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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1955)
rur UtD COBLE Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, pas tor I the Marble Collegiate church in New York City, cer tainly has popularized his 'brand of preaching. In his sermons, in his books ("Power of Positive Thinking," etc.) and in his radio talks he has become a real com petitor of psychoanalysts. To him press in person or by letter those with worries. He tries to straight en out their thinking by applying the precepts of the gospeL One can easily find appropriate quotes in Holy Writ for such ministra tion: "Come nolo Me all ye that labor and are heavy laden;" "Cast your burden on the Lord, and He will sustain thee." Through 19 centuries folk have found com fort in these words. Dn Peale uses their meaning more skill fully than many practitioners of mental healing. He is not without his critics, bower. Some find in his stuff only a watered-down version of Christianity, a form of Coueism "things are getting better every dry in every way." They point to other passages in the Bible which contain sterner admonitions: "Whosoever will come aftsr Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross nd follow Me. For who soever will save his life shall lose it." Some even go to the extreme of "enjoyin?" distress on the the ory that the world is hopelessly bad and the sooner it goes to smash and they can get to heaven the better. May we not come to see that religion has many facets? It does bring comfort to the sorrowing. It fires with real those who ded icate themselves in Christian service. .T?sus Christ himse if both the Man of Sorrows, and the indignant person flailing the huck sters at the temple. (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Berlin Police Break Up Riot Of Communists BERLIN ). Several thousand stone-throwing Communist demon strators iried to break up a wehr macht Veterans' rally Saturday night but were, driven back into the Soviet sector of Berlin by po lice. Scores of policemen and dem onstrators were injured. The , club-wielding police were met with a hail of stones -from demonstrators, who - barricaded themselves behind war-ruined buildings. The police retaliated by bringing two powerful fire hoses Into play. They were reinforced by residents of the -riot area who dumped buckets of water on the Communists. - . Pplice jaid four policemen were so seriously injured they must re main in a hospital for some time. Ten others suffered lesser injuries. Eleven of, the Communist rioters also were -akn to hospitals. Scoresof nuerf fled to the Soviet sector with bleeding wounds. A West Berlin newsreel earner man was beaten up by the Commu nists and seriously injured. His camera was smashed to pieces. The number of arrests rose to more than 60, police said. - The East Berlin radio immedi ately denounced the Western po lice. It charged that the demon strators were the victims of "brutal - police terror." i Just as the police were about to force the demonstrators back jnto East Berlin, the Communists ral lied and opened up with a new barrage of stones. But the police won out anyway. ' The demonstrators then re mained on their side of the border and shouted: "Bloodhound Fasc ists." Near Perfect Weather Seen The rest of this long weekend should be nearly perfect with only a fe light sprinkles early this morning in the Salem area, Mc Nary Field weathermen say. It win be mostly sunny this af tern n vnd clearing tonight and Monday. The mercury should drop to a high of 70 today, but Monday should about equal Saturday's high of 75. About the same situation should prevail on northern Oregon beach es. A little rain is predicted for this morning but skies should par tially clear by afternoon. Tem peratures should range from 48 to 60 and southwesterly winds of six to 12 miles and hour are expected. Storms Again Lash Areas In Midwest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Violent winds, thundersqualls and a handfull of small tornadoes lashed big sections of the Midwest. East and South Saturday. Tornado alerts were raised in 11 states but most; were lifted when no serious twisters developed.' -. .Two deaths and several injuries were attributed to the storms. A' tornado bit Grand Ledge.-a small community in Eaton County, Mich., causing an undetermined amount of property damage. Henry Crane. 