THE WEATHER CLEARING TONIGHT and fair , Friday. Little change is tern peratore. Low tonight 41; kick Friday, . Nine Interim Committees to Make Studies ' '''-'(':' : Highways, Taxation, Retirement, Welfare To Be Studied By JAMES D. OLSON : In addition to the usual ln ; terlm committees on taxation and highways, the 1953 legis lature authorized seven other p. important committees for Inter im studv of the retirement m- tem, public assistance, amend ment of the state constitution ; and other subjects.' Supplementing federal social security 10 me state retirement plan was accomplished by the rcwni legislature out u was recognized, that in so doing there were a number of com plex Ing problems that could not .UU.TW. HUllUg UIV SGN4WU. Therefore a committee com : posed of one senator, two rep- . resentatives and two citizens to ; serve as advisory members was authorized. wiin me auty 01 swaying me . viaur 1 rAtfrnmont evatom ns It applies to employes of fire and reer employes, aisaouity Dene- : fits as well as the scale of wa ges paid to public employes. Welfare Listed ' niDiic assistance ooin ai me state and county level will be studied by legislative Interim committee composed of two '-" senators to be appointed by the president ox uie senate mm three representatives to be house. ; (Concluded an Pan 5. CoL 71 : . AhnnMAnAri MUUHUUIICU Plane Crashes :vi.nlvmnfn Wdth fjnA lnm. .ux..a. jr an uxu it, ii I m 1 1 I ill. MtTK.M Mlml.nn annMminM avi HniithnjHt Waohiniflnn af. ter oeing ananaonea . oy ns, crew, crashed about 25 miles' south of here Thursday after noon. . .. The State Patrol said the crew bailed out after the land ing gear would' not lower. It was described as a C-97 Stra tofreighter. . Most of the crew, were re ported to have parachuted in the Tacoma area.. The Coast Guard said it dispatched boats for possible pick-ups of men from Puget Sound, If necessary. The crash scene was described ' as east of Chehalis. The patrol said the plane had crashed In the Hanaford Val ley northeast of Chehalis. Cut Funds for Reclamation Washington VP) Oregon and Washington reclamation pro- 000 if congress accepts recom mendations of the House Ap propriate Committee. The recommendations, sub 1 mitted to congress Thursday, eliminated money requested for ' the Klamath Project on the Oregon-California border and pared requests which the bud get of former President Tru ' man had contained for the Co - dumbia Basin, and the Roza and Kennewick divisions of the Yakima project In Wash ington. The Truman figures hid totaled $27,146,000. The committee report gave no reason for the cuts except In the case of the Roza division where it eliminated $778,000 asked to begin work on a pow er plant for pumping. Plans in Making for Memorial Day Event Members of the Salem Fed eration of Patriotic Orders at a meeting held Wednesday night at VFW hall made pre liminary plans for the observ ance ol Memorial Day here. Ihe group voted to have a parade this year, rain or shine, tnd plans were made toT " memorial service honoring veterans and servicemen who have died the past year, will be held the evening of Sun day, May 24, at one of the Sa lem churches. i Representatives of ladies auxiliaries of the various vet erans organizations will meet m Wednesday night at the vfvf hall at 8 o'clock to make plant for a memorial service. House Slams Interior Dept's Power Policy ' Competition With Private Companies Brings Budget Slash Washington, W The Boose Appropriations Committee said Thursday the Interior Depart ment should quit competing with private enterprise In the field of power. To put force Into Its rec ommendation, it asked the House to cut the department's budget for the fiscal year 1994 by slightly more than one-third of the amount for mer President Truman asked, The , recommendation was embodied in a bill carrying $404,863,239 to run the de partment for the year starting July 1. This is $202,473,161 less than Truman requested in January and $137,874,262 less than the department received this year. Deep cuts were made in funds requested for - trans mission lines and power plants. Lays Down Future Policies : The committee laid down a general policy for future guid ance of the department. These instructions could be elimi nated or revised by the full (Concluded on Fate a, Column 4) Klamath Power ' Klamath' Falls VP) The Bonneville, transmission line from Redmond to - Klamath, Falls on which the House Ap propriations Committee Thurs day directed an immediate halt, already has been built south 33 miles from Bend. ' The right-of-way for the rest of the route has been obtained and equipment such at trans formers are now in storage here and at Chiloauin. ' The other local project af fected