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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1953)
; I 5 - i- (.. ! v ! ' I ; ' ! ,:. - . , iy n?n9n '.n. Ull2g)l!DUbU Cir(! 10a YEAR 2 SECTIONS IB PAGES Thm Oregon Statesman, Satan. Oregon. WdaMday Jun 3, 1953 PRICE 5e No. es 1 ;. I POUNDDD 1651 , . saw Senate Votes to Retain Salem Airport Tower By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent' WASHINGTON Continua tion of service at McNary Field control tower was backed up Tuesday by the Senate when it approved in effect a move by Sen. Gay Cordon to force Civil Aeronautics Administration to make no redactions in person Bel involved in air safety ac tivities. The action will have to re eeive Hoase approval before it can be taken as a final directive J" - Si 1 - M 1 - " '' ."mL TFQJQjDCg The world's highest mountain Has at last been conquered. For years Mount Everest in the Him-alyas- has challenged man. Lift ing its head just over 29,000 feet it has repulsed many an adven turer. Some have lost their lives In the attempt to reach the top; others have suffered, frostbite and lost fingers and toes. At last the summit has; been scaled by a lone .New Zealander and his Nepalese guide. They were of the CoL John Hunt party, a British expedition -which made two previous attempts this year to reach the top. The ascent of a mountain of the height of Mt Everest is not done just by climbing up and coming down. A series of camps are established, supplies are brought in, an advance base set up as close to the summit as possible to shorten the final as sault Oxygen tanks are essen tial for climbing in the rarefied air of the high , altitude. When the last camp, is set then a favor able day is awaited, for the? biff effort On Mt Everest the. winds1 are Strong, hurling bits of rock and ice about Ice overhangs may break off and sweep climbers to destruction. Only the hardy and experienced mountaineers can stand such punishment and re turn to tell the tale. Now E. P. Hillary of J New Zealand and Bhotia Tensing of , Nepal have conquered the "last frontier of altitude on this planet, and lived to report their experience. In the future others will tackle the height and some will reach the mountain top. ; But Hillary and Tensing are first; and their names go down in the record of alpine achievement Without par allel, v : That the report came on the eve of Coronation Day in Brit ain added to the excitement of that event a double crowning as it were, of the mountain and the queen. There are other unclimbed peaks in the Himalyas, and at tention now will be turned to them. One is Makalu, fourth high est in the world. A party is be ing organized in California to try that ascent Why do men climb mountains? There is no explanation which will satisfy groundlings. But where there is a height man isn't satisfied until he stands on its' summit It is just part of man's inner drive. Horror Film Star Sued for Divorce LOS ANGELES ( Bela Logosi. star of horror movies, was sued for divorce Tuesday. Mrs. Lugosi. the former actress Lillian Arch, charged cruelty. She and Lugosi. 68, have been married 20 .years. They were es tranged in ;1944 but in 1945 she dropped a divorce suit. Scattered Showers , .On Weather Schedule Clouds and scattered showers are in the- weather picture for Salem today and Thursday, ac cording to the weatherman. Temperatures! are expected to remain about the same as Tues day's high of 64 and low of 46. Only a trace of rain fell here yesterday. ; , j Animal Crackers Bv WARREN GOODRICH i to CAA from the foil Congress. Cordon spelled oat the order In an exchange on the Senate floor with Chairman Styles Bridges of the appropriations committee. Explaining its in tent was to require CAA to keep 18 control towers operat ing daring the coming year on the same basis as present The Salem tower was one of those affected by a ''recent proposed cutback in personnel made as a result of redactions in operat ing funds. Alert Police Officer Spots Holdup Men An alert Salem policeman was credited Tuesday by Chief Clyde Warren t with providing the vital clue which led to the arrest of two young men suspected of sticking up the local Western Union office Sunday night and escaping with over $300 in cash and money orders. Brothers Lewis Donald Fritz, 21, and William Phillip Fritz, 25, were arrested in Sumner, Wash., Monday night after a state po lice sent out a general broad cast for the pair. Chief Warren, said American Express Co. money orders with Salem stamped on them were found in the brothers' car as well as a gun fitting the description of the one used in the robbery here. -( The brothers are being held at Pierce County Jail