AGZ FOUR A OSEGOn STATESMAN. Sedan. Oragon. Tntdot7 Momla. NoTmbr 27, 194S tcfiOttitateBmati "No Favor Sway Us; No Fear Shall Awe" ! rrom First Statesman, March 28, 1S31 j . THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COIWPANY i CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor aod Publisher -.. t . - i Member of the Associated Press - j The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use tor., publication of all newt dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. Richardson's Testimony ; The defect in American policy prior to Pearl Harbor was not the concentration of the fleet .At Pearl Harbor, which was protested by Ad- miral Richardson, but in failure to provide ample protective screening against surprise. The admiral in his testimony in reply to a ques tion by Representative Gearhart of California said the Japanese fleet which had crossed most 'of the Pacific to make the attack at Pearl Har bor "quite likely would have been able to de liver the same attack on Puget Sound.' His principal complaint was over the lack of pre paredness of the fleet; but he disagreed with the state department's policy of having... the fleet concentrated at Pearl Harbor. ' Cordell Hull and Sumner Welles in their testimony both upheld this - policy, which the ; president followed; and expressed the opinion ft did serve to restrain' Japanese aggression for a time. It is quite regular for the fleet to be moved to support a country's policy. In this case the presence of the fleet in Pearl Harbor I may have held the Japs back for a good many months. This gave us time to press our navy j Construction program, so we had new battle i ships and carriers sliding down the ways which I soon, filled the gap caused at Pearl Harbor. ' The disaster lay in the factor of surprise. For this it seems clear thatboth Washington land Pearl Harbor were tpi blame. Washington . 'failed to "give Pearl the urgent alerts and Pearl I failed to adopt the precautions which the times warranted. Both seats of authority guessed ! wrong as to the point of Japanese attack. And jour army and navy intelligence failed to keep ; track of the Jap carrier fleet. 1 - That the presence of our fleet at Pearl did have a restraining effect on Japan seems to be corroborated by the fact that the first move othe Japs was to eliminate this fleet. Admiral Richardson told of a proposal by Roosevelt to establish a patrol to prevent Japa nese commerce from crossing to this hemis phere. Richardson said he opposed this idea. Admiral Stark agreed with Richardson so the idea was dropped. .' ' The Richardson testimony fails to prove the rumors that Roosevelt was an arbitrary dictator of navy strategy. The state department backed "him up on keeping the fleet at Pearl Harbor, land he followed the advice of navy! men and dropped his idea of a patrol. The-admiral's testimony does show him as an honest, alert and forthright officer, whose personal initiative ' might have suficed to save the fleet on De cember 7. He evidently was full of fears of what the Japs might do and had he been in command, he might have insisted on wider petroling of the Pacific,. dispersal of the big ships, and alertness of observers. His removal may have been Roosevelt's big mistake. First Things First 1 ' f j j j This touchy subject of conscientious objectors is bring brought to a head by the self-imposed fast of 12 men at Waldport, but it is doubtful they are doing either themselves; or their cause any good. , ; ' -! The men have been fasting. in protest of their continued confinement, declaring the rate of discharge for COs is far less; than lj for Gla, and contending they are entitled to more eon siderttion than has been accorded them ! for service up to four years without payor pro vision for dependents. i f Without going into the merits or- demerits of conscientious objection, it may be; pointed out that drafted GIs and COs Were tailed to serve for the "duration" and six months. The "duration" has not yet been declared.!? Conced ing that everything can't be taken care of at once, we can find no fault with the policy of putting .first the problem of jreleasingj service men who served, or were in readiness to serve, in the no-quarter battles of World War II. The COs are conceded the right to their scruples, of course, but realism compels j the conclusion that were it not for the servicemen the COs wouldn't have much left of the kind of a country to which they now wish to return. in i ii i i i i j i " ' '? ' j ; . ; j Former president Herbert Hoover has deed ed his home on the Stanford university campus to the university, as a memorial to,- his late wife. It will be known as the Lou Henry Hoover home. Mr. Hoover has resided injthe hbme yery little hi recent years, making his home in an apartment in 3 the Waldorf-Astor tower. The west regrets his change of residence, but feels .... . j . , ij n ; sure ine iormer president wiu conunun lively interest "in the Pacific coast, his China has ratified the Bretton Woods financial ' agreement, the - second to do so, the United States having been first. Whether Britain will sign has become a question since the succession of the labor party , to power, jrhe agreement, points the way to an orderly ! restoration of international commerce based on national fi nancial stability. It should be ratified; andj put . into effect lest -the world lapse into economic isolation. v I g - . : Premier Attlee said that f what the world needed was the application of the principles of Christianity. With over 200 sects of the Chris tian church it doesn't appear ithat Christians Can agree among themselves any better, than the "big three" world powers. , The war must be over a Salem woman saw a flatiron for sale and actually asked the price before buying it. '" ! , Riots Ih Palestine ? If the Palestinian Jews who are bombing police stations and rioting at Tel Aviv are ., typical of the Zionists we can't blame the Arabs for wanting no mone of them to enter that country The disorders which resulted . in six deaths two weeks ago and injuries to ten. police constables Sunday will thill the ardor even ef American politicians, who have taken up tjie Zionist cause ! The rioters have been making trouble for .the British, yet the Jewes were restored to Pales tine only under the British mandate and the Balfour agreement. Britain has been their pro tector. Now they turn against Britain because under pressure from the Arabs the "white paper" was issued which restricts Jewish immi gration. Hardly a very good way to get Britain to withdraw this paper or to win approval of Americans. ; After all the title of modern Jews to Pales tine is sentimental only. The writer, of Scotch -Irish-English aricestry, doesn't feel he has any claim to the British Isles because his ances tors lived there. No more have the Jews to the Holy Land. The afflicted Jews, of Europe have claim to worjd '-mercy, but sot necessarily to land in Palestine any more than.' in Poland, Ger many, Spain where their people long have re sided. Maybe they think they can break down British resistance if they persist, like the "Irish," ' in "black-and-tan" disturbance. ' ' Editcrial Comment FIRE-FIGHTING IN STATE HANDS The state through its forestry department, has taken over fire control duties in the 281,000 acres of forest land formerly patrolled by the Polk County Fire Patrol association. " : - This follows the state's action in taking over the similar duties that had been performed in Clat sop, Columbia, Washington and Tillamook county-, areas by the Northwest Oregon Fire Patrol as sociation. "''". -. i Thus the state is extending its assumption of anti forest fire control duties and establishing a prece dent which may lead ultimately to its assumption Of direction of forest .fire prevention throughout the state's forested areas. . ' This i an important new function for the state to assume, , and one that it perhaps should hare assumed long ago. The public interest in prevention of forest fires is far too great to leave the job In private hands. The state can direct fire preven tion with more authority and probably more effic iently. - -: , ; , -V--'" ' Now that the state is directly in the fire fighting business, the state forestry department will prob ably lend its Influence to the establishment of a new policy for construction of fire breaks and fire trails throughout the woods to facilitate fighting ' fires.' : ! ':'--'-'.. -. - f, . ; : Particularly in the coastal area, where bad forest fires can be swept by an east wind down to the i through farms and cities, are we interested In t -i adequate policy of fire fighting and forest pres- : ervstion. We are pleased te see the state asssjming t i new function. AstprUn Budget , . - - , Now that we know what a new car may cost, there's nothing left to worry about except how to get the money and the xrari I 1 j Interpreting The Day's New s By James D. White : Associated Press Staff WrtUr SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2.-(P)-'Hints of Ill will are beginning to appear between Dutch and British officials who are involved in the compli cated East Indies revolt. ; t : ' These hints come as negotiations between Dutch officials and the revolutionary Indonesian "govern-: ment" break down and the British use rocket firing planes to quell new outbreaks of violence by native extremists. f I 1 5 j The hints are such as these:! The British charge that Dutch and Ambonese ' r n i loyal to the Dutch shot down ' 60 Indonesian police "in cold blood" I at a police station in the capital! city of Batavia. I ! Shortly afterward, the Dutch news agency, Aneta, reported that' the British' ordered some native villages burned. This was in f re prisal for the murder by Indones ians of a plane-load of British and Indian troops which had been forced down outside Batavia. Burning- Villages Common f vi r IM TO SHARIF TKL f AIDJX E0M8 SCCrTETS IT CSlAIRlV.ULErinSEE ; -V HIS CARDS. 