ft Tbf Stat mag, SoUcy Qrsaoq, Wdmmderr, frmf) 1, IU$ "So Favor Sutayt U$, Tin lUUwu, March U, 1151 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. IPRAOUK. Editor and Publisher MmiW ef the Aaeeaissad Press fa eatiUed eselsstvely to tt w (if repM mUu tttQOt Ueal news eriaUd to tkU kmnHr, as well m all , AP Hwi elspalcaes. W Hear You Talkln' Listen to the chatter from the ball park musical and repeti tive ai a Gregorian chant. "Aaaaay, baby, a little hustle here . . ." That's baseball talk. Almost a distinct language yet using common English words, it is typical of the many variations to which, the root tongue lends itself and which, in turn, eventually becomes integrated into the written vocabulary- The lingo of the diamond and the dugout is one of many vernaculars, all American. Almost every occupation has a par ljnce of its own. Listen to plumbers, used car dealers, collegiates, waitresses, soldiers, loggers, farmers, press agents, politicians, newspapermen and gangsters. Hear the side-of-the-mouth race track talk, the breathless instructions on the basketball maple, the carefree and unoffensive profanity of fishermen and golfers. Listen to the speech of musicians, of the theater, of circus pitch men, of artists and cab-drivers and teen-agers, or of three-year-olds conversing patiently in a primeval monosyllabism like the voluble chipmunk's. The current expressions are passports into many loosely defined little worlds inhabited by people who understand each other but are unintelligible to the outsider. A novice In any trade, a newly-won fan to any fancy, must first learn the patois before he can consort with the brotherhood. And the initiated quickly isolate and mercilessly ridicule the fraud who smartly spouts obsolete slang. The rules of branch phraseologies are nearly as stringent as those of academy French. Woe to the would-be hepcat who says ' rebop" when he means ' bebop," for rebop Is the mark of the 'square" (unenlightened dullard). Consider the monomial ' square'' in one group "a square guy" or "shooter" means the man is all right, he's jake. he's accepted. In another group, a man stigmatized as "square" might as well drop dead. Such are the cruel intricacies of dialects. Expressions, lytfd from any group dialect, stand a good chance of achieving immortality if they are recognized by the gr-neral populace as precise and "right" prescriptions of a given situation The particularly astute gradually become accepted as l-g:timat and sometimes receive the blessing of lexicographers, even. Pharses that don't make the grade and those who've served their brief purpse, pass into limbo. Nt-w expressions serrn especially adept when they replace a proaic and laborious phrase with one that is fast-moving and colorful. For instance, th hot-rod tribe has substituted "hang a Miocker" fcr making a U-turn. "Lay a stretch" adequately ex presses the sensation of speeding, and "peeling rubber" is exactly what you do when you screech around a curve. To be good, they must be to the point, abrupt, strong and easy to roll off the palate. Not only accuracy, but often humor and sometimes satire mark the occupational vocabularies. In the newspaper business, photographs and drawings are called "art" even though they usually aren't. Poison for liegemen to the king's English and source of utter confusion to linquists who learned their idioms from grammar texts, the pattern of word wa use is constantly in flux. From the mvnad dialects of the people, the root language draws new life end .'vnrr c color And. like folk songs delightful, wistful, earth ly, the vulgar patois of the common man often preserves more fjith.uiw, moie poetically, the elusive facts and feelings of the moment. M.W. legislation by Riden The house) arxiopr;ation bill for the interior department is so loaded down with riders that it probably will break down be fore it gets through the senate. Previously we commented on the provision to give existing contract holders a priority on power g"nerated at federal dams. Two other riders were tacked onto tha bill. One sets up tha requirement that the reclamation commis sioner, his assistant and all regional reclamation directors should b engineers with 10 years experience. This is directly aimed at "Commissioner Michael Straus. Straus has been a target for a lot of criticism and opposition, for which there seemed to be good grounds. But this Ls hardly tha way to effect his dismissal. The provision is not bad, but tha place for it is in an amendment to the