Salem, Oregon", Thursday, December 13, 1956 'T&ge Z-SecKorl I' THE CAPITAL JOURNAL' 1 D Id m m VI pi III m Di ch PS! he "C ohi thil Dr. pla car Dla of I b.u 0 55-8 UN Vote Flays Russia's Hungary Acts ' Condemnation Resolution Calls on : Soviet to Pull Out Troops at ; Once Under Supervision By TOM HOGE I UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. Wl 1 The U.N. General Assembly con demned Russia last night for tamping out Hungary's freedom bid. The vote split Asia's (our "neutral" Colombo nations as well as the entire Asian-African group of countries. The resolution, sponsored by the United States and 19 other coun tries, was adopted by the Assem bly 55-8 with only the Soviet bloc casting negative ballots. It was the strongest censure the Assem bly has voted against the Russian military action in Hungary. The resolution also called on Moscow to pull its troops out of Hungary at once, under U. N. supervision. It asked the Russians to ' "permit the re-establishment of ; the political independence of Hungary." Yugoslavia, Finland and 11 of the Asian-African group ol nations abstained on the condemnation resolution. But 12 other members ef the Asian-African group voted against the Soviets. India and the other three Co lombo nations Indonesia, Ceylon and Burma had joined earlier In sponsoring a mildly phrased counter-resolution expressing re gret the Russians had not with drawn from Hungary. But in tnc vole on the U.S. resolution Ceylon and Burma voted to condemn the Soviets, while India and Indonesia abstained as expected. Observers said Russia's delega tion was more concerned over the aplit in the Colombo group, on whom the Soviets had counted for at least implied support, than over the resolution itself. The Russians have ignored two previous Assem bly calls for withdrawal of their forces from Hungary. Sources close to the Burmese Ike Note to On Hungary Sighted Bv JOHN M. HK.HTOWKR WASHINGTON un President Eisenhower probably will write to Russian Premier Bulganln shortly urging action on withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary as a step toward brightening prospects for talks on arms reduction. U. S. officials say the use of Russian troops to smash anti-Moscow revolts in Hungary has creat ed a bad climate for disarma ment talks expected to begin in1 the United Nations early next I year. (They said that climate could be greatly improved if the Soviet gov ernment would return to its Octo ber promise to negotiate with ( Hungary and other Eastern Euro- pean states as a step toward ul timate withdrawal of the troops. Foreign policy matters arc prominent on the list of problems facing Eisenhower on his schcd-t tiled return to the capital late to-! day from a vacation at Atlanta, Ga. Current attention focuses on his talks beginning Sunday with Prime Minister Nehru of India. The climate for those talks ap peared to have been improved by the disclosure yesterday that Am bassador V. K. Krishna Menon will not be a member of Nehru's offi cial party. Menon, Nehru's most trusted foreign affairs adviser, is widely mistrusted by Washington officials. The proposed Eisenhower letter to Bulganln has been under con sideration for about a month. It will be a reply to a lengthy litil ganin declaration on disarmament which the President received in mid-November. One Russian proposal was fur a system of mutual aerial in.sec tion extending approximately 500 miles on each side of Ihe Iron Curtain. This has excited interest in offi cial quarters here because it marked something of a reversal from Rulgamn's rejection of the LOCK POSTS BOND PORTLAND (UPl-An lllh per son was taken into custody yes terday in connection with indict ments charging fraudulent sale of plywood co-operative stock. W. W. Lock. 77, Salem was the only per son indicted that had not been taken into custody earlier. He sur rendered to the U.S. marshal and posted $2500 bond. lumber production in the United States Is about 36 per cent of the world's total. .. . . I HELD OVEKI I i atSiL ialaaL Q M . int-iWM