The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 20, 1937, Page 1, Image 1

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    MA
Weather
Occasional rata .today,
lightly warmer;" Sunday
showers; Max. Temp. Friday
49, MJn. 42, rain 1.24 Inch
es, river 5.7 feet, northerly
winds. ' i '
POUNDCD 651
No. 204
EIGHTY-SEVENTH YEAK
Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, November 20, 1937
Price 3c; Newsstands 5c
Bla
atenni Box
actory
r
.Destroys
West
Tie-up May Follow Qder by
Labor to Defy
Ruling; Picket
Issue Is Faced
Two Carriers Ordered to
: Complete Delivery to
i Restaurant Here
Absence of Strike Held
Deciding Factor;. May
... ; Affect all Oregon
A lonely, rain-soaked picket
trudging back and forth in front
of a State street restaurant in Sa
lem yesterday became the central
figure in a labor crisis which held
the notentlalitiy of a widespread
truck transportation tie-up in Ore
gon.
Hints as to what might transpire
came close upon the heels of a
ruling by N. G. Wallace, state
utility commissioner, that truck
operators, operating under stale
permit calling for door-to-door de
livery, are required to complete
such delivery regardless of wheth
er there is a picket line, provided
no strike exists.
In Portland, Ralph J. Staehlt ot
the Allied Truck Owners declared
there would be no licensed operators-
"if permits are with
drawn."
"If we have a picket line, we
aren't going through there regard
less ot what they? say," an Am
erican Federation of Labor
spokesman was quoted. -
Companies Ordered
To Make delivery I
Wallace in ruling upon the
complaints of F. H. Chatas and
It. J. Nicol against two carriers,
the Willamette Valley Transfer
company-and Silver Wheel Motor
Freight, Inc. ordered the defend
ant companies to "forthwith com
plete all deliveries of freight con
signed to the complainants . . . to
the place of business ot the plaint
tiffs at 440 State street, within
the city limits of Salem, Oregon."
Plaintiffs, charged that : the
truck concerns ; had refused sto
make deliveries of merchandise
consigned to them from outside
of Salem because j of fear of re
prisals from the culinary alliance,
AFL affiliate which has picketed
the restaurant Intermittently for
several months although no strike
exists. . i-. .
Wallace held that refusal of a
common carrier to carry out its
contract "cannot ,.be excused for
the reason that a strike would ex
tend to its operations."
"It was f oundT the orders read,
"that no strike or riot existed at
complainant's place of business
and that no threats of violence nor
Immediate intimidation had been
offered by the picket to or about
" the - drivers and helps" of the de
fendants." . ;
Reasonable Effort"
Not Exercised, Held
Wallace held that the 'defen
dants ' had not used reasonable
effort or that diligence required
to forward the consignments of
. freight to its ultimate destination.
"The plaintiffs were and are re
Quired to remove and transport
commodities consigned to them
from. Portland, from - defendant's
Salem terminal, to their place of
business," the order continued.
"The practices and services of
; "(Turn to Page 2, Col. 2.)
0d d i t i cs
. , . in the Neu$
BALTIMORE,; Not. 19-ity-
Policeman Charles Rinehart,
Just transfered ' to the traffic
division, spent a busy morning
tagging cars parked in the mid
dle of a business street. Then
the traffic division spent a busy .
afternoon retracting the ticket.
It's legal to park there.
WASHINGTON, Not. li.HPh
Supreme Court Justice !McReyn
olds craved some enlightenment
aboui hosiery today and Sot
It from Justice Roberts.
During hearings on a patenjt In
fringement suit involving stock
ings, McReynolds, a bachelor,
"What does- full-fashioned
. mean! '
When a lawyer began a tech
nical description of the machinery
involved, Roberts interrupted to
Bay:
"It means that a stocking Is
made to tit the contours of -the
YOUXGSTOWN, O., Xot 19-,
LPHThree fire trucks and a
chieTs car snaked along icy
streets today, sirens screaming,
to answer a call from a box. As
they palled op. they found KicJc
Yavarick, with the door of the
alarm box open, trjing to mail
His unemployment censms ques
tionnaire. .
