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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1956)
State Admits 4 Brothers Own Part of Highway 99 Highway Rurean lo Resist Any Toll Road -Attempt It lnoka like those follows who roped off Oregon's main north south highway and marked it "Private Prpcrty" Sunday near Grand Pass were within their rights after all well, almost, anyway. The Highway Department can I not find any record of ownership f - of the le's-foot section of High way 99 claimed by the Stumboj brolhera, W. C. William, stale! highway engineer, admitted Tues- day after a thorough search. , Negotiations to acquire title will start immediately and "little j I omicuity "t is expected, Williams aaid. "We certainly will .resist any attempt on the part of the broth-1 1 erj to operate the strip as a toll ( road," he added.. r The logging Stumbos, Robert, Harry, Clair and Allen, barn- caaea me neaviiy-iravelea roaa tv iiiiis iiui in vi ui ania i u I j Sunday afternoon for about . a half-hour, holding vff' XO cars and a similar number of irate tempers in each, direction. One car crashed the barricade and several followed through be fore it could be restored, but po - lice were on the scene before the brothers folded their ropes and stole away. Monday, they filed a petition in Douglas County Court to op erate the strip as a toll road. The Stumbos say the property was bought by their father 40 A research committee of the Oregon Council of Churches rec ommends that the 1957 Legislature set 'up an interim committee to study the problem of migrant labor. That there is such a prob lem is hardly to be denied. Some times it is lack of such labor; at other times it is an oversupply for the Jobs at hand. And always there are problems relating to the housing, health, education of farm lies of such workers. Whether the Legislature will want to authorize an investigation I do not know. It Is usually more convenient to look the other way when difficult situa tion! arise, especially If there la bo ready solution. - The Oregon problem Is aot greatly different from that el ! viIm aavai that fhia atata aeems to be more dependent on migratory labor for the planting and tending and harvesting of its crept. An estimated 40.000 mi grant! come to Oregon each year from spring through the apple harvest in the fall. Attitudes to ward these - orkers vary. To the farmer desperate for help they are most welcome. To social serv ice agencies, both public and pri vate they provide many "cases" illness, destitution, offenses against the laws. To schools they are an irritant, children com pelled to attend, but moving on with their families after a few (Continued en editorial page 4.) Lake Claims Dallas Boy, 4 BEND (P) A four-year-old Dallas, Ore., boy drowned Tues day near his parents' campsite at Davis Lake in the, Central Oregon Cascades. The young victim was identi fied as Bryan Garrott, son of Mr. snd Mr. Kenneth J. Garrott, Dallas. The family reportedly was on a fishing outing at the lake. . , Tha mother missed her son about 4 p.m., and thinking he might have become lost notified forest rangers. A forest service employe found Bryan's body at 6:45 p.m., in the water near the edge of the lake. Acquittal Try Denied In llilhboro Judge Cane HILLSBOR0 I Circuit Judge Hnlph Holman denied a defense motion for a directed verdict of acquittal as the trial of Washing ton County Judge Harry M. Sea bold opened Tuesday, Judge Seabold is being tried on a charge of Illegally accepting a real estate fee. He has innocent. WILBERT "Ntw mind, Dod 1 found the key!" 3Q3J3E i4 nn m years ago and nobody tried to buy It or get an easement when the Pacific Highway was built nine years ago. The strip was an access road to the Stumbo home, Williams said Tuesday. Handbills, distributed by the brothers standing guard at the New Road Chief Studies Work ' "--;- a a a I 3 ! v . . . - -rr m u W. C. Wllllami (abort) officially atramefl aew duties today as Oregon's chief highway engineer, succeeding R. H. Baldoek. Williams, Sd-year highway department veteran, If here con templating a scale model of the Portland terminus of the Salem-Portland Freeway. (Statesman photo) Hospital for Mentally III Children Recommended A separate building for treatment of mentally ill children has been recommended by a special committee appointed by the State Board of Control, Gov. Elmo Smith, board chairman, announced Tuesday. The committee was appointed some timrf ago to make spe cific iccommrndations on establishment of i facility for men- tally ill children. The committee suggested that the size of the proposed new unit be for from 50 lo 60 persons and that the unit accept and keep only those who are acutely mentally ill and that it be designed for rela tively short-time treatment. It was recommended that the unit be located and administered as part of a current state institu tion with the committee's first i,.. k.;. it,. n,.n. rairuio 1 r Home. Second choice was the new , state hospital to be constructed at Wilsonville. Admission would be on a volun-itate tary basis with the right reserved in rii-haree nr commit to another institution if the patient is not treatable in the proposed facility, j ine commmce saia inai simx : kuihiiiu ........ the need is urgent legislation The man, clad in the life jacket, should be sought at the 1957 legis-1 reportedly was carried under the la tu re meeting here next January, j barge, surfaced on the other side, . Serving on the committee werelthen was swept about a quarter Dr. Dean Brooks and Dr. Herbert 'mile down river. Other "than for Nelson of the Oregon State Hospl- j swallowing considerable water, tal; Dr. John Waterman, State , Boardman suffered no ill effects, Health Department; Dr. Gerhard police said. Haugen and Dr. James Shnnklin, ! Portland; Melvin Murphy, Oregon Mental Health Association, 'and Dr. Irvin Hill, Fairview Home su perintendent. Cloudy Days p,radrdi0n Forecast The mercury bounced back over the 80 mark in the Salem area ! Tuesday. But partial cloudiness is' expected to keep temperatures flown somewhat looay ana murs- day, weathermen reported. Tuesday's high reading was M and today's maximum is expected to be near R0. Portland Ends 'Whhl IT ty n. or ... pnnrr vn i nor n.,rainr ' have agreed to slop selling whis-1 kev for 25 cents a shot .and to quit using the "free-hand pnur." ' ,h' rrnP wl" run close to normal. win return, l he reason .' 1 he i thus ending a brief liquor price 'But this is the exception. About i wild ones turn out red after frees war here. 7 Pr cent normal crop is cx- ing. The same hnlds true, hnw-1 The Oregon Liquor, Control Cnm-'pected as an average. ever, of the cultivated ones which' mission called together the bar1 Ticking of beans will run into have not been .sprayed. Spider owners .. Monday to discuss the! September and picking is expected mite 'is the trouble in both types price cutting. I to" be pretty good from here on) of berries. barricade Sunday, read: "After w aiting nine years for some com pensation or at least a thank you note, we have decided to remind the state of our ownership. In order to repossess our land, it has been necessary to tempo rarily close the highway. Life Jacket Saves Life of Area Worker Slatnmaa Stmt Srrvlrt Bl'ENA VISTA - A Portlander employed on an Army Engineer's , dredge in this area narrowly e - Vm ",u"""' ' Z'u- , V ' Pllce reported, Officers said Donald Boardman, '. 27, fell overboard between a barge and the dredge in the Willamette1, River near the mouth of the, T 1 Processors Wait for Beans; Heat Cuts Crop 25 Per Cent By LILI.IE L. MADSEN Farm F.dllnr, The Statesman "Instead of sacks of beans piling high on local processing docks awaiting their turn in kettle or freezer, some processors report they are the ones doing the wait ing this year for the next load ; ( beans. familiar sight in recent years has ' been huge stacks of bean sacks around canneries and other pr0Cessinc plants-far ahead of the ability of the plants to handle them. , Processors at Salem said Tues day that "not once this year have beans got ahead of us." The blossom drop from the July hot spell will reduce the crop from 20 to 25 per cent, many of the fieldmen and growers alike agree. In a few fields, where growers anticipated the heat, with Plenty of irrigation and fertilizer 106th Year West to Gear for Oil Crisis Pool Plan Set; Russ Aim Said To Wreck Meet WASHINGTON (AP)- The B, o v e r n m e n t Tuesday, .an nounced an emergency pro pram designed to supply West em nations with oil in event Suez shipping is halted. The plan is based on the pooling of resources by U. S. petroleum producers. Mobilization Director Arthur S. Flemming said 13 American firms engaged in foreign oil operations have formed a "Middle East emergency committee" to work out a cooperative program. He added that if Sun hipments are blocked and pipelines in the area shut off, Britain and Western Europe would have t ration oil but that no reduction in Amer ican consumption is foreseen. The canal was seired by Egypt July 28, and a conference will open in London Thursday on the question of a return Jo international con trol. Companies represented, on the committee, Flemming said, are planning a three-way program of emergency action in event Middle Easjt oil .traflic is diverted from the vitar