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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1956)
Page 2 Section 1 First Refugees Arrive in U.S. r Walter -Urges k r Haven for 17,000 By ANDRKW MKISEI-S CAMP KILMIiR. N.J. tn-This sprawling Army camp is ready I to extend a warm welcome on this eve of Thanksgiving to 62 Hunga- rian refugees from Soviet terror, g Posted over its gates is a huge H sign in Hungarian reading "God z has brought you.' The refugees were expected lo J arrive at McGuire Air Force Base today aboard a four -engine DCi r chartered from the Flying Tiger f Airlines by the Intergovernmental Committee for European Migra- ' lion. S They are the first of 5,000 to j come here for permanent resettle- 3 ment under orders of President 3 Eisenhower. Four other planc r loads are expected Thanksgiving 4 Day and Friday. i Rep. Francis Walter (D-Pa), co- 4 author of the McCarrnn-Walter 4 Tmmiftrnlinn AM KniH in nn in. i icrvicw in Vienna yesterday that America should admit 17,000 Hungarians, not just 5,000. f "I don't know whero that 5,000 . figure came Irom ' he said. ' 2 'fty information fs that as many - as i.uw couiu legally ne aomiuea I is 'escapees' and they should t be." I In Austria, meanwhile, the flight of refugees across the border , from Hungary continued at the J rate of more than 3,500 a day tnrce or lour times as last as they J can be resettled. Thirteen nations have offered to I resettle 27,500 and Canada has said it will take as many as want to come. But more than 40,000 j Hungarians were already in Aus- tria last night, most of them liv ! ing in uncomfortable transit j camps. In Washington, the While House f announced that the American pco ' pic have responded to the relief needs of the refugees with more . than five million dollars of food, ' blankets and medical and other ' supplies. t Most of these supplies already 5 arc in Austria with more on the J way, a Whilo House statement 1 laid. It said all such help will con J tlnue to be channeled to Hungary through the International Red i Cross. i The refugee sroiin flvinit here J today consists of 40 men and 22 women comprising 2(1 families. Of these, 16 are under 12 years of ; age and four are over 54. There 'are no unaccompanied children In 7 this first group. Today's arrivals will be housed 4 In three temporary barracks. Water f 84 urana THANKSGIVING DAY WINTER SWIM SEASON Wad. 1 Thuri. 6 to 10, Frl. 4 to 11 Sat. 1 to 11, Sun. 1 to 6 SWIM NOW GIANT WATER SLIDES Heated Floors In Bathhouia t lounge SWIM AND PICNIC around our ' Island Klrrplsre. NO CHAIHiK Just your swim admission ticket. Bring your own food. We furnish KRHK COITKK, wiener sticks, grill and skillets. BENTON LANE POOL Hiway 99W 4 mi. N. Junction City WY8-2836 km i Ken MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION tot Inloimollon tUnt M. 1-5000 it m i T Th 'i'C '' LOWELL THOMAS,,. it ZaJ "(JBWBM j CINKRAMA j-fC prt..nt..lon EJCl I till ,V WIU. NUII II SHOWN IN ANT OIHM TNIATII "C " H0"m"H Clllral" TICKITJ AVAIIAIU V AT ALL GMYHOUND I AGI4CIIS of 5000 Hungary 3Z- 1 mo-.-:-, ' U. ' . J 3 .. - -m. 3 ;v- .i.; NEW YOI1K Home from a session of film 'making In England, actress Mnrllyn Monroe shrugs up the collar of her mink coat as she walks across Idlcwlld Airpori this morning with her husband, playwright Arthur Miller, and escort of New York policemen. The blonde star smiled for photographers, but declined to pause for Interviews. "She is extremely tired," a public relations aide explained. (AP Wirephoto) Anti-Red Anger On Hungary fly MARK KMOND UN1TRD NATIONS. N.Y. un-A rising tide of indignation over de portation of Hungarian patriots appeared today to assure over whelming U.N. support for re newed pressure on the Soviet Union to change its policy in Hungary. But a high Russian source In dicated the Soviets were not plan ning to back down nn their stand that events in Hungary are none of thoU.N.s business. They will stay in these buildings for 72 hours, by which time Army authorities expect many of them lo havo