Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 22, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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    Capital
A i Tirvnn
THE WEATHER
koocu nest
JO Pue'fng
OCCASIONAL RAIN tonight, and .
Tuesday. Slightly warmer. Low
tonight, 40; high Tuesday, SO.
FILIAL.
EDBTION
66th Year, No. 44 L".."" Salem, Oregon, Monday, February 22, 1954 (24 Pages) Price 5c
,ffiy, f VA
Court to Hear
Baum Appeal
Wednesday
Speedy Decision
Looms on Reappor
tioment Amendment
Oregon's legislative reappor
tionment amendment, which the
people put into the Constitution
in 1952, will be argued at 1:30
p.m., Wednesday, before the State
Supreme Court.
The court will try to give a
speedy decision, because legisla
tive candidates have to know the
outcome betore the March 12
deadline (or filing in the May
primary election.
The new amendment, chal
lenged by Rep. David C. Baum
of I.a Grande, provides for
changing legislative districts for
the first time since 1910. The case
is on appeal from Marion County
circuit court, where Judge Rex
Kimmell ruled the amendment is
valid.
Districts Changed
It changes the districts to con
form with changes in the popula
tion pattern.
The- amendment also provides
that the legislature must reap
portion itself every 10 years, after
each federal census. If the legis
lature refuses, then the Secretary
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 5)
Conscies' Issue
Before Board
The State Board of Control may
hear protests against employment
o conscientious objectors at the
Oregon stale hospital when it
meets tomorrow.
A protest against the hiring of
the conscientious objectors re
cently was filed in Portland by
an AFL union group headed by
Leo Butts. He said conscientious
objectors were taking the place
of more deserving workers, for
pay less than that received by
other state employes in similar
pnsitoins.
Dr. Chirles E Bates, superin
tendent if the hospital, said the
conscientious objectors were hir
ed at a time when it was impos
sible to obtain other workers be
cause of the labor shortage. He
said they were ;ccciving the same
pay as other state employes in
the same civil service classifica
tion. Forrest Stewart, executive sec
retary of the Oregon State Em
ployes Association, said his asso
ciation conducted, an investiga
tion at the time the conscientious
objectors were employed and
agreed to the program. He also
said they received the same pay
as other state workers in similar
posts.
More Showers
Loom for Valley
Salem and the valley regions
were enjoying a bit of early spring
weather, Monday, rain and wind
tapering off over Sunday. Some
occasional rain is in prospect for
tonight and Tuesday, although
temperatures arc due to be slight
ly warmer.
The sun came out at mid-morning
to dispel a fairly heavy fog
hanging over the city earlier. The
minimum temperature dropped to
the ireeezing mark, 32 degrees,
Monday morning.
Following the rains of last week,
rivers' of the lower valley arc still
coming up, but nothing alarming
ly. At Salem, the Willamette was
tip to 12.1 and is due to continue
coming up through Tuesday.
the weather bureau at Portland
said a new storm was on its way,
but indications wcrc it would be
farther to the north. Washington
to get more of it than Oregon.
2 Escapees at
Eugene Caught
EUGENE IT1 Two prisoners;
sawed their way out ot jail here ;
lale Sunday night but had only a
few hours of freedom.
Paul B. Mnran, 22. awaiting trial j
on charges of armed robbery and j
parole violation, was found by
police three hours later asleep in
a car at the house of a friend,
lie told oflicers -he was just taking
a nap before catching a bus for,
Portland.
Victor Glen Clanin. 26, who had
been held for auto theft, was cap-,
turcd by state police about 13 j
miles south ol Salem as he drove i
a car stolen in Eugene. He was
halted about 6:30 a.m., less than I
an hour alter the car theft had ;
been reported. I
Moran and Clanin refused to say
where they obtained the live hack-1
saw blades with which they sawed
through four bars of their cell.
They got nut ol jail by cnmoinc
up a drain pipe lo the top of a
30-foot wall and lowering them
selves on a rope made from torn
bedshects.
Magsaysay -Puts
Curb on
Asiatic Slogan
Needs of National
Welfare Cannot Be
In Straightjacket
" MANILLA un President Ramon
Magsaysay Monday night put the
damper on the "Asia for the
Asians" slogan of his foreign of
fice. '
"We must not try to fight
many and changing needs of na
tional welfare into a straight
jacket of a slogan,"' Magsaysay
said.
