Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1950)
1 Tho Stat mmu Balom. Orogoa. Mondcty, Tbnarj 13. 1830 V - ' .1. From THE STATES3IAN PUBUSHINC COMPANY CHARLES a SPBAGUE. Editor and Publisher Watered at the postofflcc at Salem, Oregon, as second clan matter under act of congress March 3, 117. fublkhed every morning, easiness office lli & Commercial, Salem, Oiegon. Telephone Z-Z44L Wheat Certificate Plan Congressman Lowell Stockman has introduced bill to establish a Wheat Certificate plan for marketing of wheat. This is the plan endorsed by the farm bureau and' among the methods recommended by the national grange. The, lat ter organization discussed this as follows in the statement of policy adopted at its recent conven tion in Sacramento: - . . . the use of any practical two- or multl- ?le-prico devices such as the Export Debenture lan, Equalization Fee, or a Parity Support Cer- 4 tiflcate Plan for assuring American farmers a fair share of the world markets, and a full pari ty for the domestically consumed portion of crops, and the adoption- of safeguards which would nrotect domestic nroducers from im ports." - : ! The Certificate plan avoids any subsidy from E public' treasury, something these farm organizations want to get away from. Under it surplus wheat would be exported at the world price but millers and domestic buyers would have to pay the domestic price for grain. The tariff would protect this price. The loss on the portion of the crop exported would be absorbed by the growers, instead of by the treasury as at present.' t This plan, first called the Export Debenture plan, is described as an adaptation of the pro tective tariff principle for the! defense of farm ers who produce an export surplus. The manu facturer operating behind a protective tariff can control his production so the ' tariff Is effective .in keeping up prices. Farmers, however, produce surplus of wheat, corn and cotton, so the tariff is of no real benefit to them., Because industry operates under a protective system which raises the prices the farmer has to pay he asserts his right to similar protection for a domestic price above the world leveL ' The fact is that our government is facing two ways. Through ECA it is telling western Europe to reduce tariffs, stop the double standard of pricing and encourage world trade. Through its price support policy it is doing just what it scolds other nations for doing, subsidizing exports. 2s inconsistency is apparent and is embarrass ing. :. " s :. .. . r" i Stockman's bill revives an old approach to the farm problem for surpJes crops. Whether it" will receive much consideration seems doubt ful. Virtuous as farmers are and sincere as many are in wanting no subsidies from the treasury other farmers and the politicians' will be loathe to surrender parity under government guaran tee. Then the Brannan plan is being advocated by the administration which would keep up price support for storable crops and offer low prices, to consumers and income guarantees for pro ducers of other agricultural commodities. - The Certificate plan does offer something to farmers as well as the government It would not require acreage reduction which growers are lint tv hartnv. oKrhitt In the floundering aWit for a solution of the farm' problem congress should give attention to this old idea of the two-price system unless it is ready to cut tariffs sharply and subject AmerN ean industry to foreign competition. Fishing in Troubled Waters We're a little uneasy about those four Rus sian "fishing" vessels which have showed up in the Caribbean and in the Pacific off Hawaii. "Maybe it's just a coincidence that the U. S. navy is getting ready to stage maneuvers ;in the Caribbean, and that the Soviet schooners near Honolulu are of the same type that arrived in those parts just before the 1048 atomic bomb GOP Avoids Forthright Stand By Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 The . attempt to write a "republican statement of principles has now run 11a cxpecxea course. A rath er vacuous doc ument has been : unveiled. And it : contains Just enough bows in y the direction of . the big contrib- r-1 iwas designed to I I placate, to drive sucn progressive 1 y", ju. ; Senators Henry Cabot Lodge and -.: Irving Ives into open rebellion. The background of the Lodge r Ives rebellion tells a great deal bout the present state of the ty. The sticking point for Lodge, Ives, and the other republi cans who have in effect; -disown e d , t h e statement was the clause deal ing with civil rights. In the con- mPAaaiAn1 MSm JSSitelM mittee which drafted the statement. Lodge re-' ,peatedly ana futilely pointed out that the civil rights clause, which carefully avoided specific men tion of the FEPC, had a distinct ly weasel-worded smell. He warned that it would be taken ai a repudiation of the 1943 re publican platform, and that if it were not altered, he would dis own the statement Nevertheless, Senator Robert A. Taft stood firm against Lodge; and such other members of the . congressional drafting committee as Senators Kenneth Wherry and Owen Brewster and Representa tive! Joseph Martin and Charles : Halleck backed Taft Lodge was ihut beaten in his pleas for a forthright stand on civil rights. mi 4 I vNo favor Sway 17. No Fear Shall Awf first SUtesnoa, March Zt, USt tests at Eniwetok. But it does seem odd that the so-called fishing boats are fairly bristling with radio and radar equipment and appear to lack any signs of fishing gear. Of course, you can't draw out leviathan or information on the latest U. S. submarines with a hook. The Russians may have their lines out for neither fish, nor flesh, nor good red herr ing but for whatever appears on their radar screens. We can't object to that, we suppose. That great fishpond, the sea, is open to every compleat angler undertaking the apostolic occupation of trafficking in fish. And today, as ever, all is fish that gets caught in the net even if it's an espionage