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y THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXIV., NO. 11,471 1Elite Quarters of Fairbanks Trusties Invaded by Drunk FAIRBANKS, Alaska, April 6—¥ —When the ninth trusty in the city | jail prepared to retire Tuesday night, FoR HOUSING he found he was short a bed. He counted them carefully. | Counted again. Personnel changes rapidly in the select quarters of the privileged trusties, and the weary fellow couldn't single out the intruder. Finaly, with a little teamwork from his awakened cellmates, the mystery was solved. A drunk had wandered in from HOUSE 0.K. ‘WASHINGTON, April 6—(#—The | Hous; approved without opposition today an expansion of almost $4,- 000,000,000 in the Federal housing program. ‘The measure provides special aids for veterans housing, including a TERHUNE IS NAMED ASSISTANT CHIEF, ALASKA FISHERIES WASHINGTON, April 6—(®—The Fish and Wildlife Service said to- day Hugh W. Terhune, Administra- tor of its Philippine fishery program, will become assistant chief of itsi branch of Alaska fisheries July 1. Terhune will succeed C. Howard Baltzo, recently named as the Serv- ice’s assistant regional director in Alaska. Terhune has spent twelve years in Alaska. ¢ He was appointed administrator JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1950 St. Lawrence Gefs Some Shrdlu- Er-We Mean Names WASHINGTON, April 6—®—The Board of Geographic Names has approved 156 names for features on or near Saint Lawrence Island, Al- aska—but it choked on 31 other proposed names. Most of the names, submitted by the Geological Survey, are jaw- breakers from the Eskimo language. Saint Lawrence is north of the Aleutians and far out in Bering Strait, Closer to Siberia than to Alaska. ‘The board approved such mouth= fulls as Kittilngook Bay, Koom- new $150,000,00¢ program of direct loans for ex-GI's. Administration leaders expected quick Senate passage to send the the street and was snoozing peace- fully in a top bunk. He was formally arrested. Now he must achieve trusty status before of the Philippine fishery program|jangeeikuk Bay, Olngoosenuk Moun= it ltnm. Oskuvalowik Creek, Pingtooti- ook Bay, Powooiliak Camp, Tif- MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS __PRICE TEN GENTS JUNEAU AIRPORT OFFERED TO CITY FREE OF CHARGE| Dyer Tells Chamber Ad-| { vantages fo Be Gained by Ownership The Civil Aeronautics Authority has offered to give the Juneau Air- port to the city free of charge, it was revealed today. NEW AID . PROGRAM WANTED Congress on Unem- ployment Comp. KEY WEST, Fla, April 6P Truman Sends | Message to| Dulles Named Consulfani To Acheson WASHINCGTON, April 6—@)—~The States Department said today John i Foster Dulles, New York lawyer and foreign policy expert, had agreed to serve as consultant to Secretary of State Acheson. A formal announcement said the Republican leader was asked to President Truman sent to Congress | take the position by both President ‘The offer was reported to the Chamber of Commerce at its noon meeting today in the Baranof Hotel! today a message recommending ex- tension of unemployment compen- sation payments to an additional rejoining the elite group. JAP PLANE FLEW OVER SEATTLE IN '42, SAYS WRITER TOKYO, April 6—®—An Ameri- can Naval historian says that a sub-launched Japanese plane flew over Seattle six months after Pearl Harbor. The belated disclosure was made by Samuel Eliot Morison, assigned to write a 14-volume history of the naval phases of World War IL “This submarind’s plane flew right over Seattle—I think the date was May 28, 1942,” Morison said. It saw little or nothing in the way of unusual activity. It sought to learn compromise legislation to Presldent.| Truman. They expect, too, that the President will sign it although it is far from what he recommended. The House stamped its final ap-} proval on the measure just before the members took off for a 12-day Easter holiday. Before the compromise bill was worked out yesterday by a House- Senate conference committee, how- ever, both houses had rejected Mr. Truman's proposal for a $2,000,- 000,000 co-op home-building pro- gram for middle income families. BANDERA OFFERS INFORMATION IN TRADE, U. §. AID MUNICH, Germany, April 6—#— A spokesman for Stepan Bandera’s| Urkainian guerrillas said today hisi anti-Communist forces have sought in vain to collaborate with the if the fleet was to move through Seattle to the Aleutians for a strike at Midway.” Morison said planes launched by similar undersea craft reconnoiter- ed over Hawaii as long as two American Army in Germany. "WORST" CRIMINAL KILLED AFTER CHASE; IS BEATEN T0 DRAW LOS ANGELES, April 6—#—Fred Walter Lennon, 39, one of the na- don’s worst criminals, is dead, beaten to the draw by a rookie