Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, September 13, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Capita
si Jauh rural
THE WEATHER
FAIR TONIGHT and Friday ex
cept for patches of morning fog.
Little change in temperature. Low
tonight, 46; high Friday,' 7. . '
4 SECTIONS
44 Pages . ,
68th Year, No. 219
Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 13, 1956'
i a. aaaaar -m. - - XX XX XX
Luncleeii's
Firstjury
Dismissed
Unable to Reach
Verdict; 2nd
Trial On
EUGENE Ml A deadlocked
jury was dismissed Wednesday
night after reaching no decision
in the first trial of Ernest Lun
deen, Eugene attorney under in
dictment on two separate charges
involving financial dealings with
two clients.
While the jury was still out Cir
cuit Judge Dal M. King of Coos
County opened Lundeen's trial on
the second charge.
The first trial was on a charge
of receiving money stolen in a
food market robbery. Lundeen,
34, will be re-tried on this charge,
possibly after the new court term
begins October 1.
Claim Default on Fees
As the trial on the second charge
larceny by bailee, or embezzle
ment began Wednesday after
noon, Robert Anderson, assistant
attorney general, said the prose
cuf'on would attempt to prove
that Lundeen defaulted on an
agreement with Moses Moody,
client now in the state peniten
tiary, concerning legal fees.
Anderson said that an insurance
company paid Moody and Lun
deen $2,000 to settle a claim for
injuries Moody suffered in an au
tomobile accident. Anderson said
the two 'agreed to endorse the in
surance check and that Lundeen
would Keep one-third f the money
as a fee, returning the rest to
Moody. . . . .
Anderson said the state would
bring out testimony in an attempt
to prove Lundeen illegally re
tained all of the $2,000.
Made Several Trips
Mark Weatherford, Albany at
torney, said the defense expected
to prove that Moody owed Lun
deen more thato the amount of the
insurance check. Weatherford told
the court that Lundeen made sev
eral trips to the state of Wash
ington, at Moody's request, on his
client s behalf.
Moody, one of the first stati
witnesses in the second trial' Wed
Tipcnav. npnipa mis. .. . .
" The state accused" Lundeen ' of
converting to his own use $1,312.71
which rightfully belonged to
Moody,
Merchants Set
Giant Parade,
Yule Contest
Christmas season may be ush
ered into Salem by a parade of
giant balloons.
Tentative plans are now being
made for the parade, proposed to
the Salem area merchants by the
executive committee .of the Salem
Chamber of Commerce commer
cial division.
It is planned that several hun
dred youth would take part in the
parade, which would feature life-
sized elephants, other animals and
familiar figures representing
Christmas, Easter, circus day:
and birthday joys of childhood.
Following a meeting Wednesday
with merchant leaders from all
commercial areas of Salem, the
committee decided to recommend
that merchants underwrite such
Darade.
Fred Lund was named chair
man for the parade and Donald
McGeorge the finance chairman
Each will select his own committee.
It was also decided by the group
to propose- that a community-wide
contest for outdoor nouse decora
tion for Christmas be held. A com
mittee composed of Mrs. Mary
emma Beane, chairman, Lloyd
Hammel. Mrs. Earl Mootry, Fred
Starrett and Craig Carver was
: named to study the possibility of
1 such a contest.
Truck Driver
Hero, Averts
Blast Deaths
! TUKERSFIELD. Calif, (fl
truck driver was acclaimed a hero
Thursday for warning oncoming
motorists before his cargo of
dynamite and magnesium went
in in an earth-shaking explosion.
, The true ana an auioir.ouue
County Roads Need Improvement
. ' ,-7-V, , ... rr- -
I . IT-. 1
r '
',r
k
m
ILiil
1 nv?i!"""51J
J!
Marion County Engineer John Anderson, land- heed attention. County court members took a
Ing, and Commissioner Roy Rice point out cracks 140-mlle tour Wednesday to see where they could
in 33-year-old pavement on Macleay road at a spend $875,000 In federal funds, decided they
poin where resurfacing and realignment. of curves could use a lot more. (Capital Journal Photo)
Air Crash
Survivor
Wanders
One Body Found
In Ruins of Ship
Carrying 2 .
