! i . I'l i' . . . t . ji1 '.. 4 4Th Stcrteamcm. SoLwn, Orecjon. Thnraday. June frX 1948 TOOti "tfo Favor Sxoay Jt, No Fear Shall AwfT Frees first Statessaaa. March 1. IMI THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHART.cs a SPRAGUE. Editor and Publisher Catered at tba postofflce at Salem. Oregon, as sccec class matter amder act ef ceagress March S. 1S7I. fublUhed every eaocnlng. Easiness afflca MS 8. CesninercUt Salem. Oreren. Telephone t-2441 Skeletons Will Out The Klamath Indians don't want Dr. L. S. Crmman, University of Oregon anthropologist, poking around their burial grounds. He says he would respect any tribal bans and even take ah Indian guide along on his expeditions. But for the third time in the past two months the braves have refused to let him pursue his studies on Indian reservation lands this summer. Dr. Cress man has already done much good work, in un earthing the history ofOregon's early inhabit ants, but now he will have to confine his inves tigations to deeded land within the reservation where the chiefs have no jurisdiction. 1 This is not the first time the progress of sci ence and the spread of knowledge has been . postponed by people who, literally or figurative ly. want to leave their pet skeletons hidden in the closet. There have always been those who willfully suppress facts or distort the truth in order to protect some sacred cow. Their hope is that time changes all things if not the facts, then the perspective in which the facts will be considered. Sometimes it is hundreds of years before all the facts about an individual or institution or event become known. Occasionally, the perspec tive gained by the delay will help to illumine hiitory, and sometimes it serves to smudge the picture because the relative aspects have become lost Probably the older an event is, the less like ly it is that its exact nature can be determined. And that applies equally to the human artifacts; that disintegrate through the effects of nature or to human ideas that become modified by the attitudes of the investigators. Thus it will be a long time, probably, before the facts about current history are all face up on the table. We are just beginning to learn about past generations; every once in a while some historian discovers a new angle that throws additional light on our ancestry, and then pre vious knowledge becomes obsolete. Right now in New Mexico, Chicago anthro pologists, are preparing their'ISth exploration to "find traces of early man among the yucca and crumbling ruins of the Indian country. They hope to trace the migration of the Indian from Asia to North America. They are studying peo ple who lived over 3.000 years ago. Theirs is a study which eventually will be combined with whatever information men like Dr. Cressman find in the northwest and some day the wan derings of those Asiatics-turned-Americans will be revealed. ' The same will happen when our western civ ilization is dust and ashes. Dead men tell franker tales than live men who hate trutfh and thrive on darkness. When our dayin the sun is over the information we have kept secret throughout our' lifetime will come to light and ahow our descendants what kind of people we are. Anti'Segregation Laws Those who argue that anti-segregation laws are premature because the public is not mature enough to comply with them will cite the St. Louis race riot Tuesday and the admission of Ada -Lois Fisher to the University of Oklahoma law school Monday as cases in point. They will Insist that segregation laws are as much for the protection of ! the colored minority as for the whites. " V i An order to let negroes, and whites swim to gether in St. Louis city parks led to violeiice when white boys ganged up on colored young- Independence of lndofcnia Vital By Stewart Alsap SAIGON. Indo-China, June 22 The French cannot reconquer this country. Trench colonial power cannot be restored here, not with all the jet pUnes in the world. The . French know it Therefore, what the French now plan here is imply a hold ing ope ration, an attempt to but lime. s;.... j ,a t. - For the west, hfewt"ri the French holding operation have an obvious value. It will postpone the chain reaction , which the loss of Indo-China to the 'communist, following on the heels of the Ion of China, wiHiId almost certainly produce throughout southeast Asia. But pitstfxmetnent is not enough. 