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T H E W E A T H E R Today: Fair and warmer. Tomorrow: Fair, little change In

temperature.

T em perature* Y esterday: M a i., 24.8; Mil»., 20.4 T o d a y 's Probable Uaotffi: M a x., 44; M in ., 28 Hum idity a t 3 p. m . Y esterda y: 43% Expected Humidity This A ftern oon : 40*50%

Detailed Report, M a p -P a ge 24

Kcralb

N E W

Y O R K

European Edition Published Daily in Paris

(Tribune

Late C ity

E d itio n

n

113th Year ÏSOT*

230 West 41st Street, New York 36, N. Y,

Telephone PEn/ısylvania 0-4000

T U E S D A Y ,

F E B R U A R Y

2

,

1954

C op yrigh t, 1054

New Y ork H erald T ribu n e Inc. FIVE CENTS

Mayor V agn er greeting President Celal Bayar of Turkey yesterday. Next to them are their wives.

White House Objections

Snag Bricker Substitute

By D on Irwin WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.— Efforts to reach a workable compromise on the Bricker amendment became snagged to­ day on tentative White House objections to an important pro­ vision of the proposed bi-parti­ san substitute.

The Administration position, stated during a two-and-a-half- hour White House conference this morning with Republican Congressional leaders, failed to get bi-partlsan support when

tested provision or an Adminis­ tration-approved substitute.

A conferee who asked not to be quoted by name said the White House proposed that the clause be eliminated or that it be amended to make clear that it does not restrict the Presi­ dent’s authority to command the armed forces or recognize for­ eign governments.

Sen. Walter F. George, D., Ga., who proposed the section last week, told reporters this after­ noon he would not support the

Inventor of FM

Ta?v..-c „ » hr)t h m<?t tbt« Continued on page 20, column 6 afternoon to try to reach agree­

ment on the long-awaited sub­ stitute.

The second meeting broke up without results. Soon after it ended, Sen. William F. Know- land, R., Calif., Senate majority •leader, went to the White House to confer for a second time today with President Eisenhower. He was accompanied by Sens. Homer Fei'guson, Mich., chair­ man of the Republican Policy Committee, and Eugene D. Millikin, Colo., chairman of the Republican conference, with whom he worked closely for a settlement that will avert a Re­ publican intra-party row.

City Cheers Turkish President

Bayar Thanks U. S. for Aid,

Says Turks W ill Need More

By John G . Rogers

President Celal Bayar o f Turkey thanked the United States last night for $1,220,000,- 000 in military and economic aid over the last five years, but said more help is needed if Turkey is to continue maintaining an army of 400,000 against Com­ munist imperialism.

Speaking at a dinner o f the American-Turkish Society at the Waldorf-Astoria, just before leaving on a nineteen-day tour

“ Substantial Progress” Sen. Knowland reported “sub­ stantial progress” as he left the White House tonight, but said “some problems” remain. Attor­ ney General Herbert Brownell jr. and his aids will tackle these tonight, the Senator said, and another White House meeting Will be held tomorrow morning, to be followed by a new confer­ ence with Democratic leaders.

The controversy was on a pro vision of the proposed substi­ tute that would require an act o f Congress to make interna­ tional agreements other than treaties effective as internal law. Administration legal officers were said to have sought more time to study the section’s effect and to have suggested that the remainder of the amendment be passed by the Senate, leaving it to the House to add the con.

Armstrong Writes Note

To Wife, Dies in Plunge

Maj. Edwin H. Armstrong^ ? sixty-three, inventor o f fre­ quency modulation (FM) and one of the nation’s leading radio pioneers, plunged to death yes­ terday from his thirteenth-floor apartment at River House, 435 E. 52d St.

Maj. Armstrong was found, fully clothed to overcoat, hat and gloves, on a third-floor ex­ tension at 10:30 a. m. by Alfred Henrichs, building maintenance man. He had apparently been dead several hours.

Police found a two-page note to his wife, Mrs. Marion Arm­ strong, signed “ Ed,” in which he said it was “heartbreaking” that he could not see her again and continued: “How deep and bitterly I regret what has hap­ pened to us.”

The note, written in pencil on yellow legal paper, said he would give his life to be able to turn back to the time “when we were so happy and free” and ended: “ God keep you and the Lord have mercy on my soul.”

Maj. Armstrong, who began his brilliant career in electronics when just a boy, was a profes­ sor of electrical engineering at

of the United States, the sev enty-year-old statesman ap­ pealed for an increased flow of private investment capital to Turkey.

Assuring that Turkey is solidly devoted to capitalism and pri vate enterprise— “ the best sys­ tem”—Mr. Bayar said that to encourage private capital Turkey has passed laws giving foreign investors complete freedom to transfer both principal and in­ terest.

The dinii?” of the American Turkish Society, attended by nearly 1,000 persons and ad­ dressed also by Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, was the cul­ mination yesterday of a busy fourteen-hour schedule for Mr. Bayar, his wife, Mrs. Reshide Bayar, and their party of twelve.

