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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1956)
M - - THE WEATHER CLOUDY WITH showers tonight, few showers and partial clearing periods, Tuesday. Slightly cooler Tuesday. Low tonight, 41; high Tuesday, 49. 2 SECTIONS 24 Paget 68lhYear,No.270 Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 12, 1956. Jrice 5o Capital jLJournai New Store Center Set ForKeizer 3 Firms to Occupy .$50,000 Building At Cherry Ave. By STEPHEN A. STONE Capital Journal Writer Leases have been completed and building construction will start im mediately for a shopping center at North River road and Cherry ave nue in the Keizer district. Occupants of a new building to be built by Market Buildings. Inc. will be a Cornet store. Keizer Cap ital Drug store, and Kennedy City Cleaners. There will be off-street parking space for over 100 ve hicles, and the new building, which will have a frontage of 120 feet on North River road, will be immedi ately adjacent to the present Berg store on the south which will also be a part of the shopping center. With the Berg store the frontage will be 220 feet, and the new con struction will be 90 feet deep. Operations by March 1 Members of the firm of Markets Buildings, Inc., are Larry Bolch, Charles Foulger, George A. Rho ten. Ralph Wirth and Elmer Berg. Balch said Monday the building should be completed soon enough that the business occupants will be operating on the location' by Feb ruary 15 or March 1. The build ing, of reinforced concrete con struction and one story, wilt cost in excess of $50,000. Smith & Nelson are the contractors. The leases were handled by Grabenhorst Bros., Inc. The Cornet firm already has two stores in Salem, one in the Can dalaria .district and another in West Salem. The Keizer Capital Drug store will be linked with the Capital Drug store at State and Liberty and will be about 90 per cent owned by that 6tore. Members of the Capital Drug corporation are J. H. Willcts, Wayne W. Gordon and Roy H. Hatfield. They and Fred H. Russom, Tom Staplcton and Forrest Walker, all employes of Capital Drug, will be associated In the new store, a separate cor poration. Sixth Cleaning Unit For Kennedy Cleaners it will be the sixth establishment. The firm now has businesses at 1245 State, 145 Alice in the Candalaria dis trict, 125 North High, 1171 Center, and 1680 South 12th. Car parking space for the new building. Balch said, will be main ly in front and along the south side. The Cornet store will have fronlage of 70 feet, the drug store 30 feet and the cleaning establish ment 20 feet. Morse Leaves From Seattle ForD.CMeet PORTLAND (UP)-Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) left yester day for Washington, D.C., and a special meeting of the Senate For eign Relations Committee. The senator drove to Portland from his Eugene home. He learn ed that fog might delay his flight ''but of Porlland and motored on to Seattle to board a plane there for the trip. Morse said the committee was scheduled to hear a complete briefing on the eastern Europe and Middle East situations. ' The senior Oregon senator, who won reelection last week, summed up the balloting as an "over whelming endorsement in interna tional issues, but far from an en dorsement of the domestic program." of the Elsenhower ad ministration. Morse planned to return to Ore gon in about two weeks and then make a tour of the stale to thank his workers and supporters. U.S. Navy Ship Speeds to Aid Stricken Diver NAGASAKI, Japan W An American rescue ship was speed ing here Monday night to aid a Japanese diver at the botlom of Ihe sea with a painful prolonged case of the "bends." The submarine rescue ship Coucal was ordered to Nagasaki alter newspapers reported the diver, Yoshio Oyama, has been living on the floor of Uie ocean almost continually for a week, trying to recover. The Coucal has a decompression chamber used for treating the bends, the painful paralyzing ail ment caused by too-rapid ascent from the crushing water pressure of low ocean depths. OVama, 37, was working on the Russian freighter Karanda. sunk off Nagasaki in 1897, when he was stricken a week