'AAmw (mmm $iMmm ft MM Victor's College Graduate Age 86 I 3 I Li1"! LOS ANGELE8 Johi Bargeyae Ely (above), whe at K is b - - Ileved le be Aihrtks'i eldest college student, graduates from I'CLA next Saturday with a bachelor of arts degree in music. He Is a composer of 75 songs, eight pera. (AP Wirrphoto). HF mum President Kisenhowcr called in House leaders of both parlies last night becau.se of his concern over cut by its foreign affairs com mittee of $1,109,000.0(10 in the recommended program for foreign aid. The total asked for was $4.- on hand when Kly gets his sheep 00,000,000, though not all the! skin as a Bachelor of Arts in spending would be done in the next j music. He got all A s and B's in fiscal year. The military allocation ; "his four years of college. got the heaviest slicing a cool billion dollars; the remainder came off of economic aid chiefly. In addition, the House may vote to ban further aid to Yugoslavia in view of Tito's reunion with the Moscow Communists. Well, Republicans have come a long way sirtce they hooted at Henry Wallace, who at the war's end urged large-scale foreign aid. Wallace urged jeered Republicans, a "quart of milk for every Hotten tot" which would have taken care of the milk surplus at least, if they could have gotten the Hottentots to drink it. Speaking of Henry Wallace, niav- be he should lie "rehabilitated ' by the GOP. In the l'Wis he wa de nounced for "plotting under t h e pig.s" as a surplus disposal plan Now vc read that Secretary Hen- son says soil bank cheeks will tie given to those who plow up some of their corn, cotton or wheat. Here is another blow at the grand Bin panys campaign arguiiii-nmmjcjjii T GodPn Mortuary Jjn, rounuiy cuniicmning n1'""5" ln-aid to states. The fact-finding Congressional Quarterly has dug Up the figures which show govern ( Continued on editorial page, 4.) Bodies of Two Anslers round ..,-t l j- , iMireau. MrNarv field. Salemr BKND The bodies of I-.rme, Mostly cloudy itii scattered show Harris, 5"), Sandy city councilman, j era and periods of c learinj! tiKlay. and C. A. Happold Oregon City, were recovered Tues day from Crane Prairie Reservoir, 50 miles southwest of Bend. The men failed to return May i 18 from a fishing trip to the reservoir. It was believed their boat hit a snag, sank, and the men were unable to swim ashore. H Martians don't fly ever vary night dropping crab (raws saod than whera daaa DcwnaJrarar 311fp I Hj ZrTYYsp A sonatas, six symphonies and one Oldest oll lece Graduates Will , .. - ... lilt LOCUS' 1,0S ANGKLES (,n-.lohn Bur goync Kly graduates with honors Saturday at UCLA at the ripe young age of 86. It's the greatest thrill of his colorful life, but there's a sad note for the man who claims to be the nation's oldest student. "I'll miss those coeds, 8 o'clock Classes and coffee breaks. They kept me from feeling my age,'' he lamented Six of his seven children and four grandchildren, too will be Salem Girl, 4, Succumbs To Jaundice Karen Sue Thompson, four- vear-old daughter of Mr. and ' Mrs. Stanley Thompson, 425 S. 25th St , died Tuesday in a Sa- ' lem hospital of a liver ailment, Death was caused bv an infer- ious laundiee of a tvpe which is usuallv not serious, the attending , nhvsiei.m said III about three ! weeks. the girl nad Been nospi t.ih.'ed lour days. Karen Sue was born in Salem Max il. IM2. Besides her par ents, she leaves two sisters, San dra Kae and Sherrie Rae Thomp son, both of Salem, and grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. Iver ! Thompson, Wnodville. Wis., and ' Mr and Mrs. F,d Boldt, Salem. ArranfcmpnU arp npnHinir at The Weather Max. Mln. Prtrla. Salrm SO 42 .1.1 Portland - S7 411 .OS Rakfr M .10 .14 Mfdford S5 44 00 North Bfnd S7 47 Trace Rosehure SI 44 00 (San Franruro 2 49 Trarf San Frani lerles 71 S7 .00 74 S5 110 urk 76 5!) Trace Willamette River I 1 feet. 1 FORECAST I from I' S wealhei day and Thursday. 