San Bernardino Sun, Volume 65, 24 March 1959 — Page 2

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A-2 THE DAILY SUN

Tues., March 24, 1959

DIANE VARSI INSISTS HER ACTING CAREER HAS ENDED

BENNINGTON. Vt. (AP) Act- some girls, who attended Benning-

ress Diane Varsi who quit theiton College. . .

Elamor of Hollywood because sheiEnElan(J f(jr thp fiming of thought it was destroying her ar- -peyton Place." She won an Os-

rived in this community yesterday car nomination for her role in that

and reiterated that her acting ca

reer has ended.

picture.

Miss Varsi, dressed almost en

tirplv in hlarlt. said she hadn't

i nave preuy weu given up had a chance to get an immedi

au icieas oi acting, she said. -Tate impression of the town. "I

have no interest now in television haven't been here long enough

r01"- When asked if she planned to The actress, who was accomna-'get a job here, the actress re-

nied by her son, Shawn, 2'i, said plied, "I doubt it."

she didn't plans.

have any immediate

She and her son motored to

Bennington from Albany, N.Y.,

Miss Varsi, 21, said she decided some 40 miles, with L. Herve

.to settle in this town in Vermont's Larche of American Airlines, end-

rolling hills, because she knew;ing their cross-country trip.

Ike, Mac Want Informal Series of Summit Talks

(Continued From A 1) lif the foreign ministers fail to ease , . Jtensions. In Macmillan's view a prepare proposals to be discussed' ummit conference woud be all at a summit session. the more urgent to avoid war over Eisenhower and Macmillan both!the Sovicrs threat to tum Berlin

agreeu, wey saia, to mane a Clear Mo a ..ree cjty.. fcy May

a uaic euiu ue iur a iitfcius vi

The main purpose of the Big

fc.v.......w,w .. ..it our loreign ministers sessions

sjilucu vuitii ut" eiupiuenis jusiuy this. ALL THE MOKE URGENT This approach, however, does

not foreclose a summit conference!

Woman Stabbed fo Death at Breakfast DOWNEY (AP) Mrs. Ruth Lewis, 41, died at her breakfast table yesterday from two deep knife thrusts in the stomach and chest. Her husband, Eugene, 45, cabinetmaker for a Los Angeles furniture company, was booked in General Hospital's prison ward on suspicion of murder. He's in critical condition from apparently 6elf-inflicted knife wounds on one arm and in the stomach, police said. Two sons, Philip, 20, and Gene, IS, told officers the couple had a violent argument before break

fast over another man. The sons

were not home at the time of,notes due to be sent to Moscow

would be to get negotiations start'

ed before the Soviet deadline. This

would give Khrushchev an oppor

tunity to back away from this

threat without losing face

Khrushchev already has said he would delay turning the Soviet sector of Berlin over to the East German Communists if negotiations were under way by deadline

time.

Diplomatic authorities familiar!

with Macmillan's summit views said he believes such high level negotiations are the only way to obtain reasonable concessions from the Soviets. Macmillan is understood to favor informal, intimate summit meetings rather than the widely publicized Geneva-type meeting held in 1955. Some 800 persons from the Western and Communist side attended this conference, se

verely limiting the opportunity for

informal discussion of the type Macmillan believes best. The American British - French

the stabbing.

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in a few days are reported to

meet partly Soviet demands that Poland and Czechoslovakia be al

lowed to attend discussions on

Germany at a foreign ministers

level.

Authorities disclosed that Ei

senhower and Macmillan had dis

cussed Far Eastern developments

as well as Middle East tension during their meeting. The Far East talks covered Red China's threat to free Asian countries. No word on any decision was disclosed.

GUTTER

$1129

Length .... II

SSp io-ft.

Supreme Court Keep Russian Spy Case Open

WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Supreme Court called yesterday for more arguments on the legality of the arrest of convicted Russian spy Rudolf Ivanovich Abel who

drew a 30-year jail term.

The high court ordered more arguments on the case when its

next term starts next fall.

The brief said lawyers would be asked to discuss legal points

concerning Abel's arrest and a

search of his room. He is appeal

ing his espionage conviction. The court also:

Left up in the air the ques

tion of whether the Atomic Ener

gy Commission has a right to make public an inventor's secret without his consent. It nullified

two lower court decisions against

inventor Jerome S. Spevack, New

Rochclle, N.Y., and his "heavy

water" process effective when

Spevack gets a patent on the process sometime this spring. The

court said this would make the

process public just as the AEC

had done, erasing any legal is sue. RULING ON ANNUITIES

Ruled 5-4 that the Securities

and Exchange Commission rather

than state agencies should regulate sales of so-called "variable" annuities. The new type annuities,

which earmark part of a purchaser's money for stocks, were start'

ed to provide some protection against inflation's effect on the dollar. The high court held in effect that such plans were secur

ities and do not fall under state

jurisdiction as would insur

ance.