1 1 BUT HOW ARE WP Sl if G0LG TO SEE HIS CARDS 1 WHEN WE CANT EVEN SEE X 1 SUr&eM Vj Xht Tmarm lisihale Vf uruitiMt Hk Xto WMhiastea gti International Poker Tho Literary Guidcpost - ? By W. G. Rogers if;;,. News Behind" the News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Reproduction In whole or in part strictly prohibited.) HIGH BONNET, j Uwal jToeM (Prcntlct-HaU; SZ.SO). ; This is a novel in form, rough ly, but the form is only an ex cuse for writing about good food . . .sand it's a better excuse than many novelists think up. The n, author makes a library out of kitchen, pantry; and ! cellar; he makes a chef d'oeuvre out of a chef. The -story had to be laid, of course, in France. Jean-Marie Gallois gives up the sea for sauces and soups, becomes a sculptor in cake icings; though he is disappointed in an affair of the heart, What matters to him most is' stomach! - Though there is a fairly dra matic climax, even to bombs, the body of the book tells you how to make Zabaglione sauce for Peches Giulia; you have the pleasure of dining with the Coun cil of Brillat; and kidneys are described so eloquently that read ing is as good as a meal. ' - i To make Espagnol stock you throw into the pot "lumps of beef,) ham and veal, fried brown ! with the hammered bones; roast fowl carcasses, tomatoes, turnips, onions,, carrots, bay leaves, pep-per- and ell-spice, celery, thyme, marjoram and Savory, chervil . . . and a pinch of the Savoy cori ander . .j. and keep it at a sim mer for a day. After an integra tion! with sherry, it is passed through a hair sieve." The book is full of smells, tastes, sounds. Chefs, you learn, eat-out; it isn't the most famous places that always serve the best food; clean kitchen is no more proof of delectable dishes than a clean studio of great paintings; a meat vault is a morgue; an ama teur chef is as dependable as an amateur surgeon. There j are such cheeses as Ventadour, Thome de S a v o i e, Cantal, -Parmesan; coffee with the flavor of orange peel, ptarmi gans roasted with a vine-leaf shield, Minorca cockscombs brin ed : for Eliogabale sauce. And you'll enjoy your soup all the more if the diner at the next table is eating a tangerine. This is a book for men as well as women, and it's a point in its favor that food supplies are be coming more plentiful. . . I W NV of WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 The Inquiring congressmen have pro duced the complete Jap story of Pearl Harbor but not ouirs. j- What the Japs did and how they planned it can be frather fully understood from the files and statements I uncovered I by General Mac-- Arthur in Tokyo, but the American causes for our greatest disaster all war his tory are not so plain. rai suuea me japs de cided upon - the attack two months ahead, (October 5), when Mr. Roosevelt decided to impose the embargo upon supplies from us. Premier YammamotO told the government the loss of eco nomic sustenance from us: would defeat Japan in her war in Chi na, so she might as rell go to war with us on the chance of winning all or nothing. 1 The date was picked then, or ders issued November 5, fleet as sembled November 23 (the date our navy obviously feared! some thing big, decided to risk no more shipping m the northern Pacific and ordered all to the southern route). Most Planes Escaped The fleet refueled at sea 200 miles north of Pearl Harbor oh December 6, and attacked the next day from that neglected expanse of ocean; lost only 27 of the 381 planes in the attack; the remainder getting back to the carriers striking westward, and all escaped northwestward to the home KurileS. j The Japanese peace mission to the White House was a complete fake to cover this operation. The government had been reorgan ized November 2 to bring in a war crowd better schooled in Nazi technique (although; Hitler was not advised). Nor were the Jap peace emissaries informed of what was afoot. 1 The plan for the attack had been in the Jap war book for years, and every detail had been worked out by observation of our naval habits of bringing in ships and giving the mei) shore leave over weekends, opening faith GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty The Dutch, may have intended no slur on the British in reporting this reprisal the bodies' of four British aviators and '20 Indian soldiers had : been found hacked to pieces,' and such reprisals as burning villages are fairly stan dard practice in such cases. The usual s procedure is to warn people to leave first, so no one is hurt and the bamboo huts go up with ( an impres sive show of smoke and flame.; They cafc be rebuilt quickly. ! . ', There appears to be some dispute between the British and the Dutch over a couple of thousand Ambonese soldiers which the! Dutch have had in Batavia. . : 1 i i The British reported they had been ordered withdrawn a few days ago, presumably because most of them are Christians and traditional enemies of the predominantly Moslem Javanese who are defying the return of Dutch rule, - ; British Order Withdrawal t But a spokesman for Admiral HeFerich, the Dutch commander-in-chief, told American correspondents that the admiral had -informed the British that tho Ambonese . would stay; Soon afterward the British announced that the withdrawal order stood. Meanwhile there was a curious development regarding the use of Japanese troops who still have not been disarmed. A British officer let it be known that some had done "an excellent Job" in helping to. clear native settlements east of Semarang, where some of the latest native upria inga have taken place. i The following day Admiral: Lord Louis Mount batten, whose military sphere1 includes the Indies since General MacArthur relinquished ; that area te him shortly before V Japan - surrendered, was quoted as saying that "Japanese prisoner of war troops" had never bean used in any offensive artfrm arfwt- rati vaa.