Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, December 17, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

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    Capital AJouriial
THE WEATHER
CLOUDY WITH rain tonight and
occasional showers tomorrow. Low
tonight, 42; high Tuesday, 50.
SECTIONS
32 Pages
68th Year, No. 300 Salem, Oregon, Monday, December 17, 1936 .TV
cecond dm
Price 5 c
Silrm Oregon
12 Die as Packed Car Runs In
enix
sjq aucsna
1 rain
Wreck Is
Worst of
Kind Ever
Only Slight Jolt
Felt on Train,
It Goes On
PHOENIX. Ariz, tfl Twelve
persons were killed Monday when
the old model car into which they
were jammed collided with a
crack passenger train at the west
ern edge 'of Phoenix.
A thirteenth occupant of the
car, an 18-month-old girl, was
critically injured.
It was the worst wreck of its
kind on record.
The death td!I, originally placed
at 11, was raised at mitimorning
when police searching through
brush at the accident scene found
the body of a young boy.
Bodies Widely Scattered
Bodies wore scattered over a
large area. The body of a woman
weighing about 250 pounds 'was
found 300 feet from the Car's chas
sis. The shattered car was traced
through its license plate to a Sac
ramento, Calif., man, but he said
he had sold the car, a 1938 Chev
rolet, to a Phoenix resident.
Police later tentatively identi
fied 11 dead, presumed to be Phoe
nix residents, as:
Juan Alircs Sr., 59; Juan Alt'
res Jr., 21; Victor Alircs, 29;
Clara Alires, -21; Sofi Alircs, 28;
Mike Alircs. 8 months; Steven i
Alires, 10; David Alires, 8; Bob-'
by Alires, 3; Leroy Johnson, 36,
and Johnny Massery, 36. J
A woman, about 40, remained -
unidentified.
No one on the train, the South
ern Pacific's Golden State Limited,
was injured.
Find Flesh on Engine
In fact, no one on the train
knew about the accident until they
pulled into Union Station, about
three miles from the crash scene.
Crew members then spotted bits
of human flesh and a car fender
on the forward truck of the second
half of the diesel engine.
Mortuary attendants said
mangled bodies were those of five
(Continued on Page 5, Column 5)
Bomb Threats
Flung at Eden
LONDON HI Scotland Yard
rushed special officers and police
men to Parliament and Prime
Minister Eden's residence Monday
after receiving bomb threats.
An extensive search was carried
out but nothing was found to sub
stantiate a mysterious telephone
call to Scotland Yard reporting a
plan to bomb Parliament and No.
10 Downin,, St.
The special precautions were
taken because of a recent but
burst of activity by the Irish
Republican Army URAL
IRA men struck at more than
20 British installations last week
in the six counties which comprise
Northern Ireland, part of the
United Kingdom Attacks included
bombs, dynamitings, and theft of
weapons.
2 Tillamook Boatmen
Perish in Heavy Sea
TILLAMOOK. Ore. Ul A fast )
running tide swept two men and
their disabled boat into towering
seas on the Tillamook Bay bar j
late Sunday afternoon and search :
for the wreckage started at dawn !
waay , , , I Law, about 45, an Elks Club em- L.
ThC fVL? ca!,mcrLand "Mplove. and Joe Chacartegui. alAEAT
was a 1,500-foot ceiling but a light ,neep, hoth of Tillamook had
rain was falling as beach patrols ;
were organized and light planes?
prepared to scan the beach and
Safe Cracked
At Silverton,
$1,300 Taken
S1LVERTON (SpeciaD-A safe
cracking netted burglars about
$1,300 in cash and checks at the
Silverton Drug Co., here early
"iii
The thieves tipped the small
..... .... !.- .-j ;.j
f "rcc.r "?u,cu;it
ine aoor O w ui loois louna m
the store, Sheriff Denver Young
..U Th. lima nt h,t.nlaru
,.i a am hu an ai.t.; I
clock on which ' the plug was '
pulled by the thieves in pulling
the safe away from the wall, he
said. t
The "take" included about $800
in cash and $300 in checks, owner
Fred Parkinson said.
Entrance to the store was made
throuch a ventilator n the roof '
and exit was made through a rear
tiuar. officers said.