present law. Another provisipn prohibits use of any funds for the Jackson Hole national monument in Wyoming. This is plain spite work. Lad by the stock-raising interests of Wyoming there has been strong opposition to the creation of the expanded Jackson Hole national monument. Failing In attempts to annul the dedication by President Roosevelt tha opponents take this means of cutting It off at the pockets. This denial of funds for administration will not turn the land over to private Interests, though with no regula tion the stockmen might be able to graze the lands at no cost to themselves. The method of legislating by riders to appropriation bill or other bills is highly objectionable. It Ls a legislative trick to put over something which usually would not stand alone. The annate should put the house bill through the screen to take out . the foreign matter which doesn't belong in an appropriation bill. Today Assistant Secretary of the Interior C. Girard Davidson will announce the policy "adopted by the department for making effective the 1937 law ordering Operation of O & CgrantJands on a sustained yield basis. Davidson will speak at a public meet ing m Eugene and will answer questions. The issue has been sharply fought ever since a hearing in January over creation of the Mohawk river sustained yield unit, with the Fischer mill st Marcola as the producer cooperative. Once the policy has been adopted agreement are expected to be worked out for other units. Moft delegates to the democraticynational convention are ap proaching that event with many misgivings. Doubtless a majority would drop Truman as nominee in a minute "If they could put together a "right combination." Justice Douglas ls favored by the Roosevelt partisans, but he would be poison to the southern anti civil rights wing. All could agree on General Eisenhower except the general. So it looks as though Truman would get the bid though the delegates will sit on their hands when they name him. The Bend Bulletin suggests that the state retirement law be changed to make" retirement a question of competency not of age. That's just where the rub comes. In public employment bosses are reluctant to sort the sheep from the goats, the ones still 'fit for service and the ones whose pace has slowed down materially. So they use the age standard, even when it hurts the employer's interest Of course if they applied the competency test rigidly some would get retired at age SO or before. It may seem strange that with the greatly increased volume of water pouring over Grand Coulee and Bonneville dams that power production is reduced. The reason is that water rises in the tailrace so there is not the amount of drop for water. The generators can take only a given amout of water at any time. The rest goes over the face) of the dam and its power is lost. Those who wondered what after the primary election will news and pictures. No Ftar Shall Aw AnmUM the papers would have to print find their answers in the flood Off 8KKCO0 HELLED n (Continued from page 1) have baffled philosophers and scientists. Early Greek philoso phers speculated on this subject, and it still intrigues those con cerned with studying the riddle of the universe. What will disturb the mayor's complainant even more is the modern theory devel oped largely by Albert Einstein that there is neither time nor space in tha sense we usually give them. Quoting from an article in the May Harper's by Lincoln Barnett: "Along with absolute space, Einstein discarded the concept of absolute time of a steady, un varying, inexorable universal time flow, streaming from the infinite past to the infinite future. . . . sense of time, like sense of color, is a form of perception. Just as there is no such thing as color without an eye to discern it, so an instant or an hour or a day s nothing without an event to mark it. And just as space is simply a possible order of material ob jects so time is simply a possible I order of events. . . . "By referring our own experi ence to a clock (or a calendar) wa make time an objective concept. Yet the time intervals provided by a clock or a calendar are by no means absolute quantities Imposed on tha entire universe by divine edict. All the clocks ever used by man have been geared to the solar system. What wa call an hour is actually a measurement In spaca an arc of 15 degrees in tha ap parent dally rotation of the celes tial sphere. And what we call a year is simply a measure of the earth's progress in its orbit around tha sun. An