They toured the United Na­ tions, received the traditional ticker-tape welcome in a parade up Broadway, were received at City Hall and attended a city- sponsored luncheon at the Wal­ dorf-Astoria. Then the President of Turkey received an honorary law degree from Columbia Uni­ versity.

In contending that Turkey is a promising area for foreign investors, Mr. Bayar asserted that although his country spends 45.5 per cent o f its budget on defense, its capitalistic system has made long forward steps since 1950 to improve the gen­ eral economy.

The President, who has been school teacher, guerrilla fighter, banker and government official Continued on page 13, column 6

Complete Thruway to Cost

3 0 0 Million Over Estimate

By Dan Bloom

The New York State Thruway end its connecting links will cost $300,000,000 more than the $500,000,000 originally antici­ pated, it was revealed yesterday. The Thruway Authority will have to ask the Legislature for per­ mission to issue revenue bonds to finance the full super-highway program. Soaring costs for both construction and rights of way, plus unexpected engineering ob­ stacles, were given as the rea­ son.

Bertram D. Tallamy, chair­ man o f the Thruway Authority, said in Buffalo yesterday that the $500,000.000 the authority is authorized to borrow through state-backed bonds will “ fall short” of completing the 427 miles of road between Buffalo and New York City.

This main stretch of the high­ way, it was estimated yesterday by authority officials in Albany, will cost in the neighborhood of $555,000,000 since construction

so far is running- at the rate of $1,300,000 a mile.

The cost revision leaves the necessity now of finding funds for four Thruway extensions which were included in the orig­ inal estimates. These are: the 14-mile New England Extension from the Bronx to the Connec­ ticut line; the twenty-two-mile Berkshire extension from Albany to the Massachusetts line; the Niagara extension from Buffalo to Niagara Falls, a distance of 20 miles; and the 72- mile Erie extension from Buf­ falo to the Pennsylvania Turn-, pike extension.

It was estimated these 128 miles of highway, which are in­ tegral parts of the Thruway project, will cost close to $245,- 000,000. This would place the cost of'construction for the ex­ tensions at more than $1,900,- 000 a mile.

Mr. Tallamy said that "fortu­ nately” the authority has on

Continued on page 14, column 4

M aj. Armstrong

Columbia University and the winner o f a score o f awards in­ cluding the Medal of Merit and a Presidential citation for his contribution to military com­ munications. He was a major in the Signal Corps in World War I and preferred that title to “ doctor” or “professor.”

Columbia University called Maj. Armstrong “ the most im­ portant of all radio inventors, including Marconi.” Besides his invention o f FM in 1935, which eliminated static and led to an increase in new stations, Maj. Armstrong invented the follow­ ing three processes also hailed as the most important in radio development:

The regenerative receiving circuit in 1913. This circuit, con­ ceived by Maj. Armstrong while still a student at Columbia, took radio out of the crystal detector, earphone stage and made loud­ speaker reception possible.

The superheterodyne receiving circuit in 1917. Invented while Maj. Armstrong was a captain in the Signal Corps, it is the circuit universally used in ordin­ ary radio receivers today because of its high selectivity and am­ plification.

The super-regenerative receiv­ ing circuit in 1922. An improve­ ment on the regenerative cir­ cuit, it provided even greater amplification and made high- frequency short wave much more effective. Two-way police and Continued on page 18, column 3

Budget Sets

State Mark,

No Tax Rise

Dewey Discounts

Recession Fears

By David M cConnell

I ALBANY, Feb. 1.—Gov. Dewey asked a record outlay of $1,113,- 200,000 today to operate the state government during the next fiscal year and indicated that supplemental requests |would raise the total to $1,130,- 000,000. He said there would be

no new taxes.

Despite the record program— topped in the nation only by New York City and the Federal government — the Governor’s annual budget message pie- dieted that the state will end its 1954-’55 fiscal year March 31, 1955, with a net surplus of $3,100,000.

Gov. Dewey has recommended a “ tight budget.” In sixteen of the state’s twenty-eight depart­ ments and divisions appropria­ tions have been cut below the current spending program. The Governor said no new positions were recommended, except where required by increases in institutional population or ex­ pansion of services.

“ No Serious Recession” He said the budget is based on the conclusion “ that there is no reason for anticipating a serious recession,” and that he was planning for “ an expanding economy while standing ready at any moment to apply what­ ever emergency measures may be necessary to check any reces­ sion which might develop.”

The message produced a strange mixture o f signs of the times. It called for increased spending to care for the annual income of 3,000 persons a year in state mental hospitals, and estimated that appropriations for penal institutions would have to be .boosted to meet an anticipated 1.4 per cent increase in prisoners.

' y h e Governor estimated the state's cigarette tax of three cents a pack would fall from $40,000,000 this year to $39,500,- 000 due to a drop in consumption and that the alcoholic beverage tax would drop from an expected $49,800,000 this fiscal year to $48,700,000 during the next.

