Capital jLJournal THE WEATHER MOSTLY CLOUDY with ihowera tonight; partly cloudy with scat lered ihowen, slightly cooler, Fri day. Low tonight, 38; high Friday, 47. 5 SECTIONS 56 Paget 68th Year, No. 297 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, December 13, 1956," ."T o,?,7 Price 5c Dictator Deposed In Haiti People Celebrate; Magloire Forced Inlo Exile Bv TtEI.MAN MORIN PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti WV- This strike-paralyzed capital came to life in wild celebration Thurs day with the radio announcement that Mai. Gen. Paul Magloire was preparing to leave the country. Magloire bowed to the "cold revolution" of a sitdown strike Wednesday night and quit as chief .of state. The people were not satisfied with this victory over nis week-old dictatorship, however, nd continued to strike Thursday. After the radio announcement the people at once began milling .hn,.l in th. drools hlaring auto- mobile horns and joyriding. 2 Killed, 5 Wounded A flurry of gunshots marked the release of political prisoners Wednesday night when a crowd gathered at the prison. Two per sons were killed and five wound ed. Army Col. L.H. Clermont, iden tified as the person responsible for the shooting, was gravely wounded. Hospital authorities de nied an earlier report that he died of his wounds. They also denied reports that police officers had taken his sons from the hospital during the night and shot them. Two soldiers and a sailor were wounded in the shooting, and two police officers were killed and a detective wounded in attempting to arrest Clermont. Political prisoners were re leased Wednesday night after Magloire resigned as chief of state. Anglo-French Pullout Might End Saturday LONDON (UP) A United Na tions spokesman said today in Egypt the evacuation of Anglo French troops from Port Said may be completed by Saturday. The statement was made in El Ballah, 34 miles south of Port Said, where Maj. . L. M. Burns, commander "of the U.N. Emergency Force (UNEF) let up his headquarters here. Bums Said his U.N. forces would leave Port Said as soon as the Anglo-French troops leave and "as soon as the civilian governor and Egyptian police forces have taken ever tne citv. ,,ul " - . Burns arrived Wednesday in an districts in Oregon is recommend American sedan with a white li-! r,Prt of ,he IfS'slative cense plate marked ''L'NKF 1." Mmm committee on education. His headquarters is a converted! These neetiy school districts ( schoolhouse on the banks of the " "P" P'ms are spreau SueI - through the stale. Thirty-eight are There has been one attack on al'n ,ne subiuuan area 12 British patrol, and a British offi-l'n lne northwest section of the cer was kidnaped Tuesday A Brit ish forces still were searching for the officer and his kidnapers. A few scattered shots were re ported in Port Said but no casual ties were reported. Hunters Gasp; But Cops Had Rescued Cars Two visiting duck hunters near ly had heart attacks Tuesday when they returned to where they had left their cars parked in Wallace park to find the area covered with several feet of water. , S?" Lh?.,-J cars and boat trailers at the water's edge and the rapidly- rising waters and sent a tow car, In l!HmVe 'he vchicleV on Oregon highway to see that this program is present io nigner ground. . C08W m two ed. Many of the things we advo- -in;.r.'.LT. ' . . u Places. A washout of a bridge at cate have found support among oK.cers that was one tow bill he J, , c k mil(,post AlM and' southern Democrats and many of; was overjoyed to pay when K." '",, milepost 22 5 are ex-! them Senator Johnson has sup ! L"'.nl .;r.r.fU7. I'"' peeled lo keep the highway closed 'ported. They probably will balk higher ground. The owner of a 19-w Buick sedan that was also moved to safe- j t&SSSi&DAFA bout parked near the water's edge after launching their boats sometime during the morning, officers said. E the time they returned in the afternoon, some two to three feet of water covered the area