inhabitant of Mercury, however, would have very differ ent notions of time. For Mercury makes its trip around the sun in 88 of our days, and in that same period rotates Just once on its axis. So on Mercury a year- and a day amount to the same thing." Tha question must be resolved on a very practical basis and even then there is no universal agree ment. Most farmers prefer stand ard time (One farmer called tha mayor to r press his opposition and asked "How can I milk my cows and get to tha ball games on time?") and so do mothers of children who do not want to go to sleep with tha sun still high. But city dwellers, notoriously lata sleepers, require a clock change to get them up and to work. And since the towns pretty much set the style we're in for daylight saving time. David O'Hara In Ho tspital David O'Hara. Salem alderman from ward S and head of tha state lections bureau, was taken Tues day to Salem Memorial hospital for treatment of a stomach ail ment. Last night he was report ad resting well at the hospital, where he is expected to stay sev eral days. O'Hara, member of the council for mora than 20 years, was to have served as chairman of this year's city budget committee, which is to ponder the 1948-49 budget for the first time tonight. Airport Visitors Presented with Parking Tickets Portland floods, which brought scores of big aircraft to Salem air port Sunday and Monday also brought parking tickets to a num ber of local persons who came out to see the planes. Five Salem residents were ar rested by state police on charges of parking in a restricted area along the Turner- road near the airport. They all appeared in Mar ion county district court Tuesday and were given 15 suspended fines each. They Included Henry Arthur Lundeen, 1230 Cannon st; James Allen Fenstermacher, 1365 Cheme keta st.; Gerald John Tucker. 1520 S. Liberty st.; Earl Harry Prunk, 860 Trade st., and Leroy John Gooch, 2485 Ferry st. GRIN AND BEAR -What's tMs flub X mm f (film i I fjf! il&fc - IT" 111 Jfwk Si- i ' ; ? lytfirflllKESi ! it Grease Job MATTER President's Vaecilation on Palestine Issue Result of Political Threats By Jeaeph AIsoe WASHINGTON. June 1 It ls important to realize that for all practical purposes. Secretary of State George C w. Marshall has not been in full con- ' trol of the form-:: ation of Ameri- , can ioreign pou- e cy I or soma um. i ne r 1 1 1 1 me Droblem is the most delicate and ' dangerous single problem that has confronted this country for many v. Jwepb Aboa4 rears. If mishan-- "'- died, it is capable of bring down in ruins the whole laboriously erected structure of our foreign relations. Yet Palestine policy has lately in effect been formulated in a sort of no-man's land, some where between the Democratic National Committee and the White House. This of course represents a re turn to the state of affairs that prevailed until a few months ago. Equally, of course, it will be de nied that there has been any such return. And it is true that Secre tary Marshall and his staff are till drafting tha formal instruc tions for Senator Warren R. Aus tin at Lake Success. This, however, does not repre sent real control of policy forma tion. Specifically, Secretary Mar shall was expelled from the driv er's seat with the surprise appoint ment of Major General John S. Hilldring as state department Pal estine advisor. This appointment was announced to Marshall and Under Secretary of State Robert A. Lovett by advance dope stories in the press, which contained tha planted interpretation that tha state department was thus being superseded. Since then, on two vital steps, the advice of Secretary Marshall and his staff has once been ignored and has once not been solicited. Specifically, Secretary Marshall IT By Lichty V. ; A jTHJ DV2G I hear a beet tfce tmle planning a strike fee an t-Brtck ajT OF FACT- and Under Secretary Lovett op posed the precipitate recognition of the State of Israel. They fav ored rapid recognition. But they wanted time to notify London and other friendly and interested cap itals, and to go through the normal formalities in Palestine. The pre sident insisted upon dramatic, im mediate action (or rather the pre sident's personal advisors induced the president to act dramatically and immediately) because it was desired to placate the American Zionists and forestall the Russians. Again Secretary Marshall and his staff were not consulted be fore the president invited Dr. Chaim Weizmann to the White House. Dr. Weizmann is one of the greet men of our time, to