Hard-Times Buffer As a buffer against hard times, the Governor reported that the state purpose reserve fund “ should reach $78,500,000 and the local assistance reserve fund $62,200,000 by March 31.” He said this “ should be sufficient to weather any recession.”

The Governor’s requests com­ pare to the initial budget of $1,072,000,000 in appropriations he sought last year for the cur­ rent fiscal year which expires on March 31.

The message opened with an assertion by Gov. Dewey that he did not “ believe it is proper” for the state to add at this time to the tax burdens, and he prom­ ised to retain the present reduc­ tions of 10 per cent in the per-

Continued on page 10, column 6

Missing Russian Diplomat

Surrenders to U. S. in Japan

By The United Press

Wa s h i n g t o n! Feb. i.—in ­ formed sources here said tonight that the missing Soviet diplomat Yuri A. Rastovorov “is in our hands.” These sources unoffi­ cially confirmed Tokyo reports that Rastovorov had surren­ dered to American authorities in Japan. They refused to give any details.

The State Department de­ clined to answer any questions on the matter.

Asked about Rastovorov ear­ lier today, White House press secretary James C. Hagerty told reporters, “Nobody in the White House knows his whereabouts,” Asked whether he had checked with other government agencies, Mr. Hagerty replied, “ Of course.”

Kidnaping Charged

By Mac R. Johnson

From the Herald Tribune Bureau

Copyright, 1«54, N. Y. Herald Tribune Inc.

TOKYO, Tuesday, Feb. 2.—A Soviet spokesman charged Mon­ day that United States "espion­ age” agents kidnaped Yuri Alexandrovich Rastovorov, miss­ ing second secretary of the defunct Russian mission here.

An official of the illegal Soviet mission handed out a statement in which he charged that there was reason to believe “ Rastovo­ rov has been seized and is being detained by the American espionage organ in Japan with

Associated Press radiophoto

Yuri Alexandrovich Rasto­ vorov, a photo from a Japanese newspaper.

the aim of provocation of the Soviet Union.”

But whereas the Russian offi­ cial asserted Rastovorov is being held in Japan there were reli­ able but unverified reports that he had turned himself in to American authorities, asked for political asylum and then was

flown off to Okinawa for ques­ tioning.

Mr. Rastovorov, a genial thirty-four-year-old tennis play- Continued on page 25, column 5

Molotov Turns Down

West’s German Plan,

___

*

Renews Blast at U. S.

A ssociated Press w ireph oto

Denies wife's charges— James Roosevelt at press con­ ference in Los Angeles yesterday.

Signed to Spore Father

R oosevelt Denies All,

Calls Wife Blackmailer

By The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 1, James Roosevelt today denied misconduct with a dozen women, charging he was blackmailed by his wife into signing letters ad­ mitting adultery. He said he signed them, knowing they were false, to prevent a scandal while his father was President.

He declared that every allega­ tion of misconduct in his wife’s suit for separate maintenance is ‘false and without foundation.

After apologizing to nine women named in a letter dated Feb. 27, 1945, which bears his signature, Mr. Roosevelt said in a statement issued at a press conference that he signed it partly because he was:

“ Acutely conscious of the tre­ mendous burden which my father was then carrying as President of the United States, and the horror of adding another to these burdens seemed to me to be overwhelming.”

The late Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s eldest son said he had been assured that if he signed the letter, prepared by attorneys, it would never be made public and latei would be destroyed.

Mrs. Roosevelt filed her suit last week in nearby Pasadena.

Arthur S. Schifferman, one of three attorneys representing Mrs. Roosevelt, said his client would have no statement “ until we have seen the statement; read it, digested it and conferred on it.”

Before reading his prepared statement, Mr. Roosevelt told reporters that he had released all my friends and campaign workers” in the 26th District Congressional race. He said he would not submit his name at the next district council meet ing Feb. 11. However, the dead­ line for filing is April 2, and Mr. Roosevelt added: “ I will make my final decision at a later date

To Wed at

75,

Live With Mother

CHICHESTER, England, Feb. 1 (tf).—Alfred Thair, seventy-seven, and Emily K. Goodger, seventy-five, an nounced today they will be married Saturday. They will make their home with her mother, who is 102,

some time before the deadline. The complete text of Mr. Roosevelt's prepared statement follows:

“ The necessity of the follow­ ing statement is, unfortunately, all too clear. My wife has chosen to make the most ugly accusa­ tion which it is possible to make against any man.

“ She had brought in the names of twelve other innocent people without regard ta the ef­ fect on them or their families or associates,' but above all, without regard to the happiness, the welfare, the grief, or the sorrow of our own three chil­ dren. This has caused my fam-

Continued on page 17, column 3

Russian Calls

On France to

Back the East

By Gaston Coblentz

By Wireless to the Herald Tribune

Copyright, 1954, N. Y. Herald Tribune Inc.

BERLIN, Feb. 1. — Soviet Foreign Minister Viacheslav M, Molotov rejected today at the Big Four Foreign Ministers conference here the Western powers proposals for reunifica­ tion o f Germany.

