0
Dnternatlonal Wews
(Editor1 note: The following round-
jnp or international news which made
headlines during 1954 was complied
" by the United Press.)
0 JANUARY
10 British jet airliner crashed
11 Avianca airliner crashed
0 near Manizales, Colombia;
8 23 killed.
12 Alpine avalanches in Aus
tria, Switzerland, West Ger
3 many; 198 persons dead or
missing.
13 Moslem Brotherhood banned
in Egypt.
e14 Philippines Airlines DC-6
a crashed near Rome; 16 kill.-
" ed.
19 U. S. government civil anti-
- trust suit against A. & P.
ended after five years.
20 Return of POW's from Ko
rea begun.
21 President Eisenhower asked
for budget 65,570,000,000.
21 Nautilus, first atomic subma
rine , launched by U. S.
S 22 British Comet II flew from
London to Khartoum in 6
hours, qL2 minutes, cutting
old mark more than half,
25 Ernest Hemingway and wife
safe after two plane crashes
in Uganda.
26 President Celal Bayar of
'Turkey arrived in U. S.
26 U.S. Senate, 8i-6, ratified
0 . mutual security pact with
Korea.
31 Frank Leahy, Notre Dame
football coach, resigned.
FEBRUARY
1 Maj. Edwin H. Armstrong, F
M inventor, .died at 63.
4 John Hvasta, U. S. citizen,
freed after five years' im
5 prisonment and hiding in his
native Czechoslovakia.
7 Maxwell Bodenheim, poet,
and wife murdered in New
York. City; he was 63 years
old.
15 Two French naval officers
set new record in plunge of
13,284 feet under the sea in
the Atlantic about 120 miles
west of Dakar; plunge was
made in newly perfected
French bathyscaphe, FNRS
3. 18 At Berlin foreign ministers
conference, U. S., France
Great Britain reached agree
ment with U.S.S.R. for meet
ing with Communist China
to settle Korean question
and seek peace in Indo
China. 21 Army accepted a public
showdown with Sen. Joseph
R. McCarthy.
25 Maj. Gen. Mohammed Na
guib, Egyptian premier and
president , resigned; Lt. Col.
Gamal Nasser succeeded
him.
27 U.S.S.R. transferred Crimea
to the Ukranian Republic.
27 Naguib restored to presiden
tial power in Egypt; Nasser
still premier.
28 Hashem al-Atassi became
President of Syria.
MARCH
Congressman Alvin M. Bent
ley, Ben F. Jensen, Clifford
Davis, George H. Fallon
and Kenneth A. Roberts shot
down on floor of House of
Representatives by five
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Puerto Rican Nationalists:
no fatalities.
1 Atomic Energy Commission
9 announced first in new ser
ies of test explosions in Mar
shall Islands.
1 Prime Minister Nehru de
cried U. S. policy for Asia
and the "cold war."
5 V. M. Molotov called on Eu
ropean Defense Community,
which he described as the
course to "a third World
War."
5 Sen. Joseph McCarthy with
drew $2,000,003 libel and
slander suit against former
Sen,. William B. Benton,
6 Pedro Albizu Campos, lead
er of Nationalist Party,
seized m San Juan, P. R.
6 Roger M. Kyes, deputy sec
retary of defense, resigned.
7 Will H. Hays, first film
"czar" died at 74.
8 U.S. and Japan signed arms
pact.
10 President Eisenhower prom
ised not to involve u. a. in
war without a declaration of
war by Congress
12 Sen. McCarthy charged Ar
my with attempted black
mail in an effort to stop his
exposure of Communists.
12 Two U. S. military planes at
tacked by Soviet-made MIG
jet at Czech-German fron
tier.
13 At Caracas, 10th Inter-American
Conference adopted an
, anti - Communist resolution
advocated by U. S.
13 Premier Georgi M. Malen
kov warned that a new war
with modern arms would
mean "destruction of world
civilization."
16 Harold J. Adonis convicted
of evasion of income tax in
1948.
17 Japanese revealed a fishing
ship was showered with radio-active
ash during atomic
tests at Bikini.
17 President Eisenhower de
clared U. S. would instantly
fight any aggressor.
18 Former Gov. Harold G. Hoff
g man of Net? Jersey suspend
ed by Gov. Meyner from his
position of director of the
State Division of Employ
ment Security for "miscon-
' duct in office."
19 An Air Force M 19 crashed
near Annapolis, Md.; 18 ser
vice men killed.
23 Peru permitted Victor Raul
Haya de la Torre, radical
leader, to leave Rpru under
safe conduct after five
years as an embassy refu
gee. 26 U.S.S.R. announced East
Germany as sovereign state.