whom any courtesy from Presi dent Truman must be an inade quate tribute. But the fact remains that the Weizmann visit was at least made to appear a major de velopment of American policy. Over this development. Secretary Marshall had no control. And this development, furthermore, came close to upsetting the crucial talks in London between Ambassador Lewis Douglas and Foreign Sec retary Ernest Bevll, which Secre tary Marshall did control. This sort of thing is all the mods astonishing because President Truman is known to feel for Sec retary Marshall something of the admiration of the lower classman for the football hero. There Is, however, an explanation. The ex planation will surely be denied even more vociferously than the state of affairs it explains; yet the facts have been learned on un doubted authority and deserve to be set down. The plain uth is that the New York Democratic leaders, Paul ritzpa trick and Ed ward J. Flynn, some weeks ago gave the president a grim choice. They asked him to choose between again reversing his Palestine pol icy, or doing without the support of the New York delegates for his renomination. President Bewed This vital development seems to have coincided with the derision of David K. Niles, White House liaison with the Zionists, to leave his post unless Palestine policy was changed. Whether there was any connection, is not known. At any rate, the president bowed to the New York leaders. And Niles, whose hand can be visibly traced in the events described above, stayed on at the White House. It is difficult to foretell how long these influences will continue to mold American Palestine policy. There may have been another shift in the unpredictable balance of power at the White House in the last day or so. There have been reasons for such a shift. Several American diplomats In leading po sitions offered their resignations as soon as they learned ox the state of affairs in Washington and ware only persuaded to stay on by the personal Intervention of Secre tary Marshall's staff. The presi dent's desk is piled high with oth er danger signals from overseas. It ls further reliably reported although this cannot obviously be confirmed with assurance that Secretary Marshall has personally warned the president that he is running the gravest possible risks. The president's political position is already bad enough, but without Marshall, he would simply cease to exist. A warning from this source cannot, therefore, be ig nored. Perhaps the president will change again. Perhaps he will per mit Marshall to support the Brit ish resolution before the Security Council, with certain agreed amendments, as Is now planned. The test here is, in effect, between Marshall and Niles. who will cer tainly urge a different course. Tha outcome remains to be seen. Choice of Evils Meanwhile, it must be said that none of the foregoing necessarily reflects, or is intended to reflect, on the wisdom or unwisdom of what has been done. The Palestine problem presents a choice, not be tween good and evil, but between evil, more evil and most evil. While Secretary Marshall and his staff were briefly in full charge of Palestine policy, they cannot be said to have achieved any tri umphant success. As to tha recent conduct of Foreign Secretary Bevin, it is indefensible. Yet while the substance of what the president has done may be defended, the method has been downright shocking. The presi dent has again shown the world the unpleasant spectacle of a di vided administration, making pol icy on a life and death issue for extraneous considerations and by palace maneuver. There can be no excuse for this. (OpyrfrH. . TTk HeraJS TrieaM lac.) Group to Back U.S. Naval Air Reserve Unit A volunteer unit of the U. S. naval air reserve was recommend ed by a group meeting at the chamber of commerce Tuesday af ternoon. In the group were a num ber of former navy aviators. The chamber of commerce was asked to name a committee to undertake organizing a local unit and obtain ing its recognition by the naval air command. Present at the informal discus sion and explaining procedures was Comdr. T. C. Durkin, training officer of the NARTU at Seattle. The city desiring a unit should re cruit a minimum of 50 officers and 100 enlisted men who would serve on strictly a volunteer basis as well as securing airport facilities. On that basis, it could request assign ment of planes for practice and instruction. At present there Is no establish ed naval aviation unit in Oregon, but there are units in Seattle