II I II The Statesman, Salem. Orogron. Sunday, Soplombor 18. 1849 tatesman 4 Jfo ror Stoeys Us, No Fear Shall Ate J. rtM First gtittti . March la, US1 THE STATESMAN PUBUSIfflSC COMPANY CHARI K A RPTtAGUE. Editor and Publisher .Catered at Um postofflcc at Salem. Oregeo, as see ad clui matter aader act ef wanoi atarefa S H7; Published every morning; Bnlaen office IU& CesninerdaL Slem. Oregon. Telephone t-lUL Wbat's Wrong with Congress? Under the LaFollelte-Manroney plan for re organization of congress the present session sh6uld have been concluded by July 31st. In stead it is running on with; no prospect of ad journment before the last of October. Big ap propriation bills that should have been passed before July. 1st when the fiscal year begins, are EUll in Ihe legislative works. Only stop-gap 'legislation to permit spending at the rate of the last fiscal yeur .has prevented a breakdown of important departments of government. As for the rule for xittermining the total for the bud-geto-jthin weeks that has proved unwork able and is now virtually in the discard. DiSiatiilacUon with the way congress funo. tc,s exists over the country and within the con gress itself. What ought to be done is made the subject of an article in the New ,York Times Magazine by ben. Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. Keiauver is new to the senate but he served several sessions in the house. To win the senate seat he had to brean the bacic of the old Ed Crump macmiit. Keiauver is to polite to say so in print, Out one tmng wrong with congress is his1 colleague' from Tennessee old Kenneth McKellar, stuouoin, vituperative and obstruc tive. As chairman (by virtue of ihe senioiuy rule) of the powerful committee on appropria tions, McKeliar is pietty much of a roaaolock in the senate, as well as a vindictive tyrant on appropriations mailers. To get back to Keiauver's article. He puts eiraiiu-iuiiiiiiig as uiie the heaviest burden on members oi congress. He says that few members do not spend lrorn 50 to GO per cent of their time doing chores lor individual consti ' tuents "tTur erranu-ooy work gives us too mea ger a chance to siuoy or think about the larger issues or the common welfare." .Private claims bills, personal piooitu.s dealing with citizenship, passports, etc., representing iocal business be fore adminisuative oodles all absorb much of the time of senator or representative. it is one-of the biggest obstacles to the better1 functioning of congress. - What chances axe there for improvement? Not many; congress is a law unto itself, rutted in ancients: procedure, composed of many per sons of mediocre mentality, jealous of its pre rogatives. : The "Young Turks" like Kefauver will have a hard time driving through the re forms which are necessary. Congress will con tinue to muddle along, with only minor alter ations in its old rules. Divorce Because of Allergy The case of Mrs. Joyce Holdridge, the allergic wife who won a divorce in Los Angeles, has been treated with more" levity than it deserves. She testified that although, she and her husband both loved each other she was affected with an outbreak of rash whenever she was with him. She had spent 18 months of their two-year marriage m a hospital as a result. Judge Brockman who granted her the divorce gave a very intelligent statement when he said: "Courts may be forced to recognize what medical science has discovered that such al lergies as Mrs. Holdridge complains of are a fact and not a caprice." There seems little doubt that nervous ten sions do result sometimes in skin irritations. The super-sensitivity may be localized in speci fic spots-f-women sometimes have acute irrita tions at the back of the head. Men working un der strain' may develop skin trouble which re sists ointments, lotions and other medication. Mrs. Holdridge seems to have developed an al lergy when in the presence of her husband, which obviously is brought on by some nerve reaction. Instead of making fun of the lady, she de serves sympathy, as does her recent husband. To avoid; such allergies and irritations of the skin folk5 need to learn to relax, mentally and physically. Such items as calling the roil kill a lot of time (sonu times on purpose). The house, with its long roll, kills as much as a hour just in calling the roll. He proposes electric vjating equipment which would reduce the call of the roll to a matter of a few minutes. In the matter of debate the Tennessee senator thinks the' house is