WELLP1N1T, Wash. Iffl Two
men reportedly took off in a light
plane that crashed and burned
near here Wednesday night, but
only one charred body was found
in the wreckage.
The body was identified as that
of the pilot, Frank Hamilton, 52,
who flew low over an isolated
mine in Stevens County to drop a
business message.
Ralph M. Olson, about 35, was
listed as a passenger by the Civil
Aeronautics Administration, but
State Patrolman William Allen
said only one body was removed
from the wreck.
Seen to Board Plane
Olson's family said he planned
to take a trip Wednesday with
Hamilton, -a pilot for the North
west Uranium Co. and at least
one witness said they both board
ed the plane at Felts Field in Spo
kane. ' ' , -
Mrs, Robert Leonard, Olson's
sister, said the family feels he
survived the crash, was thrown
clear and then wandered away
"in a daze."
Hamilton had taught Olson to
fly and presumably took him along
for the ride while he dropped the
note at Northwest Uranium's mill
near here on the Spokane Indian
Reservation.
CAA Searches Area '
A CAA search party combed the
area Thursday,
There is no telephone on the
property and the note asked Geor
ge Cloward, a company engineer,
to meet Hamilton later in Spo
kane. Coward said the plane start
ed to climb after flying low to
drop the note, seemed to stall
then crashed.
Sue operation by West
Means War, Says Egypt;
U.S. Stoutly Backs Plant
' . . I W .....v- - ,i
Dear Uncle Sam: $$75,000
TofrLUtte For Road Work
Dulles: Won't
Shoot, Will
Detour
TACOMA MAN SLAIN
Money Stretcher
Seeded, County
Court Says
By BEN MAXWELL
- ' Capital Journal Writer
After travelling 146 miles of
county roads in an inspection tour
Wednesday, Marion county court
School Nearly
Empty in Clay
Boycott Move
CLAY. Kv. Wl Only two Ne
gro students, one white pupil and
seven of a teaching staff of 17
showed up for class Thursday in
the face of this community's pas
sive resistance against integration.
The mayor said whites would
boycott the school.
In sham contrast to past days,
no crowd showed up at Clay's
hilltop school, where the enroll
ment, is 590.
The two Negro students, James
Gordon, 10, and his sister, The
resa, 8, arrived an hour and a
half before class was to start.
Thev Dlaved in the school yard
and talked to newspapermen and
National Guardsmen posted in the
area. ,-
Several students came to school
but quickly left after they had
picked up books and personal be
longings. One 6-year-old girl, Linda
Spence, came out of the school
building crying and said:
"I'm afraid. There's nobody in
side. I ain't staying. I want my
Momma." .-
A woman who knew the child
too her home.
Only the school principal, Mrs.
Irene Powell, and six teachers
were present. -
AG Rules on
Registration
Atty. Gen.-Robt. Y. Thorn-
and engineers concluded that what
the county needs' is" a "money
stretcher.; . .,- , 4 r .
The officials took a day off and
traveled county roads to see where
some $875,000 in federal aid could
be spent during the next five
years. They appartently found
places' to spend that and more.
Funds About Same
Judge Rex Hartley pointed out
at the beginning of the tour that
the amount was only about 12 per
cent more, than ordinarily received
in federal funds. Increased costs
for road maintenance and con
struction will about offset that
small gain, he said.
Acceptance of federal funds is
also contingent upon a higher
standard of construction than the
county might, undertake with lLs
own monies and the $875,000 grant
will probably not go as far as the
county could stretch its own funds,
he said. ,
A mile or so south of Salem on
Liberty road Engineer John Ander
son indicated that widening the
road to four lanes in this locality
and beyond to Liberty school
would be a very desirable project.
But with the present 60-foot right
of wav this could be accomplished
only by allowing It feet for lanes
and a sidewalk on each side for
pedestrians and school children.
Such a project would allow no
room for parking cars on either
side of the road.
Liberty Needs Attention
Even so, the court and engineers
aereed that Liberty road, already
designated as an arterial highway
by the planning commission, must
be widened and modernized to care
for a daily traffic in excess of
4000 vehicles.