CONGRESS OPENS. FJJS LITTLE TO DO
bv n - :r izs t izi t -
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Packed galleries greeted the opening of the special session of congress this week, but after listening to
the president's initial message the members found little of Importance facing them, with the farm re
Uef bill not yet drafted and the wages and hours bill tied up In the house committee. Above, view of
the speaker's rostrum in the house as Speaker Bankhead called that body to order.
! ; . . ; i O' '
Traffic Impeded
By Oregon Storm
North Santiam Highway's
Use not Advised by
Motor Officials
(By Associated Press)
Planes were grounded and
highway travel threatened as
snow and rain swept Oregon Fri
day night. ; , , i .
Business was paralyzed in The
Dalles for nearly seven hours
when a slide east of Hood River
broke a power line and deprived
the city of electricity.
Heavy ram on the Cascade
summit washed McKenzie Pass
clear of snow.
Good skiing was reported from
Crater Lake, with 38 inches of
snow on the rim.
Travel was slow on the slippery
The Dalles-California highway.
The North ; Santiam , highway
wa rough and muddy, the Ore
gon Motor association advising
against its use.
A 48-mile wind and heavy rain
swept the upper and central
Rogue river valley.
Half an inch of rain fell in 12
hours at Baker.
Rain continued at Portland,
adding an Inch and a half to the
heavy November total. .
Highway accidents claimed -five
lives in Washington as the icy
hand of winter spread over the
state yesterday, and three others
were critically Injured, one at
death's door.
Two of the accidents, one at
Grand Coulee and one near Che
ney were directly attributable to
slippery ; highways - under the
newly fallen snowy In the third,
which claimed two lives six miles
south of Olympia, heavy coastal
rains were but a possible contri
buting cause as two cars crashed.
Power Plant Operation Will
HalU Council Decide Policy
The Salem -water commission
last night ordered operation ( ot
the department's hydroelectric
plant discontinued and referred
to the city council the problem
of its future use or sale. The or
der carried - with it abolishment
of the two remaining ditch pa
trolmen jobs and substitution of
a weekly patrol of the millrace
to preserve the city's water right.
The water department would
lose approximately $210 a month
if if kept the power plant la op
eration only to supply electricity
for the offices and shops build
ings. Manager Cuyler VanPtten
estimated. .Most of the expense
of operation has been in patroll
ing the mill race to keep the
stream high enough to run the
generator and yet at a level at
which it would not overflow and
damage private property.
The decision to reduce the
ditch patrol to a weekly -one was
made as a. result of a report that
the Oregon Pulp & Paper com
pany, part owner of the race,
had recently halted its part of
the patrol for a 10-day period.
'4 fa'
u I let in
MONMOUTH, Not. 20. (Spe
cial) An unidentified prowler
canght in the Halladay garage !
between midnight and 1 a. m. i
this morning was shot and kill
ed by Marshal , Verd Schmnk
and Glen Hallady after he had
staged a getaway attempt from
the city hall.
Taken to the city hall for in
vestigation, the intruder pulled
out a gun and held np Mr. and
Mrs. Schrunk as the latter , was
telephoning state police for as
sistance in checking up on the
man.
l Glen Hallady, son of the ga-'
rage owner, heard the commo
tion below from the fire sta
tion sleeping quarters ever-:
head, armed himself and hur
ried downstairs. ' The burglar
attempted to hold up Hallady
also but the latter jumped
around a corner of the build
ing and opened fire. Schrunk
began firing at the same time
and the prowled felt dead in
the street, with five bullet
wounds.
, A card bearing the name of
Paul Robert Kirsch, 35, saw
mill superintendent, Stayton,
was found in the dead man's
clothing but investigating offi
cials expressed certainty the
man was not Kirsch. '
The prowler's automobile
j .u-ked nearby and loaded with
clothing and articles taken
from the garage was found to
have , been stolen from Frank
R. BIckford of Salem. ',
Water Plant Job Awarded
.TOLEDO. Nov. i.-iip-Con-tract
tor a municipal- water plant
was awarded I yesterday to F. C.
Dillard, Medford, for $94,329.
Water will be taken from the Si
letz river. "
The water department's weekly
patrol will be largely a formal
ity. . : Commissioner Hickman urged
that the question ot future status
of the power plant be presented
to the council for Its determina
tion, as provided by the - charter.