ago. Since then his comrades have kept the semi conscious direr at a depth ot mora than 100 (ret as much as pwsfbl. raising Mm only to warm. bis codgr too reea mm, M Wreaths Honor Dead on Veterans State Senate Return Ruled Out by Smith Governor Elmo Smith said Mori day "that under no circumstances would I accept an appointment to the slate senate as has been sug gested by some of my friends." "I appreciate the good intentions of those people who are circulating petitions to the county court in my behalf," the governor said. "But I am not interested in returning to the slate senate." Gov. Smith said circulation of the petitions was a spontaneous movement and he had no knowl edge of it until he read newspaper reports. The governor said that he had not yet decided upon his future plans after he leaves office on or about January 14. 1957. The petitions asking for appoint ment by the county court of Smith to the vacancy which will occur when Secretary of State-elect Mark Hatfield resigns his senate seat were circulated by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Van do Vclde, 2975 Myrtle Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Watson, 4760 Elvira St., Salem. Blaze Kills 8 In Cincinnati CINCINNATI url Fire swept upward from a basement stair well through a three-story apart ment here early Monday, killing eight persons, seven of them chil dren. Three other persons were hurt as they leaped from the burn ing building. The dead, all Negroes, included a 26-ycar-old mother and her live children. Mrs. Johnetta Clark, 19, one of the injured, was the mother of the other Iwo children who died. Police listed Ihe dead as: Mrs. Kdna Dyos. 26. and her five children, John, 10; Beverly. 8: Jocelyn, 5; Arlcne. 6, and James, 2; and Terry Jane Clark, 5 and Larry Dell Clark, 13 months. Occupants of the building and neighbors told pathetic stories of screaming children. Firemen said all eight died of burns and suffocation. Fire Damages Atomic Plant PADUCAH, Ky. (yP Fire caused more than two million dollars damage to the Atomic Energy Commissions gaseous diffusion plant early Sunday. K. C. Brooks, AEC'j Paducah area manager, said a preliminary investigation indicated the fire was caused by overheating in 1 faulty piece of equipment. Brooks, who estimated the dam age. said there was no radiation hazard and "absolutely no dan ger" to the surrounding area or to personnel working in the plant. Weather Details Mulmam yntfrdtr. 4t: minimum today, 41. Toul 24-taour prrrlpiuuon: trirt: for month: -ZT ; normsl. Ml. ft'iion prttlplutten. T.M: normal, 1 41. lrt haltht, I of foot. (R port or U, a. waathtr Itoraan.) tM tali! fir. "tj-i 's3,iM i,, ' . , Veterans day, formerly called Armistice day, was observed In Salem Monday with a parade followed by a program at the courthouse. One of the program highlights was the placing of wreaths made by various patriotic women's organizations nt the base of the World War 1 memorial statue on the courthouse lawn. Here Cub Scout Craig Mangum, Den 2, adds some Dowers to those already placed by other Scouts. (Capital Journal Photo) Salem ParadeRites Honor War Velenms By JAMES D. OLSON ' Capital Journal Writer Tribute to dcDarlcd and living veterans ot all wars in which the United States has participated, was paid in Veterans day cere monies held Monday' in front of the Marion county courthouse. Burglars Fail In Attempt to Pry Open Safe An attempted weekend safe cracking at a Salem implement firm was almost, but not quite, a success, Salem police said Mon day.' Officers said the thieves climbed over an eight-foot fence topped with barbed wire to get to Ihe Cap ital Tractor and Equipment Co. building at 2255 Silverton ltd. Entry was gained by "chewing" a hole in a plywood door with a piece of discarded slag iron and reaching through Ihe four-inch hole to unlock the door. Inside, they entered an unlocked vault and attacked the safe but did not gain entry. Olficcrs the orized they may have been fright ened olf as the door was almost pried loose. A company employe finished the job with a pry bar Monday morning to get out rec ords and other material in the safe, police said. SINGAPORE ARRESTS