Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 07, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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    Capital AJoiiriial
1 THE WEATHER
S PARTLY CLOUDY, lew ahe.
s are, patches of fog, eoolea ta
J night; variable cloudiness, mt
Urrd showers, ccuioul Him-
f shine, Friday..Lew tonight. 12;
FINAL
EDITION
nign rriaay, 41.
66th Year, No. 6 "IT
Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 7, 1954
Study of State
Motor Vehicle
Tax Laws Begins
Stanford Research
Group Hired by High
way Interim Members
By MMES D. OLSON
A study of revenue Imi, if y, '
Reds Reject
ReleaseofPOW
On January 23
Demand They Be Kept
Until Peace Confer
ence Decides Fate
PANMUNJOM. Korea (LP)
The riii.l.l hl.h i.
rp i oiouir vrnicie m laws, nay natly rejected United Na
. , ana an effort to determine if any
'. Improvements can be made in the
motor tax laws was launched
.. v Thursday by the Stanford Re
. search Institute, working under
, contract with the legislative
; highway interim committee.
Rep. fid Geary, chairman of the
v. committee introduced Morgan
, Sibbett, of the institute, .who ar
i rived in Salem late Wednesday to
', begin the study. .
; No Instructions
Members of the committee
' .. made it plain at the meeting that
. i they did not wish to give the in
; stitute representatives any in-
. ' structions but rather wanted the
' report to be made following the
' study, to be unbiased without
' mu lfnnliratinn lHaf thm linrL
,-ings were influenced by the com
unittee members.
(Continued on Pare S, Column S)
J
i
Jobless List in
Oregon Mounts
Nearly 18,000 were added to
Oregon's unemployed during De
cember, bringing the number of
active job seekers to 63,395. At
latest report, Oregon led the na
tion in percentage of unem
ployed. The Unemployment Compensa
tion Commission said claims for
compensation continued to rise,
passing the 40.000-mark in the
final week of 19S3.
.Further seasonal layoffs were
anticipated by employment offi
cials (kit weekly totals were not
expected to reach the 64,556 post
war peak in mid-February, 1950.
With the rate of insured un
employment increasing from less
than three per cent to 12 per
cent in the past three months,
the number ot those seeking work
lumped from 19,365 to 27,311
during October and to 45,882 at
the end of November. Local offi
ces of the commission reported
only 521 specialized job openings
remaining unfilled as the new
year opened:'
Seek Rescue of
Trapped Miner
HOUSE OPENS NEW TERM
"-xr rrrj
I
ruo8JO 2
- in
vital rm
ram
In Mate of Unii
mi message
tlons Insistence that tl.l
anti-Red war prisoners be re
leased Jan. ti.
Peiping Radio broadcast a
note signed by North Korean
Prime Minister Kim 11 Sung
and the Chinese military com
mander in Korea, Gen. Peng
Teh-huai, which demanded
that all of the dsputed prison
ers be kept under Indian cus
tody until a final Korean peace
conference decides their fate.
The U. N. command firmly
rejected any extension of the
deadline, which was set by the
Korean armistice agreement,
and insisted the POWs be set
free at one minute past mid
night Jan. 23.
India to Decide
Because the two sides still
were completely opposed, it
now was up to the Neutral Na
tions Repatriation Commission
and India to decide when the
prisoners should be released.
Peiping Radio, which made
the first announcement of the
Communist note, aald it was
delivered to Indian Lt. Gen.
K. S. Thimayya at Panmun
Jom. The U. N. note, reaffirming
the Allied position that the
prisoners should be released
on schedule, was delivered to
Thimayya last night.
The Indian General had re
quested both commands to
give their views.
(Continued on Pare 5, Column I'
French Alerted
For Assault
SAIGON,' Indochina Ul The
French braced themselves. Thurs
day to meet an expected attack
on Laos from the Vietminh divi
sion which drove across Indochina
to the Mekong River and the Thai
land border jut before Christmas.