where the cars had been. Mother Wins Tanva Custody LONDON A British judge Thursday mled that little Tanya Cnwastov, baby pawn in an East- Mest struggle, should be brought UP,." ilTr;"n;.u , n - i - 1. j-j .i i ...is. nut", u.". . irtuw, year-old daughter, who was being jear-om o.usmrr , a, oeing bv heVRu i n he Tan". as taken off a Soviet ,e, . r-1ih rt nH a ' . . ... (MnhM. Ai.i. rtiwxim- . ih. rhilrt faiher foueht tn keen her rlaiminr hn former common-law I if abandoned Tanya. Treat, Not Teachers at South Salem were getting a treat gives the "master" a shoe shine. Both girls are Instead of a treatment Thursday as the schooPs on the committee which held a tea for the teachers female half participated In "Be Kind to Teachers today, all activities being part of the National Day." Coach Dick Rallantyne is getting a super Girls League week. (Capital Journal Photo) brushing job from Prg Hoffman while Pat Thor Interim Unit Urges $7 Million Aid to Needy School Districts Reorganize All Units Also to Be Sought By JAMES D. OLSON Capital Journal Writer An appropriation of $7 million i'r ,ne l357 M biennium to pro-1 Roads Reopen OverSantiam (See Picture Sec. J, Page S) North and South S.mtiam high- wavs 20 and 52 both were re- opened .0 two-way traffic Thurs- ciav mornini! state highway He tod a reporter betore leav-1'" u . , XiaTs said "W Willamette ing that his endorsement of a Hlrv. needs of the Pass is closed to easlbound traffic. eral program does not indicate, ea"calinnal Program. washout on Salt Creek. 15 opposition to the Senate leader-i Two factors have acted to m miles east of Oakridge, kept Wil- ship. He said Sen, Lyndon John- crease the difficulties faced by lamette pass closed sun of Texas would be the leader local school districts, the commit- The highway department rushed again. -M fo'.nd in its two year study, fill into sections of the North However, he added that "as 0np of 15 the raPd ,and con Santiam highwav Wednesday, ! members of Ihe majority parly. !nmn ,n.crcase ,n school popula-.-hoii n,,t npar Trout creek bv 1 wi shnulH nn-sent a sound, con-1 tlon requiring more teachers and a heavy runoff, and said additional work will be required although traffic can now pass over the filled area. remaining closures anothor a First Thor Missile ... . c it i x- n T f V il'Pl Th. I n..cnit oclnhiichmpnt of a Irain. . , :.'i...... r. ik. iir.i modl of a baliisfc missile that will travel 1 300 miles in a mailer of minutes, it was learned today, It mav actua'lv have been fired already' If so it was in the last few dav at the missile tet center ' . ... f . d,, in Fntia Th, (irjn scheduled is' secret. ' .d ,.,.' Ranse Ballistic Missile. That de- UeloDmenis are in the test stage . - ;- ... (.rf J , j t,i,rit7e 1 nwar fcMristlC 1 'Pan fest nen.s and target Clllri Oil IIIC IT.fl TV.. Air Fnr,y annrunred Wedn'dav that it would etiii-n ;a center on the West Coa-t to train men in firing ballistic miss- iUei. Treatment for ill j ; state, 31 in the southwest, four I in the central portion of the state and three in eastern Oregon. "This distribution" the report states, "indicates a shift in loca tion of school districts requiring aid from the Portland fringe area to other areas in the state." A recent study made by the Morse Leaves, Plans Return For Inaugural PORTLAND m Sen. Wayne i Morse was en route to Washing- ton Thursday to start his third term when Congress convenes the first week in January. He and Mrs. Morse left by auto Wednesday afternoon, and plan to visit relatives in Wisconsin on the waVi Mnrse said he would return Jan. 