Sunday, the Marion county sher- Pu," " 7 hld OT were infanls bassinels-! in private homes, hotels and mo
ifs oflice reported. I but n ' Their average age was between tcis
Oregon Electors Meet to Vote for Ike
President Eisenhower will toon be officially named to office as
electors from Oregon joined with those turn other atatea Monday
in casting their electoral college voles. Oregon's six. which met at
the capilol building at noon, are shown signing the ballots and include
(left to right) William E. Hanzen, Pendleton; James C. Hatfield.
Salem; Lowell C. Paget, Portland, Zenas A. Olson. Milwaukie;
Mel R. Allen, Grants Pass, and J. P. Johnson, Tigard. (Capital
Journal Photo)
Six Oregon Electors
Cast Ike-Nixon Votes
Oregon's six Republican presi
dential electors had their few fleet
ing moments ofr glory Monday
when they met to cast their votes
for President Eisenhower and
Vice-President Nixon.
They signed the official certifi
cates after considerable small talk
about voting for Joe Smith and
for states rights candidates. Ac
tually, they could have voted for
anybody whom they pleased.
Oregon electors, however, al
ways vote for the candidates get
ting the largest popular vote.
The ceremony took only a few
minutes. The electors signed six
copies of the official certificate,
one of which goes to Washington,
D.. C.
The certificates had the names
of Eisenhower and Nixon printed
on them, as Secretary of State Earl
T. Newbry assumed the electors
would support the Republican can
didates. Niel R. Allen, Grants Pass, was
elected chairman of the electors,
and William E. Hanzen, Pendleton,
secretary.
A spectator at the ceremony was
Chief Justice Harold Warner of
the Oregon Supreme Court. He is
the only surviving person among
the Oregon electors who voted for
Herbert Hoover in 1928.
Each elector got $3 plus IS cents
a mile for the day's work.
They signed extra copies of the
certificates for , personal memen
toes. "There is not a chance the men
survived," Chief Boatswain's
Mate Earl A. Ericksen of the
Coast Guard station at nearby
Garibaldi said,
The mcn in the boat, uVert
heen crUising aDOut Tillamook
Bav and attracted no particular
nolice unti their 16.foot boat
moved out toward the bay en
trance. Then one of the men was seen
trying to start the engine. This
failed and as the boat disappeared
into the heavy seas at the bar,
both men were seen sitting in the
stern.
The Coast Guard was called.
"We went down part way to the
bar,-' Ericksen said, "but it was
too heavy for us to cross out."
Ericksen said the tide would
, ....... . . .
."'" i " " , jv.
sized and probab r destroyed. For:
to have survived the ballerina !
- . .'
unpvsMu.c. c
ing. "we have a ve: rough bar
here,
T"e light planes were to follow
the line of the beach and to look
out to sea as well. The Coast
Guard might be asked to send an
amphibious plane from Port An
geles. Ericksen said, if the light
planes and the parties covering
the beach on foot had no early
success.
Both Law and Chacartcgui were
married. j
When asked how it feels to be
an elector, Zenas A. Olson, Mil
waukie, said:
"When people find out you are
an elector and what an elector has
to do, they just stop talking and
ignore us.
The other electors are James C.
Hatfield, Salem; J. P. Johnson,
Tigard, and Lowell C. Paget, Port
land. Taxes to Take
Louis' Trusts
For Children
WASHINGTON HI - The U.S.
Tax Court said Monday trust
funds set up in 1!M7 and 194!) for
ex-heavyweight 'lampion Joe
Louis' two children must be used
to help satisfy tax claims against
him.
Louis was insolvent and heavily
indebted to the Internal Revenue
Service when the trusts were cre-
iImI fh n,rt h.M
The court asserted it had been 1
unable to establish exactly what
happened to the estimated $4,600.
000 which Louis made in the
ring.
The statement asserted the for
mer r h a m n I n n was enrlv
"schooled in profligacy" and that;moncy inem " lh(,y know there
during his championship period
brakes
spending
The children's trust funds, worth
slightly more than $66,000, were
established by Lo - s former wife,
Mrs. Marva Trotter Barrow
Spaulding. But the court said the
former champion was "the actual
donor" of the funds, and that they
could not be transferred to the
trusts while Louis owed federal
income taxes he could not pay.
His tax liability, not disputed
in the trust fund case, has recent
ly been estimated at more than
one million dollars.
TO LAST 'TRIP
89 Holt Orphans
Reach U.S. by Air
SAN FRANCISCO m Eighty "We have a daughter, 14." said
nine Korean orphans arrived on a j Mrs. Fournier. "We always want
Pan American airliner Monday toied a little boy. Now we have
begin ,iew lives in their foster him."
