The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, November 21, 1956, Image 4

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    4 The Ntwi-Rtview, Roieburg Ore. Wed., Nov. 21, 1956
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CHARLES V. STANTON, Editor and Manager
ADD YE WRIGHT, Asst. Bui. Mgr.
GEORGE CASTILLO, Attl. Editor
Member of the Associarad Prtss, Orogon Nowsptpor Publishers
Association, tht Audit Bureau of Circulation!
, iflHIUll tv WISTHOllDir CO. INC., UliCri ii Nf Till. Dltrait
Saa Fraaciica, las Aairlal, Silttll, Partltaf, Otaiar
Publishid Daily Excapt Sunday by the
News-Review Company, Inc.
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aaaar act al Marcl 1, 1171.
In The Day's News
(Continued From Page One)
a world war In (he hope of STAY
ING IN POWEH.
That's the big danger.
J4J&,Je
In Oregon, sales of U.S. savings
bonds KO.SE seven per cent in Oc
tober of this year over October of
1955. Total sales for the state in
I October of this year were S3, 761.-
9.18 as compared with $3,515,035 in
Anionp; people who take ThanksRivinjr seriously and I uciooer 19j5.
too few of us no it is a day for prayers of thanks for bless-
PRAYERS OF THANKSGIVING
By Charles V. Stanton
This much can be taken for
granted:
On every U.S. base and every
u.s. warsnip wunin reacn oi Alos
their bomb bays are full of bombs.
Grim?
Well, we mustn't be caught nap
ping. That would be fatal.
Let's turn to something pleasant-
n
Or
infra nast and pleas for divine favor in the future,
Certainly as we come to this Thanksgivini? Day we have
much to be thankful for. Our Pilfrrim Fathers found reason
for our first thankspivimr in the fact that they had achieved
by herculean labor a sufficient harvest to stave off starva
tion through the winter abend. Today we squawk to Hitch
Heaven about taxes, cost-of-living, rents and poor televi
sion programs in a time of unparalleled prosperity, short
work week, high wages, and more individual luxury than
any people at any time in history have ever known.
We surely have more reason to be thankful than any
people who ever lived, and more reason to be thankful at
this particular time than any other people in the world's
history.
Most of us, I believe, are Irucly grateful for our bless
ings, even though we don t stop to express our appreciation
to Almighty God "from whom all blessings flow."
But, though we may not give thanks for the blessings
of the past, it would behoove each and every one of us to
get down on our knees and pray most earnestly for divine
favor for the future.
Peace Opportunity Beckons
Happenings throughout the world today could well turn
us either toward war or peace. Some of our people are
screaming that we are muddling our foreign policy. Oddly,
some of the loudest screams seem to be coming from the
extreme left wing,-from known "pinks" and fellow travel
ers. By their repeated screams they appear to be alarm
ing many serious-minded citizens and causing distrust in
our policies.
Perhaps we have missed the boat. We may fail in our
endeavors for peace. But current conditions seem to be
in our favor. They are enough in our favor to deserve the
prayers of every patriotic American that our leaders
shall have divine guidance in the troublesome hours and
days ahead. That, I believe, should be our theme for this
Thanksgiving1 Day.
We have had the courage to tell our good friends Great
Britain and France that when we say we oppose aggres
sion we mean what we say. And, while Russia grimaces
and threatens intervention and retaliation, we, without
much fanfare, indicating our belief that "action speaks
louder than words," have strengthened our Mediterranean
fleet, a move Russia can well understand.
At the same time we apparently have been trying to
put some stiffening in the backbone" of the United Nations.
The United Nations has been a more or less spineless
organization 'in the past - an "international debating so
ciety" but we now are insisting that the United Nations
has reached its maturity, is now adult, and that it assume
the responsibility for which it was created.
NEW YORK Ufl Right at the peak of the rock
madness, an older and less barbarous form of music is en
joying a new renown.
They used to call it jazz and they still do.
If anybody thought the rowdy strains of rock 'n' roll
would doom jazz to the musical graveyard, thev low-rated
cow ttie pilots are alerted and l,1B vimiiiy in me uixiemnu bciiuui oi nurn looters anu ineir
their enxines are warmed up. And! robust disciples.
By the sacred trumpet of the
legendary Bix Beiderbecke ("He
just put that horn to his lips, man,
and blew himself straight up to
Heaven"), jazz is entering a new
golden age.
Just 30 years ago jazz was re
garded as the juvenile delinquent
of the musical world. Today it
is the darling of the intellectuals;
it is accepted as an art form;
it is taught in colleges.
