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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1953)
r 2 The Stat man. Salem, Oregon, Monday January 1Z 19S3 College of Cardinals Prepares to Elevate 24 Catholic Prelates By WIUIAM I. RYAN VATICAN CITY UFi Th Sa eret consistory Monday morning to 'with Pope Pius XII in solemn se cret consitory Monday morning to elevate 24 prelates from 13 na tions to this Senate of the Roman Catholic Church. At a time of grave world crises, the Pope is raising to full strength the college which administers the affairs of 425 million Catholics of the world. He is extending representation In the college to 27 nations, the broadest in the church's nearly 2.000 yea. s of history. The cardinals-designate, among them Archbishop James JTancis Mclntyre of Los Angeles, will be waiting at their respective resi . dences for the arrival of color fully clad papal messengers to announce their elevation. To Get Hats On Wednesday, the new cardi nals receive the zucchetta, a car dinal's skull cap; the biretta, a square red clerical hat without pompom; the cappa magna or great ape anc the mozetta, or short cape. Tiursday the new crrdinals will be summoned to the great, color ful blic consistory at St. Peter's, where the pontiff confers the ga lero, or red hat. For Catholics it will be both a joyous occasion and a solemn re minder that the church is fight- Dad's Day Set February 14 OREGON STATE COLLEGE Dads of Oregon State College stu dents will be honored on the campus Feb. 14. Built around a St. Valentine theme, the Dads' Day program will Include a luncheon for the fath ers and their sons and daughters, the annual Dads Club meeting, a special matinee performance of a speech department play, "The Male Animal," and an OSC-Uni--versity of Washington basketball game. Dads will also have a chance to attend classes and to inspect new campus buildings and facili ties. The Dads' club annually awards five full-tuition scholarships to needy and deserving students and sponsors a host of other off -campus activities for OSC students and alumni. ing for its life in Communist-dom inated countries. Dispute With Reds In many cases the fight centers about the right of Catholics to re main loyal to the Vatican at a time when Communist regimes are attemtpmg to impose national. government-dominated churches, Archbishop Stefan Wyszynski of Poland, has inform c. the Vati can he will be unable to appear in person to receive the red hat sym bolizing the rank of cardinal. The implication in the message seemed to be that he could obtain permission to . leave Communist Poland, but might not have been able to return. Wont Be Present Archbishop Alojzijc Stepinac of Yugoslavia has said he would not be present. The -ugoslav archbis hop served five years of a 16-year sentence in prison, imposed by the Communist regime of Premier Marshal Tito, on a charge of col laboration with enemies of the state in artime. The Tito government angrily broke diplomatic relations with the Vatican when the archbishop was nominated for the red hat. Stepinac, too, has expressed fear that if he left his country, he would be unable to return to bis flock. The church's fight for life in Communist countries is symbolized by Josef Cardinal Mindszenty of Hungary, now in prison for life on i charge of conspiring against the Communist state. He received his red hat in the great consis tory of 1946. CIO Woodworkers Ask Pay Boost, 6-Hour Work Day PORTLAND UFI CIO Wood workers will ask a wage increase. a six-hour work day and other benefits in their new contract the union's Northwest Regional Nego tiation Board announced Sunday. The board, which represents some 50,000 workers in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and Northern California, said it would ask a 22 -cent hourly wage in crease when negotiations on the new contract open next month. Present contracts for most of the workers, including loggers, ply wood mill workers and boommen, expire April L. Ike to Confer With Cabinet On Problems NEW YORK ..i President-elect Eisenhower will discuss the incom ing administration's plans to deal with a wide range of domestic and foreign problems at a meeting Mon day with his Cabinet designees an other key appointees. " Vice ' President-elect Nixon also is scheduled to sit in at the pre- inaugural conference the first get together of all the members of the Eisenhower top command. The general will meet with the full group of about 25 Monday, then probably will hold a series of addi tional conferences Tuesday -with smaller units. Eisenhower aides said the initial meeting at his Commodore Hotel h' dquarters will amount to a full scale review of the foreign and domestic problems .. ich the new administration will face when it takes office Jan. 21. Eisenhower's program for deal ing with those problems is based to a great extent on recommenda tions alrea-1 submitted to him by the nine men he has named to his Cabinet and by other top appoint ees. The plans are sketched in broad outline in the inaugural and State of the Union addresses on which Eisenhower has been working for more than a month. On the foreign affairs side, those plans call in part for naming a commissi jn to study American psy chological strategy in the "cold war." An informed source who asked not to be named said that Eisen hower has decided to create such a commission to review that stra tegy and to recommend methods for its improvement and coordina tion. This source said the commission will be headed by William H. Jack son, a New York banker. The plan reportedly calls for the naming of three commission mem bers by Eisenhower himself, and one each by John Foster Dulles, secretary of state designate. Charles E. Wilson, who will be sec retary of defense, and Harold E. Stassen, named to head the Mutual Security Agency. Jackson has served as deputy chief of the Central Intelligence Agency, now headed by Gen. Wal ter Bedell Smith. Eisenhower an nounced Saturday that Smith will be under secretary of state in the new administration. When water is added to wood, its substsance becomes less stiff be cause the substance begins to change in a manner which, if con tinued, would be melting. Senate Caucus Sets Up Machinery for Session r. , t . D I v mm.:. J. mm 'AS First formal action by Oregon's . Senate In the 47th meetlnr of the legislature came Sunday afternoon with the Senate caucus. All members of the state's upper house were en hand for the caucus which named Dean Walker, Independence, temporary chairman, and unanimously endorsed Eugene Marsh, McIVDnnville, for presl- .7 dent. In a two-hour meetlnr the caucus, nominated Senate employes for the session starting today, and took aciien designed to speed up the legislative machinery for the 1953 meeting. (Statesman Photo.) (Story and picture on page one,) . Cars Crash At 14th and D A two-car collision at 14th and D Streets Saturday night result ed in considerable damage to the two vehicles, and first aidmen came to the scene but no one was injured. Drivers of the two cars were Elton A. Rosentiel, 1848 Kansas St- and Loyd Drorbaugh, 955 N. 14th St Neither driver was hurt and no citations were issued. Robert Sayre Among 18 Honored Employes Robert Sayre, 1949 graduate of Willamette University who was appointe dto a position in the U.S. Department of State, was one of 18 employes of that branch or government awarded an "out standing" commendation recently. Of the 7,317 official performance ratings awarded recently for the year 1951, only 18 were Judged outstanding according to the De partment of State Employe's bulle tin. While at Willamette, Sayre ex celled in f orensics and graduated with honors. He has been working with the bureau of Latin American affairs in Washington, D. C. Police Seek Red Leader In Pakistan KARACHI, Pakistan Iffl Police reportedly raided the main head quarters and branch, ofifce of Ka rachi's Red-dominated Trade Un ion Committee Sunday in search of the local No. 1 Communist, wanted in connection with ! last week's bloody student riots. Officials were tight-lipped about the reported manhunt, but a union spokesman, Mohamed Ali, said a searched the dingy downtown of fices of the committee and : then raced to a branch office in a sub urban working area, looking for Aziz Ahmed Khan, the Red Read er who is believed to have gone underground. All told the police the 35-year-old leader had "gone somewhere for treatment of an illness, but we don't know where." , Earlier in the day, A. TV Na qvi, chief commissioner for; "Ka rachi Province, sad the student rots n the capital were spear headed by Communists and prom ised their leaders would be arrest ed. Naqvi told a news conference the situation now was almost nomrall and that police and Army troops were easing up their heavy pa trols after arresting 384 persons overnight. He reported another riot victim had died in a hospital, bringing the death toll to 12. At least 266 per sons, ncluding 152 police con stables, were injured in the vio lence which erupted Wednesday. The riots grew out of students' protests against a 45 per cent in crease in tuition fees, and i-'th ' ties sa'i Comir nists encouraged the violence. . , - Graduate Leaves OSC Scholarship OREGON STATE COLLEGE A scholarship fund of $500 has been received by the school of home economics at Oregon State College from the estate of a 1929 graduate "in gratitude" for her education. Provision for the scholarship money was contained in thewill of Vivian A. Berg, who died in 1952 at her home in Coeur d'Alene, Ida. The check came to Dr. Bera H. Brandon, acting dean, from Miss Becgs brother, Maurice C. Berg of Spokane, executor of the estate. U.N. Repels Heavy Attack SEOUL (JP) Bloody infantry fights flared on the long-quiet Korean ground front early Mon day. U. N. troops hurled back about 1,200 Reds in the heaviest actions in recent weeks. U. S. B-29 Superforts slammed 100 tons of bombs on railroad yards deep in Northwest Korea Sunday night in their third straight night attack on rebuilt Red supply lines from Manchuria to the front. The Reds threw their biggest ground assault by some 600 men against Allied positions northeast of the Punchbowl, a shallow val ley on the cold and rugged east ern front. - . ' Police Catch Boy A 12-year-old Salem youth was apprehended by city police Sat urday night as he was leaving a closed service station at 1304 N. Fairgrounds Rd. Police files indicate the boy had forced entrance into the station which is not being used at present, but hadn't taken anything. He was picked up as he rode away on his bicycle and was later released to his parents. . Registered 1 ' - a A county at Seventy Aliens in ea About 70 aliens have registered so far this month at the Salem Postoff ice under the -McCarran-Walter Immigration Act (Public Law 4l4), effective Dec. 24, 1952, according to local Postofflce offi cials. ; jv ' r- ' The new law, also known as the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, requires that every alien who is in the United States on Jan. 1 of each year shall report his address during the month of January. I , i 1 ' The Immigration and Natural ization Service in Seattle, Wash has estimated that in this district, which comprises Oregon,! Wash ington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska there are about 140,000 aliens who will be required to register under the act. The law states that any alien who is temporarily absent on Jan. 1 shall report his address within 10 days (10 days after his' return to the United States.) i - Parents or legal guardians or children under 14 years of age must submit a report for them. Alien address report cards, Form 1-32 may be gotten at any U.S. Postoffice or any U. S. Immigra tion Office. Any alien or his parent or legal guardian who "wilfully or inex cusably fails to report is liable to criminal prosecution and .-deportation," according to the act. Lt. Sullivan Qualifies for Instruction First Lt. Russell R, ' Slliv&n, husband of Vivian L. Sullivan, 885 NCapitol St, has completed train ing at the Sixth Army Chemical Biological - Radiological J Defense School at the Presidio of San Francisco. 1 He is now qualified to serve as a CBR instructor for his unit, 6012 , Area Service Unit Company, Camp Stoneman, Calif. His Instruction included i the latest in defensive tactics against chemial, biological, or radiological attack and he re ceived training in the use of Gei ger counters and other radiation detecting instruments. Prior to entering military service Sullivan was employed by United Photo Service, Portland. 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