The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 06, 1950, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 The- Statmon, Salem, Oregon, Monday, February 6, 19S0
"No Favor Swayi V$, No Tm Skail Awt"
From First Statesman. March ZS, 151
THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
CHAP'-KR A SPBAGUE. Editor and Publisher
Catered at tbt postoffice at Salem. Oregon, aa aeceod claaa matter tnder act of eoiurresa March S, 1171.
Published every morning. Business office 2 IS &. Commercial. Salem. Oregon. Telephone 1-Z41L
Jhc Men in the Mines
If the nation's coal miners do not go down in
to the pits' today, President Truman will invoke
the Taft-Hartley act. If there is any question
whether the miners will "rebel" against any
strike order from John L. Lewis and independ
ently go back to work, the answer is almost cer
tainly negative.
J! or xne miners recognize jlwis as nw yk
gonification of a union that means more to many
of. them than life itself. That is the conclusion
drawn by A. 1L Raskin, who has covered labor
for the New York Times for 20 years.
"The outlook of, these men is as black as the
coal they dig," he finds. Their thinking is domi
nated by memories of the days when the com
panies ownea every wm6 iaico,
the miners themselves and "exercised their
ownership with brutal disregard for human val
ues." The miners don't talk of their $75 to $100-a-week
paychecks (the. ones they get when
they're working); they still talk of the peanuts
they used to get when they worked from dawn
to midnight. j " .
In some areas the companies have sold com
pany houses to the miners, have built play
grounds for the kids, planted trees on the bare
hillsides, and adopted modern industrial prac
tices which have reduced mining accidents 50
per cent! They've -even closed up the old com
pany jails, a
But the miners credit their union, not the
companies, for these reforms "changes (which)
have not dulled the memories or lessened the
hatreds.'' They are convinced that without John.
LI Lewis "they would soon again find themselves
pulverised under the fist of company rule." And
wherilt is pointed out to them that they now live
under the fist of union rule, they just laugh.
The long strikes impose a hardship on the
workers. Their credit in stores is cut off and
strike benefits do not compensate for wages lost.
But the miners evidently would rather risk these
known inconveniences in order to keep their
fenien strong than.risk strengthening the hands
of the companies by weakening Lewis. -
That's how it is. It is the price the whole coun
try has to pay for old injustices of the feudal
mine owners. It will take a long time to heal the
wounds which sua I ester, a long
workers to regain confidence in
invoking tne xait-naniey act
back to digging 6al but it won't
their employers the more. -
Babies and School Expansion
; A series of articles now Running in The
Statesman show .how the Marion county birth
rate is affeeiintf and will affect
ment and subsequent need for more classrooms
and more teachers and additional building.
The statewide birth-school picture is graphi
cally illustrated in the January Oregon Educa
tion Journal". Figures compiled by the governor's
sub-committee on education show that in 1939
when Oregon's population was 1,089,684, there
were 16,727 births, an elementary school enroll
ment of 127,807 and. a total school enrollment
of 189,222. Last year (pop. 1,736,000) there were
85,253 new babies, the elementary enrollment
was up to 185,100 while the high school enroll
ment was only 1,500 overl939's high school
Chinese Awed
By James D. White
AP foreign News Analyst
SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 5-W-The
biggest revolution in China
is the one you never hear about.
The communists never openly
ay they re attacking the Chin
ese family system They assail
"feudalism" and "Imperialistic
, Influences," but never the tra
. ditional .ties which for 4,000
years have 'made China the
source of a unique culture.
The family system has been
the glue that held China to-
ether. It also held her back,
lased Ion ancestor worship, i it
was the warp upon which the
fabric of Chinese life was woven.
It dictated marriages and pro
creation that ancestors might be
honored. It kept family loyalties
supreme.
It was China's -salvation and
her curse. It kept her from fal
ling apart into little nations but
throttled her growth into a really
great power.' i - ( '
i The reds are undermining it
quietly through three' approaches
through youth, through
women, and through peasant
politics. ' i
' ' V
A college student in commun
ist Peiping recently wrote to his
fathef in Hong Kong: I should
not call you father because I now
belong to the state ... I am
short i of funds and would ap
preciate a check by return maiL"
This boy still has to ask his
father for money, but he is learn-
ing to recognize a new supreme
authority in his life. Before, it
was his father. Now it is com
munist leadership.