27 Joseph M. Dodge, director
. of budget,' resigned,
28 Boiler room explosion on
British troopship Empire
Windrush in the Mediter
ranean killed four crewmen,
29 Announcement of another
successful hydrogen explo
sion Mar. 26 in Marshall
Islands.
30 First break in New York
City waterfront strike since
March 5 when tug crews re-
RQPwipp for 2i4
umed work.
APF.IL
2 Geh. Hoyt 5. Vandsnberg,
55, died.
7 President Eisenhower warn
ed Communist conquest of
Indochina would result in
a chain reaction of disaster
for free world
8 Thirty-seven persons killed
when Royal Canadian Air
Force training p.3?ne ranv
med four-engine airliner at
Moose Jaw, Sask.
8 British Comet jet airliner
crashed into the Mediter
ranean near Capri: 21
killed.
12 Ds. J. Robert Oppenheimer
suspended by Atomic En
ergy Commission.
12 President Eisenhower or
dered FHA files seized;
Commissioner Guy T. O,
Hollyday resigned.
12 Rumania released two hos
tage sons of Valeriu C
Georgescu.
14 Vladimir M. Petrov, third
secretary of Soviet Embassy
at Canberra, granted Aus
tralian asylum
22 McCarthy-Army inquiry
opened in Washington,
23 U.S.S.R. severed diplomatic
relations with Australia
over Petrov case
28 Communist China's Premier
. Chou En-lai warned at Gen
eva that Peipin would no
longer tolerate violation of
its territory by U. S,
29 Communist China signed
non-aggression pact with In
dia on Tibet.
30 Major earthquake in Greece;
about 150 killed or missing.
MAY
2 Biggest assault thus far on
Dienbienphu in Indochina
fighting.
4-fcCpl. Edward S. Dickenson
convicted by Army and sen
tenced to-10 years' impris
onment for collaboration
with enemy while prisoner
of war in Korea.
6 Roger Gilbert Bannister,
England, ran mile in 3 min
utes, 59.4 seconds.
7 French "Premier Joseph
Laniel announced fall to
Communists of Dienbienphu
besieged 55 days.
13 Frank Costello convicted of
income tax evasion.
13 President Eisenhower sign
ed St. Lawrence Seaway
bill.
17 Supreme Court unanimous
ly banned racial segregation
in public schools.
17 Frank Costello sentenced to
five years in jail, fined $30,
000 for income tax evasion.
18 Conviction of MiaotF. Jelke
reversed, new trial ordered.
21 U. S. authorities . charged
former Army Capt. James
M. Leech, lima, Ohio, with
eighteen - year - old axe-and-fire
murder of t&ree U. S.
officers in Germany.
24 Lt. Genevieve de Galard-1
Terraube, heroic French
nurse at Dienbienphu, re
leased by Vietminh
25 Emperor Haile Selassie of
Ethiopia arrived in the U. S
26 U. S. aircraft carrier Ben
nington rocked by explo
sions and fire at Quonset
Point, R. I.; 99 killed, 199
injured,
26 Royal burial ship .built in
2900 B. C. found in Egypt
29 Giuseppe Sarto, Pope Pius
X, proclaimed saint by Pope
Pius XII.
JUNE
4 Former N. J. Gov. Harold
G. Hoffman, 58, died.
11 Robert R. Young won con
trol of N. Y. Central R. R
14 Harold G. Hoffman's theft
of $300,000 bared in letter
he left.
17 McCarthy- A r m y hearings
ended after 36 days,
17 Rocky . Marciano retained
heavyweight boxing crown
by outpointing Ezzard
Charles. '
18 Pierre Mendes-France nam
ed new premier of France.
18 Revolt in Guatemala started.
20 U. N. voted ceasefire in
Guatemala.
20 Former President Truman
underwent -emergency oper
ation. 21 John Landy, Australia, ran
mile in 3:58 in Turku, Fin
land. 22 Dr. Karl T. Compton, 66,
died.
24 Colorado Springs selected
as site for the new Air
Force.
25 President Eisenhower and
Winston Churchill began se
cret talks in the White
House on European army
and atomic data.
27 Guatemalan President Jaco
bo Arbenz Guzman ousted.
39 New military regime reach
ed a ceasefire agreement
with insurgents in Guate
mala. 29 J. Robert Oppenheimer lost
fight for reinstatement in
AEC.
JULY
6 Gabriel Pascal, Mm pro-J
ducer and director, died at
60. .
7 President Eisenhower said
he would fight to "end to
keep Red China out of U. N.
