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The Indiana Gazette du lieu suivant : Indiana, Pennsylvania • 2

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a a a a a a TWO' INDIANA EVENING GAZETTE, INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1056. Will Force Workers To End Strike (Continued From Page One) out production. Kadar's government also notice that any persons caught taking part in unauthorized public: meetings or demonstrations would face up to five years imprisonment, About 28,000 workers 80 per cent of the working force went to the big Csepel iron and steel day but refused the works south of Budapest, yestergovernment releases Sandor Racz, chairman of the outlawed Budapest Central Workers' Council, and Sandor Bari, vice chairman. They were arrested Thursday.

Hungarian security police seized three Western correspondents outside the Csepel industrial complex and questioned thm for eight hours. They included Associated Press reporter -Eric Waha. an Austrian citizen. a reporter for Reu-: ters, the British news service, and Richard Kilian, an American who works for the London Daily Express. Kilian's mother.

Mrs. S. Baker, lives in New York City. Before their release they were. questioned by Hungarian plainclothes-men and Russian officers.

An informed source claimed guerrilla warfare against the regime has stopped. The informant said there were some rebel holdouts still hiding in the hills andi forests outside Budapest and around Pecs, but that the insurg. ent bands were "hiding and not fighting." He said the number of reel: fighters was declining steadily A5: more and more slipped out of the country as refugees. Radio Budapest said today that group of Hungarians who attacked the director of a state farm in Keczkemet had been turned over to a military court for trial' under the new martial law decree. The decree was instituted Sunday in an effort to.

combat the call for a general strike. The accused were charged with' an armed attack on Antal director of the state farm, and then resisting police who attempted to arrest them. The broadcast said the -trial: would be held today. If convicted, the accused are liable to within two hours. 60-Second Interview With Rock ay orphanage.

He organized a NEW YORK Some Metro-profit corporation called Hope, politan Opera not voices were raised through which he will funnel after high, but baritone in melody, yesterday every dime he makes from 'Bat- Enzo Sordello was tle. Hymn' toward the construction fired by Met General Manager of a new orphanage. Rudolf Bing. "These facts alone present a Bing says the 29-year-old Sor. great challenge to other human dello was fired for insubordination beings who think they've done to maestro Fausto Cleva, the something by authorizing one per- orchestra conductor.

cent out of the weekly paycheck But Sordello implied soprano for charity. 'They are dramatic Maria Meneghini Callas was jealfacts which ordinary make actor- ous of him. He said she berated proof characterizations. But meet- him backstage after their duet last ing this man fact-to-face and dis- Saturday at the end of the second covering the spirit which made act of "Lucia di Lammermoor." the real-life drama possible 1 be- The baritone say's the prima gan to wonder if I could make the soprano "cracked" on a donna screen version measure up. high note, adding: "She grabbed "I am convinced that Dean Hess my arm and said, go of the is one of the truly great men I high But I held it." will ever meet.

To speak with him Miss Callas could not be reached five minutes is 10 become inspired for comment. She went on last by his quiet honesty and his sim- night in "Lucia" with Sordello's ple love and understanding of fel- scheduled role of lord Enrico low human beings. Ashion being sung by Frank Val. entino. "Further, his dedication to prin- In ciple became more evident every announcing the replacement.

day I saw him on the set as tech- signs outside the Met Sornical advisor. I fell into a discus- dello was "indisposed." sion with him over his attitude he had "nO Maestro comment." toward becoming an Air Force career officer when his heart Sordello made his debut with the really back in his pulpit in Ma- last November. He said he was Met sang with Miss Callas two vears rietta, Ohio. no career told on the opening night of La he Scala Opera me. '1 stayed in the 111 Milan.

At that service be- time, be claims, I feel I'm doing more to clared Callas deMiss cause ne would never fight the greatest enemy that ver her again. sing with faced our civilization and Chris- He tianity. I stayed in because received a registered letter don't from Bing saying he think you can pray away com- replaced because was being munism. My obligation is in of a "regrettable uni- disagreement between form until this greatest threat to and maestro yourself Fausto Cleva." human decency and freedom the Sordello said world has he differed once ever known is dispelled. with Cleva over I'd be disappointed if they sent high note at the end singing 8 a certain home before of his first me act aria last Tuesday.