by the appropriations cut-backs Is the Klamath re clamation area on the Oregon- California line. E. L. Stevens, project manager, said some of the new construction funds all of which were eliminated had been intended to make some of the reclaimed land available to homesteading. In terior Secretary McKay some weeks ago had directed that this be done. Lebanon Man Pleads Guilty Portland, VP) The second of three defendants in the Indian timberland fraud case pleaded guilty Thursday, changing his former plea. It was Fred M. Marsh, Lebanon timber buyer, who admitted his guilt. Tuesday Clyde Flinn, ousted Indian Service aide, had taken the same step. The only defendant still to be tried is John C. Blanford, 57, of Milwaukie, an employe of Marsh. Marsh, 54, entered his guilty plea before Federal Judge Claude McCollocb in a voice that was barely audible. All three men were indicted on charges of giving false in formation to the government and with conspiring to defraud in connection with purchase of Indian-owned timberland. House Group Slashes Funds for Bonneville Washington VP) The House Appropriations Committee Thursday recommended that Congress appropriate $43,300, 000 for the Bonneville Power Administration during the 12 months beginning Jul 1. The figure is $19,300,000 below the amount recommend ed in the budget sent to Con gress by former President Tru man. Bulk of the committee cut came in construction items, re duced $16,900,000. The re maining $2,400,000 slash was taken in operation and main tenance. ' The committee report, sent to Congress Thursday, express ed concern "about the vigorous efforts which have been put forth by the Bonneville Pow er Administration in . recent years to sell its program and its power anywhere that it might conceivably build a transmission line." It said the committee "can not read into the Bonneville Act anything directing the ad Capital V- Kl QT awm suiur at aatoa, GATES OF V 4 v: V. : If iii.n.,iii' Mystery Man WorkedforFDR Washington VP) Henry W. Grunewald testified Thursday he had conducted an Investiga tion for the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt He re fused to tell what it was about, because . "I don't think the President would want it done." Grunewald, a 60-year-old Washington mystery man who had-Influential contacts in the capital, also told a House ways and means subcommittee -that he: 1. Deposited almost $96,000 in 1949, all of which he said was race track money. 2. Installed, an elaborate $10,000 private telephone set up in his Miami winter home giving him direct communica tion with various offices in Washington. - Grunewald volunteered the Information about investigative work for President Roosevelt when he came under question ing about the telephone Instal lation. For Trial of Reds ' Seattle VP) Six men and six women were sslected Wed nesday for the jury which will hear the trial of six mer and a woman accused of conspiring to advocate overthrow of the government by force. The last juror was the 77th examined from the panel call ed when the trial opened April 15. Four more will be seated as alternates who will' serve If a regular juror is incapacitated during the trial which is ex pected to last from three to six months. Government and defense at torneys agreed on the final juror after Federal Judge Wil liam Lindberg had excused a juror who had . been a target of charges brought by John Caughlan, an attorney repre senting six of the defendants. Mrs. Leona Whitchurch of Everett was excused at - her own request. PLOWS CLEAR PASS OF CELERY Eugene, : Ore. Snow plows were called out in Oregon s Willamette Pass yesterday but there wasn't any snow. State police said a truck load ed with celery overturned and the snow plows were needed to clear the celery from the road. ministration to build transmis sion lines and related facilities in a continuously expanding area," and that it would "not condone further efforts to ex pand the geographical boun daries in which the adminis tration is operating." Many of the cuts made in the construction program, the committee said, "were made because of assurances from non-federal power agencies that they can and will build faciliites in their respective areas of operations." Specifically deleted in the committee's r e c ommendation for construction funds were the M c N a r y LaGrande, Snohomish-Kitsap and Olympla-Ab-erdeen No. 2 transmission lines and proposed service in the following areas: The Dalles area, Southwest Oregon loop, Quinault, Ilwaco-Long Beach, Warden substation, Idaho pan handle, Columbia Falls, Ice Harbor Dam and the Valley Way substation addition. Salem, Oregon, Orwaa FREEDOM OPEN FOR i ' ill MTiiffnhrfiW tas - This was the scene