in Tacoma, Wash. A Salem policeman on routine patrol noticed the Fritz car in downtown Salem about 5 p.m. Sunday. He spotted it a second time after the robbery at Pine Street tand Portland Road. But at the time, word of the holdup had not been broadcast Instinct told the officer some thing was wrong about the car and he took down the California license number as well' as a de scription of the car an'd driver. After word of the stickup, po lice? here checked the license with California authorities and identified the brothers. An alarm was then sent out It was also learned the pair was wanted by Los Angeles police where the younger Fritz was taken from thecity police jail at gunpoint by his brother and a third man. It was not known here Tuesday whether the brothers will be re turned to Salem for trial or will go to California to face charges of kidnapping an officer in the jail escape as well as charges of escape and aiding an escape.' 1 . 1 Irish Burn British Flag DUBLIN ( Irish protesting the partition of Ireland burned a Brit ish flag before 250 persons gathered in the heart of Dublin Tuesday night as their observance of Queen Elizabeth's coronation. She is Queen of Northern Ireland. Molalla Marine Missing in Action, Salem GI Injured WASHINGTON JB The Depart ment of Defense reported Monday that Marine Lt. Rayman G. Heiple, husband of Mrs. Rayman Heiple. Molalla, was missing in action in Korea. Listed as wounded was Hospital man Gerald D. Kelly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Kelly, 1875 Church St., Salem. Reds Deliver Armistice Xetter MUNSAN, Korea' WV-The u. N. Command said Wednesday the Communists delivered at a liaison meeting in Panmunjom a com munication relating to" the arm istice talks. Postmasters Open Three-Day Convention With Buffet Suonei The Oregon Chapter of the Na tional Association of Postmasters kicked off its annual three-day convention ,here Tuesday night with a buffet supper and enter tainment in the Senator HoteL About 150 postmasters and their guests from all parts of the state attended the opening ses sion, but late registration today is expected to bring the attend ance over 200. State President Ethan New man Eugene, was 'toastmaster and E. T. Hedlund, Portland post master and national director of the -association, spoke briefly. Entertainment was provided by youngsters from Dallas,- Perry dale and Salem who nr. danced and played various musical in struments. Aumsv i 1 1 e business men and their wives put on a humorous skit as did Larry Sprin ger and Bob Payne of Salem, bill ed as "the "Gruesome Twosome.' Today's session will get under way at 10 ajn. in the Elks Tern- Hubbard Man Dies In Surf COOS BAY UP) An ocean wave caught two fishermen on a rocky point Monday, and carried one of them off to his death. Marvin Curtis Hopkins, 39, route 1. Hubbard; struggled in the water, but efforts of Jay Chausse, 26, Coos Bay, to save him were unavailing. Chausse said he was fishing with Hopkins, when the big wave swept Hopkins away. Chausse said he tried to get a fishing line to the struggling Hopkins, but could not do so until Chausse held the line himself and threw his pole out. Hopkins grabbed it, and Chausse was pulling him in when the line broke. Hopkins lost consciousness about then, so Chausse leaped into the surf and held Hopkins up. But he could not raise him out of the water onto the rock. Tiring, he eventually had to give up, and drag himself out of the waves. The body was recovered by the Coast Guard. (Hopkins had been living in a trailer with his wife and two chil dren at Empire, while he worked in the Coos Bay area as a sales man. The children are Carolyn. 5, am. Mildred, 1. Two other children of Hopkins by a previous marriage, Robert 16, and Jean, 18, live at Milwaukie. Hopkins wak, born at Hubbard and attended schools there. Sur vivors in Hubbard include his father. James L. Hopkins, a bro ther, Howard Hopkins, and a sis ter, Leona Hopkins.) Darlene Powell Of Lebanon to Rule Festival SUteiman Ntwt Service LEBANON Brown-haired and blue-eyed Darlene Powell, 18, Lebanon High senior, was named queen of the Lebanon Strawberry Festival Tuesday night at the Queen's Ball at the RoU-a-Rink. The 5-foot 3-inch queen said she prefers skiing to dancing, but it was her dancing ability Tuesday night which helped - the judges to decide in her favor over the nine other contestants. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter K. Powell of 1569 Park Dr., Lebanon. Darlene grad uates from High School Wednes day night. The three-day festival opens Thursday afternoon and Darlene will be crowned that night at 8 o'clock in the Elks Temple by Miss Audrey Mistretta, Astoria, Miss Oregon of 195L Highlight of the festival is Fri day with the grand parade at 11 a. m. and the cutting of the huge shortcake at noon. Judges at the Queen's Ball were District Court Judge Val D. Sloper, Salem, Donald Donahue, manager of Albany Chamber of Commerce, and Mervin DahL vice president of the First National Bank of Springfield. Western International At Salem 14. Victoria S At Tri-City 7, Vancouver 4 At Yakima 1. Edmonton 2 At Wenatchee 9. Spokane 7 At Lewiston S. Calgary 1 Coast League At Portland 2. San Francicso 3 At San Diego 1. Los Angeles S At Hollywood 4. Seattle S At Oakland 4. Sacramento I National League At Philadelphia 9. St. Louis 0 At Brooklyn X Milwaukee 4 At Pittsburgh 4. Chicago 3 (11 Inn.) At New York S. Cincinnati 4 ( 13 inn. ) . American League At Cleveland 7. Boston 3 At St. Louis S. Washington 3 At Chicago 3. New York 4 At Detroit 7, Philadelphia 7 (14 Inn. curfew). pie, 680 State St., where Mayor Alfred Loucks and Russel Pratt, president of the Chamber of Com merce will bring greetings and Gov. Paul Patterson will speak briefly. Main address will be given by Paul G. Bentley, inspector in charge of the Seattle division. An afternoon school of instruc tion under supervision of the four chapter vice presidents will be followed by a 7 p.m. dinner at the Marion Hotel and an address' by Walter C Winslow, Salem? at torney. Thursday morning talks' will be given by R. J. Alexander, Seattle, general superintendent of Postal Transportation System; James P. Cooley, Seattle regional director, U. S. Civil Service, and Paul G. Young. Seattle, district PTS su perintendent. ; ... Officers will be elected and in stalled prior to adjournment Thursday afternoon. . 7!4-Footer Seen in Salem U I r ' tUrO , V J 1. . J y . & . . ' V. Locks Martin, 7-foot 7-lnch representative of the Arden Farms Co. who visited Salem ice cream dealers Tuesday is shown above giv ing a balloon to Phyllis Brating, a Statesman employe. Martin says he's too tall to join well known Tip Toppers Club so wants to start new organization and call it the Big Seven Club (members to be over seven feet talL) (Statesman photo.) Radar Check by Police Finds Trains 'too Fast! Fifteen of 33 trains passing through Salem recently in a 22 hour period exceeded the local speed limit of 20 miles an hour, according to the new Salem police department radar speed check ing device. Police Chief Clyde Warren in announcing the results of the radar check on trains Tuesday said that three of the trains were Salem9 s Flying Farmers to Get D. C. Welcome WASHINGTON (Special to The Statesman)-The Oregon Con gressional delegation plans to roll out the red carpet Wednes day for the Salem area's flying farmers. They are Mr. and Mrs. Emory Wood, Salem, and Mr. and Mrs. Worth Wiley, Dayton, who flew into the nation's capital,' after some weather delays, in time to represent Oregon at an annual gathering of tillers of the soil who've learned to pilot their own planes. They will be hosted at noon Wednesday at a special lunch eon by Sens. Guy Cordon and Wayne Morse, Rep. Walter Nor blad and other members of the Oregon delegation. Allies Regain Lost Ground; In Korea War SEOUL If) Determined Allied counterattacks early Wednesday smashed backthe last of some 4, 000 Korean Reds who overran several hilly outposts on the East ern front Tuesday. The U.N. Command communique reported the Republic of, Korea (ROK) 12th Division attacked in predawn darkness around Luke the Gook's Castle and, by 6:30 a.m.. had cleaned the Communists out of all positions. Communis., casualties in the fight ing Tuesday were estimated at . more than 1.100. It was the heaviest fighting on the Eastern front in more than a year. The U.N. Command repord the tempo of fighting had not lessen ed on the East-Central front with Allied troops hurling back- probing assaults by two Chinese compan ies more than 300 men. One clash in that sector lasted 90 min utes. Max. 4 S3 Min. 44 SO 49 49 PrCip. trace trac .00 S&lna Portland San Franciaco SI Chicago IS Nw York . 