The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 12, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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i . "Wo Favor Sways Vt, No Fear Shall Awt"
From First SUteunan, March 23, 1851
THE STATESMAN PUBUSrtING COMPANY
CHARLES A. SP HAGUE, Editor and Publisher jj ; ,
v .Member of the Associated Press ? 4
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
news dispatches credited to it or nut otherwise credited in this newspaper.
Quality All-Important
The need for renewed emphasis on the physi- .
cal well-being of American manhood is becom
ing increasingly evident as additional informa
tion obtained through the national selective
service act comes to light.
In quantity, figures show we've nothing to
worry iuquu rive years ago uicic wac
400.000 men in the 20-44 military age group,
and within 23 years this total is expected to
be at least 29,000,000.
Bat as to quality: "It was hard for us to.
realize the exact state of I the youth of ' the
natinn aa rovaaA k statist ire frrvm. the draft."
The quotations are those of Maj. Gen. George
Lull, deputy surgeon general of the army, as
contained in a memorandum of the population
reference bureau. The general adds that after,
selective service was well underway "we grad
ually lowered our standards: we had to if we
were to get an army. ,.
Col. Leonard G. Rowntree, chief of the selec
tive service medical division, said the "amaz
ing conditions released by - - statistics - - -1
is a challenge to the medical profession fJkrti- '
cularly and to all interested in national health
and national morale, nd to the future of the
nation and its youth. j : "
Wars or no wars, the neglect of the physical
condition of the nation's youth should no longer
be tolerated. Community health and welfare
programs must be given more attention; in
creasing emphasis must be laid on such pro
grams, in the publie schools. The age of ma
chines and atom bombs hasn't done away with
the . need for strong and virile manpower.
Rather, it has accentuated that need and its
recognition should not be delayed.
He Violated His Own Code
They got Tojo all right Then he got himself
(although he wasn't dead as this is written).
And it is to be wondered just what part in
his attempted self-destrujction was played by
the American war correspondent! who inter
viewed him but a few hours before he shot
.himself.
Hot that the correspondents did any more
than ask him some very embarrassing questions.
But could it have been that these very ques
tions gave the one-time war lord the definite
impression that the jig was up? He was asked
who. was to blame for the war; what defense
he had ready for a trial as a war criminal; why
Japanese lost, and a lot of other queries that
might have cry stalized . in his , mind the fata
that could be in store.' ; j i
Yesterday he laughed, complimented Ameri
can soldiers. Within a few hours . he sent a
bullet through his chest and lay mumbling
while American plasma was pumped into his
veins. . i , : : , ' .
Dead or not, he did one favor. He violated
the traditional. Japanese hara kirl code by using
a bullet instead of a knife, and thereby didn't
do proper homage to the emperor. It may be
that such act lost him a notch in the books of
Nipponese history. Too bad. .. t
Tkeyve Served Enough ,w
It the charge of Hep. Weichel of Ohio is
true that American paratroopers are being
J f . . . . ' . . ' 1
vurnea into circus penormers lor cugimanes
fa 1CirorM nrnmrvt ind rttrtntn artlnn fa
manded. The representative add "many para
troopers had been killed in such demonstra
tions. There has been and still is no more hazardous
fi i - M ai ; ii a. a .
orancn oi me service wan inai oi me para
troops. Members of these outfits have .fought in
bitter battles all the way from Normandy to
Berlin, to speak only of the European theatre,
and they certainly should not b subjected to
the unnecessary hazards of a peace-time show.
It is not enough to say they are willing cer
tainly none will refuse to go along with his
buddies no matter what the ordeaL But they
should not be put in a position that would
even encourage thenO
There is no dignitary who is worth the life
at . 1 e a t a . .
oi a single paratrooper wnen mere is no neces
sity for risking it.,
An Encouraging Step I . -.-.
The recommendation ofj a branch of the
senate's small -business committee, in regard
to the Salem alumina plant; is - a heartening '
step in the campaign to assure at least an ex
perimental operation rather than abandonment
of all the money and effort already invested
in the project. ,-' 'if'; - V r :
The sub-committee proposed that the RFC
"continue in effect contracts tor operation of "
the government-owned semi-commercial alum
ina plants until private enterprise determines
which plants, if any, it will tftke oyer And if
private enterprise does not t assume such re-,
sponsibility, ! it was recommended j that plants
"be turned over to the bureau: of mines for.
operation, expansion or maintenance, accord--Ing
to the best interests of j national defense. -
Now here is one official Import which makes
sense. ' '. jj A ''l! . . I;'.
