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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 2, 1953)
'XS JSl 'Jt l I IFofliradls aonDpalgini ' Marion County' army of volunteer Re Cross workers will begin tinging doorbells this morning as the race to meet a goal of $31,000 gets underway. '. The nation-wide Red Cross fund campaign, which has a quota of $3,000,000, was launched Sunday with special radio and television . programs, and an appeal zor support oz ea cross c-y president Opens Drive WASHINGTON Seven-year-old Susanna Giardina of Brooklyn, wbo suffers from anemia and most have periodic blood trans fusions, pins a Red Cross "button on President Eisenhower at the White House. The presentation - was made In connection with the March 1 opening of the Red Cross campaign for $93,000,000. (AP Wlrephoto.) Ferelgn Trade Part I ! Late in 1952 the Detroit Cham ber of Commerce startled the bus iness world by -endorsing free world trade, , without protective tariff barriers, as a means for helping to solve world economic and political problems. This was followed recently by the statement of Henry Ford 11 urging that the United States drop its tariff on au tomobiles. Ford contended such a step would increase the general volume of trade, and felt con fident that the American automo bile Industry would prosper even with competition from foreign made cars. All this underscores the plea of Robert Butler, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, who has made the slogan "Trade, not Aid" world famous. All of this is of high educa tional value. Steeped so long In the tradition of a protective tariff it has been hard for Americans to realize that the change of the United States from a debtor to a creditor status forces a revision of our attitude oward world trade. The subject, however. Is too im portant to be dispatched with slogans or. individual statements pr resolutions of a chamber of commerce. World economic, prob lems are too involved to be set tled by the simple formula of free trade. Its advocates probably would find tougher going to con rert peoples in many foreign lands than they would Americans. The Department of Commerce keeps statistics from which it sets up a balance sheet of our interna tional trade and finance (Continued on editorial page,: 4) x r, j t i . .-.t.: ' - a J m ! - j : mm :J 3F ' Continued Cold, Clear Weather on'Forecast Continued cold and clear in Sa lem for today and Tuesday was . predicted by U. S. weathermen - with night temperatures "well be low freezing level. Sunday had ' a recorded maximum temperature Df 47 degrees and a minimum of 14 degrees. i Animal Crackers By WARREN COODRICH h 5H HEALTHY? WHAT DO YOU -XtiMC THAT Mm COAT Y B4TCHED WTH? . III Eisenhower. Local fund workers, headed this year by Mrs. Jack Eyerly, plan no special kick-off events to launch the month-long drive, preferring to get an early start on door-to-door solicitation. Tied Cross contributions are more needed this year than ever before, ' Mrs. Eyerly said. In creased demand for Red Cross services, particularly in connection with the stepped-up military pro gram and the need for more blood for civilian and armed forces use, means more money is needed, she said. , ! In addition to its services of fered . servicemen, veterans and their dependents, and its blood program. Red Cross now has as sumed the gamma globulin pro gram which is helping to prevent crippling of polio victims. : Another j Red Cross activity which last year, took more money than in any year since 1937 is the disaster service, an activity which helped care for and rehabilitate 32,000 families who were victims of fires, floods, tornadoes and earthquakes. As a part of the pre-campaign activities, Salem Junior Red Cross members ; Saturday distributed several hundred posters pointing up these humanitarian programs, and - urging support from local residents. (Additional details page 3.) Seven School TitKsts Will Amity Spelling champions from I seven Southern Yamhill County schools will compete in a semi-finals of The Oregon States-man-KSLM Contest at Amity Ele mentary School Tuesday; night. The semi-finals will ' start at AT KEIZER TONIGHT Champion spellers of 12 schools will compete In a semi-finals at Keizer School at 7:45 tonight The stabile Is Invited free. 7:45 pjn. and the public is invited without charge or collection of any kind. : : - f Host principal Is Albert Yoder. Participants will be; U-' - ;;: Paul Ernest Budke, 13, Dayton. Vonnell Burgess, 13, Briedwell, Darlene Sue Casteel, 13, Amity. John Gardner, 12, Sheridan. Clydene Shepard, 13, Old Grand Ronde. i Ellen. Wldmer, 12, Hopewell. Patrick