ObMrver, La Grande, Ore., Toes., Dee. 16, 1958 Page 2 rRed Educator Says American : Math, Science Teaching Short WASHINGTON tUPI) Visiting Russian educators were expected to tell U.S. Education Commis sioner Lawrence G. Derick that American mathematics and science teaching is "inadequate." The Russians reached that con elusion during a one-month tour of U.S. schools and universities. Inadequate was the description applied by Dr. Aleksei Ivanovich Markushevieh, head of the nine- man delegation, during a news conference Friday. - He said that by Russian stand ards U.S. students would get fail ing marks in math and science Diplomats Doubt Mao To Be Ousted HONG KONG (UPI) Diplo mats here doughted that Map Tse-tung would be ousted as presi dent of Red China, but they conceded he may relinquish the government job to devote full time to running the all-powerful Communist Party. The diplomats said there was no evidence to support reports from high Chinese Nationalist In -telligence sources in Taipei that "" Red Chinese leaders had rebuffed Mao and named Marshal Chu Teh to replace him as government head. Any move by Mao would be voluntary, the sources believed. The Taipei reports said the Chi nese Communist Party Central Committee had rejected Mao as a candidate for re-election be cause of popular discontent over the new system of communes and the failure to capture the Nationalist-held offshore Qucmoy islands. - Elgin Briefs ' Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Grigham " and daughter left over the week n end for Williemina, where he has employment. Mrs. Jack Eckstein returned w home from the St. Joseph hospi n tal on Saturday. K- Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Williams are parents of a daughter born in La Grande, Dec. 8. Maternal 5. gandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Era v mctt Thompson, of Elgin. Pater ' nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. " Charles Williams, of Imbler. " Mr. and Mrs. Rcid Hibbcrd is t, ependln the week in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Snyder . returned Tuesday from Portland where their son Bobby had sur- gery in the Shrine hospital, Mon day. o 7u Donald Anson and Louie Hale v rttended the Masonic installation ceremonies in Hermiston Tues day evening. Anson's uncle, Law- " renco Gray, was installed as mas- ler of the lodge mere. " Several members of the Knights i of Phythias lodge, put the big Z Christmas tree in the usual place c. near the Citv hull, Sunday and ? decorated it with hundreds of V. liehts. Mr. and Mrs. Howard c. Goyen donated the tree which the men cut from its location near the Goyen home In Elgin. But the Russians praised the general interest shown by Amer icans in the school system as well as their desire to "provide a bet ter education for a larger num ber of children." Markushevich said U.S. high school students apparently were given "easier" problems and ex ercises than those on the same level in the Soviet Union. He said Russian high school students take four years of math. four years of chemistry and five! years of physics. American stu-' dents, he said, generally have one , or two years of math, one year of j chemistry and one year of phy-. sics. , The Soviet educator also said the pace of instruction is "rather slow. American classrooms sometimes reminded him of "a slow motion film," he said. The Russian said American high school libraries are lacking in great works of literature, par ticularly the French classics. On another subject, he said I.Q. and psychological tests are not a 'fair measure of achievement. Speaking through an interpreter Markushcvich said the Soviet ed ucators had picked up "much val uable information" about the American system. But he added in reply to a question that he saw no need to "effect , basic changes" in education in Russia as a result. He said Russia was planning to reform its educational system to bring school instruction more in line with practical work. ."We consider , the school of work contributes as much to edu cation," he ' said, "as theory learned In a classroom." WONT YO' PLEA$e st((hP 7 ' HELP MAKE XMAS 1 &HMLK4 TRO011T HAPPY FOR I Stock Market Forecast For 1959 Revealed Inquiry Into Commuter Rail Service Cuts Backed By Union WASHINGTON (UPI) A pro posed congressional inquiry into railroad moves to abandon com muter service received backing Friday from rail union leaders. The leaders, members ' of the Railway Labor Executives' Asso ciation, also accused the railroads of endangering the traveling pub lic by neglecting safety regulations. The association passed a resolu tion commending Sen. Clifford