Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 02, 1957, Page 2, Image 2

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    Paee 2 Section 1
Senators Seek
To Delay Fight
On Filibusters
WASHINGTON 11 Senators
seeking to change Senate rules
and make It easier to curb (ile
busters maneuvered Wednesday
to delay the battle rather than
having it in the opening hours of
the new Congress Thursday.
In a strategy session, the bi
partisan coalition of Northern and
Western senators including Sen.
Neihersor D-Ore, created p
steering commit tee to nvet wit'
Vice President Nixon and Scnat'
party leaders to talk over the sit
uation.
Srn. Anderson D-NM , floo
leader for the croup, said one of
jrctive is to find means to avoi'
4 knnrk down fiffht when the Ser
ate convenes and "avoid the ne
cessity of doing this under Mar
quis of Queensbury rules."
Anderson said that If the leaf'
ers. desire this, the opening move
might he deferred from Thur?
day tn some later and more cor
venient dale, provided the coal
lion group's rights to raise th
issue and bring it to a showdow
ai" guaranteed.
In the normal course, the tim
to ', raise the issue of adopt in
rules would be when the Serial
meets for the new session.
One main reason the Anderson
group is seeking to change the
rules is to iinnrove chances for
passage of civil rights bills. The
filibuster or endless debate to
prevent a vote has long been a
weapon used by Southern senators
In fighting civil rights measures.
President Kiscnhower has said
he will press for passage of his
civil rights program in the new
Congress,
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, January 2, 1957
West Germany's First Atomic Pile
GOP Chairman
Hall Reported
About to Quit
TODAY'S CLOSE
n. stock wumiiiw
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS!
Admiral Corporatiop
Allied Chemical
Allis Chalmers
Aluminum Co. America
American Airlines
American Can
American Cyanamide
American Motors
American Tel. & Tel.
American Tobacco
Anaconda Copper
Armco Steel
Atchison Railroad
Bethlehem Steel
inline Co.
Boeing Air
WASHINGTON (UP) Leonard;
W. Hall will step down as Ke-j
publican national chairman some
time alter President hisenhower s
second term inauguration Jan. 21, j
administration sources aid todav.
4 I No date for Hall's resignation
has been set, these sources said.
A GOP committee spokesman for
mally denied published reports
Hall will quit Jan. 19, the day the i Bore Warner
committee is slated to hold its j Burroughs Adding Mach.
next meeting here. California Packing
Author! tative administration 1 Canadian Pacific
sources also denied a report that j Caterpillar Tractor
Fred C. Scribner Jr.. sencral : Celanese Corporation
counsel of the Treasury Depart Chrysler Corporation
mem, nas been picked as Hall s ;
succesor.
These sources doubted Scribner
will get the post. They refused to
offer any guesses, however, as to
who the new chairman will be.
There have been reports that
Hall, who helped President Eisen
hower's drive to victory in his 19.58
second term campaign, would takcj
a nigh government post or run ,
for governor of New York. Hall,
a New Yorker, thus far has de
clined to reveal his plans.
Skiers Killed
&y Avalanche
NICK, France (UP) Three
members of a party of 17 skiers
were killed by an avalanche that
trapped them on isolated Mount
M riches, police reported today.
Police said rescuers reported the
other 14 were alive but "several"
were injured.
The dreaded "white death"
struck without warning Tuesday
night at a group of skiers in the
isolated Mervcilles Valley on the
Franco-Italian border.
All were members of the Nice
High Mountain Ski Club.
WE WILL RUN
DAILY MATINEES
FROM 1 P. M.
This Picture Has
Received The Parents
Magazine Award
1 ne first atomic pile in West Germany, located at Munich, is
waring completion and Is expected to be In action by next May.
The reactor is being built under the supervision of the Institute
for Technical Physics of the Munich university. It will hnime a
swimming pool type reactor, built In the United States. (AP Wire
photo) i
Tacomah's Heart Stops for 21
Minutes; He's Well in 5 Days
If ' 1NGR10
I I BERGMAN
i Yin y
I I HELEN
I I iuvb
liiir.iS.U
M 1- i PU'S
I "Vvl Western
P -if Al Co-Hit
Ti I "Desperados
fcll iJi ,re In
Town"
SEATTLK Cf Thomas Van
Wagenen's heart stopped for 21
minutes in a rare surgery case
live days ago.
A day later the 21-year-old Ta
coman wanted to get out of bed.
Doctors were amazed Wednesday
at the speed of his recovery.
The case was described as the
second on the Pacific Coast in
which the heart was stopped com
pletely during the delicate cor-1
recti ve surgery inside the heart !
white a heart -lung machine took
over its functions and Kept the
patient's blood circulating. I
The Iirst involved a lo yenr-old.