71, suffered compound Jtrn,7lH,l fuimel-shaped : wmds pilled hisl ban djoTLwLliau ...i Memorial Bay: to Honor JJ.S; Fight Tdet JMeFi iFree ' BY GEORGE; CORNELL Associate Press Writer - ' ' NEW .YORK A sober-faced lad, a steel helmet shading his eyes, the green fatigues liinp on his body; a pack on his back and a rifle in his hands he is the one we remember this Memorial Day Weekend. ; ' .' ' A squint-eyed sailor, crouching beside a deck gun, 'his hands wet with sweat as he waits for a firing order be is the one we honor. . . - " - . A jaunty airman, climbing into a cockpit for his last strike he is the hero. . t .. , He wears many naif arms and has many names. He fought hi' nuay places aid many years. He starved at Valley Farge. He went aewa oa the Maine. He diHI at St. MikleL-He was tost at Aazla. He crashed la the Yala Valley. He is the American fighting man, he marched around the earth to put dowa wrong, end he was paid 50 dollars a month or noth ing and be crawled in the mud and frooze in the sea and he never lost a war. . : ' : ; . . He sleeps now. H is 1,122,393 soldiers who fell in five major wars, lasting through 26 years of the nation's 180-year life, and he rests today in the bivouac of the dead. His silent ranks are marked by rows of crosses and banners stirring in the breeze. '7 Ye Break Faith, We Shall Not Sleep" He is the unknown soldiei' in Arlington Cemetery. He is Jones, John, Serial No. 616-528-0132, in a military plot near Paris. He is the lingering vision in the 'mind of a mother, a son or a widow. He is part of a poem: "-.. . ... "If ye break faith with us who die,rwe shall not sleep, through poppies grow, in Flpders field." He Is one of 31 03,128. Americans who fought ear wars. He Is brother of the -1,376,520 who were wounded. His voice is stilled mow, yet he still speaks. From the grave, he caa tell many stories. Listen: '.'I was a farmer at Lexington in 1775, and my old muz-zle-loader fired one of thore shots heard around the world. "I caught a musket ball on Breed's Hill, and I was on the Bonhomme Richard and heard John Paul Jones breathe fire:. 'I have' not ' yet begun to 'fight I felt the, cannon quake and saw the Redcoats in the smoke.. "We Fight to Set a Country Free" "I recall how old Tom Paine put the whole thing, 'we fight not to enslave, but to set a country free, to make room upon the earth for honest men to live in'. ' . ' ' "I am 4,435 men who died in the American Revolution. "I am also 2,260 men who died in the war of 1812 to free the seas. My name then wac Capt, James Lawrence, of the Chesapeake, ' and the Navy never forgot my' dying order, "Don't give up the ship!" - , "I am 18S Texaas massacred at the Alamo. "I am 13,283 mea who didn't come home, bat we kept the Mexicans oa their own side of the Rio Graade. O ' "In 1861,, I was a Northerner and a Southerner, in the Union Blue and Confederate Gray. I was at Vicksburg, Chancellorsville and I followed "Stonewall" Jjckson up the Shenandoah Valley. "I rode with Jeb Stuart, and 1 was at Antietam, the bloodiest day of all. I was at Chickamauga and , on Cemetery Ridge at Gettysburg. . .. "WiMMaliceT6ti VI didnvt get to Appomattox courthouse.' I was 527,332 dead be fore the thing was over, and Lee and Grant put up their swords, with the Republic sealed and all the people freed, and oW-bonest , ' Abe saying: . ' .- fWith malice toward none, with eharity for all . .'.Let ui strive on to finish the work we are in: to bind up the nation's wounds ..... To do aQ which 'may achieve and cherish a' Just -.and lasting peace.',. .. ; .;,., ; ,w'::.. ,,. "I got rankled about the Spanish concentration camps in Cuba.. our neighbor, around 1833. and I got nailed there too. at El Caney and San Juan Hill in the Spanish-American war. I died of bullets and disease, 2,446 of me..' I, "Some say this one wasn't worth it, but it Set Cuba and the Philippines on freedom roadA . . ; . "Then in 1917,' with German U-boats shooting up the oceans. I went off to Europe singing,, 'Keep the Home Fires Burning. I wrote my last letters in a trench on the western front. "They NeverRetire, Only go Forward" "l went down in the Belleau woods j along the Marne and in the Argonne forrests. I remember Col.: Bill Hayward's snorting at a French general who wanted us to retreat, 'My men never retire! they only go forward!" , "I remember Old Blackjack Pershing pushing me on with his, 'Hell, Heaven or Hoboken by Christmas.' ' - "I didn't thiak of It mach oat there, with red fire criss-crossing the sky, bat ia the back of my mind knew how Presideat WDsoa aammed ap the business, To make the-world safe lor Democracy.' " The right is more precious than peace,' he said, 'to sach a t task we can dedicate our lives and our fortunes,, everything that we are and everything tha we have.' AH told, 116,563 of we died this time. .' 