I I riM BCRMAHONEY W Ml DAY JOURDAN I j f3?n nn huding ' lsUlilVAN-LOVEJOYl I -rus- IkJULIEVI I DOCTOR AT SEA II and Ceylonese said they final ly had decided it was time to take a firm stand no matter whose feet got stepped on. Burmese Del egate U I'e Kin declared no nation had the right to coerce other na tions, and we have seen ir Hungary that the Soviet Union In sists on coercion." Chief U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. termed the split in the Asian-Alrican nations "very significant" because "it shows that many countries feel there must be one rule for everybody if aggression is bad in the East, it is also bad in the West." Lodge and his cosponsors made one concession to the Colombo group's milder resolution, incor porating into their own a request to U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to take any steps he deemed helpful "in relation to the Hungarian problem." India Delegate V. K. Krishna Menon and his associates had proposed that Hammarskjold be asked to go to Budapest and Moscow, if necessary, to negotiate for the Soviet troop withdrawal. Otherwise the Assembly on voice votes rejected amendments with which Menon sought to soften the condemnation of the Soviets. Menon finally withdrew his own resolution without a vote on it. The Asian African group split this way in the condemnation vote: abstaining Afghanistan, I Cambodia, Egypt, India, Indone-1 sin, Jordan, Morocco, Saudi Ar abia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen; for condemnation Burma, Cey lon. Ethiopia, Iran Laos, Leb anon, Libya, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Thailand and Tunisia.' South Africa and Hungary, both boycotting the Assembly, and Haiti were absent from the vote. I Bukanin "open skips" exchange between1 the United States and Russia! which Eisenhower proposed at the; Geneva summit conference in 1955. Officials indicated Eisenhower's' reply to Bulganln on this point! would welcome Soviet acceptance of the aerial inspection principle i without agreeing to the particular ' zone arrangement which the Rus sians suggested. NOW SHOWINGI WAIT DISHEYS IMAN in y s. V CMHICI.O-' -AISO- Clark Gafile Spencer Tracy in 'BOOM TOWN" NOW PLAYINGI mum " m w But we Truth! For Your Added Entertainment HILARIOUS mTr JSC t3t 0 HARA " From Niagara Falls to Lake Louise And Sun Valley! 'Honeymoon Paradise" Bomb Planted By IRA Found Near Warship BELFAST, Northern Ireland (J) A crudely made time bomb, believed planted by Irish Repub lican Army terrorists, was found early Thursday near a British de stroyer in Belfast Harbor. Hundreds of police pushed a wide search for HtA raiders who struck across 20 mijps of British North Ireland Wednesday. The bomb, packed in a small suitcase, was found by workmen near the destroyer Caroline. Po lice said it was set to detonate at 2:30 a.m. Friday. In Wednesday's raids, IRA men set fire to a courthouse, blew up a British Broadcasting Corp. transmitting tower and attacked a British army barracks and RAF radar station. The IRA seeks to drive the Brit ish out of the six counties com prising Northern Ireland, and unite them with the Irish Repub lic in the south. APPRECIATIVE HUNTERS HILLSDALE, Mich. (UP) alan A. Davis gave two hunters per mission to hunt on his farm while he was away. When he returned he found a rabbit, dressed and ready for cooking, in a kettle on his stove. Itaptaeippaaaefia i j ' Vissj 8-AM0ND f ! ' l 30 DAY ' : I MONEY BACK I wrfllW ZJ2g, J E GUARANTEE rl H llllMl gf j0?k I iiiii i m vmyr mm - m iif &r jfmmmnmm 100 TRADE-IN LTVfe! II ALLOWANCE trWv r DIAMOND 3-DIAMOND S-DIAMOND EMERALD-CUT " ' SOLITAIRE 14K GOLD RING UK GOLD RING DIAMOND V t i SSSSS-- 'V- 62w '89so W '20000. Ut"V'i I135WIIKIV $1 7i WEEKLY $2 00 WEEKLY Tj WEEKLY ' I LIFETIME DIAMOND f 1WT 1 1 Give America's Top I I ! : SERVICE Christmas Gift-Watches h Ilghlm png 1 .n, Una. fesf'vZ foiilt Ml if l W J fXl ENSEMBLE VXYfftW'St 1 B lh Jt "The Diamond Store of Salem"l wchaN. J3&, :H lmhaaimro5.:5:"'J "mrn .5 t s state ajq ubkri xS0r '85 $ !!mwwowihm1 II &incaigwi; ' I "''"" I ? UK Nixon to Refugee AUGUSTA, Ga. m-Vice Presi dent Nixon will fly to Austria next week at President Eisenhower's request for first-hand study of Hungarian refugee problems. On return he will recommend what further aid tha United States can give. In announcing plans for the Nixon trip last r.iyhl. While House press secretary James C. Hager- Tass Withholds UN Action News MOSCOW Wl A Tass dispatch Thursday reported that the U.N. General Assembly had wound up its debate on a resolution con demning Soviet action in the Hun garian revolution, but Tass did not say the resolution had passed. Tass charged that the resolution, sponsored by the United States and 19 countries "repeats previ ous slanderous claims against the Soviet Union and the Hungarian People's Republic, and condemns the Soviet Union for putting down a counter-revolutionary putsch." The resolution was adopted 55-8. The world's thinnest watch is the same size as a U.S. quarter. IV DIAMOND MAN'S FIERY JI-DIAMOND Ak i BULOVA "11 -e-W-n ONYX RINO DIAMOND 3 ROW BAND tftZXZr Self-Windar ? M &&ffik '24S0 $49M '9950 fflBmA9 1 Fly to Austria on Mission Next Week ty said in reply to questions that f whether to admit more than 21,500 Hungarian victims of Soviet op pression to this country will await the Vice President's report to Ei senhower and Congress. The President already has au thorized that number. Together with arranging for Nixon to visit Austria, into which more than loo.ono Hungarians have fled, Eisenhower created a 15-member presidential commit tee on Hungarian refugee relief. The committee was set up on recommendation of Tracy S. Voorhees, the President's per sonal representative in charge of coordination of the relief program in this country. It is headed by Lewis W. Douglas, former am bassador to Great Britain, as hon orary chairman. Voorhees is ac tive chairman and the vice chair man and director is Gen. J. Law ton Collins, former Army chief of staff and now U, S. representa tive on the North Atlantic Alliance Military Committee and Standing Group. Other members include rep resentatives of Protestant, Cath olic and Jewish organizations which have been dealing with the Hungarian refugee problem. I In addition to its coordinating functions, the Presidents vaca tion headquarters here said "the committee will be a focal point to which offers of assistance to refugees, such as jobs, homes and educational opportunities, can be directed and referred to the appropriate agencies." The White House statement said Nixon will leave Washington Tues day and return Dec. 23. It added that the purpose is consultation with American, Austrian and in ternational relief agency officials on problems "relating to relief and resettlement of Hungarian refugees." -Completely Remodeled centrally located BANQUET FACILITIES Group Meetings From 10 to 100 People j 440 Store PHONE 3-50T6J Damage Suit Seeks $42,585 Damages totaling $42,583 are sought in two complaints filed in Marion county circuit court Wed nesday, involving a single traffic accident of Sept. 12. The suits were filed by Richard R. Patten, as administrator of the estate of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Patten, who lost their lives as the result of a car-logging truck collis sion east of Sweet Home on the South Santiam highway. Defendants in Ihe litigation are the Cascade Trucking company of Lebanon, truck owner, and Melvin R. Schlight, Veneta, Ore., who was driving the vehicle. Each of the two complaints charges negligence on the part of the defendants. I rmmr lAAn I IIIUVIA LVrtE NAVEL - iAGS By The $69 BOX mmSk By Ihe lb: 9' A Tofer Bag of BANANAS Sweet Potatoes 5 lbs. (or 28-OZ. JAR MINCE MEAT 39' MELLORINE LIKE ICE 2-LB. BOX VELVEETA POWDERED OR BROWN SUGAR ZEE WAX PAPER 019' STRONGHEART DOG FOOD LARGE 46-OZ. CAN TOMATO JUICE 23' Fancy Beef ip PotRoaslib. JL LAMB NECI(to , 15' VEAL STEW ,,, 19' VEAL STEAK ,,49' FRESH HOME MADE HEADCHEESE 25' Smoked Jowls ,b19' MED. 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