too tight with its time al lowance and the senate too loose. More time is lost by committee hearings in 'quadruplicate" by senate and house committees separately before a project is authorized, then by the separate appropriation committees before money is appropriated. But he blames lack of party discipline as the real cause of the failure of congress to function better. He remarks that "Our system seems to put a premium on mugwumpery." Coalitions of republicans and democrats have often seized control, defeating legislation proposed by the party in' power. That has been true both in the Roosevelt and Truman administrations. lJarty discipline has broken down. It did under republican rule when the: "sons of the wild packass" (as Senator Moses called them) won lame (and reelection) as insurgents. It is hard to maintain party discipline when con gressmen run on their own in districts and sen ators run on their own in states. The direct primary makes the cam e ate independent, and party organization is greatly weakened. The paralyzing seniority rule is not touched on by Kefauver, but outside critics hold that Familiar Trial Orgy Hungary is the latest country to stage a trial orgy of an accused communist. Laszlo Rajk who until a few months ago was a top com munist and head of the police system is being tried on charges of plotting to overthrow the government. At his trial he admits his sins glibly and says he plotted with Americans (some of whom he names) and with Yugoslavs to assassinate Rakoski, the leading communist who runs the country and to set up a Titoist govern ment Maybe he did plot a revolution. That must be common practice in countries ruled by dicta torships. But his confessions are too pat, away. But some day the vicious system that encou rages revolution by its own denial of elemental freedom will be destroyed. It is so evil that it should fall apart of its own weakness. -Tfr I By Joseph and Stewart Alsop j WASHINGTON, Sept. 17-One significant unreported disagree ment arose in the vitally impor tant talks on Asia policy this week between" Secretaryof State Dean A c h e i o n and Foreign Secre tary Ernest Be vin. There was -- i Juerph AlMtt over, contrary to report, there was no dispute about Hong Kong. Bevin flatly told Acheson that the British mean to defend Hong Amtng if it Is" attacked, but that there is no present intention of asking for American help. I However, Bevin refused to go along with Acheson on economic policy in China. The state de partment wants the power in eN feet to cut off China's trade with the west The Britishwith their vast holdings In China, want only to control the shipment of war m a t e r ial and munitions. This disagree ment, which deeply affects Anglo - Ameri c a n policy in Asia, clearly springs from the desperate , i . l of the British. It will only end when the threat of British economic col j lapse is ended. Yet more really significant ;' than the outcome oL the Ache , son-Bevin talks is the simple fact , that a positive and vigorous Am ; ericari policy in Asia is now at ; lest .being evolved, thanks to the efforts of able Ambassador-at-"I eWrge Philip Jesup. Jessup was recently assigned by Acheson to examine the whole range of Am erican Far Eastern policy; and to come up with a series of recom mendations fon Americaniaction. ; ; .:: The work of Jessup and his staff is still in the thinking stage, and there is a wide gulf between thinking and action. But at least the thinking has been intelligent and imaginative. One project which Jessup and his staff have been considering calls for an Am erican supreme commander for the battle for Asia. Through no efforts of its own, the state department will now get a discretionary kitty of $75 mil lion under the military aid pro gram, to fight the battle. If this money is to be spent in dribs and drabs, without any coherent plan or central authority. it iwill be wasted. . It ,4s proposed instead that a man of great stature be found to spend the money where it will do the most good. He could use it to strengthen the centers of resistance to the communists in China, or to arm non-communists in southeast Asia, or to promote American interests in. such other ways as he saw fit 1 Moreover, he would control all American trade with China. And within very broad- limits he would have the authority to take whatever action seemed neces sary to promote the central Am erican objective in Asia - - a grouping of sovereign national states strong enough to with stand the Kremlin's drive for power. Obviously this I project would cut down the authority of the state department's far eastern division, which is therefore throwing cold water on the idea; Jessup himself has not finally; decided in favor of the idea, nor has Acheson. Much will depend on whether a man can be found with the ability and reputation necessary to do the job. As al ways these days, when there are difficult and vitally important jobs to be done, the advocates of the project have settled on the name of former Under Secretary of State Robert LoVett Lovett - 4 GERMAN Sri---. ' -"w'. 