P. Case (R-N.J.) for suggesting the Senate investigation into rail abandonment requests made since the passage of a new transporta tion act last year. The law made it easier for railroads to discon tinue service on interstate passen- ' Mrs. Jack Eckstein re-entered the St. Joseph hospital Wednes day morning. o Recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louie Hale, was her sister, Mrs. Ethel Cummins of Portland, and Mr. and Mrs August Cummins, of Senacca. o Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Bailey ar rived Wednesday for a few days visit at the home, of their daugh tcr and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs Jack Parsons. They are from Hep ner. Mr. and Mrs. Verle Sagers and sons returned home Wednesday from Delaware where they spenl a month's vacation visiting rel et Ives. The OES will hold their Christ mas party Friday night followinf their regular meeting, as announc ed by Worthy Matron, Game' Ituckman. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Nedrov recently entertained with a birth day dinner in honor of theii daughter, Mrs. Peggy Rysdam. o Mr. and Mrs. Nels Rasmttsscn plan to leave Monday, Dec.. 15 for Arizona, where they will spend the remainder of the win tcr months with their son ant c'aughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs Rasmussen. Tuesday, St. Pats played the HiSfces on the local floor. The Pep club worked Up a special number for half time. The Elgin Home Extension Unit will hold their Christmas party and - gift exchange at its next meeting which will be held in the home of Mrs. J. E. Witherspoon. Mrs. Jack Eckstein underwent major surgery in the St. Joseph hospital in ta Grande, Friday morning. ger runs which arc operating at a loss. Daniel P. Loomis, president of the Association of American Rail roads, promptly declared the un ions were trying to hold .on to jobs for "uneconomic and unneed ed services." ' He said the new law nvst be preserved because it provides realistic means of removing the undue burden on interstate com merce resulting from re:. ments to maintain uneconomic services Loomis did not comment direct ly on the union safety charges, but he declared that "name, call ing and finger-pointing by rail la bor officials do nothing to contrib ute to solution of grave problems confronting the railroad indus try." A. E. Lyon, secretary treasurer of the 22-union group which con cluded a five-day meeting here, said no federal agency now has power to require a railroad to re pair faulty tracks or bridges. Jesse Clark, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Signal men, said railroads are endanger ing the lives of their passengers by "gross neglect" of their sig naling .systems. By ELMER C. WALZER UPI Financial Editor NEW YORK I UPI) The stock market faces a boom-brake or a boom-break in the next 12 months according to the 1959 forecast of the Fitch Survey. The survey notes that much depends on the rate of expected resurgence in 1959. and whether the stock market in its present advancing phase may not have discounted already much of the business improvement next year. Fitch lists several favorable items for the new year a gross national product expected about $475 billion, against $441 billion in 1958; a rise of $lff billion to $307 in consumer spending; a pos sible rise of government spending at all levels of $7.o billion to $100 billion: a rise to $50 to $52 billion from $49.5 billion in construction and a possibe jump of 25 per cent in corporate profits. On. the adverse side or critical area the survey lists the prob lem of unemployment o v e r- capacity. in many lines; reduction of corporate spending for new plants down 15 per cent from 1957; uncertainty of the new car market; and prospect of a steel strike. Should corporation earnings, unhampered by strikes, manage to push up 25 per c?nt. Fitch holds, the stock market could leap ahead with corporate earn ings catching up with stock prices and reducing price - earnings ratios. "The positive forces currently exerting a strong influence on security prices far outweigh the probabilities exerted by negative factors in the year ahead," says Fitch. The market's advance will be CHILD'S PARADISE Ready to guard the halls of the Grand Palais, Paris, France, for the annual children's show is this small army of wooden soldiers. Military shine is assured by a workman with a paint brush. AF.Mcn Arrested For Kicking Son MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) Authorities arrested Air Force Staff Sgt. Neal Whorf, 40, Sunday on charges he kicked and beat his son, Neal Jr., 14, to harden the boy into Air Force officer