of- ficer and an FBI agent. And today, police and federal men hroughout Southern California are rying to track down his “most- wanted” partner, believed traveling in a housetrailer with his wife, listed as “a dangerous gun moll.” Lennon was cut down yesterday by FBI agent Jerome J. Dount and state highway patrolman Sam H. McDaniel after a 70-mile an hour chase on a desert road near Mo- jave, Calif. He was spotted by Dount near Lancaster -after the trio had been | reported seen in that area, towing 1 housetrailer. The car pulling the ‘railer was reported to contain Len- ncn, Lee Emroy Downs, 44, listed ki lighak Bay, Ughkooleekuk Cove, Yaghmelngak Moutain, Youghapot- it Rocks and Ynveeghik River. The board rejected seven of the submitted names, including Kit- ngeghuaget Point, Muknughapaghik Creek, Nyraghtalghuk Beach, Tap- paghtalghee Bayy and Tipitipita- zhat Peaks, It deferred action on 24 ad- ditional proposed names pending search for simpler spellings or bet- ter selections. % Among these were Agphtapuk Point, Ikallooksik River, Kinnipa- ghulghat Mountains, Niykhapak Point, Tappaghtalghee Bay, Tapp- isaghak River and Vngyat Point. PRODUCTION TO BEGIN AT JUNEAU LUMBER (0. PLANT BY APRIL 15 by T. H. Dyer, chairman of the organization’s aviation committec. which met with a party of CAA offi- cials here Monday night. However, Mayor Waino Hendrick- son said the offer was made once before and turned down by the city because of the high cost of main- taining the field. “The offer looks better now,” he said. “We're waiting on a statement of the cost of maintenance and ex- pected revenues before we take any action whatsoever.” Mayor Hendrickson said that ‘Walter Plett, CAA regional adminis- trator, who headed the CAA party which visited here, had indicated that the information would be sent to the city within 10 days. Plett also indicated that the offer of the airport included about $100,000 worth of equipment and maintenance machinery, Mayor Hendrickson said. Landing Fees Another factor making the offer The Juneau Lumber Coempany|more attractive than before is the mill will be ready to begin produc-|stated intention of CAA to charge tion of 30,000 to 40,000 board feet;landing fees at its fields. of lumber per shift by April 15, it{ This would mean that Juneau was announced today. “We have tried several times to establish proper contacts with the |vears after the start of the war. He said Jap subs were fre- would not be by-passed if it charged American Army,” the spokesmanquent visitors to the Oregon, Wash- by the FBI as one of the 10 most- wanted criminals, and Downs’s wife, Patricia. Lennon apparently drove The plant will begin operation!landing fees at the field; and reve- with the 60 by 200-foot building un- finished, according to J. R. Murphy, said. “We are willing to trade valuable information which we obtain from inside Russia. In return we ask only permissigiF¥o¢arry on our work in occupled - Germany and a little American ‘help in training and equipping our underground fighters. “But so far we have had no re- sponse from the Americans to our feelers.” U.S. Army authorities declined comment. Unofficially they said the Army could not establish contact; with such underground organiza- tions except upon orders from ‘Washington. Bandera himself emerged briefly from hiding last Friday to make an appeal through the press for a new line of attack against Communists |ington and California coast dur- [ing the early days of the war but |that in August, 1942, with the U.S. capture of Guadalcanal, Japanese Army leaders insisted on the re- turn of the subs to supply island outposts. TWQ PLANES OPERATED SEATTLE, April 6 — (® — The Washington, D.C. correspondent of the Seattle Times reported today that a submarine-launched Japa- nese airplane which flew over Puget Sound in 1942 was one of at least two that operated in the North Pacific. The report came from official Navy documents, gathered since the war. The dispatch said the planes operated from three or four sub- >n alone to draw.-pursuers from Downs and his wife. Downs was placed on the list in 1948 after the $10,800 robbery of aj San Jose, Calif., telephone office. He was described as “a safecracker, one of the elite among those who follow the burglary trade.” Found in Lennon’s car was $9,000 in currency. one of the organizers of the com- pany which purchased the Juneau Spruce Corporation properties Jan- uary 27. Already most of the equipment has been set up, he said; and slight damage done by high winds to the | partially completed main building will not slow up the process o! bringing the new all-electric plant into operation. A road will be driven through the charred remains of the Juneau Spruce Corporation mill which burned August, 1949, Murphy de- | clared. The new plant is being built SNOW FALLS OVER OREGON SECTIONS I south of the charred mill, and the road will connect it with the retail PORTLAND, April 6—(@—A" big oart of Oregon east of the Cas-|yard at the other end of the prop- cades was covered by snow today.!erty. marines which prowled waters off Washington, Southeastern Alaska and the Aleutians. The reconnaissance preceded the June, 1942, bombing of Dutch Har- bor, occupation of Kiska and Attu and the battle of Midway. Navy documents recorded the re- port: “The submarine off Seattle and one off Kodiak maintained their stations for some time. The only contact reported by the Kodiak sub- by the Western Poweir. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, April 6—Closing | quotation of Alaska Juneau min® stock today is 2%, American Can 118, Anaconda 29%, Curtiss-Wright 9%, International Harvester 27, Kennecott 51%, New York Central 14%, Northern Pacific 17, U. .| marine was the sighting of one large Steel 32%, Pound $2.80%. | merchantman.” Sales today were 2,000,000 shares.{ The report said a seaplane was Averages today are as folloWs:ijaynched about May 30, 1942, from industrials 212.13, rails 56.23, ulil-| . < hmarine about 100 miles nortn § i6ies 48.20; |of Dutch harbor. It scouted that Aleutian port-and reported only a few merchant ships. : | since April 1—.10 inches;. @ since July 1—4030 inches; @, ® o 00 0000 00 i u 3 ! The Washingion, Merry - Go- Round iCopyrisht. 1960. by Syndicats, Inc.) Bv DREW PEAKSON ASHINGTON—The power one member of Congress can wield over a governmeént agency has sel- dom been more shockingly demon- strated than in a backstage drama | involving Martinetish Congressman! John J. Rooney, New York Demo- crat. Rooney is threatening to stymie the vital air-safety program of the Civil Aeronautics Board—following a personal gripe against able CAB Chairman Joseph J. O'Connell Jr. As boss of a House subappropriation committee, Rooney recently slashed a hefty $923,000 from the CAB's modest $4,323,000 budget request. If approved by Congress, this! ® amazing 23 percent cut will mean ;e that the CAB’s overworked staff of 640 people—smallest of any inde- pendent agency in the government —must be reduced by 100. Futher- more this will come at a time when there is a crying need for more personnel for the ever-growing job of supervising civil aviation. More important, it would mean an almost inevitable letdown in inspection facilities to insure max- imum safety. Many lives would be placed in jeopardy. Close friends say that Rooney has never forgiven O'Connell, a fellow New York Democrat, for remarking at a banquet a year VISP T G s (Continued on Page Four) Two other subs were reported to have patrolled a line south of Cold | Bay, near the end of the Alaska Peninsula, without being detected. ., “The submarine-borne planes maintained radio silence during their flights,” the report was quoted, “with orders to break radio silence only if they were chased by Ameri- can planes.” SIEAMERLOVEM!NIS Denali scheduled to sail from Seattle Saturday. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver Snturgay, Baranof scheduled southbound 5 p.m. Sunday. ® & & o * o & o 0 O WEATHER REPORT In Juneau—Maximum 37; minimum- 30. At Airport—Maximum 37; minimum 28, FORECAST (Juneau and Vielstty) Cloudy with occasional light snow tonight and Fri- day. Low temperature to- night near freezing and high e Friday about 40. SPRECIPITATION ® (Past 24 nours endg 7:30 & m. today City of Juneau—None; since April 1—.06 inchese since July 1—60.63 inches. At Airport—None; 1t arrived unheralded, setting lo- The mill will employ 25 men per zal records for floating down long | :hift, Murphy said. after its winter companions had left, It was two to four inches deep over central Oregon and parts of southern and northeastern Ore- gon. Prineville reported three inches ind the snow 27 miles east of ‘here, at Ochoco Ranger Station. was four inches deep, It tapered off ;0 the west. Pendleton, La Grande and Meach- mnan had it. At Pendleton, the shocked Weath- :r Bureau reported it was the first measurable April snowfall since ye- ords were started in 1899, The ru- ler put the depth at 1.9 inches. (10 Longshoremen Vote Financial Aid, (onvicfl Bridges SAN PEDRO, Calif., April 6—® >f Harry Bridges’ fight against his -ecent perjury conviction was voted ‘ate yesterday by delegates repre- senting 10,000 CIO longshoremen. A resolution unanimously ap- oroved by 90 union leaders hurled charges of “frameup” and “gross miscarriage of justice.” It said the 3an Francisco verdict was ‘“based 1pon the testimony of paid inform- ors and self-admitted perjurers.” * Expeded Twins Buf lrlplel_(iirls Born CONCORD, Mass,, April 6—® -- The birth of triplet girls “flabber- gasted” their