IU SINGAPORE, in - The Singa pore Council of Ministers Monday authorized continued detention of 130 persons, including Assembly man l.im Chin Siong, in connec tion with last month's riots. The arrests were authorized under a public security law which permits detention for a period of up to two years without trial. Campus Clubs Fight Property CORVALL1S (UP) - Fralcrnl tics and sororities at Oregon's in stitutions of higher learning were reported today to be protesting a recent ruling of the State Tax Commission which compels them to pay personal property taxes. Until now most of the county assessors have assumed that off campus living groups were ex empt from the tax. But the tax commission said there was nolh- ing on which the assessors could base such an assumption. The question was raised recent ly by the Benton county assessor's office and a ruling came down from the legal department of the tax commission laying the living groups were not exempt. In both Benton comity, bomt ef Davt j The ceremonies, sponsored by the Salem Federation' pi Patriolic .Orders, followed a parade which formed in the capital man ana went through the downtown streets. The Rev. Brooks Mootjr, pastor of the First Methodist cljprbh, gave the invocation at thc?apeiing of the program' and Ihe.'.lfcy. ( V. L. Cunniff, assistant paslpr of St. Joseph's Catholic churcBjja'Bd Dr. Harry Brown, president Hfotnple Beth Sholom, spoke brieflj?. ticn. Abrams Marshall" William Brown of RadioiStation KSLM, who served as rhdster of ceremonies, introduced BrfeGcn cral Carle Abrams, Spanish War veteran, who served as grand mar shal of the parade, H. C. (Hub) Saalfcld, state director of- vet erans' alfairs and Chief Robert Fallon. . . Wrealhs of flowers, were placed at the foot of the statue. of the doughboy on the courthoupMawn as Ihe concluding feature , of, the ceremonies. ; A marine color guard led 'the pa- radcrs which was followed by Na tional Guard companies Mil). 182nd headquarters company and Company C, 162nd tank company of Albany, One division was. made up of Gold Star Mothers; Ladies of the G.A.R., Spanish war veterans and auxiliary members, American Le gion posts Nos. 9 and 136, Vet erans of Foreign Wars, Barracks 113. World War I and their auxil iary members. Band Music In addition to Ihe Willamette university band, music was fur nished by the South Salem high school band and Ihe Parrish Jun ior high school band, the latter two bands led by clever girls twirling batons, ' ; Boy and Girl Scouts took place in the line as did the Marion county, sheriff's posse, the'iSouth Salem junior saddle club' and marching unils representing Salem veteran organizations. Tax R uliii g Oregon State College, and -Lane county, aite of the University of Oregon, steps have been taken to put the properties on the tax rolls, Richard Wegener, Benton coun ty assessor, aaid the tax bill for the OSC groups was being back dated five years as required by law. The live-year bill for the more than 40 organizatiors comes to about $15,500. The 1056 taxes total J3.W1.M. At Eugene Lane County Assessor W. w. smith said he did not know whether the tax was going to be made retroactive. Living groups at Oregon State feel that as the tax has not been imposed up to now and there has been no change in the law. It should not be applied now. They have retained Peter Otinner, a- lem attorney, to advise them, , Egypt Entry Roberts Store To Consolidate WithLipman's Liberty Street Unit to Close at Once; Stall To Be Retained First step in the consolidation of the Robert Brosi-Lipman store in terests in Salem was announced during the past weekend. Roberts Bros'., new owners of the Lipman store here, announced that their Liberty street store will be closed "immediately" and all personnel as well as merchandise and service facilities" will be moved to the Lipman store build ing. Store officials said the Roberts Bros, store at 340 Court St. will remain open "for the time being," but consolidation of that store under the Lipman roof is expected in the near future. The moves follow purchase sev eral weeks ago of the Lipman store by members of the Roberts Bros, executive -family.