It was the President's first
public comment on the "Asia for
the Asians" slogan which has
caused heated debate in the Phil
ippines and attracted litle sup
port elsewhere in the Far East.
"From the past administration
we know you cannot govern, you
cannot achieve progress by slo
gans," Magsaysay said in an ad
dress at the U. S. Clark Air
Force Base during Washington s
Birthday observances.
Phrase Easily Destroyed
"One danuer in expressing a
policy through a slogan," he said. !
"is that it's so easy to distort a
phrase. Already the slogan 'Asia
f,... th Ac!-,,,.?' hiilnrt 1,11m.
peted over radio Peiping and by
communist propaganua enanneis
elsewhere as a cry of hostility
by our people towards the Amer
ican people."
"This is a lie," Magsaysay de
clared. "I see nothing incompat
ible between friendly and sympa
thetic feeling for our Asian
neighbors and continuation of
our especially warm relationships
with the United Stales."
Adenauer Says
Reds for Peace
BONN, Germany LP Chancel-
lor Konrad Adenauer expressed 1
the view Monday mai inc mvicv
Union wants peace settlements in
Korea anu lnoocmna. an(1 Womcn and small children
In a radio interview. Adenauer j wno .t.r0 rPicasc(j by Hungary
said "The Soviets showed at Ihc ' &n() who arrived here bv train
Berlin conference that their goal hal( slarvc(. n,cir clothing in rags,
is a settlement in Asia and that : their i,alre 0 Communism ,burn
thev are not interested in a solu-1 jng 0ri"ht
ti,V'TPCan Pr0blt'nr " 1 Spokesmen for the group said
'I he Big Tour nations plus Red u " or
China will meet n Geneva on Apr. i sjt.k , work wcrc frCcd by
20 o discuss ending live n on hs of communists who captured
stalemate in Korean armistice . . . -. .
talks and the Communist-lcd rebel- j -unn he -civiwar
'Tdenauerlald Moscow wants to ! ""ind. doomed to s.nv-
Aclon nrnliLmc lw..finci it ' tr
does not have to fear repercus
sions in its Europan satellites
from such a settlement."
Seek to Relax
Berlin Controls
' BONN, Germany (UP) The
United States, Great Britain and
France proposed to Russia today
that controls be relaxed on the
movement of goods and persons
in Germany.
The relaxation would be ef-
fective between the Allied and 1
Soviet occupation zones and be- j
tween West Berlin and West Ger
many. Berlin, where the west
ern powers control the western
part of the city, is an island in-,
side Soviet held territory.
The Allied proposal was made '
by the three western high com-, chiPf'Unconscious 'on the floor,
missioncrs to the Soviet control . Miltnias was married but had
commissioner in Berlin. , no children. He had been fire
Toward the end of the Big ! chief here since January, 1946.
Four conference in Berlin,, the i
western delegates notified So- AnntUar rSanlle
vict Foreign Minister Viachcslav ! VV CUinei UeiUIIS
M. Molotov they would make the i M,x um .WA. M; minimum to
proposal in hope of casing thci, jj toui ji-hnur precipiutmn,
situation in Germany despite """ ;'" "'
l-.1.., in ,,, ,,: sin precipitation. 35. 11; nwniil. J JJ.
failure to agree on German uni- j Rlv,r hrl!hl 12 , ,K,port by .
fication.
New Yorkers Riot at
Bargain Sale Stampede
NKW YORK if Surging, titht
packed ocean of people cngultcd
a Manhattan department slorc
Monday, shoving, shouting and
tram.ing toes in a stampede to
grab up bargain merchandise
Women lost hats and shoes in,
Ihn nntch At Irail tu-ft nf thpmlttnro frnm nnrnino its rionrS at
fainted. Several fist fights broke
out as a mass of more than lO.nooi
people jammed around Hcarn's
department store on 14th street.
A policeman was shoved through
a plale glass door, but was not
hurt.
Thousands converged on the store
ling betore opening time, lured
bv advertisements of Ml c h
"George Washington Birthday"
snorisk as S19!).i watrhes for
MM and s.19 noarl ncrklaeea for
$279..
Extra police detachments rushed
fi Hiwaaa IBDDDDO DUnaa
7 i g
Greek Slaves
Appeal to U.S.
VENICE. Italy (UP) - Hun
dreds or Greeks held in slave la
bor camps in Hungary appealed
to the United States today to res-
cue them from a seven year reign
of Communist terror.
