Thursday, Marca 16, IMS at Willamette: Dances on Galeridar Of Week-end Br BABBAKA JACKSON "A Tight Little Itland" wUI M presented by UNESCO to morrow and Saturday nights la waller ball. An English com jedy. tha film will begin at 7:30. Admission price It 80c. ." v, . 1 Baxter hall now has tele j vision set The second one to appear on the Willamette cam pus, the set Is a result of funds , gathered by the Baxter men's association and gifts from alum- nt associations. ' Bishop manor will present ' their dance tonight, and the theme of the affair Is 1 Club It Germaine." following closely the French theme, the decorations, planned-by Judy Slack of Coqullle, will be in . aplred by the paintings of Ma tisse and Ficasso. The room wui 'resemble a Parisian night club, and candles In bottles will dec orate the table tops. Sally Che : evens of San Carlos, Calif, and Marilyn English of Hood River are chairmen of the. function. ' i'. -'-J-' v.,' ii,' "f '::;- K .!""''f, .' ' "Spring Fever wUI be the theme of the Beta Alpha cam ma-8igma Alpha Chi annual dance. The two sophomore hon- cranes wiu oanca in juauwums hall tomorrow night from 8:80 until 13. Preparations for the event have been made by Judy Fullager of Portland and Chuck . Ruud of woodburn. Monday was a blue day for the senior das on the Wil lamette campus this week, for In the traditional Blue Monday style, they swam the mill stream. As the losers of Fresh : man Glee, taking fourth place, the class of 1988 presented Blue Monday chapel for. the student body. - Roll in - Cocking of . Salem reed the obituary of the class, amid tears of the seniors. The graduating ' class entered ' In their caps and gowns, carrying ' a rowboat with two senior women, Amaryllis Lilies and Eleanor Oakes of Portland, In It. Bob Miller of Pendleton, class president read the senior class will. To the sophomore class they left the "shafted glee" banner. The sophomores placed second In the race. To the Junior elass, who won the contest for the third straight year, the seniors left weir 140 left feet. The freshman elass ; placed third, and no mention of them was made In the will. After singing their songs for the years that they nave par ticipated in Glee, the seniors marched out to the mill stream and filed into the water. THE CAPTTAL JOUKMAL, sum, urcgon . 1 1 1 stand-by. roNTKOLsuKGED';vr. ti Hnnrnrn I vacation souNP 2000 Jopanese Teste r..,cfMA?PER n ' ' ' ' l0!IMeaSUre : V First Day of Freedom JT IWinc FflVAr I J ..Maiiuru, Japan W Two if' I If.lllJ IMIVI ' v1 'I I f thousand Japanese Thursday I V; S I T seiuU highway com- I tasted their first real dsy of IV MaM vntmA i.itin(mniti1 WakH. I I CI nesday for the house-passed .. t I bill to impose tolls on, the " I highway - bridge across the . ' I Columbia river at Vancouver. . V I I The money will be used to I A,A 4 Financier Bernard Baruch (left), who. told the senate backing and currency committee that in a "world under "seige" stand-by economic controls legislation mutt be en acted, confers with hU brother, Sailing Baruch (right), prior to the hearing in Washington. In the background la Sen. Harry F. Byrd, (.Va.) (UP Telephoto.) Gold Medal Awarded to Youth Who Saved Lives Howard Fitzgerald, 18-year- old Scout of Dallas, received the gold medal award for life saving at the 82nd annual ban quet of Cascade Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, at the Marion hotel Wednesday night. The award was based on the boy's efforts In rescuing two brothers from a burning home In Valsetz last September' 13 The father . and two -other brothers lost their lives in the flsmes. ''. '.,. The mother, Mrs. Leonard Fitzgerald, now a resident of Dallas, was present to see her son honored through the pres entation - by Edwin A. Arm strong, secretary to Governor Paul Paterson. , Howard, now a Second Class Scout with Troop 24, Dallas, was a Tenderfoot at the time he" rescued his brothers. In recognition of their years of service with the Boy Scout movement four business men were, presented with Silver Beavers Wednesday. . ?