8 Col. Carlos .Castillo Armas
elected president of Guate
mala. 8 Four Puerto Rican terror
v ists sentenced to maximum
prison terms for House of
Representatives shooting.
IS United States recognizes
new Guatemalan regime.
19 Roy M. Cohn resigned as
chief counsel of Senate per
manent subcommittee on in
vestigations. .
20 Blair Moody, 52, died.
21 Indochina armistice signed
at Geneva
22 Dr. Otto John, West Ger
many's "FBI chief," vanish
ed into Soviet area of Ber
lin.
24 Communist Party banned
in West Pakistan as "danger
to public peace
26 Mrs. Ruth Bryan Rohde, for
mer U. S. minister to Den
mark, died at 68
26 President Syngman Rhee of
Korea arrived in the U. S.
26 Two Chinese fighter planes
shot down by U. S. carrier
planes, fired upon by Red
aircraft in South China Sea
27 U. S. Senate passed atomic
energy bill, 57-28, after 13-
day filibuster,
28 Section of Niagara Falls fell
into Niagara River.
AUGUST
3 Mt. Godwin Austen (K-2),
revealed as conquered by
Italian expedition July 30
3 Sidonie Gabrielle Colette,
died.
3 Bess Street Aldrich, 73,
died.
4 Britain's first truly super
sonic jet fighter, the Eng
lish Electric P-l, unveiled
5 Iran and oil group initialed
agreement ending long oil
dispute.
o-Emilie Dionne of the fam
ous quintuplets ' died of a
stroke at 20.
9 Colombian Airlines Constel
lation crashed in Azores; 30
perished.
9 Vito Marcantonio, 51, died,
12 U. S. Senate voted, 80-0, to
outlaw Communist Party in
U. S.
13 Yuri A. Rastvorov, former
Soviet intelligence officer
in Japan; received asylum
in the U. S.
14 Dr. Hugo Eckener, 86, died.
16 President Eisenhower sign
ed tax reform' bill.
17 Herbert Hdbver, Jr., named
under-secretary of state.
17 Packard, Studebaker motor
comnanies mereed.
19 Dr. Alcide de Gasperi, 73,
died.
22 Braniff Airlines DC-3 plane
crashed near Mason City,
la.; 11 lulled,
24 Pres. Getulio Vargas, of
Brazil committed suicide at
71.
24 President Eisenhower sign
ed bill outlawing Commub
nism in U. S
28 B -36 bomber crashed - at
Ellsworth Air Force Base,
Rapid City, S. D.; 24 killed.
30 President Eisenhower sign
ed atomic energy bill.
30 French Nationalist Assem
bly rejected EDC treaty.
30 Udefonso Cardinal Schuster,
74, died.
31 Hurricane Carol raked Long
Island, New England.
SEPTEMBER
1 President Eisenhower, sign
ed social security bill, ex
tending benefits to 10,000,
000.. 1 Bert Acosta, 51 - year - old
veteran flier, died.
1 Sen. Burnet R. Maybank, of
South Carolina, died at 55.
3 President Eisenhower sign
ed bill making peacetime
espionage punishable by
death.
3 Brig. Gen. Christian de Cas
tries freed in Indochina.
5 Dutch KLM Super-Constel
lation airliner crashed in
Shannon River estuary; 28
dead, 28 survivors,
7 N. Y. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
announced decision not to
run for re-election,
8 Defense treaty for South
east Asia and Southwest Pa
cific signed in Manila. .
7 Glen Scobey (Pop) Warner,
83, died.
7 Harvey C. (Bud) Fisher, car-
toorfist, died at 69. ' .
9 Earthquake in northern Al
geria killed approximately
800.
lit Hurricane Edna hit Maine
hard,
13 Peiping radio reported re
lease of three Americans;
Richard Applegate, Donald
Dixon and Benjamin Kras
ner, held in Communist
China since March, 1953.
17 U.S.S.R. announced another
nuclear blast. "
17 Rocky Marciano knocked
out Ezzard Charles in eighth
round to retain his heavy
weight crown.
18 Cleveland clinched Ameri
can League pennant.
20 New York Giants clinched
National League pendant.
21 Kokichi Mikimoto, Japanese
pearl king," died at 96.
22 Three killed in Mjssouri
State Penitentiary prison
break attempt.
25 Japan, Burma signed repara
tions agreement.
,26 In Japan, typhoon capsized
train ferry Toya Maru; 1,218
dead, 196 missing. v
28 Sen. Pat McCarran, 78, died.
OCTOBER
2 New York Giants won
World Series from Cleve
land Indians, taking fourth
straight game.