waterway.. .HI. The plan provides for pooling of terminal, storage and transpor tation facilities for .maximum ef ficiency: inter-company exchange of crude oil to. meet needs; and the adjustment of , production to reduce transportation problems. Threat Issued DAMASCUS, Syria I New threats against oil for the West away from the U.S. toast. . crossing Syria In pipelines were; Weathermen said the small. In voiced Tuesday night by a mass tPnse tnrm is exrieeted to hold j meeting of all Syria's parties in support of Egyptian control of the Suet Canal. , Former .Premier Khaled El Aim read out decisions warning that 140 million tons of oil which flows West across Syria "would be immediately barred tha mo ment any Western power starts military action against Egypt." - LONDON () The Soviet Un ion was reported scheming Tues day night to wreck the 22-nation Suet Canal conference at the out set Thursday and substitute a big ger one on Soviet-Egyptian lines. Britain. France and the United States invited 24 nations to dis cuss international control of the canal, whose operating company was nationalized by Egypt s Pres ident Gamal Abdel Nasser. Greece and Egypt refused to attend. The Soviet Union, in its quali fied acceptance of the invitation last week proposed that 45 coun- trie! be invited to a parley. The! list included all the European1 Communist countries and all the Arab nations. Seeks All Canal Users Nasser, in rejecting the Western bid Sunday, also said that about 45 countries, including all those that regularly used the canal, should be included in any Suez conference. Moscow sources said Soviet For eign Minister Shcpilov planned at the opening of the conference Thursday to move for adjourn- -j . n,..ii, .nm.u.hro cl!ie ln the larger form suggested jby Nasser. Shepilov was reported ready to announce that Russia would refuse to abide by decisions made in London on the ground that the enference is not compe- ,0 ct withou, gypt (Aoo. ,lorr P, Jf See. 1) PORTLAND ATTORNEY DIES PORTLAND un - David Fain. Portland attorney and member of a 'legal firm representing The Oregonian Publishing Co., died Tuesday -afternoon following upon a heart seizure. out, the growers said Tuesday, Evergreen blackberries are really in clover price-wise this year, growers reported Tuesday. However, here loo, the crop is down. While it is early In the season, the crop Is now being estimated at about one-halt to two-thirds of normal. ' But the price is the best fnr a number of years. Some tanners jnave no definitely announced Ihrir Price hut buying at "market Neny r arqunar posted 15 cents a pound Tuesday; And talk iwithin the trade circles seems to Indicate a 14 to 16 cent price throughout to the grower. t Both wild and cultivated types are being marketed. More wild, than harvested for some years, are expected because of the good price. However, the wild ones, are not expected to hrini: ouite the top price that the cultivated" ones 2 SECTIONS - 1ft PACES AAire Soys a nn OD S Doug McKay to Introduce GOP Keynote Speaker rwiug MrKay if Salem will In troduce the Republlraa renvea lion keynote sp e a k e r la Saa Francisco next week as the na tion watches by television, Wen dell Wyati, Republic state rhairmaa, announced Taesday aight. Hyatt said the Invitation was extended through Leonard Hall, GOP national chairman. McKay, eempellng with Sea. Wayne Morse In November's I. 8. Senate race, will receive na tional recognition In introducing Gov. Arthur B. Langlie of Wash ington aha is involved la a sen ate race ef his ewn against Sen Warren Magnuson. ' It was also learned that Mrs. McKay will address the Republi can women at the convention. Coast Fromirath Of Hurricane MIAMI. Fla. UTi Hurricane Betsy, 190 miles east of Fort Pierce, Fla., Tuesday night, was hnlHinff to a oath that nrnmises to k-wD her 120-mile-Der-hour winds t jt. northwesterly course for the next 12 hours and move at nine miles' an hour. After that it may swing more northerly. "New England has nothing to worry about from this storm. said Gordon Dunn, chief of the Miami Weather Bureau. "This trend continues to de crease tha possibility of toe hurri eano center reaching tha Florida coast," tha Weather Bureau said. The Weather Bureau, however, reported a new "area of suspi cion" has been found far out in the tropical Atlantic, in about the same area that spawned Betsy six days ago. They said the area, too to 1.000 miles east of Puerto Rico, so far amounts to surface winds of some 35 miles an hour. Q-Ycar-Old T'wgl?rr - ' - '' -CfVCl Shows 9 Em Up Statesman N'tws Srrvlra WOODBURN - A nine-year-old Salem boy Tuesday showed up his parents and a number of other grownups in the