1 ne r rencn plan 10 create what they call a 'redoubt," a center , of military power, across the eastern coastal rout- of infil tration by the Chinese commune ,ms. 10 this end, they mean; to root out Ho Chi-minh's guer rillas from a quadrilateral area bounded by Langjon, Moncay, Hanoi and Haiphong. 'This re doubt Will not seal th Tnrin- Chinese borders. In the moun tainous thick jungle of the in terior, that is impossible. But, by cutting off the coastal route, the redoubt will confine contact across the borders to jungle trails. It will thus .be difficult for the Chinese communists to deliver any decisive aid to their . Indo-Chinese comrades. - The ultimate purpose of this holding operation is to allow time for the organization of an independent Viet Nam govern . ment and army under the titu lar and possibly temporal lead efshlp of the former emperor. Bao Dal. This government and army will then have the task of doing what the Trench can not do reducing Ho Chi Minh's following to a hard txn munist core and establishing a . truly independent Indo-Ouna. , There are those here who be lieve this French elan is nor- iters leaving the pool and beat them with ball bats and sticks. As a result, the mayor decreed a' return to separate pools for whites and ne groes. Court decisions ordered university officials to admit Mrs. Fisher to traditionally all-white classrooms after her three-year-long legal bat tle. The young colored woman has been enrolled but segregation is still practiced: she is separat ed from her classmates by a railing especially built around her, she has to eat in a special sec tion of the cafeteria, study in a segregated nook in the library and use separate washrooms. Both the riot at the swimming pool and the ridiculous antics of Oklahoma university offi cials, (there's no fundamental difference be tween the two incidents) illustrate that emotions cannot be legislated. Laws alone will not make people tolerant, but they can force people to refrain from expressing their intolerance and thereby help to create an atmosphere in which education for democratic behavior can gradual ly advance. Laws, don't make people honest, either, but they discourage flagrant practice of dishonesty. Chances are that if the St. Louis pools were patrolled by law enforcement officers to quell any disturbance, either the whites would stop swimming or they would get used to sharing accommodations with the colored people.' The same is true in the southern universities. White students and faculty will probably get used to having Mrs,' Fisher around. They may even get to like her as a person and forget her skin. And then the guard rails and, other insults will seem as juvenile as they are unjust. Costly Junior A junior high school at Richland, Wash., built for children of workers on the atom bomb pro ject, cost $3,900,000. which exceeded the esti mate by $2,000,000. That's a terrific cost for a Junior high in a city no larger than Richland. But it is a sample of government extravagance all along the line. We had plenty of similar ex amples in war construction. They could be ex cused on the ground of speed. That doesn't Jus tify the cost at Richland. It is a mistake;-though, to put all the blame on the chairman 0 the AEC, LilienthaL With appropriations running to hundreds of millions he couldn't supervise items like a junior high school. But the commission does need stricter budget control; and as a result of this inquiry probably will get it. The prevailing temptation In federal government circle k to spend and spend, and it will take some one -with Cal XJool Idge's sense of thrift to change the attitude. Ypn've "heard of persons refusing to buy $3 bills for $4.88. There teem to be people willing to paj' $44 an ounce for gold dust worth only $33 at the mint. They are gambling that the price of gold will be increased; or that is a gen eral debacle their gold will have Teal -value in a welter of paper currency. It's legal to own raw gold m the -form of dust or nuggets or gold in the form of jewelry or dental fillings; but not gold coinage or gold bars. There may still be .gold bricks for suckers. ; Seaside held a dance Sunday in honor of Jupiter Pluvius, hailing him as lord of the rain which keeps Oregon green. Perhaps that was what woke up the old boy and got him out with his watering can. . sense. Bao Dal Is a rather pa thetic .French stooge, so the ar gument runs. He can never at tract the essential nationalist support. The French army and colonial services are determined to sabotage an independent Viet Nam government in any case. For these reasons It is said that the last and only hope, here as in China, is an attempt