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Show 3 c Prison Executive Defends Treaty' to End Recent Riot i r ! 50,000 Stranded V- EDITOR'S NOTE: A rebellion at the prison at Walla Walla during the Washington State Penitentiary the riot that some of the stand ended peacefully with release of ards recommended by the associ It u Noted Brain Surgeon Joins Faculty - -- - p" 7-p'- , j qualified - -- ' proj-ects.-O- - ne '., 5 l ) v.:.P ! g .J Pi pp) Pf' y "the-beginnin- i h V If I I ' Against Polio -s - V -- Beginning Of End of Fight NEW YORK (UP) A power Others crowded nearby vania Railroad trains had to disbreakdown in tunnels used by the "tioned bars and restaurants to es charge about 1,000 passengers beLong Island Rail Road, the coun cape the heat and thou- -' cause there was no track space for commuter line. sands resignedly squeezed them the trains in the New York station. try's stranded 50.000 passengers Tues selves into already - packed and An g loudspeaker addfor almost three hours. day steaming subways to take a round- ed to the din at Penn Station, inSome 20,000 perspiring commut about trip home. commuters of forming would-b- e ers jammed Pennsylvania Station. The Long Island Rail Road r said the trouble and advising them to the breakdown of its commuter take the subways. trains was due to a severed power, "They can advise all they want," line which halted traffic in two one woman said. "I'm not going tunnels under the East River. The to get on those subways." break occurred at 3:58 p.m., just Some of the Long Islanders in time for New York's daily el- - placidly accepted the delay as one ly commuter jam.' of those things and took it as and was not repaired until 6:22 as the sweltering heat SALT LAKE CITY (UP One of p.m. Service was back to "nor- would allovtMany of them waited ' the top researchers in the nation mal" by 7:30 p.m. in the station' for restoration of in the use of high frequency sound During those hours, -' Pennservice rather than face the subhuge waves for surgery joined the staff jsylvania Station was a bedlam. The way jam. of the University of Utah College jrush of commuters entering the But others surged against the of Medicine today. station, who did not vet know of Pennsylvania Station information The new staff member, Dr jthe delay, ground against the rush booth' and heaped words of indigPetter Lihdstrom. has already used of commuters leaving the station nation on the hapless attendants, ' the sound wave technique on 60 who knew only too well. the Long Island Rail Road, the The tie-u- p patients at the University of Pitts also reached across Transit Authority, the weatherman burgh Medical School. In the opera jthe Hudson River into Newark. and anyone else they could think tions, he used the sound waves in j.J., where five inbound Pennsyl of. place of a scalpel while performing ear-piercin- "Therefore, I knew the minute I saw the demands made by the rebellious convicts that there was By B. J. McFARLAND no doubt they had some merit." United Press Staff Correspondent Dr. Harris, who took over the state institutions program June The OLYMPIA, Wash. (UP) was 20, making his first visit to man who signed a "treaty" with the prison when he rushed to the convicts to end the recent riot at scene. It also was the first riot the state prison in Walla Walla said today, he did so to prevent prison riot he has handled. He is the "blood poisoning of hate" from a psychiatrist by profession. "When I saw the hate behind spreading through the whole pen their demands, I knew something ltentiary. to be done quickly to avoid had "I know .there are many, wholesale destruction and possible ing wardens and- - other prison ad- death to the hostages they .held," ministrators, who may question he said. the method. I used for 'ending the "As a doctor. I diagnosed , the recent riot," said Dr. Thomas situation the same ele as having Harris, director of state institu ments as an infection in a med tions. ,J ical case. My. objective was to he found said. "I .the an tone down the hate and avoid "But," swer to handling the situation in spreading of that ,hate throughout The Bible." the prison. ' "xne mole" referred to is a "I think I did that through the bootc by Richard McGee, director negotiations with leaders of the of corrections for the state of Cal rebellion. Olornia. It is entitled a "Manual "I signed the demands, but I of Correctional Standards." Mc also every point of As Gee and the American Prison agreement, pointing put that any so.iation's penal committee gath- concessions would have to be al ered and compiled the information lowed under the law. As for prom t in me manual. ising no reprisals, I told the inwould be subject to mates "I knew when I set foofinslde the lawthey but it was my personal opinion that consideration should be given in view of the fact they did not tear the place apart and, for the most part, conducted an orderly revolt. ' Tough Ringleaders "Signing of the agreement ended prisoner control. The next step was to get tough ringleaders out The long of the prison. That we have done NEW YORK. (UP) fight "against polio already .is at by placing. 