'or the inauguration of Robert D. HotaM as governor. structive liberal program. That is what we intend to do. "If the opposition in our party, wants to modify the program, let them do it. But we arc going to (on civil rights." to Fire :.. n.,.r,, anrf i h. lir.i itt lie. ing of a long range ballistic miss-' lie. it will probably be several years before the push button weapons are put in operational " smn iains aic nunm-i; complex, and huje technological problems are created by their j speed through space But the scheduled firing of the ''- "ilea inor. is an inaica-, ! tLTJZL o. ... -v...K . K , ,,, .nr,..H Ru55'' ""' . "'ve0P"1 lonIS "l " ; " rv K . Jackson "ii-Whi a mcrii- th! sau. Arm,d s,,rv,ce! J a.e,. mitt eric, said several months azo that.Russia ahead in develop. ment nf an tRBM and had already test flown missiles with about a 11,000 - mile range. Teachers state department of education re veals that Ihe 'distressed school districts will require $17,702,100 in the next two years to provide ade quate housing for double-shifted, over crowded and substandard classrooms and projected enroll ment increases, the report states. "With a remaining bonding capacity of $8,698,636, these dis tricts will require an additional $9,103,414 to provide for their building needs," the committee re- ZXr ".hi. the above figure tremcly conservative. A bill has been pre pared requesting an appropriation of S7. 000,000 for the biennium to nF..lA r tuH ......... -, provide for the more urgent ' ,i supports neorganrauon Th committee will also recom-1 mpna 8 providing tor reorgan- j to 4 leH Mow noo(J cv(, hcre (nation of all school districts in the Tnc Sanijam in lne Jefferson state, tthile it is not contemplated arra was Ml abovc f)ood sla!(, lhal boundaries of all districts be.thj, morning. measured at 14 1 altered, the committee says it is 1 fc.t nut thal wa, a ,jx.f00t drop 1 intended that all will be examined ; from ne crest. in the hope that effective and efli-1 nnlv 9 trar. nf rainfall wa. r. cient districts will result. Such 'r'c's' 'lal' niore classrooms. The second is the increased cost ol the education program, the report continued. Much of this is due lo inflation and rising costs (Continued on Page 5, Column I) . . rrPCT StrtllC II I CS)l CHOUS r. I lhett or Lar A 14-y ear-old Portland boy ad-' mittrd to city police early Thurs-! day that he and two friends had stolen a car in Portland and; abandoned it in Salem. The car is registered to Peter J. Emler, Port-1 land, officers said. 1 The confession came after the u i,.nH hiH. . . i-l the 300 block of Leslie street about 5"""n Si"f . We u'ou p3ml ' 4 a.m. He later admitted that the,,!r,fn and leave them lh' road three were intending to steal that ln lr'"" 01 lhe "" 'anks. 'car and head south, police said I "Tn' "V'i Rusians would slop Tha other youths were not at the ,helr lanllt- think 11. . the plates SC(a(. at ln(. t,me 0( nl, arrest'"1"7 "- lnr" e wouia anri nrj ...1 kin nnr.h. nn. 1 heave Molotov cocktails in Ihe t(l 1, sai(j Tn(.jr iifs u. given as 14 and 15 by the arrested y0tJth Tnc ,rres,jn mc ,aid hc :ha nottd 'he m en car earlier in lhe morntnff and later saw the ear abandoned lh 300 block of S0"'" l-'berty "rt- 'f'r''men were callgl at the! .me because of smoke com.ng 'i i. nt- !IU'S' i snor,:n8 battery ca' " The youth was enpeded In be turned mer to Portland authori- JUea Thursday arternoon, No Floods Due From New Rain 2 Deaths Blamed On Weather in S. Oregon By I'NITED PRESS Most of western Oregon slowly returned to normal today follow ing sudden floods but heavy rains continued to drench the southwest section of the state where at least two deaths were blamed on the weather. A total of 4.07 inches of rain fell on Brookings in the 24-hour period ending at 4:30 a.m. today. More than three -inches of rain fell there in a 24-hour period ear lier in the week. More rain was expected throughout western Oregon today and tonight but it was not expect ed to have the flooding effect brought earlier n the week when rain combined with warm temper atures to melt snow and 'send tributary streams out of their banks. Victims Listed North Bend in Coos county got 42 inches of rain while Newport to the north received 1.05. The flood victims, both in Coos county, were Edward L. St. Den nis, 43, a Weyerhaeuser Timber Company employe, feared drown ed when a boat capsized, and John G. McTcague, 