Ralpm. Oregon. Thut;day, December 6, 195R Page 8 Section I 15 Segregation Troublemakers Jailed in Tenn. Last 9 to Be Arraigned Today; Clinton to Reopen School By DON BINKI.KY CMNTON, Tenn. W Nine more of the 1 persons accused in racial violence which closed integrated Clinton High School Tuesday faced a federal judge to. day as officials made plans to reopen the school. U. S. Dlst. Judge Rnhert h. Taylor of nearby Knnxvillc Issued criminal contempt warrants for the 16 yesterday, charging them with violation of a court order for bidding interference with Integra' tion of the school. Fifteen of them 6 men and one woman were in jail at Knoxville within a few hours. A 16th, reportedly a woman, was still being sought by federal mar shals. Six of the prisoners, Including W. H. Till, chairman of the pro segregation white Citizens Council here, were arraigned before Judge Taylor, last night. All de nied the charges. Other arraign ments were postponed until to day. There also was a report (hat steps have been taken to see If bail can be revoked for John Kasper, -26, who has appealed Taylor s one-year sentence on a similar charge in previous dis orders at school opening last Au gust. The Anderson County School Board, which had ordered the school closed Tuesday "until further notice," decided after the 15 arrests last night to reopen the school next Monday If possi ble. . The closing followed a series of increasingly numerous racial in cidents climaxed Tuesday by the beating of a Baptist minister, the Rev. Paul Purner, after he had escorted six Negro pupils to school past jeering bystanders. The school admitted 12 Negroes among 800 white pupils Aug. 27 under Taylor's orders, after five years of litigation. Resulting dis orders during the first week brought In National Guardsmen Sept. 2. The other five who were ar raigned along with Till last night were: Lawrence J. Brantley, employed former grocer; the Rev. Amnio Bullock, an unem ployed preacher: William Brake bill, service station operator; Clifford Carter, unemployed liv borer; and Jimmy Pierce, a teen' ager who dropped out of Clinton High In October. Their bonds were set at sums ranging from $2,500 for Carter Is $12,000 for Till. Those facing arraignment to day were Zella Nelson, Thomas R, Sanders, Henson Nelson, Clyde Cook, Cleo Nelson, Chris Foust, John B. Long, J. C. Cooley and Raymond Wood., All . were charged in the war rants with "one or more" of a long list of alleged violations of the court's order forbidding any body In Anderson county from doing anything which might tend to cause interference with peace ful integration of the school, Ike's Cooking Is All Bluff, Claims His Sisler-in-Law SEATTLE uri-One of President Eisenhower's close relatives says he it "all bluff." About cooking, that Is. The relative is Mrs. Edgar El senhower of Tacoma. Wash., the President's sister-in-law st whose home the President stayed while campaigning this fall. "Being marrird to an Eisenhow er," the sister-in-law told the Women's University Club jester day, "I know the President's cook ing is all bluff. He turns the knob on high, burns It to a crisp and mat s all." SUES FOR ALIMONY LOS ANGELES Mi Hack ali mony and child support payments of $4,050 are demanded from nicht club comedian Walter O'Keefe by Mrs. Roberta Robinson O Keefe. Site stated in a suit that her hus band promised to pay her 40 per cent of his gross income for her support and their two children when they signed a settlement in 1950. She said his present income Is $500 a week. Notes on a Feul4 fly yee) wenldet catch Bank Manager at The Dalles Dies THE DALLES Ifl - Charles A. Reynolds, 64, manager of The Dalles branch of the United States National Rank of Portland, died Wednesday. He started his banking career with the Ladd & Bush bank in Salem shortly after his graduation from the --University of Oregon in 1914. He formerly was manager of the U. S. National branch at Astoria. He had been manager of The Dalles branch bank since 1945. St. Nick Pays Visitto Waifs From Hungary CAMP KILMER, N.J. Ifi Dozens of Hungarian children, up rooted in bewilderment from their homes only a few days ago, awoke today to find that the spirit of St. Nicholas lives around the world. When they looked at their shoes polished so brightly in hope, they found a wonder of wonders St. Nicholas had paid them visit. Even though they were thou sands of miles from their home land and living in an Army bar racks, the old gent had found them. He left (hem the traditional gifts: dolls, games, candy and switches. They were small gifts, in their tradition that says the big gifts come on cnrlstmas Day, the small ones on Dec. 6 from St. Nicholas. whom Hungarian youngsters con sider their special protector. - While the children were nestled all snug in their beds, volunteer workers from the Red Cross quiet ly delivered the packages last night to Hungarian refugee par ents billeted here. The gifts, all new, were donated by various organizations through the Red Cross. The symbolic switches an other part of the tradition that calls for the youngsters to shine their shoes and set them out for gifts were "pulled off some trees around here," a Red Cross spokesman said. Insurance on Slain Man in Court Action PORTLAND Ifl The govern ment is asking a federal court here to determine whether a dead man's government life insurance should go to his mother or the son that killed him. The case Involves the $10,000 policy of Eldon L. Biswell who was killed at Burns in 1953 by his son James, then 16, who hit him with a baseball bat. James was tried on a charge of manslaughter in January, 1954. He was found innocent by reason of Insanity. The father's Insurance policy named James the beneficiary. But the slain man's mother, Mrs. Lissie Biswell of Nampa, Idaho, the contingent beneficiary, claim ed the money on (he ground (hat ihe youth had forfeited his right to it by feloniously killing his father. The trial will open Tuesday. First Multnomah Vice Trial Opens PORTLAND in First prose- eulion growing out of last sum mer's grand jury investigntion of vice conditions in Portland opened in circuit court Wednesday. Davie L. Nance, restaurant op erator, went on trinl accused of perjury as a new grand jury pre pared to report its tindings. The new Jury heard several witnesses, among (hem city police officers, Tuesday. 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