Wren, 13, WUlamina. The winner In the semi-finals will receive a Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, and the winner and one runner-up will be eligible to compete for defense-bond prizes In the grand finals at Parrish Junior High School In Salem, Wednesday night, March 25. Monmouth Citizens Urged to Help Solve Water Crisis .Statesman Nw Service , MONMOUTH A citizens sur vey to decide plans for meeting Monmouth's water problems is underway here.. Postcards, bearing service bills for the current month, are being mailed to each water user with a request to Indicate individual opinions on how to meet the wa ter shortage. "; ;" A , The water shortage last sum mer was, sufficiently critical to make necessary a supplemental supply before another summer ar rives. L ' ' - A citizens' committee composed of George W. Cooper, Anton Postl and C J. Rolison Is directing the survey. Sp ell at Amity CoL James Liiper, Ex-Salem Man, ng 3 Dead in OMAHA 1 An Air Force ac cident investigation board Sunday probed the wreckage of a B-26 which crashed Saturday night near here, killing three persons. The dead included CoL ' James R.Luper,i 88, -? deputy inspector general for security at Strategic Air Command Headquarters here; Lt. Col. George R. Groves of Dallas, Tex., and T-Sgt James R. Armstrong of Garden City,' Ala. Luper was a native of Salem; Ore. ' .. - (Col. Luper attended Salem High School in 1932 and left there to later graduate - from Hill's Military Academy in Portland. He spent some years at the University of Oregon and Oregon State College before entering; West Point ; He graduated from West Point in 1938 and became a full Colonel in 1951. His father, the late Rhea Luper, was a state engineer. His mother, Mrs. Harry liouvey, uvea in Portland. , : v-s;-?-r.-. (Services for CoL Luper are to be held in West Point Thursday morning.- During World War II he was captured in Germany and spent some time in prisoner of war camps before the Armistice. He started the officer candidate school at Miami and was group com Amo . . . v- - - x - 102ml YEAR 12 Pacific IL Chief Put ' .. - - ; On PORTLAND UTi The Pacific University Board of Trustees Sun day placed University President Walter Giersbach on a six months leave of absence with pay. : Three trustees were appointed as an executive committee to op erate the university and study its problems. - The action, approved unanimous ly by 16 board members, followed 10 hours of discussion Saturday and Sunday on a faculty petition asking that Giersbach be fired. The petition, signed by 42 of the 45 faculty members, contended that Giersbach had mismanaged the Forest Grove college, under mined the liberal arts program, and had not maintained effective alumni relations. Giersbach, who refused to com ment earlier on . the faculty charges, also declined to comment on the board's action Sunday.--, v Giersbach now is serving as state senator from Washington County. He was appointed to the post when Paul Patterson resigned to become governor. The committee named to run the college and study its problems in cludes: Dr. Paul A. Da vies, super intendent of the Congregational Conference of Oregon; Mrs. Doris Burlingham, McMinnville. and Jo seph McCready, Forest Grove. The board also relieved Edwin T. Ingles of bis duties as vice president of the university and as secretary " of the board. Ingles re mains on the university faculty in a teaching position. Mother Gets Ike to Pose With Infant AUGUSTA, Ga. OB Because his mother "just dreamed It up," two-month-old-Aubrey Rhodes Jr., was briefly tucked under an arm of the President of the United States Sunday. Mrs. Virginia Rhodes, pretty 22-year-old wife of a defense work er,' stationed herself outside the Reid Memorial Presbyterian Church Sunday morning while President and Mrs. Eisenhower worshipped inside.; The Rhodes are not members of the church. When the President strode from the church, Mrs. Rhodes asked: "Mr. President, will you let us get a picture of you holding our baby?" "WhoU , take, the picture?" the smiling President asked. Mrs. Rhodes pointed to her hus band, standing shyly to one side with a box camera. "Okay," t Eisenhower grinned, "but hurry up." The President seemed a bit ner vous and held well-poised little Aubrey for an Instant under one arm. It all happened so fast that when Rhodes snapped his shutter the infant was back in its moth er's arms. News photographers missed the picture, too. Rhodes, 24, does administrative work at the Savannah River Atom ic Energy Plant He said he voted for Eisenhower In the last elec tion. "This Is Just something the wife dreamed up," was his summa tion of the incident. The