18 of them in the Yakof the end," Basil ima County Jail lor eventual re'O'Connor, president of the Nation moval to a mental institution at al Foundation for Infantile Paral Medical Lake, Wash., , ysis, said today. ' 'We can control them there by Announcing 31 grants totaling placing them in individual maxi $1,652,741 for polio research and mum security cells. ThejN won't the support of respirator centers, have 1600 other prisoners backing O'Connor said that while the battle them' make trouble and if up against the disease was not yet the tension they eased at the is being over," "We know that polio can be prison. I also hope to treat them defeated." mental problems. "So long as there are patients for possible are those who know there "I who need care," he said, "the will yell 'sell out.' But that isn't tie against polio can and must true. The 'treaty', if that's what continue. "We have come a long way in it is being called, seemed to be the last year and a half. The the best method for handling this disturbance. In my mind greatest vaccine field trial in his specific worked. tory has been completed. It showed it "But then, there are those who . that "the vaccine developed by Dr, we should have gone in with think Jonas E. Salk, properly manufac x ' tured and tested, is safe and ef guns." fective in preventing paralytic polio." The 31 grants O'Connor announced included several new is the search for a drug to prevent or treat polio. Another 3s the quest for a normal human or animal cell for breeding polio virus which would eliminate the use of monkeys from the Far East, The grants for research, in various amounts, included the Calif or nia Institute of Technology, Pasa dena, Calif.; University of Minne--j sota, Minneapolis, Minn.; UniveBerkeley, Calif.; rsity of California, California State Department of Health, Berkeley, Calif.; University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan; Washington 'University, St. Louis,, Mo. and the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. Lesser grants went to various other institutions for the study of methods of preventing and treating polio and to . a number of respiratory centers. i Tie-u- p busiest nt recent Railroad 90-degr- ee after authorities ation weren't being met in our hostages July nine-poito a agreed "treaty" to prison," Harris said. was an out conditions. It Some Merits improve in In N. Y) air-condi- 6 come unprecedented prison history. WEDNESDAY. JULY 30. 1955 Utah County. Utah JAILY HERALD 11 . delicate brain surgery called or lobot- - omy. Lindstrom will serve as assistant professor of surgery in charge of neurosurgery at the Utah college. He will also serve on the staffs of Salt Lake City's two Veterans Administration hospitals. OGDEN BOY IS POOR CONDITION OGDEN. (UP) The condition of old Gary Unander who was run over by a neighbor's auto mobile Sunday night was listed as "poor" today at an Ogden hospital. The baby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Unander of Ogden, was crushed into the wheel well of the 4' th ii "Snow use, officer, this snowball sundae is all mine," Janice Bowles tells Millwood at Hotel Peabody, Memphis, headquarters for the Southern officer P. James special Garment Manufacturers Convention. Five hundred snowballs were expressed from Akron, Ohio auto as it backed from a driveway. i for a big snowball fight (in July) by SGM representatives. (UP Telephoto). SNOWBALL SUNDAE: Ruling Says Teacher Can't Serve On Board good-natured- Ifs th construction that counts in th comfort and fife of YOUR MATTRESS Most mattresses look alike but OVERMAN'S extra quality built in I to ployed. The opinion was written by Walter L. Budge, assistant attor ney general, in response to question from Dr. E. Allen Bate- man, state superintendent of pub lic instruction. ALLOWANCE for your old mattress or springs as trade on a SMOOTH TUFTLESS MATTRESS Fully Guaranteed. - OVERMAN'S MATTRESS 147 No. University Ave. Soar)? msms) SALT LAKE CITY (UP) The Utah Attorney General's office ruled today that a teacher cannot serve on a board of education in the school district where he is em $25 have that CO. Phone im FR 3-30- 42 UDDQ THE RIGHT MAN MEDFORD, Ore. (UP) What's in a name? The - horticultura agent for Jackson County is Don Berry. You're missing plenty if you haven't tried mm Bmv Special! 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