ThPiP appciil was brought out
hy ,2r1 sick and agort r;rct,k m,,n
! The evacuees said the men left
behind asked them to tell their j
story lo Greece, to the United
Nations and " above all to the j
fnited States. The dazed Hun-j
garian populace looks only to a
new world war to set them free,
liicy added.
Pasco Fire Chief
Killed in Blaze
PASCO (Pi Overcome by
smoke while fighting a home fire,
Pasco Fire Chief Larry Mathias
died Sunday en route lo a hos-
pital
Assistant Chief Lyle Cooney
said Mathias. 40, wai trapped in ,
the basement of the burning ,
home when smoke and flames
drove other firemen outside.
The firemen fought their way
back into the building when they
discovered Mathias was not with
ll,nm I'uiniM mill nnrl fnnnH the
i S. Walher Hurfiu 1
to the scene, as the elbow-gouging will he from Argentina, Kgypt,
throng circled the block and j France, India. The Netherlands,
spilled into the streets, blocking ' New Zealand, the United Kingdom
crosstown traffic. Some stood i and the United States. Their sug
atop stalled cars, yelling. gestions will be submitted to a 20-
Police Inspector Joscpn t. wei
don issued orders preventing the
the scheduled time of 10 o'clock ;
until 'reinforcements arrive
i He said the "lives and safety of
I these people" was involved, and
that it would be dangerous to open
die doors to the massed humanity
'until "the pressure outside is re-
lu ved "
Finally, an attempt was made
In admit people gradually, 10 at
a time But as one door opened,
an avalutice of about 100 iKiurcd
Ihrouth before it could he closed.
j Once inside, people found they
'.couldn't get out.
NEW VIEW OF THE NEW COURTHOUSE
This photograph of Marion county courthouse, now nearing
completion, was made with aid of a strong filter to show
marble texture and differentiate planes of the structure as they
appear from the south driveway entrance on State street.
Still Seek Cause of
Death of Sacks Wife
PORTLAND (UP) George F.
Sack, Portland apartment house
ownrr,"was secludod beyond the
reach of newsmen here today as
University of Oregon patholo
gists pressed their efforts to find
out what caused the dcatn ol
Cyclone Strikes
In Australia
SYDNEY, Australia (UP) A
cyclone which killed 18 to 21)
persons, caused $2,250,000 in
property damage, and brought
new houtn wales us worst noons
in history veered out to sea to-
day
The storm left thousands home
less and in need of food and
medical supplies.
Telephone lines were knocked
out. Kail and road transporta
tion were cut.
Sewerage, electric and gas fa
cilities wcrc disrupted in places.
All communication with the
north coast was severed, with only
amateur radio operators maintain
ing contact from the stricken area.
Hundred of thousands of square
miles were affected. Homes were
wrecked, bridges smashel, thou
sands of head of cattle destriy.
ed. and .many acres of valuable i
grazing land ruined.
'f .us ",a . "ud
army duck, to rescue hundred of
stranded persons. Others waited
patiently for places of he Royal
Australian Air Force to fly in
badly needed emergency supplies.
Plan Study, of
Food Surplus
WASHINGTON - Kxpcrts
from eight countries will meet
here Tuesday to see if they can
find a way to get food surpluses
to hungry countries without caus
ing Hicnetnr In nrirpc
a rr.nr.wi.ntMiivns ilf thp 1 'niti.it 1
V;nii.n .mil Auririiltiirp !
Organization 1FAO1 they face the
same problem on a global scale
that U. S. farm officials are trying
to solve nationally: How can
mounting slocks of farm products
be disposed of and farmers' in
comes kept at a high level?
The experts, many of them at
larbed to embassies in Washington
nation committee on commodity
nrnhtfim Hmp trt meet in .tune.
' . . . .
They are expected to work tor two
or three weeks, most of the time
behind closed doors
Ql'KEN PI.F.ADS INNOCENT
ON CORRUPTION CHARGE
CAIRO Described as too
ill lo appear in court, the queenhee
of F.gypts' once dominant Waitlist
Paity pleaded innocent in absentia
Monday to corruption charges. A
medical commission reported that
I plump, 49-year-old Mrs. Zeinah F.l
Wakil Nahas. wile of former pre-
mirr Mustapha Ft Nahas, was suf.
fcring from a nervous breakdown.
his wife last Tuesday night or
Wednesday morning..