The Frencn said they believed
an assault in the Seno area, just
south of the rebels' invasion route,
was imminent.
After almost two weeks of quiet
in the area, numerous patrol
clashes have been reported in the
past 48 hours around Seno.
Just north of the Laotian border,
itMlliMurf 1nrlr,rhina Fl-anrh
RAVF.NSDALF., Wash ( A ;,. anj bombers kept up their
coal mine rescue crew worked roun.the-clock attacks on roads
desperately throughout the night i and rebe, suppiy imes northeast
and Thursday morning in a vain , of Di(n Bien phu
attempt to reacn a miner whu
was trapped deep underground by
a cave-in near here in King County.
A second victim of the accident,
400 to 500 feet underground, was
freed Wednesday alter being
trapped for nearly four hours.
There was laint hope for finding
Harry English, 39. alive in the
chute where he vanished under SEATTLE ( The Coast Guard
coal, rock and broken timbers, j sent i(j Thursday for the 135-foot
His tauier-in-iaw, nmum ""("., sea Lion ot San rrancisco,
Sr.. commented grimly alter wnjcn fi jt was drifting in
emerging from 17 desperate hours neayy JeaJ off tn, Oregon coast
unaersruuuu. ; aiI(,r losing a oarge II was lowing.
The only thing we can do is W. c- i ...nnrted ihe line
to hope to God that we have not (o the unmannc( 275-foot barge.
C5
Gist of Major
Policies Listed
By Eisenhower
US and Russia
Will Talk on
Atomic Pool
House Probes
Junkets'.Cosf
Speaker Joseph Martin (R., Mass.) presides from the upper
rostrum as the 83rd Congress reconvened in the House of Repre
sentatives, Washington, D.C., Jan. 6. Only routine formalities
were scheduled. (AP Wirephoto)
Coast Guard Aid
Sent Sea Lion
run out of miracles."
West in Meet
With Russians
which was loaded with high octane
gasoline, parted about 4 a.m. The
tug. with 11 men aboard, later
radioed its engines were inopera
live.
WASHINGTON u. A sec
ond House investigation was
underway today into reports
junketing congressmen spent
rinse tn MOO 000 in "blank
check" foreign currency. In ad-1
Hlllnn tn s,.l tttniim nrnvlHurl
by this government, on over
seas trips last summer and fall.
The legislators are not re
quired under law to make any
accounting of how they spent
this so-called "counterpart"
money, local currency put up
by foreign governments to
match dollar aid from this
country.
Chairman Karl M. LeComte
(R., Ia.) said his House Admin
istration Committee has asked
the chairmen of five other
house groups lor a report on
counterpart money spent by
their globe trotting members.
He promised to make public
whatever information be geta.
Criirr Ren. . Clare E. Hoff
man (R. Mich.), chairman of
the House Committee on uov
rrnment Oocrations, launched
a similar Inquiry, Hoffman
was understood today to have
prepared a detailed new quei-
iinnnalra for the State Depart
ment on what it knows about
the spending s; co-i.-i-ari
funds.
Coast Highway
Closed by Slide
Rain of the last few days
caused a slide three miles north
nf Rnrkawav and closed the
Oregon
State 1
c.ih indav. Motorists were ad
vised a detour lour miies long;
was available on the Miami
river county road. i
Chains were required f or j
cars at East Diamond lake,
where three inches of new snow
was being plowed. Chains were
advised at Bly with an inch of I
new snow. 1
Spots of ice were reporieo
at Government Camp, Timber
line, Warm Springs junction.
Bend, Brothers, Baker and
Seneca.
Packed snow was wen sano-
Corliss Lamont Cited,
Contempt of Congress
WASHINGTON Wi - The Senate
investigations subcommittee Thurs
day called for c . tempt of Con
gress citations against Corliss La
mont. wealthy New York writer:
Abraham linger, a New York City
lawyer, and Albert Shadowite of
Nutley. N. J.