business of pick ing beans. Dickie Powell, 77 S. Lincoln St.. harvested 550 pounds of beans during a day's work on the Roman Horsing yard in tha Woodburn area. Dickie's proud father, Bernard Powell, believes this to be an unusual effort for so young" a boy. Hoesing agrees. The father himself had to settle for a respectable JM pounds Tues day. Dickie also bettered the harvest of his mother and 12 j ear old brother. Annual Marian Pilffriniaire Today At Oookrd River .tin Irs man Nfwi Srrvlrt MT ANTiEIa Vistorn from af;ir urrn Arriuintr hprp Tiirrlav fnr the third annual Marian Pilgrimage j which will be held Wednesday at tiny Holy Rosary Catholic Chapel in the Crooked Finger district, 12 miles east of Mt. Angel. There will be a daylight proces .jpIp. 1 sum at 2 30 p m. and a linhl mi.rnh at n m Time u nltr ing the half-mile pilgrimage route I at night will carry randies. Speakers will include the Rev. I Francis F. Woods, Albany Y V ., Spared lot television's Family Rn'ary, ,,hrllEE0(1' It off as' altogether . in ilrusaflcs program. . klv to affect the convention. Approximately R.OO persons took park in last year s pilgrimage. IS TLT. NOnTHWrST I.KAftrK At Kuirne 3, SalMn 0 At Tri-Cltv J Lewlntnn 10 Al Npnkana 7, Wtnatrhrc 9 PM'lrit' COAST MUCH No jrfmes -hedulef1, AMr'.nlCAN I fAIItr Al Kantian Citv I, ('hlra?') 12 Al Clrvrlanri , Drtrnil A At HHitfwiir .1. Wn-hlnstnn A At Ni Vork IS Bnlon 1 1 WTION VI. I I K Al Rrm.klvn I. Nrw Vnrk S At st. i-oun , Milwaukee i POUNDBD 1651 The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Talk of First Ballot Victory Starts Anew - CONVENTION HAI.L, Chi cago (API Adlai Stevenson's hid for the presidential nom ination . perked tip Tuesday night at the Democratic Na tional Convention. Supporters suddenly pumped a new head of steam into what they hoped may be a first ballot band wagon. Earlier the Stevenson camp had all but given up hope of putting the former Illinois governor across on the first convention roll call Thursday. The odds still ap peared to be against his toppling challenger Averell Harriman so swiftly. Rut some Stevenson backers are willing to take the odds now. Sen. Clinton Anderson of New Mexico figured them at no - worse than 2 to 1 against victory on ballot Xo I and even money fpr grab bing the nomination by the sec ond. It wasn't so much any sudden surge of Stevenson strength that brought the upturn in spirit! but CHICAGO P) Cov. G. Meav nea Williams of Michigan threw his support early Wed nesday ta Adlai E. Stevenson for the Democratic presiden tial nomination. The Michigan caucus voted to support Williams as s favor ite son on the first convention ballot but to divide this way on the second ballot: Stevenson J1H votes; Got. Averell Harriman 11 votes: Sea. - Stuart - Syaiiagtof , one vote. tha adding up of little things. Some of tha omens turned np In Ohio, New jersey snd Mary' land. Paul Ziffrrn,' California national committeeman, said the tip-off to him was word from Gov. Frank J. Lausche of Ohio that he won't join -Harriman' side. Strong Possibility George Killion of San Francis co, a former Democratic national treasurer from 1945 to 1947, said there is a strong possibility now Stevenson can make it on the first ballot. Since Monday, when he predicted Stevenson's nomina tion on the second, Killion said a new spurt toward Stevenson had developed. Col. Jacob Arvey, national com mitteeman from Illinois, said Rob ert B. Meyner of New Jersey re portedly has asked his delegation to turn him loose and go for Stev enson on the first ballot. A power in' the Jersey delegation predict ed that is what will happen with most of the state s 36 votes. Stevenson Visited As for Maryland. Mayor Thom as d'Alesanriro of Baltimore and Michael J. Birmingham, the out going and incoming national com mitteemen, visited Stevenson and afterward predicted he would have the stale's IB votes. Probably this Stevenson senti ment had to be discounted -to the extent it came from friends of the 1952 party nominee. The Cali fornia delegation, for example, is solid for Stevenson with 6 votes. Still, the possible straws in the wind were of sufficient size to generate new fervor among Stev enson rooters. It developed as Democrats were going through a fourth convention session heavy on oratory and not much else. Republicani Whaled In a committee work room, par ty platform drafters came up with a farm plank promising to sup. Bnrt baSic ""P . itead of ""' .P"- rem 01 pariiy That represented a victory for the view of Stevenson over those of Harriman Former . President. Truman. plugging away tor Harriman, said nv h tilling so iipviiiisp nr norsn i ,hink . Stevensnn could win the