He virtually ignored the West’s demands for free elec­ tions as the vital basis for re­ uniting Germany. He delivered a long address violently attack­ ing the United States and charging the American govern­ ment with preparing aggressive war against the Soviet Union.

He coupled these attacks with a major plea to France to join with the Soviet Union in pre­ venting a revival o f “ German militarism.”

Tiring “ Old Refrain” After Mr. Molotov’s address Secretary o f State John Foster Dulles told the conference: “ I cannot speak for my colleagues, but as far as I am concerned I can keep awake indefinitely under the stimulus o f new ideas. I find it hard to keep awake when an old refrain is played again and again.”

Mr. Molotov’s address at the seventh session of the confer­ ence was the tensely awaited Russian reply to the West’s pro­ posals last week on the German problem. Mr. Dulles and the Foreign Ministers o f Great Brit­ ain and France regard the ques­ tion o f Germany as the main business that brought them to Berlin.

British Hopes Dashed An official spokesman o f the British delegation who on Sat­ urday regarded Mr. Molotov’s opening remarks' on the German problem as “ encouraging” said tonight:

“ We regard Molotov today as very disappointing. There was no sign whatsoever, such as he seemed to show on Saturday, o f readiness to consider the West­ ern plan (for Germany) on its merits. He made nothing but remarks in a most uncompro­ mising manner. He has tabled a plan on which we have had variations, the same as those which the Soviet Union set forth the year before the death of Stalin . . . and had been re­ peating in subsequent notes ever since.”

Mr. Molotov demanded that the Potsdam agreement of 1945 between Russia, the United States and Britain form the

Continued on page 4, column 3

Avalanche Crushes Igloo

2 Harvard Students Die

On Icy Mt. Washington

Special to the Herald Tribune

PINKHAM NOTCH, N. H„ Feb. 1.—The frozen body of Philip Longenecker, twenty- five, of Toledo, Ohio, a Harvard graduate student, was found today buried in the icy wreck­ age of an igloo which he and a companion had built on a week-end mountaineering ex­ pedition on Mt. Washington.

His companion, Jacques Par- ysko, twenty-three, of Cam­ bridge, Mass., a senior at Harvard, was found frozen to death late yesterday on the treacherous slopes of Tucker- man Ravine. He had apparently clawed his way barehanded out of the igloo when it collapsed early Sunday morning, and had tried in vain to make his way down the mountain, lightly clad and barefoot in the bitter cold.

Mr. Longenecker’s sister, Polly, twenty, a junior at Connecticut College, who had spent Friday night in the ice shelter with the two young men, volunteered to lead searchers to her brother’s rescue today, but sub-zero tem­ peratures and high winds caused veteran mountaineers to send her back before they reached the igloo, 4,200 feet up the 6,288-foot mountain.

The three young people, a c­ cording to Joe Dodge, manager of the Appalachian Club, which operates the Pinkham Notch

Camp here, started out on a camping and mountaineering week end Friday. “ If we had known where and how they planned to camp we would have advised against it,” he said, “ be­ cause of uncertain weather con­ ditions and avalanches in the ravine.”

High up the side of the ravine, the two young men built the igloo and the three passed the first night in its shelter. Satur­ day morning Mr. Longenecker and his sister skied down the ravine to the camp and he re­ turned up the mountain alone. He was last seen by students at the Harvard Outing Club cabin, Continued on page 11, column 4

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Adv. Field .. Amuse . . . 14- Auctions . . . Books ... Bridge Deck. Buchwald .. Business ..26- Classified 32-Comics ... Editorials . . . Employment Fashions Financial 26-Food ... Hy Gardner.. Going On . . . Lawrence . . . Lippmann ,. 16 Lost & Found. 2 Marine ...24 Nature Story.25 Obituaries .. 20 P u zzle...33 R a d io ... 25 Real Estate..31 R u n n e r...26 Red S m ith ...21 Society ...13 S p o rts __ 21-24 Stabler ...26 Television .. 25 The U, N... 4 W ebster... 19 World News.. 2

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N E W

Y O R K

H E R À L D

T R I B U N E ,

T U E S D A Y ,

F E B R U A R Y

2,

1954

13

Grosvenor House Benefit

T o Be Marked by Dinners

Final plans have been made

for the performance o f “ The 1 Caine Mutiny Court Martial,” to be given next Monday for the benefit of the Grosvenor Neigh­ borhood House at the Plymouth Theatre and for the theater dinner, which will precede the play, in the Kendez-Vous of the Plaza. Mrs, Edward A. Hill is chairman and Mrs. David Granger jr., vice-president of the benefit.

Among the dinners planned for the evening of the perform­

ance are those of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Hill, Mr, and Mrs. David Granger, Mr. and Mrs. Fergus Reid, Mr. and Mrs, Frank Hayden Connor, Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin Maull and Mrs. Bur- chall Black.

Also, Mr. and Mrs. Hermon A. High, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Richards Ford, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. George J, Leness, Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Linsley, Mr. and Mrs. David L. Richardson and Mr. and Mrs. C. Lamont Post.