American homes. Fourteen adults, besides Holt,
Some of the children cried escorted the youngsters from
O'hcrs laughed. Most of them ; Seoul.
v1e bewi,ld'ref , . I Before resuming their journeys,
"'"j "-...
2 and 3 years. i
-u;u a i 1
,u TS"r. I
wie jlv,v uidunra uy jiniiyi
Holt, an Oregon farmer, photo-
;...., ad newftrtolm(,n bathed
them in camera lights.
faltfornia f Amili arfnntpH 39
nmhani nnH Orpflon home nrp'W'th Capt. Richard Campbell, the
taking in 17. The others are going ' P''. t0 hirr 'e more. Camp
to homes throughout the nation.!111 to,d !olt nP C0,)W Prov e
Sgt. Rex Oilman, of Taeoma. ! Ilfe jacket and life raft for 91
Wash , picked up a 29-months-old children. Holt herded 17 more
boy j orphans aboard.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fournier, ' Holt said he was racing against
of Grants Pass, Ore., iaid they a Dec. 31 deadline of a special
were naming their 3-year-old I immigration provision. He plans
Mark Lloyd after Fournier 1
Two Hailed to
Court to Face
Pinball Count
DALLAS (Special! Two per
sons are to appear in Polk county
justice court Wednesday on
charges of operating games of
chance. They were arrested Satur
day after allegedly paying off to
winners on pinball machines.
Scheduled for preliminary hear
ings Wednesday aro Harry Ells
worth Wilson. 51, operator of the
Bar-B-Q tavern at Rickreall, and
Bernicc Housely, 48, an employe
at the Canteen tavern, Independ
ence. Wilson was arrested shortly
after noon Saturday and Mrs.
Housely later in the afternoon in
state police raids led by fagt. By
ron W. Hazelton. Two pinball ma
chines were seized in the raids.
Polk county District Attorney
Walter Foster said warrants were
sworn out for the two alter in
stances of paying off on pinball
machines were witnessed. Other
establishments are under surveil
lance for similarly paying off, hc
said. Foster and Deputy Sheriff ,
Robert Lcfor accompanied state I
officers in the raids.
If convicted on the charges, Wil
son and Mrs. Housely could be
fined and jailed or both and the
pinball machines would be ordered
destroyed, Foster said. The ma
chines arc worth at least several
hundred dollars each, it was esti
mated. The machine seized at Rickreall
belongs to Furguson Enterprises,
Salem, Foster stated. Owner of the
other was not immediately known.
Playing of pinball machines "for
amusement only" is legal, Foster
pointed out, but it is known that
few players arc willing to invest
,H no "lance ui collecting on inc
Four Capital Journal
Coniics Fail lo Arrive
Four Capital Journal com lea,
Ozark Ike, Beetle Bailey, Henry
and Donald Duck, failed to arrive
In time for publication today.
They were probably delayed by
the Christmas rush in the mails.
A telegram has been sent to
New York for a new shipment.
The entire week's supply comes
In a single package.
i np rminrpn win upi a nipni ipp n
The airlift of Korean orphans', ,a,t m(mln., PoishS()viet talks
is a project of Holt, who live:
,,
" 7, "i"A aZaL kLT",:
o.tgnally had planned to bring 74
cnnaren on mis inp.
At the last minute he pleaded ;
to make one more trip.
weHeid'U g; jjiasts Russ Chaise
Hostage in
Bank Hani
Banker. Forced to
Yield Cash in 6 :
Hour Ordeal '.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. Ill
Two gunmen invaded' the apart
ment of a young bank teller and
his wife Sunday night, held them
captivo for nearly six hours, then
forced the teller to drive to the
bank and hand over the contents
of a night depository.
Estimates of the loot ranged
upward from $20,000.
The u j p 1 e's three-year-old
daughter slept undisturbed dur
ing the night of terror.
Wave 3 Pistols
Brandishing three pistols, the
gunmen forced their way into the
apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Don
ald E. Bishoff in nearby Hyatts
ville about 9:30 p.m. Sunday.
At 2:30 a.m. Bishoff,, 34, was
forced to drive to the .College
Park branch of the Suburban
Trust Co. and surrender weekend
deposits.
The bandits fled in Bishoff's
auto after returning him to his
home and binding him back to
back wilh his 27-year-old wife. He
struggled free IS minutes later and
notified police about 3:30 a.m.