Rhodes' have been married 14 months. TEEN AGERS ARRESTED inree saiem , teen-agers were charged with burglary of the Cal vary Church, 1115 N. Liberty St sometime Saturday night. They were released to their parents and slated for juvenile court today. Nothing was reported tnlmrfng zrorn xne cnurcn. B-26 Crash mander of the 8th Air Force. : (Other survivors include grand parents Mr." and Mrs. Will Potter, Cannon Beach, a sister, Mrs. Karl Neupert,-Portland, and a cousin Max Rogers, 2005 S. Cottage St, Salem.) The .plane en route back to Offutt Air Force Base here from Colorado Springs, Colo., was ap proaching the field for a landing wnen the crash occurred about nine miles west of the base. The accident investigation board, hampered in its nrobe bv snow and blowing snow Sunday, ordered that we wrecxage oe undisturbed until xne investigation was complete. The , board was expected to make a report Monday on its findings. Arthur Carsten. a farmpr liv ing west of Papillion, Neb., ap parently was the only witness to the crash. While out in the farm yard feeding his cattle, he said he noticed the plane and then saw it "dive to the earth with its engines still roaring." ; ? Observers at the scene nf the crash said the engine cniitroA si v. foot holes in the ground upon Im pact The plane bounced only 15 feet, crumbled together in itim. hie of twisted metal but ' did not catch fire. - Leave PAGE3 Principals in v l ,V, f kK . ' ' - I l i ' "; $ ! : A f A LONDON World Communism offered a sensational human barter i Lee Menr. (left), 25, Chinese girl guerrilla chief under sentence to hang In Malaya for Edgar Sanders (rifht), 43, British businessman now in a Hungarian Jail under sentence on spy charges. Miss Meng Is accused by the British of being one of the highest ranking female Communists In Milajft. Suden wu sentenced with American Robert Vogeler three years ago. Voreler has been released. (AF! Wlrephoto to The Statesman.) fiJossadegh Ousts Army Leader, Stalls fori Time By WILTON WTNN ! TEHRAN, Iran (JFj-Premier Mohammed Mossadegh threw out his Army chief of staff Sunday and fought stubbornly to restore his grip over Parliament and the country while mobs in the streets turnecj against him with cries of "Death or the shah." ; Gen. Mahmud Baharmast one of the scores of high Army brass to be fired by Mossadegh in recent weeks, was charged with fail ing to act promptly to squelch j " v ; ' ; mobs which chased the pajama- clad premier out of his house SaUl urdav. He was renlaced by Tarhl Riabi, undersecretary of defens4f The situation was confusing and contradictory. The ' outcome still appeared to be touch and go. Mossadegh indicated he was try ing to wait out the storm for at least another day. Saturday the aging premier was forced to flee in" his pajamas from the back door of his house when mobs burst In at the front door. But so far as could be learned, he was back there again Sunday, after leaving the Parliament building Just before midnight Sat urday night Shah Planned Trip Mossadegh's recent foe, Ayatul lah Seyed Abolghassem Kasha ni, high Moslem priest and Parlia ment speaker, apparently used the Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi from the country to stir up mob action. Mossadegh's enemies, probably fearing he would use the royal absence to tighten his rule, forced the shah to cancel his trip. The Majlis (lower house of Par Sunday behind doors barred and guarded to keep out mobs still screaming "Death or the shah." Twenty eight pro - Mossadegh deputies, calling themselves the New National Movement, . boycot ted the session, but announced aft erward they were determined to remain in the Parliament Build ing continuously. Sporadie Riots Earlier, pro - Mossadegh dem onstrators shouting "Death or Mossadegh" had massed in front of the Parliament Building. There were sporadic riots and clashes in the bazaar section , of Tehran, where pro - Kashani supporters have appeared to be in the ascen dant lately. ' . Bazaars were closed again Sun day, usually a sign of trouble. .Tu deh (Communist) groups also were trying to organize demonstrations. In one of his first actions, Mos sadegh' removed Gen. Beharm- ast as -Army chief of staff. Foreign Minister Hossein Fate mi. charged that Beharmast or dered by telephone to send troops to Mossadegh's house Saturday at the height of the disorder, inso lently answered that he could not come for two hours. Fatemi charged the incident was the result of a plot against; the premier's life, and that the se curity; forces not only were care less and derelict in their duty but actually aided in the disorders. - Appearing in his pajamas before an