Sordello "If I can Dean get this essential feel- said he bowed to Cleva of in this ing screen 1 will have across achieved on the the matter and eliminated the high Hess note. most significant accomplishment of He say's he's taking the first. my lucky career." available plane back 10 Italy. "When I first read the script for Hymn' I knew it was one nf the best roles of my challenge when I met the man I'm portraying." says film star Rock Hudson. "A minister of the Church the Disciples of Christ, Col.

Dean Hess became a great fighter ace in two wars. He flew 63 missions in Europe in Wrodl War I1 and 250 missions, many of these tactical ground support, in He trained the ROK Air Force from 10 inexperienced South Korean pilots throwing hand bombs per the sides of liason planes into a vest pocket combat arm for the nited NUations. spreading devastation on the Reds from the sky. in F-51 Mustang fighter-bombers. a 'sideline' he picked every orphans he could find refugee straggler lins and eventually assembled 800 of them in government building on Cheju land which he commandeered SWEDE AND LOVELY grid Carisson, 20, of Stockholm, is that city's 1956 "Lucia Bride." She will reign as the "Queen of Lights" in the traditional Swedish Christmas celebration.

Oil Pioneer Uses A Gun To End Life (Continued From Page One) sell Eagleto Shell Oil and the profits to start Amerada allitroleum Corp. search Corp. in 1930 and helped He established Geophysical organize Geophysical Service, He was a past president of American Assn. of Geologists in 1952 was inducted into Oklahoma Hall of Fame. His rare, books were mostly about Mexico, New Mexico Arizona.

He also had some books dealing with Texas and California during Spanish times. He edited the story, "Across Aboriginal America," about journey of three Epglishmen across Texas in 1568. He bought controlling interest the Saturday Review of Literature and rescued it from financial ure. He became board chairman 1948. 1,000 More Refugees In Freedom Bid VIENNA (P--Nearly 1.000 refugees crossed the border from Hungary in the last 24 hours despite stiffer controls by Russian troops, Austrian police reported today.

Police counted. 401 in the daylight hours yesterday, and had expected a considerably larger number last night. This had do been the pattern of the past six weeks. But at 9 a.m. they.

had counted only another 564. Eisenstadt border police headquarters attributed some of the reduction to the after-effects of the general strike called in Hungary earlier in the week. Lack of trains and buss apparently prevented many refugees from reaching the frontier area. Fiften national Red Cross SOcieties today were taking over the of 25,000 refugees in large camps throughout Austria. On Jan.

1 they will assume responsibility for another 10,000. Met Firing Draws Fire Of Patrons Dulles Reporting To Ike This Afternoon On His Important Paris Confab (Continued. From Page One) 'urgent efforts to the Suez Canal operating again. it was blocked during the fighting last month and for final settlement of Middle Eastern problems. ment Apart from reporting on apartimprovement in Western Big Three relati .15, Dulles could tell; Eisenhower of two other major developments bearing on the fu-: ture of the alliance.

The first of these was an agree ment, announced at Paris, for the United States to supply allied in Europe with weapons capable of firing atomic The atomic warheads them-ition. selves will not be furnished. be-1 of a restriction under American law. Some specul. 'an developed here that the Eisenhower administraition in time might ask Congress to permit the furnishing of weapons to Western European countri: but this speculation was without any official support.

But it appeared that even the limited commitment made in might run into sharp critijcism in Congress. Con. Fulbright (D-Ark) told reporters Reports from Paris quoted Dulles as saying the meeting of the 15-nation North Atlantic Treaty: Council had marked the turning point in development of the allilance. was badly shaken last month when Britain and France attacked Egypt and the United: States deno iced their action. The NATO Council called for the agreement looks like "a very dangerous thing." Fulbright said 11.S.

pricy is to try to prevent an atomic war, and that "to go spreading them (atomic weapons) around" seems conitrary to that policy. The other T'ATO development Dulles could report :8 an by all the 15 member nations to closely in the future on political problems of interest to the alliance, Dulles 'ha: regarded such an agreement--which he began work-: ring on last spring--as essential. step in the NATO into, something more than a purely military alliance, Officials here said, however, that the re.l significance of the agreemen.t to consult on political issues will be determined in the future by the extent to which. in such consultation. member nations actually engage, Seek Funds To Start A Town Bank ELLENVILLE, N.Y.

(P -Eiforts were under way today to raise $1,050,000 by selling stock in a new du national bank to replace the defunct Home National, closed after discovery of shortages totaling $1,300,000. The capitalization funds must be raised by a committee of Ellenville businessmen, who conferred Washington yesterday with officials of the Federal Deposit Corp. and the office of the controller of the currency. H. Earl Cook, chairman of the FDIC, told the committee all of Home National's 8,500 depositors will be able to transact their banking business in the normal manner when the new bank opens.