- Transfer of store facilities from the Liberty street operation to the newer building "will greatly in crease the facilities of the Lipman store unit, enlarging many depart ments and adding others while re gaining all the present sections," the office of Leonard Kremcn, manager of both stores, said Mon day. - A spokesman said there will be no reduction in personnel due to the consolidation. Extensive improvements and painting -Tiave- been under way for the past -three weeks, ft was de clared. 2 Republicans Pick Up Seats In Ore. House The Democratic margin in the Oregun House of Representatives was reduced Monday to 38-22, as final returns from Washington and Lane counties gave the Republi cans two more scats. The earlier unofficial count showed 40 Democrats and 20 Republicans. In Washington County, John D Mosser, Republican, Portland at torney, nosed out James R. Shick, Democrat, Forest Grove attorney, for the county's second House seat. Stale Rep. Leon S. Davis, llillsborn Republican, was re elected to the other one. Stale Rep. Edwin E. Cone, Re publican, Eugene lumberman, also won reelection in the late tally. He eliminated C. A. Pad dock, Democrat, Oakridge farmer, who earlier had been listed as elected. Thanksgiving Proclaimed; Ike Asks Aid WASHINGTON (UP) - Presi dent Eisenhower in his annual Thanksgiving Oay proclamation loday asked Americans lo help "the ill. the destitute and the op pressed in foreign lands." Proclaiming Nov. 22 as Thanks giving Day, the President remind ed the country lh.it the Pilgrim fathers, fleeing from religious op pression, "landed on a bleak, for bidding shore and began to carve out what became this great repub lic which it is our happy destiny to love and serve." "For their foresight, their cour age and their Idealism let us give thanks to the power which has made and preserved us as a na tion," he said. "And let us, as the beneficiaries of this greatness, give a good ac count of our stewardship by help ing those in need and by render ing aid, through our religious or ganizations and by other means, to the ill, the destitute and the op pressed In foreign lands." Scouts Found Safe in Woods WII.LAM1NA if) - Two blood - hounds and 35 men were colled out a search Sunday night three Bov Scouts were ; before found In the woods north of here, The search started alter Bill Ramey, 13: Dale Sloreschine, I, and Ken Davis, 12. all of Willa mina, failed lo return by night fall from a hiking trip to Rock Creek. Searchera found them unharmed iaaveral tasurt later. GH of UN Police Force Dag to Fly to Cairo, Talk Details UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. Ml Secretary General Dag Hammars kjold announced Monday agree ment had been reached with Egypt for the entry of the U.N. police force immediately. He said the first group would arrive there early this week. Hammarskiold said he himself would leave by plane for Cairo luesday to be on hand for de tailed discussions with the Egyp tian government. He said he ex pected to reach the Egyptian'cap ilal Thursday and return to New iork by Sunday. First Units In Italy The first units of the U.N. force already are at a staging area nt Capodichino Airport, near Naples, Italy. Some of the troops may leave foe Egypt as carlv as Tues day, Hammarskjold said. Ihe secretary general said he wanted to visit the staging area as well as Egypt. The command er of the U.N. force Mui. Gen 12. L. M. Burns of Canada, will meet him in Italy for consulta tions and then Burns will fly to New York for talks here. Hammarskjold said the purpose of his own visit to the Egyptian battle area was "to sec that no unnecessary loose ends" arc left. He said he had no intention to confer with military leaders of the invading British, French and Is raeli forces. "That is staff work," he said. The secretary general also ex pressed a willingness to go to Hungary after his Cairo visit, if it appeared such a trip would be useful. He announced , he was establishing two groups to deal wun tnc Hungarian proDiem: one to investigate the Soviet interfer ence in Hungarian affairs and the ether to observe the situation on the scene. The first group will be headed by Chief Justice