Commissioner Roy Rice, in dis
cussing slippage on South River
road between Halls Ferry and Or
ville guessed that $100,000 could be
spent on this section it roaa
stability warranted such an ex
penditure. Such an amount might
nav for verticle and horizontal
drains necessary to hold this three
mile headache. Oregon Electric
recently olaced drains 11 feet dci
on the upper side of this road be
low Orvllle with tne idea ot pro
testing its own tracks from a po
tential slide that might slip South
River road onto the railroad. -.
i Several Areas Visited '
.Several other road areas which
showed need for repair and re
surfacing received county atten
tion. Some of them were the West
Stavton road. Macleay road. East
State street, Silverlon - Sublimity
road, Abiqua road, crooked r inger
road, Clear Lake road, and North
River road.
North River road, one of the
areas needing attention due to
heavy daily traffic, and Liberty
road, seemed to Be about lirst on
the list for repair and realign
ment. '
Judge Hartley told the group
that the 146 miles of Marion coun
ty's 1200 miles of roads they had
traveled Wednesday, -'Five mil
lion dollars could be spent now.
What we need is a money stretcher."
. '. l-j i i. irnnH,,- nihi ton said in an opinion today that
n husv hifhwav. 10 miles east ! voters may be legally registered
Ideal Autumn
Days to Last
Ideal autumn weather prevail
ed in Salem, Thursday, with indi
cations there is more of the same
to come..
Forecast calls for fair weather
through tonight and Friday, ex
cept for possible patches of
morning fog.
Temperatures are due to con
tinue in the 70s for maximums
through Friday.
With the rising temperatures,
however, there is to be moderate
increase in fire danger west of
the Cascades and central Oregon.
Humidities are due to be nearer
the 25 per cent mark Friday in
the drier areas.
Except for possible morning
fog, fair weather is booked for
the beach regions through Fri
day.
3 Killed, 22
Hurt as Bus,
" Truck Crash
MONROE, Mich. Wl - A' Grey-,
hound sceni-cruiser bus and an
auto haulaway truck crashed ead-
on near Monroe early Thursday,
killing three persons and injur
ing 22, State Police said.
Troopers said the truck driver
and two bus passengers were
killed. Two of the dead "ere
identified as Francis G. Pcsko,
the trucker, and Mrs. Frankic
Mae Semple, 38, both of Detroit.
The other victim was not identi
fied immediately.
Six of the injured one of
them in critical condition were
admitted to Monroe hospitals,
State Police said. The others were
treated and released. All were bus
passengers.
A ureynouna spoxesman saiu
at least. 23 passengers were
aboard the bus."
Monroe County sheriff's depu
ties said the bus, bound from
Pittsburgh to Detroit, and the
truck, outbound from Detroit with
a load of new automobiles, col
lided at 3:30 a.m. just north of
this southeastern Michigan community.
WASHINGTON (UP) ' ISccre-
Inrv of State John Foster Dulles
said today the United States does
not intend to shoot its way
through the Suez Canal or enter
any shooting war if Egypt tries
to block the canal.
At the ame time Dulles ap-
nealed to Esvnt to accept the new
Western sponsored "users associ-
tion" to assure freedom of navi
gation in the canal. Dulles called
the plan a basis for "a just, yet
peaceful settlement" of the Suez
crisis.
Dulles said there is no intention
on the part of the West to impose
a Suez settlement on Egypt. He
said it is fantastic that anyone
might think this the case. Indian
Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru
earlier today criticized .the "user
association" plan as an "imposed
solution" fraught with "grave
consequences.
Annroved By Elsenhower
Dulles outlined the U.S. position
at a press conference packed by
about 175 reporters. He read a
700-word prepared statement and
then answered questions.
President Eisenhower approved
Dulles' statement in advance du-
rine a telephone conference from
his Gettysburg, Pa., farm , this
morning.
Mr. Elsenhower will fly back
here Friday to confer with Aus
tralian Prime Minister luracm
Gordon Morales who headed a I
five-nation committee which tried I
vainly to sell Dulles' taternaltonai-
Ization plan ictgypi. i ,
Dulles . told reporters, in re
sponse to questions, that the
United States does not intend to
try to shoot its way through the
Suez Canal.
He said If Egypt blocks the
canal by force the umteo states
docs not intend to go into any
shooting war.
Would Avoid Canal
He said American ships In that
event would take the long way
around the Cape of Good Hpe at
the southern tip of Africa instead
of going through the Suez short
cut.