The Salem plant is 99 fper cent complete,,
according to the Columbia Metals president, J.
O. Gallagher, and even more encouraging is
the "disclosure that necessary allocations of am
monia and sulphuric acid have been assured. ;
Proponents of the operations' continuance
have j repeatedly and rightfully stressed that
never again should this nation be so dependent
upon foreign sources for baiixite used in alumi
num production. Any new development that
might aid in domestic self-sufficiency is not
to be discounted lightly, ' f
The RFC already has directed Columbia Met
als to carry on, and for the present it appears
the plant will definitely stay in the national
picture. The decision is mora than commend
able, and with the potential by-product of fer
tilizer looming as a major actor in Willamette
valley agriculture, it will be unanimously wel
comed. "
' J't' - : f-AJiD too I OFvxfc V-v -r.
f$ 1 J)'
Km KCW THAT 7HV j Yf Ui k V
! .-1. i ; !'... I., . : !
Vr Biuim wtta -am
Double Talk
The allied authorities preparing for the trials
of German war criminals hava released the list
of 24 who are slated for trial,, starting in early
October. Familiar names of the nazi hierarchy
head the list: Goering, Hess, Bormann, von Rib
bentrop, Ley, Rosenburg. Tha; quotation used a
few days ago from the light opera; Mikado also
applies here. "Their names pare jon the list;
They'll none of them be missed." .u . Yes they
will ba missed, en joy ably so.! j: j
1
Interpreting
The War Noivo
By JAMES D.I WHITE
Asudstod Press SUff Writer
. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept lll.-W-Hideko Tojo
pointed a pistol at his heart, but he was aiming
at history, too. ,j '
He wants what hs thinks i his rightful pla
in it and that Is not the forgotten grave of a war
criminal. . if I j I
Tojo is many things, .but he ,1s also vain. As
American plasma kept umf alive today he told
someonel that he shot himself near the heart be
cause he didn't want to mess up his head.!
Tojo coordinated if he did not actually plan
the start of the war. He had jsuch resounding
success that all Japanese acclaim
ed him a hero. ; t:; I V
On of the strange things about
Japan today is the way many Japa
nese who are in contact Jwith
American cbrrespondenti volun
tarily nam Toje this man Who
carried them to their greatest
heights as their No, 1 war Crim
inal. The main reason, they! say,
(S that he had not until; today-
committed suicide to a ton for the
disgrace he had brought Upon the
empire.
This is only human, of course,
but it smells like the same snivelling we hear from
Germans who blame everything on the nazl party.
It is not necessary to .feel sorry! for Tojo to
realize that he la not alone to1 blame. Indeed, he
seems to have been toying to escape sole responsi
bility from the first He: did not relish the hero
act, even when the conquest he directed engulfed
half a world. "I am the blade and the eyes of book
we weapon usea m uus struggle," he once said.
. - a. D. Whit
f ho Litorary
Guldcpoot
By W. O. KQGgJtS I
bio business nc a dzmocsjCct.
fcy Jasms Traslow Asams (Scrtk
$; SS.7S). :- j-
This book, which Adams re
fers to as possibly his "swan
song" as a historian, is In gen
eral a hymn' to Big Business and
more particularly it's theyapo
thesis of General Motors; , !
The Ford Company, does not
fare anywhere near so well,
maybe because Ford, without
mentioning historians, called
history the "bunk.? And neither
do the ' New Deal, Roosevelt,
- Wallace, the "notorious" Wag
ner act, taxes, bureaucrats, la
bor, reformers, liberals, radicals
nor- the press which he com
plains does not furnish the news.
The world has always been
business, he says, but it. re
mained foe: America to develop
Big. Business which supplies
Jobs, satisfies consumers mani
fold wants, . enriches widows,
orphans and, other stockholders
and builds weapons. In incredible
quantities. "Perhaps our Big
Business is, after all, the Mount
Ararat on which the ark of free
civilization is to rest after the
world flood."
1 Using GM as-his 'principal ex
ample, he sketches its history,
finances and policies, and .gives,
brief biographies of leaders like -
Sloan and Kettering.
j Though what he says is plain
enough his manner of writing
is a kind of stumblebum process,
one step forward and two steps
back. His pages are filled with
references to "what ! Fve Just
said" or promises of things "to
be- taken up later "
I He writes as an after-dinner
speaker talks, in a hi-ya-fellaj
style: history is a long train. that
goes "toot toot;" reformers write
"tripe;" the text is sprinkled
with "ain't," blankety-blank,w
"gal,- "O.K," "darned," "dum
fOOL". . J- j.' . -
In case you dont know the ap
proximate area of this country,
he tells you seven times that It's
3.000,000 square miles. He refers
17 times to other books he has
written, and names five of them.