'Then came the bi one, after Pearl Harbor. I got knocked ? . out with shrapnel in the dugouts of Corregidor, and died on the ' Coral Sea, at Midway, Guadalcanal, New Guinea, in Burma and . fwo Jima. . - .- "They Buried Me All Over the Map" "l was sunk in Jula Gulf ana around the Aleutians, shot down over the Ryukyus. I trailed "Vinegar Joe' Stilwell into' China, land ed at Sicilly in the shell bursts of Salerno and Normandy. "I rode with 'Blood and, Guts' George Patton's tanks across France, and flew the ack-ack run over Berlin. I never saw Dwight Eisenhower, but I died in the Battle of the Bulge and in steel ringed Bastogne. They killed 407,828 of me, aad baried me an over the map hat it took that to break the ehaias that had crashed dowa oa two sides of the world. . I ; - - "Korea was the last one, at Pusan Beach, in the' skies and in , the ragged land- around Seoul,- the Reds killed 54,246 of me, .but we pushed them back. - . ; . "I guess President -. Truman i explained pretty well why we' and the rest of , the United Nations forces went over there in the first place when be said: 'No one nation can find protection in a selfish search for a safe haven from the atorm.' t "And Hit Truth goes Marching On" That's the way it goes. Tin not bragging for what I've done. Bragging doesn't go with fighting. 'You just do and die. It's too bad votes and speeches can't do it all mat it takes iron and blood. ..' .f ' : 1 ... There's aotalag pretty hi the rait of drams, the clatter of , iaaks, the spit of aaachiaegnas or 'evea the Mare of a balge on a battlefield. Bat tt's part of history's hammer aaeT aavil of Jastlee. "It's not glory or fame I did it for. nor even out of courage, but because I had 'o, because you yield or fight, because there was nothing else I could do. I'm taking it easy now, but an old hymn is running through ny bead: His Truth Goes Marching On.' " NOKTHWIST LXAGUX At Stem 12. Yakima S , : , At Lcwistoa 7. Eusen At Spokn a. Tn-Oty T . . PACtnc coast LXAcint " - At. Portland i. Saa rrandac S . - At Lei Aaectea 4. Sn Dies 8 - At Oakland X, " Sacramento 4 -. -At Seattle 0, Hollywood 1 . V NATIONAL' LEACCK " ' . At New York 3. "Brooklyn At Chlcaso 9. , Milwaukee 3 ' 7 At St. Louis 1. Cincinnati S , 1 .At Pittsburgh 4. Philadelphia 8 AMEKICAN LKAGCK. At Baltimore X. New York 1 - Jt. Kns City I, Oev.laad t ! t: BottohTa. WMhinitoa .1. 12 - At Detroit A Chieafo 1. Deadline Spurs GI Efforts to Wed Austriari Girls VIENNA, Austria (UP)-Appli-cations from American - GIs to marry Austrian girls have jumped about 100 per cent since the Army slapped a aoid-June deadline for such- requests on its troops in Aus tria, officials here and tin, Sal burg reported Saturday. - i All four-power occupation troops are due to leave Austria after rati fication of the Austrian state treaty. The Army warned soldiers this week there might not be time to t process 'marriage applications received . after . Junt, IS. 1 105tS Year 3 $EaiONS-24 PACES CIO State's Holiday( Accident Toll Climbs to Four By THE ASSOOATED PRESS Four persons died in accidents in Oregon Saturday the first full st full Day i day of the long Memorial weekend. , Three men were killed in traffic accidents and a child drowned. The body of Pamela Lynn Mc Cartney, 22-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lennual McCartney, Portland, was. found in .a two-foot- deep fish pond in the yard behind her home. . . , , 1 , . . Nicholas S. Freund, 80, of Port land, was injured fatally when struck by an automobile as he at tempted to cross a Portland street Paul Murray, 19, Eugene, suf fered fatal injuries in a three-vehicle collision in Southeast Port land Saturday. Murray was 'a passenger in a car which collided with a truck driven by Stanley P. King, 43, Ken- newick. wash. Driver of the car in which Mur ray was riding was Valmore C. La Marche, 27, Springfield. He was taken to a hospital for treat ment of head injuries. Another passenger. Caroline Siler, 18, Eu gene, suffered knee and chin cuts and a possible head injury. Harry B. Hussy, 48, of Madras was killed when his automobile plunged off a highway two miles west of Brownsville. He was alone in the car. Police said he appar ently fell asleep while driving. Deaths Lagging Across Nation By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The number of deaths on Ameri ca's highways lagged far behind predictions Saturday night as one third of the Memorial Day week end went by . . ; ,., The National Safety' Council s ex perts were optimistic that the traf fic toll for the three-day holiday might be at least 60 less