left tho reception center, Thoso who remain past the three- day period will bo transferred to semipermanent quarters else where in tho camp. YVat.r 84 upemng It's worth m trip to SAN FRANCISCO because YOU will experience every ol the hundred thrills ol through the gitileit wondit , TtCHNICOLON UUii it Mm I rVtMn I otCM. i IU. MATI. MON. ikrH A1. Oallp lO0 1 1 .? S I I .6 VIS. MON. thrv NM. ftallr 1:30 tl.Alllt.JI IATUIOAY IVII MO.rlO 30 41 6i H T) IUN. 1 IHOWI 1.OO1O0 110 11 H 41 M M6tA! ATlwIII UCIHie- . pU. T.t All JIATJ x KI1IKVATION4 TAKIN IIKVID " 10 WIIK4 IN APVAHCI Look Who's Baek! TV War High Indian Delegate V. K. Krishna Mcnon was scheduled to take the General Assembly floor on behalf of the proposal by neutral Asians seeking to breiik down Hungary's rejection or a U.N. observer team. A high Soviet source an id this res olution was not acceptable. Anil-Communist voices in the Assembly grew louder, and cau tious. Asian and African nations were discarding their earlier aloofness. The result was expected to mean heavy majorities for anti Soviet resolutions. Throughout the lecond day of continuous debate on Hungary, tho Soviet Union and Hungary were repeatedly asked why they objected to observers It they had nothing to hide. An urgent plan was presented to the Assembly to meet the im mediate needs of thousands of refugees streaming westward Into neighboring Austria. It came from Argentina, Belgium, Denmark and the United States. Tho resolution urged govern ments and nongovernmental or ganizations to make contributions for fefugees to the secretary gen oral, the U.N. high commissioner for refugees, or other agencies. Because You Requested It - -We Are Proud to Present More than your eyes . have ever seen... A 3 More than your heart v W has ever known g. . I IN THE COMPLETE Ki.4 C.RANDEUR OF V.UL- CINEMASCOP 1 J -M Hi mSiiWfi AtUUlllillillY v. . 1 MtV The A r te"t ?CitCtfNt'i PLUS SAFARI VICTOR MATURE JANET UIGH Georgia Crash Kills Trio on Private Plane STATESBORO. Ga.'tfl A small private airplane, trying desper ately to find the airport in a dense fog, crashed early Wednesday car rying its three occupants to a fiery death. - The bodies were so badly charred by flames that only in direct identification was possible J fc. W. Harnes of the Barnes Funeral Home at Stalesborn, said, however, there was no doubt that the trio was Henry Elton Clifton, Slatcshoro photographer and own er of the plane, and two students at Georgia Teachers College. The students were Bob Funua of Milliard, Fla., and Hump Camp bell, whose wife teaches school in Savnnnah. The plane was Clifton's and Hi ere was no doubt that he was the pilot. He and the two college men had been seen together earli er in the night and presumably went for a flight. Around 2 or 3 a.m. the fog be gan to descend and visibility was soon near zero. The plan flew frantically over the town for near ly an hour trying lo sight the air port but apparently could not. It finally crashed in flames in a pine grove. The United Nations FAO reports that Central America faces an es timated 100 per cent population in crease in the next 30 years. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL . 'Whitewash'of Arms Probe in Japan Charged Lawyer Sues Over U.S. Overpayment ; Alorse Tipped Him Off TOKYO UTi An American at torney in Tokyo Wednesday ac cused U. S. military officials of "whitewashing" an investigation into alleged over-payments for munitions. He also charged new multi-million-dollar contracts had been awarded to a Japanese firm in the heat of a Senate investi gation" of the firm. Richard A. Tullis of Dallas, Tex., a member of the Tokyo Bar Assn., made the accusation in con firming that a $21,400,000 damage suit had been filed for him on be half of the government in New York federal court against the Komatsu Manufacturing Co. Ltd., of Tokyo. Tullis could realize up to 35 per cent of any damages awarded the government.' He said the Army was told by the Senate Armed Services Com mittee to investigate his charges of $10,700,000 