Alaskan Kskimo, Morris Walter,
who underwent a similar opera
tion here 10 days earlier. His re
covery is slower.
Both ca.ses were In the hands
of a University of Washington
medical tram.
In several previous cases, the
hearl-lung machine devised at the
University's School of Medicine
was used to by-pass the blood
(low around the liearl but the
beating of the heart continued
during the surgery.
Jn V an Wagenen a case, a sur
geon sewed up two holes in a cen
tral wall between two inner cham
bes of the heart. One was l lie
size of a quarter; the olher the
size of a nickel. A seven-inch in
cision was made around (lie out
side of the heart.
After the holes and incision
were closed, the surgeon siaried
the heart beating again and com
pleted the four-hour operation.
Ihe doctors said Van Wagenen
now will be able to look forward
to a normal life expectancy. The
defect, with which he was born,
had been placing a greater and
greater strain on his hcrH.
To start 'he heart beating again,
the surgical team merely discon
nected the heart-lung machine to
let blood flow back through the
heart again. The doctors explained
that Ihe heart started its action
promptly and settled into a
rhythmic beat, as though it never
had halted.
Van Wagenen was the first pa
tient with his specific intraven
tricular defect to be operated on
by the university's medical team.
He is one of 10 children of Mr.
and Mrs. A. F. Van Wagenen of
Tacoma.
OPEN 6:45
'THE SOLID GOW
CADILAC
v a r
JUDY HOUM- PAUL DOUGLAS
SKCONI) 1IIT-
PORT AFRlQUE
1CIII WW
.NICE
HCHIKMM'
Ike Appoints 3
Cahinct Aides
WASHINGTON U'P) prusl
dent Kiscnhower Tuesday appoint
ed new assistant secretaries of
interior and health, education and
welfare.
The President appointed Itoss L.
I.efller, Philadelphia, to the newly
created post of assistant secretary
of interior for fish and wildlife.
I-effler, a former Pennsylvania
game commissioner, is assistant
to the executive vice president of
the U.S. Steel Corp.
Mr. Kiscnhower appointed Elliot
Lee Richardson, Boston attorney,
to be assistant secretary of health,
education, and welfare. He suc
ceeds Roswcll Perkins who resigned.
Norhhul Bill to Seek
Yaquina Bay Project
WASHINGTON Rep. Wal
ter Norblad (R-Ore) said Wednes
day he will introduce in Congress
on its opening day Thursday
bill tn authorize the Yaquina Bay
project.
This work, he said, would im
prove Ihe hay for shipping with
the Army Engineers authorized to
spend $19,800,000 on it.
J Cold Loggers
Accidentally
Fire Timber
Montgomery Ward
HOSEBURG tfl A. CrOUP of I Nnrlhcrn Parific
Cities Service
Consolidated Edison
Crown Zellerbach
Curtins Wriaht
Douglas Aircraft
duPont de NemouT
Eastman Kodak
Emerson Radio
Ford Motor
General Electric
General Foods
General Motors
Georgia Pac Tlywood
Goodyear Tire
International Harvester
International Paper
Johns Manville
Kaiser Aluminum
Kennecott Copper
Lib' y, McNeill
Lockheed Aircraft
Loew'n Incorporated
Weallier Tabic
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
24 hour, lo 4:30 a. m. Wednesday
Mai. Mtn. Prep
linker 32 19 .02
Bend 45 15 T
Eugene 42 32 30
Klamath Falls 45 17
M ed ford 3.1 32 .(15
Newport 4il 3ft .32
Pendleton 35 .02
Portland Airport 40 37 .54
Itoseliurg 42 3fi .la
Salem 41 37 .Sli
The Brazilian Island of Tiini-
Langley Suits
Dismissal Asked
In Court Motion
PORTLAND tft A motion has
been filed in federal court here
making dismissal of Multnomah
County Dist. Ally. William M.
Langley s two million dollar dam
age suit against six newsmen of
The Oregonian.
The motion says the federal
court does not have jurisdiction,
that the jaw under which Langley
seeks to proceed is not constitu
tional and that the complaint fails
to state a claim against the defendants.
Langley in his suit asserted that
he had been deprived of his civil
rights in the course of Portland s
vice Investigation. In addition to
the Oregonian newsmen, he sued
Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton,
4hen Police Chief Jim Purcell Jr.
and James B. Elkins. The current
motions are only for the news'
men.
loggers got so cold Monday they
accidentally started a forest fire
about 35 miles east of here.
And the weather was so cold
Tuesday that falling snow helped
control the blaze.
The U. S. Forest Service here
said the loggers had started a
warming fire so they could toast
their hands between swings
ineir axes.
The sun during the past few
days had dried out the exposed
slope on which they were work
ing, and the fire got away from
them.