Ruled unanimously that state officials must collect federal claims against state employes'

wages for unpaid federal taxes.

In the case, involving West Vir

ginia State Auditor Edgar B

Sims, the court also said that a state official is personally liable for payment himseU if he fails

to do so. Abel, a meek-mannered Rus

sian who posed for nine years as

a down-at-the-heel artist and

photographer, was arrested by

immigration officers June 21, 1957, in his Manhattan hotel room. Although arrested for deportation, he was later indicted tor spying after a one-time col

league, Reino Hayhanen, turned himself In at the U.S. embassy In

Paris and agreed to testify.

I if . Jt ' ! r 1 ft 4 -a J A-

Traffic Cop Eying Duke Waved on

BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (AP)

The Duke and Duchess of Wind-

; sor took off yesterday on another

leg of their cross-country tour after a near encounter with a

traffic officer.

Their two station wagons were double-parked while being loaded at their hotel. A police patrol car pulled up to check the double

parkers. But Police Chief Clinton

Anderson arrived just in time to;

wave his officer on.

The duke and duchess and their

retinue headed for the coastal re

sort of Pebble Beach, south of San Francisco, after a three-day stay

in Los Angeles.

AWAIT GRIM WORD Mrs, Rebecca Yancey, whose

sons Bernard, 33, and Willard Yancey, 36, died in coal mine explosion near Robbins, Tenn., sits outside mine entrance and calmly awaits recovery of their bodies. With her is Vernell

Yancey, cousin of the dead men. (AP wirephoto)

Gas Blast Rips Mine; 9 Killed (Continued From A 1)

All of the men lived in or near

Oneida, 18 miles north of Robbins.

Burl Phillips and Oscar West were operators of the mine, described as a family enterprise which normally employed eight or,

10 persons.

The mine, in the Cumberland Mountains about eight miles, east of Robbins, produced 50 to 60 tons

of coal daily. The fuel is distributed by trucks.

Audie Acres, a veteran miner

who assisted in the rescue operations, said the gas pocket appar

ently collected over the weekend. "The mine's ventilating system was cut off over the weekend,"

Acres said. "This apparently allowed gas to collect." Belgian King Accepts Ike's Bid for Visit

WASHINGTON (UPI) King

Baudoin of the Belgians has ac

cepted President Eisenhower's invitation to visit the United States, the White House announced. Eisenhower was notified that the king would arrive here May 11 for a 10-day official visit to this country.

Auto Circles Lawn By Self, Bringing Tragedy fo Family NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. (AP)

Eileen Torrey, 27, mother of

two and expecting a third child,

was talking on the telephone yes

terday with her husband, John,

to tell him she finally was able

to start the family car.

Suddenly she said the automo

bile was moving, and she placed

the telephone receiver on the ta

ble. The husband waited and then

heard the older of his sons, Kevin,

5, say into the telephone:

'Daddy, Mommy is lying under

the car."

Police Chief Joseph W. Lawlor,

after investigation, said the autoobile apparently made three cir

cles in front of the house and up

on the lawn, striking Mrs. Torrey

the third time around.

Torrey was rushed to Lawrence

General Hospital from his Woburn

place of employment.

Attendants told him his wile

was dead.

Brown Names Bay Ciiy

Man fo Court of Appeal SACRAMENTO (UPI) Gov. Edmund G. Brown has said he

will appoint San Francisco attorney Mathew O. Tobriner, 54, to1

fill a vacancy on the First District Court of Appeal. At the same time, the governor

announced that he had selected justice Absalom Francis Bray, 70, as presiding justice of the appellate court's division one. Bray succeeds Justice Raymond E. Peters, who was elevated to the State Supreme Court by Brown last week. '

MACMILLAN TRULY VICTORIOUS; IKE LOSES NOTHING

Khrushchev Gets Another Propaganda Chance

By 3. M. ROBERTS (Aiiocistad trm Nswi Analyst) President Eisenhower's agree

ment with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan on a summit confer

ence with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev will be assessed by a

good many people as a victory

for the Soviet leader.

Any form of compromise with

the cold war opponents always produces some iear of guard-dropping.

1955 PUDDING SOUR

Khrushchev has been trying for two years to maneuver Western

leaders into a new conference such as the one at Geneva in 1D55 which produced so little.

Since he is going to get it bar

ring some vital hitch over the agenda and since Eisenhower is going to do something he didn't want, the argument is bound to be that Khrushchev is, to date, the winner.

Whether he proves to be the

ultimate winner, however, will depend upon how well he succeeds

at the conference itself. The propaganda pudding he attempted to concoct in 1955 turned sour very

quickly. To date the truly victorious fi,

ure in all of the maneuvering is British Prime Minister Harold

Macmillan. And, indirectly but

potently, his success involves an important American interest of

India Avoids Tibet Revolt

(Continued From A 1) a result of rumors that the

Chinese were planning to kidnap the Dalai Lama, who is considered a reincarnation of Buddha.