Cook said the FDIC stood ready to pay off depositors to the legal limit of $10,000, but that the pay-' off was deferred because of greater benefits to the depositors and community from operation of a new bank. The Home National was closed Dec. 4, Its former president, William R. Rose, 51, is being held in default of $50,000 bail on a charge of falsifying bank records. Rose, now awaiting grand jury action, claims he pocketed none of the money but used it to aid local businessmen.

Arrangements with the FDIC, last night. reinstatement Ellenville sources, were informed of all deposits. But a total of $250,000 in questionable loans plus the Motel Zeiger overdraft of $253,000 and the Anjopa paper mill overdraft of about $900,000 will not be reinstated. it was reported. The name of the new bank has not been selected for this Catskill Mountain community.

14 Trapped In Big Fire KANSAS CITY P-Fourteen persons were trapped on the top floor and overcome by smoke from a fire that broke out in the basement and raced up the air shaft of a four-story hotel here last night. Firemen wearing gas masks carried them down ladders to safety. Nine were unconscious. Three were hospitalized. The other six were treated and released.

Leo Pursell, manager of the hotel, the Delmar, said 45 persons were registerd. Fir Chief Edgar M. Grass said the cause of the fire was not known. There was no immediate estimate of the damage. Read The Gazette Classified Ads Port Said Incidents Increasing (Continued From Page One) out.

I pull Egyptian military sources charged the Israeli army is delaying its withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula and trying to impose N. guarantees of the secrty, of Israel's borders. Yugoslav informants said the would permit Yugoslav U. N. troops to occupy only a 31- mile wide strip of the Sinai deserti adjacent to the canal.

They said Yugoslav patrol advanced about miles beyond that point and was ordered back by the Israelis. Further East, Syria remained pairs to the sabotaged pipelines that carry oil for Europe from Iraq to the Mediterranan. 1 To-; gether with tanks plying the canal, these lines carried the bulk of Middle East oil destined for Britain and other Western European countries before Suez invasion. Syria Public Works Minister Majdeddin Jabri declared the pipelines cannot be touched until all foreign troops have with-. drawn from Egypt.

The United States protested to British official said there was possibility they might have been mistaken in the early morning darkness for British or French troops. There was speculaton the guerrillas may be members of the outlawed nationalist Moslem Brotherhood trying to put Egyptian Presi-! dent Nasser in an embarrassing situation, Lt. Gen. Sir Hugh Stockwell, British commander, ordered his forces to round up all Arabs, men, women and children, in a five block area for questioning in the kidnaping of Lt. Anthony on Wedesday.

Arab males years or older were taken to the city sports stadium for questioning. The car which Moorhouse was kidnaped! was found abandoned- in a garage in the search area. The Egyptian claims to have killed Stockwell told -newsmen: don't hold any great hope on this operation but I feel must do something abot it." The withdrawal continued without letup, but there still was no official word on when it would be completed. The aircraft carrier: Theseus sailed for England dawn with 1,100 British The last shipload of Jews fled Port Said, leaving a behind only two frightened families who refused. to depart- ntil their men are released from hostage.

Jewish families have charged Egyptian secret police visited them after the Israeli me invasion 'of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula and took away one member bf each family. Some 330 Jews, including citizens Egypt, France, Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia and some stateless persons, boarded a French troopship in the harbor because of fear they would 'be a persecuted if they remain here when the British and a French leave. Delay in clearing the debrischoked Suez Canal brought mount-1 ing concern in Britain and France. The British and French have cleared a channel through the Northern end their troops 0C- cupy, but the Egyptian-held southern end remains clogged. At the United Nations in New York, there was speculation the nations would press Secretary General Dag get the clearing job started without further delay.

Egypt has cepted a N. offer to help clear the waterway but refuses to work begin until all foreign troops Syria yesterday about the delay in allowing immediate emergency repairs. Undersecretary of State in allowing immediate emergncy' rpairs. Undersecretary of State Hrbet Hoover Jr. called on the Syrian government to "take immediate steps to get that oil flowing to the Mediteranean." Medical Men May Revise Water Views ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.