They thought they had put out
the fire Monday evening, but the
Forest Service, in checking on it
Tuesday morning, found the
flames had burst out again. Two
men in p fire suppression crew
stemmed advance of the fire until
about a dozen loggers could be
called.
Then it started snowing, and the
Forest Service said the snowfall
actually helped control the fire.
An estimated 10,000 to 30,000
board feet of bucked logs were
lost in the fire, which covered
about seven acres.
rol.IKKIIM DRAWS 850.000
SPOKANE W Spokane's Mun
icipal Coliseum Wednesday report
ed attendance of 850,000 persons
for events there during 1956 and
Manager Ren Moore predicted a
25 per cent increase this year.
lNSI'KKS ELECTION
ANN ARBOR, Mich. W Eugene
Power, Democratic candidate for
regent of the University of
Michigan, took out a $1,000 in
surance policy. To collect, it
would have had lo rain election
day in heavily Democratic Detroit,
and he would have had to lose the
election.
H didn't rain and he didn't
lose anything except the $130 pre
mium.
Pacific Gas & Electric
Pacific Tel. 4 Tel.
Penney (J.C.) Co.
Pennsylvania R.R.
Pepsi Cola Co.
Philco Radio
Puget Sound P & 1'
Radio Corporation
Rayonier Incorp.
of; Republic Steel
Reynolds Metals
Richfield Oil
Safeway Store Inc.
Scott Paper Co.
Sears Roebuck & Co.
Shell Oil Co.
Sinclair Oil
Socony-Mobile Oil
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil Calif
Standard Oil N.J.
Studcbaker Packard
Sunshine Mining
Transamerica Corp.
Twentieth Century Fox
Union Oil Company
Union Pacific
United Airlines
United Aircraft
Unitrd Corporation
United States Plywood
United States Steel
Warner Pictures
Western Union Tel.
Westinghouse Air Brake
Weslinghouse Electric
Woolworth Company
13 4
94
34 a.
92 .
23 '
41 '
78
5
171
73 4
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65
26 V,
195 -H
60
44 H
39 U
43
32 n
92
15 .
69 '1
67
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54 'ii
4S V
69
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87 H
6 4
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59 i
43
43 4
27 '
82 H
38
105
48 4
44 4
126
13
56 "4
20 4
38 4
34 4
40 4
49 4
124 4
82 4
21 4
18 4
17
27 4
35 4
30 4
58 4
59 4
68
68 4
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28 4
88
61 4
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58
74
7 4
37 4
23 4
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42
88 4
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57 4
43 4
New Mark Twain School at
Silverton Open for Classes
SILVERTON (Special) It was
'off with the old-on with the
new", literally, as far as students
of Ihe Silverton sixth, seventh and
eighth grades were concerned as
they trooped through the doors of
the new Mark Twain school this
morning.
The "tired old" building, re
ferred to locally as the junior high.
Hungarian on
Job in Eugene
EUGENE tin Tlbor Kepcs, a
22-year-old Hungarian electrician
who was fighting in the streets of .cusively lo orienting the students
was officially aoanuoneu uuum,
the recent holiday vacation when
the custodial stall of the elemen
tarv schools, under the direction
of 'the principal, Tom Cutshall.
moved all the eouipment to the
new location on N. Church street
Each teacher was responsible for
setting up the equipment lor nis
department and with the excep
tion of gym equipment which is
expected soon, everything was
ready for the new term. Locks
have not yet arrived for the lock
ers and bookcases from the old
building are teing installed until
such time as the budget will allow
installations befitting the new
plant
The first day was devoted ex
Budapest less than two months
ago. started a new job Wednes
day in Eugene.
Kepcs, the first Hungarian refu
gee to come to Lane County, ar
rived here three days before
Christmas. He spent the past
week, getting acquainted with his
sponsors, .Mr. ana .Mrs. siepncn
Ralnri
I siavioB with the Batoris gives doors . at recess periods,
! Kepes, who speaks only a few
i words of English, a big advan
tage. Batori was born in Hungary
and speaks the language fluently.
Kepes is working as an elec
trician in Batori's communica
tions equipment firm here. After
taking part in the Hungarian re
volt, he fled to Austria Nov. 11.
Valley Dates
GERVAIS (Special) The Ger
vais grade school Mothers' club
will meet Thursday, Jan. 10 at
2:30 p.m. in the school basement.
Mrs. Ordie Hoye .and Mrs. Don
Hood are co-hostesses for refresh
ments. EIZER (Special)-Thc Keizer
Sewing club will meet again with
Mrs. Mclvin Nichols Thursday at
her home, 1955 N. 24th St. It will
be an all day meeting with a cov
ered dish luncheon at noon.
FRU1TLAND (Special) The
Fruitland-Middle Grove Livestock
4-H club will meet at the Fruit
land school Friday at 8 p.m. Rex
iscwcll is president.