at Freedom Village near Munsan, ' Korea, during the second day's exchange of sick and wounded prisoners of war as repatriated United Nations ' soldiers walk from ambulances to processing tents. , In . front of each tent Is an arched sign "Welcome Gate To Freedom." (A? Wirephoto) Freed P0W Tell of Torture and Epidemits Freedom Village, Korea (UK) Freed United 'Nations sol diers told today - of fiendish Communist tortures, of epi demics that swept through pri son camps and of an am munition shortage on the West ern Front V Bishop Tells of London 0J.B Dr. - Cecil Cooper, Anglican bishop of Ko rea recently released by the Communists said today he took part in a nine-day forced march in North Korea with 700 American soldiers and 68 clvl liana. The ,71-yejar-old , bishop tti(l) a press conference that 9fl ot tne war prisoners cuea on xne march. - ... yJ "That march was terrible) There were some 705 Ameri can GI's and something like 60 to 68 civilians, when we start ed. Among the civilians was a French priest over 80, several others over 70, women and children, while the Americans were sick and wounded. "The only food we had was one ball of millet cereal in the morning and another one in the evening," the bishop said. , Nichols fo Head Washington UJ9 Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay has picked Marvin C. "Nichols, Ft. Worth, Tex.,, democrat engineer, to head the U.S. rec lamation bureau. If his choice is approved by President Eisenhower, as ex pected, Nichols will replace Michael W. Straus, ' who re signed several weeks ago. Sen ate confirmation is not requir ed. Nichols, 56, Is a partner in the consulting engineering firm of Freese and Nichols, which specializes in public problems such as city water systems. Former president of the Texas Society of Profes sional Engineers, he calls hlm seld a "basically conservative democrat" who voted for Mr. Eisenhower last November. Rent Controls To End July 31 Washington VP) The house Thursday passed a bill calling for an end to the bulk of fed eral rent controls on July 31. The bill was passed by a standing vote of 187 to 66 after the house trounced two moves by a few democrats to extend ceilings, to October 1, and for one year. Controls over some 5,600, 000 housing units in 32 states will die April 30, one week from today, unless extended by congress. The senate banking commit tee has approved an extension to October 1, but the senate has not acted yet. The compromise bill would continue all present rent con trols until July 31, to give local governments time to re place federal ceilings with lo cal control if they wish. fill i UfhTI Thursday, April 23, 1953 A- J4 Pages Price 5e REPATRIATES 2s Tm s A south Korean whose fin gers rotted away while his hands were tied behind him. who was hung up by his heels while his guards shook pepper In his mouth and nostrils was one who told his story. Another South Korean, saw 1,000 men die in one camp. ' Woman Repatriated . The first U. N. woman pri soner repatriated, a South Ko real Army cook, said the Chin ese Reds beat her on two suc cessive days with a steel stick after her capture. . Colombian Cpl. Osar Dur- na, 20, told of the ammunition shortage, speaking as one foot soldier fighting from a bunker against ovexwneunlng enemy strength. : Duma's unit was attached to the U, S. Seventh Infantry t ,The battle had teeii going on vuvlston. . :.: : ! for 14 days, Durna said, when one morning at 4 o'clock his little group in a bunker started running out of ammunition. Position Overrun "We ran out of ammunition after a few hours," he said, ex cept for a little which the Ut ter bearers had, Durna, wounded in the back, leg and arm, was captured ohen the position was over run. M. Sgt Kim Ka Sung of the South Korean army told the grimmest story yet of Com munist, cruelty. He held up his hands to show only one thumb remaining. His North Korean captors kept his hands tied behind his back with telephone wire for two weeks, he said, until the fing ers rotted away. A doctor am putated eight fingers and one thumb, he said, and dabbed mercuro chrome on the stumps. 93Wet Backs To Be Deported Klamath Falls VP) Ninety- three Mexican nationals were in the county jail here Thurs day morning as U.S. Immigra tion service agents continued their round-up ot illegal en trants. A special railroad car took part of them south Thursday morning. . In the past they have gone to Portland for processing but this year a hearing agent came here to check legality of their pres ence in this country. ; Most ot them, called wet backs because ot their habit of swlmimng across the border, were with , railroad work gangs. 