Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, December 08, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    Salem, Oregon, Saturday, December 8, 1956
tage z Section 1
'Itit, casual journal
h Sentence Decided
Negroes
To Return
At Clinton
Auto Show Preview
Ministers
4.,
Ki
I 9ft
7. a": ,.-m-m wm
dnap
m -t Z M. W I
Inlejrralrd High
School to
Reopen
CLINTON. Tenn. (UP) NVflro
students indicated today they will
return to the integrated Clinton
High School when it reopens Mon
da after a week's shutdown be
cause of racial strife.
Strong precautions were being
planned to prevent further molest-1
ing or intimidating of the nine Ne
groes among more than 7on stu
dents. The Anderson County school
Ijoard assured the Negroes they
will have oolice nrotcction.
I County Attorney Kugene
Joyce said the text of a federal
court injunction against interfer
ence with the right of the Negroes
h attend the school will be read
tii the entire student body at the
school reopening.
A DraniiiLir Event
'Wc wont lo dramatize this
thing let them know it's com
ing down like a wet lent on every
one" Joyce said.
; The hoard threatened to expel
any students caught harassing the
Negroes.
Tne board said it will "funnel
information to the FBI and Feder
al Judge Robert L. Taylor" con
cerning any pro-segregation acts
which could be considered in vio
lation of his injunction.
Z The FBI has begun n wide in
vest. Ration into anti-integration ac
tivities tn this hot-spot of rncnl
disorders. It was keeping 72 per
sons, including IS to 2(1 students,
linder surveillance.
Kill Atllliirie Switch
The FBI told Sheriff (.Ind Wood
Vard last September it would not
.rnter jhe Clinton school integra
tion issue.
However, Joyce said, events of
'the past week have shown a
"change in the FBI attitude.'
Police Chief Francis Moore told
;the board meeting Friday that of
ficers would be on hand to arrest
jnyone found loitering around the
cehool Monday with no business
there.
"I assure you there will be not
riojie outsider interfering with stu
dents returning to school," Moore
'.paid.
SCANDINAVIAN
SMORGASBORD
Dinner Entree
$2.50
1 p.m. H I p.m. luniUyi Only
Kari's Smorgasbord
aCORNS FROM THE
WITH DEL Mlt-Ml
NOW
WE'VE
DONE
IT
. . , we've deciden to go
who'e hog on our brand
new service . . . our buffet
dining! So starling this Sun
day we'll be open from noon
on in our Coffee Shop for a
SUNDAY
o BUFFET
There'll be three mn en
trees headed by Rortil Baron
of Beef arid a whole raft of
deticiois $ide dishes. You
can ei as rt.uch as you want
. . . t'ay as long as you like
. . . all for
$1.75
$1 00
for adults
children
under 12
Remember In Salrm It's the
HOTEL
MARION
Phone 3 4123
NKW VOHK The rhorus of a musical revue
rehearses for the nlx-tlmpB-a-dny show that will
add glamor to thr 1957 National Auto Show which
opens officially today. The auto Industry's extrav
1 957 Na tional A u lo Show to
Open in New York Coliseum
Ity DAVID J. WII.KIK
AP Automotive Editor
NKW YOHK iff In a setting
as modern and glamorous as its
newest product, the nation's auto
industry opens its 1U57 National
Auto Show today.
Scene for the 114 million dollar-industrial
extravaganza is New
York's new Coliseum on Colum
bus Circle. For all practical pur
poses the show opened last night
as thousands of persons roamed
over three floors to inspect the
last word in passenger cars and
trucks and scores of cutaway dis
plays of engineering components
like fuel injection systems, high 1
compression engines, braking sys-;
terns and multiple barrel enrbu-j
retnr assemblies.
It was an Invitational preview
for the press, industry represent
atives generally nnd their friends.
The main show runs through the
next nine days.