65 and the low tonight, 45 Temperature at 12 01 a m. today was 50. SAIFM PRECIPITATION slnr' SUrt ' ther Year sept l This Vat I at Van lUnrtnal SS 79 ' 31 22 .IS 07 Removing Half of Brain Turns 'Brat' Into Normal Utile Girl By ROBERT GOLDENSTEIN CHICAGO W A pretty 6-vear- old blonde girl who was banished from school because of ugly be-! havior and uncontrollable convul- sions is ready to start life again with a new personality but only half a brain. ; The girl hasn't had a convul- Ision since the right side of her, brain was removed May 14. She;""1 "K,i8 siiaigni aneau ane is described as cheerlul. coopera tive and of normal intelligence Instead of placing her in an in stitution for special care, her pa-'shp suffered 10 to 12 severe con rents plan to send her back to vulsinns a day, blacking out each -Vmnl nnvl fall tilllC Surgeons at ' Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital described the case at a news conference Tues-1 day. They did not reveal the girl's identity, except to say she lives lit. I ... 14., with her parents and three young- i r hrothers and sisters in north- era Indiana. I 106th Yur State Rnvs Site for Hospital Wilsonvillc Land Bought; Fairview Project Okehed Purchase of the West Wilson ville site for the new $14 million state mental hospital was approv ed Tuesday by the State Emer gency Board. Also voted by the board was appropriation of $8,500 from emergency funds to obtain 13 additional acres at the site. The 13 additional acres are ' deemed necessary to block off the 492 acres which the state i hopes to get from nine owners at $243,886. The board also approved con struction of three buildings at Fairview Home, including an ad ministration center, multi-pur- : pose building and inmate cottage. ; Contractors are Viesko and Post, Salem, on a low bid of $834,000. Construction in 1957 William Ryan, board of control enrrn f m ri- n -j if 1 Ti int1 a i- kn Ka. jCved negotiations for purchase of the menial hospital site could he eomnletcd within a short time and that construction should be underway early 1957 Voters of the state approved construction of the new hospital at the 1954 general election. First unit of the hospital, in cluding 500 beds, will be con- m utHea" n-nr-5o,dJD.uuu appro- pnation from the 1955 I-cgisla- ... ,. ture. Remainder of the hospital will be built over two bienniums and when completed, the institu tion will have 1,500 beds. ! Additional Money The last Legislature appropri lated $839,000. for the Fairview Home projects, but Dr. Irvin Hill superintendent, said it probably, would be necessary to ask for a lie nrS tion did nut include furnishings! and architects' and inspectors' t fees. 1 Also approved Tuesday was a budget for $25,000 for the newly voted (hewings Fescue and Creeping Red Fescue Commis sion for the remainder of the 1955-57 hiennium. A loan of $5. 000 from Orecon's Fescue Grow ers' Association Was included In ' Ihn hiidrrpt anH uill hp rpnaiH ' Price questioned ' State Senator John Mernlield. Portland, questioned the price ( li been boosted far above its ap- nraised value simnlv because the state was seeking the land. The senator said this apparently had : been the rase in several in-! stances when the state required land. But Board of Control Secretary Ryan said he considered the price for the site "fair " Hvan told r.mergency isoaru niemoers inai some 25 proposed sites were in vestigaled for the mental hos pital. Scott Seeks Re-Election Harry W. Scott, downtown mer chant, is a candidate for reelec tion to the Salem pistrict School Board. A June 18 election is sched uled to fill one of the five school directors' posts. Candidates have until Friday to file at the school offices, said Con nell Ward, clerk of the school board Petition forms are avail able there, with 49 signers requir ed The election will be conducted hetween 2 and 8 cm at 17 nollins places throughout the school fits-1 trict, the same places set up (or a budget election last month. Date j of the school director elections is! set on a statewide basis by state law. Scott has served on the school board since 1!46. A member of the four-man team of brain surgeons that handled the i caso Rave thls account: lhp Krl appeared of normal health and disposition until she ! contracted sleeping sickness when 'shp was a Vear 'd Partial paralysis affected her arn' an(1 p,t htlp able to see objects to her left. became a "brat" mistreating oth-1 ers. shouting at her mother andi destroying toys and other objects. Doctors decided the bad half of lpr hra'n w'" triggering the con- vulsions