0 The current round-up has been in two northern Califor nia counties and Klamath, Lake and Jackson counties of Oregon. Grand Jury Clears Police in Shooting Roseburg VP) Sheriff Cal Balrd and 13 other police offi cers were, in effect, absolved of any blame In the Burgoyne shooting after a three-day Dou glas County Grand Jury inves tigation. The jury completed its work Wednesday without recom mending that any action be taken. Sheriff Baird, who - earlier promised a statement, said Thursday he had changed his mind and would make no comment. U.N. to Charge In POW Deal Panmnnlom (U.F0 The Unit ed Nations Command indicat ed to day it may formally charge the Communists with cheating on their agreement to reran all sick and wounded Allied war prisoners. V. N. officials gave high nrl- orny luuay io we carexul as sembling of all evidence of bad faith by the Reds despite a communist announcement that more than 605 men originally listed would be sent home. An authoritative source said United Nations protest oro- bably will be made after offl. cials have interviewed all re turning prisoners. Ambiguous Promise The unexpected and ambig uous communist announcement that additional men will be re turned was interpreted here to apply principally to men re cently, wounded and captured. Allied officials said thev are Inclined to believe, on evi dence; suppl.ed by the early exchanges, that a considerably larger number of sick and wounded men captured early in the Korean war should be coming back. (Csnemded en Page I, Column ) United' Nations, N. (ft The U. N. General Assembly xnursaay voted overwhelming ly for an Impartial ibvestiea- tion of communist charges that American troops waged germ wanare in Korea. The vote, 51-5 (Soviet bloc) witn four abstentions came immediately after the U. S. ac cused Russia with "utterly and completely iniquitous" be havior for spreading the charg es and called Soviet opposi tion to the Investigation "re prehensible In the extreme." The tense atmosphere clear! ed for a moment shortly after wards as both Russia and the U. S. joined in- support of a Mexican resolution calling on all countries to help Burma get rid of 12,000 Chinese Na tionalist guerrillas who have been operating on her soil. The vote was 59-0 with Na. tlonalist China abstaining. Fair Weather for Friday Predicted Fair weather is expected for Friday, reports the weather bureau, clearing due to start In tonight. Skies remained threatening much of Thursday following .15 of an inch of rain measured in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Some high wind came with the light rain through Wed nesday and the night in west ern Oregon, but temperatures w comparatively miia. .. Germ Charges To Be Probed r Westside Scores Again With Industrial Shovi The aggressive and pros perous community ot West Salem had its third annual In dustrial Night Wednesday with a dinner, display of its pro ducts and some other very In teresting features. It was held at the West Salem school and was attended by 250 or more persons of both the west and the east sides. Clyde Everett, manager of Oregon Flax Textiles, was pro gram chairman and master of ceremonies at the banquet. He gave the audience some signi ficant figures. The annual payroll on the westside, said Everett, Is $2, 600,000, which is paid to 2,332 men and women who are em ployed in factories and pack ing plants of the community. And the annual output of the 1 5 Sabre jets Score on 3 Red Mig 75s Seoul (U.n MIG-kllllng American Sabre jets scored their first victories in five days over the Red air force today while South Korean raiders slaughtered or wounded 100 Communists in their trenches. The Sabres probably destroy ed one MIG and damaged two others in roaring dogfights only five miles southeast of the Communists' Yalu river sanctu ary in Manchuria. ; . Two pilots asked not to be Identified. The third, 1st Lt. George W, Jensen of Tacoma, Wash,, got a damage claim. : The South Koreans moved silently Into the enemy tren ches at four points, surprising Chinese Communist units. They killed or wounded 63 Chinese in two raids south of Panmunjom and wrecked for tifications with grenades and satchel charges. , ' NATOWarned By Eisenhower Paris VP) U. S. Secretary ot State John Foster Dulles said Thursday night the NATO Council of Ministers has -unanimously agreed thai they could not asume at the present time there has been any change In basic Soviet policy." - 1 Dulles' statement followed a message from President Elsen hower warning America's al lies in the North Atlantic Treaty Orsanlzatlon not to re lax their rearmament effort because of the, Soviet pea campalgbi'?