and Spokane; and it is believed if the right showing were made a unit could be obtained in Oregon. Body of Salem Vet Returned From Pacific 1 The body of T.5 Harold W. Leh man, son of Mrs. Emilie Lehmann, of 1295 Leslie st., killed in action with the army on Holla ndia Oct. 9, 1944, will arrive in San Fran cisco soon aboard a U. S. army transport. Lehmann was born at White Salmon, Wash., and came to Sa lem with his mother in 1937. He was inducted into the army in February, 1943, and went over seas in January, 1944. He was 20 years of age at the time of bis death. Surviving besides his mother axe three brothers, Martin, Theo dore and Arthur Lehmann, all of White Salmon, and two sisters, Alfrieda Lehmann of White Sal mon and Mrs. Serena Danlelson of Santa Ana, Calif. The body will be sent to Salem by train for ser vices and interment. Also on tha army transport will be the body of Wilfrid John Ding man, Independence army ser geant killed on Biak island in the Pacific in June, 1944. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ding man of Independence. Awards, Scholarships Given at Salem High Farewell Assembly By Denna Carr Statesman Cimptu Cerr pondnt i The senior farewell assembly, with presentation of awards anq. scholarships, senior farewell program, and the traditional presents ton of a gift to the school by the senior class and moving tof the) juniors and sophomores into the auditorium section they will occupy nexr year, was Held Tuesday at auditorium. Twenty three graduating seniors received awards and scholarships which were presented by Princi pal E. A. Carleton. Hugh Bellin ger won the Joseph H, Albert prize for the most progress to ward the ideals of service, char acter and leadership. Sarah Back strand was awarded the Bausch and Lomb Science award for out standing work in her science course. Jeanne Hoffman received the Nelson Social Sciance cup and Ann Kligman won the Amer ican Legion Auxiliary award for placing highest in a competitive American History examination. The Nelson Memorial fund was awarded Jackie Johnson and Jim Gingrich. Alicia Cover and Bev erly Becker received the Senior Home Economics award. Senior Band and Orchestra awards went to Roger Middleton and Frieda Carlson. Mike Glenn won the Ci vics club award. Onlstandins Seniar Betty Meyers was awarded the Girls Letter club award as she was voted by club members and teachers as being the most out standing senior in the club. Elev en other GLC girls were awarded honor pins on the same basis at a club function recently. Receiv ing pins were Darlene Scharff, Delores Lehman. Jahala Keyes, Donna Wiederkehr. Shirley Dean, Shirley Rockafellow, Virginia Bowers. Pat Boyer. Jeanne Hoff man, Ann Kligman and Lorraine Eckersley. Mike Glenn won the "S" club award for excelling in boys athletic events. Virginia Car da won the Com mercial club plaque and Stanley Johnson and Dorothy Polanski were winners of the Snikpoh Dra matic Society award. Jackie John son won the Daughters of the American Revolution award for good citizenship. The Palateers club award for achievement in art work was awarded to Senior Robert Carrow. Tuition Scholarships Lowell Aplet, Clara Belle Roth, and Roger Middleton were recip ients of tuition scholarships to the University of Oregon. Marion Giese was winner of an Oregon State college scholarship. Betty Ann Johnson won the Oregon State college Home Economics scholarship and Loren Newkirk won the Oregon State college FFA scholarship. The Willamette Ro tary club scholarship was award ed to Mike Glenn; the other Wil lamette scholarship awarded wentJ to Jackie Johnson. FJdene Ayde lot received the AAUW Oregon College of Education scholarship and Barbara McNeil was winner of a Nursing scholarship to Sa cred Heart hospital, Eugene. The annual senior class fare well skit, with "The Tree of Life as its theme, was directed by Ann Kligman and reviewed the events of the class of 1948s three years in high school, took a peek into the future to predict what might be the occupations of some of the grades and presented a class will. Assisting with this production were committee members Marvin Black, Lour Williams. Donna Carr, Doreen Hannon and Yvonne Cas- selman. Stage chairmen were Ro ma Nelson and Tom Wheeler and make-up and property chairmen were Mary Thomas and Margie Coe On behalf of the senior class, Mike Glenn, class president, pre sented the school with two trophy casea to ba placed in the center hall, a pay telephone for student use, and curtains to be used for the