and abnormal behavior. Doctors said the only loss th girl suffered from surgery, in ad- Hilinn In lh linHocil-ah .Bf.r.. dition to the undesirable aggres sive traits, was the sense of smell sive traits, was the sense of smell In her left, nostril only. I 2 SECTIONS-20 PAGES Nearly 900 Register for ,"B Tr"T ' J. i- t; ., fi.fi , Wmm0 1 hjt ml lk ra'a amall frv will the 8lem YMCA. Le, U Mm camaalgi. which he- . rarMM w,y- ,,. Djrkm,., YM physical director. Is shawi ! ""! " Senate Group Unanimously Backs Seaton (Picture on Wlrephoto Page 14. II.) WASH1NGT0N fl Presi(k,nt nomination of Fred A. Seaton as secretary of the in- lfr!or won unanimous, piparusan endorsement Tuesday from tnc Spnate Interior Committee. Chairman Murray (D-Mont) said he would report the committee ac- tion to the Senate shortly. In a 90-minule public hearing which brought questions on every phase of Interior Department problems. Seaton defended Kisen howcr s "partnership policy" for water power deelopment. Th Wl.il.. 11..,,.,. ...icl.nl .it." . " .,.,, ,.,, stepped some Democratic ques- lions. nowcer, saving iney were : subjects he must study. ' It was Sen. O'Mahoney of W'y- oming. a Democrat, who moved that the committee unanimously I recommended that Seaton s nom - 'ination De conlirmcd. ine sena tors did this without leaving their chairs and without the formality of a roll call vote. Seaton, under questioning by O'Mahoney, described Eisenhow er's "partnership policy" as "the truest kind of Americanism be cause it guarantees the maximum of local control.'' , It's a very simple sort of, thing." he said, with municipal!-! . tic-s. rural electrification associa - I mn. anH nrivnt. ..iii:n.,c wirwu-al. jnK m power development, . e ob:,.j ..j ,.ii involving the Hells Canyon Dam that a federal high dam there would conserve more water than the three lower dams now licensed - peeled to appeal direct to the to the Idaho Power Co., a private supreme court in what may be utility. come the first clear-cut decision The nominee said he did not; by that court on city bus segre "claim to he an authority oniSit'l"n , Hells Canvnn " Rut he noted that1 The historic decision came six the Federal Power Commission had issued a license and that un less Congress acted to revoke it his course was clear O'Mahoney and Sen Neuhcrger (D-Orei predicted a bill authoriz Ung a federal multi-purpose high j dam on the Idaho site will get through Congress, He said he would try to con- jvince Eisenhower to favor immedi- ate statehood for Alaska, as well as Hawaii. TonV- V vnlrkcim ajAJHJSUMI Fatal to Two Men GRAND JUNCTION. Colo An nil tank under an air pressure test exploded late Tuesday in a s,f(, yarfj icillirtK two men and injurinst two others . c . . n . . rlna " t0IP' na '""1811 iw - Hockman. both of grand junc- tion, were killed, Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, June art thlr flrat rt taut af wafer T"f Community Air Force Base Committee Formation of a committee to function in connection with the proj ected $60,000,000 Air Force Base near W'oodburn was undertaken at a luncheon meeting Tuesday at the Marion Hotel. The committee tentatively will include Marion County Judge Rex Hartley; the mayors of Salem, W'oodburn, Gervais. St. Paul, Donald. Hubbard and Newberg; Elmer Berg, president of the Salem Chamber Rose Queen Choice Tonight PORTLAND W - The 1956 , , 0.r l.il li,,sp t1 !"" nio ut- iidim-u ni luioiuiuun '' ceremonies in Multnomah Stadium Wednesday night. Threatening weather failed to j halt plan3, and festival officials' I euiH th hnu uill Lfit itn ..vtin ! . a downpour comes along Thorp wjl, hp sadum shows ti,..H,,. .r,l rr;j. nights, a I rh.lHren's nararf FriHav and ' thoi floral parade Saturday. The American Rose Society will oprn js annual meeting Wcdncs- 1 day, Federal Judges in Alabama Outlaw Segregated Buses MONTGOMERY, Ala.. OP Splitting 2-1, a three-judge panel in federal court ruled Tuesday ,hat e rac ial segregation on city ! buscs m Montgomery violates the federal constitution. i Hut the court look no immedi ate action to issue an injunction against enforcement of city and state segregation laws. That will come later. City and state officials are ex- months to the day after the start of