father. Attorney David Glass said he and his wife had expected twin boys to match a set of girl twins born two years ago. “Now we’ll have to think up a set of new names,” he said. The heaviest triplet weighed four pounds eight ounces and the smallest three pounds 13 ounces. They were born yesterday at Emer- son hospital. % —Full 1 ial and moral rt us. s Jma Suppc Isuvce depicting the fighting of SPAATZ MAY INSPECT (AP INSTALLATIONS Air Force General Carl Spaatz|minerals in 1940; in 1948 mines pro- | has indicated he may inspect Civil Air Patrol installations in Alaska next August, it was brought out last night at the bi-monthly meet of the CAP. Air Force reservists who will give catrol members flight training may receive pay for the work; it was orought out, and points toward service, Henry Leege, Juneau chapter of the Red Cross, jave a two-hour lecture on first aid methods, covering in that time zhe course given Red Cross workers which takes 18 hours of instruction. He urged CAP members to devote 2 least 10 more hours to such work in the near future, Several films were loaned the group by the Fish and wildlife chairman of the forest fires by parachute jumpers and how to predict avalanches, or set off a small one in order to avoid a large one. Two new recruits have brought total strength fo 25, entitling the satrol to three cadet commissioned officers and four cadet non-com- missioned officers. A goal of 50 has been set, with recommpendation then to go to headquarters for six offic- ers and 12 non-coms. Infantry drill and airplane iden- tification work was carried on, and the parking problem for the group’s Stinson plane was dis- cussed. Capt. Morgan Davies of the An- chorage Wing attended the meeting as a guest of Lt. Butch Suhrbier. TIDE TABLTE APRIL 7 High tide 4:3¢ am, 175 ft. Low tide 11:22 am., -12 ft. High tide 5:43 p.m. 136 ft. Low tide 11:26 p.m., 44 ft. nue gained in this manner, added to royalties received from fuel sold on the field and rental fees re- ceived, might make possible prof- itable operation of the airport by the city, Mayor Hendrickson said. Further advantages to be gained by the city’s taking over the field were listed by Dyer as: 1. Federal Aid to Airports funds could be obtained for the 2,500-foot runway extension which is being sought, { 2. The proposed hangar and op- erations building could be built at less expense using an already-paved portion of the field near the ad- ministration building as a floor for the hangar; CAA would not permit this. 3. The city would not have to pay rental fees for the ground on whicn the present administration building stands and on which the proposed hangar and operations building ! would stand. Featured speaker at the Chamber meeting today was Leo H. Saarela, Territorial Commissioner of Mines. He said that Alaska had mined more than $26 million worth of jduced $13 million; and last year mines in the Territory produced $11,300,000. He blamed the drop on the fact that mine operators are caught setween $35 gold and high costs of labor and materials. And all the time the easiest work- ed deposits are being used. “If mining is to continue, there must be exploration ‘and prospect- ing,” he said. “All available skill, and the latest scientific procedures must be used tc discover and de- velop ore deposits.” Pointing out that out of a tofal 5f $209 million produced by lode mining in Alaska $105 million came frcm the Juneau area, he said that Southeast Alaska has a greater diversity of minerals than any- where else in the Territory. “pgriculture and mining arc the most basic industries,” Saarela said. ‘Alaska has mining.” The Chamber’s executive board reported that the local industries committee had decided that no further good could be accomplished oy the Chamber in respect to tiie mportation of Canadian milk. A letter from the Rev. P. Gor- don Gould, director of Methodist work in Alaska, told the Chamber that it is not likely that a decision will be reached as to the location of the Methodist College for Al- aska at the Methodist committee meeting in Cleveland, O., April 17. It stated that it was not consid- ered advisable for Alaskan com- munities to send representatives to the meeting. H. L. Faulkner had been chosen to represent the Chamber at the committee meeting; Mayor Hend- rickson was to represent the city. |/ Visitors at the Chamber meetirig were Roy Peratrovich of Juneau John Center of Seattle and Doris Barnes of Wrangell. Al Overholtzer of the Miner Publishing Company was introduced ‘nlmmember. 