Neither of the Bishoffs was
harmed but Mrs. Bishoff was
hysterical from the ordeal aiTd
cried to police, "It can't be true.
It s like a fairy talc."
' Wife Held As Hostage
Bisholf reported his wife was
held as a hostage while he went
to the bank. He said the man who
went with him, while the other
guarded his wife, salii Mrs. Bis
hoff might be harmed if they did
not return to the apartment by
3:15 a.m. Tbey returned about five
minutes before that deadline.
D. K. Brown, agent in charge
of the Baltimore FBI office, said
that judging from previous week-
en- deposits the -loot might run
to S40.000 or J45.000. He empha
sized that this was purely spccU'
lative.
College Park, home of the Uni
versity of Maryland, . is a suburb
of Washington, D.C.
The two bandits abandoned the
Bishoff's auto two or three miles
from the bank, the FBI reported.
1 Escaped Con
Caught; Dogs
Trailing 2nd
One escapee from the Oregon
Stale Penitentiary annex was in
custody Monday morning and
bloodhounds were searching for
another some 18 hours after they
walked away from the annex.
Benjamin T. Gaul, 47, was cap
tured by prison guards near Tur
ner about 9 a.m. Monday. He
had been serving a 2'Vycar sen
tence (or burglary on which he
was sentenced from Marion county
circuit court a year ago.
Ted M. Simonsen, 32, was still
at large early Monday afternoon
by state police expected his cap
ture at any time through the me
of Norman Wilson's famed blood
hounds from Dallas. It was pre
sumed he had stolen some other
clothes as the trousers and jacket
worn when he escaped w?re found
near the Disciples of Christ tar
ernaclc in Turner. Officers' main
fear of losing him came from the
possibility that he may have
hitchhiked a ride.
Simonsen was serving three
years from Umatilla county on a
forgery conviction. He was grant
ed parole three months ago and
was only waiting for a Jo1! before
being released.
He is described as $-11, 157
pounds, and having brown hair.
Poland Given
oice
WARSAW M Poland and the
Crt.-iot ITniAn ainr.A1 a rr.ilila.-tt
agreement Monday night giving i
Poland a say in the movements j
of Soviet troops stationed within i
Polish borders. I
intatin,d.iig.u1mr,,, . ... . rr.nk.S.i1.
Moscow. It was one of the!"3"1 uvis, 01 nowers.-uavis at
fruits of the "October revolution"
that t Wadys!aw Gomulka in
of ,h(! ,, jsh communi.,.
party and led the nation to more
i independent policies.
Weather Details
Mat) mti
minim
URI i
ISrV.'f
urainn precipitation. i i ; normal, l
luiVWMih
Of Stirring
Head for
WASHINGTON President Elsenhower amllei ha uh In th
S rear of his car with Indian Prime Minister Nehru Just before
1 departure for the President's Gettysburg farm where they will con.
ycr alone today and tonight. The President called for Nehru at
" Blair House where the Indian leader Is staying during his Wash
ington visit. (AP Wlrephoto)
ISO WORD UNTIL TUESDAY
Ike-Neh ru Parleys
Open in Seclusion
GETTYSBURG, Pa. Wt -Presi
dent Eisenhower and India's
Prime Minister Nehru secluded
themselves in a private conversa
tion minutes after arriving at the
President's farm Monday from
Washington. i
Leaving their aides in other i
parts of the big farmhouse, the
two heads of state got together
in the heated, glass-enclosed porch
which overlooks the historic Get
tysburg battlefield.
"It is an entirely personal con
versation," White House press sec
retary James C. Hagert; reported
to the 100 or so newsmen cover
ing the meeting.
Eisenhower planned a baked
trout lunch for his visitor, follow
ed in early afternoon with a walk
around the farm.
llagcrly told newsmen he ex
pected lo have little to tell them
alroitt the substance of the priv
ate Eisenhower-Nehru talks. He
said a communique may be put
out in Washington Tuesday.
Hagerty, replying to questions
at a news conference, also said
he has no knowledge of any "def
inite plans" for a visit to the
United States by President Tito
of Yugoslavia.