3 Statesmen of nine powers
signed pact in London giv
ing West Germany arms and
sovereignty. I
5 Italy and Yugoslavia signed
agreement ending Trieste
dispute.
7 Owen Lattimore re-indicted
" on perjury charges.
7 American freighter Mor-
mackite sank in gale off
Henry, Va.; 37 perished.
9 Hurricane H a z el struck
eight states and District of
Columbia from South
Carolina to Canadian bor
der.
16 President William V; S. Tub
man of Liberia arrived for
three-week visit in U. S.
16 E. H. Crump, 80, died.
19 Great Britain, Egypt signed
pact designed " to . restore
control of the Suez Canal
zone to Egypt.
23 Fifteen nations signed proto
cols to three treaties in
Paris which, when ratified
will make Western Germany
an equal and sovereign mem
ber of the Western alliance
25 Warsaw radio announced
release of Hermann Field,
American jailed in Commu-
nist Poland.
26 Queen Mother Elizabeth of
Great Britain arrived in the
United States.
28 Ernest Hemingway awarded
Nobel Prize for literature
30 Twenty-eight-day dock
strike ended in Great Brit
ain.
NOVEMBER
2 Averell Harriman elected
N. Y. governor; Democrats
gained control of House and
Senate.
2 Shigeru Yoshida arrived in
New York on a "good-will
mission." 9
4 Henri Matisse, 84, died.
6 Constantin von Newrath,
Hitler's foreign minister, re
leased from prison.
8 John Marshall Harlan of
New York nominated asso
ciate justice" of . U. S. Su
preme Court.
8 "Moral and material repara
tions" demanded by U. S,
from U.S.S.R. for shooting
down of U. S. B-29 photo
Teconnaissance plane over
northern Japan Nov. 7.
11 Dixon-Yates private power
contract signed by Atomic
Energy Commission.
12! Fred B.'Snite, Jr., who lived
in an iron lung for 18 years,
died at 44.
13 Jacques Fath, Paris fashion
designer, died at 42.
14 Four Communist torpedo
boats sank the Taiping, Chi
nese Nationalist destroyer
escort, north of the Tachen
Islands off southeast China's
Chekiang coast.
15 Lionel Barrymore, 76, died.
16 Budapest radio announced
release of Noel Field and
his wife, Herta, who disap
peared behind Iron Curtain
in 1949. -.
17 Premier Pierre Mendes-
France arrived in U. S.
21 Gov. William S. Beardsley
of Iowa, 60, killed in auto
crash.
22 Andrei Y. Vishinksy. 70,
died in New York.
23 Peiping radio announced
prison sentences for 13
Americans accused of es
pionage inside Red China.
24 William W. Remington, 37,
died in prison at Lewisburg,
Pa., federal prison after fel
low convicts beat him. He
was a former government
economist imprisoned for
perjury on Communist is
sue.
27 Alger Hiss released from
Lewisburg prison after serv
ing 44 months for perjury
involving espionage.
28 Dr. Enrico Fermi. 53-year-
old scientist, died.
30 Sir Winston Churchill cele
brated 80th birthday.
30 Johannes G. -Strydom suc
ceeded Dr. Daniel F. Malan
as prime minister of Union
of South Africa.
30 Dr. Wilhelm Furtwaengler,
noted German conductor,
died at 68.
DECEMBER
1 Secretary of State Dulles
announced U. S. and For
mosa had concluded nego
tiation for a, mutual defense,
treaty.
2 Sen. Joseph McCarthy cen
sured by Senate by vote of
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Sot
170
Monday, January 3, 1955
.at
Th Ruin of John McLoughlin
The Great Emigration of 1843
drove a mortal blow into the
heart of Hudson's Bay Company
enterprise in the Oregon coun
try. And it was the beginning of
ruin for the heroic soul, Dr.
John McLoughlin, in his mater
ial position.
First of all, the fall storms
of cold wind and rain came
early, in cloud packs that rolled
and tossed up the Columbia from
the North Pacific.
Hundreds of people a thou
sand, one man reported of
the emigration were trapped
at the Cascades, where rafts had
been broken up, with several
lives lost and provisions sunk.
The people were marooned in
the great, gloomy gorge, train
worn, storm-beaten, hungry, tat
tered, cold and well-nigh des
perate. Sea of Red Ink ....
McLoughlin ordered out the
bateaux in the fury of the winds
and beating rain. There were
loaded with piles of food and
some, clothing, the voyageurs
grim at the oars, without song.
The rescue went on night and
day. Hundreds were fed and
sheltered and supplied. Every
item given had to be noted on
George Simpson's ledgers. To
sell the supplies and the food
was one thing, under company
orders, to give so much away or
67-22.