Oscar Gunder sen of Norway. CAPODICHINO STAGING AREA, Italy U) The United Nations police force for Ihe Middle East came into being as a united command Monday In a one room headquarters of the bomb-ruincd administrative building here. S. L. De Angelus, American aide to the force commander, Canadian Mai. Gen. P). L. M. Burns, is in charge of headquart ers here. His staff so far totals one press officer and a girl typist borrowed from the U.S. Naval Facilities Administration. There was no indication when the force would begin its move lo Egypt. Arrival of the Colombia platoon of 50 militiamen Monday brought the total strength of the infant force to roughly 200. A party of Danes arrived Saturday night and a group of Norwegians early Sunday. Clearing Skies Eyed Tuesday Showers arc in the offing tonight and Tuesday morning, says the weather bureau. Considerable fog hung over Sa lem over Ihe weekend, making night and early morning driving difficult, but It was not as dense Monday morning. Five-day forecast call for precip itation to be above normal for the period, occurring over Monday and again Thursday and Friday. Tem peratures arc due to be about nor mal, slightly cooler Tuesday but a warming trend to follow. SHOWDOWN DI-LAYFI) Zhuko v 'Keeps Peace' In Kremlin Struirirle LONDON (UP) -Diplomatic reports from Mosrow today said an uneasy truce appears to have been established between the quarreling factions of the Kremlin, with the Red Army acting as umpire. Soviet Army Marshal Georgi Zhukov, minister of national de fense, has increased his influence considerably over "old Bolshevik" Vyacheslav Mololov and Commu nist party boss Nikltn S. Khrush- ehev, the reports said. The diplomats said the new power struggle in Ihe Kremlin was expected lo reach its climax next month at the meeting of Ihe Communist party's Central Com mittee. The reports said the events In Eastern Europe have had a "pro found effect" on the Kremlin'a leadership and have led to con siderable disaension among the Soviet leaders. Russians In Budapest Amid Scenes of Horror Despair, Cold and Huuger Weaken Patriots t ' By WILLIAM L. RYAN VIENNA tfl The overwhelm ing power of Russia's huge mili tary machine moved relentlessly today against the last pockets of Hungarian national resistance. The only major pocket left In side ruined Budapest was at Cse pel Island, site of the nation's big gest industrial complex. Workers Jiarricnded themselves in one of the big Danube island factories and continued to beat off deter mined attacks by Soviet armor. Other pockets still held out in the Budapest suburb of Ujpest, in Dunapenlfle (Stalinvnros), south of the Csepcl Island area, and at Pecs, near the Yugoslav border. Sonic Shooting Elsewhere Occasional shooting also broke out in Gyoder province, especially along the roads leading to Aus tria, and in the Vac area north of Budapest. The last-stand rebels also fought cold, hunger and despair. The puppet premier installed by the Russians, Jnnos Kadar, ad mitted in a speech over Budapest radio that groups of rebels still Were holding out in cellars by day, emerging by night in larger groups for hlt-and-rnn attacks. But he said ho believed "all- Buda pest remnants of the countcrre volution will be liquidated" in two or three days. In the relentless Russian pur suit of the nationalist remnants, rows of workers houses were-shat tered, ' a children's clinic was wiped out, hospitals were set afire. To wipe out a single rifle man, the Russians would turn a full barrage from tanks, machine guns and automatic weapons, and destroy an entire building. Man Ends Life After Shooting Divorced Wife PORTLAND (fl A 42-ycnr-old woman was reported recovering Monday from rifle wounds in flicted by her ex-husband shortly before ho killed himself Sunday. The woman, Mrs. Florence Mc- Kcnzic, was listed in fair condition nt a hospital here after being struck by four .22 caliber bullets at her home at Welches, about miles cast of Portland on the Mt. Hood Highway. She was hit in the abdomen, leg and hip. Lt.' Paul Lowrey of the Clacka mas County sheriff's office said the ex-husband, Raymond Gerald McKenzie, then took fin overdose of