D 'A rlen e

Grosvenor Neighborhood House aids— Mrs. Edward A . H ill, left, and Mrs. David Granger jr. are co-chairmen o f the benefit' performance of “ The Caine Mutiny Court Martial” and theater dinner in the Plaza next Monday.

Engagements

Dr. Elizabeth Aub,

Dr. Robert C. Reid

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Aub, o f Belmont, Mass., announce the ■ engagement o f their daughter, Dr. Elizabeth Francis Aub, to Dr. Robert Clay Reid, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. Elton Reid, of Peculiar, Mo.

The future bride is a grad­ uate of Shady Hill and Cam­ bridge School of Weston, Smith College and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Co­ lumbia University. She is a resi­ dent in psychiatry at the Boston Psychopathic Hospital. Her father is professor of research medicine at Harvard University.

Dr. Reid is a graduate of the University of Missouri and the Harvard Medical School. He is a resident in psychiatry at the Boston Psychopathic Hospitl. He served two years in the Navy.

E d m u n d M. K ram e r

Dale Banker

Dale Banker,

Robert E. Penny Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Avery Banker, of 16 Madison Ave., Cranford, N. J„ announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dale Banker, to Mr. Robert Elliott Penny Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Penny, of Cedar-, hurst, L. X.

Miss Banker was graduated from the \iail-Deane School and attended Cazenovia Junior Col­ lege. Mr. Penny was graduated from Rutgers University and is a member of Delta Phi. He is a lieutenant in the U. S. A. F. R. A March wedding is planned.

G eorg e D ick s o a

Dr. Elizabeth F. Aub

Betty Jane Verhoeven,

[William S. McCready

Announcement has been made by Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Ver­ hoeven, o f the engagement of Mr. Verhoeven’s sister, Miss Betty Jane Verhoeven, of New York, to Mr. William Steel M c­ Cready, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. McCready, of Bartlesville. Okla.

The prospective bride is the daughter of the late Mrs. Ethel R . Verhoeven. Mr. McCready was graduated from the Univer­ sity of Oklahoma. During World War IX he served with the Air Force in the Mediterranean as a navigator. He is with Phillips Petroleum Co.

Grace E, Johnson,

Dr, L. Y . DeFrancesco

STAMFORD, Conn.. Feb. 1.- —-Mrs. George C. Johnson, of 100 Strawberry Hill, announces the engagement of her step daughter, Miss Grace E. John­ son. to Dr. Louis V. DeFran­ cesco, son of Mrs. Hugo De- Francesco, o f Mayflower Gar­ dens, and the late Mr. DeFran­ cesco.

Miss Johnson is a graduate o f the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and Berkeley School. She served in the W.A.C. during the World War II and was attached to Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s headquarters in the Philippines.

Dr. DeFrancesco served in the Navy and Marine Corps and participated in the Normandy and Okinawa invasions. He re­ ceived the Purple Heart. He is a graduate of Fordham College and Columbia University Dental School.

A spring wedding is planned.

M ollet

Assisting with plans for Barnard College’s luncheon and forum marking the 200th anniversary of Columbia University’s founding are, left to right, Mrs. W illiam A . Mudge, Mrs. Reynolds Pomeroy and Mrs. John A . Coleman, The luncheon will be held Saturday in the Waldorf-Astoria.

Barnard Luncheon To Be Held Saturday

Reservations for the Barnard College luncheon to be held Saturday in the W aldorf-As­ toria marking the 200th anni­ versary of Columbia University’s founding, must be in today. The luncheon will be followed by Barnard’s sixth annual forum.

Millicent C. McIntosh, presi­ dent of Barnard College, heads the executive committee, which

includes also Mmes. S. Pearce Browning, Frank J. Horrigan, Herbert Macintosh, William A. Mudge, Mrs. Reynolds Pomeroy and Miss Mildred Uhrbrock.

Taking part in the forum which will follow the luncheon will be Agnes Ernst Meyer, whose subject will be “ Women in the Community” ; Emily H, Mudd, “ Have Knowledge and

Freedom Brought Greater Hap piness to the Home?” Emily Kimbrough, “ The Pitfalls of Freedom,” and George N. Shus­ ter, president of Hunter College, “Knowledge and Responsibility.” Tickets for the luncheon are $5 and for the program only, $2. They may be obtained by applying to the Barnard Forum, 102 Milbank Hall, 606 W, 120th St.

Dewey Is Host at Luncheon

T o 30 Republican Leaders

From the Herald Tribune Bureau

ALBANY, Feb. 1.—Thirty Re­ publican county chairmen and vice-chairmen were the guests of Gov. Dewey and Mrs. Dewey at a luncheon today at the Ex­ ecutive Mansion. Sen. Irving M. Ives and Mrs. Ives and Rep. Dean P. Taylor, Republican State Chairman, and Mrs. Tay­ lor, also were present.

It was the first of a series of Monday luncheons planned by the Governor and Mrs. Dewey for the purpose of getting better, acquainted with the party lead­ ers throughout the state. There were no speeches and while politics was the main theme of the table chat, neither the Gov­ ernor nor Sen. Ives nor Rep. Taylor had anything to say “ that was politically significant, according to those who attended.