Shadowitz is the man who re
fused to answer questions of sub
committee Chairman McCarthy
R-Ws at a public hearing in New
York Dec. 16 on grounds that Dr.
Albert Einstein, the famed physi
cist, and advised him not to.
All three refused, in one way or
another, to cooperate by answer
ing questioons in recent investiga
tions conducted by McCarthy. -
McCarthy said the subcommittee
also had voted at its closed door
meeting to ask the Justice Depart
ment to consider whether a fourth
witness should be indicted for per
jury on grounds the man had lied
under oath in denying Communist
party membership.
He declined to name-that person.
described only as an employe of
the ueneral blectric plant at bene.
nectady, N.Y., who had testified
WASHINGTON I The State
Department said Thursday the
United States and Russia will start
n..l,....u (alb mm 0.ul.- V i
WASHINGTON (At Tonic by . ,i
topic, here is the gist of major pre,umably in the course of the
recommendations President Els-Int (tw days."
rnnower made to Congress The . two countries agreed
Thursday, Including many to be , Wednesday to begin conversations
spelled out ia future messages: iirnea Mtin. , time, plaae and
Strong Economy Measures will i agenda for full scaled negotiations
include flexible credit and public j on the project outlined by Eisen
debt policies; tax adjustments to! hower in his Dec. t address to the
spur spending: loans and guaran-"United Nations,
tees, expanded social security: re- Soviet Ambassador Georgl M.
vised plans for agriculture and for- Zarubin will represent Russia and
eign trade: advance planning for Secretary of State Dulles will speak
public works. ; for the United States at the pre-
TaxM Ther. wilt ho fnrih-r . liminary talks here.
later a hm-rf ariv rm. ' State Department Press Officer
vision should include liberalisation i Henry Suydam told his news con
as to working children, medical I (erence Thursday:
expenses and widows and widow. "The procedural conversations
r tmih rienambin -h,iHrn. k, i between Secretary Dulles and Am
business, a break on depreciation, bassador Zarubin will be arranged
research and retained . earnings, at their mutual convenience, pre
But scheduled, excise and corpora- j sumably lit the course of the next
tion income tax cuts should not days."
go into effect. . . ,
Budget It will, move closer to
$5 Billion Cut
In Government
Cost Proposed
balance, but a debt limit rise is
needed.
Flexible Farm Supports
Agriculture Supports should be
come flexible, but without sudden
price drops, to stimulate consum
ption. Existing surpluses should be
"insulated" from trade channels
through such programs as relief
and emergency stockpiles.
Defense Emphasis is on nuclear
weapons and air power. Some in.
WASHINGTON P President
Eisenhower promised Thursday to
proposed early tax revisions ben
efiting some individuals and cor
porations and aaid the federal
budget Is being-trimmed as a step '
toward snore new cuts In the fut
ure. .
The chief executive, in his State
of the Union message, forecast a
federal budget trimmed to K6.600,,
Ooo.ood or less for the year starting .
July 1. t .
Eisenhower addressed a joint ses,
sion of the Senate and House in
the House Chamber. His address
was broadcast ty all major radio
and TV networks. , ,
Eisenhower delivered his ad
dress in a firm strong voice, read
ing from a text In a Urge loose
leaf notebook.
it took him 94 minutes. '
Altogether, Eisenhower was In
terrupted 45 times by applause.
There was a standing ovation
as he concluded, '
But he said It will still be neces
sary to (1) raise the 375-binion.
dollar ceiling on the federal debt
and (2) cancel tax cuts due April
1 on corporation incomes and on 1
such things as tobacco, gasoline.
