Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1956)
e Journal THE WEATHER. MOSTLY CLOVDV with scattered showers tonight. Thursday. Lillle change in temperature. Low to light, 43; high Thursday, H. 2 SECTIONS 28 Pages 68lhVear,No. 296 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, December 12, 1956 VV.'iTT oi Capitals Hungary's Reds War On Strike Soviet Army Joins Savage Street Fighting VIENNA (UP) Savage street fishting broke out todav in Buda pest and the Hungarian provineesT Reports reaching Vienna indica ted the Soviet Army was attacking the rebel patriots in a massive ef fort to end Hungary's nationwide strike against the puppet govern ment. The Hungarians had prayed for a miracle to save them from another round of blood-letting in their struggle for freedom but the miracle did not come and fighting resumed today. Soviet armed forces and Red Hungarian militiamen had been alerted for instant duty and need ed only a word of command to launch a new massacre. Bloody Clashes Reported Reports filtering through to Vienna from silenced Budapest said bloody clashes were taking place wherever the new Red po lice of puppet Premier Janos Ka dar attempted to make the strik ers return to work. Rut the reports indicated the fighting had not yet reached the scale of another all out uprising. The crunch of mobile artillery and mortar fire kept tense Buda pest awake through most of the night. And in the hills to the north. Russian infantry and tanks closed in on 10,000 partisans who began shooting even before a presiden tial committee declared martial law and outlawed the regional workers councils Sunday. Machinegun fire rattled sporadi cally from the Gelert Hills, a villa-specked outcrop within the confines of western Budapest. It was believed Hungarian police and militia and not the Soviets were attacking the freedom fighters in this area. Martial Law In Effect The clashes continued despite the heavy punishment by military tri bunal that is Xo be meted out un der the martial law which went into effect last night. The martial law provisions could be stretched to affect anybody who did not ac tively support the regime. The picture of fighting in the province was not clear. Budapest still was cut off for the most part from communication with the out side world and refugee reports were conflicting. But it was reported that clashes were frequent in the region of Pecs, where coal and uranium mines were in such bad condition that miners could do nothing even (Continued on Page 5, Column 4) Mid-East Oil Saboteurs Set Off 16 Bombs LONDON (UP) - Saboteurs ex ploded 16 bombs early Tuesday in the Anglo-American oilfields at Kuwait, setting fire to one oiJ well and damaging pipelines, dis patches from Bahrain reported to day. It was the first serious outbreak against the West since end of the Suez fighting. Kuwait police began an investigation but said no ar rests had been made. Other attacks on oil wells, gas pipelines, power station and a water distallation plant were un successful, but tanker loadings were suspended and strict security precautions were set up. A foreign office spokesman said the sabotage had not affected the overall production in Kuwait. Brit ain's biggest oil suppliers. Kuwait is an independent Arab nation un der British protection and is lo cated at the head of the Persian Gulf. It supplies 60 per cent of Britain's oil. Clouds Block Plane Search For 2nd Day VANCOUVER. B.C. W Low. hanging clouds for the spennd jtraicht day thvarted srarchers Wednesday in the hunt for a Trans Canada Air Lines plane that van ished with 62 persons aboard Sun-: day night. Even a helicopter couldn't net through for a search of an inland mountain area. It had to turn back alter traveling less than 10 of the 55 miles to Sumas mountain. j The search focused on the mountain after a boy and two men reported seeing, at long range, an object which possibly could be a pieceof airliner wreckage. 1 However, the helicopter pilot! said he had made a "tree by tree" ! search of the mountain Monday without seeing anything resem-, bling wreckage. It has snowed at upper elevations since then mak ing any search doubly difficult. Roval Canadian Air Force search leadesr discounted earlier reports of lights having been seen on two peaks farther to the east en th night oi tot crasn. Yule Packages Pile Up at R r.:.