Even in such simple things as
r the "Yang Ko" peasant dance
which the -reds have spread far
and wide, Chinese youth breaks
sharply with classic Chinese
, ideas of how young people
should behave. Before, they
were not supposed to be seen in
public together alone, let alone
dancing and touching each
' other.
If children used to be told what
to k by their parents, the great
mass of Chinese women were
equally under the thumb of their
husbands. They bad little status
under family custom. Their hus
- band could divorce them, but it
was their duty to put' up with
.their husbands, serve them, and
bear the children demanded by
custom. The great mass of pea
NUtlHI IMI
enrollment, and the total school population was
248,020.
Estimates for the 1950-51 school year are for
33,500 births, 213,380 pupils in the eight ele
mentary grades, 66,350 in high school, and a
total school population of 279,730. There should
also be 11,427 teachers, 533 additional teachers
and rooms the building cost estimated at
$10,660,000.
i The sub-committee estimates that the peak
elementary enrollment for Oregon will come in
195960 with 361,000 youngsters. High school
enrollments will hit the high point in 1963-65
with 168,500 and total school enrollment 13
years from now will be about 495,200 with 19,
13S teachers.
What the war babies and the children brought
to Oregon by incoming families will mean to the
taxpayers is this: By 1963-64, 8,859 additional
classrooms and teachers will be needed, accord
ing to sub-committee estimates. The total cost
for additional building over the 14-year period
from 1949 to 1963 will be $176,820,000.
Occupational Disease?
Is it an occupational disease for government
engineers to underestimate costs of projects? If
so the army engineers must have it bad.
Here is a comment made in congress by the
watchdog of the treasury in the 80th congress,
Cong. John Taber of New York:
Mr. Speaker, I have been tremendously dis
turbed by the hearings that have been released
from the Appropriations Committee indicating
that the Chief of the Army Engineers has esti
mated that the cost in the fiscal year 1951 for
certain rivers and harbors and flood-control
projects, including flood control on the Missis
sippi river, will be increased $583,000,000 over
the figures that were sent up here for the fiscal
year 1949. Some estimates of the cost of indivi
dual projects have in that period been, multi
plied by five. This is one of the most terrific
increases I have ever heard of, when a project
" is appropriated for in one year and then in the
next year the estimate of cost Is increased.
The deal approved by the SEC for the pur
chase of stock of Pacific Power and Light is a
clean, cash deal. It is not a shoestring purchase,
contemplates the continued operation of the
company as a private utility system, gives Guy
Myers no strings by which he can collect fat
commissions by selling the corporate properties
piece-meal to gullible PUD's. The holding com
pany making the sale gets the cash which it
needs for liquidation; It might have realized
a little more under the original offer, but that
depended on contingencies. Except for those
who wanted to wreck the operating company
and profit by its hreak-up the satisfaction over
the outcome of the SEC hearings is generally
satisfactory.
time ior me
their bosses.
may pui mem
make them love
school enroll
A news item quotes one Dr. Brainerd Desaix
Burhoe, woman sociologist, as saying that wives
demand flattery and attention from their hus
bands in return for which they treat the men
"like slaves." Dr. Burhoe has had experience
in the fields of educations, rehabilitation, social
research, community organizations, finance and
public relations But is she married?
ssasisssssssss
What goes up must come down the old rule
is still operating. Witness automobile prices
and eggs.
by Reds' Pseudo-Democracy
sant women could not own prop
erty. They seldom met their
husbands before marriage, which
was, of course, arranged by their
elders.
Naturally, Chinese women
found some ways of getting
around such restrictions, espec
ially in well-to-do. families
where the matriarchal boss was
not uncommon. But the great
mass of Chinese women had to
take it
The communists have given
Chinese women what looks to
them like equality. Now they can
criticize their husbands In public
and divorce them.
. .Most Chinese live in the. coun
try and are very poor. -They for
merly had little appeal against
the rule of their local officials.
The reds, in encouraging the
peasants to "overturn' the old
order, have introduced such
novelties as village elections and
public meetings where gripes can
Litera ry Guidepost
By W. O. Kegera
THE MESH, by Lucia Marchal,
translated by Virginia Peterson
Appleton-Century-Crofts; S3)
I am 28, says Madelaine Fran
cois determinedly to herself, re
hearsing the declaration she in
tends to make to her mother; I
am 28, I .have the right to inde
pendence, I have planned to take
a small apartment of my own,
you and Charles are better off
without me, I am better off with
out you.