41, who suf fered a heart attack while fleeing the rising Coquille river. Also being investigated was a report that cries for help were heard early Wednesday at Myrtle Point near the Spruce creek bridge. Dragging operations were scheduled when the Coquille river there returned to normal. Slides and washouts still ham pered highway traffic. Southern Pacific railroad passenger trains were delayed several hours yes terday because or a bridge closure near Oakridgc. Santtam Drops S 1-eet The Sdntiam river, which reach ed 19 feet at Jefferson yesterday, had dropped nearly five feet to 14.2 this morning. The Willamette was expected to crest at Albany before noon today below, flood stage.. Small tributary streams which caused much of the trouble were back in their banks. Valley Rivers Crest; Minor Flooding Due Rivers in the lower valley were cresting Thursday in the current iS" P"iod with only minor ""k iuc 11 ui" ,m i c un 1 But more rain is in sight, meaning 1 more high water trouble should heavy amounts come ft aaiem, me tviiianieuc was , . . .,.. n.u j clocked at 15.2 feet Thursday morning and was due to hit ifi fC(!t today, the crest fluctuating in forecasts. At least it will be 3.5 ordpd tar Salfm in lhe 24.hour Period ending at 10:30 a.m. More showers are due tonich! and Friday, but cooler tempera tures al.so are moving in. Refugee Says Russ 'StupuV In Street War CAMP KILMER, N. J. OB A '0l'n? vcleran "J B'aPt street fighting says the Russians arc stupid, that Hungary's rebels could have beaten them if proper ly armed. Robert Yank, who looks even younger than his 19 years, pro claimed his scorn of the Russians Wednesday when he arrived among 1IW Hungarian refugees, the first group airlifted from Eu rope in II, S. military planes. Dressed in odd and ends nf clothing. Yank said his home is in Pilismarot, Hungary, and he had fought Soviet forces for three weeks in Budapest. ' We used to lake two plains and secure them tuaellier." th' ' tanks and set them afire. We got lot ot them that way. i. Vank said he and his friends . finally had to fall back before ! superior numhers and he fled his ' nome ana a lew weeks aco.u BKBROAflCAST TV OKAVRD WH..VCTO.V Appl, of L. s-ovall. Maup.a. n f)rc rftr . rhannrl 71 If miiimi lafir.n that willre-hroadca prozrams : ol ran land station hOI.NTV was approved Wednesday by the Fed era! Communications Commu jsion. Hung 'Remain on trike m neprisal tor Grab of Labor Leaders MILD CALL FOR FREEDOM NA TO Quiets Russ Fears of East Europe Liberation War By JOSEPH E. DVXAM PARIS (fl The Atlantic Alliance called Thursday for freedom in Eastern Europe but pledged itself against a war of liberation. ! Foreign ministers of the North' Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) endorsed a five-point dec-l Juration of ptilicy on Kastern Ku rope submitted by West German Foreign Minister lleinrich von Brent a no. i NATO officials emphasized that; the declaration is a Western stale ment of policy designed to quiet any fears in Russia that the West is preparing to launch an attack to liberate the peoples of Eastern Europe. I Rut Von Brcnlano said the peo ples of Eastern Europe have a right to know the free world's atti tude toward their struggle for freedom. He said NATO must not encourage any militant action or Allies Demand Access to U.S. Atom Weapons PARIS Ifl America's Atlantic allies, including West Germany, Thursday demanded access ' to! tactical atomic weapons as essen tial to their own self defense. U.S. Secretary of Defense Wil son told the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Council he would give his reply Friday. The European demand for access to American-built atomic weapons runs counter to American legisla tion which restricts control of nu clear weapons to Ihe President. Under Ihe MacMahon Act, only the President can order the use of atomic weapons. He is not per mitted to send or soil such weap ons to any other nation, not even America's closest allies. j The demand for