Outwardly unconcerned about
press reports in Chicago, Seattle
and Portland linking him with
investigations of deaths or dis
appearances of five persons, the
57-ycar-old former Chicagoan fol
lowed the advice of his attorneys
and went into seclusion. He was
freed late Friday under $10,000
posica oy oan uuhummi-h.
Saturday Sack withdrew bonds
and securities from his safety
deposit bax and converted them
into cash, police reported lie
took a room at a downtown hotel
and did not return to the Mont-
gomery street apartment house
wiiuii or uii. iii- i
briefly as a material witness in
connection with his wife's death
which still was unexplained to
day. (Continued on Page 5, Col. 3)
Letter Barrage
On Eisenhower
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. Calif.
Rackstairs at the traveling White
House:
This is fur the hundreds of peo
ple who have been bombarding
"""rXai
his faction hadquarters here.
It does no good to send the Pres
ident ol the United States a regis
tered letter with instructions, "de-
liver to addressee only
No postman gets through to the
Chief Kxeeutive. All registered let
ters arc signed for by a secretary.
The same thing applies to people
who place person lo-pcrson tele
phone rails.
Not since the I!).'i2 campaign has
the F.iscnhowcr staff been subject
ed to such pressure as Ihc bar
rage of requests hurled at them
in Southern California.
In aK seriousness, a school
board chairman called the While
House switchlmard to ask the
President to decorate a salely
patrol leader. Another caller want
eil Mr. F.iscnhowcr. in person, to
examine his uranium mining
i iim.
Rickreall harrner
To Be Candidate
DALLAS Joe Hiirlaml of
Rickreall, a farm leader In Polk
county, has announced he will be
a candidate for the position of
state representative nn the Re
publican ticket in the coming May
primary.
Harland has been a resident of
1 nll. t,.w Ik. n.tl in vmri
' m; .... ,.....
; and operaates a large farm near
i Rickreall .He is president of the
Polk county agricultural planning
council ,a member of the county
rural school board, and a member
of the county bud;;et committee.
Qt' F.F.N' OPF.N'S PARLIAMENT
IIOUART. Tasmania 'P Fac
ing a portrait ol the young Queen
Victoria and silting in a
carved hy convict labor, (fiieen
Elizabeth' I! opened the fifth srs -
smn nf the Unih Tasmanian Par -
liament Monday.
Dulles Denies Recognition
Of Red China at Gene va
Nehru Calls for
Cease Fire in
NEW DELHI, India (A') Pre-
mier Nehru called Monday for a j th parev si1Uu1i ease world ten-ccase-firc
in Indochina "since it ; sj0n.
would seem a tremendous pity ,.-' . ,
that this terrible war mould coiLjrh 'fh'B?c .1,.?1,,e, i're!
tinue when a serious 'effort to s ''J',', J'rf,lnI!,elpinS
meet and discuss this problem" j r1,! ' 1,0 v,01ce of Hed Cl,lna- ,
is scheduled April 26 at Geneva. llle. broadcast heard here quoted
"It is desirable, I think, to
HIH, IU
have some kind of
cease fire
without any party giving up its
position," Nehru told Parliament.
The Associated Press, in a
United Nations dispatch Saturday
night, reported Nehru was plan
ning such a step. Commenting
on this dispatch in Washington
Sunday, diplomatic officials said
they doubted Nehru or anyone
else could succeed in arranging
a cease-fire in Indochina before
the Geneva conference starts.
French Sliy,at Intervention
French Embassy officials have
made it plain they do not relish
Indian intervention. The Nehru
government, they point out, docs
not even recognize Viet Nam, one
of the three Indochinese states
fighting the Communist-led reb
els with French help.
In addition, diplomats ray,
there is 'too little time between
now and April 26 to get a cease
fire worked out; and even if
ll,nrn wiirp tliprf. iu nn Hpnrlif
defined line along which to
mark the combat zones of eachi
side as there was in Korea.
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 6)
British Shippers
ISfrike af Critics
LONDON Ml
British ship-
owiuis uiM it'll uacK ouiiuuy iiim
at American critics of thei? trade
i i i i t. c I : u
with fled China. Their association
report charged the United States
ha,( pos(e( armed guards aboard
British ships while in American
ttalt.rs shadowed them with naval
cutlers and imposed other "almost
incredible" restrictions,
n Washint0Ili a us. Navy
)okl,sinan rt!,0I,lV), -i e v e r
ht,ar(, of j( , jU5l donH b(.it,vc i(
hapIt,ned. An( i certainly would
havu heard of it if it had hap-
pence!