5,000,000 persons and raising bene- fits by approximately 20 percent. Mr. Truman sent the message to Washington by a courier in the hope it can be transmitted to the House before it recesses this afternoon. The message calls for legislation speliing out recommendations he made in his “State of the Union” budget and economic messages fo Congress in January. White House officials said the President pleads in the message for enactment of legislation at this ses- sion since federal law must be sup- plemented by state enactments and many legislatures are meeting in l1951. | i The text was not made public here, but Presidential aides told re- porters the five-point program sug- zested would up average payments by 20 percent and extend coverage to employers of from one to seven persons, In many states the laws now apply to employers of eight vr more. One white House aide said that if the President’s recommendations had been in effect in 1949, the job- less would have received $850,000,000 more in benefit payments during unemployment periods than they did under current laws. TRUMAN SEEKS SUM TWO CIVIL AIRPORTS [N ALASKA DISTRICT WASHINGTON, April 6 — @ — President Truman asked Congress yesterday for an extra $176,606,194 to meet government expenses this year. He said the money is needed principally for increased pay and travel costs. The requests include: $4,500,000 for building civil airports at An- chorage and Fairbanks, Alaska; $1,- 110,000 for the Bonneville power transmission system; $750,000 for construction work on the All-Ameri- can canal system, and $7,000,000 for grants to states for unemployment payments and Employment Service Administration. :BOY, NINE, PERISHES | ATTEMPTING T0 SAVE 2 SISTERS IN BLAZE MURRAY, Ia., April 6—(»—Bobby i Egan, 9, perished with his two sis- (ters whom he was trying to rescue when fire destroyed the family’s new home early today. The girls who died in the blaze were Patricia Ann 8, and Marlene, 2. Bobby and his twin brother Billy were awakened by smoke about ? a.m. Bobby sent Billy to awaken their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Egan, who were asleep in another bedroom. . Bobby went to the bedroom where his two sisters were asleep. ! The parents and Billy got out | sately. When Bobby and the girl: tdid not immediately follow them the father and Billy ran back into the burning home. Flames barred the way to the bed- room where the three children were trapped. u.S. I_u;ns Down Cne Request Made By Czechoslovakia (By Associated Press) The United States has turned down a Czechoslovak request that eight fliers who engineered a mass escape of Czechs in three planes that reached the American zone of Germany be returned for trial. In a note to the Czech Foreign Ministry at Prague the U. 5. Embassy sald the eight are legitimate political refugees and have been given asylum in the west “in accordance with humanitarian principles.” Truman and Acheson. Only last night, Presidential Press Secretary Charles G. Ross de- nied reports that Mr. Truman pro- posed to name Dulles to a top policy post with the rank of Ambassador at Large. The State Department today said Dulles “will advise Secretary Ache- on on broad problems in the field of foreign affairs and on specific lines of action which this govern- ment should follow.” It added: “His work will not be confined to any specific area of the world. His broad background and wealth ot experience qualify him for consid- eration of problems in Europe, the Far East and other areas of the world, as well as problems affecting the work of the United Nations.” It was learned today that the Dulles appointment was worked out by Acheson and Senator Vanden- berg (R-Mich) after Mr. Truman had authorized Acheson about 19 dfays ago to take such action in an effort to restore real bi-partisan- ship in foreign affairs. The President, Acheson and Van- denberg finally agreed on Dulles as :he best man for the job within the past day or so. After Ross’ denial last nighi sther Presidential associates at Key West said Mr. Truman had not planned to include Dulles among /he bi-partisan foreign policy ad- visors because of Dulles’ attacks on ’he administration during the New York Senatorial campaign last year. Dulles, who made an unsuccessful race against Senator Lehman (D- Lib-NY), had raised the issue of ‘welfare state” and “statism” in his sampaign speeches. APPOINTMENT ACCEPTED NEW YORK, April 6—(M—Joha Foster Dulles, said today he had ac- cepted appointment as foreign policy adviser because the need for national unity was urgent in the face of a Russian “threat” as grave as “any we have ever faced in a shooting war.” Dulles, former Republican U.S. Senator and one-time U.S. delegate to the United Nations, issued his statement at a news conference in 1is home shortly after his appoint- ment was announced in Washing- ton, Dulles said he was “in full accord” vith recent speeches in which Sec- retary of State Acheson discussed Soviet-American tensions. “The United