extraordinary session of Par liament Saturday night Mossa degh angrily demanded that; the situation-: be clarified within 48 hours by a vote of confidence so that the government could, carry on. Otherwise. . he threatened. . he would "go to the people" in a ref erendum and the deputies could bring anybody you like to pow er. BARTJCn BROTHER DIES ? MIAMI, Fla. . m Hartwig N, Baruch, 84, brother of statesman Bernard Baruch. died Sunday at his home in Coral Gables. . The oldest of the four Baruch brothers was a former member of .the New York Stock Exchange. KUNDBO 1651 The Oregon Skxtesman. Salom, Orjon.r Barter Offer J. Springfield, Police Capture Pen Escapee Springfield police recaptured Ralph A. Ove early Sunday less than twelve hours : after he disap peared from the State Prison An nex southeast of Salem. Deputy Warden Lawrence O'Brien said Ove, i 18, serving a year for a Clatsop County larceny, was re turned to the prison about 5:30 a.m. Sunday after two city police had picked him up on a Springfield street. O'Brien said Ove had hitchhiked, south after escaping from the annex sometime between 3:30 p.m. and 5:50 p.m. Saturday night. " f . Investigation is continuing on reason for delay in reporting the absence of Ove, O Brien said. The inquiry revealed that he had been last 'counted at 3:30 p.m.' rather than the 11 a. ml time reported earlier. "The -lapse was still too great, and we Intend to do some thig about it," O'Brien said. " Recapture of Ove ended the brief freedom of Saturday's two prison escapees. Harry L Little, 34-year-old trusty, was retaken minutes after he drove out the gate with a state-owned car. f He had been working at the guards quarters. oxers Said Extinct NEW YORK tf) Teen-age bol by soxers are now as extinct as flapper says a magazine publish er, and their place has been tak en by "the best generation Amer ica has produced : since the turn of thef century." ; - '' This was the opinion expressed Sunday by Mrs. .Alice Thompson, publisher of Seventeen Magazine, who wound up a month's tour of the nation in which she met with about 25,000 young people in high schools and youth forums, i "We found a marked' change in the present teen-age group since as recent a period as two years ago when we made this same type trip to determine from personal experience ; just what these 13-19 year olds are thinking and doing" she said, t ' " " "The girl under 20 today is in essence a throw-back to her staunch, stern, strong ances tors who helped to pioneer this country." Max. 47 Mia. Frecip. Salem - , Portland . , ,,. San Francisco Chicago . , . 14 - traes SO JQO 43 .00 " SO ' J09 SO 30 M New York SS JO Willamette River 1.8 feet. FORECAST (from U. S. Weather Bu reau. McNary Field, Salem): General ly fair today and tonight High today to so. tow tomgnt zs to z. Temper ature at 111 jn. was 27 degrees. : SALEM PEECTPITATIOW " Since Start ( Weather Tear Sept. 1 BODDYd This Year 31.64 Last Year Normal 29.41 i Mondcry. March 2. 1953 Professor' S BvColl v- y N At Cong I ri VaiWleetto Give Congress Data on Korea - WASHINGTON (J Congression al leaders said Sunday they have been assured the wraps will be off when Gen. James A. Van Fleet tells the lawmakers this week how he thinks the Korean War could be won. ' - An influential administration of ficial, who didn't want to be quoted by name, .said the former Eighth Army commander will be under no restraints except those he im poses on himself in testifying be fore Senate apa House committees. "He is fre to talk all he wants." this official said. "There will be no wraps on him at all." Van Fleet said when he left his combat command in Korea and again on his arrival in San Fran cisco that "certainly" the Eighth Army could wage a successful of fensive. He added that the military dead lock in Korea was "of our choosing and not imposed by the enemy." The retiring general has a busy week ahead of him, starting with a White House luncheon Tuesday with President Eisenhower and lawmakers, an appearance before the House Armed Services Com mittee Thursday and a possible discussion with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Friday. Van Fleet's testimony on Korea will be fciven behind closed doors but Chairman Saltonstall (R-Mass) said the Senate armed services group plans to make public ex cerpts as It did with the testimony of Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur two years ago. . "I have asked Secretary of De fense Wilson to furnish us with a military expert who can delete se curity information from the testi mony and then we will make lt available to the .public," Salton stall said. U.S. Urged to Spo) risor Butter Bargain