mater ial. ' - ' Whorf was picked up at General Mitchell Field where he had gone to turn himself in for being absent without leave for 11 days. The sergeant was named Dec. 3 in two battery warrants with beating and kicking young Neal. Mrs. Whorf filed the complaints and the boy exhibited bruises and a cut toe where a ricocheting but cher knife struck him. - Whorf came to police attention in August when his wife com plained he made the boy eat ham burger off a floor as punishment for lagging in his school work. At the time,, Whorf told authorities: "I want to make sure he is to be an officer in the Air Force." htm umm ..A Tl I 14,. '1 more restrained next year, how ever, with increasing emphasis reflected in higher levels for long depressed cyclical stocks. "Setbacks in the market which will take place from time to time in 1939 should be employed in bul warking portfolios, with good qual ity equities, as we have not yet seen the top of the bull market." Fitch notes that it will be a iough job to find good values in the coming year. Market experts generally are in agreement with this statement and most of them suggest extra care in selecting purchases. They are not entirely in agree ment on some other statements by this highly respected market firm. For example, Wall Street holds that strikes are of little conse quence marketwise. There is an old Wall Street adage that says. Never sell on strike news. Traders recall the market in the previous steel strike. Prices moved ahead under the leader ship of the steel shares while the steel workers were out on strike. The idea is as Wall Street sees it, strikes are a sign of prosperity and not of depression. Labor or dinarily doesn't strike when times are bad. , Also the problems of unemploy ment and of overcapacity are seen as transitory. A business re covery of broad scope could elim inate "both, it is held. But it is a fact that electronic brains haven't yet been invented that will take the place of good common sense in picking the right stocks to buy, to hold, and to sell. Neuberger Says Plans Undecided PORTLAND (UPI) Sen. Rich ard Neuberger (D-Ore.) told the Multnomah Democratic Central Committee Saturday night that he was undecided on his plans for 1960 and did not know if he would run for a second term. "If I do run again, it will be on my record as a responsible legis lator . . . and not through personal bitterness or partisan hysteria," the senator said. He said that bickering and back-biting in politics are "de grading to the government." I have no quarrel or vendetta with anybody in Oregon politics," he asserted. Sen. Neuberger commended Gov-elect Mark Hatfield for run ning a smart campaign and warn ed Democrats "not to snipe at Mark Hatfield when hi is gover nor over purely personal matters, nor should we criticize him just to be criticizing." The senator said Oregon has "two strong political parties and this is to the benefit of the people because they can shop around for choices of candidates." j Your Gift Is Enduring When You Give Leather Goods For Christmas! WOMEN'S PURSES, HAND BAGS, WALLETS MEN'S WALLETS AND BILLFOLDS BELTS FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN . . . Western and Dress 1 .1 Anderson Shoe & Leather Goods 1407 ADAMS SHORT NOTICE This street sign seems to be sinking into the ground in the Richmond, Va., suburb of Lakeside. The midget markers are designed to eliminate neck-craning by motorists. School Drops Ban On Married Students GOLD BEACH (UPI) A con troversial ruling banning married students from attending Gold Beach Union high school after this semester has been dropped, according to the local school board. The school board said it thought its original stand was correct but it didn't want to spend the money of taxpayers to obtain a court de cision in the case. For A Musical Christmas Give rca Victor Phonographs & Records! RCA 45 AUTOMATIC Phonograph $2295 Reg. 34.95 Now , RCA 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC Phonograph SSE95 Reg. 73.95 Now. RCA VICTOR Record Albums 45's and LP's POPULAR CLASSICAL BROADWAY SHOWS Choose from the world's greatest artists! RCA VICTOR Stereo Records Largest selection in area! Giftwares THE teams? y wan 107 Depot WO 3-3313 CREATES NEW OFFICE WASHINGTON (UPII The Small Business Administration an nounced Sunday night it has set up a new ofice to boost small business activity in government research and development. Christmas Brings Snow Jobs' By Clerks By DOC QUIGG United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) Christ mas is coming and we shall have snow-jobs from all the sales de partments from hero on out. Some of