In the shooting, the consulate

was hit by about 60 bullets, Indian government sources said, but none of the staff of about 30 was hurt. Nehru said a crowd had visited the consulate about two weeks ago as a result of the rumors concerning the safety of the 23-year-old Lama, and a group of Tibetan women had asked the consul to present demands to the Red Chinese authorities. The consul, Nehru said, refused this request, and also turned down a Chinese suggestion that the consulate staff take refuge at Chinese headquarters. Nehru said he had no reliable information on the fate of the Lama but declared he earnestly hoped he is safe. There were unofficial reports that the Lama is under house arrest in the capital and that the Chinese are trying to persuade him to leave for Peiping, thereby demonstrating withdrawal of moral support of the rebels. Other unofficial reports have said fires started in two' large

U.S. Pilot Awaits Trial in Indonesia JAKARTA, Indonesia, (AP) -Allan Lawrence Pope, the Miami, Fla., pilot captured while flying

for the Indonesian rebels, is liv

ing in an Indonesian air force bungalow while awaiting trial. U.S. Embassy officials, who visit Pope periodically, said he is in fine shape. Government forces shot Pope down in a rebel B26 May 18, 1953.

monasteries in Lhasa, possibly

from Chinese bombing or shelling. Other reports said the Chinese had

deployed about 4,000 troops in

southeastern Tibet to combat the Khampa tribesmen.

(In Taipei, Formosa, Nationalist Chinese Cabinet Minister Li Yung-

hsin, chairman of the Mongolian-

Tibetan People's Affairs Commis

sion, said the uprising had spread

to the Chinese provinces of Sikang

and Chinghai, which border Tibet. He did not disclose the source of

his information. Li said thousands of Chinese were fleeing Sikang into India, which also borders that

Chinese province.)

Mrs. Duncan Kept Under Close Watch By 'Suicide Guard'

VENTURA (AP) Convicted murderess Elizabeth Duncan is be

ing watched by a "suicide guard"

as she awaits the third .phase of

her trial for murder, it was dis

closed yesterday.

Sheriff William Hill said he post

ed the guard over her county jail cell Friday night after a jury set death as her penalty for hiring the murder of her daughter - inlaw. He said that as far as he knew 54-year-old Mrs. Dunnan had

not made any suicide threats,

Superior Judge Charles F. Blackstock is expected to rule today

on Mrs. Duncan's sanity on the basis of submitted reports by two

court-appointed psychiatrists.

Mrs. Duncan was convicted of

first degree ' murder for masterminding the slaying of Olga Dun

can, 30-year-old pregnant bride of

her son Frank.

which President Eisenhower was fully aware during their conferences. FACES ELECTION

Macmillan's ruling Conserva

tive government, trusted by the

United States, faces an election.

After nearly two years during which it was frequently said that an election would have returned

the Labor Party to power in Brit

ain, the Conservatives siagea a

political comeback. To take ad

vantage of it, Macmillan had been expected to call an early election.

Then Secretary of State John

Foster Dulles became ill and the

Berlin crisis opened an opportunity. The British people and press wanted Macmillan to take advantage of the opportunity for in

creased British leadership. He

did.

The London papers used words

like "triumph" in their headlines. Their jubilation was matched by

the sourness of Aneurin Bevan,

a measure in itself of the Macmillan success. The left-of-left Laborite called

Macmillan a poseur and accused him of carrying empty diplomatic luggage.

The election call can be expect

ed in a matter of weeks.

SOLID U.S. SUPPOUT In the meantime, a survey made by the New York Times

before the Eisenhower-Macmillan

agreement, reported the American people solidly behind the President's determined stand not to yield any Allied rights in West Berlin, and willing to rely on him to handle the details. So, if Macmillan has won a vic

tory, and Eisenhower hasn t lost

anything, then it's up to Khrushchev to see if he can make any hay as the lines are drawn for a new top-level propaganda battlp. For propaganda, rather than any real hope of settlements, is now the order of battle.

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Draft Extension Is Signed by President WASHINGTON (AP)-The military draft was extended yesterday until July 1, 1963. President Eisenhower signed the extension law which Congress passed on his recommendation. The law also extends authority for special pay to medical and dental officers in the services.

HEART O. K. NOW Says R. Gallett I first went to Dr. Wing, the Chinese doctor, for treatment for palpitation of the heart In 4 weeks I was improved and was discharged after 3 months. Afterward I worked hard in a laundry with no ill effects. It has been 4 years now and my latest check-up shows I am quite well. (Signed) R. Gallett. Dr. Wing, D.C., Chinese Herbologist, call for appointment. Pomona 900 E. Holt Ave. (between Alexander & Towne Ave.) NA 9-3910. L A. office 1429 S. Vermont, DU 2-2801. Free booklet "Regain Health, Naturally!" Closed Sun. & Mon.

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