- Receiving the awards were: Douglas Parkes, state highway department engineering super visor; W. W. McKlnney, Salem attorney; 6. T. Moore, district' forest supervisor of Detroit; and F. L, Thompson, Albany, president of the council. The awards were presented by W, L. Phillips of Salem, long affiliated with the Scout Miss Hays Bride At Stayton Church AumsvUle On March 11 at the First Baptist church in Stayton, Miss Thelma Hayes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. El mer Hayes of AumsvUle, was married to Merle Beach, ton ef Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beach - ad Turner. The Rev. Nick Neufeld offi ciated at tha double ring eere- - mony. Mrs. Poole played the wed ding music and Mr, M. Windsor tang. Lighting the tapers pre ceding the ceremony Miss Norma Hayes and Mrs. Barrel Hayes. The bride wore a blue street length dress and tarried a white Bible entered with an orchid. ' Her honor attendant Mrs. Richard Price, wore a yellow drees and tarried a colonial bouquet. . ' Best man lor Mr. Beach was Barrel Hayes, brother of the bride, and ushers were Ned Jensen, Elton Beach, Darrel Dalke and Dalbert Dalke. For her daughter's wedding. Mrs. Hayes wore a black dress and hat and a pink carnation corsage. The bridegroom's mother wore a gray dress with matching hat and a pink carna tion corsage. At the reception following the wedding Mrs. Harry Way cut the cake, Mrs. Fred Ling served. Mrs. Louis Killlnger, Mrs. Alfred Schneider, Mrs. Ned Jensen and Miss Donna Hayes poured. The couple left on a wedding trip to California through the Redwoods. They plan to live ear Turner. Mrs. Beach it a senior at Cascade Union high school. . r Shirer Says Nazism Returns to Germany San Francisco tut Wil liam L. Shirer, veteran eorrei pondent and authority en Ger many, warned today that Natl iam wat making "frightening comeback." Ha said there ware "more Nailt in tha West German for its office at Bonn today than there were in Berlin under Hitler." Shirer, who covered the rise and fall of Hitler's regime as . American newspaper and raril.i correspondent said he was 'alarmed over the repld comeback of Natlsm in Ger Dallas Sergeant to , Reach Seattle Today ' seatue, un Miutary per sonnel from the Far East were scheduled to arrive here Thursday aboard the Navy transport Jamet O'Hara. Among those aboard it Sfc. Herbert G. Lincoln, Dallas, Ore., INDIA'S DEFENSE BUDGET -New Delhi, India WV-The Indian " parliament Thursday approved a defense budget for the coming year of 1,898,400, 000 rupees ($410,684,000). This is a alight increase over last year's figures. movement. ' Seven boys were advanced to Eagle -rank: Jamet Bo wen, Leroy Grlebenow, Ronald Brown, Robert Yunker, Julian Thurston, David . Adamt and Bruce Bleckert. The awards were made by . Norman Frees, member ef the Scout executive board. ''y''-y,:iK:-'-'y. Additional awards included: Scouter keys: Carl Ander son, Troop 80 scoutmaster; Rus sell Harrison, 'scoutmaster Troop 22; Herb Clark; Warren Black, deputy council commis sioner; Forrest Huntley, Troop 22 Explorer adviser; Lyle Gil more, Troop 28 chairman; Or ris Carnegie, Troop 22 assist ant scoutmaster; Floyd Hope man Calapooya, district chair man; Osborn Shaw,' Post 63 Explorer adviser; Dwayne Snook, assistant Twenty-year veteran awards: Maurice Keller and Edward Gottfried; 18-year, Sam Calr nes, Sweet Home. - Guest speaker was Senator Phil Hitchcock of Klamath Falls and the "Scout Family" was exemplified by the An drew Rhodabeckt of Albany ef five personi. wB VftCtaiM C1IHMQ1 Ask for Tear Lucky Penny Yacuum Cleaner Clinic 481 Court St Fh. 4-88M Shoes you'll love ... C V, WTLON LACE ccntd with PATENT MM 'X. V "t". ' A rlBLACK with bha t- tt trim , Arr llaWOtWtM fit 0rtlMT memi 1119 The senate highway com mittee oi tne uregon legisla ture voted unanimously Wed nesday for the house-passed bill to impose tolls on , the highway - bridge across the Columbia river at Vancouver, The money will be used to finance construction of a par allel bridge. A similar bill was