So she schema, going from the
Brussels department store where
she works to the home dominated
by her mother, who in turn is
dominated by her love for jthe son
-Charles -with the twisted, ankle
and the limping gait, iris a fa
therless family with a small in
come controlled by the mother.
But everything else is controlled
by the mother, who keep the son,
in his mid-thirties, from all
women except those who supply a
fleeting and incomplete compan
ionship, and also constantly
thwarts the development of the
abilities "which would set him on
his feet financially; and who, fur
thermore, serves her daughter in
tatesmaii
be freely aired as long as they
are "democratic" that is, not
against the new regime.
It is not Important In the pea
sant's mind that these elections
.are not secret, or that the public
meetings are often organized
mob action.
What dazzles him is the fact
that they are held at all, and that
he IS part of such "democratic"
processes.
As he is used to accepting au
thority, he accepts without pro
test the communist leadership
that replaces the old order.
No one supposes that the red
rule rests, on the whole, any less
heavily upon the Chinese than
did the old order. In time it may
become more intolerable, but by
that time the reds may have
succeeded in splitting the atom
of Chinese life the family. That
could have unpredictable results
for them and a lot of other
people.
the same way by driving away
the menfolk.
While Madeleine has been
screwing up her courage, Charles,
who does not see his position so
clearly, has decided to act Be
fore the sister can utter her de
fiance, the brother tells his moth- '
er of his engagement to Mme. '
Josserand, who for a time until
a young boarder was convicted
of the crime, was accused of poi-
soiling her husband, the pharma-'
cist across the street. The mother
can't believe her ears, she forbids
the marriage, and when finally
Noemi enters the house as his
wife, she leaves.
From then on this is the story
of a fierce and merciless rivalry
for affection. In this deadly game
the mother's weapons are brains
and ruthlessness; the son's handi
caps are weakness and terrible
undefinable needs; the bride and
her little dog Michel are the
pawns; and the sister sees her
own dark fate grow on her and
welcomes it without recognizing
it. It's an uncommonly tense and
powerful novel, motivated by ab
horrent passions, and every word
points straight to a startling and
inevitable climax. - ....
Golf Museum
Should Honor
Game Duffers
By Henry McLemore
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla, Feb.
5 The United States Golf asso
ciation is going to build a mu
seum In New
York City and
IH bet my best
repainted ball
that it is the
intention of the
'association to
fill it with
tfticki, balls,
bags, and score
cards of the
great players of
the game.
I can see the
place now, even
though the building has yet to
be purchased.
Bobby Jones' famous putter,
"Calamity Jane," will be in a
glass case along with the Atlan
tan's famed tournament concen
tration, i
ThereTl 'be Walter Hagen's
, driver and bottle opener, Harry
Vardon's cap and moustache cup,
Francis Ouimet's spectacles and
Boston accent, the shoes Sam
Snead wore when he broke away
from the hills of West Virginia,
Lawson Little's napkin ring, and
the knickers Gene Sarazen was
wearing when he scored his
famed double eagle at Augusta.
Far be It from me (well, not
too far) to disagree with the
USGA, but things like those men
tioned above are not what should
be placed in the museum. The '
mighty players are not the ones
who made golf the great sport it
is, or who keep it flourishing to
day. The backbone of golf is the
celebrated duffer the fellow
who prays at night that some day
he will break 100 or 90, and
whose form is a cross between an
epileptic fit and chopping wood.
I wish the USGA would let me
select the things to go into the
museum.
My first choice would be a pic
ture, life size, of Mr. Westbrook
Pegler in action on a golf course.
Just where on a golf course
wouldn't matter; it could be on
the tee, on the fairway, or in a
trap. I haven't seen Mr. Pegler
. play for quite a few years, but
the memory of his technique is as
vivid as if it had been etched on
my mind with r crowbar.
The picture of him hard at
work in a trap will remain with
me long after the picture of all
the great players I have seen has
faded away. Mr. Pegler, as you
perhaps know, is the only golfer
who never had to pay a caddy.
The National Geographic Society
-always provided him with an
archeologist to carry his bags, be
cause it was a rare round on
which Mr. Pegler didnt unearth
bowls, skulls, pottery and the like
of a lost civilization.