The Stale Department added
it also knew nothing of the al
leged incidents.
The British complaints were in
Ihc annual report hy the Cham
ber of Shipping of the United
Kingdom, which the private but
take up at a meeting next Thurs
day. The report did not give details
of its charge of U.S. "shadowing."
Pakistan Asks
Military Aid
KARACHI, Pakistan I Prim
Minister Mohammed Ali an
nounced Monday that Pakistan has
requested Uuilcd States military
aid witlfin the scope of U.S. mu
tual security legislation.
lie added:
"Pakistan made the request for
the purpose of achieving increas
ed defensive strength, a higher
and stronger degree of economic
.1 I , n r ... . i I
M-.,... y . I-,,;.. . ii,,..-. - Wfln(1 2,fl mirs n(,rth of (hc bj
tcrnational peace and security jus bas, , okinawa is crunljnR
within the framework of,thc!and ,,cmjnR up clouds of ashes
United Nations charter. Before I which have spread for 20 miles
making mis lormat request, raki -
Stan informed itself of the re-
quircmonls of U. S. mutual so-
curity legislation'and finds itself
in agreement with them."
Ike Refuses to Talk on
McCarthy -Ste vens Ro w
PALM SPRINGS. Calif i -
President Eisenhower's vacation
headquarters declined to say Mnn-
day whether Secretary of the
Army Stevens has the Chief r.x
ecutive's personal backing in his
controversy with Senator
Mc -
Carthy iR-Wis i.
Stevens has accused McCarthy
o abusing and humiliating an
Army olficer who appeared at a
Congressional hearing b e h ind
closed doors.
The Anny secretary said Sun
day he was unwilling for the of
hcet to "run the risk of further
abuse" bv McCarthy.
McCariiiv in turn" has accused
Ihc Army of an "attempt to coddle
liir.d promote l'oimunisls" and of
'claiming "special immunity from
(legislative investigation and cx-
Red China OK s
Geneva Meet
Of Big Four
TOKYO i Communist China
tonight put its stamp of approval
on the Big Four decision to hold
an Asian peace conference at
niinniio .(.iHinn At.ril Ofl nnA cni4
an editorial in the official Peiping
p . . iv-:,.. .-..; With.
i,,,,, ',,,, :
win. ti.iiMl. una .'-'Illl-IH VVHl
gradually reduce international
tension."
Communist China will attend the
conference, but U. S. Secretary of
Slate Dulles has stressed that the
invitation does not mean U. S.
diplomatic recognition. ' .
South Korea and Nationalist
China both have assailed the Ber
lin decision as a sell-out of their
interests.
Moscow Sees
Peace Chance
LONDON W Moscow radio
said Monday the forthcoming Ge
neva conference, including Com
munist China, can help pave the
way to a Korean settlement and
the establishment of peace in I
llldochina "
I
the Communist
Ouoting Horn
Party organ Pravda, the English
language broadcast heard here
suiu the Western foreign ministers
at the recent Berlin conference
"had to agree to holding the Ge
neva conference with the partict-
i patlon ot the Chinese Peoples Re
public. U added:
"There can bo no doubt that this
conference can help to relax inter
national tension and lo eliminate
the difficulties blocking a settle
ment of the Korean question and
. .ul,,-. .
Kh, "!llshment of pcac0 in ,n'
Try Out Jefs
First on Cargoes
WASHINGTON iP - Civil Aero
naulics Administration ICAA)
experts have recommended that
jet airplanes be tried out as cargo
carriers before they enter passen
ger service in the United Stales.
That would provide the jet testing
and experience required before
they are accepted for passenger
transportation, a CAA jet evalua
tion team has decided.
The CAA team has forecast the
US-built' jet planes will go into
airline use between 1957 and 1939.
It also predicted that:
1. Jets will be used on domestic
routes belorc they go into over
ocean service. Other sources have
predicted that the first U. S. use
of jets would be on long uvcrwater
flights.
2. Turboprop planes 'jots com
bined with propellers) may be
introduced by the airlines virtually
simultaneously with the pure jets.
3. A practical reverse jet thrust
device may be developed in time paraded through Jakarta's streets
for use in the first U. S. civil jet in observance of so-called Inter
transport operation, but further j national Anti Colonalism Day.
work will be needed on brakes and ! The crowd, composed of men
other decelerating devices.