overpayments for shells to Komatsu but that it "toned down and whitewashed the matter with the expectation that ben. Wayne Morse 'D-Orcl would be beaten in the election." Tullis said Morse, who was re elected, is the senator to whom he sent his information and who got the inquiry started last May. Local officials of the Far East Command, which oversced mili tary procurement, had no immedi ate comment on Tullis' charges. A Komatsu spokesman has de scribed the federal court suit tn New York as "rubbish." Tullis said "right in the heat of the Senate investigation." the Army paid Komatsu more than 3 million dollars and awarded it new contracts for 4V4 million. He said he is seeking a U. S. federal court order against payment of $949,000 still owed on the con tracts covered by the investiga tion. Deckhand Washed Off Ship, Then Back On ABERDEEN, Scotland (UP) A ugc wave washed deckhand John Craig overboard from the trawler IJoriiecn Tuesday and the thought flashed through his mind: "Chcer- , I ve had it, But shortly afterwards another iqually large wave washed him back on board while Skipper John Watson was out in a lifeboat look ing for him. STARTS WED. NITE FOR THE LADIES ONLY We Will Have OPEN FROM 1 P.M. him tender p ? y JVC7 In the rJQJ he WoM tH born to play! f- 'Jfly RICHARD EGAIi ol lh. nolorlou. R.no I mjt iSk lEDIUtrnWEI Brolh.r....and th. I Jf 4-(f AM girt Ih.y (ought tori KTROOIKlfM m CO-HIT ami antra 'yff it WORDfl MONTALBAN I STV it GUARDED BY 6 POLICE Freshman Jailed For Arson at U.L MOSCOW, Idaho (UP) Six state policemen stood guard today around the Latah County jail as "protection" for a University of Idaho freshman arrested in an in vestigation of four dormitory fires that killed three men students. The suspect vas Paul Davis Matovich, Kellogg, Idaho. He was accused only of setting a firr at Chrisman Hall, one of three blazes that preceded the fatal blaze at Gault Hall Oct. 19. It was in the Uault blaze that the three students perished. Law officers refused to say whether Matovich admitted set ting the Gault blaze. They said they had their "reasons" for charging him only with the Chris man Hall fire. Law Enforcement Commission er Lloyd G. Martinson said: FBI Nabs Seattle Bank Holdup SEATTLE (fl The FBI Tues day night arrested two ex-convicts and two women for ques tioning in Connection with the $34, 000 robbery of the West Seattle branch of the Peoples National Bank of Washington Monday. Richard D. Aimrbach, in charge of the Seattle FBI office, identi fied the four as: Raymond William Joseph Cler mont, 39, of Seattle, who was pa roled from the McNeil Island Fed eral Penitentiary near Tacoma two years ago after serving a term for interstate transportation of stolen property. Wholesale Oil Price Boosted PORTLAND (UP)-The price of heating oil was boosted one-cent gallon here yesterday by one major oil company but distribu tors said that the price rise would not be passed along to household ers unless other companies follow suit and a general price rise is made to adjust costs. The Union Oil Company of Cali fornia revealed the wholesale price increase to its dealers. Com pany spokesmen said that no in crease in the price of gasoline was anticipated, however. HHIiH:l ''SPECIAL LADIES SHOW" WE ARE HAVING A "LADIES ONLY" SHOW ON "LOVE ME TENDER" Thursday Morn at 10:30 A.M. So Come on Down and Enjoy Elvis Presley's First Big Show Matinees Thursday -Friday -Sat. -Sun. "Investigation which involved series ol fires in University of Idaho dormitories and the death of three students at the last fire at Gault Hall Oct. 19 was cul minaled with a full confession by Matovich after the unrelenting co operation of all investigative agen cies." Matovich was arraigned Tucs- day before Justice of the Peace Herbert W. Rettig. He was bound over to District Court for trial. He was held on $40,000 bail. The iire broke out early in the morning of Oct. 19 and spread through Gault Hall within 15 min utes. The three victims were trapped on the fourth floor. They were John hnudsen, Idano tans; William C. Shuldberg, Terreton, Idaho: and Clarence Johnson, Torrance, Calif. All were 18 years old. Four iii Gerard Rushton Pcabody, 56, of Seattle, a bartender with a long criminal record involving larceny, assault and bank robbery. Mary Moore McGraw. 