The fart that we now know
that the Hobnob Indians (a
branch of the Aztecs) once inhab
ited Long Island is solely due to
Mr. Pegler's excavations on and
about the Maidstone club course
at Southampton, N. Y.
A picture of Mr. Pegler in the
. museum would bring more hap
piness to more duffer golfers than
almost anything else.
Another ifem I would like to
see in the museum is the golfing
vocabulary of Mr. Adolphe Men
Jou. Brilliant as his clothes are,
they-, are drab things compared
to his language when one of his
drives carries but 135 yards in
stead of the intended 136.
Mr. Oliver Hardy's putting
stance should hang somewhere
in-the museum. All 400 pounds
of it. So should Mr. George Mur
phy's look when he is about to
make a brassie shot. I saw Mr.
Murphy, in "Battleground" the
other night, and he was not near
, ly so grim as when faced with
a close lie on the fairway.
I could name a hundred items
which should occupy prominent
places In the museum. Mr. Pete
(Cities Service) Jones' smile
when he sinks a long three-inch
curling putt; Mrs. Fontaine Fox's
whinny which he uses only at
the top of an opponent's back
swing; and Frank ("Moon Mul
lins") Willard's sea chest of ex
cuses when he shoots a 78 after
getting a 15-stroke handicap.
I trust the USGA won't go
GRIN AND BEAR IT
v mk
"What's the use of me taking them miracle cold drugs, Motn. If
1 gotta blow my nose anyway .
.HORN OF PLENTY
irei
I
Your Health
DURING recent years we have
learned a great deal about a di
sease with a long name and a
bad reputation.
Known as histoplasmosis, it
was at one time thought to be a
highly fatal disorder but, within,
the past two years, research has
shown that far from being neces
sarily fatal, it IS often so mild
as to go unrecognized.
The condition is caused by a
fungus known as the Histoplas
ma capsulatum. In severe cases,
the symptoms are like those of
severe lung tuberculosis. The pa
tient has : fever, anemia, or a
lessening or decrease in the
number of red cells in the blood,
loss of weight, and cough. The
lymph glands and liver, as well
as the spleen in the upper left
part of the abdomen, may be en
larged. It seems that this fun
gus gets into the body through
the mouth, but occasionally may
gain entrance through the skin.
In children, the disorder starts
gradually with loss of weight,
fever, digestive upsets and
coughing. Later in the condition,
the lung is often affected. There
are chest pains and abnormal
breathing sounds. Often, calcium
or lime deposits are seen in the
X-ray plates of the lungs and
lymph glands at the lung root.
f
Larfe numbers of persons
never known to have had the di
sease were tested with an extract
from the organism which causes
histoplasmosis, and many show
ed positive reactions.
Further examination with X-
ray disclosed numerous lime de
posits in the lungs of these per
sons, similar to those caused by
healed tuberculosis infections.
This clears up a problem which ,
has baffled investigators for
many years the presence of
such depositis in people who can
not be shown by any other test
to have had tuberculosis, but a
mild form of histoplasmosis is
responsible for these scars. From
these results, it was suggested
ahead without putting something
of the duffer in that museum.
(Distributed by McNaught Syndicate.
Inc.)
by Lichty
Written by
Herman N. Bundensen
Dr.
that a mild form of hltoplas
mosis may be responsible for a
great deal of the lime deposit!
seen in persons who do not have
tuberculosis.
Eighty-five 'children were
tested with the histoplasmin, and
a large number of them were
found positive. These children
often had such symptoms as
tiredness, loss of weight, night
mares, fever at night, and
coughing. They were often pale
and listless, suffered from anem
ia, and X-rays of the chest
showed many calcium or lime
depositis in the lung tissues. -.
It would appear, therefore, that
this condition, known as histo
plasmosis, may occur much more
often than was formerly real
ized. However, with careful ex
amination, including X-rays of
the chest and the making of a
skin test with an extract of the
fungus, a diagnosis may be
reached. Treatment with sulfo
namide drugs may be of value.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
A Reader: What are the symp
tims of a brain tumor?
Answer: Symptoms of brain
various sensations and sense or
gans, such as the eyes; at times
attacks of vomiting may occur. ,
If a tumor of the brain is sus
tumor depend upon the size and
location of the tumor within the
brain.