to pro mote the apostasy of the com munist leadership. (This argu ment is now being presented to the state department, as the same argument was ; made about China. H , It is true that the same con ditions for: communist indepen dence exist here aa in China. It ilt also true that . Ho Chi-Minh flatly told an American diplo mat some time; ago, that be had lost his faith in communism and was no longer -a member of the . party. This is very, very far for a national communist leader to go. But the signs are that Ho Chi-minh's. nonconununisnt ;is about as real as the Chinese communists' alleged gentle agrarianism. i f For it is known that Ho has ' been regularly dispatching emis saries to Moscow (through Paris, interestingly, not China). In the meantime. Ho's radio (which at first neverrmentioned the word communism) now spouts the straight Kremlin line. We can not take the risk of falling twice into the same silly trap. The plain fact is that, after what has happened in China, the west simDly cannot ? afford any risk at all of losing Indo-China. This country is like a great mus cular - finger crooked around Siam and probing into the heart of southeast Asia. Its loss will be the first stage of catastrophe. What can the United States, as leader of the west, -do? Before coming to the Orient, this reporter suspected that the new post-war Asiatic national ism was largely a surface phe nomenon, articulated by a hand ful of Intellectuals. ; It is noth ing of the sort. It is a deep and universal I force. Already , we have been maneuvered into the position of seeming to be the enemies of Asiatic nationalism, while Moscow masquerades as Its champion. If this process is m i in' : lliiatcsman High allowed to continue indefinitely, .in the unanimous opinion of the best observers in the Orient we aha 11 aurely lose Asia. We must halt the process. Thus what we cannot do Is 'obvious. An American policy which supports, or seems to sup port the moribund remnants of French colonialism in Asia would be sheer folly. An American arms program in aid of a French colonial army in a war which that army can never really win would be absolutely fatal to American interests throughout Asia. ) JE,wr2'VJU5 Nam experiment here with en ergy and determination. We can publicly insist so to speak, on the reality of Viet Nam's inde pendence which will certain ly deeply irritate a good many of the French. To this end. we should as soon as practicable offer gen erous American diplomatic eco nomic and military aid to the Independent Viet Nam govern ment and army which the French are now officially promoting. The real weakness of Viet Nam does not lie in the fact that Viet Nam's ruler, Bao Dai. was a playboy in his youth. It lies in the universal conviction that Bao Dai is the puppet of French colonialism, and thus as clearly doomed as French colonialism, while Ho Chi-Minh rides the ware of the future. If the west is to have even a fighting chance in Indo-China, this conviction must be changed, and only a determined Ameri can policy can change it ; Under any circumstances, there is in truth no more than a fighting chance here. But a fighting chance is better than no chance at alL And there is still one chance a Viet Nam government which ewes alleg iance to no great power, not France, nor the Soviet Union, nor the United States. The full weight of American strength now be brought to bear to promote and support such a government iCoprrixM. 1MB. Kew York Herald Tribune Inc. l But Weddings Certainly Are Worth It, Hank By Henry McLesnore DAYTpNA BEACH, Fla June 22 It's a horrible thing to ad mit, I'm sure, but when I get a wedding inv.tatior my first re action is not one of happiness. Neither is my second ruc tion, for that matter. This is what goes on in my mind, if you want the truth: "Oh, good ness, another present. Con found it, does n't anyone stay single any more? Is a man J NcUmn suposed to go broke buying pres ents for kids he hasn't seen since they were 13 years old?" ' I always open the invitation hoping that it is from parents who are not too close acquain tances, so that I can get some thing cheap. But what's cheap any more? Nothing. And you' have that on the word of a man who is a wedding-present-bargain - hunt ing fool. No shop is too obscure for me to scour it, no fire sale too smoky for me to range its counters. There was a time when a man could send a young couple a toaster or a percolator, without going into debt But no more. Have you seen the toasters of today? Why, they have more chromium