-'- Jl "'- 1 Mail clerk Roland Pope works on a large pile of Christmas packages, part of the heavy holiday mall that hit the Salem post office this week. Peak Is expected next Monday. Use ot this basement room and mail chute has alleviated space prob lems 'In the main building. From here packages are moved out a back door. (Capital Journal Photo). NATO Council Votes Extension of Powers Super-Parliament Plan Proposed By Lloyd PARIS m Leaders of the At- lantic Alliance Wednesday reached , tentative agreement on proposals : to bolster the North Atlantic Treaty Oreanization by giving it wider political and economic pow ers. The' NATO Council ot Ministers endorsed the general outlines of recommendations to this effect submitted by Gaetano Martino of Italy. Halvard Lance of Norway and Lester B. Pearson of Canada, a conference spokesman said. The three foreign ministers called "the three wise men" have had the recommendations under study for months. French Foreign Minister Chris tian Pineau upheld final action by insisting on submitting several amendments. West Germany's 1 Honrich von Brentano also tied the council he would have rope. some amendments. : He move came as delegates to The conference spokesman said the 79-nation Assembly rallied be neither Pineau nor Vnn Brentano hind an American-backed resolu spocilicd what he had in mind.;tion condemning Russia for tarn- Other sources said the French and Germans wanted to make the report even stronger than original ly written. In discussing the report, Brit- ih Foreign Secretary S e 1 w y n 'ims observers to Hungary and the Llovd came up with a proposal world will soon know whether this for 'establishing a kind of "super , Soviet charge is true or false." parliament" with limited powers' Specifically, the Soviet dclega to serve NATO. ! ,lon Proposed that the Assembly The British statesman! pro-, Seattle Bus Pay Boosted SEATTLE If The Seattle Transit Commission, whose em ployes halted a 10-day strike un der court order, granted coach operators a 6-cent hourly wage in crease Tuesday. The increase, retroactive to Dec. .1. represents the maximum offer by the commission before the walkout which ended on that date. It brings the hourly rate to $2 24. Arabs Report Briton Killed PORT SAID. Egypt l - The shortly after 10 a m. and taxied them InoWd the plane -fairly high" in Egyptian underground says it kid-: up together to a receiving line of At Harmon Field. Newfound-; triC sir ,le ,aKj jt ,u(jdenly be naped and killed a young British government and military officials, land, where the planes arrived on : gan os'ig aj't,iude and spun into lieutenant. The planes three Air Force, an icy field late at night, an evema (jpi,) oul o( hls inl behind a The report was brought to Brit-, CIH's ana a Navy R6D came more impressive reception was1 hill. A "lig black cloud of smoke" ish headquarters Tuesday night in i in frc Muaich. Germany, with held. immediately arose, the face of British insistence that the fir of iTie 21,500 refugees1 There, wives of servicemen and "There was an awful concussion the lieutenant be returned quick-1 due to arrive by ail and sea be-, those of the military who were oil when the plane hit." Black said. Iy and alive. fore Dec. 31. j duty tpent most of the night mak- ' The British-French occupation ! command awaited firmer evidence before conceding the officer had been killed But British Lt. Gen. Sir Hush Stockweil. the occupa- tion chief, let it be understood me iHInn would follow if (the officer was not given up alive, posal before the North Atlantic Council was part of a three-point program for developing the polit ical bonds between the 15 mem bers of the NATO alliance. Lloyd did not precisely define the sort of super parliament he has in mind whether it would be plprtnri nnH httvp thp richt to makp )aws or whether members WOuld be nominated with powers only to consult. UNGetsRuss Blast at U.S. 'Subversion' VXITKD NATIONS, N.Y. OP -The Soviet Union formally laid before the U.N. General Assembly Wednesday a complaint charging the United States with "subser- sive action" in the Soviet-domi noti-inatcd countries of Eastern Ku pering in Hungarian affairs. U. S. delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. replied to the Soviet charge with this statement: Let Moscow admit United Na a io lis agenoa an uem en- uueu: intervention Dy ine unnea States of America in the domestic affairs of the peoples democra cies and its subversive activity against those states." Such charges had been made by the Russians in previous sessions of the Assembly and rejected as unfounded. MATS Brings First 200 Ref ugees to U.S. MCGUIRE Ain FORCE BASE, thusiastic and sympathetic