3
TWO KTDTOHD (OHZGOK) MAIL THIBUNZ
Sunday. Jun. t. 1197
Beck's Quilting May
Have Sayed Bouncing
Washington IP Dave Beck s
decision to retire as president
of the teamster union may save
him from being "bounced," ac
cording to union sources?
Disagreement among Team
sters leaders as to who should
succeed him as head of the 1,
500 C'OO-member union also may
help him stay in office until
ater a successor is elected abouP
Sept. 30, they said.
The union "constitution pre
scribes Dec. 1 as the date for
new officers to take their posts.
O Both questions are likely to
C'One up at the next meeting
of the union's 13-man executive
board. Beck has promised to call
board meeting for about the?,
middle of this month.
Meantime, union sources in
dicated that Teamster's leaders
are engaged in a lot of political
pulling and hauling. Last week
informed and reliable sources
said a majority of the board was
prepared to force a meeting to
ask Eck to resign and0 if he
refused, to force him out. a
Portland Schoolboy
Patrolman Badly Hurt
Portland HP A 10-year-old
Portland school boy suffered a
broken arm, and pelvis, a col
lapsed lung and a ruptured
spleen Friday when he was
truck down by a car in a
school crossing.
Stephen Jeske was hi and
carried aboi 60 feet by an
auto driven by the Rev. Luther
G. Baker Jr., who said he was
watching the curb and didn't
see the light in the crossing.
Motorcycle Patrolman Jim
Brouiliette cited Baker for fail
ing to yield righ of way to a
pedestrian and for failing to
produce a valid driver's license.
It was the first such serious
accident in the 17-year history
of this city's police dpartment
aponsored program of student
patrolled school crossings, an of
ficial said.
Y V V 4
1 PRAY I DO RIGHT' Mrs. Tae Moon Cherry of Taeju,
Korea holds her baby son, Marvin, as she waits in Tokyo
for a mercy flight to the bedside of her husband, Army
specialist Havis V. Cherry, who is near death at the Army
Navy General Hospital in Hot Springs, Ark. A short time
after this photo was radioed to the U. S., the boy was
stricken with a high fever and severe attack of dysentery.
When doctors told Mrs. Cherry that her son could die if
she mae the trans-Pacific flight, she decided to remain
un Tokyo, saying broken English, "1 stay, 1 pray I do
right."
o
Missionary Tells Harrowing
Tale of Death, Cannibalism
Tiny white ants of Australia
build ant hills three timQ the
height of a man.
IMor Health. Rot. Comfort
ar4 HoapUality at tho
Buckhorn Mineral
Springs Sanitarium
O.t a Tw cas on
Ufa through t h
u.a of our fairjooi
mineral watera.
91 HUinl
ana Una Satha
for Rhumittrm
V.reu.naa rTan airt Low tfiooa
rruro aM Sa'.a Ph-optlora.
Carta Bloxldo Tapor Batk for
A.rhir.a. Rwmi, Colli. Simla and
Frn?hH1.
"Ton WeaHk Sa Om mm"
For raaorratlone ar 4tatlc4 ra
forBQation ad4rcaa
0 .ackaara Mineral Sarlnaa
g.attarlam. Stoa Barkhora Sarlart
ad. Altaians Ort.
Or phono lona dlatanta
B. Sanaa Ynli
Cblropractla Phralelan
Hollandia, Netherlands New
Guinea IP The Rev. Tom
Bozeman, of Ormond Beach,
Fla., came out of the wild Ba
liem valley Saturday with two
achievements: he talked a head
hunter out of killing him and
attended a cannibal feast.
The handsome young mission
ary and his wife have spent
the past year deep in the in
terior of Dutch New Guinea
where a man s social obligations
are paid off in human heads.
Kill Eight or Nina
"We estimate," Mr. Bozeman
said, "that an average citizen
of the Baliem Valley has to kill
at least nine men during his
lifetime to meet the various
tribal obligations that require
human heads. A man must take
a head when he marries, when
he names his children and for
various festive purposes."
The minister, a member of
the Christian and Missionary Al
liance, said he had never be
lieved the stories of cannibalism
until he witnessed the ceremony.