Sen. Ives, who told reporters last night that Gov. Dewey “will have to run” for re-election this fall, because party interests de mand it, refrained from any

campaign in his talks with the luncheon guests, it was said.

Sen. and Mrs. Ives, overnight house guests of Gov. and Mrs, Dewey, left at 3 p. m. today by train for Washington. The Gov­ ernor accompanied them to the railroad station.

John J, Knewitz, Bronx County Republican chairman, and William H. Hill, Broome County chairman, were invited to attend, but did not appear. It was explained that Mr. Knewitz was absent from the state, and that Mr. Hill was detained because o f illness in his family.

Gets Psychiatric Posts

ALBANY, Feb. 1 »).—The appointment of Dr. Lawrence C. Kolb, o f Rochester, Minn., to two psychiatric posts in New York City was announced today. Dr. Kolb was named director of the New York State Psychiatric Institution, and professor of psychiatry and executive officer of the department of psychiatry, . Columbia University College of mention o f prospects for the fall Physicians and Surgeons.

Bayar

Art Show to Aid

Oberlin Museum

A sponsors’ cocktail party in the roof garden o f the Pierre and several dinner parties in the hotel’s Cotillion Room will pre­ cede a benefit preview of paint­ ings from the Oberlin College Museum tonight at the Knoedler Galleries. Proceeds will help sup­ port the museum. Starting to­ morrow the exhibit will be open through Feb. 21 without charge.

Mrs. George Bassett Roberts is chairman of the benefit open­ ing, and Mrs. Joseph Bissett is honorary chairman. Miss Pris­ cilla Stevenson, daughter of Dr. William E. Stevenson, president of Oberlin College, and Mrs. Stevenson, is chairman of the committee of hostesses, of which her sister, Miss Helen Stevenson is a member. Others are the Misses Sue Carroll. C. Ann Dun­ can, Diana S. Field. Caroline M. Fraser, Marcia J. Mattson and Henrietta Oates. Miss Constance D. Sherman is chairman of patrons.

Marriages

Caroline C. Miller

Caroline C. Miller,

Antonio S. Cueva

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wood Miller, of Scarsdale, announce the engagement of their daugh­ ter, Miss Caroline Cremins Mil­ ler, to Mr. Antonio Santaella Cueva, son of Mr. and Mrs. An­ tonio Maximilian Cueva, o f Rye. Miss Miller attended Colby Junior College. Mr. Cueva grad­ uated from Bordentown Military Institute. He is a member of the 107th Infantry (7th Regiment) New York National Guard and as with A. Santaeila & Co., Tampa. Fla.

Frances Lee McEachern,

Ens. Peter \V. Streich

RIVERSIDE, Conn., Feb. 1.— In St. Paul’s Episcopal Church this afternoon, Miss Frances Lee McEachern, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Thomas A. McEachren jr., o f Riverside, became the bride o f Ens. Peter Wakely Streich, U. S. N. R., son o f Mrs E. L. Steiger, o f Riverside, and Mr. Charles Streich, o f Oshkosh, Wis. The ceremony w as-per­ formed by the Rev. John J. Hawkins and a reception fo l­ lowed at the Milbrook Club Greenwich.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride was attended by her sister. Miss Martha McEachern, maid of honor; the Misses Betty McEachren, an­ other sister; Carolyn Steiger, Rosamond Lehren, al) of River­ side, and Barbara Wear, of Memphis, Tenn.

Lt. Charles A, Streich was best man for his brother.

Mrs. Streich attended Ran­ dolph Macon Woman’s College and the Child Education Found­ ation. Ens. Streich was grad­ uated from Princeton University and is stationed at Newport, R. I.

Joan Carolyn Stevenson

Joan C. Stevenson,

Lane Patrick Brennan

Mr. and Mrs. James Steven son, of Rye, N. Y „ have an nounced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Joan Caro­ lyn Stevenson, to Mr. Lane Patrick Brennan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don T. Brennan, also of Rye. .

Miss Stevenson is a senior at Skidmore College, where she is student first vice-president of College Gdvernment Association. Mr. Brennan, is a senior at Princeton University. He is a member o f the Cannon Club.

St. Joseph’ s Alumnae Tea

Mrs. Ludwig J. Cibelli is gen eral chairman of the St. Jo seph’s College for Women Alum­ nae Association bridge party and fashion show to be held at the Starlight Roof of the Waldorf- Astoria. ) G ustave Lorey Patricia G. Sharpies

Patricia G. Sharpies,

Peter Taylor

TROY, N. Y „ Feb. 1.—Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Sharpies, of Troy, announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Patricia G. Sharpies, to Mr. Peter Taylor, son of Rep. and Mrs. Dean P. Taylor, of Brunswick Road, Troy, and Washington. Rep. Taylor also is chairman of the Repub­ lican slate Committee.