LONDON (Jn Europe shivered automobiles and liquor.
some more from winter ice and I Eisenhower'! far-ranalna home
snow Thursday. Northern Italians, front program designed, he
the continent s hardest hit. Strug-1 said, to start the nation "on the
gled to dig out trom unaer me forward road to a better and
white Manuel oeiora new storms stronger Amerta" contained a
Europe Digging
Out From Snow
Hallinan Starts
Prison Term '
SAN FRANCISCO UP) A
smiling: affable Vincent Halli
nan surrendered loathe.. U. S,
marshal today to start serving
an 18-month prison term tor
income tax evasion. ,
The millionaire attorney and
19S2 left-wing presidential
candidate told newsmen he
would return upon completion
of his prison sentence to begin
active polititeal work for the
"liberal forces "
Hallinan, the Independent
Progressive party standard
bearer in the last presidential
election, predicted eventual
victory for the "liberals."
Hallinan was found guilty of
evading S36,73 in income
taxes and was fined 50,000 in
Coast highway, the I you .-.- -
Highway department . : w. r
at a recent closed door hearing at I oris should be shared with friends,
Albany, N.Y. . 1 (Continued on Paa . Column 41
McCarthy has denounced as
lie" reports that he has agreed.
after' urging from administration
-4flclals. tn switch hil emphasis ' w ",",t!
to fields other than Investigation
af communism.-,.: ,
$2,603,800 in
Veterans' Loans
Th Slate Veterans department
made 399 farm and home loans
to veterans in December, totaling
260.3.800.
It was the biggest month in the j
eijht-year history ot the program.
During 1953. 1.831 veterans bor-
cd at Siskiyou. Green Springs ; rowed io.3m.u. aiso new .cv
mmintain. each of which re- ord. The previous record was 7.-
yoo.uuv in isuv.
Godfry Quits
IV Sponsor
NEW YORK (UP) Arth-r
Godfrey ant his seven-year spon
sor, Chesterfield cigarettes,
reached a parting of the ways to
day, but a spokesman for the Co
lumbia Broadcasting company
said it was amicable on .both
sides.
The Liggett & Myers Tobacco
company, makers of Chester
fields, announced it was with
drawing sponsorship because "we
are unable to arrive at a satisfac
tory agreement" with CBS, God
frey's employer.
Godfrey was unavaname ior
comment, but the CBS spokes
man said that only money was
involved.
formation on use of atomic wean- hit. 1 proposed new move against Com-
.uosena m imiu vuibkcb m mc munisia: ainpouiK American .
Italian Alps were Isolated after I iienihio from anybody convicted ot
the worst snowstorm m u years, 1 eonsDirinc hereafter to advocate
Huge drifts, closed many miles I the overthrow of the government.
ol highways. - A textile mill col- He did not say how it would be
I lapsed ' Wednesday nignt ' unaer i aora,
lions of snow near Tordenone but! (Cetlsiae4 Page a,'Celun It .
its Q employes naa m lor we i
day... .v .' Hr - a
Italy's flood damage tn tne rot
River delta could not be eati-l
mbI r.Ni,l iritai if !r-h fnrtn.
Ask to Share
Atomic
WASHINGTON im - President
Elsenhower asked ConaTess Thurs
day for authority to mar certain
i atomic secrets on the tactical use
of A-weapons with America's al
lies to strengthen the defense of
the free world. f
At the same time he challenged
Russia which he said Is now on
the diplomatic defensive to,, take
a constructive role in tortncon.ing
international atomic talks and thus
help turn the world away from
'the fatal road toward atomic
war. ,
The Soviet and American gov
ernments announced only Wednes
day night an agreement to hold
discussions here on the time, place
and procedures for international
talks on atomic problems.
In his State of the Union mes
sage, Eisenhower pledged to con
tinue the struggle against Bed ag
uated.
Hawaii Ruled by
Bridaes, Claim
WASHINGTON (U.B Former
Hawaiian Gov. Ingram Stain
back said today that Hawaii's
economy Is controlled by Har
ry Bridges' longshoremen un
ion which In turn Is run by
men who "absolutely follow the !
communist line.
Stninback. once an ardent ad
gression in the Far East and called vocote of stateheod for the Pa
lor greater unity in Free Europe,
He said Godtrey's firing iast!"n -- 'i
year of singer Julius LaRosa had : ,l0n-
no part in the cancellation, nnr
did Godfrey's penchant for kid
ding his sponsors enter into the
decision.