A fact-finding committee of the American Medical Assn. is reassessing the association's favorable stand on fluoridation of drinking Dr. waterid B. Allman, presidentelect of the association, said yesterday that afte. the five-man committee reports its findings at some future AMA meeting, the association "will either reaffirm its previous stand or state otherwise." years ago, the AMA dorsed fluoridation as a' means to prevent children's tooth decay.

Since then, 'many cities throughout the country have adopted the principle while others are opposed. Dr. Allman, an Atlantic City physician, said he believed the committee would reaffirm the as-' sociation's stand favoring fluordaton. I The feeling in the AMA, he said, is not unanimous on fluoridation but the majority of the members are definitely of the. opinion, that fluoridation not only is safe but also beneficial for the improvement of dental health in children." Read The Gazette Classified Ads Obituaries OTTO S.

STOCK of Black Lick Press Action For Mideast Crisis Issues (Continued From Page One) Hungarian people" with "Soviet public professions." They' called on the N. "through the pressure nf world public opinion, to induce the Soviets to withdraw forces from Hungary and to right the wrongs done to the Hungarian The council took several steps to strengthen NATO on both the military and non-military fronts. FIt received a U. S. promise to.

deliver to the Atlantic Allies weap-. ons capable of firing atomic siles but mnus the atomc war-: heads themselves, still top secret under American security legisla-. agreed that U. S. Secretary of John Foster Dulles had reestablished a working partnership in a series of separate meetings with British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau.

Before leaving early today for Washington, Dulles said his talks with Lloyd and Pineau had done much "to bury if not dissolve' entirely the differences existing in The council sessions appeared to have put the United States and other member nations back on friendler terms with Britain and France through general concern over the Middle East and agreeatomiciment to support U. N. moves there. Nevertheless, it appeard that Big Thre harmony still was not back to the "best status that existed before Wash-: thislington reproved its British and French Allies for their drive into the Suez Canal zone. Officials of several countries Anti-Soviet Riots Staged In Poland WARSAW, Poland (-More antiRussian demonstrations have been reported in five Polish towns.

Organs of the governing United Workers' (Communist) party have warned that continued demonstrations might lead to 1 a clampdown by the anti-Stalinist Polish. Communist government. Fears also are held that if the situation gets out of trol, Russia may feel its rail links through Poland to East Germany are endangered. One of the points where renewed du disorders were reported Thursday, night was Stettin, where 91 per. sons were arrested Monday night! in an attack on the Soviet consulate.

Reports reaching Warsaw also said students marched through the streets of Lublin in Eastern Poland demanding an end to Soviet intervention in Hungary. The reports said Similar demonstrations occurred in Czestochowa, Kutno and Lalisz, all in Central Poland. The renewed disorders were viewed in the light of the widely held belief that the power struggle of socialism" led by anti-Stalinist Communist leader Wladyslaw Gomulka and a faction favoring a tougher policy. There also were anti-Russian rumblings on the labor front. The 30,000 employes of the Cegielsko steel works in Poznan adopted a resolution demanding the immediate withdrawal of Russian forces from Hungary.

Floods Hit W. Virginia, Ohio Areas CHARLESTON, W. Va. (P Crests short of Nood stage were expected for the Ohio and other rivers today as central West Virginia's high water moved out, caving muck in its wake. Three days of rain climaxed by an all night downpour sent streams out of their banks yesterday.

Schools were closed in all of three counties and portions of two others. One man was believed drowned. Gordon Ashcraft. 57, of Wallace, a coal company employe, was last seen when he fell from a bridge into a rain-swollen stream about 25 miles south of Clarksburg. He had been cleaning flood debris from the bridge.

The body had not been found last night. It was the worst flood in 40 years for Spencer, a farming town of 2.500 about 50 miles north of here. The first floors of about 50 houses were flooded and families were evacuated before the water began receding the yesterday. The community of Reedy near Spencer spent a cold night because the flood washed out its gas main, but prompt repairs were expected today. Highways still closed last night included U.

S. 19 between Clarksburg and Shinnston. Page passed away in Indiana, Friday, December 14. Born in Jeannette on January 17, 1884, he war the son of Michael and Caroline Simmindinger Stock. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Elsie Stock, Blairsville; one son, Joseph, Summit Station, six daughters, Mrs. Evelyn Pirimentel, Pawtucket, R. Mrs. 'Hazel Zwircan, Brooklyn, N. Mrs.

Marie Pecorino, New York City: Miss Dorothy Stock, Mrs. Edna Randall, both of Brooklyn, N. Mrs. Marjorie James, Clymer; 18. grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs.