- -" - -.-- . r, . - ' II tffn -. , f-- a . isW Tfcl - - s & i n 'A '- 'Tee're tee late I jest bought seme reel estate from eae -;. .-i i ' -1 "!' ceeaoet2torsr . - - ef yew the sub nets for garbage 'disposal at dawn, as well as our limited plane observation radius of 200 miles (just outside of which the Japs refueled). It was cunning, long-planned treachery perfectly executed un der the most favorable auspices. On our side of it, Mr, Roosevelt and his admirals knew an at tack was to be made and the approximate time of it. But they expected it in Malaya against the British and Dutch, and against us in the Philippines. They did not expect it to fall upon Pearl Har bor, and were totally surprised when it did. This is the only justifiable conclusion from the accumulated public evidence that they knew war was coining through inter cepted messages yet did nothing about Pearl Harbor. They did little more about the Philippines, anticipating no doubt, a long range war on that front in which we would attack Jap shipping northward and seek out the Jap fleet. x Responsibility in Question Beyond all the new and old facts about Washington's failure to warn and the navy's failures to detect and defend, is the basic question of who was responsi ble,, for setting up our fleet like ducks on an enclosed pond for the Japs to destroy. This is the inexcusable, colos sal, overall blunder. A few hours warning from here would have dispersed the fleet to sea where the bulk of it would have been saved (the Jap planes had no gas for searching out maneuver able ships). Admiral Richardson says Roos evelt, 15 months' earlier, told him the Japs would make a "mistake" and enter the war; but also declined to accept Richard son's policy of retiring the fleet to the safety of our Pacific coast and replaced him with a man who would do presidential bid ding. FDR Concept Wreng It was Mr. Roosevelt, then, who is responsible for the policy .of keeping the fleet based on Pearl Harbor as a general policy. His concept Of Jap attack strat egy was therefore wholly wrong. . As to the specific event of why the fleet was bottled there that day, it is unbelievably true that Mr. Roosevelt and his ad mirals who were required to fol low his bidding, permitted those ships to remain closeted in their narrow base when they knew atti -. was coming without a warning to disperse. Some evidence suggests Mr. Roosevelt was playing a come-on game with the Japs, wanted to draw them into the "mistake of war and thus dispose of them. This may be true, but neverthe less the man or men responsible for the disaster are the ones who left the fleet set up there that day. They - could only be the ruling navy clique of which Mr. Roosevelt was the intimate, ship loving top man. The answer which these, facts demand is complete cleansing out of the top navy and Mr. Tru man has already started it with the replacement of Mr. Roose velt's Admiral King, (who came in after Pearl Harbor) and si multaneous approval by the . president of the legislation to put the navy with the army and air corps into a combined armed service force. Proper Utilization of State s Resources Urged by Hunter jr r. ,. a T.:n nvrciAn th first steo in winning the peace. Chancellor Fhederick M. Hunter of the state system of higher edu- woi Caim chamber of Commerce inemoers na iu mrmwi to utilize the .state's unmatched resources to "keep with the 200,000 who did not come ( County Court AffixesNew Street Names The Marion county court at a hearing Monday affixed names to nine roads and i avenues in the immediate vicinity - of Salem at the request Of the postmaster ana certain residents adjacent to these roads, i , The road running easterly and westerly between SalemrWheat- land road and the Willamette riv er and between f and parallel to Sunset avenue i and Cummings lane is named Manbirn road. A portion of road known as Morgan avenue running parallel to East Center street is renamed Auburn avenue. The portion bf Monroe avenue runninc south irom ruiuana road or East Center street and parallel to the eastern boundary of the city Is renamed Hawthorne avenue. . Cannon street is the name giv en to a block-length street one- fifth of a mile south of . Hoyt street, and on the east side of 12th street. Certain roads or avenues run ning east ana wesi ana . com mencing on Cherry avenue ana immediately north of the alumina plant were named. The first road north of the plant is named Can dle lane, the second road is now Shady lane, the third road Is named Clearview avenue and the fourth road is named Alder ave nue. These four roads are parallel to each other and at right angles to Cherry avenue. Filbert avenue is the name given the road commencing at Alder avenue running northerly and being parallel to Cherry ave nue. back."