He said this diversion would be
more expensive, of course, but
that the United States believes it
would not be catastrophic.
He said it has already been de
cided to take some U.S. tankers
out of the mothball reserve fleet
to divert oil and other traffic
around Africa if anything should
happen to deny passage of the
canal.
Tau n ts Res u It in
Pendleton Killing
PENDLETON Ifl Taunts flung
on the streets of Pendleton early
Thursday resulted in a shooting
that killed William Mancanarcs
Jr., 27, Tacoma.
Dist. Atty. John Walker said
Hollis Carl Doe, 30, Pendleton,
came Into the police station vol
untarily atlerwards and admitted
the shooting.
Doe is being held for investiga
tion.
Walker said he had pieced to
gether this story:
Doc, a Negro, stopped his car
on the west side of Pendleton to
talk to some women he saw there
about 3 a. m. Mancanares and
three others were in another car,
talking to the women. A dispute
arose, and the others began taunt
ing Doe, who first tried to climb
into the others' car, and then fired
a shot into the back seat before
the four drove off.
The car carrying the four men
was stopped for a traffic viola
tion. At the police station officers
were told of the wounded r.lan.
He was dead on arrival at a hos
pital. Doe gave himself up at the po
lice station later, turning over a
.22 caliber single-shot pistol. -
With Mancanares were William
Clifton Arms, 22, Tacoma, the
driver; Richard Shawaway, 29,
Pendleton, and Gerry Enick, 27,
Puyallup, Wash. ' .
Mother Hospitalized
After DoubleMurder
Baseball Scores
Father Unable to
Explain Slaying
Of 2 Girls
By MIKE FORBES
- Valtcv Kdttar
LEBANON - (Special) Blunned
relatives of wo little girls beaten
I
ii
I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore 011 001 100-4 6 0
Cleveland 000 010 0001 5 1
Johnson and Tnandos; Aguirrc,
Narleski (71, Houtteman (9) and
Maragon.
Home runs Baltimore, Tri
andos 2. Cleveland, Avila.
Boston (110 010 001 0-3 10 2
Chicago 011 000100 1-4 9 0
Brewer and White; fierce and
Lollar.
Home runs Boston, Piersall.
Chicago, Dropo, Rivera.
(10 innings)
Washington 001 000 010-2 5 1
Detroit 011 003 llx-7 15 .1
Stobbs. Griggs 171. Chakales '8)
and Courtney; Foytack and Wil
son.
Woman Dies in
Fall From Span
BEND (UP) The body of Mrs.
John H. Bruns, 56, reported miss
ing from her home at Camp Sher
man on the Mctollus river, was
found by state police today who
said she apparently had fallen
from a railroad bridge in the deep
Crook river gorge.
Mrs. Bruns had been reported
despondent after the death of her
sister, Mrs. John E. Kilkenny, 67,
who police said took her own life
by leaping from the St. Johns
bridge over the Willamette in
Portland last July 22.
Ilrs. Bruns was reported miss
ing last night. State police located
the body after Mrs. Bruns' car
was reported abandoned at the
parapet in Peter Skene Ogdcn
park between the railroad bridge
and the bridge that spans the
Crook river on U. S. highway 97.
State police were bringing the
body out of the rugged canyon
this afternoon.
GOP Enlarges on Morse Record
Of Conflicts; Dick Slams Elmo
of Bakersfield, killing the motor
ist: ' "
Though injured, Walter Rosen
baum leaped from his flaming
truck and halted motorists in both
directions with his shouts, "Get
back! She's due to blow any min
ute now."
A freight train running on a
track nearby' was also halted be
fore the dynamite exploded with
a thundering blast.
Weather Details
Mixijnum yntfrdir, 13; mlnlmnm
tndtT, it. ToUl M-hoor prrlpltlnn :
: lor month: .so; normal. i. Klrrt
hliht. -J L (prt br V. s.
Wtathtr Bareio.) . .
outside the county clerk's office
Thornton said that the county
registrar could set up some other
definite place to register voters,
but could not register them door-to-door.