There are 125 passenger cars
on the second and third floors of
the Coliseum. On the first floor
tare approximately 70 trucks and
coaches. Counting fn the huge
rounded stage, from which a top
musical revue will be presented
i six times daily. Hie presentation
takes up 300.000 iinrc feel of
exhibition space. Adding to the
glamor at each display are some!
of New York's most
young women models.
attractive ,
Theoretically the show is rest- ,
ncled to what the industry knows ' (n;im rubher Mnr,,(l thp nicr
as "production" model cars, cars iimj thm spread to cargoes of al
that actually may he purchased t.i10i :Ktmvr and varnish. 1
, in the market places. Bui several j
cars on display will not reaeh;injumi' jn ,((C mid has ;s(
spring; some are so lavishly fin-
ished and upholstered that there
appears some doubt that they
could be obtained on anything but
a "buill to ordcr" basis.
F.arly visitors displayed spec
rial interest in the Cadillac "Di
rector." R is equipped with a
rear facing seat to the right of
the driver, for the busy execu
te e's secretary. Kqmpiucnt in-
NMI
'yosiaxwm ami..
"V"' " ''V
Compfelily
ST It
All You
Can fwfif For
y Dinners -Open
440 Stat St.,
Downtown and
8440 Interstate,
Portland
;-r-r k n 1
aganza Is bring held In New York's new Coliseum.
It takes up three floors with displays of cars,
trucks and cutaway designs. (AP Wlrcphoto)
eludes a typewriter that folds into
a center partitaion, a telephone,
letter filing equipment and a
small screen upon which news
bulletins and stock market quota
tions may be flashed.
American Motors emphasized
its new Rambler Itebel model to
come out next spring with elec
tronically actuated fuel injection.
Studebaker-Fackard showed its
1957 model Packard Clipper and
a glamorous - looking Golden
Hawk sports model.
Attracting much inleres at the
Ford display was its newest
Fairlane model with a retractable
Torch Sparks
Get Blame for
Brooklyn Fire
NEW YORK Mr-Fire Commis
sioner Edward F. Cavanaugh, Jr.,
says Brooklyn s disastrous pier
explosion was caused by acetylene
torch sparks starting a fire which
touched off 37.000 pounds of dot-!
minting fuses. j
Cavanamih said last nii:h( s narks
fnim nu. torches of ship riggers,
niakiiii' rc nails on the roof ol the
hi.' nirr firrri hnrLm-u-mnnrH
.... .... , . '
; Monday. Damage has heen est i
i mated at 15 million dollars.
The "primacord" fuses, the com
missioner said, "hemme heated
and detonated and was the compe- .
lent and nrodiicinc cause ol the
trame explosion."
The itiamifacturrr of the fu.
the Knsiyn Ilicktord Co.. !$ims
Imry. Conn . said it had slupiJf d
"hundreds of millions of Utf." of
the fuse cord .n in years ttithmit
one inst;ui(te oi its epl.tmR in
transit
The fiiM is ti -foil In set olf e
plosive chalijes in (marrying, mm
int: and genei-nj hlastmj; (ipea
limi'.. The company savs lite shipments
fonitilti.H tuirli r I .i. ...... r iu
' Interstate Commerce Commission
i and the l" S. Coast (iuard.
fflss3aitjaazA
tea c&n
Heil Caittmi' fsoo
(oot mi m Fe Too
5pen.-il P.piien. 1 ;irce or
Snbill I til 10 J
in ofaioaiics
(Tuoesb Food to Take Out
IC"? IV ( inocrnaj St
ipeo ion to ? in
iu(fi a m
o
Sunday
jor.
1
J
.
steel top. Mercury's leading eye
catcher was the new Turnpike
Cruiser, with retractable rear win
dow and numerous other ad
vanced engineering features.
Chrysler showed its newest of
fering, the so-called "300" series
a 375 horsepower limited pro
duction model and its Ply
mouth division showed a new
Fury" model, only inches
high and powered with a 290
horsepower engine.
Topping the Pontiac exhibit
were two cars, its Bonneville con
vertible to be powered with me
chanically operated fuel injection
and an exquisite creation it calls
hapai isienne a four-door sedan
with interior and exterior finished
in what Pontine terms "coral
mist" color and cream tQi find
accent panel.
teat League
Hears Export
Prospect Good
PORTLAND if Tlie Oregon
Wheat lirofters League a tnld
Friday that the outlociK for l S.
wheat growers will Ip great If
improved withift tlie oet two or
three years by the ifirrfovd c
porls. (iond'O Piapf, assistant ad
ministrator of the ffoeitin agrw.uk
lure servic. sain thr step up io
exports is largely a result o the
government's surplus disposal
programs.