sleeping tablets. He collapsed shortly alter police arrived, and died en route to a hospital. Lowrey said McKenzie appar ently had waited on the porch of his ex-wife's home. When she ar rived at 4 a.m. from the restau rant where she worked, he opened fire. The woman managed lo escape into the woods. Coroner Leslie Peake said Mc Kenzie formerly was a patient at the stale menial hospital at Pendleton, The collective leadership seem ingly has agreed on a truce for Ihe time being to enable Russia to deal first with the urgent politi cal and military aspects of the East European uprising and the Mideast crisis, the reports said, The Red Army was understood to have stepped fai to hold -the peace while "mopping up" opera tions continue in Hungary and while Poland's moves remain un certain. Zhukov, hero of the battles of Moseow and Berlin, was reported gaining rapidly In Influence and power. There was no suggestion so far that the Red Army is taking over from Khrushchev. But the indica tions were the Army already has played an Important part In sway ing the Kremlin'a decision In fa vor of military Intervention Hnngary, Aheadfor Mop Up Correspondents returning from Budapest said the city was in the grip of indescribable horror, more horrifying even than they had seen in the days of World War II. By the best available estimates, 20,000 or perhaps more Hunga rians died in the attempt to break the grip of the soviet Union and communism on their country. Rus sian dead were estimated at from 4,000 to 5,000. Western corres pondents back from -. Budapest brought these figures, and said the wounded numbered 50,000, Rus sians and Hungarians. ' Hospitals were so crowded that litters carrying Ihe wounded were directed to cellars and garrets, all crammed with suffering hu manity. In Ihe Petoefi Hospital, one ot Hungary s largest, doctors have been operating for two days without the aid -of drugs. The wounded are dying in great num bers because of the lack of anti biotics. The first Intoxicating taste of victory and freedom for the. Hun garians a week ago has turned to crushing defeat at the hands of 13 Russian divisions, an. estimat ed 200,000 men. Sympathy for Hungary nigh Across Poland WARSAW (UP)-A wave of sym pathy for the defeated-people of Hungary and fear of an impending crackdown on a more liberal gov ernment swept Poland loday. Rumors that Russia- Is massing several divisions on Poland s east ern frontier touched off fear that I lie government may curtail the new democratization program. Ob servers said a crackdown may be ordered to keep the Russians from finding an excuse to move into Po land as they did in Hungary. However, there was no official confirmation of the Russia military buildup. Signs of an undercurrent of pro test against the Soviet interven tion in Hungary . were found all over the country. Workers in the industrial region of Lower Silesia, Bialystok and the textile capital at Lodz bluntly condemned the Rus sian action In Hungary as foreign intervention."' Photographers Killed in Suez Line Crossing PARIS in An American and a French photographer have been killed attempting to cross into Egyptian lines In the Suez Canal one, their organizations con firmed Monday, The two were David Seymour, a Polish-born American who headed Magnum Photos, and Jean Roy of Paris-Match. Seymour was a lieutenant and photographer in Ihe U.S. Air Corps during World War II. Aller- ward ho worked for several United Nations organizations. He was also n photographer with Ihe late Robert Capa during the Spanish civil war. Recently ho has lived in Paris. French military sources gave (his account of the death of the two men Saturday at El Qantra. They tried to cross from the British-French lines to the Egyp tian side with a party exchanging wounded. The photographers were in a jeep and were fired upon by tho Egyptians. Their Jeep ran into a nearby canal. Their bodies will be returned to- Paris. Russ Barrage Arahs in Code NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP)-Allied hcidquartcrs hero wcro reported c incerned today over a sharp In- crease in Russian coded wireless signals to the Middle hast. The signals picked up by