JAP VOLCANO Kltt'PTS
TOKYO OP A volcano on an
1 around, Kyodo News Agency said
Monday.
The volcano is on Suwa No. one
of the Ruyukyu Islands south of
I Japan.
I posure of the malefactors."
James C. Hagerty, White House
press sccrclary. said in reply to
mil!mi ol 9 n. rnnlnrpnrn
that' Sevens had not been in touch
with Eisenhower or anyone else
ion his small staff here since the;' me , American aeicgauon ai
President arrived In Palm Springs
last Wednesday night
Asked then whether Stevens has
Eisenhower's personal hacking in
the controversy with McCarthy,
Hagerty laughed and told his ques
tioner: "Try again."
In reply lo another question,
j Hagerty said he did mil know
whether Stevens might have con
suited in Washington with F.iscn
hrwer) chief aide, Sherman
Adams.
Key Members
Of Congress at
Secret Parley
WASHINGTON 7F Fifteen
key members of congress heard a
report from Secretary of State
Dulles Monday on the Berlin Big
Four conference and came away
with such noncommittal com
ments as "interesting" and "in
formative." Beyond that, about all any of
th.em would say to reporters was
a statement by Sen. Ferguson ( R.,
Mich.) that he feels "certain" the
Berlin agreement to have an
Asiatic peace conference at Gen.
eva in April, will. Communist
Chinese delegates attending, does
not implv diplomatic recognition
of Red China. v :
The agreement states specific
ally that diplomatic recognition
is not involved.
Long Discussion Held
Dulles invited the lawmakers
to the State Departir cnt and spent
an .hour and a half in discussion
with them. It was the first round
of his campngn to convince the
nation he got the best possible
results out of the Berlin sessions.
Reporters were awaiting out
side Dulles' diplomatic reception
room when the meeting with the
legislators brok-: up
Senate Rcpi blican Leader
Knowland, Calif., strode briskly
by, telling them, "I have no com
ment."
(Continued on Pajfe 5,' Col. 5)
Kremlin Boasts
Striking Power
LONDON WL Moscow radio
said Monday Soviet armed forces
have strengthened their fighting1
power and are now "in the posi
tion to deliver a crushing blow
upon an enemy."
Quoting an unidentified speak
er at a meeting honoring the 36lh
anniversary of the Soviet army
and navy, the Home Service
broadcast said.
"The fighting power of our
armed forces has increased of
late.
"At present our armed forces
arc strong enough to cool down
those hotheads who have lost
their senses and who might try
to encroach upon our independ
ence.
"Our armed forces are in the
position to deliver a crushing
blow upon any enemy."
Red Chinese Leader Mao Tze-
Tung sent greetings to Premier
Malnkov on the occasion.
Rebels Warned
By Indonesia
JAKARTA, Indonesia OP. The
government warned Communist
front demonstrators Sunday that
"severest measures" will be
taken against anyone conspiring
to. overthrow the young repub
lic. . The warning was voiced by Sec
ond Vice Premier Zainul Arifin to
10.000 demonstrators afler they
hers of 14 Communist front organ
isations, presented aopies of reso
lutions opposing colonialism and
a protest note criticizing alleged
Dutch colonial actions in Indonesia
to the offices of the prime min
ister and the Dutch high commis
sioner to Indonesia.
Diplomat to
Leave Korea
SEOUL i.P With stalemated
preliminary peace negotiations
scrapped. L". S. Envoy Kenneth
Young said Monday he will leave
Tuesday for Washington, and the
! Communists will have to learn nf
! his departure from news reports.
! Young expressed belief that Ihc
j preliminary Korean in ks at Pan-
j munjom "probably (ncililattcd the
H'S "" agreement to noia on
i ASNIh PCICO COHlCrCnCC W OenCVd.
1 The Stale department Far East
, pcrl said hi departure will close
. ranmunjom. mic
no plans to notify the Communist
delegation.
Young stood in for Ambassador
Arthur II. Dean for three months
after the preliminary negotiations
were suspended.
CHIANG SEES REVIEW
TAIPE1I. Formosa Chiang
Kai-Shek anil members of Nation
ist China's National Assembly
Mon.lav attended a review ef 30,-
AiUl tMAn..B mnnii nt Iham flnnfliut i
native Korwosans.