T council may sell the equip
ment, lease it to the ? Portland
General Electric company or de
vise some plan by which the city
may utilize the power generated.
To protect . the water depart
ment in event the ditch over
flows, the commission voted ' to
Insure Itself against property
damage that might result.
The problem or. establishing
water rates for individual and
community consumers along the
gravity supply pipeline was left
for a special committee consisting
of Commissioners E. B. Gabriel,
E. B. Grabenhorst and O. A. Ol
son to work out next week and
present at the next ' session of
the commission. The commission
has a petition from 125 Turner
citizens asking that water be sup
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 4.)
Farm LerfslatioiT
To Be Ready Soon
Introduction Due Monday ;
War Situation Given
Some Attention
WASHINGTON, Nov. 19-(jp)-Farm
legislation, with economy
trimmings, was virtually ready to
night to provide the idle and rest
less congress with the special ses
sion's first real task.
While the senate listened to
the soprano cadences of its first
feminine filibuster, the agricul
ture committees of both ! houses
reported progress and promised
to have crop control bills ready
for consideration Monday, -
The prevalent economy Impulse
bobbed up in both committees du
ring the day, to write a $500,000,
000 limitation upon the cost of the
program and veto proposals the
old processing taxes be revived to
finance it in part.
In addition, the foreign situa
tion provided material for ora
tory. Senator; Nye (R, N. D.) an
nounced a meeting of interested
senators for next week to con
sider drafting legislation to com-,
pel President Roosevelt to apply
the neutrality act to , the Sino
Japanese hostilities.
In the house, a move to consider
a similar resolution was blocked,
and Representative Lewis j(D-Md)
introduced a measure, saying the
United States has been "uninten
tionally yet effectively" j helping
Japan. It called for an embargo
on all commodities, food excepted,
which Japan might use i against
China. : "; -i-" ;-1
In the senate .Vandenberg of
Michigan demanded an investiga
tion of reports Ambassador Bullitt
was sent to Poland to warn that
country against joining in the
German. Italian, Japanese anti
communism alliance. (The state
department said Bullitt's visit was
merely personal.) ; j '
The feminine filibuster was
Mrs. Diile Bibb Graves, appoint
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 4.)
yj 4-.
Robinwitz Return
To Oregon Denied
HELENA, Mont., Nor. 19-iP-
GoTernor Roy E. Ayers today re
fused to allow extradition of Louis
Robinwits to Salem, Ore., on fraud
charges. The governor declared
the person whose removal was
sought did not resemble photo
graphs ot Robinwitz, who was re
cently acquitted of fraud charges
at Great Falls. ,
Deputy Sheriff B. G. Honeycutt
took extradition papers for Robin
wits to Helena early this week.
A message from him Friday said
Honeycutt was leaving at once on
the return trip, by automobile.
Robinwits had - been held at
Great Falls, Mont., at the request
of District Attorney Lyle J. Page.
He is under indictment here on a
charge- of larceny of $1300 from
Rev. J. R. Scherbring of Sublimity.
Wallace
Key to China's
Defense Lines
Broken, Claim
Defenders Retire After
r.City Is Demolished
by Aerial Bombs
Withdrawal to Forestall
Nanking Destruction
Being Considered
NANKING, Nov. 20.-(Satur-day)-(;P)-The
Chinese govern
ment formally announced re
moval of the nation's capital
a today to ' Chungking in Szech-
wan province.
Government officials, how
ever, reiterated iheir determin
ation to resist the Japanese to
the last man.
(Chungking, on the meander
ing Yangtze river west of Nan
king, is about 750 air miles far
ther inland.)
SHANGHAI, Nov. 20.-(Satur
day) (JP) Japanese announced
capture today of oochow, center
of the main Chinese defenses he
tween Shanghai and Nanking.
Chinese officials ' at Nanking,
the capital, did not deny the Jap
anese report either of the fall of
Soochow or of Hashing, 35 miles
to the southeast.
They said, however, their for
ces were battling, desperately to
defend the northern flank of the
"HIndenburg" defense line at
Changshu, 25 miles north of Soo
chow.