than the council's forecast or might even fall below the 2 counted by The Associated Press on a non-holiday weekend, twp weeks ago. This was the accidental death count for the nation, begun at C p. m. (local time) Friday. -' At 2 a. m. (EST) there were 104 traffic deaths, 26 drownings, and 15 deaths from miscellaneous cases, for a total of 145 Ned H. Dearborn, president of the council had predicted a, traf fic toll of 360 for the 78-hour holi day. . The count last year was 362 and the record highway deaths for a Memorial Day weekend was 363 in 1952. . One apparent reason for the les sened number of traffic fatalities was fairly widespread stormy weather in the central part of the nation Saturday. Aged Couple, Police in Duel; 3 Officers Die OCALA, Fla. () An aged c0iple who officers said had an arsenal in their two-room house shot to death two sheriffs deputies and the . assistant chief of . Ocala police Saturday night. - ' Sheriff Don McLeod said B. E. Lindley and his wife, both over 70, finally were captured after hun dreds of shots were fired and of ficers filled, their little house with tear gas. The elderly couple was taken to county jail but' no charges were filed immediately. The- sheriff - said the shooting started when deputies Bob Wooten and Curtis Youngblood went to the-l Lindley house to investigate a complaint of a neighbor that Lind ley shot ' at him while he was sprinkling his flowers. City, county and state officers rushed to the bouse in response to a flood of calls from neighbors and a gun battle began that lasted more than an hour. . - In the exchange of shots. Asst. Chief M. O. Tuck was fatally wounded . let:-. WiMGQ Max. Mia. freei. Salem Portland - ,., Baker Medford North Bend Roaaburg San rraadaco Chicafo - New York . 7S n .ae .73 39 trace . 74 30 .00 . 15 41 M .65 41 .00 1 3S .00 . (7 45 M .70 S3 J3 . 7 M .00 .S3 M M Lof Anfeleo Willamette River L4 fet FORECAST (from U. S. weather bureau. KcNarT field. Salem): Considerable cloudiness and a few Ufht sprinkle early this morning. mostly sunny uus afternoon, clear Ins tonight and Monday. Cooler to- oay wtin io-n mgn, tonight, 3S-3S. Hifh Monday 7S-7T. Temperature at 111 a. m. today .was SS. SALKM FRECIFlTATlOJf Slnee Start f Weather Tear Sea. ft This Tear La it Yeaf v " Mrul . aaja: .. alb . ; -. tl.M , Holiday Road Th auctions' Oldtimers on Hand for National Jersey: Meet sf - " . T"'. I iii ! mm - - i ii , .i hit rm , ,M m , - . . I " The subject as asnal was Jerseys Saturday ai these four fence riders enjoyed the annual Marion The subject as asnal was Jerseys Saturday ai these four fence riders enjoyed the annual Marion County Jersey Cattle Club Show. For the three seated it's been more than 60 years of Jersey shows ia Oregon. They are the' three remaining charter members of the state and Blarion County clubs, Henry Zera of Aurora, Warrea Gray of Marion and Stanley Riches of Turner. At the back is D. T. Simons, Fort Worth, Texas, president ci the American Jersey Cattle Club, here to attend the national convention in Salem this week. (Stateslman Farm Photo) National Jersey Judge Praises County Show . . . Br LILilE L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman f "Not many counties 'in the entire country could bring out so many different breeders as! I have seen here today," Lawrenee Gardiner, Memphis, Tenn., declared as he completed judging the annual Marion County Jersey Cattle Show at the State Fairgrounds Saturday. j ? Gardiner, who arrived in Salem Friday,-is. here to attend the S7th annual meeting of the Ameri-j . . can Jersey Cattle Gub, first, busi ness of which will get underway today. Committees will begin! their meetings at Marion Hotel, head quarters for the convention, which concludes Thursday, Opportunity Sale Gardiner is sales manager for the Opportunity Sale, expected to be one of the finest Jersey sales ever held in the west. This has been set for Tuesday night fat the State Fairgrounds, with Tom Mc Cord of Montgomery, Ala., as auc tioneer. j Other dignitaries at Marion County's show Saturday were D. T. Simons, president of the AJCC and Mrs. Simons of Fort j Worth, Tex. and Floyd Johnston, j execu tive secretary of the national club, Columbus, Ohio. This is Mrs. Sim ons' first visit to Oregon and she had high praise for the weather throughout the day. Toward eve ning when first drops of rain fell, she remarked, however, that "I'd heard it rained every single day here but hadn't believed it!" Officials Enthusiastic j Simons ' and Johnston, both of whom have attended many of the nation's finest Jersey shows, were also complimentary in reference to the cattle in Saturday s snow m e than enthusiasUcaiioutrthe show ring beneath theoak trees at the State Fair f They watched Rossmert Farm of ML Angel show to top place in all. championship classes and re marked ' that the winning cattle would be a credit to many! a larg er show. A total of 93 Jerseys were -judged Saturday. To Start Business While some of the .out-of-state visitors were planning to leave at 5 a.m. this morning f or j Otis to have breakfast with Mr. 