Days NEW YORK OB A leading New York butter dealer Sunday urged the federal government to institute "butter bargain days" and give away a pound of surplus but ter with every pound sold. The proposal was made by x red C. Lowenfels, president of the Ho tel Bar Butter Co., of New York, in a telegram to Secretary of Agri culture Benson. Noting the government has more than 80 million pounds of surplus butter In storehouses, Lowenfels said the scheme not only would help the government unload the surplus, but also would "help put butter back on many consumers tables." "The government has been des perate for Ideas to immediately relieve the butter glut," he said. "It is more economic to give sur plus butter away than to let lt spoil In warehouses." Judge Praises Polled Heref ords On Sale Today at Fairgrounds By LDLLD2 L. MAD SEN Farm Editor, The Statesman Polled Heref ords of fine line: breeding and fine type will be sold at the third annual sale of the Oregon Polled Hereford Associa tion at the State Fairgrounds to day, Dick Richards, reported at the association banquet Sunday night. The banquet was held at Senator Hotel and more than 150 Hereford breeders attended. - The cattle brought here for the sale were judged Sunday after noon at the fairgrounds by Rich ards, former assistant state fair manager, and now in charge of a large Hereford ranch at Warren. This is the first sifted Polled Hereford sale held here, Richards pointed out, adding that this makes it one of top quality. Sifting, he explained, dropped the cattle grading less than two minus from the sale, although some of these will be sold privately at the fair grounds. - Ben A. Newell, Marion County agent, was toastm aster at the an nual banquet Russell Pratt, pres ident of the Salem Chamber of Commerce welcomed the group to which Walter Fisher, Oregon City, association president,- responded, T. R. Hobart, agricultural chair man of the Salem .Chamber of Commerce, and assisting In local arrangements, was among . the guests introduced. Also introduced were Ben Robinson of Imbler, mil PSICS 5c .ege for laspended. n TT ress Jtieann, PHILADELPIUA ( AP) T c in p 1 e University at nounced Sunday it has suspended Dr. Barrowa Dnnhsm, . professor of philosophy, for. his failure to answei -questions before the. House Un-American Activities "r" Committee. . . Dr. Robert L. Johnson, Temple University president ; University president who takes I over Monday as head of the gov ernment's overseas information program, in a letter mailed to Dunham Saturday night, told the head of the university's Philoso phy Department "you, have delib erately created a doubt as to your loyalty status." - Durham declined to answer questions before the committee. probing possible Communist in filtration in the country's educa tion system, beyond his name, age and address. Says Act Loyal Durham said following the' sus pension notice . from Johnson that he felt "no act of mine could have better displayed my-loyalty 'to this country and its traditions than the course I followed last Friday "In an institution dedicated to truth the relations between teach er and student, between teacher and teacher ought to be protect ed. , "If teachers can be required by inquisitors to reveal the thoughts honestly expressed by their students or colleagues 'noth ing can be discussed in the class room and nothing learned. I have been defending the integrity of this relationship. Public Defamation "There is no! question that Con gress has the right as it has the power to Investigate for legislat ive purposes. What I encountered last week, however, was not gen uine inquiry but public defama tion intended to extirpate from the colleges not disloyalty but dis sent. XXX!.:' - - - - r 1 have never concealed my views nor violated the Impartiality of the classroom. If the regularly appointed bodies of the university will consider my record they will discover my suspension to be as unjust as it Is unwise," Dunham said in a statement. Johnson's letter said the , basis for the suspension was a Pennsyl vania law, called the state's loy alty oath. Under Section 13, Johnson wrote required to .j, "unequivocally set forth that the institution has no reason to believe any subversive persons are in its employ.' "By your refusal to answer questions put to you by the con gressional committee on the ground that to do so might be self - incriminating, you have de liberately created a doubt ' as to your loyalty status." 