77 .00 .00 60 Willamette River 3.1 feet. FORECAST (from 17. S. weather bureau. McNary field. Salem): Partly cloudy to cloudy with a few scatter ed showers today and Thursday. Lit tle change In temperature with hifh today near 65 and the low .tonight near 4V Temperature at 11:01 a.m. waa 44 degrees. SALEM PUCIPITATION Staee Start ef Weatker Year, Sept. 1 This Year Last Year formal 40.09 asas iV3 v Vj n clocked at 26, 28 and 30 miles an hour He said a copy of the report would be sent to the railroad companies involved. The check took place at 12th and Marion Streets between 11:06 ajn. May 28 to 9:10 a.m. the next day. The radar equipment which is mounted on a police patrol car was used for the first time Tues day afternoon to check automo bile traffic on Summer Street However no motorists were stop ped. Chief 'Warren said traffic sur veys of various city streets will be taken with the radar device in the next six weeks to two "months before arrests will be made. "We want to educate the driv- i ing public to the radar first," said Chief Warren, "and motorists are urged to stop at the patrol car and watch how the radar works. Officers will answer their ques tions." COOS BAY SAFE STOLENj COOS BAY Of) A safe was stolen from the McDonald Candy Co. office here Monday night or early Tuesday. Officials jsaid jt contained about $3,000 in; checks and cash. 1 Control Board Architects for The State Board of Control Sin- dicated at a meeting Tuesday it would take its time in- selecting an architect to prepares plans for the service building and garage included in the motor vehicle pool approved by the 1953 Legislature. State Finance Department Di rector Harry Dorman had urged immediate employment of an architect. Gov. Paul Patterson said the board had received more than 40 applications. "We want to be fair in the selection of architects in volving the state's construction program covering the next two yean," Patterson averred . j Roy Mills, board secretary, said he had sent questionnaires to all architects wh have spolied for state employment and it would be several weeks before all of these questionnaires would be re turned. In the past, considet'on of applications for state construe-' tion, narrowed down to a few architects. "I doht like this system." Gov. Patterson said. Patterson added that as a lawyer he was in io position to compare the merits of the various applicants without having more detailed information) available. 1 i Projects included in the 1953-55 hoard of control : construction Ike Snips 'String' to By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (J) President Eisenhower talked Congressional leaders Tuesday Into Junking a pro posal to cut off U. S. financial sup port of the United NaUonjr if the international organisation seats Communist China. M But in return the lawmakers got at a White House conference what some of them described pi the "strongest possible" pledp from the President that this nation not only wul oppose Red Oiinlr entry into the Security Council Jbut will lead the fight against it. Coupled with this was eslden tial approval for a substi(Me pro posal promptly introduce in the Senate by Sen. Bridget &.KH to put Congress on recorgainst Peiping's admission to frag world body.. Approval Indicated tff Bridges gave notice he jlU call for a vote Wednesday. Matlons were It would get over jflmlng approval as an amendmW on a pending money bill for K staCb, commerce and Justice depf Jnents. The' President threw hie .ffestige into the balance at a Kfriedly c ailed' White House meeMg with the leaders to head off aUpst sure, adoption by Congress of aroposed' rider to the bill. This wgd auto matically have cut off con tributions to the U. N. if th Chinese Communists replaced thhinese Nationalists in the Securj Coun- Opposes China Reds g Eisenhower won agreement for substitution of a virtuallyvtoothless expressipn of Congressional opin ion. In turn the President appar ently went much farther! than he has previously in lining himself Big Three conference against British Prime Minister Churchill and other Free World leaders who have made it clear they would sup port Red China's bid for a Security Council teat if a satisfactory truce is reached in Korea. Bridges, who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee and wrote the fund-halting rider, said after the midday conference "the President assured us that not only would this country oppose the ad mission of the Chinese Communists, but would take the lead In opposing such admission Prince Gets First Medal LONDON (A Prince Charles appeared on the balcony of Buck ingham Palace Tuesday with a medau on his chest. His mother. Queen Elizabeth, bad Just pinned the Coronation Medal to his tunic. It is the first of count less decorations that will come his way in the years ahead. The medal is the Queen's gift to 100,000 persons for service to the Crown, especially in the coronation season. artments Burglarized Two apartments, in an apart ment house at 698 N. High St were burglarized sometime Tues day and $53.50 in cash stolen, city police reported. Miss Helen Pomeroy told police her wallet containing $50 was stolen and John R. Stutheit re ported the teft of $3.50 in 50-cent pieces irom ms apartment. Police believed entry was made with a pass key. to Slowly Sift State Buildings program involve