Montgomery's negro bus hoy rntt, a still continuing mass re fusal to ride segregated buses What immediate effect this ruling will have on the bus boy cott was undetermined. NORTHWEST LEAGUE At Salem Yakima, rain. At Lewiston 4 Wenatrhee 3. At Spokane 1. Tn-City a. PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE At San Dieito 3, Portland S At Hollywood 6 Vancouver S At Sa'-ramento 7. T.on Anifele 6. At San FrancKio 4, Seattle J. AMERICAN LEAGUE At New York 4. Kans Citv 7 At WhlnM,.n 3. hn o I At Baltimore 1 Cleveland. S. At BoMoo 11. Dr'rmt 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE At Milwaukee 1 Brnoklvn . At Ollrlfn 7. Pitthlirt;tl 3 At St. Iyiun 3. New York 1 At CinclnruU t, Philadelphia 4. WUNDID 1651 Learn to Swim day classlflcatUi lata age aid ability f roapt, while several f his l instructors leak . Actual lessaas wui cantlnae through Saturday at day. (Statesman Photo.) Officials Form'Cyprus Chief of Commerce; Elton Thompson, chairman of the chamber's indus trial committee; Stanley Grove, chamber manager, and Dr. Wil lard Stone, Marion County health officer. Thompson was named organiza tional chairman. Present were Judge Hartley. Berg, Thompson, Dr. Stone and Mayors Robert White of Salem, Larry Koch of St. Paul and Rex Cutslorth of Gervais. Principal discussion centered aruund the possible impact on Marion County ami cities in prnx- imitv t, !, ulr kit... ;., .....1 ' " "a". to sanitation, zoning, traffic and services. Also studied was a 13 page Air Korce suggestion for a Rase Commnnitw i-mmni in K.nHi problems attendant upon its opera- ! tion, which The Statesman obtained from the Pentagon last week County and city representatives were asked to study the legal aspects of possible housing re strictions, pending calling of an other committee session. Dam Townsite Goes onJUock WASHINGTON lift - Rep Coon 'H-Orei introduced a bill in the House Tuesday to provide (or the sale of the McNary Dam townsite to Umatilla, Ore. The 344-acre site with buildings, utilities and equipment has been declared surplus by the federal the Columbia Klver and is re government, ported to have been the site of t'matilla would pay an appraised i Pacific Coast headquarters for the fair market value for the site. I Lewis and Clark expedition. Municipal Azalea Garden to Get Start at Bush Park Today By l.ll.LIE L. MADSEV Garden Fdltor, The Statesman A planting which will in the future probably draw thousands of visitors to Salem will have its beginning in Bush's Pasture park here today. A 500-plant municipal azalea garden will get underway, Walter Wirth, superintendent of Salem parks, said Tuesday. The azalea garden, which will be in the upper division of the park, against the background of trees, will have its first bloom, if all goes according tn schedule, in the spring of I9.17 From then on the bloom should improve with each year. The planting is bring done un der Jhr directions of the Salem Chamber of CommercftJ)eau1ifi cation committee of which J. Earl PRICE Campaign start today la the YM (. They this week, thea conclude next Masi Tont xaiu iui Death Threat LONDON ifl - Cypriot extrem ists openly threatened Tuesday to put a bullet into Field Marshal Sir John Harding. The British im mediately tightened their ela borate policy system for protect ing the Cyprus governor and members of the British cabinet. The threat the first made openly in the British Isles came in leaflets tossed from a car racing through the streets of Manchester, 16 miles from I,on don. Harding, still under special po lice guard, turned up in the house of Parliament Tuesday night to give members a report on the Cyprus situation Mure than 300 members of both parties packed a committee room to hear Harding's informal talk. j Harding, showing no concern, i moved behind a wedge of detec- tives from government office to government office in London dis cussing the problems of the riot torn eastern Mediterranean island which Prime Minister Eden has said Britain must hold. Ft. Clatsop Monnmrnt Rill Passed by House WASHINGTON - The House passed a bill Tuesday directing the Secretary of Interior to investigate the advisability of establishing a national monument at Kt. Clatsop, Ore The bill goes to the White