A jazz band led by Dizzy Gil
lespie even went abroad, with the
blessing of the U. S. State De
partment, to toot for the Ameri
can way of life.
Jazz is doing well, too, in the
realm of the big dollar. Its prac-
lilinnnra a pa in Inn AamnA HM
The more money the neoDle save I isTT hinh.nri.-nH .ni.
up the more money will be avail- lectors' items, and some 85 com-
aui- .ui iun 10 muse wno want to panies turn out a total of more
"I wouldn't be caught dead at
a rock 'n' roll concert unless I
was doing research for a paper on
mass hysteria."
Anybody for Mozart?
Stephen Foster?
The Dalles Man Suffers
7,250 Electrical Shock
THE DALLES I Karl K.
Kenner, 58, was in fair condition
at The Dalles General Hospital
TiiAClaw after a 7 ?.W-Vnlt elcC-
roll j irical shock went through his
body.
Kenner, driving a loader at The
Dalles Lumber It Manufacturing
plant, was taking logs off a "cold
deck" when the boom on the load
er came in contact with an over
head power line.
Apparently unaware of the elec
trical surge, Kenner stepped from
the cab and fell unconscious as
soon as his feet touched the
ground.
Hospital attendants said he suf
fered shock and burns on the
hands and feet.
PLANS FOR ACTION
WASHINGTON i - Atty. Gen.
Brownell this week called confer
ence to plan a course of action for
federal authorities in the South
under the Supreme Court decree
striking down racial segregation
on public buses.
Summoned to a meeting here
Dec. 10, were the 34 U. S. dis-,
trict attorneys stationed in 14
I Southern states. j
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PATRONIZE NEW-9EVIEW
ADVERTISERS
Why is that good?
The answer is simple.
build new houses to live in and
new factories to provide employ
ment for our people.
There is a lot of talk about "light
money, and the politicians would
have us believe that all that is
necessary to relieve the tightness
ot money and credit is to wave a
wand. It isn't quite that simple.
Money is a commodity. When it is
scarce when the demand for it
exceeds the supply it is high
priced. And hard to get. When it
is abundant, it is lower-priced and
easier to get.
Money is abundant when Deonle
save more than they spend. It is
tight and hard to get when people
generally spend more than they
save.
That's the long and the short of it.
In the stale of Oregon as a whole
(he people increased their purchas
es of savings bonds in October of
tins year over October of last year.
The increase, as already staler!
here, amounts to seven per cent.
In the five DrineiDal eounliea .if
aouinern Oregon Douglas, Jo-
than 1,000 new platters each year.
A leading historian of the field,
Leonard Feather, has just com
piled "The Encyclopedia Year
book 'of Jazz," which is a fine
prose pudding full of rich plums
for fans who like to argue the
merits of Count Basie versus Duke
Ellington.
Personally, like many other
tone-deaf musical illiterates, I
thought that rock V roll music
was a form of jazz a sort of re
tarded stepchild.
While admitting there is a
fringe area where it is hard to
draw a line between the two.
Feather prefers to point out that
the best jazz is closer to classical
music.
"Rock V roll bears the same
relationship to jazz that wrestling
bears to boxing," he said.
"Rock 'n' roll not only is very
rarely jazz; it is very rarely mu
sic. Its present popularity is a
passing fad about which the par
ents of America need hardly con
cern themselves."
Rock V roll seems to have a
firm grip on millions of high
sephine, Jackson Klamath andscno! students. Who, then, arc
Chance To Make Friends
There is no question but that the United Stales has
made friends by sticking with principle. There is evidence
that France and Great Britain have been surprised. They
apparently believed that once they committed themselves
to the policy they adopted in the Middle East we would
join, even though we might come in reluctantly.
Ry our refusal to join our former allies and our good
friends in this latest move, we have gained the confi
dence of many of the smaller and previously suspicious na
tions. Knowing that we would back them up with our mil
itary might, if necessary, they have provided the manpow
er needed for the U.N. police force.
India, which has been very friendly with Russia, now
is speaking out against Russian aggression in Hungary and
Poland. We want India for our friend. Perhaps the cur
rent situation will cement that friendship. Trust, under
standing and cooperation between India and the United
States could be of the utmost influence in preservation of
world peace.
"God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to per
form," and the "prayer of a righteous man availelh much."
Those two quotations, even out of context, could well be
the inspiration, I believe, for our prayers of thanksgiving
and pleas for divine guidance as we celebrate our national
holiday.