36, of Grand Coulee, Wash. Auerbach said she was also known as Mick ey Hale. Jane Hardesty, of Seattle. Clermont was charged with bank robbery. Peabody, who was released from McNeil Island in November, 1953, after serving a term for bank robbery, was being held for investigation. The two women were being held as material witnesses. Auerbach's agents took Cler mont into custody at a home be ing tented by the Hardesty wo man in West Seattle. In the home, Auerbach said, agents found two revolvers and $16,000 m bills, much of the money in wrappers bearing the name of the robbed bank. ( Auerbach declined to comment on the circumstances which led FBI agents to arrest the four. The bank was robbed shortly before closing time Monday by two armed bandits One of the gunman stood at a doorway while the other rifled the tellers' cages. -As the two gunmen fled, a brown paper sack in which the stolen money was stuffed split open and some $10,300 in bills were strewn on the street and abandoned. STARTS WEDNESDAY FOR THE LADIES ONLY THURS. MORN. Hear EM ting Lovt Me rcNocrr WTKC OOHNA MOVE" POOH BOY" Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, November 21, 1956 North Chinese Said Starting Anti-Red Push Student Manifesto Asks For Speech Freedom, Commissars Ban TAIPEI tn A Chinese Na tionalist news asency reported Wednesday that students in North China universities launched an anti-Communist movement on Nov. 11. There was no way ot confirm ing the report from the Tatao news agency, operated by the Ministry ot Justice. The aeency. which claims un derground contact on the main land, said students had issued a manifesto demanding freedom of speech and thought and abolition of the system under which the universities are directed by Com munist political commissars. They also demanded "an immediate halt to the brutal slaughter of the Hungarian people by Soviet Rus sian troops." Tatao said the manifesto had been issued by students at the Peking and Tsinghua universities at Peiping, the Normal Univer sity there and Nankai University at Tientsing. The agency said the Commu nists carried out strict checks at night in an attempt to root out the instigators of the movement and had forbidden students to leave their campuses without a special permit. !50 00 Cosh Prill WED. NITE DANCE Crystal Gardens Thursday Morning 10 A.M. SIM Karv r ,5 1 CARTOONS MORNING "Say Moml Send the kiddies down to us Thanks-I BP giving rfiorning at 10 ' they II be home by noon. PS 15 CARTOONS TODAY FROM 1 P.M. !7 CHALLENGING AN IMPOSSIBLE MOUNTAIN; -SEARCHING FOR A WRECKED AIRUNERl PARAMOUNT PRESENTS SPENCER TRACY ROBERT WAGNER TCI Kourimirj 1 H 19 Torrid and Terrific Co-Hit fOR YOUR ADDED A Colorful Short on "WORLD .IN Skeletons of 4 Revolutionary Soldiers Found PHILADELPHIA Ml Archae ologists have found near In dependence Hall the skeletons of four men believed to have been colonial soldiers in the American Revolution. One will be placed in the Na tional Memorial to the Unknown Soldiers of the American Revolu tion to be erected In the center of Washington Square near Inde pendence Hall. LITTLE WILLIE JOHN THANKSGIVING EVE DANCE WED., NOV. 21 featuring Little Willie John Recording Star of "FEVER" "My Nerves" "All Around the World" "I Need Your Love" "Home at Last" with WILLIS JACKSON AND ORCHESTRA COTTONWOOD ALBANY ' THURSDAY AT 10 A.M. a.m., and we'll see thatS 15 CARTOONS You'll tell your friends that "The Mountain" is one of the most suspenseful pictures you have ever seen. THE MOUNTAIN Where you'll be part of an ex citing experience in suspense. THE MOUNTAIN Where you'll climb with two brothers , , . one good . . . one evil. THE MOUNTAIN Where you'll live amid the splendor and full majesty of the Alps. ENTERTAINMENTI Canadian Wild lifel A MAJRSH"