Most brain tumors consist of
headaches, disturbance of the
pec ted, immediate study by a
neurologist is advisable.,
(Copyright, 1950, King Features)
Hollywood
HOLLYWOOD Talent agents
can' be awfully blunt. They used
to ask Rosemary De Camp,
"With that nose, you want to be
in pictures?" Today she could
laugh in their faces. She's Holly
wood's first actress to be regu
larly busy in three mediums
movies, radio and television.
There's nothing wrong, really,
with Rosemary's nose. It's a
cute little gadget like Rosemary
herself. Got its slight curve
from an incident in her native
Prescott, Ariz. Rosemary, then
12, was watching a football
game. Things got rough and
somebody threw a board. It
broke her nose.
Now brown-haired, blue-eyed
Rosemary De Camp is nose-deep
in a happily hectic career. The
unreleased "Big Hangover," star
ring Van Johnson, is her 25th
movie. On the air, she's in her
13th year as Dr. Christian's
nurse, Judy Price. In television,
on film, she is seen weekly as
Mrs. Chester Riley, wife and
mother on "The Life or Riley."
In pictures, Rosemary figures,
she has been almost everybody's
mother. She was Jimmy Cag
ney's (though years younger
than he) in "Yankee Doodle
Dandy"; Robert Alda's in "Rhap
sody in Blue," Ronald Reagan's
in "This Is The Army," and
Sabu's in "Jungle Book." As for
being typed as a movie mom.
Rosemary says "I like to work.
Yes, I like playing a mother, and
I like being a mother."
Her daughters are Nana, 7;
Martha, 3, and Valerie, 2. Rose
mary is the wife, of Justice of the
Peace John Shidler, of suburban
Torrance. It's a 30-mile drive to
Hollywood. Rosemary, a 10-hour
sleeper, rises at 4:30 sun. every
fifth day to be in make-up by 8.
A half-hour television film is
shot in one day after three or
four day's rehearsal.
Rosemary can pretty well
memorize a 50-page script in an
hour and a half. To get away
from the youngsters interrupt
ions, she parks somewhere near
her home in her car with her
Marion County
Polio Advisory
Board Planned
Formation of a council to learn
about and advise on the problems
and program of Marion county
chapter, National Foundation for
Infantile Paralysis, was under way
today, with all civic, fraternal,
patriotic and labor organizations
invited to appoint interested rep
resentatives. Mrs. Faye Wright, county chair
man, announced that letters are
being sent to nearly 100 such
groups asking their cooperation in
the year-around project. The coun
cil, authorized at the chapter's
last executive board meeting, will
meet with the board to hear its
business and participate in dis
cussions. The council will not be
a voting group.
Members will act also to inform
the groups they represent about
the "aims, efforts and accomplish
ments" of the chapter in its fight
against poliomyelitis and to pro
vide improved understanding.
Organizations interested but not
directly contacted were requested
to appoint representatives and not
ify the chapter office at 340
Court st.
FTJtE LEAVES SM HOMELESS
MANILA, Monday, Feb. -4Jfh
Fire raged through the eastern
section of Cabanatuan, capital of
Nueva Ecija province, last night,
press dispatches said today. Some
000 persons were reported home
less. on Parade
script. One more hour's rehear
sal aloud, with somebody cueing
her, and she has it down pat. As
a performer, Rosemary likes
television best.
"It has all the satisfaction of
pictures and radio," she says.
'It's new and exciting." She
thinks television eventually will
crowd out both movies and radio.
"Inertia will be the main factor
with pictures, at least. Why go
out when you can see a show at
home?" She thinks television
will be important in education
and religion. She calls it, in
fact, "the greatest thing since the
discovery of fire. f
Bettor English
:i By D. C. Williams
1. What is wrong with this
sentence? "We were up against
difficulties."
2. What is the correct
unciation of "elixir"?
pron-
3. Which one of these words
is misspelled? Caesar, Shakes
peare, Thackaray, Disraeli.
4. What does the word "in
capacitate" mean?
5. What is a word beginning
with gl that means "round"?
ANSWERS
1. Say, "We were eenfrontisur
(or confronted by) difficulties."
2. Pronounce e-lik-ser, first e
as in me unstressed, 1 as in lick,
second e as in her, accent second
syllabic 3. Thackeray. 4. To de
prive of power; to render unfit.