He says 10 times f that he has
been abroad. He says six times
that he comes of ancient Ameri
can lineage.
That's the trouble with his
too much lineage. Adams,
n
win
tends
I HONOLULTJ-ff)-As if enough
hasn't j happened to these Ha
waiian Islands in the. past few
years, now comes a Russian bal
let dancer turned wrestler who
aims to make Oahu. island the)
scene oi the biggest mayhem
mess- ever pre-
sented as an f f vJ !
athletic contest. I
I If things work
out: right, the
affair will be
billed
world's
as the
cham-
J .'-S3
pionship heavy
weight wrestl
ing tournament,
with! la few
"uwr Knnth IMxcm
thrown into the arena for class ;
decision.-' '' ' ' "A
. rn . ambitious planner of all
this isL Russian-bora Al Kara
sick, who takes wrestling so ser
iously that he wants to thin out
its self-claimed kings.
iThere too many cham
peena, declares the stocky, bull
headed Karasick, who used to
trip the stiff-toed fantastic in
the chorus of famed Anna Pav
lova's ballet. .
He repeats "there's too many
champeens" and adds Hhafs
what's the trouble with rassling.
: Everybody claims to be a cham
peen and nobody is.
"Well, we're going to iettle it
here just as soon as transpor
tation can be arranged from the
mainland." f - .-: ..:
Karasick just got back from
the mainland, himself, returning
to Hawaii .where he's been pro
moting: the squeeze-and-wheeza
business for the past decade.
"Whaddya think I found up
there?"; he says, waiving his arms
to encompass the USA in the
out-thrust and pull in the rest
oc the world ! with the back
sweep. It was i strictly rhe
torical question; so he just con
tinued:; V
"Champeens everywhere and
none of them drawing a good
house. : . " v
i l
or a wise editor, should have
cut these 275 pages to 100.
Spreading the idea of democracy throughout
Japan may.be the one way of assuring peace
hinting that there was an arm: that wielded the GRIN AND BEAR IT
-blade. . , . ,:g i
This column has suggested before that certain
By Lichty
In the orient. Off efihf promlsa of better Vic- Japanese groups seem to ba jvdrking; methodically
cess would be propaganda for birth control
among the folk of Nippon
Western Union can again transmit singing
telegrams. So THIS is ,the freedom We have
fought for! 'V :
Editorial Commont
rvni nu ntnmim
This week the spotlight shifts from Astoria to
Pendleton. While the sport season lasted, this city
was the mecca of those over the state and north
west seeking, recreation but this week they will
direct their full-tanked cars to eastern - Oregon
where Pendleton will stage its annual Round-Up,
the. greatest of all frontier festivals which had its
beginning 35 years ago. .-,'; '
After a wartime suspension of two years, the
Vt TM1ttfAfi i)iaw ni mfmtrmA mtrni-rx lac v.av m-nA
in spite of gasoline rations, drew an "attendance
that was feminiscent of pre-depression days when t:.. When Tojo was chosen premier in October Hi
J3,uuu io J.Vw j peopiv were py;u uiu ui grauo-
stands.. K big part of the audience was service
to shift as much war guilt al possible on the mill,
tary class who did the fighting for them. The Tolo
business ends to support; that suspicion. -Certainly
the military are guilty, but they could
not have accumulated their guilt without the sup
port of other Japanese. The extreme measure thv
have taken in the past have embarrassed the throne
and the big business interests in Tokyo, but these
same banks and firms (often! with imperial house
hold capital behind them) have followed closely
In Japan's march of conquest ii jf f -y .
Tojo gained his reputation as! a keen-minded,
efficient administrator when he- bossed the Kwan
tung army in Manchuria; developed its air-tight
police system with brutal gendarmes, and got rich
manipulating the opium Suppression" bureau
which in reality developed! the, narcotic trade
and made it pay. The Japanese called him "old
razor-brain." . - - ?? j - -- ' j; - 4
But the Kwantung army many times got Tokyo
into hot water by acting independently. Japanese
conservatives hated it for its lack of finesse, not
oecause u succeeded m doing things.
men from northwest stations:
The Pendleton Round-Up has more than a state
reputation. It is renowned over the nation and its
success year after year has been due to the civic
spirit of the community which has manned and
maintained it as a festival without profit to those
who stage iL. The taint of commercialism has never
been on It, enabling it to put Its earnings back
into the ETounds. facilities, and the show itself.