recep N J. (jfl Four American mili- tion all the way. tary planes flew some 200 Hun-1 At Prestwick. Scotland, the first garian refugees to the United stop, defendants of U.S. service States Wednesday in the start of a men stationed there were out in spectacular freedom airlift. Service 'MATS! planes arrived It was W.e end of a tiring 28- hour trip, but the r?fliugees seemed to hold up well. They smiled as thev walked off the planes, carrv- ing small bags labeled "V. S. Escapee Program," and headed for Camo Kilmer .1 i En route here, they had in en-J Post Office PeakYuletide Mailing Eyed Next Monday While the outgoing flow of parcel post matter has constituted pretty much of a steady stream this holiday season, it is probable that the peak mailing will come next Monday, in the opinion of Post master Albert C. Gragg. Thi3 view is based on experience of other Christmas seasons. Because of the availability of basement space this year, Christ mas mail has not piled up in t.ie workroom on the first floor. As fast as the receiving clerks can weigh and stamp the parcels, they are chutcd into the basement for sacking end dispatch. So far there has been little or i no congestion in front of the pared post winders at the south erj of the main corridor. Two experi- enced receiving clerks, whose knowledge of zones relieves them of the necessity of stopping to detent-ire the amount of postage needed, have been handling the outgoing mail with little or no delay. For convenience of the public, arrangements have been made t: kcp the stamp and parcel post windows open each night until 8 o'clock except Sunday, through Dec. 19. The customary children's Irttcrs ; addressed to Santa Claus arc being i received at the post office. The are being turned over to the Elks lodge and the Active club. EXECUTIVES VICTIMS Oil Firm 's Plane Crashes; 8 Killed BARTLESVILLE, Okla. UPi -Eight employes of Phillips Petro leum Co. were killed Wednesday when a company airplane spun into a ranch pasture. The crash occurred four miles southeast of full force to see that the trav- 'milk for the 50 children among1 ing sure the refugees were 'made wrlcome. The flights marked the begin - ning of the Air Force's 'Operation Safe Haven." under which 9.700 refugees are scheduled to be , hrrmoht Wo h Dre It hif sir The othcri will come by ihip. Bus Rider Slavs Pal, Wounds 3 Gunman Disarmed In Newport Cafe By Driver NEWPORT, Ore. ifl An angry bus passenger who thought his companion had stolen $1.30 from him as he napped, opened fire when they went into the bits depot restaurant here late Tuesday, kill ing his friend and wounding three bystanders. The bus driver stepped up to the gunman and demanded the pistol as others in the restaurant sat frozen or dived for safety. Jailed here on a booking of mur der was John Willie Long, 36, of Dayton, Ohio. S.P. Employe Victim The victim was C. I. Huff, 43, Portland, a Southern Pacific Rail road employe who recently had moved from Coquille. Huff and the man chaged with shooting him were old friends, Dist. Atty. A. R. McMullcn said, who were riding together, along with Dallas Coals of Portland, from Coos Bay to Portland. The district attorny said Long awoke from a nap and accused Huff of taking $130 from him as he slept. When the bus reached here Long followed Huff into the restaurant, demanded the money and then, said McMullen, fired three quick shots. Jilt lly 2 Bullets ; Huff slumped to the floor dead with two bullets in his body. The third bullet ricocheted from the floor and broke into frag ments. One hit CoaLs in the face,; inflicting a minor wound; one hit Daniel Michael Clancy of Neotsu, Ore., in the shoulder and one hit Thomas Edgar Sanders, Molalla, Ore., in the hip. Clancy was to be released from the hospital Wed nesday and Sanders was. taken to Portland Veterans Hospital where his condition was satisfactory. The bus driver, Roy Anderson, 40, of Mcdford, said the gun was smoking when he stepped up to Long and said What me hell did you do that for? Give me the gun." Long did. . Schrunk Gets Auto Damage Suit Re-trial Multnomah County Sheriff Ter ry D. Schrunk won a new trial Wednesday in a damage suit that once raised the question whether he could continue in office. Mrs. Thular B. Hnmmons, Grants Pass, won a $12,780 ver dict against Schrunk, charging that his office failed to serve a summons in connection with an auto accident in which Mrs. Mam mons was injured. The accident occurred in Josephine County and she said failure to serve the sum mons resulted