House. Ft. Clatsop is at the mouth of Conk is chairman. Aaleas to he used are not of ordinary origin. They are from h.md-pohnatod seed from the world-renowned Kotschild Kstate in Knglanil Azaleas of this gard en are noted for their brilliant coloring and healthy growth. While they are of the Mollis type, generations of breeding toward healthier, stronger plants and more brilliant colorings tell in the Kxhury strain which has come to Salem only in recent years through importations by p. II Hrydon. Roth seedlings and plants have' been grown by Rrydon They har in the past two years created sin h sensation that their descriptions have been car ried by various garden writers in many of the nation's topmost garden magazines. 6, 1956 54 Ne. 71 Tide Adds To Flood Problem Highway Near Coast Closed At Hi jih Tides PORTLAND OB - The flood threat eased for most of the Columbia Basin Tuesday, although the upper and lower reaches of the Columbia still face danger. The tide yi pushing water 20 inches deep over the Columbia River Highway on the Oregon shore at Westport and Clatskanie twice a day. Traffic was halted Monday night and again at high tide Tuesday. The road was closed 5H hours, starting shortly after noon. Tuesday. The problem is expected to continue for six days. The Pacific Highway between Portland and Seattle was reopened to two-way traffic at a point south of Kalama. Wash., where it had been closed briefly. Sandbags were placed around the flooded section and pumps carried off the water. The lower Columbia held steady at 26 1 feet at Vancouver, Wash. nearly J2 feet oyer flood stage and t slow fall Is expected to begin Wednesday. Crest Passes As the apparent crest passed, dikes continued to hold, protecting rich farmlands on the last loo miles of the river's course to the Pacific. They' must hold now against days of continued high water, as the Columbia carries off mountain snow melt in Us annual freshet Three dikes broke earlier, flood ing several thousand acres of river-bottom pastures along theUiiai 1DOt lower Columbia. Some farm districts protected by dikes fear the tides might push the Columbia over the top oX their dikes. The Small Business Administra tion, taking action to be prepared to offer 20-year, J per cent loans to home owners and businessmen, designated 11 Oregon and t Wash ington counties as disaster areas. The Oregon counties: Clatsop, Columbia, Multnomah, Hood River, Wasco. Sherman, Gilliam Morrow. Umatilla, Washington and Clackamas, Cloudy Skies, Showers Stay Cloudy skies and scattered show ers will continue through today and Thursday and the temperature will stay way below the 70 mark, McNary Field weathermen said. High temperature today was ex pected to be about 63 and about the same tomorrow. Low tonight will he about 45. they said. Tuesday's high was 60 and the day brought .03 inch of rain, rais ing the total for the month to .48 inch in five days. Similar conditions prevailed throughout Oregon, weathermen pointed out. Baker taking the priie with an early morning low tem perature Tuesday of 30. accom panied by .14 Inch of rain. Today's Statesman Psg Classified 17-19- Comes rha Dawn .. 4 . Comics 14 . Crossword 15 . Editorials 4. Home Panorama 7-9 Markets 16 Obituaries 17. Radio, TV 15 Sports 11-12 Star G.ier 3 . Valley News 3 Wirephoto Page 14 Sac. .11 ... I II . II ... I I II II II .11 .. I ... I .. II Brydon, a member of the Salem Chamber of Commerce Beautifi cation committee, is donating the nlants to th.-. nark division As sisting in both the plans and tlic&t,1J bf chn5e,D work, will be members of the Salem Men's Garden Club of which Brydon is also a member. Digging of plants will get un derway this morning and plant ing will follow at once. The pro ject of digging and planting the son individual bushes is expect ed to take about three days. Wirth estimated. The beautification committee, has set Thursday afternoon for a lour of Salem with an eye toward snots, particularly at the en trances tn the city which need improving However, the new ar.ilea garden will be one of the stops. Margin By 5 to 3 Richards Wins Democratic Nod In Senate Race SAN FRANCISCO, (AP) - Adlai E. Stevenson won a smashing victory over Sen, Estcs Kefainrr in California! make - or - break Drmocratjo nresiflenb'al nrimarv. Kefauver concfded defeat early today. In the winner-Uke-all contest fee the state's M presidential nomin ating votes. th count from U,M of 24.160 precincts was: Stevenson 451,70, Kefauver J6U 80J. Stevenson was pollinf M per cent of the Democratic vote. His overwhelming victory which migiit approach a half million vota margin appeared to have roada Stevenson the man to baat (or tha Democratic priie. Led Ftmi Start It put him near the threshold! of a second successive nominatioa which might pit him la November for a rerun of the 1953 race Presi dent Eisenhower won by ,4S0, ooo votes. Stevenson grabbed a lead In the first scattered returns from yes terday's final contested presi dential primary In the nation be fore the party's August convention in Chicago. He kept a steady pace to swamp Kefauver. . Stevenson said in a victory state ment that he was "delighted by tha results." He added, however,, "this is wty the first step 1 a long campaign." In conceding defeat, Kefauver sent a telegram to Stevenson ei- pressing "linctrest congratulations on your victory." He said he and his supporters will "join In any thing they can do to help you ' Coaliaae Campaign Telling reporters he had "no ex cuses, no regrets and no alibia, Kefauver said he plana to eon-( tinue campaigning, for the presl dential nomination. He reiterated. he would net accept a vice prett California Atty. Gen. Edmund 6. Brown, Stevenson's No. I backer in tha state, said tha outeoma "means Calif orai .will tlact Adlai Stevenson in November.' ' j' Tha t t a 1 Stcvcoaoa-Ketadvct vote which tnlgbt lop l,8uo,ooo- ran substantially ahead oil Repub lican balloting for aa unopposed 70-vote convention delegation sup porting Elsenhower. Tha group al so will back Vice President Nixon for re nomination. Eisenhower beat Stevenson by 700.000 votes in California in 1951 But a Republican primary contest that was sparked only by congres sional and local races brought a relatively lower vote than that of the Democrats. ; Kuehel Wiaaer GOP Sen. Thomas Kuehel won Republican re-nomination easily but failed In his bid to wrest tha Democratic nomination and thus avoid a November battle In this cross-tiling state. He wllr be op posed by Democratic State Sen. Richard Richards of Los Angeles. Under cross-filing, if a candidate can win nomination on both major oarties, he's elected in the pri mary. Kefauver i hopes of winning the Democratic presidential nomina tion appeared to have been all but engulfed in a Stevenson flood tide. That washed out the Tennessee senator's claim that he is the choice of the rank and file voters. Although Kefauver said he will continue to contend (or top place nn the national ticket, his Cali fornia defeat not only robbed him of 68 of the Ufti convention votes needed for the nomination but left him bereft of the winning psychol ogy he had established in early primaries. Far Oat la mat Stevenson's thudding defeat of Kefauver marked a tremendous comeback for the llllnoisan from the low point of the March 20 Min nesota primary, where his rival won by 59,000 out of about 432,000 votes Unlike Minnesota, California vot ers could not cross party lines. The results here seemed to sus tain Stevenson's claims that Re publicans ganged up on him in Minnesota. Stevenson's 68 vote surge in Cali fornia put him well out in front of his rivals in support among 993 national convention delegates chos en on a total of 1.372 Including California, the count was Stevenson 259'j, Kefauver 142, all oIIkts 226, publicly uncommit ted 370',. While this left Stevenson sub stantially short of the 66 nomi nating figure, the impetus of his Califm-nia victory seemed likely to win him support from previously undecided delegates and others Kefauver added Montana's 1 votes and SoutbDakota's B. But his chances of reaching 200 on the first convention ballot seemed dim Some of Stevenson's supporters were pointing toward his victories in Florida and California as the basis of hopes for nomination on only the second ballot. JET AITO CLAIMED MOSCOW iif Pioneer Prada, Soviet newspaper for children, said Tuesday the Russians have produced an experimental jet-propelled autnmobiie with a speed up to 200 m.p.h.