Carrie McCoy, Wilkinsburg; Miss Helen M. Stock, Cincinnati, 0. Funeral arrangements, in charge of, Shoemaker Funeral Home, Blairsville, are incomplete. CALVIN H. STEFFY died Friday morning at his home in Ash- ville, 'N.

Y. Services will be held at the Henderson and Lincoln Funeral Home, N. Monday, Deck 'ember 17, at 11 a. m. Mr.

Steffy is survived by his wife, three daughters and two brothers, James Blair Steffy of Little Rock, Askansas, and A. Glenn Steffy of Marion Center. the Naval EARTH Research SATELLITE PROGRAM -Scientists from BEGIN scientific Laboratory set off the first rocket of. the earth satellite program at 'Patrick Air Force. Florida: The Viking rocket soared about 125 Base, air before miles into.

the it fell into the Atlantic Ocean. The hicle for the earth satellite will be launching vefirst stage of which will be a modifled rocket, the three-stage Viking. Shooting Local Man Called "Justifiable" (Continued From Page One) against the family made by tele- phone. Chief Heckel said both factorsMartin's attempt to enter the house and the circumstances preceding his appearance were taken into consideration in viewing the shooting as justifiable. The police chief said the other! law" enforcement offcers.

includ-! ing Westmoreland County District Attorney L. Alexander Sculco, agree with his decision. Heckel said he had stopped at the Addison home earlier Thursday evening when the chain of events started and found the family "frightened." Chief Heckel said Martin "holds; no malice" but is determined that he was right in the action he took. All action in ruling a the -shooting justfiable, of course, is on the assumption that Martin will recover from the wound. There also remains the possib-: ility that individuals.

involved in the" affar may file charges in the of any formal charge lodged by investigating officers. Assisting Chief Heckel in his: probe of the case were Joseph Hostenske and Peter Marino, of the Greensburg State Police substation. Former Demo Chief Faces Court Action SCRANTON, Pa. (9-A federal grand jury late yesterday indicted William J. Green delphia's, Democratic a former congressman and five contractors for alleged "fraud and deceptions" during construction of a' huge Army Signal Corps depot at nearby Tobyhanna.

The grand jury said Green, former Rep. Herbert J. also a Philadelphia Democrat, and the five contractors conspired to circumvent standards and specifications in contracts for the 33- million-dollar depot, The indictments charge that Green, member of the House' Armed Services Committee which was concerned with building the depot, received $10,000 pa off money and another $20,000 collected illegally through his Philadelphia insurance business. Also indicted were John P. Gilboy of Scranton, head of an' engineering firm; Joseph Rochez of Rochez Brothers, a Pittsburgh construction company; Frederick J.

Raff, Hartford, Conn. plumbing and heating contractor: Robert W. Brown of Consolidated Construction Merchantville, N.J., and John B. Kemmel, Philadelphia painting contractor. The grand jury is continuing its probe and the indictments yesterday gave no indication of how much money was involved in the alleged frauds.

McGlinchey, a long time political associate of Green, served in the House from 1944 to 1946 and was defeated last month when he again sought election. He was accused of conspiring to conceal corrupt payment of money among some of the defendants by acting as a go-between for the" collection and delivery of the money. Yule Season Stops Flow BONN, Germany P--The West German Refugee Ministry said today the approach of Christmas has cut the flow of East Germans seeking refuge in the West. In the last week 3,947 persons quit the Soviet-occupied zone compared with 4,412 in the previous week, The average in recent weeks has been around 5,000. Officials described it a "seasonal decline" because Germans are reluctant to leave home at the time of their biggest festiI val.

MRS. 'ANNIE MARY McCREIGHT, 76, lifetime resident of Indiana R. D. 2, passed away this morning (December 15) at the Hospital. Born March 21, 80, in Washington Township, she was a daughter of Robert and Margaret Bracken Bates.

Mrs. McCreight was a member of the. Salem Methodist Church. She is survived by her husband, J. Frank McCreight and one sister, Mrs.

Ella Johnston of Indiana. R. D. 2. Friends will be received at the Clark Funeral Home, Elderton, after the noon hour Sunday, December 16, where services will be conducted at 2:00 p.

m. Tuesday, December 18, by the Rev. R. Paul Beatty. Interment will follow in Elderton Cemetery.