Ki,i ,i w in nn immM aiei norieo iwu iiiliico u, . , --- , .
- .. :,u ,u Th iwrngp man since inc
wiin mice, r . . . .L
Wile's Letter to
Batchelor Listed
TOKYO I Cpl. Claude Batch-
; elor Thursday handed U. S. author
ities lour letters wriuen oy nis
1 . si Mr 111 emf IIS UaT3S.
f A Coast Guard tug. the Yocona, ,che, at Meach.m and a, Aus-; Kram .tarteo 'li&Zt
!S T'l ' U7 m Pnri : '"Wk. w, ni.mond lake, " ' W ,le aF S,aM W,,n " -m"m" ' lied Control
'Aneerc.: Wash. The Sea Lion's lc!hi;hw.v n. closed by snow. !"? ? m .icsed to four of '" t Berl.
Picking Site for
Big 4 Conference-
BERLIN (U.B- Berlin's Ameri
can. Soviet. British and French
commandants met today at the
British headquarters in Olympic
Stadium to pick a site for the
Jan. 23 Big Four foreign minis
ter's conference.
The Western delegations went
into the closely guarded stadium
advocate holding
in the former Al-
Authority Building
lands were wrecked and fiahernien f J " T
Hm-aH laro Stv. amBll MT R W W ' 1-
villages were Inundated'. fSveryoneJ liC7 3 rlvMnjar'
In serious danger had been evac- ..,.,, ,- -
Inlonal Democrats generally greeted
t -resiueni .cisannower s atate or
the Union message Thursday with
reserve. Republican reaction
ranged all the way from full en
dorsement to outright opposition on '
specific points. .
The sprinkling of direct GOP dis-
agreement applied to such matters
as the proposed cancellation of
scheduled cuts in corporation in
come and excise taxes, and tne
President's call for nigher postal
rales.
And Republican applause for Ei- ,
senhower's backing of flexible
farm price supports was noticeably
scarce in the House Agriculture
Committee.
First reaction to his plan for
sharing some atomic lnfurinaliun
with Allies was favorable.
On the broad scope of the mes
sage. Rep. Ilallcck of Indiana, the ,
House Republican leader, said it
"outlined a program geared to the
hopes and aspirations of the Amer
ican people for a prosperity based .
on peace instead of war."
Rep. Rayburn ot . Texas, the
j House Democratic leader, pretty
well summed up tor the minority. -He
aaid the message made "few,
if any. specific recommendations
on major subjects" and added: .
"We slill will have lo wait to see
what President Eisenhower's pro
gram is."
Weather Details
lUtl ?!,,. M
Ss-. 4. Tll
.Ill fr nvnlh.
prtlIIBllM. 1I.M:
rtrtIU!l:
Bit. I.U. -
Mil. IS. IS.
VI fttt. iBtpert St I', a
vrDl TV im U.'jictrn flplp0ale
. i.k ih. n,,..,, ai innith cation was given as 70 miles south
Thursday but failed to reach o! the mouth of the Columbia
agreement on the exact place in River.
Berlin for a forthcoming Big Four
foreign ministers conference.
They will meet again Saturday
at Soviet headquarters in the East
lector of Berlin. A communique
issued after six hours of meetings
said only that there was an "ex
change of views."
A short time before they con
vened, a Russian - licensed East
Orman newspaper splashed
front case article claiming that
stiiMt West Berlin was not safe
enough for the conference ot for
eign ministers Jan. 2S.
The Western Allies have pro
posed the 500-room former Allied
control building in tne American
sector for the conference
i.nma. ttnri ti onn inr tarm. rnev were
I xhe department has loaned 4.9,- Batchclor's buddies who are still
TERRORISTS KILLED j M4.140 tii U.137 veterans, but more ' in the pro-Commu-'ist prison camp
NAIROBI. Kenva A fierce, than 22 millions has aireaoy oeen:m uie norean uemmidrucu
ciflc territory, testified before
the Senate Interior Committee.