Chinese asserted their forces
withdraw from Soochow only aft
ter the' city virtually had been de
molished ' by Japanese bombing
planes. Hashing fell, they said,
after severe street fightings
SHANGHAI, Nov. 19.-(5VChI-
na s leaders at Nanking debated
tonight whether to defend the cap
ital at all costs or, by voluntary
withdrawal as the Japanese ap
proached, save it from destruc
tion. .
Japanese asserted their legions
drew closer to Nanking as ham
mer blows In the center, right and
left of China's "HIndenburg line
weakened the defense system
some 50 miles west of Shanghai
but still from 125 to 150 miles
from Nanking.
A Japanese army was report
ed within three miles of Soochow
and preparing for aft assault on
that - central strongpoint. Kask
ing, 35 miles to the southeast,
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 1.)
Minto Hotel Open
Serving Floaters
Giving to Panhandlers Is
: Discouraged by Chief;
. Patronage Is Good
j Hotel de Mintoi, Salem's famous
Resort for transients, is Open
again. Chief of Police Frank Min
to having obtained the services of
a cook, the important detail that
prevented opening several days
earlier. . " --
The need for the "hotel's" ser
vices was immediately apparent?
18 "patrons" registering the first
night of its operation. .
Taking cognizance of the ,fact
that there has been some panhan
dling on Salem's streets in recent
weeks, Chief Minto declared there
was no longer any excuse for it
and that any persons giving mon
ey to "moochers" would be defeat
ing the purpose for which the "ho
tel" is operatedkeeping the
transient situation under control
"It local ' people feel disposed
to help these people, they should
donate to the 'hotel Instead of to
individuas., the chief said. ' .
Community, Chest funds will
defray some -of "the costs of the
"hotel" this winter but will not
take care of the entire load, and
donations ot food or money will
be appreciated. , '
, SAN DIEGO, Calif.. Nov.rlS-
(AVLeon Zorrita 147, of Los An
geles, won an easy 10-ronnd de
cision over. Jack Rainwater!
14tt, of Seattle, in a bout here
tonight.
: During most ot the fight Rain
water managed; to keep his oppo
nent away with a long left, but
whenever Zorrita got inside, be
handed out an artful lacing,
There was only one knockdown
and that was accidental, coming
in the sixth round, when Rain
water took a light right . and
slipped at the same time. He was
on his knees for no count.
Late Sports '
Title Game Is
Still Possible
On Turkey Day
V :
Oregon City Moves Into
Limelight ; Vikings
Beat Foxes 13-6
Aquatic Contest Lacking
Many Thrills; Fumbles
Hamper Home Team
By RON GE-MMELL
Prospects of a Salem-Oregon
City high football game Thanks
giving day which might be billed
as for the mythical championship
of Oregon but would ' definitely
settle the western Oregon suprem
acy, loomed Friday after the Sa
lem Vikings squeezed safely past
the Silverton obstacle and Oregon
City demonstrated It was "big
league" as well as undefeated by
vanquishing Eugene 13 to 0.
In a, game in which even the
powder- of the blanks in the tim
er's gun got so wet that the last
straggler had cleared Sweetland
'lake" .before the gat finally re
sounded, the Vikings took a des
nltory win from the Silver Foxes
by a 13 to 6 count.
Coach Hauk's men must have
been saving up for a rainy day all
season, for they fumbled no less
than six times and recovered not
once.
It was only by dint of two long.
squishy runs by Salem's backfield
stars, Chapman and Nelson, that
the Vikings were able to splash
their way through the steady driz
zle into six-point port twice.
Chapman Runs 40
Yard, First Score
The first tally came on the
eighth play after, the opening
kickof f that Silverton received
Chapman used an effective, piston-like
crawd stroke to boom
through the Silver Fox line from
the Foxes' 40, and then 'swung in
to the rhythm of a smooth racing
stroke to cut down the south side
lines to land in Silverton harbor,
D. Christenson almost, cut him
down on the 20, but Crasher Carl
oozed on by. ,
While the Foxes proved poor
swimmers when it came to chalk
ing up first downs getting nary
a one they proved to be expert
retrievers, a la water spaniels In
stead: oi Foxes, ot the seven turn
bles of the ball, Silverton recov
ered exactly seven, six of Salem's"
and their own one and only.
Longer Scoring Run
Is Made by Nelson
Viking Nelson, in emulation of
co-partner Crasher Carl, took hold
of the. slippery pigskin on his
own 49 early In the second frame,
whipped through left tackle, re
versed his field and "waded" down
the north boundary line 51 yards
for Salem's second six-points.
