I
Afro-Asia Bloc "
rionniinrnc Wocf
Thursday, January 2, 1958
MEDFOBD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUWB TVE
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Cairo OP The Afro-As-:
ian "solidarity conference"
ended Wednesday in a burst
of anti-Western resolutions
that condemned the Eisen
hower Doctrine, NATO and
the Baghdad Pact.
The delegates, mostly left
wing groups, called on the
West to accept the latest So
viet plea for an immediate
end to nuclear tests and con
demned the policies of the
United States, Britain and
France.
Egyptian newspaperi ban
r.erlined the end of the con
ference and described the
weeklong talks as "historic"
and "epoch making" in de
veloping the Afro-Asian bloc.
Egyptian workmen today
were taking down the huge,
five-language banners and
signs that festooned Cairo
durinp the conference. The
delegates either were en
route home or to Egypt's ag
ricultural show place in Ta
hir Liberation Province. Oth
ers were visiting the Gaza
Strip.
Egypt's Youssef El Sadai
and India's Anup Singh start
ed work setting up a perma
nent solidarity committee
with headquarters in Cairo
to carry out the conference
resolutions.
Arrangements for financ
ing the new body were left:
vague in the final resolution
establishing it but Egypt was
expected to make the major
contribution.
Western observers studied
texts of the resolutions and
hoped for detailed reports of
what led up to them to get an
inkling of what happens next
Multnomah Fires
Sheriff's Deputy
Portland (IP) Thomas S.
Cowling, 37, was dicharged
by Sheriff Francis Lambert
Tuesday after 11 years as
Multnomah county deputy
sheriff.
Lambert said Cowling was
discharged after he had been
secretly indicted by the coun
ty grand jury and booked at
the county jail with another
man on a charge of destroy
ing property with intent to
defraud the insurer.
Cowling and Lloyd A. Ol- j
son, 32, Portland, were re-1
leased cn $2000 bail each af
ter being booked.
Lambert said he fired
Cowling after an independent
investigation by his own of
fice and added that "it just
happened that the two inves
tigations ended about the
same time."
Lambert said the investi
gation by his office brought
out evidence that Cowling
and Olson? conspired to de
fraud the insurance company
by pushing Olson's car over
an embankment Nov. 26 east
of Gresham. The car burned. !
Dr. Casey To Speak
At Press Meeting
Eugene Dr. Ralph D
Casey, one of the nation's
outstanding journalism edu
cators, will be the 1958 Eric
W. Allen Memorial Fund lec
turer at the annual Oregon
Press conference at the Uni
versity of Oregon.
Casey will give the prin
cipal address Feb. 14, 1958.
A former member of the
University of Oregon journal
Ism school, Casey is now di
rector of the University of
Minnesota school of journal
ism. Before coming to Ore
gon in 1922, he had been on
the faculties of the Univer
sities of Montana and Wash
ington. He left Eugene in
1930 to take the Minnesota
post.
Casey received both his
bachelor's and masters de
grees from the University of
Washington and his doctorate
from the University of Wis
consin. His professional expe
rience, in addition to his work
in education, has been as a
reporter, political writer, and
assistant city editor of the
... - A T J If J
beanie fosi-iniemgencer ana
a reporter on the New York
Herald.
Manned Fighter
Plane Said Staying
London ctP) Boyd K. Bu
cey, vice president of the Boe
ing Airplane company, today
said that the manned fighter
plane is here for a long time
to come.
"Despite the present pub
licity regarding satellites and
missiles we firmly believe
that manned airplanes will
be the backbone of our Air
Force for many years to
come, he said.
Bucey's opinions were giv
en in a paper read to a con
ference here on the problems
of aircraft production.
The theme of the confer
ence, arranged by the Institu
tion of Production Engineers,
is a comparison of air produc
tion practices in the United
States and Britain.
W 41
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