11 Bail Out of Cargo Plane INDIANAPOLIS (fl Eleven men bailed out of a crippled two engined air force cargo plane in a heavy snowstorm west of here Sunday night and the plane crash ed in a farm lot. The men were, scattered over an eight-mile area by strong . winds but all were located within an hour and a half of the crash and there were no serious injuries. newly elected : president of the Oregon Farm Bureau and Sherman Guttridge of the Western Live stock Journal, Lyle S. Hoys of the American Polled Hereford As sociation, and Gene Jessee of the Pacific Stockman, "all of whom will assist with the sale which has been set to start promptly, at 12 noon Monday. H. B. Sager of Bozeman, Mont, will cry the sale. . Of the 78 head judged by Rich ards Sunday. 23 were sifted out of the - sale, by James T. Filings and Larry William, graders. Ray Robinson .'showed the champion heifer, Larry D; Blanche 45", a senior yearling, while Kirk & Robinson , of Heppner showed the reserve champion, a two-year-old first place winner. The cham pion bull was shown by R. J. Dodge of Estacada. The breeder was R. A. Dard of Halsey. This was a fine big two-year old. The re serve ; champion came : from the same group, a two-year-old shown by Floyd Warden of Heppner. First place winners at the show were, in heifers, "owned by Kirk and Robinson, Heppner; Roy Rob inson of Mt Vernon, Orev and Reed Taylor of AliceL Bulls: R. J. Dodge, Estacada; - Ralph L. Cook, Medford, Mary D. Leonard, MCMinnvuie. A Junior yearling bull bred by Clayton Mann of Philomath, plac ed third in its class. - V U 'JAW Silence 3 Men on Raft Spotted, Lost - ers TOKYO (JV Three men on- a raft in perilously high seas were spotted Sunday, then lost again in dense fog . as the huge U. S. air craft carrier Oriskany and mili tary transport UDerty aeii search ed the Pacific in vain...-.". A Japanese patrol boat and ihm U. S. Navy frigate Everett arriv ed in the area southeast of Tokyo to join the hunt Monday whil Navy planes dipped low over the murky - waters in a checkerboard search. There was no hint of the na- possibly were survivors of the Ai uma Maru, a 144-ton Japanese fish ing craft. Carrying a crew of 47," lt disappeared Feb.. 23 during a storm in the same area. The Japanese Maritime Safety Board reported there were three men afloat on the raft. The Liber ty Bell radioed U. S. Navy head quarters at Yokosuka there were several men, but could not iden tify them by nationality. It spotted the raft at 10 a.m. Sunday. The raft disappeared again in huge swells while the Liberty Bell raced through fog to the area. . . - -..- Conf onierence ci r ens m saiem At the opening rally of the Inter- Church Missionary Conference held Sunday afternoon, 20 mlssionariea were introduced to the public. The main auditorium of the new , First Baptist Church' was filled ' with people from the cooperating churches.: - - Dr. Vincent Brushwyler, Presi- dent of the 'Evangelical Foreign Missions, Association, who chair- manned the meeting, informed the audience that the Association has 39 Mission Boards in its member ship and serves 100 Boards. Dr. Lloyd Anderson, pastor of the host church, .extended a welcome to the conference. The focus of interest was the main message on "Crisis Spots in World Mission" by Dr. Clyde Tay lor of Washington, D. C, Executive Director of the E.F.M.A., and him self for many years a missionary to South America. He pointed out' that every day 233,000 people are born and 140,000 die in this chang ing world. "Communism," he said. "is the great threat to the - mis sionary program in all parts of the world." Infiltration, agitation, or open conflict are methods used in Asia. ' -. . . 1 - --: "To meet the challenge of to day's - changing world," said Dr. Taylor, "the church needs new power, new methods, men , and money." -- t The conference will eontlnue daily, afternoon , and . evening. throughout the week. Todays af ternoon rally at 2 o'clock will be an open forum addressed by Rev. Orval Butcher. Rev. Butcher, rep resents the Wesleyan Methodist Church and the Youth For Christ International 4. . - ) Indian Show to Encore Tonight So many i persons were turned away Friday night that Chemawa Indian School will present its an niversary show of Indian music and dances Again tonight at 7:30 . Doors will open at T p.m. in the 1000 seat auditorium of the school which was packed to capacity for Friday night's show. An estimated thousand others were - unable to gain s admittance, according , to school officials. , - ; 'The program "Moon Memories', marking the 73rd anniversary of the school includes Indian dances of various tribes in colorful costume. STEVENSON ON TRIP SAN FRANCISCO IB Adlai Stevenson arrived by plane Sun day night for a short stopover be fore leaving monday on the first leg of his tour around the world. By Search Missionary Op