The opinion was expressed in a
letter to state Sen. Monroe Sweet
land of Milwaukie who had asked
Thornton for a clarification of an
earlier opinion relating to regis
tration of voters. Thornton said
the Legislature "undoubtedly in
tended to vest the clerk with au
thority to provide ample facilities
for the electors to register. The
language employed requires the
registrar to have a fixed place,
in one or more precincts in his
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Republican State Central
Committee Thursday issued
a supplement of 112 pages to an
earlier booklet called "The Docu
mented Record of Sen.. Wayne
Morse."
The supplement, as the' original
publication, contains reprints
from various sources which the
committee says shows conflicts in
"shot through with opposition to
civil rights, opposition to the
United Nations, opposition to nec
essary legislative support of our
public schools and colleges of
higher education, opposition to the
foreign trade policies of the Eisen
hower administration, opposition
to the aspirations of our elderly
people."
Sen. Morse Wednesday took Is
sue with an Interior Departmert
Morse's position on a number ofjpress release which Morse said
issues.
And at Salem Thursday, Sen.
Richard L. Neu'-erger said the Re
publican State Committee "should
repudiate the candidacy of Gov.
Elmo Smith because of his shock
ing record in the stale Senate."
In a prepared statement dis
tribuled at a press conference,
county, for that purpose," he iaid.Neuberger said iimith'i record is
and slashed to death by their
mother Wednesday were going
about the sad task Thursday-of
making funeral arrangements
which at noon still were nor com-
nlpleri. "
The mutiiatea poaies oi itum
Upham, 4, and her sister, Lois,
were at the Huston runerai
Home.
The mother of the children, Mrs.
Graham (Helga) Upham, is being
held under observation at the Ore
gon Slate hospital in Salem where
physicians-. acscriDea nor condi
tion as "very disturbed." She has
been charged with first degree
murder in a complaint issued by
Dist.-Atly. Courtney Johns who
then obtained a court order com
mitting the woman to the state
hospital for psychiatric examination.
The father of the children, who
works as a technician in the Leb
anon "community hospital, was un
able to explain the motive for the
brutal slaying in his home at 614
Evans Dr. He told state l'once
man Lloyd Riegel that his wife
had been depressed for about a
month.
A neighbor told police that Mrs.
Upham had told her recently that
she feared "The uevu is getting
hold of my soul.
Officer Rlcgcl reported that an
hour of questioning of the pris
oner failed to disclose a motive
for the killing.
Police were called to the upham
home about 10 a.m. Wednesday
by Mrs. -Upham who reported that
she had murdered her two chil
dren
When police arrived, Mrs, Up
ham walked to the police car and
sat down. The olllccrs enterea
the house and found the bodies
ot tho two children in a pamy
lilled bath tub. They ; had Been
beaten on the head with a hammer
and their tm-oals.w janyj Par
Ins Vnlte. ,.
Both Mr, and Mrs, . upaam; at
tended Kansas University at Law
rence, Kan. Both their parents
were missionaries to India where
they were born. They have been
married nine years,
attempted to credit Douglas Mc
Kay with a $3,721,000 appropria
tion for expansion of tourist facili
ties at Crater Lake National Park.
McKay, Republican candidate
opposing Morse, in next month's
general election, formerly was In-
wrinr Ktreiaij. . ..,,
Morse said "it took an election " -
House to hear the voice of the
National Park Service and the
voice of the people. After three
years of low-budget requests, new
plans finally were laid in this
election year."
He added that it took the Democratic-controlled
84th Congress to
get the Crater Lake appropriation.
Morse also said that when Mc
Kay headed the Interior Depart
ment, "the first thing McKay did
was to slash the Truman budget
for the national parks by almost
(4,000.000 It is interesting to
note that the White House has re
cently displayed a sudden inter
est in national parks. It is per
fectly obvious that it will take a
Democratic controlled Congress
year to get McKay and tha White I parks rehabilitation plan."
Salem Driver
Escapes From
Blazing Truck
LEBANON (Special i A dumpl
truck belonging to Eldon C. Rey
nolds of Salem was damaged to
the extent of about $300 when Hi
caught fire on the Berlin road cast
of Lebanon Tuesday morning.
Vic Bell, Salem driver, said the
gas tank under the bed of the
truck caught fire as he was haul
ing a load of rock down a nil..