Junior senior proms 4-H Cancels Camp Period Cancellation of this summer's first outing week at Camp Silver Creek, a period for 4-H club boys and girls, was announced Tuesday. Lack of sufficient registration was given as the reason. Those who had planned to attend are to be included in later weeks if pos sible. First use of the camp this year will be by high school boys and girls of the Willamette presbytery J of tha Presbyterian church, from June 13 to 20. The camp area is in charge of Salem YMCA throughout the sum mer, and the YM sponsors most of the several weeks of camps. Direc tor for the first week will be Gus Moore, YM associate general sec retary, who with John Gardner, boys' work secretary, will take turns during the summer. Services Here for Plane Crash Victim The body of Ted H. Smith, 21. who was killed Sunday in the crash of a plane near Joseph, Ore is to be brought here for services and burial. Arrangements are in charge of W. T. Rigdon company. Smith, who resided at Joseph, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Smith of Corvallis. His com panion in the plane, " Jean Rine hart, 18, of Joseph, was also killed. Smarm Foot Space jFos Salem's Low set Insurances Rated Building Capital City Fiotat & Ferry Streets 1Z50 in the senior high school Improvement In Cherry Crop Forecast Seen ! By LilUe L. Madsea I Farm Editor. Tba Statesman Salem's cherry crop gives promi ise of being somewhat better than! forecasts earlier in the season in dicated. R. E. Shinn. manager of we wmameiie cnerry Growers said Tuesday. ? j The crop win be spotted? which has come to be accepted as "near normal.' Mr. Shinn ; stated, pointing out that it ls the unusual year when a crop is "good the whole way around." Willamette valley cherry crops are sported at least 50 per cent of the time, he believed. f For instance, this year, Mry Shinn stated, some growers have a fairly good crop while J others near at hand have no. cherries at all. Recent surveys made of or chards indicate that the average crop will be fair. While cherries will ripen later pthis year than they have fin the past two years, they are row more nearly normal for maturity based on an average ripening period over a number of years. The past tw3 years have seen cherries ripen much earlier than has been estab lished as the normal time. Cherries are now developing rather rapid ly and will begin to reach the processors late in this month, Mr. Shinn believed Tuesday. . No spraying has yet been done in the 4.000 acres of cherries in tne Salem area, but fly traps have been placed in orchards and are now being checked daily. Growers are warned to have all their spray or dust materials in complete rea diness for the battle the moment the fly emergence is broadcast by newspapers and radio. WU Seniors Honored at S "Final Chapel J At a Willamette university sen ior farewell chapel Tuesday morn ing in Waller hall the graduating class of 1948 heard Dr. R. Ivan Lovell, head of the history de partment, keynote the farewell with the subject, "Success Is In the Choosing." During the ceremonies. In which the senior class made its tradition al march down the aisle in caps and gowns, the graduates heard President G. Herbert Smith gire a congratulatory message and Ro bert Johnson, Kodtak, Alaska, pre sident of the class, speak on the value of education. O. J. Sparrow, Salem, presented the university with a new clock to be hung in Collins hall, as a gift from the 1948 class. f Dr. Lovell in his farewell ad dress, stressed the importance of the bill of rights to the graduates of American universities and men tioned the value of the courts in the American system. ? The farewell song, "FarewelL Willamette." was sung by Reid Shel ton. Salem, accompanied by pianist Katherine Schissler, Salem. - Legion Post Uy Initiate 100! j An outdoor initiation of up to 100 new members of Capital post 9, American Legion, was set yes terday for 8 p. m. Monday, June 7, on the lawn of the post's new clubhouse at 2650 S. Commercial st. I I Officials said the post' degree team captained by Arthur John son will conduct the initiation for all members added to the post since the lost formal initiation. Approximately 100 are eligible. The ceremony will be public f In a regular post meeting fol lowing the initiation, nominations will be thrown open for post of ficers for 1948-49. Nominations will remain open until the annual election in July. 5 i 1 Expert, ReliubU K nepairinrf Call 1523 . 42 Ceert SL or Unit Transfer Co. ... I Fhons 7773 EenS I s Basis i