Lake savings bond sales in Oc
tober fell behind sales in October
last year by nine per cent. But in
Klamath and Lake counties they
increased better than 14 percent.
The increase in Lake county
amounted to 14.1 per cent and in
Klamath county to 14.2 per cent.
Consolidate Asks ICC
To Issue 250,000 Shares
WASHINGTON I - Consoli
dated Freightways of Portland,
Ore., Tuesday asked the Inter
state Commerce Commission
(ICC) for permission to issue 250,-
ouu snares of us 52.50 par value
common stock in connection with
its proposed acquisition of eastern
motor carriers designed to give
Consolidated a trans-continental
trucking system.
Consolidated estimated the ac
quisition of six companies operat
ing east of the Mississippi would
cost close to 18 million dollars.
The company plans to make a
public offering of the 250.000
shares, using the proceeds for a
cash purchase of Motor Cargo Inc.
of Akron, Ohio, and Liberty Motor
Freight Lines of Secaucus, N. J.
America's jazz fans? Surprising
ly, only a few are oldtimers nos
talgic for the roaring 20's and the
threadbare 30's.
A poll by Feather showed that
about half were of college age,
only 6.4 per cent were over 30.
Two-thirds of the fans reported
they spent from 5 to 20 hours a
week listening to jazz music, al
though one lady reported, "I try
for at least 112 hours a week."
and another young lady said she
devoted 84 hours a week to jazz
and 30 to classical music.
Nearly half said they spent from
$2 to $5 a week on jazz records,
but one fan said his weekly out
lay was S25 to $30.
The most cheering note in the
whole poll to purist Feather, who
rates F.lvis Presley's contribution
to modern musio as roughly equal
to a medicine man's contribution
to the advancement of modern I
surgery, was this: 78.6 per cent
of the jazz fans expressed a vio
lent dislike for rock V roll.
"Beyond any doubt," -he said,
"(he rhythm-and-blues (or rock
'n' roll) fan and the jazz fan are
two different species, scarcely
ever overlapping."
As one slaid collegiate jazz
scholar put it:
Pravda's Attack Indicates
Possible Return To Oldline
Stalinists, Backed By Army
WASHINGTON (NEA) The
regular session of the United Na
tions General Assembly in New
York has a heavy 66-item agenda
lo consider. But many of the rou
tine or long-range problems are
apt to be sidetracked by the more
immediate and explosive crises in
Ihe Middle Fast and the Russian
satellites of Eastern Europe.
This session was delayed from
its normal September opening so
as not lo get the U.N. mixed up
in Ihe U. S. elections. It develop
ed that this was an unnecessary
delay.
For when the Egyptian and Hun
garian fighting developed, the Gen
eral Assembly pitched right in
with a spociai session. Instead of
being influenced by the U. S. elec
tions, it was the other way around,
fnited Nations night sessions al
most drove the election off the front
pages and monopolized the a i r
waves.
IT WAS A healthful development
for the U.N. It showed again that
in an emergency as it did in
handling the Korean aggression
Ihe General Assembly could act
By NATHAN POLOWETZKY ,a speech reported Tuesday by
LONDON I Pravda's mtnr-t ! Moscow radio.
on Yugoslav rresidenl Tito is I This apparently signaled the re- 'T ' ,. .... . '
viewed here as new evidence that turn bv Molotov to the Soviet Var ,he rnd of th" aK'"mla' ,hc
the oldline Stalinists, prnhahlv ' ideological stage from which he I Gon,'ral Assembly has two nn-w-ilh
army support, are gaining in has been absent for many months : l'rUnl li'slions to consider on
the Kremlin struggle for power. ever since he got into" ideolooi. i l'hi,"'"R "l organization.
me i omniums! t'artv ral trouble ha.i i i.i.i., ly 'or enlarging ine ;e-
newsoaner in Moscow, aitm-lcerl ,.,,r,... ,,. entity Council from its present 11
Tilo for blaming "Stalinists" in year ' ! members to possibly 13 one new
come before the General Assem
bly include the matter of race re-'
lations in South Africa, South West
Africa and the administration of
British trust territories in Togo
land and Somaliland.
The Greeks have put the ques
tion of self-determination for the
people of Cyprus on the agenda.
Since Cyprus is the base from
which the British and French
launched their attack, this ques
tion may develop some hot de
bate. ISRAEL'S SEIZURE of the Gaza
strip focuses new interest on the
question of handling Arab refu
gees. A new Commissioner of Ref
ugees must be named to succeed
the late Dr. G. J. Van Heuven
Goedhart of the Netherlands.