atomic firepow-l er came after Lt. On. Leon John- son. American member of the NATO military standing group, j told the council Ihe risks of world-! wide war through a Soviet mis-! calculation are today greater than ever. He said this danger had been accentuated hy recent events in Eastern Europe and the Mid dle East. i Tass Blasts Nixon's Trip (Also see story on Page 2, Sec. 1) MOSCOW (UP) The official Soviet news agency Tass charged today that Vice President Richard M. Nixon is going to Austria to stir up "Hungarian counter-revolutionaries." A Tass dispatch from New York, reporting Nixon's planned trip to Austria next Tuesday, described Ihe Vice President s mission as "supporting the Hungarian counter-revolutionary underground and reactivating it behind poorly con cealed 'humane goals.1" '.Nixon's mission is considered here as a mission of "veiled inter ference in Hungary's internal af fairs,'" the Tass dispatch said. It added that the Austrian gov ernment is eagerly making "in terference" possible. SKCKKCY LIFTED ON' AEC Reveals U-Orc Production Has Been Doubled in Past Year WASHINGTON' The Atom ic Knergv Cominishion 'AKd re ported Thursday that the rate of IS. uranium oxide production ha doubled in less than a yp;ir. This was Ihe first release of siifh information, in lire with a nw policy announced Wednesday nlzht with the aim of speeding developments of peaceful atomic power. I' S, mills currently are pro ducing at an annual rate of more than 8.000 tons of uranium oxide, compared with 4.000 tons at the beginning of the year, the AKC said. I'ranium -jxide is a concentrate that may be refined into metal for nuclear reactors or into rhem irals for gseniis diffuOvi plantf. The I'nited State)", Britain and Canada announced Wednesday i night they will release much in uprising that could spill over into Western Europe. Instead the At lantic Alliance should strive to in fluence (events through economic and social contacts. The foreign ministers directed (hat the declaration be incorpora ted in the closing communique which will sum up the work of the current meeting of foreign, fi nance and defense ministers from the 15 NATO nations. The five points submilted by Von Brent ano were: 1. All peace-loving peoples shall support the right of the nations of i Eastern Europe to self-detcrmina-' tion and self-government in full: freedom. 2. The political order In the countries of Eastern Europe shall bo based on national independ-i ence, sovereignty and the banning of any imperialistic subjugation of small nations. LATE FLASHES OAKRIDGE m Crewi were working Thursday In efforts to prevent Salmon Creek f r m changing Its channel to a new course that would flood a half dozen hlAllCS, UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. UP Hungarian Foreign Minister lmre Ilorvath was reported to day to have booked passage on the French liner Liberie leavltff- New York Friday. Eastern Eur- oprao sources said he was re turning lo Budapest io replace Janos Kadar as premier. Laiifflie Friend Shot to Death ByaNeighhor OLYMP1A UP William W. Ward, hearing-aid dealer and golf ing partner of Gov. Arthur B.I Langlie, was fatally shot early to day in the garage of a neighbor,' Sheriff Clarence A. Vanallen re ported. Vanallen said the shooting oc curred about 2:1(0 a.m. in the garage of Louis I. Dung an about three miles northwest of here. Dungan. an e m p I o y e of the Rainier Ordnance Depot, told of ficers he fired two shots from a 12-gauge shotgun through a locked door linking the Dungan's kitchen and garage after hearing shouts and pounding on Ihe door. Dungan was questioned, but not held. Prosecutor Hewitt Henry and Coroner Kenneth I'artlow were called in to investigate. Vanallen said Ward's residence two doors from Dungan's was or identical structure. "Ward was re turning from the Olympic Country club by loot and evidently got into the wrong house, the sheriff said According to Vanallen, Dungan believed someone was trying lo break into his