on themQhan an eight-cylinder car, a dash panel like a B-36, require a captain, co-pilot, navigator, and chief en gineer to operate them, and cost just a little less than a jade neck lace.. The average young bride doesn't have sufficient engineer ing skill to operate the modern toaster which, when the proper levers are pushed, throws the toast in the air, butters it while on high, and brings it to a per fect three-point landing on the plate. For the past 15 years I have been shopping for two things. One is that rubber stamps the post office uses which says "Re turned - Insufficient Address.' M I had that little fellow I wouldn't have to buy a present. The moment I laid eyes on one of those square envelopes with : a wedding invitation in it, I would pop it with that stamp : and drop it back in the mail box. Unsportsmanlike to be sure, but what a great little money-saving device. But aa -much aa I hang around post offices, looking at pictures of other criminals and reading post 'cards over jwoplea ahauld n, X .still haven't been abas to get hold of one of those stamps. The other thing that I long for is another kind of stamp one that says "Sterling.-, Think how much that would save on wed ding presents. A man could buy any old kind of nlated dish or bowl, turn ft upside down and whack "Sterling" on it, and end it with perfect assurance that it would be welcomed. By the time the dish or bowl started turning green the chances are that the bride and groom would have forgotten who sent it to them, or would blame them selves tar not knowing how to take care of a precious silver object. "Of course, the simplest answer to the wedding present problem would be for postmen to go on strike each year on the first of June and continue to strike until July. Just hand up their suits and refuse to delive - single letter. Why do so many people get married in June, anyway? What's wrong with October when the leaves are turning? Or February when the baseball camps are in full swing? Or No vember when pumpkins are at their height? Of course, I was married in June myself, but that was differ ent To this day, many people still talk of what a lovely June groom I made. (MeNaiKht SmdicaU. Inc.) GRIN AND BEAR IT 1 think these leetares aa warld affairs are trE tf4. aw s cfceam sa a THATS WHERE THE TAIL CORN GROWS! Ms?- The Why of the wlB k htMckt t tk icaeraf UcV.wltala a few weeks. It jam have eaestis-as yaa waat aaswerec. writ tm Um aaspltal prefrtat a 11 11 TMT f. Hi C ,mr rpten 2-3SS1. n ymm hmw-mmm rta 1 ait ft tty tat gettlac kaspttal mitlM tea the ptwfnu ttfln ( jmmt esrrlae.) Here's taaajr's aaestiee: QUESTION: If you construct a new build ing with capacity of 200 beds what will become of the present Salem General Hospital build ing? .ANSWER: The present building is of A grade construction material, fire proofed and should stand for centuries. It Is not large enough nor adapted to proper segrega tion of patients as for time sav ing service so necessary in a gen eral hospital serving acutely 111 patients. Literary By W. G. lagers THE SPECTACULAR SAN FRANCISCANS, by Julia Cooley Altrocchi (Dutton; $4.50) The first Spanish ship touched San Francisco in 1775, the first settlement was attempted the next year, the first English ar rived in 1792, the Russians in 1806, the French in 1827, and the Yankees came overland in the course of the years. Early names were such international surprises as Josefa Livermore, Antonio Richardson and Timoteo Murphy. But Mrs. Altrocchi :really gets interested only with the 'first concerts, theaters, and balls, and the founding of the first fortunes, a century ago. San Franciscans, I gather, practically always wear striped pants, diamonds and wraps plastered with orchids. They love a party, and have en tertained a lord, a princess, a grand duchess, and Mine. Chiang Kai-shek, for whom the elaborate and elegant welcome "made a mends, says the author, "for 'that Chinese Exclusion act which at evidently regarded as a kind of faux pas. They also gave warm receptions of Lola Monte z, Em erson, Patti, Paderewski and Calve, and were duped by a bo gus baronet By Lichty ...it gives mm mm fcxatVotte MmmmmmKmmmt &ex A. D VVVv WV5 p low racw: Hospital Drive The building Is quite usable for special types of patients and can be arranged for that purpose. The Oregon State Board of Health is urging thisaerrice and says the Salem area needs S02 beds for special patients that should not be taken to general hospitals. The fact that this building would be available for special