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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1957)
Page 6 Section 2 THE CAPITAL JOURNAE Balert, Orefori, Monday1, March" 11, 1957 m ' Truck Involved in Death Crash $J El X NE dclec J; monc . soizil i Doi '' clcd and i I the Jo was pend robb A was (ire N port with Pi Woll stall bote clos him Tl gral Wol fire , mis 0 ! foui ' two ll . WASHINGTON' Tbe Fd- Ei: talk issue ;!h an eslimale get the warning to the people, eral Civil Defense Admi3trat:im iiu arrniiursti to Ih Navy Radio- That is a much more difficult 7 says a nationwide system ni mi- Imccai Lucuratory that a 38-bil-1 proposition." i clear war shelters would cml , liun-cfiiil ar srjils.tr program could, person said that, in view of c more than 32 billion dollars sav 99 per cent it the people, development of missiles, civil de- . and still protect only aboat 60 p -We don't think so." he said. (cnsc has sivcn up js formcr as. t0j cent of the people. 1 "We tfcinfc you can save approxi- sumption that an cnemy woud air The Salem brpas rit imi vv.h jani from this track foUit a ntviiixai itr day night shirk eUiwfi tibt Mt vt Hn. Sylvia McDonald, SjUfiu. . Vi truck loaded w ith more than 20 tons of scrap iron landed in 1 ditch as a result of the impact between it and the car driven by Mrs. McDonald. (Capital Journal Pho(o) A-War Shelters for 60 Pet. of People Would Cost 32 Billion Civil Defense Administrator Val matetr 60 c?r cent . . . We arc 1 ,,, ,., u..,.;i,, Peterson told a House Appropria-1 going to lose millions of people industrialized metropolitan areas. Now, he said, defense planning is "based on the random distribution of such weapons over both subur ban and rural communities sur- tlnnc Klihrnmmiltpo thp arfminic- J up have a war. . . There 15 no tration is studying some shelter easy answer to this thing except to i " J proposals, but added that "we have peace." should not go oft carelessly on aj He said this is so even tnougn MSIDE HOLLYWOOD By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD OrV-Kirk Douglas standi his best chance to win an Oscar thia year, but he won't be here to collect it. He's leaving for Europe, where he ll film two movies for his own Brayna Productions. If his third try for an Academy Award is suc cessful, his wife Anne will have to accept it at the March 27 blowout. Douglas makes no bones about : his wanting to win. Sure. I want it. Any actor would. I've gotten all in "Lust for Life" has been hon kinds of awards the Mexican ored by the New York and san Oscar, the Japanese Oscar. Now 1 want the real Oscar." What are his chances? "How should I know? I only hear the good things from friends; naturally they're pulling for me. But that's no indication. They had me so convinced I was going to win the Oscar for 'Detective Story' that I was working on my acceptance speech. Then 1 wasn't even nominated!" Kirk has been nominated before for "Champion" and "The Bad and the BeautifuL" It weighs in favor that he has been a bridesmaid but never . . . etc. he admitted. Plus which his role as Van Gogh Francisco critics, the Hollywood foreign press and various mag zines. "It was bv far the most diffi cult role I've ever done," he said. In "Lust for Life,' 1 had to play so manv variations of timer tur moil. Van Gogh was an extremely complex character. The U. S. Army Air Force sta tion at Roslyn, Long Island, is one of the smallest air force bases in the world with only 500 person nel. Yet there have been 68 wed dings there since 1952 , 42 of them involving airmen and WAF couples wno met on tne post. ;" program of that magnitude." i his agency hopes, by May 1, to rmlndi ng citios and milit ary eSlab . He said the federal government have reduced to one minute the i;,hmic " " ' ni'nntimllv "luill hai-a In Into a larger hand" in civil defense. heretofore defined by law as pri ) He tin min1 hi nnnnm, ...HI nrnnntn . oa,u nci,. inn pi unac n0 that Congress make the responsi- bility a joint federal and local one Petersons P Feb m marily a state and local function. testimony. given 6, was published today. time required to flash a warning of enemy attack to every city in the United States. "In the past it has taken us as high as 8 or 10 minutes," he said. In each case, he said, he refer red to time required to alert an official warning station in each I city "The next stage will be to 2 Victims of Tidal Wave Plane Crash HONOLULU -Paul O. Beam I formcr Yakima newspaperman and Associated Press war cor respondent, died Sunday of in Juries suffered the previous day in a plane crash on a tidal wave photographic flight. The 42-year-old head of an ad vertising and public relations firm here was the second casually of the crash. Sarah Park. 29, a re porter, was killed outright in the crash into the ocean off the north west tip of Oahu Island. ' Beam was piloting the plane for The Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Beam banked for a photogra pher to get a picture and the light plane dived into the sea pher who suffered severe Injuries, said: "As soon as I shot the picture, he banked. He couldn't pull out The engine was running good but we dove right into the ocean. All he said wns '1 can t pull out One of Beam's assignments as an A. P. correspondent in World War 11 was coverage ol the Kwa jnlcin Island Invasion Irom i bomber overhead. He later worked, for The A. P. in Portland, Ore. He Is survived hy his widow here and four children by a for mer marriage. Jack Matsumoto, the phologra-i paper said. 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