home. Weather Details Maximum yetrday, 91; minimum today, 41. Tola I 24 -hour prrrlplU llon; trar: for mnitlh: 1.91; normal, 2.1ft. firaion prf rliillallnn, lit. 11; nor mal, M.l) A. niver h'liht, 1.1.2, diir to hit l rrt. (Rrporl by IS. I. Wathr Bureau.) RESERVES formation on nuclear power tech-1 niques and resources heretolure kept from the public. AKC said in explanation that the world is "on the th-eshold of practical atomic powrr development " j The first outgrowth of the new polit y was the report on uranium j oxide output. It was accompanied I bv an estimate that the trnitedi , States had AO million tons of ! ' uranium ore reserves as of Nov. ! i l- ! Of these reserves. M.4 pr cent! were in New Mexico. The restl , were distributed percentagewise j i as follows: L'tah 125. Colorado j fi 8, Arizona 4 3, Wyoming 3.8. 1 Washington 2 5 and all other states 1 7. 1 i Th information was given wit simultaneou'lv wiih an estimate in Ottawa that Canada has 22 million tons of known reservef of , the ore. I 3. All nations in Eastern Europe shall have the right to decide for themselves and in full freedom on the social order in their territor ies. 4. The internal development of the countries of Eastern Europe shall not be influenced by military force or threats or by economic or political pressure. .This point evidently would apply to NATO countries as well as Russia.) 5. The human rights of the popu lation of the countries of Eastern Europe shall be inviolable. Von Rrentano had warned the council that if Hungary's revolu tion fever spread to Communist East Germany, nobody could tell how big the blowup would be. But he toned down his warning with the observation that 22 Russian divisions stand ready to smash any German uprising in the East. Northwest Red Activity Probe On in Seattle SEATTLE W1 A subcommittee of the House Un-American Adiv- ilies Committee opened a two-day hearing here Thursday with a statement by Us chairman that the Communist Party now Is con ducting a campaign of political subversion in (his. country, :The hearing into Communist- front activities in the Pacific Northwest got under way after Federal Judge John C. Dowen turned down a petition by which iivo imneis ui in r. a.iiiiiiKiiii i jured irom a factory building to Committee for the Protection of i a conference in Kadar's Parlia Ihe KoreiRn Horn sought to halt ment building. the proceedings, Subcommittee chairman Rep. Clyde Doyle (U-Califl said in an opening statement that the Com munist Party "is attempting to rob the United Stales of its legal defenses against ultimate con quest by an alien conspiracy," Mrs. Barbara llartle, lornier top woman Cominmunist in Wash ington stale, was to be one ol the first witnesses. Mrs. Harlle, who testified in 1954 before the same committee, came from Spokane. She now is living on a farm north of (here with her father and sister. Doyle noted that his subcom mittee has Just completed similar hearings in Chicago, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and San Fran cisco. The sworn testimony which we have received, he said, shows clearly that the Communist paign ol political sub ersion ranks iuuoy .- . ............... one ol threats to our form of govern ment Rita Ketimis After 1 Year NKW YORK (I'PI Film star Rita llayworth arrived today aboard Ihe liner United Stales alt er a year's sojourn abroad. The llamehaired actress was accompanied by her daughters Rebecca. II, whose father is Or son Welles, and Yasmin, 6, whose faihcr is Prince Aly Khan. They will go lo Beverly Hills, Calif., for Christmas alter spending a few days in New York. The commission listed 12 urani um mills now in operation anil said eight new mills, lor wliuli contrails have been negotiated, are scheduled for completion in !i:7 or early IMS. Among the new mills are one at Ford. Wash , lo be operaled by the Dawn Mining Co, with a capacity of 400 tons of ore daily. AKC said the U S., British and Canadian action in removing the secrecy labels