The League named Kenneth
PecJt of I.oximltin "Conservation
Mmi of the Year." Me ttnn the
title for his use of strin croninne
mid tia hy fallow lo in event Pro-
Mini on his 1.12t n
cattle farm.
0 wheil nnd
The auaid. offered hy The (He
cm an. un-i presmt.id to Pei'k tv
M .1. Prey, puhhslu-r.
Tin League's i-ake-haking con
test was ttnn hy Mrs. Pi. Filbio
of The Palles. With Mr. Numiiq
(illicit . In (iinnde. rtinnevup,
nit! Mn. Mildied Kosan. F.cho.
third.
Ilflci:aie opproi'd a niunter of
resi'lulii-ns collmi; for:
i:eisiin ot feieral K'ndcs for
pram.
('onsi.,iro'um nf Pacific Mativ
wnl uliidt q fr-cH as well as
foini m irtti t al farm ti uislotmn.
(ii'positiiin to any fic-R-'il m
cnaso on grain
Argentina Fn-cs
lis I ! Iit legale
01 MiW AIBO'S. ti g.ntina in
lVm's.ual freaiaem Pedio
Hi omlniru aas fired Adm. sm
h! o. onxicii as Hrcntinc nein
oncnt dotcga'O lo the l nitcd Na
tuo).
B.iregn M n:rv s.iiikeMiiotl
ictnct in yio ittt' ica'-un u mo
nun i. ftwotC). fOeni tTiliiiS'n
M (ho nrtuticuru rcjimis bj" Oil
vicn tin come to ii&ht
New ork TifMiprralurc
HI MlKt - 0'r
v ICTy tcolf it tciad
9 two mi to t.f-0)
nrkers h.i-:ni: in At Jrec
inper.iiiire,-. 'enieidnv a rec
ord lor the date ThP old mark
of ti' T u.i. set in ll'.'tl.
i?K r rvnpra t
WITH
Larry V, Cascade Range Riders
"The Northwest's KincM WrMcrn Band"
Aumsville Pavilion Every Sat. Nite
To Meet
Hnngary Events
Bring Spirit
Of Accord
PARIS ii Ministers of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organiza
tion pushed into a renewed
' spirit of cooperation by events in
.Hungary next week open what
!may be their most dynamic meet
' Ing.
The session begins Tuesday,
bringing together the ministers of
foreign affairs, defense and fi
nance of the 15 nations. It will
provide the setting for the first
meeting of British. French and
American foreign ministers since
the Suez campaign which threat
ened to split the organization wide
open.
Healing Process
But the three members, once
so widely divided with France
'and Britain on one side and
America on the other, have begun
the healing process so actively
: that one highly placed figure in
the organization predicted: "It
I will be the love match of the
year. The lovers are going to con
fess their faults, kiss and make
up probably more warmly than
ever before."
For the past two years NATO
has shown signs of pulling apart
at the scams. Many members,
calmed by the smiles of the
Kremlin, wanted to cut their de
fense expenditures. Russian can
nons and tanks in Budapest
changed all that.
Srrurlly Remembered
"Members who were reluctant
before are now remembering how
much security the Atlantic Pact
gives them," a member repre
sentative said.
The biggest event is the ex
pected meeting of Secretary of
State Dulles, British Foreign Sc
retary Selwyn Lloyd and French
Foreign Minister Christian Pi
neau. It has not definitely been
decided when or even whether
they will meet as a Big Three.
Bridges Union
u
Saul AWft ta
Choke Hawaii'
HONOLULU (fl The U. S.
Senate loteronl Security subcom
mittee is on record, today as dt
clarinft that Harry Bridges Iater
aitioeal Lai ft shoremen's and
i'arefcaitttmea's Union "nre m
a pesition to -choke off iiiand mip
pJrs." Hurry Bridges. ILWU presi
dent, in a statement, charged that
the mihrnmmitleo headurt by Sen.