9. i"' l-: 1'Ps STEEL FOR BRITAIN Girders of a, bombed bridge over the Spree, parchssed by Eagland, are cut into lengths for shipment to farmers la the Germaa western tone. Literary Guidepost MIDNIGHT BOY. By George Agoew Chamberlain (Bobbs Merrill; $2.75) A midnight boy, should it be that you haven't heard, is a lad who picks the strokes of 12 for birth,! thereby achieving a life time pf unbeatable fine fortune. Mark i Perry, the protagonist of Mr. Chamberlain's 29th novel, appears at the age of 14 on page 14; and for a yard and a half and several hundred pages thereafter models for proof of the legend. Set: down in the middle of a desolate section of New Jersey known as The Pines, young Mark is surrounded by a strange cast indeed including: Fortune's Hope Jones, colored mammy of clas sic cloth, filled with canniness, determination, faithfulness and mystic confusions; Rusty Ballard, romantic young lawyer betrayed by war into progressing alcohol ism; Adele Welsh, the cause of Ballard's dismay; a long-legged DO r u u u y u ft J n n i n J Carson Heads State Bar The Oregon State Bar chose an able lawyer and i fine gentleman as its president at the annual convention at Gearhart, allace P. Car son of Salem. --'He comes of aanjily of lawyers, his father John Carson havmbeen a leading attorney in Salem. His two brothers, John and Allan practice law here now and his sis ter, Mrs, Genevieve Barsch is an assistant at torney general. Wallace will give conscientious and intelligent service as head of the organized legal profession bf the state. (Continued from page one) to pull leather. Members who had not known of the chair man's directive before It was sent : out protested so vigorously that i the chairman sent a follow-up communication to the college presidents telling them the committee had no desire to censor textbooks and interfere with: academic freedom In: defying the committee the college presidents will find most editors supporting them. Free dom of speech and of the press is a constitutional right but it must be defended against tyrants, in cluding those who operate in the name of patriotism. female adolescent with an irrita ting array of manners and such aliases as Carlotta, Toy and Carl; and final principal. Buck, a collie out of Albert Payson Terhune. Supporting are one colored handyman, various locals who are apt never to have visited nearby Atlantic City or Philadel phia, sundry out-of-season deer slayers and one or two corpses. Analyzing the ingredients after the final lyric duet by that quick ly growing team of Mark-Carllo-ta the elements of the story be come a bewildering melange. There's mystery of a long-abandoned mansion, unburied dead and a hunt for Mark's paternity; narrative of conventional "grow ing boy" pattern; backwoods feuding; and the you-know-what -happens-finally tribulations of Rusty and Adele. Some sub si diary romantic comedy duties are put up to For tune's Hope, who is the mystery key for the main theme, and also Is an expert at conning a dusky provincial out of wagon, mule, wages and bachelorhood. The story goes off in so manv directions of jolly predestination that none of the themes gets much of chance to dominate. So it's hard to say Just what tvpe audience will like it most. The best catalogue might be the no tation that "Midnight Bov" was previously serialized in a nation al weekly. Hollywood on Parade 5ai Fall Op drugs. Capital tionery, Capital furniture. Cfstrom's, Sola Acres florist. Fields' dress shop,, Fashlonette. Greenbaum's, Gevurtz furniture. Good Housekeeping.'