Quarterback Myers didn't get the
opportunity of booting' the ball
from placement, as he did so ac
curately after touchdown number
one, because Chapman couldn
get it "placed,"
The Foxes, cunning gridders
that they turned out to be, kept
booting the pellet and recovering
fumbles until they finally got the
opportunity for which they were
louaing. j , .
Successive Fumbles
Help Foxes Score
' D. Christenson opened the final
period by hoisting a high kick
from his own 36 (as near as any
one could tell), which plummeted'
down on a Viking chest slightly
beyond mid-field and caromed off
to be recovered by a Fox as
usual. . v
Hesitating not. one whit, Busch
sent boot number 10 soaring- to-
- (Turn to Page 2, CoL 3.) -
Rubber Plants
Repp
en9 Executive Announces
AKRON, 0., Not. 1S.-JP)-C. C.
Slusser, vice-president of v Good
year Tire & Rubber Co., said to
night that the three plants closed
by a sit-down strike would re-open
Monday "for those who i want to
work in spite of hell or high wa
ter." . A sit-down, in protest against
scheduled layoffs, made 12,000
idle today. The Goodyear plants
shut down.
Pickets to Try
To Block Work
Reports of the planned reopen
ing brought from several shop
committeemen, who refused to
give their names, the comment
that a picket line would be thrown
around the plant in the next 2 4
hours, and that preparations were
under way to prevent resumption
of work.
: Sixty city police were on duty
at the plant tonight. They refused
to allow workers to take food into
the plants.
When Slusser ' announced the
back-to-work plans, he relented
in an earlier decision to bar from
the. plants any workers attempt
ing to relieve strikers. He said
the ban on admittance would ap
Congregational
Pastor Arrives
' , '.i f
v
4 -V
fV
t.
t I,
Rev. iiobert A. Hutchinson, new
pastor of the First Congrega
tional church, who will preach
his first sermon here Sunday
morning. " ' k '.
New Pastor Will
Preach on Sunday
Rev. R. Hutchinson i Here
to Take Over Duties at
First Congregational
Rev. Robert A. Hutchinson has
arrived in Salem from The Dalles
and Sunday morning at 11 o'
clock will preach his first sermon
as pastor of the First Congrega
tional church here, a post to
which he was unanimously called
and accepted early last month.
Theme for his first service here
will bo "Personalizing Religion."
Rev. Hutchinson has been pas
tor of The Dalles' Congregational
church the past eight years, and
he leaves as monument of this
work there a beautiful , church
built under his leadership,
The new Salem- pastor, and
Oregon resident for the past 23
years, was unusually active in
civic affairs in Dallas and is a
member of the Kiwanis club.
He and his son Harold, a soph
omore at Willamette university,
took up residence yesterday in
the parsonage on Center street,
and Mrs. Hutchinson and their
four other children will come to
Salem to reside in mid- Jan n ary,
or just after the mid-year school
term Is completed at The Dalles.
v,ReT. Hutchinson takes the post
here left vacant last July 1 on
resignation of Rev. J. R. Sl
monds, who left the pulpit be
cause of ill health. I
Of the new Salem pastor. The
Dalles Optimist, on his removal
to Salem, says editorially in part:
' "He has provided much of the
spice of life for people of The
Dalles and vicinity, daring his
pastorate here, with his spontan
eous flow of Irish wit to flavor
the constructive philosophy of
life - which has been an Inspira
tion to all of us."
Engineer's Survey
Planned on Sandy
PORTLAND, Nov. 19-ip)-Plans
to Improve the sand-blocked Sandy
river by! diverting water -into the
Little Sandy were considered to
day when the state game commis
sion approved employment of a
hydraulic engineer , to determine
costs,. . , ... . : i . , ,
Allocation of 212,500 for a
dam, ' sought" by Commissioner
Lew Wallace, was delayed. ,
at Akron Will
ply to only those workers who
attempted to enter at tlmea oth
er than the hours of a h i f t
changes. Earlier, Slusser had laid
"No more men will be allowed to
enter, this plant not even at gun
point." , t
James P. Miller, regional di
rector "for the national labor re
lations board at Cleveland, trav
eled here from Toledo tonight to
investigate conditions.