fio"ld,,nry ,h'" Nnvembrr flcc- '"stevensnn had nothing to say u .mDpfc h, h:. oiH Juilgc Walker Fair After Atlaek; Tooze Improving Circuit Judge Arlie Walker. Mc Minnvillc, was reported in "fair" ! condition Tuesday at Salem Mem orial Hospital alter being stricken with a heart attack while attend ing the, Northwest District Kiwanis convention here Monday . Meanwhile, attendants reported that .lnslir Walter I.. Timze of the Stale Supreme Court is "ictting along nicely." JuMice Tooze en tered the hnspilal 10 rinys ago snf- jicribed at a stomach ailment. iuesmau Oregon, Wednesday, August Drive (OoiDims Oregon Delegates Parade 1 1 r i ri r"f, I skew twMt mm kiai a ( CHICAGO Delegates display banners for Sea. Wayne Morse , He ssid he is "no longer almost as he waits (at top of picture) to begin his speech Tuesdsy alone within my party in the Sen night to the Democrat National Convention. (AP Wlrephoto) . ate" and asserted: 1 "The Democratic Party is' tha Negroes Find Social Issues Trampled in Battle for Political Balance ly JOSEPH and STEWART AISOP CHICAGO Because- civil rights Is the one malce-or break issue at this convention, Roy Willdns, executive sec retary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, is a key figure here. He is also an interest ing man to talk to. Wilkins is a thin, solwrly dressed NegrB of 55, with an oddly boyish face. He is a decorous man, mild-mannered, intelll- gent, highly, articulate, carefully reasonable. Most of the time, he talks like a learned professor of sociology. But once In a while you sense the intensity of feeling behind his carefully chosen words.' Here, for example, is Wilkins, in his best professorial atyle, on how change will come to the South: "Areas of racial reaction will so isolate themselves in their philosophies aixf-practices that great externa! and internal pressures for change will automatically be generated." Bitterness Engulfs Negro's Voice But here is Wilkins when the bitterness breaks through the schoolmasterish style. "No other people would have endured so long being stomped on and kicked and humiliated." The bitterness is only occasional, and Wilkins clearly makes a great effort to control it, to be patient and reasonable. "I'm not in favor of taking a baseball 'bat and beating anybody's brains out," he says. "If there's ever sny violence down South, the Negroes won't start it. They never do. The Southerners talk about , sending Federal troops down there to enforce de-segregation. You won't find a single Negro leaden- who's ever ssid anything about Federal troops." Desegregation, Wilkins explains, again in his professorial style, has become the great symbol-issue for all Negroes. "We see It CHICAGO (f Platform drafters lor the Democratic National Convention adopted early Wednesday a civil rights plank by a 12-S vole. Members of the groop declined Is dlarisse Hi terms Immediately. But all Indications were It was moderately worded. Rep. John W. MrCormark af Maasarhaaetli, rhairmaa at the draft ing group, predicted approval ( this plank and the entire new platform by both the lOS-member resolutions-platform rammlttee and the convention. as a status issue whether we arc going to remain second class citizens forever.. The feeling of status permeates the whole of Negro life from one end of the country to the other." Then the professorial manner breaks down again, when he talks with a grin about "that Judge Rredy down South who says we're a criminal race only two generations from eating cock roaches." The grin is not a gay grin. And there is a real, fierce bitterness when Wilkins talks ahinut the economic pressures brought to bear on southern Negnes who support the NAACP: "They'll take a sharecropper, a poor country Negro tied to the land, and kick him nut. have no shame in starving him." The outcome of the current pulling and hauling on the civil rights issue could determine who is to be the Democratic can didate. It might even determine who Is to he the next president of the I'niled Stales, - Vet in the crowded hotel bedrooms and the echoing amphitheatre of this convention city, the issue has taken on a curious unreality. The civil rights debate has centered nn using the dread words. "Supreme Court," in the civil rights plank, Whites Feel System Threatened Yet the issue is very real lo Wilkins and his fellow Negroes profoundly and bitterly' real. II Is' equally real tn the while Mtuthcrncrs here, who feel most deeply and sincerely that their established .social system is threatened by the Negro upthrust. Many of Hie southerners quite genuinely believe that the problem ran be solved nnly if the South is lelt to deal with it in its own