'and Mrs. J. E. Modlin and view their Jer seys, Simons and Johnston feared they would have to remain in Sa lem to get business underway early today. Some 10 -committee meetings will be held-this after noon and evening, continuing through Monday. , . . . " "We hope to have Tuesday free so that we can take the planned trip through the valley and to Sil ver Creek Falls, Mr. and Mrs. Simons said. ; The annual business, meeting of the AJCC will be held at the Salem Armory Wednesday with the con vention banquet set for Wednes day night at Marion Hotel (Story on Marion County Show page 3, PORTLAND STORE SOBBED PORTLAND l- Two armed men' took more than -$4,000 from a supermarket's safe Friday. night. then - abducted a clerk,' Ernest Long, for a 4S-minutt ride. OUNDDD 1651 Ortgon Statasman, Salam, Oregon, OverossDue This Morning Casper A. Oveross of Silvferton, is slated to arrive in Salem this morning to face charges of first degree murder in the Feb. 17 rifle slaying of Ervin Kaser. 4 : The United Air Lines plane car rying Oveross and Marion County Sheriff Denver ; Young and State Police Sgt. Wayne Hoffman is due to arrive from Fairbanks, Alaska, at Salem airport at S a.m. today. Sheriff Young and Sgt. Huffman, acting' on a. recent grand jury in dictment, left for Fairbanks Wed nesday to return the wanted man. Farm Accident Kills Indian WARM SPRINGS ( James Palmer, about 68, a lifetime resi dent of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, was killed in an acci dent, on his farm about. 20 miles north; of ; here Saturday morning. .. He was crushed .fatally by his tractor.-PalmeT was alone at the time but friends said - he appar ently fell off while riding down a hill. . - - Snow Slide Pass Hits YAKIMA UTi A giant -slide roared down onto the Chinook Pass road in the Cascade Mountains Saturday, injuring several persons in one automobile' which ' was hit by the ice and snow. .The, road, opened only a few hours earlier,' was closed to all traffic. ;- . , ... - - Early reports had said a num ber of automobiles were believed caught in -the slide, but the State Patrol reported that to the best of its knowledge no cars were actual ly trapped. . a . The damaged automobile was driven by Mrs. Ernie Berghoff, 36, Yakima. She was treated in a Ya kima hospital for multiple cuts re ceived when snow crushed the windshield. Her daughter Gloria, 12, also was cut" Five other chil dren in the Berghoff car were un injured. . V ' j A- 9 jsvi ansaia, uaw"vi .were reieasa irom me nospuai after receiving treatment I . The occopants of the Berghofl Sunday, May 29, 1955 Ford Excavation for New Methodist Church Starts Excavation work started Satur day at what will be the future home of the Mornineside Commu nity Methodist Church in the 3200 block of S. 12th St, . The new church, whose construc tion will be handled to a great ex tent by volunteer help, is expected to be ready for occupancy by early September. No other churches will be ab sorbed ' into the Morningside church, though a now-abandoned desire by Leslie Methodist Church to move to another location is cred ited with spawning the new proj ect After a survey of sites, Leslie Methodist decided against a move because of distance involved. How ever, the Morningside location was deemed ideal , for organization of a separate church unit. - The new church, resting on a slope, will be two stories and with a wood exterior to blend with sur rounding trees. Designs for the 100x36 structure were made by architect Lyle Bartholomew, and the. lot was purchased by money from the Methodist Church's "For ward Movement" fund. ; An ' organizational meeting is planned in the near future for those in the Morningside area in terested in supporting the new church. Dr. John Morange, Salens a retired minister, will head the organizational drive. . - Laying of the structure's -corner stone is expected to ; take place late-' in June. - EX-EMPLOYMENT CHIEF DIES CRANFORD, NJ. OB W. Frank Persons, who was national direc tor of the United States Employ ment Service during the President Franklin D. Roosevelt administra tion, died here Friday, He was 78. in Chinook