FRUITLAND (Special! The
Fruitland Home Extension unit
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Georgia Gerig at 10 a.m. Jan. 8.
Pauline Wagner and Selma Dalke
will demonstrate making yeast
rolls.
to their new environs. A handbook
containing rules of conduct and
regulations was distributed and
students were acquainted with the
physical aspects of the building
and facilities. Classes will settle
down to routine tomorrow.
According to the principal, the
biggest problem facing the staff
I will be keeping the students in
! doors at recess periods, a neces
sity due to the condition of the
school grounds which will not be
landscaped until during the next
summer and fall.
Faculty of Mark Twain includes
Tom Cutshall, principal; Gene
Mulkey, science; Mrs. Knute Di
gerness, social living, music; Miss
Marguerette Hillock, math,
scienc arts and crafts; Mrs. Cor
dell Woodall, social living, physi
cal education; Mrs. George
B-andt, social living, homemak
ing: Charles Bennett, social living,
arithmetic.
Teachers for the three sixth
grade classes which will be housed
in the new school as long as the
four-year high school plan is in
operation in the district are Mrs.
William Thayer, Mrs. Fred Hug
and Mrs. Nellie Wattcrson.
Others on the staff include Mrs.
Emanuel Kcllerhals as head cook,
Porter Eldrcd, custodian, and two
part time employes, Mrs. Mae
Reid as secretary and Miss Han
nah Olson as librarian.
The -public will be invited to an
"open house" at a later date to
inspect the new premises, Cutshall
announced.
Rescue Truck
Provided CD
AtWillamina
Governinpnt Pavg Hdt
Of Cost; Unit
Aeerpled
WILLAMINA ISpecial) - The
Willamina Fire department has
accepted delivery of a civil de
fense rescue truck, which has been
driven here from Ihe GMC factory.
On this type of equipment, as
on the large fire truck, the fed
eral government pays half of Ihe
cost, with the slate and the city
each paying one-fourth. The city's
share of the price of the truck
will come from the firemen's gen
eral fund.
The equipment of the truck in
cludes a portable generator, lights,-
electric welder, electric power
saw. winches, jacks and various
other rescue equipment designed
for nuclear or other large disasters.
The Willamina fire department
will provide a force of 15 trained
men to make the truck available
for community service.
'CASH NITE'
T0NITE
CRYSTAL
GARDENS
T.FKKV FRANK TALKS
SIIA'KRTON (Special! Gerry
Frank, manager of Meier and
Frank store at Salem, was intro
duced as the speaker for the Ro
tary club noon luncheon Monday
by Dr. Robert Epcneter and talked
on Oregon's prospects for the future.
GIRL BABY BOU
ST. LOUIS (Special) Mr. and
M.s. Lloyd Fcrschweiler are the
parents of a new babv girl born
Dec. 29. The little girl has two
sisters and one brother.
Completely Remodeled
Centrally Located
BANQUET FACILITIES
Group Meetings From 10 to 100 Peoplt
440 State
MH4
Phone EM-35016
Have Perspiration Stains
Ever Ruined Your Dress?
diiil. about 750 mill's east tit Hie
Hruilinu coast, is Mill uninh;ilii-U'd.
Phone EM J-SiSII
IMPORTANT!
WE WIIL ONLY PLAY
"GIANT" ONCE AN
EVENING AT 7:45
DOORS OPEN 6:45
GEORGE
&STEVENS'
mmwmtr EDM FERBER
WANNIM 0OWANtACOlO
FUTABrrU ROCK JAMES
TAYLOR HUDSON DEAN
N THURSDAY - JANUARY 3
S , 'Coffee And ' Time with informal modeling of
daytime and sport clothes-A "come as ou are"
Jp4 hour for women with coffee and light macks
Er? available.
fj OREGON ROOM, STREET FLOOR J
RTI 9 30- 10 30 A. M.
F FASHION MODELING p
Jt OREGON ROOM, STREET FLOOR
IMS- 1:30 P. M. I
New ARRID with Perstop
Stops Perspiration Stains - Stops Odor
DRAMATIC STEAM BATH TEST SHOWS HOW
Thit womin wit put in
ttvambalh it 104 d(Ttl.
AKKID with Pvntop wit
fuhhtd into htr forthtad. Ftf
ttn muiutfli liter . . .
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tpintion - but ARRID with
Pvritop kept her fortheid
dry. ARRID will do th nan
for your undtrarmt, too.
Jmt rub ARRID in - nib per
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rub odor out. When th cream
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ARRID with Paritop. uad ARRID with Pantop it 14
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underarms dry, soft and sweet. perspiration and odoi.
Cftttai Products tiaemia far suliaaatad kydrecarbea surfacuatai
, don't be half-tare.
Be completely safe. L'ia
new ARRID with Perstop
to be sure. 43r plus tax.
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