Nehru - .d the President arc re
maining here overnight so they
Mayor Names 18 to
Study Water Rates
A committee authorized by the
city council a week ago to study
Salrm water rates and make an
advisory report to the council was
appointed today by Mayor Robert
K. White.
The committee of 18 members
is considered one of the most im
portant citizen groups appointed
by a city administration in recent
years. Its members are:
G. Carroll Merles, chairman,
vice Pr-sid-nt of the United States
National Bank of Por"and and
manager of the North Salem
Branch bank; Gerry Frank, man-
iionman, ccninra puDitc account
ants: IJavid O'Hara, councilman,
state election supervisor; Joseph
A. 11. Dodd, district manager of
Portland Gag & Coke company;
Chandler Brown, vice president of
Clifford W. Brown and Stevens!
F.'iuipment Co.: Claude A. Miller, j
manager of Salem branch of ,
MrNire Rllinr Fnrmi- I JMi'ic
0f Mitchell Radio and
Television; Walter fJerth. West Sa-1
retired; Howard Jrnks, Sr.,
Gettysburg Conference
may talk over the world situation
away from the protocol and social
obligations of the capital.
Their basic aim is the achieve
ment of closer relations and bet
ter understanding between the
United States and India not the
working out of specific agree
ments. Nehru, who arrived 1n Washing
ton Sunday, spent the night at
Blair House, the government's
guest residence.
UN Police to
Hurry Piillout
ELBALLAH, Egypt lift Moj.
Gen. E.L.M. Burns, U.N. com
mander, said Monday his forces
would get out of Port Said as soon
as possible after the British
French withdrawal.
"The sooner the better, and any
way before Christmas, he said.
The commander said at his
headquarters here a further Is
raeli withdrawal of 15 miles in
the Sinai Desert will begin Tues
day. Yugoslav troops of his com
mand will follow up the Israeli
withdrawal as fast as roads can
be repaired, he added.
Pete Gunnar, attorney; Slanley
Grove, manager of Salem Cham
ber of Commerce; Norman Mer
rill, general manager of Blue Lake
Packers; Earl Bushnell of llru
betz it Bushnell and city councilman-elect;
E. C. Charlton,
member of City Council; James
Loder, Loder Bros. Co.; Fred Mc
Kinney, president of McKinncy
Lincoln Mercury, Inc.; and one
not yet named.
The committee's duties will in
clude arriving at i more equitable
distribution of Salem water rates
which were thrown out of propor
tion during the summer months of
the year when irrigation rates
were eliminated as a means of in
creasing revenues in the depart
ment. The need for more revenue
arose when the people approved
construction of a new water sup
ply line from Stayton Island to
Salem, estimated to cost $.1,730,-
i 000.
Since then bond interest rates
have increased. A further water
rate increase is not at present con-
I Inmnlztfti anH pilv nfrif-iaU arp
hopeful that present revenues will
be sufficient to meet the cost of
the construction program without
Up Hungary
Hungary Cold,
Hunger Break
Strike's Back
BUDAPEST H) The Hungar
ian workers sitdown strike ap
peared to bo ended Monday In
Budapest and the provinces. Lack
of coal and power still hampered
production.
Work resumed at the Bcjolannis
electrical equipment plant, center
of the new wave of slowdowns
and sitdowns last week protesting
the arrest of two leaders of the
Budapest Central Workers' Coun
cil.
The two labor leaders, Sandor
Ttacz and Sandor Bari, have not
been released by the Soviet-supported
government of Premier
Janos Kadnr. But tho threat of
hunger and winter cold appeared
to have broken th- strike.
A Hungarian army lieutenant
barred Western cc.respondcnts
who tried to enter the Bejolnnnis
plant to talk to some of the 6,000
workers employed there. The of
ficer said plant had been de
clared a military area and was
occupied by Hungarian troops and
police.
Along with the backto-work
movement, reports of widespread
guerrilla activities in the Hungar
ian countryslle am' large-scale
desertions by Bussian troops gen
erally were discounted In Buda
pest. Courthouse's
EMpire Calls
Pile on 'Mac'
What a busy Monday C. A.
"Mac" McClure had In his city
county plnnnlng office! All on
account of this KM pi re business.
McClure Is a draftsman with
off Ires In the Marlon county
courthouse which has a switch
board connecting all depart
ments. To get an outside ronnrctlnn
one must dial 9 first. But the
switchboard Is so arrnnged that
It Is possible to call any depart
ment In the building without
first getting a switchboard clear
ance. The difficulty In so far as Mc
Clure is concerned is that his
Inter-office number Is 38, two
digits that correspond with KM
on the dial.