There are many other wildwest shows but none
that equals the annual one at Pendleton. It is a
' ---- - m1 tfNH I -
Tit''. 1 . 5
no one was able to explain dearly why a Kwan
tung army man was named to begin Japan's greatest
xamoie in war-maamg. , . :y n ; - x j :
: But when the gamble failed, another Kwantung
army man, General Yoshi jiro Umetsu, was chosen to
sign the surrender. Whether by design or not i this
puts the military extremists squarely behind the
eight-ball when heads start falling.
So when Tojo pulled-the trigger he may have
been shooting ,at a place In Japanese history which j
he saw threatened if he lived to be convicted as
a war criminal. ;l -r-J. : . ' f-
, ; "Banzai the nperorJ i he- wrote in . what he "ItH mkm n. 1..-.. .1- ! w...n
"Jack Sharkey claims, to be
the heavyweight champeen in
New York. Louis Thez says he
' Is and around St Louis that
goes. Up Minneapolis way, ev
erybody says Broncho Nagurski
' is world's champ. And when
you get around Michigan, It's
Joe Savoldi.
"Of course, California and the
National Boxing association rec
ognizes Jim Londos as champ
but what good does it do him
when nobody else does. ! I ask
youT" -;
Karasick allows that the sit-
' uation is killing the wrestling
g a m e and, while admitting
there are, certain characters who
think it Should" have died long
ago, he continues with his diag-
nosis. -- " -""Look
at the junior light
heavyweight class," he says;
. "just look at the champs they
got." He counts them off on
his atubby fingers as he con
tinues: "There's Red Barry, Ben-
- ny McShane, Leroy McGurk, Bill
, Wiedner, Lou Talaber and Lee
Crable not to mention Charley
. Carr, whose here in Honolulu.
, The whole business, is very
upsetting- to Karasick and he
wints to straighten it out
j "Back on the mainland," , he
expostulates, "the boys are all
- unhappy. They're not making
any money. There's - no, point
in being a rassler - any more."
,Ha shrugged off a suggestion
that there never was any point
and-went on: "As long as any.
punk can get by with a phony
claim to titles, rassling will nev
er be any good. What would
boxing be if it was that way?"
While on the mainland, he re
ported, he went to see promot
ers of all the oversize charley
horses and found they agreed
with his crusading ideas. Fur
thermore, he declared, they , a
greed to bring their various
champions out to Hawaii to set
tle, once and for all, who rates
. the' titles. v, ' u.
Karasick's wide acquaintance
In the business made it easy for
him to make contacts. When he
' quit touring the world with Pav
lova shortly after the first World
war, he started wrestling at the
old Olympic club in San Fran
cisco.' JThe next several years,
during which he won the world's
light heavyweight; crown "le
gitimate, I mean," : he says in
1925, he got to know most pro
moters personally. I ;j ;
So, as soon as . transportation
becomes easier, Karasick aims to
bring both heavyweight and jun
ior light heavy "champeenship"
claimants out here, f .
; What will happen' to Honolulu
when all the self-crowned kings
of j the .mat swarm in is some
thing to ponder on. But it seems
that a place that survived the
Pearl Harbor attack should be
able to take It K r
. After the tournament, Kara
sick says, champs in the various
classes can go back to the main
land where "as legitimate
champs they? can draw good
crowds and good enough dough."
The losers? "Well," he adds,
"they can go on to Australia, or
some place, and draw good dough
because they're from the main
land." - ; ; :v; ,rr
An Karasick? Well, he prob
ably will stay : here. , The Rus
sian likes Hawaii and, besides,
it Will require some time to count
his! take from such a tourna
ment " - ' ,
srjrce cf gjeatTri'. to,Oreroa after'.' tie'wair!.
. Calcimine is basically a physi-
Aplot atxrat a cal structure held together with
iC
Expansion of Educational
Facilities Aultorized By
State Board j of Education
PORTLAND, Sept lll-W-Expansion of Oregon' collega
facilities for rising peacetime enrollment was approved today
by the state board of higher. education. ' - . ,
. The board authorized purchase of sites f or a new girls
dormitory at University of Oregon, and an industrial building at
Oreion State college. Architectural plans for a proposed naval
science building at the state col
lege were ordered.