,)nrwK Kastland 0-Miss had as
its "main purpose. . . lo fill the
record to Mors; statehood" for
Hawaii.
Ka ii land "is on (he record thai
as lots a there is an II. WU there ! " an Activities heannit when nc drj(i0 jno ,n(, corrjdnr
is nn siatolnmi." Bridtcs a'Med. j l'l P in lhe audience and ac- Holdndjc wa, tne ib viee
The cniumittcc issued a slate-j cused the committee of "treason" pr(,sificniini nominee of the .'a
nwnl. after completing a six-day, ltiona, prohihilion partv.
hearing yeslerilay. saying it found pl .in 1 I Two attorneys were also ejected
'Communists a tine in concert in
a present-day c(ins)racy 'lo fur
ther Soviet pmposis in these is
lands. "
The committee suggested
"nunc use of the immunity stat
ute to break the wall of silence
the Communists erect." It
alsn
advocate lcnsihcmng the statutes
"''
den.c iisama C.iumunists is es -
senuoi inr proseculie action.
Sicra! senators on the com -
imtlep said they may take slops
In strip the ILWt' and its affi-
liated I niton I'uhiic w orkers
i nit'n oi i an-tian icy
Act
tcition. To this end. they
recommend, they said, the
may j
.liis-
tii-p Department take a: ;nn
aamsl the two unions under the
Coiiununtst Control Act.
Pendleton Sets
Building Reenrd.
PKXDI.CTOX renrllelnn
cily building has alreoily reached
an all-time peak this year, cily!
otlicials report.
Nnveiiiljir pcrmils of
brouuht tlic in toial to tJ.tK.J49
whu o is greater IHjo the previous
nl l-i n uc piak of f S.M.lja set last
year.
Eijjht pernii'j tor new hmnea
ifl No ember costllie 9-..r'00
hriuigoi the heme building her
ins car to 112 units costing i.-
:.)!. HSiv
Dance Tonite
Kvney Snk. Hittht
Sheridan fogies Hall
mmi am.
fldbrujiHisn f.tM
E0f The
Silver String ftaraaxor
General Accuses Un-American Commifle
, . . ... .. .. ,-a-5 . - v"5
LOS ANGELES Wi fe. General berbtrt C. Hold
rldKe, retired U.S. Army officer now living Si
Shernnn 0;s, CilJif., rises lb acciwe the Hou
ln-Atiericaji Activities Committee of "treason,"
"cowardice." and "saavorsian of the Cora tttl ion"
dui uig a Committee lK';o uig aera taany. fle had
Retired General Ejected From
Un-American Group Hearing
Group Accused
Of 'Treason',
Cowardice
I.OS ANGKLKS uf Retired ,
Brig. Gen. Herbert C. Holdridse.1
M. as ejected bodily from a
House subcommittee on l"n-Amer-(
Ellsworth Back
From
VSHINCTON
Rep. Klls-
worth of Oregon is hack from
' Kuro. where he a an official
(iricRaie oi voni;rcss in int nunni
1 Atlantic Treaty Oraanization par-
liamentary conference.
! Kllsworth. who was defeated in
his hid for an eichth term hy
j Democrat Charles O. Porter. Fo
: eme, will spend the next two
Cene,
weeks windinR up his alfairs here.
He will leav e Dec. 22 for his home
in HoseburR.
Kllsworth said his future pUns
are not definite.
Riitish railuai'S employ a staff
of 601. iiM people.
DANCE
TCN1TE!
UGION HAIL I u!q j
Mby- Bjj TAMIT C ENDS TONITE!
wisternaires m CRYSTAL " ryWf
srar i gardens :yi;L&
. lln , . IL ADMISSION ODe UiW MiStkbAMl
I WJaJ HTi.1 i 1 STARTS TOMOHHOW-ANOTHIR FIBJT BUM
1 iraQCll,vft lAX ,.j?5r,s day
rim m&rci) mimm
5 ; iW'few
D CRSOH S rz
Jl .Pf'T.VLT. iT.enAitT Llmlls nn !. M
i i i i I I IH
"cowirdict" and "subversioe of
to Constitution of the United
Sltl!S."
