the. Eighth Army had said it' was made by only 250 Reds. , , .: -.'.! The Chinese crossed the Kumhwa - Kumsong highway shortly after midnight and stormed ROK positions south of Kumsong. After 40 minutes of savage fighting the Reds broke off the battle and were driven back across the road by counter attacking South Kore ans, the Army said. . SENATE OKs YOUNG TAFT Washington W The Senate Thursday approved the nomi nation ot William Howard Taft III to be ambassador to Ire land. Taft is the son ot Senate Republican Leader Taft of Ohio. Praise and Greet College Report Proponents of two bUls in the legislature, implementing principal recommendations in the so-called Anderson report, drastically changing currlcular allocations among institutions of higher learning, predominat ed at a meeting held Wednes day night before a Joint ways and means committee. J. F. Cramer, dean ot the general extension division of the board of higher education and chairman of the Anderson report committee ' said that the Anderson study was con ducted by Dr. Earl W. Ander son of Ohio State university over a six months period and his recommendations were the basis of two legislative bills, Senate Bill 426 and House BiU 713 The senate bUl would permit f (TV ' after packing his personal December tl after 33 years ot service, went to , work .Wed nesday, laboring from 6 au until tar Into tfa night to wbat' golUg-oh In the prisori, . 'TU bat torspend some ftm-' to feel my way around here." he said, "and I won't know for while ? what changes I'll want to make." He was'hlred Tuesday night when the board of control fired Warden Virgil O'MaUey on charges that he tailed to maintain discipline among the convicts. ' .... ., Gladden, kindly looking, friendly . 88-year-old man, is determined to maintain strict discipline. ; ;,V" The prison should have a aood training program - with education and supervised rec reation," be said, "but any re habilitative program must be tied up with constructive dis cipline to make it successful. I'll give as much training as possible. The inmates must be better prepared to meet competition - in society. And we have to change their atti tudes toward society." When Gladden went into retirement, he and his wife moved to Tacoma, Wash., where she. has relatives. But he didn't like being idle, so he welcomed the chance to take over at the Oregon prison. The state board of control learned about him from James V. Bennett, federal director of prisons, who gave Gladden the highest recommendation. ' He's here only on tem porary basis, but that word "temporary" might mean as long as a few years. Criticism the three colleges of education at Monmouth, Ashland and Le- Grande to offer secondary tea cher education and give a ba chelor ot general studies de aree. At present these institu tions are permitted to offer only elementary teacher educa tion, House Bill 713 would per mit Portland state Extension center to offer both elementary and secondary teacher educa tion programs. To date they have been able to oner oniy a lower-division program In day classes. Another ot Anderson's re commendations would give ele mentary teacher education to the University ot Oregon and Oregon State couege, now lim ited to only secondary teacher education. ' (Concluded ea Fage I, Column 1) lloAfteotto Verity Chcrc3$ By Witnesses By JAMES D. OLSON Virgil J. O'MaUey, nl-iassi warden at the Oregon state penitentiary Thursday charged that the three lnvestlgatiar wardens, whose adverse report on conditions at the prison re sulted In his dismissal, sprat only It minutes Inside that walls of the penitentiary dar ing their three-day investiga tion, v. In a lengthy statement O'MaUey shifted blame . for many of the deficiencies con tained in the report on Super intendent George Alexander, denied some charges and inti mated that the entire Investiga tion was "rigged" against him. '"Previously someone did a pretty good Job ot organizing the parade of witnesses for the committee," he declared. "Pert haps this would explain why the so-called evidence dove tailed o perfectly." . - .- l) No Records Inspected , O'MaUey complained furth er that the investigators---War-dens Joseph E. Ragan of UU- : nois, G. Morton Jameson, ot South Dakota, and L. E. Clapp ot Idaho, had not requested nor Inspected records at the prison nor attempted to verify the tes timony given by witnesses with official sources. , . ..- I do not believe that any vestlgator or investigating com mittee should ever reach, any conclusions without ; at least trying to verify Information re ceived from official sources. ' "Furthermore, it Is my opin ion that it is a highly unethical practice for any committee or board evaluating a report to condemn anyone without gtv Cravens Will .-.)'$ Washington (n -President - Eisenhower Thursday - nomin ated Kenton R. Cravens, St, Louis banker,, to be adminis trator of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. . Cravens - would succeed Harry A. McDonald as head , of the big government lend ing agency. McDonald's res ignatlon Was accepted . Wed- nesday. , . vw ; : The appointment apparent ly - wiU be a short-term on since congressional leaden k -have reported the administra tion plans either to let the RFC die on June 30, 1954,' or perhaps abolish It earlier. , Cravens, a 48-year-old na tive ot SaUna, Kans., has been in credit work during his en tire business career. At present he Is an execu tive officer in charge of lend ing activities and bank opera tions for the Mercantile Trust company In St. Louis. Since 1930 he has maintain ed other business interests, particularly rubber manufac turing. . ' .. '.vT Split on Control Ot Rain Makers The House and Senate of the Oregon legislature were spUt Thursday over how rainmakers . should be controlled, and it will be left to the Joint Ways and Means committee to try to reach a compromise. The house voted 83 to T Thursday for Rep. Robert Root's biU to Ucense persons who try to change the weather, and at the same time to en courage experiments In that field. - - The senate voted last week 18 to 11 for Sen. Ben Day'a bUl to license the weather con- - trol men, but to have severe restrictions imposed on the cloud seeders. Both Root and Day are from Jackson county, scene ot a bitter dispute last year in which the people defeated by only 34 votes county meas ure to ban cloud seeding ex periments. ? ', ' - The Day bill already Is In the Ways and Means commit tee, -and Root told the house he is asking that his be sent there, too, ; -r- ,. - -i. 1 : ! 1. 1 I