Setting the brake, he attempted
to put out the blaze with dirt, but
fire had burned through the air
hose, releasing the brake. The
truck Tolled down the hill and
stopped against undergrowth.
Lebanon firemen put out the fire
after it had destroyed the entire
cab.
Reynolds hauls rork to Crabtree
for rip-rap work being done along
the South Sanliam river by the
Floyd Graham Construction com
pany of Lebanon, 1
What Firemen Do
With Spare Time
j.
Junior wants to be a fireman!
But then he's just like hundreds
of other red-blooded American
youngsters. They all like that
action as the bright red trucks
go careening up and down
streets to protect homes and
properly from tire.
But firemen do olher things
besides fighting fires. Thry
practice, clean equipment, and
study. Some of the things fire
men do are pictured on page 5
Section 4 of Thursday's Capital
Journal.
Ike Keeps in
Close Touch
With Dulles
GETTYSBURG. Pa: (UP)
President Eisenhower kept . in
close touch with developments in
the Suez Canal crisis today while
relaxing at his farm near here.
Mr. Eisenhower conferred by
telephone with Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles in Washington
on the new proposed International
operating authority for the stra
tegic waterway.
Dulles discussed with the Presi
dent a lengthy statement outlin
ing the U.S. attitude toward the
latest proposal to solve the vex
ing problem brought - on by
KevDt'a nationalization ot ine pri
vate company operating the canal.
Mr. Elsenhower planned to fly
hack to Washington Friday after
noon for a talk with Australian
Prime Minister Robert Gordon
Menzies. Menzies headed a mis
sion to Cairo which sought un
successfully to resolve the dispute.
He already has reported to iJritisn
and French leaders.
The President will fly back to
Gettysburg after the meeting. He
is expected to spend the weekend
on his farm.
In response to press inquiries,
Press Secretary James C. Hager
ty said Mr. Eisenhower was
pleased by the Wisconsin GOP
primary victory of Sen. Alexander
Wiley.
INDIANS' OIL TAKE ZOOMS
WASHINGTON W-Indians re
ceived a record 41 million dollars
from oil and gas leasing of their
lands in the year ended June 30.
Secretary of the Interior Seaton
said this compared with 28 million
dollars in 1054-55 and 13 -million
in 1950-51.
Russians Join)
In Warning.
; ; Allies J;T
LONDON (UP) -Egypt servei "
notice on the West today that any
attempt by a "users association'!
to take over operation of the Suet
Canal "means war." ' .
Soviet diplomats in London
voiced' a similar warning. , . ;
They said Russia wants to avoid .
any . such conflict over Suez, but
at the same time they let it J '
clearly understood that Russia
would be among those nations
providing Egypt, both with volun- 1
teers ana arms. .
The Egyptian warning came. In
the . midst of an angry itirerJ
national exchange of charges and .;
counter charges in which the only
conciliatory words came from .
secretary ot State John Foster :
Dulles. V
Dulles Against War : v
Dulles said at a press confer
ence in Washington that tha
United States does not intend to .
shoot its way through the Suez
canal or enter any shooting- war.,
if Egypt tries to block the canal'.'
He said the United States ' stilt
seeks a just and peaceful soluv
Hon to the Suez question." But he
supported a users association. '
In the House of Commons la , t
London, during the second day of - I
debate over . the - British- ana : !
French plan to set up,- a "usert,,
assoaauon lor we canat, or.--v
eign minister aeiwyn Liioya nim
t p oar inn nvtmnwv . nm .nam. ...
internum, .w uavauuK.- wn
its , ju-m - siano . mav ti win a..
auow me lmernauonai waterway, t , ;
to remain under the aole control '- v
of Egyptian President' Gamal Ab- ;
del Nasser. .
He hinted that, with-one of tha
pilots', rom the .old Suez Canal ,.
Company aboard, a British, shi
might challenge Egypt to permit '
a passage usinjr. neither. svntiaii '
hired pilots or other normal fa
cilities controlled by Egypt.
He said the new Ancrln-Fronf h
Suez association will hire the
European pilots now :auittina- in "...
Egypt and "keep them at work.
Angry Egyptian Note .,.,
Egyptian Ambassador Ahmad
Hussein delivered Egypt's angry
reaction to Dulles in Washington.