the service ing and car pool garage, estimated f to cost $700,000; ward building at the Oregon State Hospital to cost $1,500,000; central kitchen at the hospital, $300,000; intermediate penal institution $1,250,000; pa tients' i ward . at Fairview Home. $32,000, and isolation ward at the Eastern Oregon State Tuber culosis Hospital at The Dalles. The intermediate ienc' 'nsti- tution will be constructed in Marion County and will house young offenders now sent to the state penitentiary and incorrigi ble offenders committed to the MacLaren School for Boys near Woodburn. i A proposal by gome state offi cials that,. the institution be lo cated on state-owned wonertv near the state penitentiary is op posed by several proun rd or ganizations. These groups contend the institution should b loctd considerable, distance from any other state building. A bill authorizing an appropria tion for this institution t be fore the joint ways and means committee of the J953 Legisla ture for several;weks Board members sid thev hoped- to have construction start M ort some of the projects within 90 days. AidFurid Ap Monarch Issues 'Hope, Gratitude'8 Message to Half Billion Subjects By RELMAN MORIN LONDON (AP)-Elizabeth II, crovmed in a cere mony old to England but new to' television, rode her golden coach' triumphantly through the streets of her capital this rainy day to the acclaim of the biggest crowds in London history. . The cheers of hoarse millions sent her back to Buckingham Palace : tired but happy. . There she made six bal cony appearances before the mad ly roaring throng below as, a mile-high firework likenesses of herself, the Duke of Edinburgh and their two children, lighted the drizzly iky, l Between appearances! she broad cast a message of gratitude and hope to her half billion subjects around the world. j "I thank you from at full heart." Elisabeth said in the. broadcast. "God bleu you all." j She pledged to devote her life to the service of her people to whom she was spiritually dedicated Tuesday in assuming St. Edward's five-pound crown amid ancient pomp and pageantry at Westmin ster Abbey and urged them to guard freedom and practice toler ance 'so we can go forward to gether in peace." "I am sure that this, my corona Hon, is not the symbol of a power Additional Coronation stories on pages 2 and 4. and a splendor that are gone," said the sovereign to whom Britons are looking for inspiration of a new Elizabethan age. "but a declara tion of our. hopes for the future and for the years that I may, by God's grace, be given to reign and serve you as Queen." Day of Destiny 4 The broadcast brought officially kept the Queen in the public eye 11 hours. -y ' It was the most seen coronation in history. Only 7,500 could crowd into West minster Abbey among them Prince Charles, 4-year-old heir to the throne, himself due to get the crown some day in this coronation church of the Britons. But millions here and on the con tinent looked in directly via TV on all bui the most sacred sections. Tuesday ; night a hundred thou sand subjtcts, massed solidly around Buckingham Palace, kept calling for her to come out Break PeUea Lines ' ' Many persons in the huge throngs previously spread along the more than five-mile processional route converged on the palace after the Queen returned there. They broke police lines and surged against the gates and fences each time the Queen appeared on the balcony. The first time the Queen ap peared on the balcony her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, their two children, her mother, Queen Eliza beth, nd her sister. Princess Mar garet, were with her. A deafening storm of cheering greeted them Prince Charles looked startled. He had to be coaxed into waving. He had seen only part of the abbey ceremony, sitting with his grandmother and his Aunt Mar garet and seemed to think the spectacle was very good fun, in deed. S.S73 CasaalUes Throughout the gaily decorated heart of London, the crowdsjpressed heavily all day. The crusl of the crowds and the long hotrs that many had waited brought 6.873 casualties, police reported. Of that number, 313 required hospitaliza tion. Golden light gleamed in Eliza beth's hair as she received the crown in Westminster Abbey. In the moment of her coronation, Elizabeth was the very vision of a 1 queen. beautiful, regal and out-! wardly serene. It was a hushed moment, electric with meaning. Elizabeth was seated in King Edward's throne. Holding herself rigidly erec. she still looked tiny against the higb. gabled back of the chair. Her robe in that part of the rites was of gold cloth. From above, soft yellow light encircled the throne. It bathed her cheeks with gold. build-fHalds