the gadgets that sprout from fertile sales minds at this season arc as the Broadway set would say real gassers. Take, for instance, the Incite cocktail stirrer with an electric bulb on the stirring end for stirring cocktails in bluckouts. Despite the fact that practically nobody ever has occasion to stir ocktails in the dark, this thing sold right out shortly after it vent on sale in a New York store. The real stroke of genius in the liquor line, however, is not on the narkut yet because of tax and li censing difficulties. This is the wtable martini, in the handy vest-pocket or handbag size. clothed in a transparent, sealed plastic envelope. The brainwave for thus pack aging cocktails for portage lie '.ween oases came from the Min- TOURIST TRADE UP LONDON ( UPI ) Moscow Radio has said that about 5.000 Amer ican tourists have visited the So viet Union so far this year dou ble the 1957 number. nesota Mining and Manufacturing Co., which makes the polyester film that encloses the drink with out imparting any flavor to it. Liquor companies are said to Man's Laughter Provokes Shooting LOS ANGELES (UPI I Susie Finnegan, 33, told police she shot her boy friend three times because he laughed in her face when she proposed marriage to him. The boy friend, Mads Anderson, a civil engineer, was still laugh ing although hospitalized with two bullet wounds in the left arm and one in the chest. "I love the gal," he said. "We were having a wonderful conversation. She's a great talker and I was listening when she broke off our little tete-c-tete on what you'd call a pleasant note." Anderson, in fair condition, said Ihey were at his apartment Satur day night when Miss Finnegan stormed out of the living room after her marriage proposal and returned a couple of minutes later blazing away with a .25-calibi'r automatic. She was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. ' In 1 cJasby"sffnc TEACHER'S HIGHLAND CREAM Sootch WhUhJf A rrr; BO PROOF DUndd Scotch WhUky f -"J Echlt(lln A Co.. New York X '5F' ' be investigating the possibility of marketing the pocket cocktails (they're only being distributed to friends as gifts by the Minnesota company now). One difficulty in marketing is law requirement that a tax stamp must be de stroyed on opennig. At present, Ihe bag can be scissored or bitten open anywhere on its surface. A holiday pitch thought up by one purveyor, of spirits, Schenley by name, is a fancy Christmas time vodka decanter aimed di rectly at dcadbcats who stop by !o cadge drinks. The base of the bottle is a metal bank wi.h slots labeled "coins," "tips," and "I.O.U.'s." Attached is an auto matic pencil and a pad of I.O.I', blanks. Vicuna, a soft touch fabric of growing reputation, apparently has Zoomed to record popularity in Christmas buying. One store reports vicuna sales to be three times as high as they were in i the 1937 Christmas season. Vicuna smoking jackets run as high as $500; lounging robes, $750. One attractive item that has just been announced, though not necessarily as a Christmas gift idea, is a telephone with a built in sanitizing system. According to the Danco Telephone Co., of New York, which developed the phone, an automatic radiation unit emits ultra-violet rays that kill bacteria and viruses within second after the mouthpiece is returned to its rest. It keeps the conversation clean. Now Is The Time To WINTERIZE YOUR CAR! We Give Complete Service By Trained Personnel WESTENSKOW'S UNION SERVICE First and Adams VI 0J makes SALADS something special Only X TANG-TVi Perfect ' inatsmoom, r''Ssr leasing laste. . -r- rivJTi mmmm ONLY BY' HIGH -ROLLS EASILY, CAN'T TIP! , . .. ' - VvV ' ' Eureka' Exclusive "Vlbra-Beaters". . Shake Hi Rug, Loosen Embedded Dirt For the first time in any vacuum cleaner powerful, air-driven "Vibra-Beaters" dislodge embedded dirt! Full horsepower suction and sweeping brushes do the cleaning! Cleans 3 times faster than other cleaners. I SUM, SLEEK AND LIGHT j Eoty to carry big Kandl. no demgfag j cord. Stand an end oaty to tfora. . t "TIM I I frm niiPi i Introductory Offerr WMYS HOME AMI "" """Ey-BACK GUARANTEE pius BIS TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE Air. in , i , I -"'" mobil. NEW DELUXE 10-PIECE SET OF TOOLS IN CONVENIENT "HANDY-PAX" KIT LI -J CLEANS STAIRS EASILY Slow mly on end on narrow stru,aafti up or down without tipping. SPBCIALWISWEBK! Powerful ftoto-Motic ModVt 160 a' MOW ONLY f , 4ft88 fj WITH roou "Ml OUOHU WAS 7.! Includai new unbreakabla hoie, 2 rug noixltt and long Hoot bruih. CE LlVf DEMONSTRATION ' AT OUR STORi NOW OR PHONE n" wom' : FOR 10 DAYS HOME TRIAL 108 Depot DOLVEN'S Sales & Service . 3-3327