in dismissal of her damage suit. The state Supreme Court or dered a new trial Wednesday on the ground that the lower court piTIHIUl-U iiii)iUJt:i mriiuna tu be asked concerning Schrunk'si assets After Ihe lower court verdict the question was raised whether Schrunk could continue in office, Gov. Elmo Smith ruled that he could. here only a few minutes after the plane had taken off from Bartlcs ville's airport. I There were no survivors. ! One of the victims was A. M. Rippel, 61, head of Phillips' nat ural gas department. Others were W. C. Reed, a company attorney, C. W. Bicnkley, George Sneed, I). F. Mayficld and T. D. Young, all members of the gas division, and the two pilots, Joe Bowers and R. E. Ulrich. The plane, a Lockheed Lodestar, was used for transportation of Phillips executives. H. C. Black of nearby Nowata, a Sinclair Pipeline Co., worker, said he was the first person at the wreckage after he saw the twin-engined craft go into a spin and crath. r c h.,l, 7 mha u ri..i Weather Details ' M.nimam yni.rif.v. ss; minimnm '"' T"ul -' pr.npiu. ,'.J"p,"l!!t.i ""'"',: "i. u h.iiht'. i2t'f..t. ''" (R'pitt t. I. WciUl.r i """, Orego ins subside After Floods Wreak Big Havoc on Roads, Bridges High Water to Spare Valley Damage High water continued to plague the mid-Willamette area Wednes day, with river crests to be slight ly higher than first predicted. Barring unexpected deluges, how ever, the first big rush of high water of the reason is due to pass this region without loo cost ly damage. At Salem, the Willamette was up to 12.9 feet Wednesday morning and is slated to crest at 17li feet about noon Thursday, one foot higher than the original forecast. Flood stage here is 20 feet. 20.G Feet at Jefferson The rampaging Santinm passed 20.6 feet at Jetferson about mid night Tuesday to bring the great est spillover in that section in some time. The river had sub sided some early this morning, the weather bureau reporting the last reading at 19.1 feet. The intake from the mass of water there is bringing up the Willamette in this section more than usual. Except for extensive washing along the banks, there was little damage to report from the San tiam spillover. Because of the sudden rush ot water from the torrential rains in the canyons above, there were many logs. trees and debris rushing along with the roily waters. In the Talbot area, near where the river joins the Willamette, there was water over the road at one place near the D. Davidson place, re ports stated Wednesday. Albany Crest Nearg The Willamette is due to crest at 19.2 tonight at Corvaltis and at 19 feet about 4 a.m. Thursday at Albany. Flood level is 20 feet at both points. Rain slackened off considerably in the valley area over Tuesday night. At Salem only .08 of an inch was measured in the 24-hour period ending at 10:30 a.m. Wed nesday. five-day forecast calls for scat tered showers tonight and Thurs day, then recurring rains through the period. Temperatures and rainfall totals, however, are to be about normal. Jurors Acquit Silvcrton Man Of Rape Count Norval Jackson, 23-yenr-old Sil vcrton man, was acquitted on a charge of statutory rape Tuesday afternoon by a Marion county jury. All 12 members of the jury voted in favor of the defendant after de liberating about two hours. The case was given to the jury just before noon. At that time the jurors said they wanted to deliberate before going out to lunch. At 1 o'clock they notified the bailiff that they had not reached an agreement and were taken to a downtown restaurant for their noon meal. A 13-year-old Oregon City girl was involved in the rape charge. She testified that the act of in tercourse had taken place in an automobile parked along a county road about a mile from the French home where the party was in progress. The defendant categorically de nied the girl's assertions. All of the testimony presented during the trial indicated that most partici pants in the party had been drink ing beer and vodka. Trial dates for a number of others indicted by a grand jury in connection with parties involv ing teen-agers have not been set. 7 Floridans Freed in Neiu'o Floirniiiir Trial Bt'SHNKl.L. Fla. OH Soven white men were cleared Wednes day of charges of flogging Jesse Woods. 