2 Pope Pius XIII suffered se
vere relapse.
4 Paul M. Butler elected
chairman of the Democratic
National Committee.
"6 Shah Mohammed Riza Pah
levi of Iran arrived in U.S.
7 Senator McCarthy de
nounced President Eisen
hower for "tolerance" of
Chinese Reds; regretted his
support of President in 1952
campaign.
8 Communist China warned
U. S. of gr a v e conse
quences" if it does not with
draw "all its armed forces"
from Formosa, the Pesca-
. dores Islands and Formosa
Strait.
9 Ichiro Hatoyama succeeds
Shigeru Yoshida as Japan's
premier.
9 B ill' McGowan, baseball
umpire, died at 58.
10 New Japanese prime minis
ter pledges cooperation with
West.
12 Dag .Hammarskjold, United
Nations secretary general,
asks meeting with Red China
on imprisonment of 11 Amer
ican fliers.
13 Floods bring heavy damage
in Europe.
14 Peiping hints at possible
trade of imprisoned airmen
for 35 Chinese students bar
red from return to home
land by United States.
16 Russia warns France on
ratification of German re
armament agreement. - -
17 NATO agrees security of
Western Europe to be based
on nuclear arms.
19 Italian airliner crashes into
Jamaica Bay; 26 die.
20 Mendes-France wins vital
confidence vote on German
arms agreement.
21 Great Britain rebuffs Russia
on German rearmament
warning.
23 Ten servicemen returning
from Europe die in plane
crash near Pittsburgh.
24 French deputies reject re
armament of Germany.
26 Dulles, Eisenhower keep
close touch on French sit
uation.
27 Christmas week end traffic
death toll set at 380.
zo inree American prisoners
said due for release from
Soviet prison- camp soon.
iv oes ot German rearma
ment attack United States.
30 France approves Western
Eurdpean Union by vote of
287 to 260.
MEDFOKD BtANCH
itn HMD 0M6ON rOCCIMtt
or LfeR
to give credit for the asking,
left Dr. McLoughlin responsible.
But the doctor was no man to
be stopped in meeting dire hu
man needs by threat of nun for
himself. And such needs kept
rising as the caravans came on,
year by year.
In the final accounting, the
Fort Vancouver books showed
bad debts amounting to $60,000
in United States money. The
company took the loss.
But this was only one of a
number of causes of the separa
tion of George Simpson and
John McLoughlin. Soon James
Douglas succeeded "White Head
ed Eagle," who retired to a
simple home and comparatively
poor living at Oregon Cify. "
The Good Old Days ...
McLoughlin's salary was small
by today's standards, even while
he was governor of the Pacific
Northwest province of the Hud
son's Bay Company's empire.
But he did enjoy great power
and a princely position.
The Fort Vancouver scene and
ways of life have been exhaus
tively described by the eloquent
among the company's guests
there. Lieutenant Charles Wilk
es, commander of the USN ex
ploring expedition of 1838- 42
was one of a score.
Wilkes took note of the wages
paid by the company to its "ser
vants" were low, the food issue
poor, the restrictions hard, the
five-year agreements loaded in
the company's favor, with traps
to catch the servant through in
debtedness. There was security of a sort.
The servant who stayed uncom
plainingly with the company
could -feel secure. The condi
tions, Wilkes observed, were
good for the morals of the ser
vants, and of the settlers who
were bound to the company.
'Order and decorum are pre-
At Least
a MiEKr
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RADIO-TELEVISION TRAINING SCHOOL, INC.
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
Missing Skier Found
At School in Seattle
Portland (U.R) A search
for a 26-year-old medical, stu
dent believed to be lost on the
slopes of Mt. Hood was called
off early today when it was
learned the "missing skier" had
hitchhiked to Seattle.
Fred C. Flannigan, University
of Washington student, was re
ported missing at 5:30 p.m. yes:
terday. A volunteer search party
was formed after a check of ski
trails failed to locate the skier.
However, Flannigan's family
phoned the ski lodge from Puy
allup, Wash., and said he had
hitchhiked tj Seattle to resume
his classes. - G
served, he wrote, "together
with steady habits ... The con
sequence is that few commun
ities can be found more well-behaved
and - orderly than that
which is formed of the persons
who have retired from the comp
any's service. That this power,
exercised by the officers of the
Company, is much complained
of, I am aware, but I am satis
fied that as far as the morals of
the settlers and servants are
concerned, it is used for good
purposes."
Iron discipline ruled. And, in
the end, it was as hard on John
McLoughlin as on the poorest
servant. And his charity brought
it on him.
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