In their haste to try out the
new KM prefix, many court
house workers forget to dial 9
first, so thry get an fmmrdlale
connection with MeClure's of
fice. The first few calls were some
what amusing but when they
continued to slack up, McClure
grrw weary of the whole busi
ness. Although a bit gun shy, he
didn't dare to Ignore the rails in
fear that someone from the out
side was seeking a connection
with his effic.
Soviet Sweeps
Aside Protests
On Tanks
WASHINGTON I Russia
charged Monday the Hungarian
revolt against Communist rule
was "stimulated from the out
side." The United States bluntly
rejected the accusation.
Less than two hours after a So
viet embassy officirj made the
contention, a State Department
spokesman said it is "as clear as
the nose on anybody's face" that
the uprising was "the action of
the Hungarian pi .'c themselves
protesting the oppression they
have been under for some time.
Envoy Levels Charge
Soviet Charge d'Affaires Sergl
Striganov leveled the accusation
during a call at the State Depart
ment. At the same time, ha
brushed aside an American pro
test against the massing of So
viet tanks on the sidewalk in front
of the American legation in Buda
pest about two weeks ago.
i accnno resolutely this pro
test," Striganov said. He termed
an unjustified attempt to inter
fere between relations of the
U.S.S.R. and the Hungarian Peo
ple's Republic."
state Department Dress officer
Lincoln white told a news con
ference later that the American
protest "still stands." Deputy Un
dersecretary of State Robert Mur
phy who talked with Striganov re
fused to accept the explanation.
ne saia.
Let U.N. Take Look'
"Mr. Murphy pointed out the So
viet Union would not want foreign
tanks on the atdowalks in front
of the Soviet mission in Washing
ton," White said.
In rejecting the Soviet accusa-"
lion that outsiders were stirrinf.
up the Hungarian revolt, White
said that if Russia would permit
U.IV. observers in Hungary to in
spect tho situation "the answer to
who stimulated whom would ba
very evident."
It certain v would not show
stimulation from the outside," he
aaard.
All reports from Hungary, he
added, show It is a "spontaneou
uprising" which suffers lack o(
leadership and coordination.
Court Rebuffs
Sheppard Plea
WASHINGTON m - The Su
preme Court Monday refused for
the second time to review the trial
of Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard. Cleve
land osteopath serving a life sen
tence for the bludgeon slaying of
his wife.
Tho high tribunal's first denial
was announced Nov. 13. Shep
pard's counsel then filed a peti
tion asKing reconsideration.
Sheppard was convicted in a
; sensational trial two years ago.
i His counsel, in asking the second
time for a Supreme Court review
of the case, said "Roman holiday"
trials would become tho pattern
for the country if the high tribu
nal allowed, the conviction to
stand unchanged.
The high court also ruled that
aliens ordered excluded from the
united Slates may obtain judicial
reviews of their coses by habeas
irpus proceedings, as well as by
n anion under the Administra
tive Procedure Act.
News in Brief
Monday, Dec. 17, 1956
NATIONAL
12 killed as Cnr Hits
Train at Phoenix ...Sec. 1. P. 1
New F.ngland Storm
Death Toll at 20 ... Sec. 1, P. t
LOCALS
NW Landscape Methods
Lauded .Sec. 4, P. I
Open House Set at New
Agriculture- Building Sec. 1, P. 8
Mayor White Appoints
Water Study Group.. Sec. 1, P. 1
Two Tillamook Men
Claimed by Sea Sec. 1, P. 1
FORKIGN
L'.S Slaps Russ Charge
Of Egging on Hun
garians Sec. 1, P. 1
Cold, Hunger Break
Hungarian Strike ...Sec. 1, P. 1
SPORTS
Football Beavers Fly to
California Tuesday. .Sec. , P, 1
Giants, Bears Win Pro
Uivision Titles Sec. 4, P. 1
HKGl'LAR FEATURES
Amusements
Kditnrials ..
Locals
Society
Comics
Television ..
Want Ads ...
Sec. 1,
, P. J
Sec.
P. 4
P. 5
Sec. 1.
...Sec. 2. P. 1,2
Sec. 4, P. 3
Sec. 4, P. 4
.Sec. 4, P. 5, 8,7
Markets
Personal Problems
Crossword Punlo
Christmas Story .
Sec. 4, P. S
.Sec. 3, P.
.See. 4, P. 3
.Sec. 3. P. 1