In the housing field, the board
aDDroved purchase of ten" homes
for farm help at the two Institu
tions, ordered dormitory eoulo
ment for Orecon State and auth
orized use of 100 . prefabricated
houses for veterans.
Training of. ' nursery school
teachers will remain centered at
Oregon; State college.
Orlando Hollls, dean of the uni
versity law school and former act
ing president who is now liaison
officer i for veterans, reported a
system was set up to inform dis
charged servicemen of Oregon's
educational opportunities.
The board appointed a group to
appear I before the tax investiga
tion committee in Salem Septem
ber 17, and approved a largemmv
ber of personnel changes.
Orafon State CoUcf Rcorgmnfaaitioa
of th deoarftnent of soology with ap
potntmcst of 'Eh-. Kenneth Gordon as
chairman .of department with promo
tion In rank to full profeuor. and
promotion of Dr. Rosfiand Wullen to
piwfeaaor. Dr. JJ L. Osborne to associ
ate professor, and Dr. X. J. Dornfeld
to associate nrofeasor. with appropri
ate salary adjustments.
Appotntmenta-of Dr. W. 8. Morris
mm assistant pro ft seer of history: Mrs.
Marr V Bramfoaugh as noma demon
stration agent m TUiamooa: county;
Joe R. Anderson as assistant county
a cant la Malheur county. Garr- SL
Dennis- as assistant county agent In
Wasco county, ail with rank of in
structor., Ralph "Colby promoted to full pro
fessor of English: A. Harper pro
moted from research assistant to assis
tant orof t nr of poultry husbandry:
Dr. H. P. Hansen, assistant professor
of botany, to full Urn on science sur
veys with promotion- to associate pro
fessor: Mrs. Marrarct War appointed
instructor tat foods and nutrition re
placing Miss Mildred Arnold, assistant
professor, granted year of leave.
Appointment of Mrs. Beulah Fisher
as instructor of secretarial science
during learre of absence of Zdward
ViettL assistant prof essor. ' teaching In
armed forces school fall and winter
terms; appointment of John Q. Grant
ham as associate professor of wood
products, succeeding Glenn Yoorhiea,
resigned; resignation of Natalia Reich
art, assistant professor of physical edu
cation appointment of William M.
Perry as club agent tn Yamhill coun
ty, succeeding 8. X. Skinner, resigned:
return from leaves of Dr. L. X. West
and Dr. Jack G. Roof, assistant professors-
of chemistry; aopointmant of
Mrs. Helen McBurney Abrego aa home
demonstration aent in Deschutes county-
succeeding. Miss .Elizabeth Boeckll.
resigned.:
Return from mlHtary leave of James
V: Dixott aa assistant football coach
and member of physical education
staff, effective January 1: transfer of
Miss Jean Ogleaby, secretary in regis
trar's office to president's office, ad
vance of Mrs. Esther Weikel from clerk
to secretary in registrar's office: return
from military leave to W. T. Cooney,
assistant professor of poultry husban
dry; appointment of Miss Ruth Jeffer
son as instructor tn household adminis
tration: i .
Appointment of Louia P. Shepherd,
and Georae W. Creel as Instructors in
English, . the latter- replacing Xwing
Anderson, resigned: appointment: of
John J. Wittkopf as assistant profes
sor in- electrical engineering; appoint
ment of C I Church as Instructor
in physics: -appointment of Herbert
W. Asful h assistant ? professor 1 of
wood products: raaixnalion of Dr. P.
P. Wangaard. associate professor of
wrd nroducts. - - - 4 -
University of OreeonAppointment
of Dr. Walter A. Wykhuia aa associate
r.iori o orost ethic dent4trr at
dental school; appointment of Dn Ster
ling Kincaid as initructor in English:
apootntment of George Cough ton as
assistant professor of violin; resigna
tion of K K. Shumaker. assistant pro
fessor of education and director of
Hwer division advisory group: return
from leave of Dr. Paul BanweU Mean,
rtrofeesor; of religion. Dr. Kenneth 8.
Ghent, assistant professor of mathe
matics, and Dr. Daniel D. Gaee. amort,
ate professor of business administra
tion. ... ! . .
Afpolntments of Dr. Herbert Craw
ford MeMurtrv and Dr. Daniel L. Adler
as acting- assistant processors of ns-r-UMtlusjr
and connecters in university
testing bureau. Robert C. Myers aa
instructor la sociology. Mrs. Grace
Irrtn Clang as acting assistant dean
of women, rank of instructor: Kirt E.