Car; 2 Hurt car were the only ones treated at the Yakima hospital. The slide was reported shortly after C p.m. It was a i j il . J !iL a ioe uura curing me aaj, wun iwo i smaller . ones ' hitting . the highway in -the early afternoon . ' ; The Berghoff automobile was one of a number waiting for the road to be cleared of debris left in the, first slides.' t TJie highway was opened to Mem orial Day holiday traffic at S a.m. after being closed all winter ' , The scene of the slides, on the east side of Chinook Pass, .was estimated at more than 50 miles from Yakima. The time of the slide apparent ly was between S and '6 p.m. zs Raymond R Cowin, 1619 Hunt? Richland, reported in Yakima that his automobile cleared the slide area at approximately 6 pm. He told the State Patrol at Yaki ma that by the time he left all automobiles had been plowed free and had proceeded to their destin ations. - . , Nt. 63 Formal Vote on Set in Motion DETROIT, Mich, (ft The OO United Auto Workers Saturuday officially sanctioned a strike of 140,000 Ford Motor Co. employes anytime . after next Wednesday midnight 4 ' i The action was taken in the face of a suggestion by company Presi dent Henry Ford II that the union reconsider its flat rejection of Ford's stock purchase 'package of'er of Thursday. ( Said UAW President Walter Reu ther: I "As of the present time it will require a considerable change in the company's attitude to avert a strike." Reuther charged there was "ob- ivious collusion" between Ford and j General Motors in standing firm to date against the union demand for a guaranteed annual wage. The union's strike sanction came from the UAW international execu tive board, made up of Reuther and other top officers and regional directors. - i The board unanimously- . ap proved a request for strike author ity from the union's national Ford council 140 union representatives from Ford plants around the coun try. . The council unanimously reject ed the Ford offer, previously turned down by the UA W's Ford negotiating committee soon after it was placed on the bargaining table. General Motors gave the un ion a similar offer a week ago and that, too, apparently has been re jected. 1 Russ-Slav Talk To Produce Dual Statement By EDDY GILMORE -' BELGRADE, Yugoslavia . (A Borba, the Official Yugoslav Com munist newspaper, predicted Sat urday President- Marshal Tito's talks with Soviet leaders i here would result in a joint document' of considerable importance, j In its first comment on the talks that beean Friday. Borba said hnfh Hplpcraf inn vr ftnr!inr : rha - i . . . . i exenange oi views proxiiaDie de spite "numerous differences" that had appeared. . J , These differences, it was report ed by informed sources, included Tito's disinclination to go along with a role of "passive coexist ence," or Austrian type neutrality in world affairs, as proposed for this country by Soviet Communist Party boss Nikita Khrushchev.! . Tito ' was reported to have de clared his country intends to play an active part in uniting nations which oppose dividing the world into ideological blocs. Borba said the joint document that is expected to result would formulate the essential elements of a policy of active coexistence. It listed these elements as: Equality of all nations, ' great and small.' .. t '. Consistent -respect of the inde pendence, sovereignty and integ rity of all countries. The right of every nation to de fense in harmony with the U.N. Charter. . . - Non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries. Decisive condemnation of all ag gression and aggressive expansion.' Solut'on of all disputes in a peace ful way. i Willamette U. Baccalaureate This Afternoon Baccalaureate service for mem bers of the Willamette Univer sity graduating class will take place today at First Methodist Church starting at 3 p. m. Mark O. Hatfield, dean of stu dents and Willamette and state senator, will address the group on "Idols of Modern Man." Invocation ' and benedictidn will come from the Rev. Brooks H. Moore. First Methodist minis ter. Dr. G. Herbert Smith, Wil lamette president win read the i scripture. ' The university choir, directed by Don M. Glecker. will sing two hymns.' Processional and Reces sional marches will be played by Josef Schnelker, First Methodist organist (Willamette graduation list on page 3, sec 1). . . . Today's Statesman - - - - - Sec Pag t dassifiads !! 5-7 Comas the Dawn 1 4 Comics -III Crossword - M 4 Editorials r.l 4 Farm al. I ,,, , S Homo, Panorama U 1-3 Our Valley . . II 8 Sports ..... I 6,7 Star Gazer II 4 TV, Radio 4 Valley .... ... .111, I PRICE 10c Strike