. Gay's cand ies. Grand theatre. Hartnvan's jewelers, Holland bakery, How ard Maple sporting goods. Hots Brothers appliances. Haniger's dress shop. Heider's radio. Ham ilton furniture, Howard corsets. Jackson jewelers. Jewel Box, Jayson's. Johnson's ready-to-wear. Jack and Jill's. Jary florist. JJ; clothier, Judson's, Kay's apparel. em stores Register for ening (Story also on page 1) The array of Salem stores which will participate Tuesday night in the Fall Opening exhibits and will have numbers in the treasure hunt includes the following, reg istered J through Saturday: AH en hardware, Alex Jones. Alexander's jewelers, Anita shops, Acklin bootery, Arbuckle's, An derson ' autos. Brown jewelers. BishoD's. Burke's cameras. Bus- ick's grocery. Bramble hardware. Mar's lunch. Moore's bicycle and i few scattered specimens In South Breifhaupt's florist, .'Cooke's sta- sporting goods. Me tr op olitan America. Montgomery Ward, Marion mot ors. Kohlgren's restaurant. Olson's florist.,. Otto J. Wilson autos. Price's Penney 's. Quisenberry's pharmacy, Roberts Bros, Red Cross pharmacy, Rohland's. Smart shop. Sears-Roebuck. SalenThsjd ware, Salem Home furniture, S&N clothiers. Stevens jewelers, Sally's, Schlesinger's, Stiffs fur niture. Salem lighting appliance, Stan Baker motors, Shrock jnot ors. Toy and Hobby shop. Spa res taurant. Valley motors. Vince's electric. Williams card shop. croinier juasons. rj apparei.. Woohvorth s. Woodry's furniture Kailles dress shop Karmd Kom Western Aut0 j Win; shop. Les Newmans men s store.' ntnrw v..,.,.. .ZX.i" Lambert's antiques. Little French shoe Leon's shoes. j McKay's autos. Midret market! The scarlet Ibis, one cf the most Modeme. Margaret's shop. Mari- spectacular birds in the estern lyn's shoe, Man's shop. Miller's Hemisphere, have jheen reduced department store. Moms optical, from once extensive rlocKs to a Livesty Building if-uuuirini Telephone 4-2223 CHRISTMAS IS COMING 1 1 WHY NOT SELECT EARLY THIS YEAR STERLING Gochcrm Wallace Smith x Towle Alvin Whitincj International Heirloom Lunt Reed Barton Danish Imported DIAMONDS RESET WHILE TOU WAIT ... .people know that even the most precious stone is "lost as an article of per sonal adornment without a mounting that compliments and displays it with equal taste and brilliance. VOU ARE INVITED TO SEE OUR FINE CHINA Dinnerware Figurines Wedgewood Lenox Koyal Donltoa 1 Sttrtm i r tm,t r i (Ml) "7U :i )jwmm Pf 1 Ik Jewelers ySilTeramitha State at Liberty f I Vigorous Asia Policy Finally Evolving may be sounded out by Jessup himself when Jessup goes to New York for the United Nations meetings. At any rate, whether or not it comes to anything in the end, it is something new under the sun to find beld and positive plans for action in Asia emerging from the state department. Jessup and his staff have also come up with another important idea a major policy statement by President Truman. Acheson and Truman have been discussing this matter, and as a result the statement may soon be made. What is proposed is a brief, simple statement, containing three major points. First, the United States strongly favors genuinely independent regimes in Asia. Second, the United States will strongly oppose com munist regimes, since these are not genuinely independent, but a new form of imperialism.. Third, the United States is determined to do everything possible to help raise the living standards of the Asian people. The real purpose of the pro posed statement is simply to re assure the Asian leaders that the United States has no intention of abandoning Asia, as roost As ians now believe. If it accom plishes this purpose, the sta ten ment will have a deeply impor tant psychological effect. All this means real progress, even though the inertia of the state department where Asia is concerned may defeat Jessup efforts in the end. As the die agreement on China suggests, any American effort will alio be de feated If the British crisis is al lowed to lead to British For Asia can only be saved if 1 United States and Britain in close partnership, and a eriess partner is a useless ner. Even so, there are sighs that the long paralysis of American policy in Asia may an end, and that at thing to be thank (Copyright m. ,N Tribune govecnm collaDsey wore pow- 'part- becomu least fur for. ew tot Herald 4ac ...... , tg to is some- The incident opens up the whole field of the independence of colleges and universities from government control or dictation. It may be undermined in ways that: appear innocent. The blunt and) offensive demand for a list of textbooks is so obviously an invasion of academic freedoms thaj! it is easily resisted. But university freedom is in danger from government subsidy and from government-sponsored re search. Once 'let the government sub sidize the colleges and