Miss Sharpies is attending Russell Sage College. She is secretary to Rensselaer County Judge DeForest C. Pitt. Mr. Tay­ lor is a junior at Colgate, where he is in the R, O. T. C. He is a member of Delta Kappa Epsi­ lon. He attended St. Albans, Washington; Albany Academy and Williston Academy.

Catherine J. Redgrave,

William K . Hohlstein

ANNAPOLIS, Md., Feb. 1.— Announcement has been made by Capt. Dewitt C. Redgrave jr., U. S. N. (ret.), and Mrs. Red­ grave, of Atlanta, of the engage ment of their daughter, Miss Catherine Jane Redgrave, to Mr. William Kurt Hohlstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Hohlstein, of Rutherford. N. J.

The bride-elect is the great granddaughter of the late Gen. Henry M. Robert, U .S. A., author of "Robert’s Rules of Order” , and Mrs. Robert. She is the niece of Mrs. Henry M. Robert jr., of Annapolis, and of. Rear Adm. Wesley McLaren Hague, U. S. N.

Miss Redgrave is a senior at Duke University. Mr. Hohlstein will be graduated this spring from Duke, where he is a mem­ ber of Sigma Chi, He will enter the Air Force.

Births

Patterson

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert P. Pat­ terson, of Locust Valley, L. I „ announce the birth of a daugh­ ter, Kathryn Clews Patterson, their first child, on Jan. 29 at the North Country Community Hospital. Glen Cove, L. I. Mrs. Patterson is the former Miss Louise Oakey, daughter of Mrs. Francis Oakey, of Southamp­ ton, L. I., and the late Mr. Oakey. The child is the grand­ daughter also o f Mr. Morehead Patterson, of New York, and Mrs. John D. Kennedy, of Lenox, Mass., and a great-grand­ daughter of Mrs. Rufus L. Pat­

terson, of New York.

Thatcher

Mr. and Mrs. John M. P. Thatcher jr., of Saw Mill Lane, Greenwich,' Conn., announce the birth of a daughter, Barbara Riddell Thatcher, their third child, on Jan. 29 at Doctors Hospital, this city. Mrs. Thatch­ er is the former Miss Dorothy Riddell, daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. John F. Riddell, o f 580 Park Ave., this city,

Harvey

Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Harvey jr., of Rumson, N. J., announce the birth of a son. Robert Eldon Harvey, their third child, on Jan. 30 at the New York Hospi­ tal. Mrs. Harvey is the former Miss Eleanor M. Ashforth, daughter of Mr. H. Adams Ash­ forth, of Greenwich, Conn., and the late Mrs. Elizabeth Milbank Ashforth.

Glenn

A daughter, Wendy Gail Glenn, was born to Dr. and Mrs. Morton B. Glenn, of 36 Sutton Place South, on Jan. 26 at Doc­ tors Hospital. Mrs. Glenn is the former Miss Jane Brill Pollack, daughter of Mrs. Herbert Pol­ lack, of 480 Park Ave., and the late Jack Kugelman, of Phil­ adelphia.

Molesphini

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Molesphini jr., of Clifton, N. J., announce the birth o f a son, Raymond Anthony Molesphini, on Jan. 27 at Passaic (N. J.) General Hospital. Mrs. Mole­ sphini is the former Miss Con- cetta Di Maio.

(Continued from page one)

in a long career, cited the fol­ lowing figures of percentage in­ crease in Turkish industry over the last four years; cereal out­ put, 94; livestock, 13; iron, 130; copper, 131; coal, 25; cement, 150; cotton spindles, 70; woolen spindles, 337; electric power, 27; imports, 92; exports (esti­ mated, by volume), 94; agri­ cultural credits, 233; general credits, 136.

“It is due to the greater role played by private enterprise in her economy,” Mr. Bayar said, “ that Turkey has achieved such development within the last few years. While there was a 7 per cent increase in state revenues up to 1950, that increase is now 50 per cent. , . .

“ It is a noteworthy fact that a balance was obtained in the 1954 budget, not by a reduction in budget expenditures, but by ensuring an increase in income.” Mr. Bayar said that Turkey believes, with the United states, that “social peace, just like po­ litical peace, can be made pos­ sible only by fighting poverty everywhere.” And, he argued, Turkey has disproved Soviet propaganda by demonstrating before the world that capitalism, with proper attention to the principles of social justice, “ is the best system ta be employed in rehabilitating a country that is economically backward.”

Mr. Bayar reported that Turkish national income is up 54.7 per cent over 1938, 35 per cent over 1949. But defense ex­ penditures were up 54 per cent over 1950.

Mr. Bayar spoke in Turkish and an interpreter read the speech in English.

Nixon Praises Turks Vice-President Nixon said in his speech that Turkey's eco­ nomic progress and development in the generation since it was known as “ the Sick Man of Eu rope” has been rapid, and now the nation was a strong democ­ racy “ fast becoming economi­ cally self-sufficient.” Americans admired Turkey also, he said for its strong stand against Communism. “ No one in the world knows better the threat of Soviet imperialism,“ Mr. Nixon said, “ than the Turkish people.