Montgomery as assistant professor of
speech and dramatic arts, R. D. MUM
ean as assistant professor of advertis
ing. Increase in time aery ice of 0.
lando John Hollls. dean of law. from
14 to IX months: transfer of Alice
B. MacDuff. assistant dean of women,
to full-time housing secretary; resig
nation or w. uwrtne s. Bee. assist
ant professor of sociology to accent
poartton at Reed' eoHera.
Kastern Oregon coUece of Educa
Vm Appointment of Mies Dorothy
Byrd as acting instructor in English
with half time as director of dormi
tories. '
Centralized scuvrUeS Aonoretment
of Dr. Richard Rsnaow as field repre
aentatiye. general extension, rank of
assistant professor of sociology ex
tension: appointment of Miss Jean
PJirabeth Meyer as uninn catalorer in
the central library office, rank of
assistant professor.
Southern Oregon Colleye of Xduca-ti-
Resignation of Miss Louise Wood
ruff, assistant professor of music and
appointment of Wallace Sann inatni.
tor in music, to replace her.
Association Denies,
Girdles to Return '
Flatly; denying a, recent, widely
publicized statement from war
production board to the effect
tthat two-way stretch s girdles
should be back on the market by
November, the Corset and Bras
siere Association of America de
clared in a statement issued to
day that no such early relief is
possible,! and cited confusion and
uncertainty as to government
price regulations for the corset
and brassiere industries as ; the
reason.- -;' :v -
Validity of Price
Control Rule Questioned
PORTLAND, Sept. 11-HWVA
ruling ' that only: the emergency
court of appeals may consider the
validity lot a price control regu
lation was questioned today by
federal Judge Claude McColloch,
: During OPA's suit for $3830.84
for treble damages from West
Side Lumber company, the Judge
declared that the ruling might
not be upheld now. It was, ap
proved by the supreme court only
S3 a r-ir retrjr, I tzli.
Youth Problem
1 .1
jCiHiDiiasizea in
Steps must be taken now to head
off increasing juvenile delinquency
and avert what threatens to be
come a major postwar problem,
Robert W. Hansen, Milwaukee,
Wis-, editor of the Eagles' national
magazine, asserted In an address
Tuesday night at the "Eagles' club
house. Worthy President I. T. Wal
lace presided at the meeting. '
Hansen, former, national presi
dent of the Fraternal Order of
Eagles, warned that war and its
aftermath are always accompanied
by a letdown in moral standards
which "m e n a c e : the future of
youth.' Already, be pointed out,
Juvenile delinquency has increas
ed SI per cent in the last year, ac
cording to Juvenile court records.
Unless this trend is halted, the re
sult' will be- disastrous for the
countrys future, Hansen declared.
The speaker said that solution
of the Juvenile delinquency prob
lem is one of the major concerns
of the Eagles organization and that
local Aerie-committees on youth
guidance have been established all
over the nation to co-operate with
the juvenile problems. .
Turning to another major Eagle
activity, aid for returning service
men, Hansen said the local com
munity must' supplement national
and state rehabilitation programs
with . neighborly aid K and under
standing if servicemen are to be
properly restored to community
life. - - -.j ..i.--. -
City Planning
Discussed at
Jaycee Lunch
"The problem of city planning,
taken over by the senior chamber
of commerce, will; in a few years,
be - placed In your hands,1 C A.
McClure, engineer for Salem's
long-range planning commission,
told members of the junior cham
ber of commerce at luncheon
yesterday.- , '"f;
McClure outlined many of the
possibilities for future develop
ment of the industrial areas and
transportation system of the city
and surrounding territory, .and
emphasized the necessity for a
complete zoning system to separate-the
factory from the residen
tial section. i. .. - j. -.. '
He pointed out that Salem Is
one of thefew cities that has no
."blighted area. Interspersed with
tne older houses in Salem's resi
dential districts are, dwellings of
a new vintage. This is due to
the buffer formed by state-owned
property around the city which
has tended to confine the residen
tial districts, McQure continued.
Following bis speech, members
of the junior chamber asked
questions of the engineer, con
cerning many phases of city de
velopment, . r - , j
COLONEL TO COMMAND
II CAMP WHITE, Sept. ll-yP
jLt CoL L. J. Farber, command
ling officer, of the Camn White
prisoner of war unit for the last
year, was promoted today to the
commana of the entire camp. He
Succeeds CoL John R. Young.
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