He was called at the insist
ence of Son. George A. Smoth
ers (D., Fla l who opposes a
bill lo make Hawaii a state.
The former governor, now
. an associate justice of Ilwa-
it. c - rn,tr trlftatenned
11 OUpivnre ,wu. , - ri
questions as to his present
vlrwi nn statehood.
Asked whether the ilwu
"controls the economic life of
the islands." Stalnback said
emphatically: "There's no
question about It."
He added that although not
many members of the union
are communist party members
i "the men who control It abso
! lutcly follow the communist
' line."
battle rased Thursday between repaid in principal and interest.
Kenya's security forces and more
than 100 members of the Mau Maui
secret anti-white terrorist organii-i
minn Twelve terrorists were re-
norted killed and a number
wounded.
UlaimApplegate Seized
By Chinese Pirates
Boston U. Fires
Prof. Halperin
Surplus Dried Milk
Shipped to Japan
PORTLAND JB The Agri
BOSTON - Boston I'nivrrsity
has fired Prol. Maurice Halperin.
who was named last November in
an FBI report as a link in a Com
niunist espionage ring in high V. S.
government circles.
The university announcement
alH WaHnacHav that Haloehn W8S
PANMUNJOM, Korea, UP , as they sailed off Hong Kong in dismiMed "for the good of Boston
j Communist correspondents Allan Applegate's pleasure boat. University" alter he failed several
I Winnington and Wilfred Burchett winnington and Burchett said times to appear before a school
today denied that Chinese Reds there no mti ot review board assigned to consider
captured American newsmen ,nrte miam men ln Chinese his 'Titness to teach.'
Richard Applegate and Don Dix- linl.nd new,MDers despite Reached by telephone in Mexico
nn off Hona Kong last March. M.i..n t,nni,rmA
Winnineton. a reporter for the : ,k h. i,,i-h .ith.r ber, Halperin told
I Batchelor asked Indian guarus iu
be repatriated on .ew lear s
He was flown to Tokyo three days
later and reunited with his ile
Kyoto Araki.
Kyoko said one of the four let
ters was lo Cpl. Richard E. Tenne
son She said she promised Tenne
son s mother, Mrs. Portia Howe ol
Aldcn. Minn., to write Tenneson.
Mrs Howe flew to Tokyo last
month in a vain effort to see her
son.
New Look Given to
Nation Defense by Ike
Car Plunges Into
Willamette
OREGON CITY Hi A Crown '
Zellerbach solely supervisor from
Olvmpia died Thursday shortly
alter being rescued from a river
bank led-:e following a 75-foot
Oregon's Traffic
Toll 370 in '53
Oregon's 1953 traffic death toll
sjinds at 370, a reduction of v
WASHINGTON UP President
Eisenhower gave congress Thurs
div the new look at national de-
; (ense a "great and growing
number'" of atomic weapons, ex
panding air fleets, diminishing
: manpower.
I His Slate of the Union mesage
i specifically mentioned a one bil
lion dollar boost in spending for
1 continental defense against en-
' cmy sir attack.
Here are considerations
Eiserhower said went into
oram "iven the unanimous recom
mendation ol tne Joint vnieis oi
Stall and his own approval after
. nlunse in his car.
Coiurcss to provide tne necucu Th(, vj(.(in, KrM, Ponljll K was
authority." . . . . , rescued by boat and brought across
j. "New relationships oeiwcen hospital here. Res-
men and materials. . . iim
economics In the use of men. . .
the air power of our Navy and
Air Force is receiving heavy em
phasis." , .