"Your actions art disgraceful."
Chairman Clyde Doyle (D-Calif)
retorted yesterday. "You are a
disgrace to the United States
Army and to your country."
"Mr. marshal, remove that
man from the room." ordered
Rep. Gordon L. Scherer 'It-Calif.
I Cn.-nral Honnlinc hnctlnH lint.
from the stormy hearing, which
is being held to determine wheth
er there is any Communist ac
tivity aimed at undermining the
nation's security laws.
A. L. Winn, counsel for the
American Civil Liberties I'nion,
was ordered t rom t he room lor
exchansinR remarks with commit-
t itV0 livil-v a,mcd at undermining the I JK3SlL WAR lJjf P if? lHt J I
EilirOUL nation's security laws. I PICTURO MLJ fltiO JJLgf 1 I
OLD-TIME DANCE fmj IEhMIBBlfl
Lorion's Orchestra MsUUuikakMi3jO l"wl w',de
Over Wstern Aula .J . India"' f
JACK IDDII )
Ev.r Saturday NigM PALANCE ALBERT 'l - ,
Lit UVW . Mmrf STRAUSS 1 A j
Admission 50t , I "Droopy" Cartoon I
E. H i r..iiiMfairiii cnaer-ivsler I I .no i
'CASH NITE' J"" ' l""""w!i""i wjMBMj
J I DOCTOR AT SEA" J
5 " I E,,B B"'" Than "r.octor In TheHnuse" I
'"i"1""""""' i 1
risen to ttO the comraittca uembets h wantvd to
adftess them. 8ub-coaimin chnirumn Clyde
Doyle (D-Cnltf.) told Boldridge, 84, he was "a dis
grace to Uw Untied Stales Army and ta yonr
cocratry," and and him remaved by marshals!
(AP Wllfphoto)
; tee counsel
Richard Arens, and
Atty. Maynard J. Onerberf was :
ejected, for laughing when Cliair- j
man Doyle commented on the de-
sire nf Congresa to legislate.
intelligently.
NOW!
ONt OF THE MOST t ' ffiS JV I
mih j'sil
Elecff ie
Chair
MINEOLA, N.Y. I A jurv of
12 fathers last night condemned
Anfielo LaMarca to death in the
electric chair for the kidnap
murdcr of 32-day-old Peter Wein
berger. The jury found the swarthy auto
mechanic guilty of kidnaping and
first degree murder.
LaMarca 's knees wobbled when
he heard the verdict. Two court
attendants grabbed him to keep
him from sagging to the floor.
The defense built its case
around a temporary insanity plea.
It claimed LaMarca. 31, was a
normal, hard - working husband
and father until last spring when
a burden of mounting debts drove
him out of his mind.
In that unbalanced state La
Marca embarked on the kidnap
plot, the defense said.
IMarca tried but failed to col
lect a $2,000 ransom.
The defense asked mercy for
LaMarca.
But Dist. Ally. Frank Gulotta,
the prosecutor, called LaMarca
a scheming, cold-blooded crimi
nal and demanded of the jury:
"What mercy was shown hahy
Peter when he was left in that
woods . . . What mercy did he
show then?"
The jury was out for six hours
and 24 minutes before returnintf
its verdict ending the month old
trial.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Weinher.
ger, parents of the ttoy victim,
were present in the Nassau Coun
ty courtroom when the verdict
was returned.
The defendant admitted taking
the baby from the patio of the
Weinbergers' Westbury, N. Y.t
home last July 4 and abandoning
him a short while Uiler in a Long
Island honeysuckle thicket a few
miles away.
Police found the child's body
Aug. 24. the day after the FBI
seized LaMarca.
9E SgftJSSSQKJnstlES SSUK
6
Tr.dilianNl Chriatmiu OrnRnt
HarMtHi ditpnd to kmp U fr.ih
Piiflknd 10 an. bt .hipping hex
ONIY $6.00 par box
k
U
$
MJ1 i box to I
W. R.& Lela Newmyer
SnUm, Pliana 4-6531
At Your Favorits cont. From
Downtown Theatre ' M.
mm 0.Tr .
O'