passed, by the Washington legislature'. The committee said it ex pects the new bridge to.be completed in about five years. When , it is finished, . each bridge will carry one-way traffic. , 4 Retail Price Index Likely to Show Drop Washington () The govern. ment's retail price index today was almost certain to show a small average drop In the price of food, clothing, housing and hundreds , of - other ' consumer purchases for the third month in a row.: . - ;.v',' 1 , Sharply falling food prices. led by cheaper meats, have' al ready been recorded by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BUS) foro the month' ended February IB. ' The index for January 18, the last one out, stood at 113.8 1l 4 Former President Harry S. Truman (left) talks with 'newsmen, on arrival in Los Angeles aboard the liner Presi dent Cleveland from San Francisco. 'Truman, his wife and :. daughter are en route to Hawaii for a month's vacation. (UP Telephoto.) , , per cent of the 1947-48 average index. Today's index, reflect ing the price change from Jan uary 15,was expected to con tinue the decline from the rec ord high reached in November. Youth Admits Part in Chicago Holdup Killing Chicago (U.B A 19-year-old youth gave himself up early to day and admitted taking part Maiiuru, Japan W Two thousand Japanese Thursday tasted their first real day of freedom since the end of World War n and UKea n. Tkaii wAMt nsrt fit thfl fintt v. vw tr- - - - group of some 80,000 repatri ates China is returning. These 1,000 were the first to t. unHsv the first to be re leased from the processing cen ter nere, ana w nt w home free. .. . r Would Put 49 Stars In 7 Horizontal Rows Washington (U.B Rep. Thomas J. Lane D., Mass. has introduced a bill to nut 49 stars in the American flag after Hawaii's admission as the 49th state. ' : '''' ' . " His measure, offered at the request of the Veterans of For eign Wars' Department in Mas sachusetts, calls for aligning the stars in seven horizontal rows of seven each. ; in the holdup of the Llbby, Mc Neill and Llbby Co., in which a guard wat killed and .five men beaten. v'. ; ; ..r"-: Hudson Tillman, accompahl- Iw Mm miithw nrarfier and an attorney, surrendered to Lt. John Olsen, head of tne look county state's attorney's police. Ma. Gen. Arthur G. Tru deau (above) took , over . command of the U.S. Sev enth division In Korea re cently is directing the de-: feme of Old Baldy, strategic hill on the battlefront which ' is under heavy . Chinese ' communist attacks. (AF: Wirephoto) ADLAI REACHES MANILA ' Manila W Adlal Steven son! arrived from Hong Kong Thursday for a five-day visit here on hit world tour.: OPE N' HOUSI gaMPJpBJIJgeaj FAHCY CRYSTAL-CUT DESIGN j m C0N-D0N DISH ft COVER Beautiful crystaUelear glass Moulded by famous Anchor Hocking Useful 7" she for candies, cookies, snacks Decorative table piece, too Com meet Gof your Qih today I )())? st.for. i leaaaKTt n; ihbii . 'BHea.ar ir itrr tBtastttai gafget- mrmL. g&NS. at tta iiti h ph aHBaaeea Ta-i4t). ' PAM J. MYERS, home economist for the East Washing Machine Corp., will demonstrate the AOV SPINDMER Demonstrations at 1 1 a.m. -1 p.m. 2 p.m.-3 p.m. 7:30 p.m, Friday! Come in . get this beautiful, .useful Bon-Bon Dish and Cover made by famous Anchor Hocking Glass Corpora-, tion. ABSOLUTELY FREE -just for watching a 3 minute .demonstration of this amazing value EASY Spindrier. See how the speedy 2-tub Easy Spindrier does a whole . week's wash whiter, brighter, in less than an hour. Watch Easy'i gentle Spiralator washing action arid the thorough Automatic Spin-rinse. See how Easy spins clothes 25 drier than a wringer. Theft you'll agree that dollar for dollar, feature for feature, Easy 'f your best washer buyl FREE PARING KNIFE To Any Adult Coming Into Hogg Bros. Friday or Saturday! . . I . ' ' ' ' ; " " ' ; ' )'.'-, Free Balloons for the Kiddies! Open Friday 'til 9 p.m. ; PRICED AS LOW AS I ) M(t with an Easy. There'i m U ( mmmXtA nmi' 1 I nuimm nuni tuinit imuici i iohi rimsiiu I t SALEM OREGON CITY 1 CORNER COMMERCIAL and STATE many."