39-year-old Negro who had kmi forcibly taken from nearby Wild wood jail. The men were cleared on a di rected verdict of Circuit .Judge T. (J. Fuk-h after State Atty. A. P. Ruie himself asked that four of the men be freed. The case blew wide open when Ruie complained that witnesses changed their stories when they came into Sumter County Court home to testify. The defense then moved that directed verdicts of acquittal be granted for the other three de fendants. The state had Just lost a battle lo get in a ulatement from (Jeorgc 'Georgia Boyi Allman. The state ment was taken aftrr Allman's arrest in connection with the flog ing cut. no"". ' . New, Old UF Presidents VV f,TEO fid UNITED FUND Itetlrlnii United Fund President Herbert E. Darker. rlRhi. eon Krntulntes Bernard Mnlnnorlnn, named president Tuesday Tor the next year at a meeting of the board of director!. (Capital Journal Photo) Mainwaring to Head UnitcdFundml957 Lillle and Pfouts Named as Vice Presidents Bernard Mainwaring, editor and publisher of (he Capital Journal. Tuesday was elected president of tho Salem United Fund for lfl.i7. He succeeds retiring president Herbert E. Barker. The 42-member board, which organized Tuesday for the coming year, also named other officers: Benjamin Little, first vice presi dent; Dean Pfouts, second vice president; Arthur B. Bates, treas urer, and Claude A. Kelts, execu tive secretary. ihe board officially endorsed the current Marion county Red Cross special campaign for a quota I ff $3,016 in the Hungarian relief, effort. ! Barker appointed Albert C. Of- fenstcin to represent Salem at a Thursday meeting in Seattle called to help plan for next Aprils an nual meeting of the western con ference of United Funds. The new president has long been active in community affairs in both Salem and in Nnmpa, Ida., where he resided until 19..1. lie has been on the local UF board for three years. Independence Road Flooded The South River road leading to Independence was closed to traf fic at 4 o'clock Wednesday morn ing after state polico had report ed that the Willamette river was out of its bank a short distance east of the Independence bridge. In reporting the closure to the county court, Assistant County En gineer Ted Kuenzi expressed the belief that closures of tho road were coming at a lower stage of Ihe river each year. Today's clos ing occurred when the river was approximately 14 feet above min imum. Buie asked that charges be dropped against Keith Sands of Jacksonville. Max Stumborg of Wildwood, Eeaman Lundy of Belleview, Fla.: and Doyle Polk ot Marion County. The other three defendants were Robert Nesmith of Belleview, Ezekial Alderman of Wildwood and Altman. Wood, a farm laborer, was ar rested Oct. 27 on charges of drunkeness and disorderly con duct. Arresting olficers reported that the Negro said, "Hello there, baby," to a while school teacher. Wood testified at the trial that he was released on bond and asked to he placed hack in jail because white men were follow ing him. Hc related that he was forced from the jail, taken east of Wild wood, kicked, beaten on the shoul ders by both endj ol belts nd struck bf iuti, . , 'I Since moving to Salem with the purchase of the Capital Journ al in early 1953, Mainwaring has held directorships in the Salem Chamber of Commerce, the Ki- wanis club and Salvation Army. Hc is a member of the stale board of higher education, president of (lie i'resnytenan church Mens club, a director In the Oregon Mate tolleco alumni association and president of the Associated Press for Oregon. In Nampa, where he published the Idaho Free Press from 19.17 until 195.1, he was tho first treas urer of the Community Chest. He nerved with many civic groups just prior to leaving, had bceii chairman of the board of trustees for the College of Idaho in Cald well. Hc is a graduate of Oregon State College. Mainwaring and his wife reside at uoughton St. His son Rill, is a senior student at the University of Oregon. His daugh ter Ftuth is a sophomore at Wil lamette. 2 Saved From Flood Waters; Cling to Tree LKBANON (Special) Two men were rescued from the surging waters of the South Santiam river near Waterloo Tuesday afternoon after clinging to a tree for two and a half hours. Near-victims of the flooding river were George Hayes, Sweet Home, and Bob Wright, Rt. 1, Lebanon. The two men went out on the river in a boat in an attempt to salvage a caterpillar tractor that was half submerged- by the rising water. During the attempt the boat overturned, spilling both men in the water. They managed to cling to a nearby tree. Plight ol the men was noticed by Leonard Rowell who called the Lebanon fire department for help. Responding to the call were Ken Fuller, assistant fire chief, and Arlie Bartram, fireman, who took the flood victims to shore in an other boat. Assisting in the rescue were (ius August, of the Albany Democrat Herald, and Bob How ard. The South Santiam river crested at Waterloo at 19 feet at 3 p.m., a half hour after the rescue. Earlier in the day Rartram aftd August assisted (Wen Brandel, a farmer, in rescuing 16 head of cattle stranded on a small area of high ground near Waterloo. Baby'Chamjf At 12 Pounds Salem Memorial hospital has a new "champ" In the largest baby division for 195(1. And It's doubtful If this year's record will be broken soon. A 12-pound, 6-ounre baby girl wii born Wednesday morning Is .Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Price, M Gerth Ave. Hospital author ities Immediately rrowned the young lady anofflrlal champ In the poundage division e( the stork derby. OakridgcArea Hardest Hit; Kails Out ; By THE ASSOCIATED TRESS ' Western Oregon's mountain streams began dropping back into their banks Wednesday, leaving debris and broken communication ' routes over a wide area. All Ihe way south from Detroit Dam to the California line the rivers, which surged upward from a Monday deluge and melting' snow, left damaged roads, bridges, farmlands and, in some few cases, damaged houses. Rain tapered off Wcdnesdnv. The Weather Bureau said, though, that more was coming. McKcnzle Near Rampage The McKenzie Hiver. which with ' its tributaries caused extensive damage to forest roads and bridges, crested Tuesday night at Coburg more than 3 feet over flood stage, then began a moder ately rapid fall. In the Oakridge area eommunl. cation routes were severely dam aged. The Southern PaciKc's rail. ' rono. Dnage at Salmon Creek was weakened and crews were put to work bolstering it so trains could resume service. The north, bound Cascade was held south ot Oakridge and the southbound Kla math was held at Oakridge but they were expected to be on their way again Dy early atlcrnoon. . The Willamette Hlohw.v ' though, will be closed for some days. Two sections of the highway, each about 250 feet long were washed out by Salt Creek 14 miles cast of Oakridge. The Sal. mon - Creek highway . bridge. '- at Oakridge was open, only to one- Water on McKenzie Highway si ill kept that rnute closed at Finn Dock. Two miles east of there Elk Creek bridge was expected to be closed for a day or two for re- pairs. This has isolated the resi dents of Blue River and McKenzie Bridge. Oakridge residents, who had a scare in the Tuesday night flood ing, were reassured when the wa ter began dropping swiftly. How ever, their drinking water supply was believed possibly contamin-, alcd and boiling was recommend ed by Mayor Kenneth L. Randall. South of Roscburg the South Umpqua River crested Tuesday night with several homes in the Winston area surrounded. No one was evacuated, though, and dam- " age was minor. Most of the trouble in that area, as elsewhere, came from tribu tary streams. Main channels were able in most cases to handle the water. The Rogue, for example, crested at Grants Pass five feet,' short of flood stage. Road and bridge damage was ? being surveyed Wednesday along . all of the Cascade and Coast Mountain tributaries. ' Detroit Homes Periled At the northern end ot Ihe flood troubles, 10 Forest Service men battled at Detroit Ranger Station to save their settlement when run-' off water cut a channel down a hillside and threatened homes, of- ' fices and maintenance buildings. ' They succeeded, with bulldoze, in scooping out a new channel. In the Ihannn area the South Santiam River swept onto farmer Glen Rrandel's pastureland and only quick response from neigh bors enabled him to save 16 head of trapped cattle. . t News in Brief . Wednesday. Dee. 12, Mht NATIONAL First Refugees Reach U.S. in Mass Airlift Sec. 1, P. 1 White Men Freed in Negro Flogging Sec. 1, Pi t . LOCAL Firemen Fish Money From Chimney Sec. 1, P, i STATE Flood Waters Damage Ore gon Roads, Bridges . Sec. 1, P. 1 Gunman Kills Friend, Wounds 3, Newport . Sec. 1, P. 1 FOREIGN Street Fighting Breaks Out Again in Hungary ..Sec. 1, P. 1 Irish Republicans Raid Ulster Sec. 1, P. i SPORTS Senator Stockholders Meet Tonight Sec. J. P. 1 Saxons Lose Sec. J, P. 1 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements .....Sec. 1, P. Editorials Sec, 1, P. 4 Locals - Sec. 1. P. S Society ..Sec. 1, P. ,7 Comics Sec. 1, P. I Television Sec. , P. 10 Want Ads Sec. J, P. 11, 12, IS Markets Sec. J, P. U Personal Problems ...Sec. 2, P. 7 Crossword Puzzle Sec. 2, P. I Home and Garden ..Sec. 2. P. 4. S t Christmas Story .Sec t, P.M