-6' W Eisenhower said that "until the conditions for a genuine peace have been firmly estab lished, it would be foolhardy for us to delude ourselves about the dangers confronting us.' Action taken by the minis ters on the first day of the meeting underlined this atti tude toward the Soviet Union. The ministers signed contracts for 550 million dollars for planes to be turned out In Eu ropean factories to bulwark NATO's air arm. Indonesia Reds Push on Hanoi, Indochina VP) A communist spearhead pushing down from the north reached within 60 miles of the Royal Laotian capital of Luangpra bang Thursday. It ran into stiff French-Laotian resistance at Muongngoi in the Laos King-; dom's mountain territory. A French communique said the communist-led Vietminh was maintaining pressure at Muongngoi but after repeated attacks had failed to smash the defending forces. The invading column had pushed south from DIenbienphu in the Thai moun tain country, 180 miles from Hanoi. French and Laotian defend ers clashed with a patrol of the enemy on the Plalne des Jarres in the heart of Laos, killing sev- en of the invaders and captur- ling one. industries grosses $14,500,000, he said. The event was under the sponsorship of the West Salem Lions club. Exhibits numbered 26, and In addition the Salem Police Department had an ex hibit that featured such things as weapons, traffic lights and some samples of bogus checks, and the state highway depart ment showed models of Center and Marlon street bridges. There was a prize-drawing event, presided over by Junior Eckley of Blue Lake Packers, in which 26 prizes were given away. Mayor Al ' Loucks, chief speaker at the dinner attended by about 150 persons, praised the spirit of West Salem and then Invited questions on city problems "with no holds bar red." (Concluded en fag l Cluma 4) FINAL GDITION jSees Son:3fh:n3 Wrong in Sick PW Treatment ' Washington VP) President Eisenhower said Thursday ha Is ready to do anything and confer .anywhere .to .bring about peace in Korea. ' The president told a news conference, however, that lika every one else he Is simply waiting now to see how devel opments go in Korea. ; His statements were in re sponse to a question a to whether he felt the chance are good for a prompt true in Korea. ' In reply to another question the president said he has had no reaction from the Kremlin to the world peace and dis armament plan he set forth a week ago. Studying FOW Exchange He said the government 1 studying and - analyzing the prisoner . exchange . situation, and that obviously, from new stories oi atrocities, something is wrong. ---ii He added that he a yet has no full and complete report oa tne matter ana so can't deter mine - what the actual fact are. On other matter, the presi dent: 1. Said he 1 confident de fense spending will be cut for the fiscal year starting July 1, but that he 1 not ready to estimate how much the sav ings will be. (CMeta4ft.orf I, CMssM ft VVIVIMV CanBeTriood Washington VP) President Eisenhower said Thursday he --'- - At , I wucvn we ucieuBe Dnarn cast be cut but isn't prepared to say yet by what amount The chief executive also told his news conference plan wiil be sent to Congress .very soon for reorganization of Defense Department and the State De- ' partment Ha said these would be in line with discussions ha held earlier this morning with congressional leaders and ad ministration officials. Sen. Taft R-, Ohio, told re porters after the White House meeting that there was general discussion covering such pos sibilities as: 1. Removing the Voice of America and associated infor mation programs from the State Department and making them an independent agency.. 2. Transfer of the Point Four aid program from the State De partment to the Mutual Secur ity Agency. This program aim at spreading technical know ledge to underdeveloped area of the World. ; - 3. Reorganization in the De fense Department to eliminate certain boards and give these responsibilities to civilian as sistant secretaries. Taft : said this Included the munition board. For Key Officers Washington MV-The United States will give training la atomic warfare to key allied officers in Europe starting April 28, the Defense Depart ment announced Thursday. A statement from the head quarters of Gen. Matthew B. Rldgway, Supreme Allied com mander, said that the courses are designed to acquaint Allied officers with the "use of atomic weapons in tactical situations." The brief announcement said the courses will exclude any information classified as "re stricted" in the Atomic Energy Act. U. S. officers will conduct the courses, which will be giv en In the U. S. zone of Ger many. I ti 1 Weather Details Mutant rMtarbr, til almkmi to. Sir, 47. Tatal It-inr trMtoluuni .III In MMkt Mt mnl, 1.11. iiihi HMlMUtln, H.lll Mmal, MM. sum kilikt, l. fl (Innt t V.S. FmUmt hmi)