1 Hungarians Have Ousted: 2 Newsmen (Continued From Page One) detention by Budapest. police. Waba and Kilian were detained yesterday, afternoon together Reuters with Farquhar of when police objected to their interviewing workers around the Cse-' pel iron and steel works, south of Budapest. Farquhar was not expelled. Kilian said he understood hotel authorities were handling the details of reporting his presence to.

the police, as is customary in many countries. Both expelled correspondents said they were convinced their efforts to cover the Budapest labor situation was the reason for their expulsion. The Associated Press still has two men in Richard Kasischke, American chief of bureau at Vienna; and Endre Zara ton, Hungarian, who has represented the AP in Hungary for years. Universe Expansion Is Slower By FRANK CAREY WASHINGTON (P Tentative evidence was reported today that the universe may be expanding at a slower rate. This challenge to the concept of many astronomers that the cosmos will forever continue to bal: loon out into an undefined void was contained in the annual re-' port of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, a private research body.

It said studies made by' astron-. omers Carnegie's Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories in California suggest that the universe may be an "oscillating" thing like a toy balloon that is repeatedly blown up, partially deflated, then blown up This tentative conclusion is a thousand billion billion miles based in part a on studies of stars fromt he earth and racing outward at speeds exceeding. 60,000 miles a second. The Carnegie astronomers said their "still too crude" observations, if confirmed, would mean that "the expansion (of the universe) will eventually stop, and contraction will set in." Other astronomers said if the concept proves to be sound, such oscillating of the universe would take place gradually over billions and billions of years.

They said the Carnegie report constitutes the first observed evidence, however tentative, to support the theory, of an oscillating universe, which is not a new one. Still another concept held by some astronomers is that the universe is a steady thing one that never has expanded or contracted as a whole. although individual star systems within it may do so. Astronomers generally define the universe as including matter, energy and space. Many say it is expanding to some degree.

They concede they have no present answer to the question of what' "space" can expand into. Dr. Caryl P. Haskins, president: of Carnegie. said confirmation of the Mt.

Wilson Palomar. data "may allow conclusions of a fundamental and far-reaching nature about the geometry of space, and about the mean (average) density of matter in the universe." Brings Word From Three Yank PW's By SEYMOUR TOPPING BERLIN (P The tall, slim German looked around nervously and said: "I've got a message from three Americans held prisoner by the Russians in a camp near Leningrad." This sort of thing happens often in this city 110 miles behind the Iron Curtain. Sometimes 'the reports are true, often they are peddled by rofugees desperate for money. This story sounded more convincing than most. The German, who lives in the Communist East, risked his neck to bring the report in and 'asked nothing in return.

"Up until the spring," he said, "I was held in a Soviet camp for foreigners at Lipschinskaya near Leningrad. It was a camp to receive prisoners who became sick in the slave labor camps. "Early this year four Americans were brought to the camp. They were arrested in East Germany in 1945 on charges of being spies. They were sentenced to 20 years of hard labor by a Russian military court in Brest-Litovsk and sent to the Novo Sibirsk camp in Siberia.

"Three days after the Ameri-1 cans were brought to Lipschinskaya, one of them died. His name was Dean Kelly. He lived in Detroit. His father was the owner of drugstore and his brother was a teacher at the Detroit Technical High School." The German said the other three Americans, still alive, were: William Seals, 39, of New York City; Fred Thompson, 36, of delphia; Donald Oswell, age un-4 known, also of Philadelphia, Just before he left Lipschinskaya, the German said, the Americans pleaded with him to get out word about them. The German had trouble getting personal details from them because he knew only a little English.

He gave the information about the Americans to the German Red Cross as well as a reporter. "I didn't contact U. S. officials because I- didn't want it to be thought I was an agent," he said. The U.

S. Army command in Berlin said the four names given by the German do not appear on their lists of missing soldiers. This includes men known to have deserted into the East German -zone -since World War 11. The Army is checking further, South Koreans Are Under Fire TOKYO IP The Pyongyang radio said today Communist North Korea's Supreme Court had "pronounced a stern verdict" on South Korean who was charged with seeking to stir up a Hungarian type rebellion. The South Korean was identified as Pak 'Choon Keuk.

The broadcast charged he was a U.S. -trained intelligence agent ordered into North Korea to organize revolt "similar to that which oc. curred in Hungary." It gave no details of the sentence. Now In U.S. A.

NEW YORK -Mamoru Shigomitsu, Japanese foreign minister, arrived today to accept his Dation's expected seating in the United Nations sext Tuesday. I.

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