"In one of the periodic fights
between the tribes near our
"mission," he recounted, "one
tribe managed to capture the
Rfohrfbin the start.'
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body of an enemy they had
killed.
Hack Body is Pieces
"They turned a deaf ear to
pleas from the victim's family
that the body be returned and
after hours of dancing, singing
and shouting, they fell on the
body with knives and axes and
hacked it to pieces.
"They roasted and ate the
pieces." the missionary contin
ued, "in full view of the wailing
relatives who watched the pro
ceedings from a safe distance
atop a nearby hill."
The area in which the Boze
mans are working is considered
so dangerous by the Dutch gov
ernment that it has disclaimed
any responsibility for their
safety. The only contact the
missionaries have with the out
side world is by radio and the
monoplane that flies into the
mile-high area when weather
permits.
Firm 'No' Ends Bank
Robbery Attempt
Portland W A would-be
bank robber attempted to hold
up the Canadian Bank of Com
merce in downtown c?ortland
just before closing time Friday
but all he got was a firm "No"
from a woman teller and he
finally wound up in jail.
Mrs. Marcelyn Willson, the
teller, said the stranger ap
proached her and with his right
hand in his pocket said:
"Don't make a move. I want
all the loose bills you have
handy."
Mrs. Willson said, "No, No,"
and backed out of her cage,
closing the door.
The frustrated intruder rushed
out of the bank and tried to
escape in a taxicab. but was
caught before he could get away.
At the police station, he was
identified as Ray Martin, 39.
Vancouver, Wash. He admitted
serving time in Washington
state prison on bad check
charges.
Greek Hero Dies in ! fT
Highway Crash; US
Serviceman Held
I Athens. Greece IP Greek
authorities Saturday charged
'. American Airman 3-C Marion
iMousalli with "manslaughter by
i negligence" in the highway
I death of a Greek wartime resist
) ance hero.
I (Seek Police escorted Mausal-
li, of Benwood, W.Va., from po
lice headquarters where he spent
the night to the office of the
prosecutor to hear the charge.
Police guarded the U.S. Em
bassy but there were no inci
dents .
Victim of the traffic accident
was Gen. Stafanos Sarafis, com
mander in chief of the wartime
Greek Communist underground
Army. Sarafis was killed and his
English wife-, the former Mary
Briscow, was injured when Mou
salli's American car struck them
in the Athens suburb of Alimos.
American authorities immedi
ately placed the airman under
custody of Greek courts. This ac
tion was credited with channel
ing public sentiment into mere
sorrow for Sarafis' death in an
unfortunate accident rather than
bitterness a g a i n st American
forces in Greece.
Criticizes Police
Chicago OP Police officials
here criticized charges by an
Italian nobleman that they only
performed "one fifth of the job"
in their expensive efforts to
track down his missing son.
Count Ludovico Barattieri di
San Pietro, ftalian consul-gen-erl
to Chicago, a diplomat to his
fingertips, then responded to po
lice criticism by commending
them for time and energy spent
in search of his son, Vittorio, 14,
and promised to send a check to
the Police Benevolent associa
tion. Stung by Barattieri's charges.
Police Commissioner Timothy J.
O'Connor defended the sleuthing
of local police and pointed out
that it cost the police depart
ment "between $40,000 and S80,
000" since the boy was reported
missing April 16.
Not only had 40 detectives
been working full time on the
case, said O'Connor, but they
had "arrested a man who at
tempted to extort $5,000 from
the family."
O'Connor also noted that Vit
torio had been in New York an
hour before police had been noti
fied of his absence.
Coin Thought Freak
Of Philadelphia Mint
Princeton. N. J. (U.R) Ken
neth Shedden, operator of a
stamp and coin shop, has one
for the books a coin the size of
a quarter, with the imprint of a
half dollar and the weight of a
dime.
The paper-thin disc arrived
at a Trenton bank several weeks
ago in a bag of 19S4 half-dollars
and was turned over to the Prin
ceton shop-keeper by a bank of
ficial. Shedden believes the coin is a
freak of the Philadelphia mint
caused by placing the amount
of metal intended for a dime
stamp into a half dollar stamp.
There was not quite enough
metal to fill out the stamp with
the result it came out the size
of a quarter.