patients should add fav orably to Salem leqaeat 'for Federal Aid in the construction of 'the new general hospital building. Giaidspost The i book is about murders in the best circles, duels among the right people, wecMings of the cream of the cream to cream of the cream, banquets for and by the 400: and about funerals, men US, mansions, crinolines, wasp waists, bloomers, cock fighting, cotillions, right down to Elsa Maxwell shindigs and a wedding at which "I love you" was sky written above the merry makers. And it is about opera, symphony, museums and art . . . one painting is identified as a "Holly Fam ily" by "Reuben" but whether that means 'Rubens r or some hick I don't know. This is not meant to be all df San Francisco, of course. This is just frills and furbelows, frost ing and froth. This is not about the 1906 earthquake but its so cial .background; not about 'the organization of the United Na tions but about what secretaries entertained what envoys extra ordinary with what wines and foods at what prices in whose ;paiaees. Thts is indeed glorified 31ue lBeok?a taort of endless so ciety column. It "has a tremen dous amount of information which, perhaps will matter more to you than it does to me. Your Health As long ago as 1880, physicians were familiar with a disease known as -sprue, then thought to affect xmly-people living in tropic countries. Today, we realize that this disorder is much more fre quent in temperate climates than -was formerly believed. When it occurs in babies, as it often does, it is known -aa Celiac disease. Diarrhea, with the presence of a great deal of digested fat in the bowel movements, is one of the first symptoms of sprue. In ad dition, there is anemia or lessen ing of the amount of coloring in the blood, inflammation of the mouth and tongue, and swelling of the tissues, particularly the legs. Later on there may be some damage to the spinal cord, to gether with symptoms indicating a deficiency of vitamins A. D, and K, and those of the B-com-plex. Naturally, loss of weight and strength is marked. Apparently, in its beginning, sprue is the result of a distur bance in the body's ability to ab sorb and use fat and the essen tial products which come from its digestion. There also appears to be a faulty absorption of the factor which prevents pernicious anemia. This, together with the resulting: vitamin deficiencies, accounts for most of the symp toms seen in sprue. Liver extract has been found curative in sprue; because it con tains the factor which is neces sary for the absorption and Hollywood un parade By Gene Handsaker HOLLYWOOD Dave Hersh is a plump, affable, spaghetti-loving man born 45 years ago on a farm in Hungary. With a beret he'd look like a cartoonist's con ception of a Hollywood producer, which he is. Dave believes every man should have a hobby. One day 13 years ago Dave de cided to make himself a scrap book. He took a stack of heavy paper, covered it with two wood en boards, punched holes and bound the book together with shoelaces. On the front he let tered in ink, "Interesting Events In My Life." "I kept the photos, write-ups, invitations to parties I attended, telegrams, letters from friends," Dave says. Not long afterward, Dave's brother became the father of a boy. Dave decided that a nice present would be a baby book made by himself. First thing Dave knew, he was giving away books right and left. "Somebody got married, or had a baby or a birthday. Always a question, what do you give 'em? Gradu ation! Everybody gives fountain pens. I nave scrapbooks about 25 a year for the last 15 years." Dave's work bench and power tools occupy one section of his three-car garage. Then came the British 75 per cent tax on Hollywood movies. Hollywood stopped exporting its pictures to England. Dave, who had had a production hand in "A Walk In The Sun", Copacabana", and ' other films, had just pro duced "Northwest Stampede". He says, "My associates and I had $100,000 invested in the pic ture. When the tax came along, we decided it would be hard to make money in pictures. I said to myself, 'Dave, it's time to get 'into something else.' " His scrapbook-making hobby became his business, with 20 em ployes. In 14 months, it has made enough money to finance his next movie, "Tavern in the Town," planned for fall produc tion now that foreign restrictions have eased. Dave found himself bucking Written by Dr. Herat! N. Basdensen. M.D. of the fatty substances, as well as the substances which prevent pernicious anemia, and other factors which we