Outburst Spontaneous
Says Union Head
John House, president of Good
year local of TJRWA, said the sit
down was a "spontaneous out
burst" resulting from -announced
plans of the company to lay off
1,600 employes. He added that
the demonstration which started
last midnight was without URWA
authorization, but that the union
local would meet Sunday to con
sider the strike...
House claimed seriorlty rights
were a fundamental issue in the
sit-down. Slusser said the com
pany considered seniority - on a
departmental father1 than com.
panr-wide basie- in announced
layoffs.
Plant Is Total
Loss;
YardGoneToo
Conflagration Has Good
Headway Before It
Is Discovered
Salem Firemen Helping;
Beutler - Quistad's '
Plant in PerQ
Catastrophe struck West
Salem's principal industries
early this morning? witn the
total destruction of the Salem
Box and Manufacturing com
pany's plant in a fire which
broke out shortly after mid
night, i
By 2 o'clock this morning it
was evident that nothing in
that plant could be saved.
The Copeland lumber ; yard
nearby was also an inferno at.
that time and hopes of saving
it had been abandoned.
West Salem firemen with
their own equipment, assisted
by one pumper and crew from
the Salem fire: department,
were battling desperately to
save the Beutler - Quistad
woo dworking establishment
nearby, j
A boxcar on the nearby sid
ing was also ablaze.
The box! factory was valued
at around! $65,000. The com- .
pany carried $20,000 Insur
ance, i- '
John Frieseri, proprietor,,
said he had no idea how the
fire started. i -rr" J
Volunteer firefighters manned
two hose lines to save the Beut-ler-Quistad
lumber yards, located
west across ; Wallace road from :
the box factory. They took refuge
behind plywood wall boards from
the intense heat, j - 1
Total loss from the fire ap
peared likely to i reach at least
2100,000 as the flames leaped an
alleyway northwird and roared
through the Copelnd yards, where
aproximateiy l.uou.vou leet I
lumber in i addition i to a large
stock of other building materials
Was .stored j , f
A second crew of Salem fire
men rolled: up to the tire at 2:15
a.m. to run a hose line cast the
Copeland yards In an effort to
the small Swift & Co. livestock
station. No ' homes were en
dangered. . i t
i The fire aparently broke out In
the crane shed at the rear of the
box factory shortly after 1 a.m.,
according to Amon Grlce, Orchard
Heights, one ot the first men at
the- fire. ;Percy Castle, Wallace
road resident, was credited with
sounding the alarm. j
r Ernest and Wlllard Friesen,
sons ot the factory proprietor,
saw no flames j as they drove
homeward across the Marion-Polk
county bridge but as they entered
their " home ?n West Salem the
telephone rang giving the alarm.
Rushing; back to the fire tbe
two i boys broke Into the ! factory
office in an effort to save money
and records. But! the fire,1 licking
at the walls - surrounding them,
drove them out,-! One of tbej two
suffered severe i burns on tbe
hands.
The mill proprietor said he bad'
no -idea how much money may
have been destroyed when ! the
fire reached his office. Among the
records were those of aproximate
iy 130,000 worth of accounts re
ceivable, j ' . V: . ' ' 4?
More than 700,000 feet of lum
ber were stored i in the box fac
tory sheds. v j.
Probability that origin of the
fire might never be known was
heightened by the fact that the
mill watchman was required to
remain on duty j only until mid
night. . . : c
i The flames were well under
way before the fire alarm was
sounded and the I box factory was
In ruins less than an hour later.
. High tension.: lines running
past the mill were soon burned
down, leaving rural residents as
f a e at a T .lnAlvi mttaa mas K
without electric service. Tbe 11,
000 volt feeder connecting West
Salem and Salem, however, was
wit munuuiuf, -
Albany Pastor Resigns ,
. it tj a w t ! -f a .fna rrv. x
J. B. 'Patterson resigned today as
pastor of the United Presbyterian
church accepted ' a call to San
Diego. He was here seven years.
A L LADE
of TODAy
r ft. fi
. . Excuse ft folks this morniag
If we tail to rhyme our views;
'twixt shootings, wars and fire
we're too busy with the news.
Copeland