Rrilish monitors consist of a 26-word per minute four-letter code which In formed sources said was definitely Kiissian. The sources (aid the output had fflltnen stepped up considerably dur- ; flog tut last 43 Dourf, Russia, China Still Hurling Aid Threats LONDON, W) Egypt has agreed lo permit entry of the United Nations police force im mediately, U.N. Secretary Gener al Dag Hammarskjold announced Monday. He said the first units, now assembled at a staging area near Naples, Italy, may go in Tuesday. ., ,1 Canadian Maj. Gen, E: L. M. Burns, commander of the force, was talking in Cairo with PresU dent Nosser and Foreign Minister Mahmoud Fawzi when Hammers kjold made his announcement In New York. .,' The secretary general ' said he intends to leave by plane Tuesday for Cairo to discuss dotails .wlth ' tho Egytpian government and al so will inspect the Kalian stag ing area, now occupied by units from Denmark, Norway and Col ombia totaling about- 200, troops. The Cairo talks of Burns and Hammarskjold - may determine whether the slinky cease-fire be tween . ine Egyptians and ' troops of Britain, France and Israel can be made permanent. -: - Eventually troops of 16 nations are to be represented in the: po lice force, from which all .of the Big Four powers are "barred. A 17th, Burma, withdrew Monday its offer to contribute. The Ran- goon government said It had re ceived no response to its ofter. Assurances Sought .. The Egyptians had made clear respect for their sovereignty was among several conditions for ad mission of the police. They have aiso sougnt assurances, that the British-French and Israolr forces wilt withdraw immediately front the territory they overran In the hostilities that broke out. two weeks ago arid that the police will be based in Egypt only .tempor arily. As Burns flew into-Cairo from Israel, the effects of last week's British-French invasion ' of the Suez Canal Zone continued -to re verberate around the world. - ' Hoth Russia and Communist China Issued new threats to send volunteers" to hem Eevnt throw out die British and French "ag gressors." Arab Chiefs Meet ., . At Beirut, the heads of five Ar.j ab states met in a toD secret D.ir- ley rt discuss the whole Middle bast situation. Reports said the lenders of Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia would discuss not only the British-French invasion but the threat posed by the raoid spread of Communist influence In the area. In New Delhi, Indian. Prime Minister Nehru met . with the ministers of Burma, '. Indonesia and Ceylon to discuss both the Middle East and Russian repres sion in Hungary. Both India and Ceylon are im portant Asian members of the British Commonwealth. which has been split by the British in vasion of Egypt. While the United Nations troops marked time, Moscow propaganda organs kept drumming out threats to send "volunteer" Com munist airmen, tankers and artil lerymen to fight alongside- the Egyptians unless the British, Is raeli and French soldiers quit Egypt quickly. Communist China said a quarter million Chinese volunteers "tens of thousands of them former sol diers" had signed up to go to I'.gypt. mere was no indication how they would get there. Uneasy quiet returned to the (Continued on Page 5, Col. 4) . News in Brief For Monday, Nov. 12 -NATIONAL President Proclaims Thanksgiving Day. ..Sec. 1. P. 1 Oil Millionaire Sinclair Dies Sec. 1, P, I LOCAL Home Tax Relief Favored For Persons Over 65 Sec. 1, P. i New Shopping Center Due for Keizer Sec. I, P. 1 STATE Slale to Spend tS9 Million On Highway 30 ....Sec. 1, P. II Republicans Add 2 Scats In Legislature Sec, 1, P. 1 FOREIGN Egypt Agrees to Entry Of UN Police Force Sec. 1, P. 1 Zhukov Said Sitting On Kremlin Struggle ....Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Beavers Stun Stanford Sec. 3, P. Willamette Finishes - Season With Tic . Sec. J, P. 1 Prep Playoff Lined Up Sec. 3. P. 1 REGULAR FEATURES ' Amusements Editorials ... locals .. Sec. 1, P. 2 .. Sec. 1, P. 4 .. Scc. l, P. 5 ..Sec. 1, P. 6-7 Society 1 comics ..Sec. J, P. 0 ..See. ii P. 7 Television I Want Ada Sec. J, P. 10-11 I Person.) Problems ....Sec i, P. 4 Crossword Puzzle) Sec, 3, P. 4 t