Crew High In front of the 27 year old Queen, stood the Archbishop of Canterbury, tall and solemn in cream-colored robes embroidered with green. He held the five-pound crown high over her head. The jewels caught th . light and threw it back in dart ing shafts of crimson and azure, green and white. Silence filled the- vast abbey. The gorgeous pageantry of robes, uniforms, ermine and diamonds, gleaming swords and rows of med als, gold braid, gold epaulettes, gold helmets the whole dazzling scene froze into immobility. The archbishop set the crown on Elizabeth's head. At a signal from a watching her ald, .hundreds of peers v and peeresses simultaneously put on their coronets. The many white gloved arms, moving as one. look er like a' ballet. A jshout "God save the Queen" rumbled through the abbey and went echoing along the vaulted gothic arches high above. The call of silver-throated trum pets rang through the abbey. Out side, guns roared from the Tower of London. A mightier roar went up from more than a million throats in the streets. Bells pealed. This was the climactic moment of a political act a religious rite and a vst popular celebration. U Climbers Offer; ueen OnMt. Everest KATMANDU, Nepal Un T h t hardy .British-directed team that conquered the world's highest peak as a coronation gift for Queen Eliz abeth II drank a toast to her on Everest's stormy slopes Tuesday and began the perilous descent. Native, runners, speeding in re lays from Mt Everest's desolate height, brought down the news sent to her that the Union Jack had been planted on top last Friday.' And while the dramatic news was being flashed to London, CoL John Hunt and his team radio sets tuned to the Coronation celebra tions quaffed their toast. Two of the 15-man team succeed ed in scaling the icy summit above 29.000 feet New Zealand's Ed ward Hillary, a beekeeper, and the famous Nepalese Sherpa guide, Bh utia (Tiger) Tensing. ' The cryptic message brought by the runners to Namche Bazar said only that Everest had been con quered May 2S on the party's third try and that "All is well." There were messages going back to the mountaineers too, a stream of congratulations pouring into this Nepalese royal capital to be re layed to the men now huddled a lit tle below the peak. British members of the Himalay an Club irf New Delhi were elated. One said "Pardon my Insular out look it's the proudest day for Englishmen everywhere The perils of the intrepid team are still not over. A dangerous de scent awaits them. For this reason the Indian government radio will continue to radio daily weather forecasts to the team. ' But instead of relaying the fore cast for the 29.000 foot level Tues day tha radio beamed it at 25.000 feet Radio officials said they had been ordered to continue the forecast un til at least June IS. Coronation TVRaciWon NEW YORK 11 In an unex pected ending to a red hot air race, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. was the first Tuesday to telecast coronation films to viewers in this" country as well as Canada. . 1, CBC started its telecast f the films at 12:15 p. m. (PST). from Montreal where an RCAF jet fight er had landed them a half hour before. . The Montreal telecast was picked up by the National Broadcasting Co. and American Broadcasting Co. and sent on their networks in the United States. Meanwhile, a converted . P-51 Mustang fighter carrying the Columbia ' Broadcasting System's films had landed at Boston, beat- j inz out a similar NBC plane by j 24 minutes. But it was 12:24 p. nr. PST, before CBS had its films on the air. The films on all three planes were recordings of the live British Broadcasting Corp. telecast, and had been flown from London to Goose Bay. Labrador, in a British Royal Air - Force Canberra jet bomber. . -, Weather Stalls Atomic Test LAS . VEGAS. Nev. un An atomic test' was postponed Tues day because of unfavorable weath er although an Air Force bomber was less than an hour from its target on Nevada proving ground. Scientists of the Atomic Energy Commission deckled to delay the scheduled air. drop 48 hours. The Air Force B-50 turned back and landed with; its lethal load at its home field, KIrtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, N. M. It was the second postponement of the nth and final test of the spring series, originally set for Monday, Shifting winds and cloudy conditions near the site forced the cancellation to safeguard the pub lic. Today's Statesman Section I Editorials, Features . 4 Coronation Stories I 4 .Soc'etx. Women's 4-- 8 Section It ? Sports l-2a Valley News ,t 3a Jr. High Graduation .:.i ' Radio, TV L 6a Classified ads . 8a-7a Toast to Q By Canadians 7 V.