Algerian Nationalists may again
try to have the General Assem
bly consider their case. Hereto
fore France has walked out on
such proposals, contending it was
an internal government affair, of
concern only to France.
India has proposed considera
tion of an international develop
ment plan for the joint use of
Antarctica.
Eisenhower Majority
13,762 In Multnomah
Pravda,
PORTLAND I President
Eisenhower received a majority ot
1.1.762 votes over Adlai Stevenson
Hungary and Poland. 11 ae- viet i-n-nn... .'. 1...1 1',..' ! Europe and enlarging the Ken- in Multnomah Countv. official re
cused him of hying lo split the the same sort of inslnii-l uini i!inol,,,c Social Council from IS 'turn from the Nov. 6 election
Communist world. sued in stnlin'a l.r..im 1,.. i.m-. 1 members lo more than 20. I showed Monday.
Ihe Kremlin for Russia's troubles Mobility's instructions to Ihe So-' ",u'ml"'r '"r A"" ,n(1 "ne ,'Hr
tins could mean Maliiusts are
shaping Ihe paper's editorial line
and thereby signaling their as
cendency
artistic
Andieai
light hand man on the
trout, party secretary
f.iiunuov.
The fnrm.-r V... ,..i r...-..:.... :.
An unconfirmed report reaching isler told Ihe artists to stick rich!
nipiomnts supported Irus to the Snuet Communist Pain-
The U. N. now has 76 members I James W. Gleason. countv elec-
instead of Ihe original 5(1 charter ! (ions registrar, said the county
vole was 129. 6M for Eisenhower
and 115.898 for Stevenson.
line in their work
He declared- ' We
British
theory. The report suggested lhat
Gcorgi Malenknv may step back
auviri pn-iiutr, leiuniiiig .m- men level of Bolshevist idea con
muni muKmiiu. nun iiu-i t. in. irni in the creative
jmoioiov, iormer ioreign minister,
may oust Nik it n Khrushrhrv as
boss of the Soviet Communist
Parly
There appears to ba a "split
personality" in Ihe Kremlin lead
ership. Recent actions show a
"velvet glove" line, possibly in
spired by the Khrushchev faction,
as well as "iron hand" tactics
which perhaps can he ascribed tn
the Stalinists, believed led by
Molotov.
LONDON UTi First Deputy
Tremier Vyncheslav M. Molotov
laid down Ihe Communist Party
line to Russian creative artists in
arlists
Translated
jargon this
propaganda."
advocale
1 idea c'
work of our
from
means:
Communist
"We want
WANT HIGHER PAY
employment nun :-o to 55 per cent
a vear 10 less man 111 per cent
The association, claiming that
slate salaries are below those
paid in private rmplo mrnt. is
making a study to he submitted
to the Legislature.
members. Tunisia. Morocco and
Sudan are scheduled for early ad
mission. Japan was denied mem
bership by Russian veto last year,
but will probably be admitted this
year.
Ibis would make U. N. mem
bership 80 nations. In addition, the
Communist bloc will try to force
admission of Outer Mongolia and
Communist China.
NEW SECURITY COUNCIL
memhers must he chosen lo sue-i
The official count showed Gov.-
eleot Robert D. Holmes received
129,272 votes in Multnomah Coun
ty, compared with 114,446 for Gov.
Elmo Smith.
Numerous Offers Come In
For Hungarian Refugees
WASHINGTON in - So manv
ceed Belgium. Iran and Peru. The offers lo sponsor Hungarian refu
sal i-u .,, : r.ui opean choice has been nar-1 gees are pouring into Ihe Slate
SAi.r.M i.fi The Oregon Slate 1 rowed down to Sweden. Italv or I Department all 5,00(1 persons to be
hmpioyes Assn. said Tuesday that i Spain. The Latin-American and As-1 admitted ur.der the emergency
liigller wages for slate employes 1 1,111 blocs have not decided on program mav already be assured
would reduce Ihe lurnnver in slate 'their nominees. 'of ions.
I'rmce Wan of Thailand is now State Department officials who
the leading candidate for election reported this "enormous response''
as president of the General As-1 said they are checking private wel
sembly. Hut he may he opposed fare agencies cooperating in the
by a nominee from the Comimi- project to determine definitely
nist countries. i whether Ihe program already has
Hardy perennial questions to gone over the lop.
111 J
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