An Egyptian embassy statement ,
said: - , i ...
'On instructions from the Ekvd
tian government, Ambassador Ah-
med Hussein met this morning a
few minutes before 11 o'clock with -
Secretary, of State John- Foster1
Dulles and conveyed the urgent
message that the scheme .which
Sir-Anthony Eden wants to Impost)
on .gypt is an open and flagrant ,
aggression of Egyptian sovereign- .
ty and its implementation mean
war. If the United States desires
war, then she may support the
scheme, but if her desire is to
work for a peaceful solution, the ',
scheme has to be abandoned." . . .
The angry debate in Commoha'
split the Labor and Conservative;
parties as they have not been onv
foreign policy , since the end" ot :
World War II. , . ' &
Alfred Robens, socialist 'foreign'
policy chief, charged that a gov-,;;
ernment decision to bypass . the' '
United Nations means "sappin(M ':
the whole foundation of the United
Nations." : . '-1 1 i
Lloyd had said that to have gom ' ; '
to the United Nations would hava
meant a Soviet veto or "weeks of. ' .
debate, Innumerable amendment' ;,':
and finally at the most a racom-)-.'
mendation." v v ,
Massachusetts School Balks
At Hiring Negro From Oregon
GLOUCESTER. Mass. (UP)
An Oregon man who was hired
by mail to teach school here was
given $1,000 and sent home wncn
he proved to be a Negro.
City Councilor Manuel F. Lewis
called today for a "complete pub
lic investigation" into the pay
ment made last Thursday tor
transportation of the teacher, War
ren McClure, 34, from his Eugene
home to Gloucester and back.
No school official would say Mc-
Clurc's color influenced the deci
sion to terminate his contract
However, Superintendent ot
Schools L. Munro Grandy ac
knowledged he did not know Mc
Clure was a Negro until the teach
er arrived here.
McClure was hired by the
school department at $4,200
year. Because ot Aiassacnuseus
antidiscrimination laws, tne De
partment could not request inlor-
mation as to his color on the ap-
nlication form.
On Aug. Z7. uranay announced
that McClure would teach the
sixth grade at Babson School.
McClure arrived here last
Thursday and. after talking with
school officials, agreed to accept
11.000 for transportation and term
ination of his contract. He left
for home next day,
EUGENE (UP) Warren Mc
Clure, who was hired by mail to
leach school in Gloucester, Mass.,
then given $1000 and sent home
when he proved to be a Negro, at
tended summer school at Univer
sity of Oregon here this year and
stayed in a Eugene apartment,
News in Brief S
- NATIONAL . .f'
Ike. Nixon Kick Off ". ' V-
GOP Campaign Sec. 1. P.I. ?
Adlai Talks Tonight on All -v'r
Networks Sec. 1, P.J u '
LOCAL '.'. . if :
Morse Says He'll Stay Free -' iv .' V'
Man . sec. Z. P.B .
Vandals at Work In North ' ? ,
Marion County Sec. 2, P.d
Huge New Can Plant Ready ; ' J :
lor Ceremonies ...Sec. 2, F.B -STATE
. -,V
Hites for Truck Victims
Set Saturday . Sec. 2, P.I .-.
Mother of Dead Girls i
Committed ........Sec. li P.l
FOREIGN ' ' i
Suez Plan Means War, Egypt , !. "
Warns West Sec. 1, P.l'
Dulles Says U.S. Won't Shoot : )
Way Through Suez. Sec. 1, P.l ;
SPORTS I.
Schedule Biggest OSC . , , ' ,
Hurdle Sec. 4, P.l
Saxons, Viks Name , -, V
Starters Sec. 1, P.l
Braves on Top, IS Games '-'".''
jjeii oec. l .
REGULAR FEATURES . :
Amusements Ses. 1, P.l
Editorials Sec 1, P.4c
i
..Sec. 1, P S ;
Sec. J, P..J.-3- .
Sec. 4. P.41
Sec. 4, P.T .
Sec. 4. P.7-M
Sec. 4, P.T.'
Dorothy Dix -.See. 4, P.10 -
Crossword Puzzle Sec. 4, P.4 1
Food. , Sec,,;
Locals
Society .
Comics ...
Television
Want Ads
Markets