suspect may be missing in cases of sprue. Cases of pernicious anemia are , benefited by what is known as folic acid, a part of the vitamin B -complex. Folis acid also has a helpful effect on some of the symptoms of sprue, but it is not the factor which regulates fat absorption. Sprue has also been treated by various types of diet such as the fruit milk, and meat diets. These give good results because they contain relatively large amounts of th ; anti-sprue factor, and be cause they stop fermentation and improve the action of the bowel, thus aiding in better ab sorption of the anti-sprue factor. In any eient a great deal has been learned about sprue, and, with the proper treatment it can be rapidly overcome. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS J. L.: What is the cause of itching piles? Answer: The exact cause of piles or hemorrhoids, which are enlarged or dilated veins fas the 'lower part of the rectum, is not known. Itching usually occurs because of some infection, often due to a parasite, such aa ringworm. (Continued from page 1) taken to have the railroad mov ed to a point near the east curb line of 12th street and a new curb constructed nine feet wes terly from the center of the re aligned railroad track, which would isolate the railroad from the highway. The foregoing treatment would rninimixe traf fic complications and permit a workable signal installation at 12th and State streets City Manager Franzen worked farther on this idea. He would separate the railroad from the street by barriers parallel to the tracks, but would leave an access lane along the east side of - the street He would widen the roadway oh the west by taking off several feet from the abutting property. He would make this part of an express way north and south through the city, though initially he would have it end at Mill street until funds were in sight for its extension. Signals then could be install ed at the 12th street crossings to control motor and pedestrian traffic, lights going red when trains are approaching. This of course; doesn't provide grade separation. and .long trains would continue to hold up traffic desiring to cross the tracks. Elevating the railroad is not desirable; no one is willing to pay for putting the railroad underground. The remaining al ternatives are overhead cross ings or underpasses for the streets. The latter will be stu died by the city and the long range planning commission with the railroad engineers saying what might be done in raising the track a foot or two to lessen the excavation required": No one should get excited over this. There's no money for it either. But as -a long-range proposition it deserves study. For one thing the underpasses could be done one street at a time. If an express highway is built to parallel the track the underpass would separate north south motor traffic from east west. Objectionable to owners of abutting property would be the long slopes to get under 12th street. Worrying shouldn't start yet for a number of years, how ever. Admittedly this is a tough traffic problem but Salem ; shouldn't quit seeking its solu tion merely because a simple one isn't in sight. Belter English By D. C. Willlama 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "There is a difference in the front room and' the rear room." 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of , "passe"? 3. Which orie of these words is misspelled? Ratio, embrio, folio. 4. What does the word "cruci ble" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with 11 that means "uneducated"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "There is a difference between the front room and the rear room." 2. Pronounce pa-sa, first a as in ah, second a as in say, accent second syllable. 3. Embryo. 4. A; severe trial or test. "It was the crucible of af fliction." 5. Illiterate. baby-book companies in business 75 years. He offered showman ship. The baby's photo on the Iwilr'c atnrriv frnnt malm it a j - - - combination photo frame and al bum. Instead of shoelaces, there are fancy brass hinges. He also a makes bride's books and plans " graduation, guest, and birthday- memory books. The new business enables Dave to continue picture- making as a hobby. mm on $29.75 The fsasaes Ilsrfcl crafts kip ana' styling is iacerse rataa la these very aae twJl 1 nwr 4J tfaa'swatarpreef waCck,ynJrl aaa cwresira ease ... Ddkafly styke! 1W QJ Stevens & Son laahaiekaBeaea ; aTlaVIaaVa VWftWv eMi V VVewweagea Uvesley Wd3., 390 State Easily Arranges! lit f IIP' -trim