will make avail able to Industry and anyone else who wants it "a large proportion" nf the "many categories" of In formation on atomic reactors which have been open only to those cleared to obtain it. For Ihe first time, all restric tions will be removed on Ihe pub lication of statistics on overall uranium ore reserves, and pres ent and future ore concentrate production figures. Kadar Suicide Amid Chaos Humored-. By ENTIRE MARTOV BUDAPEST m Tens of thons and of Budapest workers quit . work again Thursday only a few nours after returning to their fac. tories at the end of a two-day na tionwide general strike. The new walkout was in protest against the arrest of the chairman of the Budapest Central Workers' . council and his chief assistant by the Russian-Imposed govern ment of Premier Janos Kadar. There was a total walkout of 15,000 workers in the industrial llth District of Budapest, which has many textile and tool plants. Serov in Charge Informed sources reported the boss of Russia's secret police. Gen. Ivan Serov. has taken over control of Kadar's government in a desperate effort to end the con tinuing widespread resistance to communism and Moscow control. The situation in Hungary was so chaotic that the Russians were re ported running matters entirely. A Hungarian source said Serov "is now running what is left of the Kadar regime, whose members are fighting among themselves." Serov is an expert at repres sion and deportation. The new strike was touched olf by the arrests of Sanfor Racz,: Workers' Council, and his deputy, Sandor Bari. Walkout Spreads Ronldlr The walkout spread r.nlJI. among plants in the capital when me workers heard of the arrests. More stoppages were expected to follow in provincial cities and towns when they got the news. ' "We continue the strike until Kacs is back." crowds of worker' told Western correspondents. ine workers were especially m- censed by ihe reports that Raca Und RaH W.M .niriwl .flat h.intf "Doubleeross" was a healed word on the streets of Budapest as the reports circulated that the two officials had been arrested by a Communist trick. The approaches to the Parlia ment building, scat of the govern ment since the outbreak of the re bellion, were blocked Thursday by masses of Russian tanks and armored cars. Kadar Said Suicide Rumors circulated through the capital that Kadar had commit ted suicide or vanished. The ru-, mors could not be checked, how ever, and appeared to be mora, wishful thinking than anything else. There was no way of know ing unless the government makes an announcement. At least six persons were killed in rjots ai)d c8snM wi,n Russian cam-,lr00D, gnd communist Hungarian plke 6uring tne general walkout mesaay ana Wednesday. The communications blackout on Iliinxiiry wns lifted at least tem porarily shortly before noon' Thursday atter Western corres pondents protested to the Hungar- ' ian Foreijjn Ministry. Telephone -culls to Western Kurope had been , impossible since Monday. rt Serov. the Soviet secret polict; chief, has a long record in con nection with deportations from the t Soviet Union. News in ISricf For Thursdav, Dec. 1, ISM NATIONAL , NW Rod Hearing Opens in Seallle Sec. 1, P. 1 AKC Reveals Figures On I'ranium Output Sec. 1, P. I LOCAL Stork Has Big Hay Sec. 1. P. S Early Dentihls tsed Real Pain Killer Sec. J, P. 7 Santa and Secret Room Sec. 3. P. 8 STATE ' Interim (iroiip I'rges Aid To Newly Schools Sec. 1, P. 1 FORK KIN Hungarians Remain On lieneral Strike Sec. 1, P. 1 I'N Condemns Russian Acts in Hungary Sec. 1. P. 2 SPORTS Senator Stockholders Approve Partnership Plan Sec. 4, P. 1 WU Grid Stars on Second all-Northwest Sec. 4, P. 2 RKfil'LAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 1 Editorials Sec. 1, P. 4 Locals . Sec. 1, P. 3, Sec. 3, P. 12-13 Society Comics Television ... Sec. 3. P. 1-J Sec. J, P. 10 Sec. 3. P. 14 Sec. 4. P. 3-4-5 See. 3, P. 14 i Want Ads .. Markets . ... Dorothy Dix Sec. 1. P. 14 Crossword Fuzile Food Sec. J. P- Iff a a SAC I