universi ties: and the way is open for political interference with their operations. Better for them to be poor but free than rich and de pendent. This does not apply so much to publicly supported In stitutions like state universities and land grant colleges which receive federal grants, because they are admittedly children of government. It does apply to private institutions and those supported . by religious bodies. They serve the country best if they, are kept completely free of government assistance. it is in the field oi govern ment-sponsored research that new dangers arise. . The govern ment is subsidizing scientific ex perimentation, much of Ms sec ret.! That is, the government wants to keep the nature of the study and the findings secret. It begins then with loyalty checks of professors and work ers and puts theX mark on those luspected of Scientists in peacetime and resent secrecy. They know that knowledge has expanded7 only as discoveries are made public property. In wartime they will work for the t; and in peacetime j will work in government tories and abide by the of secrecy. But they do noti think it is healthy to draw iron curtains around the labo- jpratories of educational institu tions. . . Collegiate and public protest stopped, the witchhunt among college textbooks. There should be similar protest against in fringements of full academic , freedom in research, even if that means to kick out of 'colleges government-financed special research. resent th coloration. loyalty tests By Gene Hands er HOLLYWOOD Claire Trevor, who was nominated for an Os car 12 years ago and won one this year, says: "I hate myself on the screen." She saw the first day's rushes of "Borderline, the picture she's now making, -and was ill for two days. Does she like her looks? "Heavens. NO! It's a b lem making me look as good as ! i ao. Her self - dissatisfaction goes beyond looks to action. "You think you're doing something in the scene. Then you see the rush es and you think. That isn't what 1 meant to do. " . : ft. irevor, wno nas cur golden hair and a sensuous, j)Hi 5-oow mouin, nas also aryxn ienoruy complex. "Which is just lor an actress, sne adds, a little bitterly. She's sWlr get ting over .it, though. How? "Well, you keep talking to yourself. You look back at sev eral mistakes you've made. You say to yourself, Anybody could j maxe those. A lot have made worse mistakes. I did fairly well with the equipment I have." Claire forces herself to go to her rushes; "I still suffer," she says, "though yesterday's looked 'pretty dood. Of course, I never look the way I'd like to - - like Joary Fontaine, for instance. I like tall, thin people. I look short and fat most of the time." The self -critical Miss Trevor, a ; movie actress 16 years, says she! learns something new about act- ' ing on every picture. "You think i you know the fundamentals, buti you're net doing them all." Her ' husband. Milton Bren, co-produ- j cer oi ner present picture, told her recently: "In moving or re acting, you do everything too quickly. In The Velvet Touch you had a scene with Roz Rus sell where you turned so fast the audience couldn't even see you. It was just a whirl. Notice how Irene Dunne and Joan Crawford take their time. Also, confesses Claire: "I've never bothered to notice where the camera was. I was afraid of sacrificing naturalness for a good camera angle. But you can't ig nore the audience. Bob Montgomery, directing her in a Broadway play a few seas ons back, reminded her to con centrate more on what others - -and she herself -- were saying. Claire was nominated for an Academy award for. "Dead End" 12 years ago. Her recent Oscar was for her portrayal of the drunken moll in "Key Largo." It fired her with the desire to win another. People now expect her to give an Academy-award per formance every time. Claire says slyly. "I wilL- Splendid Student . . . H we mean that he It sound asleep by 10 P.M. with his homework behind him, complete, neat and weM presented ready for tomorrow morning's classes. Parents, as well as teachers, play a major role In this respect, h is their responsibility to too that the student Is supplied with materials to make this work not chore, but a worth while, even pleasant, operation. Parents, teachers and students will find that Cooke's stock and sell a wide range off ejvaDry school supplies. P. S. Cooke is headquarters for Parker and Shoaffer Pens, f This FaB, in years past, they w look to I i f UJ'i rJ -'.;. i If