States is engaged in 1 cold war,” said Dulles, an interna- tional lawyer, and a long-time for- eign affairs advisor to New York's Governor Thomas E, Dewey. JESSUP STILL ON JOB KEY WEST, Fla, April 6—/P— The White House said-today that the appointment of John Foster Dulles as State Department consul- sant still leaves open Philip C. Jes- sup’s old job as trouble-shooting Ambassador-at-Large. Presidential Secretary Charles G. Ross told reporters the President is still looking for a successor to Jes- sup, promoted recently to special wsistant to Secretary of State Acheson. SCORES ARE DEAD AS HOLIDAY TRAIN FALLS INTO RIVER (By Associated Press) At least 125 persons were killed and more than 300 injured today in three foreign train wrecks, a fire and a barge sinking. Sixty textile workers were miss- ing from a motor barge which cap- sized in the Douro River at Oporto, Portugal. At least 19 persons were Kkilled and more than 100 injured in the derailment of the Oviedo-Madrid Express at Pola De Lena in Spain. A train loaded with Easter holi- dayers plunged into the flooded Indian River at Tangua, Brazil, when a weakened bridge collapsed, and jammed coaches were reported to have carried 40 persons to their deaths. The injured totaled 200. An early morning blaze in a home at Toronto, Ontario, trapped six children who were burned to death. The parents and two other children escaped. LATTIMORE SWEARS HE'S NOT COMMIE Will Invesifia?e Suing Mc- Carthy - Solon Is Denied Right to CE-Examine WASHINGTON, April 6— ( — Owen Lattimore denounced as “base and contemptible les” today the charge that he is a Russian spy and swore that he is not and never has been a Communist. From the witness chair of a Senate Committee, the 50-year-old Johns Hopkins professor said (A) he intends to talk with his lawyers about suing Senator McCarthy (R- Wis) for making the accusations and (B) he hopes to be the “ins- trument” of McCarthy's resigna- tion from the Senate. Lattimore testified before a pack- ed hearing room to the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee in- vestigatingg McCarthy’s general charges that the State Department is infested with Communists and their friends, Sitting with him was Mrs. Lat- timore and his attorneys, Abe For- tas and Paul Porter. Flood lights set up for movie and television cameras beat down on the witness and the Senate committee members flanked along a table across from him. Spectators filled all the pub- lic seats and were lined three and four deep around the wall of the big room. McCarthy was sitting behind the committee members. He is not a member of the committee, but asked yesterday for the right to cross-examine Lattimore. The com- mittee denied him that privilege but said he could submit questions through committee members. s he would “I asked for the right to cross examine the witness but my re- quest was denied,” McCarthy said. “It would be completely inade- quate to try to question him through the committee. I will 'just watch the proceedings.” Will Call Witnesses On next Thursday, the committee will sit to hear “mystery witnesses” McCarthy says he can produce to back up his charges against Latti- more. The Senator says one of these can testify that Lattimore was or has been a Communist Party member. As for that charge, Lattimore earnestly told the Senators: “I make to you on my solemn oath the following statement: “I am not and never have been 2 member cf the Communist Party. { have never been affiliated or associated wita the Communist 2arty, “I have never believed in the rinciples of Communism and have never consciously or deliberately advocated or participated in pro- moting the cause of Communism anywhere in the world.” When Lattimore spoke of Mc- Carthy his voice was heavy with sarcasm. His face twitched from anger Or nervousness. BITTER STREET CLASHES, PARIS (By Associated Press) Parisians last night witnessed the most bitter street clashes between Communists and police since the end of the war. The 1500 Com- munists were demonstrating against the publication in a Conservative newspaper of the diary of the former Nazi Col. Otto Skorzeny. Anti-Communist newspapers in Paris today demanded that atomic scientist Federic Joliot-Curie be tired from his job as head of France’s energy commission. He is an outspoken Communist who said yesterday that “Communist scien- tists will never contribute a particle of their science to a war against the Soviet Union.” "MUSH' MOORE ON TRAIL ONCE MORE EDMONTON, Alta, April 6—(#— Cecil (Mush) Moore and his 12- dog team hit the road again yes- terday. ‘They are enroute to Lewiston, Maine, on @ 5000-mile sled trip that started Nov. 14 in Fairbanks Alaska, . The remaining 2,900 miles will in- clude stops at Saskatoon, Winni- peg and Chicago,