"Concentrated attention, un
broken by rest, so prostrates the
brain as to incapacitate it for
thinking." H. Spencer. 9. Globular.
GRENADE PACKING CHL
KUALA LUMPUR -- Mal
aya has a grenade-packin' momma
on whose head the government
has placed a reward of (Straits)
$2,000 "dead or alive". She' is 28
y ears-old Shamsiah binte Sutan
Pakeh, only 4 feet 6 inches taU,
who carries her grenade in her
sarong.
Tmt vmi :fictitt n
Quiz Precedes
Dental Survey
fEdiUr! . moU: Fellowlnr lg ui
ftUi la a eerie f tjaetUea and
aniwer articles published by Th
Oregon Statesman in cooperation .
with the Marion-Polk-Tamhill Den
tal society ani the Marlon county
health department, prior to a school
dental survey la the near fntara.)
At what are should a child
be irin brushing his teeth?
When all the primary teeth have
erupted, which is usually between
the ages of two and three years.
Should a parent help the child
with his toothbrushlng?
Yes. In fact, the parent will have
to do most of the real brushing for
some time. The child should be
permitted to wield the brush first
and then the narent should v
over and complete the Job. In this
way the child will develop the
habit of regular toothbrushlng.
What is the best method or
brushing the teeth?
, There are several approved
methods. One eood method U thi
With the Jaws held slightly apart.
Drusn tne teeth of each jaw sepa
rately. Place the bristles on the
gum and brush the upper teeth
with a downward motion. Rpvoru
the procedure for the lower teeth.
brushing upward. Give at least
five strokes to each group of teeth
covered by the brush. The grind
ing surfaces should be cleaned
with a scrubbing motion. It is im
portant to brush the tooth surfaces
that touch the tongue as well as
those that touch the cheeks.
When should the teeth be
brushed?
To obtain the best results, the
brushing should be done immedi
ately after eating whenever possi
ble, because food debris that ad
heres to the teeth is one source
of tooth decay. This is especially
true of sweets.
Which U better, tooth powder
or paste?
There Is no essential difference
in the cleansing properties of
tooth powder and tooth paste. For
children a paste is probably pref
erable because it is easier to han
dle and therefore less subject to
waste.
Does gum chewing hela or
han the teeth?
There is no evidence that gum
chewing benefits the teeth in any
way. On -the other hand there Is
evidence that sugar contributes to
dental decay and chewing gum
contains sugar.
Leather Craft
Class at YM
To Resume
With an instructor whose know
ledge of leather goes back to the
cattle cn the Wyoming ranch of
his boyhood. Salem YMCA'S craft
classes for boy members will re
sume next Saturday, from 1 to.
4 pjn.
Teacher is Victor Johnson. Sa
lem building contractor, who is a
skilled leatherworker . and has
taught veterans in hospitals. He
was a marine corps pilot after
playing football at University of
Wyoming.
Johnson will teach boys to make
and use patterns and to make
worthwhile objects, according to
Roth Holtz, YM boys' work sec
retary. First classes will be In
leatherwork, with woodwork to
come later.
The YM also gives craft classes
for adult members on Tuesday
evenings.
Northwest's
C of C Officials
Attend Meet
PORTLAND. Feb. 5 -flP)- Pres
idents and managers of Oregon
and Washington cities' chambers of
commerce began arriving here to
day for a two-day annual confer
ence. v
E. L. Skeel, Seattle, a vice pres
ident of the All-America Defense
association, is scheduled to. speak
at the luncheon tomorrow on plans
and problems of Pacific northwest
military defense. '
Retailing, industrial, tourist and
civic topics will take up other
sessions of the first day's progxam. '
Speakers will include C. W.
Thorn berry. Everett: N. Phalen.
Seattle; G. W. Gannon, Belling -
ham: w. otto Warn, Spokane:
Earl Reynolds, Boise; Claire R.
Dobler, Everett; Chester Kimm,
Wenatchee. i
SOUTH AMERICANA
DALLAS (INS) Braniff In
ternational Airways and the Dal
las symphorfy orchestra will prove
next March that there's an awful
lot of things in Brazil besides
cfofee. The two organizations will
present- the first in a series of
concerts that will feature an artist,
instrumental or vocal that has
never been heard in North Ameri
ca before. The series will feature
artists in following concerts from
several other South American
countries.
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