Eight Factors Make
Oiie Unfit To Wed
Los Angeles OI.R) Three
University of California re
searchers believe tehy have dis
covered eight distinct and pos
sibly universal factors that may
make a person unfit for mar
riage. TQe factors are: low self-opinion,
adolescence "hangover,"
early conditioning to marriage,
cumulative ego strain, homosex
ual tendency or male passivity,
sex dissatisfaction and projec
tion, revolt against femininity
and flight into rejection.
The researchers, Ahmed El
Senoussi and Dr. Andrew L.
Comrey, both psychologists, and
Dr. Jacob S. Druckman, a psy
chiatrist, explained adolescence
"hajigover" as bringing adoles
cent instability into marriage.
Sex dissatisfaction and pro
jection were explained by those
who blame their own sexual fail
ure on their mate. And "flight
into rejection" seems to be those
cases of people who reject thCir
husbands and wives because
they themselves are rejected.
The three researchers based
their findings on the survey of
50 marital failures representing
a wide range of social, economic,
educatio nal and intellectual
backgrounds.
On state occasions, Britain's
Queen Elizabeth rides in a royal
coach that is magnificently un
comfortable. Since George III
bought "Old 'sattlebones'' two
centuries ago, monarchs have
complained of the unpleasant
swaying and jolting of the four
ton, elaborately carved convey
ance. Rubber tires and fluores
cent lighting but little comfort
were added for the Corona
tion ceremcies in 1953.
Si
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SITTING FORLORNLY outside Bailey, Colo, hospital,
Jimmy waits for reunion with master, Andrew McGregor,
75, whose life he saved by earning note from isolated
mountain cabin where McGregor lay helpless, in need
of medical, hospital care. (International Soundphoto)
Portland Flier Hurt In Crash Landing
Martinez, Calif. w A Port
land, Ore., flier, injured when
he crash-landed his light plane
near here, crawled through
marshlands for more than four
hours before he found help
early Saturday.
The pilot, Miles Soukup, 49.
was taken to Martinez General
hospital where he was reported
to be in fair condition, suffer
ing from shock, cuts and
bruises.
Soukup. owner of a trucking
firm, told sheriff's officers he
became lost on a flight from
Portland to Sacramento. Out of
fuel the plane camg down in a
swamp three miles Qeast ofTiere
about 11 p.m. last night.
He said he freed himself from
the wreckage of thfi single en
gine Cessna but found he was
"so stove up" he couldn't stand.
Soukup wandered aimlessly
on heeds and knees until he
came upon a flagman's shanty
alongside the Sants Fe tracks.
He was found there about 3
a.m.
William Howard faft was the
first man to serv the United
States both as President and
chief justice of the? Supreme
Court.
First Europeans to see Burma
were the Portuguese.
Soldier Killed in
France by Algerians
Metz, France HP One U.S.
soldier was killed and another
injured here Saturday in a pre
dawn assault by two unidentfied
Algerians, U.S. and French auth
orities announced.
Police said robbery was the
motive of the attack.
The two GIs were returning
to the Metz quartermaster depot
when their car broke down
while they were traveling
through the Algerian section of
this city.
Two Algerians in a nearby
cafe agreed to help the service
men repair the car for a fee, an
official report said. They attack
ed the Americans with a blunt
instrument as soon as they walk
ed out of the cafe.
Sgt. Able L. Watson, of Jones
boro, Ark., suffered a head in
jury, but was able to alert police.
Police found the second GI
dead. His identity was withheld
pending notification of relatives.
The Kremlin in Moscow cov
ers about 63 acres.
Kerby Man Injured
In Cycle Accident
James Charles Scott, 20, Ker
by, was treated for bruises and
abrasions Friday afternoon fol
lowing a motorcycle
highway 99 at Scenic lane, state
police reported.
Scott told officers he w.
thrown frorri his motorcycle aft-
-1 amniS iu a uiu tuniMon wnn
a car operated by Sarah Hester
Culbertson, Central Point.
Scott was taken to Rogue Val
ley Memorial hospital for treat
ment and was released shortly
after, police said.
J CHRISTIAN 1
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Sunday)
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