Here Elsenhower obviously had
in mind the proposed gradual re
duction of troop strength, which Is
expected to bring the Army oown
frnm a oresent manpower level
1. riiv ah h went late in Novem- trom tne idz toiai, awrruri assessment or u
reports P"y-h5J"e,.u" i,arv policy making National Se-
r..S'er.hr: P';-Di"n 'n,"'"Jlniibe tried on trumped up espion-
t, 4kr UiA Kaaaan .Url ithr OCT, nfllUCnn HU ' 11. "
mmiA in. T " ' . . ' . .. UW-iM- 1 nuituaj . t-JliiI vwww.a.
uononn uu.tj .. i- . rntnn or helping ana wouia . . vr. ..M th rjn uaa micht . ...... f..ii mrommt
that Rod on University hai wc-be increased. Perms injured last . -rowin2 number o!
. . k. .., Kk, Am ihi vi-ar are -
mmhwl tn tha oi nvnrni. " - J
manipulated by unscrupulous poli
ticians. It has done a disservice to
its own good name and to the cause
of academic freedom."
L ;.mured hv the Comunittf werei Maipenn saiu ra ,
stncsion. i am. i ne o. . ...... , ------- . d gnauccessfully to learn the "because my wiie nas oeen in oe
was purchased ai li cenu '"" -" "-- j u k,,. i tha ihrr men
iy ail ina iirai . miiiiiuiiu, iw .... v -. , ...
day that the United btates snip- j - Kramer might
ped W.0M 000 pound, of surplu. fa wlled by .pir,le,.
dr. TlranTi But both Winnington and Bur-
fice said 2000 tons of the con men, represenuiuve " Americans were assigned to
sienment was shipped from Long- newspaper I Humamte, said re- myer )h. p,nmUnjom truce Ulks
. ... . , nn,. thai 1 h three men were . .
view, vtasn . ana ine rri ir..m i - ---- '"-.,. , The U.S. SUte Department nas
age charges.
Both Red newsmen knew Ap
plegate and Dixon when the
pound to support dairy prices
r . ...j i (M n l that the mer. naa oeen issen
JrJA " limn custody by a Red gunboat March 21.
ever since they dissppeared last
three men 1 cause of Ihe pressures." His wife.
Edith, is on leave of absence from
the Brookline school system.
r . . , nnrlpar weauons ana ine inuai c-
inc jaea in me iwjj tutai. ' , , u -
January was the worst month in fectiv. means of "m "
153. with a traffic death rate of against an aggressor d they are
It per 100 million miles traveled, needed to Preserve
August was best with a rate of 4 Our defense will bt '
Newbry said 75.000 drivers were ; under appropnat, security sa e-
S Is-r'lnMing ccAain- knWMge n, the tactic, sion.agsin,,
. driving while drunk. I use of our nuclear weapon. 1 urge lie..
cuers said when they reached him
hi. pulse was strong. But he was
dead on arrival at the hospital.
There were no witnesses lo the
mishap in which the car plunged
over the cliff at the rear of Ihe
west Unn Inn, but from tire tracks
this was learned:
Pontin's car went over a iw-incn
ig a parking area,
down a bank, crossed
crashed through the
walk's wooden guardrail Ihen drop
pec to the river.
Ponlin was seen immediately
.n....,J K.tl hramhlpl and fhO
wings during the year, to 127 b(u(f mad. rMCU. ,rorn tht
wings two years hence and later r , practicable route.
to an eventual goal of 137 wings. "vw lm
I'reaent strength of the Air Force
!, m w'ngs of which about 105 NKWSREKL MAN FIRED
are at full ellectiveness. wni1 : Aklra Shiraishl. a
1 "Our armed force, must re- bfcOU; m;n.
gain maximum m..,iny o. m. . Kmrtn curt
which from Dre,em m,npo , ,' timber edging a
of about 1 "i million to a force of iam
recom- l'lM 00 b " "","n" - a board walk, eras!
1(IM
The build up ln air power is ex
pected to Include expanding the
r. ... ..t iia i.s
Air rorce to a svrenui ...
Our strategic
centrally
'pf.CcedrTnrdVCTre.dU; .Thursday for T X
stand trial In a Korean court.
I!
s:
i !
V i
1
"I
Ptua - I