wsy, Whether one agrees with them or' not, it is possible to feel sympathy both with Wilkins and his southern enemies, because they are nut faking, because they mean what they say. But the vast majority of the politicians gathered here, including most of the leading candidates, do not really mean what they say. Indeed, they are not really concerned with the meaning of the words written intn the civil rights plank. They are thinking, instead,' of the delicate balance between the rlclegntes(jf the Snuth . and the delegates "I 'Michigan or Minnesota; between Southern voti's.and the votes of Harlem or Chicago's, black belt. It is only wl.cn you t;ilk lo a mm like Wilkins. or to one of the wiser. Southerners, that j nil are smith nly and sharply reminded that there is really a great deal mure tn it than that, ymi are reminded that the Negro problem Is Ihe great, central, tin solved problem ni American sonify. I' op) riflit. I'M, New Yui It Hriald Tnbune, Inc I IS, 154 PRICI Civil Rights 'e f , 1 ' . tc - I- .. -. Mm W ms The Weather Todays forecast: Partly dowdy today, tonight and Thursday, with tog or tow cloudiness morning slightly cooler today. (Cakialru raters m , St No. 141 raou Asks End to 'Regency of Big Business' BY WHITNEY SHOEMAKER ' CONVENTION 1 1 ALU CW cago (AP) Sen. Wayne Morse, the Oregon Republican-turned Democrat, exhorted Americans Tuesday night to elect a Demo cratic president this fall and end "government by big business regency." Morse described himself as "tha target of a White House Purge" which would "fall flat on Its face". The Oregon Senator is seeking reelection and predicted be would defeat his GOP opponent, former Secretary of the Interior Doug las McKay. Eisenhower accepted McKay's resignation aa secretary earlier this year with a hearty boost for his Senste candidacy. Morse brake with Eisenhower during the 1952 campalga and sup- f (Additional oavetlea stories on pages t and 13. Conventioa pictures en pages 11 and 13.) ported Democrat Adlai ' Stevensoa for tha presidency. Later Mors switched to the Democratic party. "Happy With Pwlsloa" "I am happy with my decision," ha - flpotarpd TiwaHav. ... oTyV'beru,m 8 r WUB,ry mora aaia uei nocrsui nava "that rigor and the vision ta asa government as a creative force in ' the solution of' tha complex prob lems of the 10th Century not at' an Instrument of reaction and re trogression." In a speech at the w indup aea aion ef tha second night ef the De mocratic National, Convention, Morse accused the Eiseehowef administration ef "dragging Hs feet" ea aid to education. Telia of "Sacrifice" He also charged the administra tion with sacrificing natural re sources "in its willingness ta serve the limited ends of special interest groups." Democrats, Morse said, repeat edly "came to the rescue" of Eisenhower in the field of foreign policy "when his own party failed to support him." But he said that "unfortunately. the President didn't reciprocate on many Issues for which the lib erals foucht." Many Republicans, he ssid, are still isolationist in outlook "time has passed them by." The record shows, Morse add ed, "that the administration has been reactionary in economic affairs st the cost of the general welfare of the people of the country." Lots of Demarrata Stepping off a plane from Wash ington earlier in the day, Morse was clearly Invigorated by his proximity toso many Democrats in one place. "Fine, fine. Just fine." he de clared, when asked how he liked the idea of being welcomed by a National Democratic Convention. "I've only been to one other convention the Republican con vention in 1952." he said. "This one is going to be fine." He was met at the airport by his legislative aide. Merton Bern stein, snd rushed off to the home of Bernstein's mother to whip his speech Into shape. Committee ta Adlai Morse didn't say who he favors at the convention's Presidential choice. But he declared he re garded himself committed to Adlai K Stevenson under Ore gon's primary election mandate that sent a delegation to Chicago bound to Stevenson's candidacy. "Although I'm not s delegate, I feel as fully bound as the dele gates." he said. CROWD ROOM F.DF.N LONDON i - About m per sons chanted "We Want Peace" and booed Prime Minister Etn as he returned to his No. 10 Downing Street residence Tues day night from the theater. Today's. Statesman Page 14-15... ...-11... 10.. 4... Sec .. II .. M .. II ... I ... I .. II .. II ... II ... II ..II .. I ... I ..II Classified Comics .... Crossword Editorials 1 . Home Panorama Markets 6.. .; ::12... ...12.. .11... 16.. 9-10.. . . 5... 74.. 11... Obituaries Radio-TV Sports .... Star Caier Valley NtVi . Wirepoto "Pane Speed