- w I f-, - .xt'- The people of the United States as a whole, he maintained, should lead the world in perfecting an international; organization with au thority and jpower to stamp out wars in their! very beginnings, keep the nation's defenses high and should maintain a research pro gram adequate to cover the farth est frontiers! of Scientific investi gation in all fields, using for this purpose government and private financing. ' ' j , Forest Crop Taps Oregon has the greatest unhar vested forest crop in the United States, agricultural fertility sur passed by no other state, water power, resources per capita great er than those of. any other area of America of similar extent and population, one of the finest cli mates in the world (here his audi ence laughed, for Hunter traveled through one of the worst storms in recent years to address the Sa lem chamber), a great tourist won derland and the beginnings of a manufacturing industry of great promise, he declared. Intelligence High! The state's levid of intelligence rates high and so does her living standard, the speaker said. By raising levels of j intelligence and with them living standards of peoples on the Cither side of the Pacific basin, Oregon may not only help to keep the peace but build for herself a still more prosperous future, Hunter predicted. CRT 0MBB (Continued from page 1) What the compromise will be has not been announced, but within a few months the states will take over the service. Such being the case the states should plan now to pick up the pieces and put them together again. Here are the (difficulties: The state wage; scale Is lower than the federal. Employes .will na rurally "look S around" before taking a wage cut Second, few lof the employes have any civil service rating with the staie because there have been! so jnany changes in personnel, j I In Oregon the employment service will go back under the unemployment compeni ation commission. Just as soon as the return is definitely decided the commission should designate the director of the; service and in form all employes they will be blanketed in as far as may be done consistent with the merit rating plan of employment. The commission should not stop there, however. It should sees: 10 ouuq. s up tne service where it wiu tnake a real at tack th the employment prob lem, seeking aggressively to firid jobs for workers. During the war its task became one of finding workers for jobs. Right now, it is sort of between hay -and grass" and devoting most of its time to registering applicants for unemployment compensation. It should not lapse into just a regis tration onice for the unem ployed. : 1 - I - The CED report referred to makes definite suggestions for Improvement of the unemploy ment service, such as: Improvement: of employment contacts with local employers and local labor groups. A greatly strengthened system of state and local advisory com mittees. . . . :f- - ".. Comprehensive . Job informs Hon and occupational counsel ling service. '' , Unity of action and adapta bihty to the rapidly changing conditions of tHis period, effect ive guidance of i interstate migra tion; a properly supervised pro gram of transportation grants to move workers from surplus to deficiency labor areas. Oregon had an excellent em ployment service before the war, It should hot .fail in the postwar period. But thorough planning and prompt action are needed if the service is to meet the burdens that may be seen just ahead. The army has developed a new shirt cloth utilizing a finer yarn, permitting Its manufacture by a larger number of mills. The first Greek letter sorority. Kappa Alpha Theta was founded at De Pauw. university in - Janu ary 1870,--" j: - ' Snyder Speaks On Elenientarv School System Salem persons, j including a number of teachers, who attend ed the fourth in a weekly series M , . , oi j.? icciures on community re sources for youth education-held in Collins hall Monday nigit heard Walter Snyder, curriculum director for Salem public schools, speak on elementary education systems. , - The lecture series which is fea turing outstanding, speakers from specific fields of youth education is being sponsored by the Wil lamette university department of education under the guidance of Dr. Lawrence Riggs. Marlon county teachers who are attend ing each meeting of the series will receive in training credit, for their attendance; , The December 3 meeting will feature a panel discussion group including C. A. Kells, general sec retary of the YMCA: Lvle Lei eh - ton, executive. Cascade area coun cil Boy Scouts; Mrs. Esther Little, general secretary Salem YWCA. and Mrs. Emma! MaxwelL execu tive aaiem, camp Fire girls. Catholic Group Electyifficers . "7f ..1 .. -x , Edward Hammer, Mt f Angei, was elected president for 1946 of the Willamette valley league of the Holy Name; society at. the league's regular bi-monthly meet- inff mt KiiHlim; o . . . - -"""v oumijj nigni, November 25. ' The vice president post went to Anton Traeger, Mt Angel, and Joseph L. Prange was named secretary-treasurer. Patrick Gor man, Stayton, was re-elected marshal. - Presided over by Retiring Pres ident Ross Coleman, St Paul, more than o i delegates from many parishes in the Willamette valley, heard an; address by Rev Damian Jentges,! OSB, Mt Angel ; A.K v-auiouc Mental ity." Other members of the clereV present were j the Rev. Frs. Jos eph Scherbring, Sublimity, and M. Jonas, Stayton. ' - An invitation from Father Jonas to the league to hold its next meeting in January -at Stayton was accepted. ' ii (vatcii T-A Cent ttreei (( , rayments ; 4