Other speakers at the dinner included Joseph C. Grew, hon­ orary president of the society and former Ambassador to Turkey and Japan. George C McGhee, president of the so ciety, presided.

Mr. Bayars day began at 9:15 a. m. yesterday with a visit to the United Nations, where he was greeted by Secretary-Gen­ eral Dag Hammarskjöld. He touched briefly on the architec ture of the world center as “splendor in simplicity.”

Mr. Bayar praised President Eisenhower’s world atomic pool proposal as “ wise and humane, and said Turkey would continue to maintain its fully equipped brigade in Korea. Referring to

In g -J o h n

Mrs. Peter W . Streich

Margaret Adlersberg,

Mark H . Berger

Miss Margaret Adlersberg, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. David Adlersberg, o f 136 E. 64th St., New York, was married Sunday afternoon to Mr. Mark H. Ber­ ger, son of Mrs, Emanuel M. Horowitz, of Brooklyn. The

the pact among Yugoslavia, Greece and Turkey, he indicated confidence that Yugoslavia would not return to the Soviet block. He said he was “ anxious for a permanent solution of the Arab-Israeli situation in the Middle East.

Parade Up Broadway The Presidential tweny-five- car motorcade left the United Nations soon after 11 A.M. for the Battery to join the ticker- tape parade up Broadway to City Hall. Among the marchers were contingents of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and Coast Guard and members of the city’s Police and Fire De­ partments with color guards.

Mr. Bayar was accompanied by Richard C. Patterson jr., chairman of the Mayor’s Recep­ tion Committee, and John F. Simmons, chief of protocol of the State Department. They rode in an open limousine, pro­ tected against the freezing tem­ perature by a heavy lap rug. The President’s wife and Mrs. Susan Wagner, wife of the Mayor, also rode in an open car, with oth­ ers in the official party in closed vehicles.

At City Hall, the President was greeted by Mayor Wagner in the Plaza, and at a reception in­ side the building was presented with the city’s Medal of Honor for distinguished and excep­ tional public service.

Later, at an official luncheon at the Waldorf-Astoria, Mayor Wagner hailed Turkey’s thriving economy as “ an example to peo­ ple behind the iron curtain of what a free economy can achieve.”

Later in the afternoon. Presi­ dent Bayar journeyed untown to Columbia University, where he . received an honorary degree o f doctor of laws. Dr. Grayson Kirk, ~ ' president of Columbia, made the presentation in a ceremony in St. Paul’s Chapel at Amster­ dam Ave. and 117th St.

Queen’s Chaplain

To Wed Mrs. Moors

BOSTON, Feb. 1 UP). — Mrs. John F. Moors, eighty, a widow, confirmed today that she and Canon C. E, Raven, sixty-eight, Queen Elizabeth’s chaplain, will be married March 24 at Bos­ ton’s Trinity Episcopal Church. Canon Raven announced their engagement in Cambridge, Eng­ land, yesterday.

Mrs. Moors, who lives in Brookline, just outside Boston, said they plan a small wedding with only relatives and close friends invited. She said they will leave after the wedding to make their home in Cambridge, England.

The bride-to-be is a great- great-granddaughter of Robert Treat Paine, one of tne signers of the Declaration of Independ­ ence, and is the widow of John F. Moors, who died in March, leaving her an estate of $3,652,- 910. Mr. Moors was a Boston at­ torney and investment banker.

Canon Raven was chaplain to the late King George VI and has been a widower since 1944. Mrs. Moors said she first met Canon Raven in 1926. They de­ cided to get married, she said, when she saw him for about three weeks last September.

Tremor Upstate

CANANDAIGUA, N. Y „ Feb. 1 UP).—A strange “ explosion” that rocked homes within a fifteen- mile radius of Canandigua was written off today as a probable earth tremor.

OPENING TONIGHT!

A N E W SENSATION!

Serge Obolensky presents for the first time in New Yorh

G e o r g e & N i c h o la s

A L E X A N D E R

Songs in Many Languages

at dinner & supper

«

C rtr-w -w

C7/fe SBCRRy NCTWCRIAND

FIFTH AVENUE AT 59th ST. ♦ NEW YORK

TW O BRILLIANT ATTRACTIONS

DENISE DARCEL

MATA & HARI

STANLEY MELBA

and his orchestra with the Cotillion Strings

THEATRE D INNER $5 Served 6 to 8 p.m. N o Ent. Tox

Luncheon Fashion Shows— Wednesdays

.room

S P ieric

FIFTH A V E N U E AT 4 lj ! ST J

ceremony was performed by the Rev. Zev Zahavy at Congrega­ tion Zichron Ephraim, this city A reception followed at the home of the bride’s parents.

The bride was graduated magna cum laude in 1953 from Radcliffe College, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She is a student at Columbia Law School.

Mr. Berger was graduated from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in 1947, where he was elected to Tau Beta Pi. After his graduation from the Harvard Law School in 1950, he served in Korea with the Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps. He is with Regosin and Edwards.

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