network. Nevertheless, we are sure the U. S. navy won't swallow the statement by one Russian captain that they are not spies. After all, you know, a fishing rod could be a stick with a hook at one end and a spy at the other, and we doubt that for the Russian sailors fishing is what it was for Izaak Walton: "An employment for my idle time, which is then not idly spent; a rest to ( my soul, a cheerer of my spirit, a diverter of sadness, a calmer of unquiet thoughts, a modera tor of passions, a procurer of contentedness." At least, not in the troubled waters of the Carib bean and the Pacific. Dr. Henry Roe Cloud The sudden death of Dr. Henry Roe Cloud re moves one of Oregon's splendid citizens and one of the Indian bureau's ablest staff members. Just a few weeks ago he spoke at the Salem Rotary club discussing frankly the future role of the Indian. He believed firmly that the In dian should be integrated with the white civi lization bringing to an end the wardship and the segregation. His lifework, ended too soon, did much to prepare the Indian for emandpa- ' tion into full citizenship and economic inde pendence. Football Too Costly The University of Portland is giving up foot ball because keeping up a football establishment is too costly. The university has a big expansion program on and concludes it cannot carry it and football too. Father Mehling, university presi dent, says that eventually the sport will be re stored, but gives no date. Portland has been handicapped by holding an intermediate status. The school is much larger than the northwest' colleges and much smaller than the schools in the Pacific Coast conference. Despite great efforts its teams haven't come through with any degree of consistency. So dropping the sport for a time will not mean a great! sacrifice. As far as education goes football is just side show one of the kind that Woodrow Wilson complained of when he was president of Prince ton, the kind that overtops the main circus. Bonneville Power administration uses a hell copter for patrolling its transmission lines. Also it is going to install an elaborate micro-wave radio transmission net to speed up intra-system communication. With its vast network of power lines over the northwest and with the whole area dependent on BPA for half of its electric energy it is necessary to use the most advanced scientific means of preventing, detecting and curing breaks in the power lines. But it still will take tough men bucking snow and ice and rain and storm to mend the breaks and keep the current flowing. In the senatorial conference which was convoked to consider the statement, Ives and a number of others Joined Lodge in revolt. Ives again proposed that the 1948 civil rights plank bo reaffirmed. In a show of hands he was backed, significantly, not only by such of the twelve Senatorial "young Turks' as were present, but by Martin of Pennsylvania, Ferguson of Michigan and others - who usually support Taft. Never theless, Taft again won the day. The meaning of all this Is clear. This is no doubt that Taft and others are sincerely convinced that compulsory fair employment legislation is bad legislation. But the basic reason for the weasel-word edness of the civil rights statement Is simply that many big Northern, industrialists are just as bitterly opposed to FEPC as any Southerner. Men of the Wherry-Martin - Brewster Halleck stripe are peculiarly re sponsive to the opinions of big . industrialists. And thus a mag nificent opportunity to put the democrats on the spot by all-out republican support for civil rights was lost - Much the same pattern held throughout the effort to draft the statement This effort consisted largely of a running battle be tween Lodge and most of the other members of the drafting committee. The anti-Lodge maj ority found a valuable ally in the novelist Clarence Budington Kel land, who was selected by the republican national committee to . give literary polish to the con gressional draft Kelland is adept at translating Into purple prose all those pre judices and policies which have been chiefly responsible far the long record of republican defeat. His efforts were, naturally, well received by the Wherry-Brew-ster - Halleck-Martln contingent But Lodge at least succeeded in toning down some of Kelland's more extreme effusions, particu larly as concerned labor and the tariff, where too flourishing a nostalgia for the dead pasT was ia evidence. on Civil Rights But on the whole Lodge fought a losing battle. One losing bat tle, which he fought with Taft, is worth describing. Taft produced the slogan, "Liberty Against So cialism,'' now to become the re publican war-cry. Wherry, Mar tin & Co. enthusiastically con gratulated Taft on his brainchild. Lodge entered a lone dissent Taft, with something of the pride of authorship, pointed out that he had been campaigning intensively in Ohio for several months, that he had rased this line with marked success, and that ho knew what he was talking about. Lodge replied that he did not doubt .that the slogan would appeal to voters who were re publicans already, but that to get the marginal vote which the re publicans must have to win, some more convincing and less shop worn appeal was essential. This is, in fact what the con test in the republican party is all about. Most of the republi can leaders are apparently deter mined to limit republican efforts to soothing the big contributors and to persuading the already persuaded among the voters. The "young Turks' in the senate and elsewhere, led by Lodge and Ives, are convinced that if the republi can party is ever to win, the per suadable margin of the unper suaded, who have been voting democratic for the last sixteen years, must also be brought over. Whether the "statement of principles" will succeed in its principal object filling republi can coffers remains to be seen. But it may serve a more useful purpose In the end.. Senator Ives is seriously considering ' issuing a sort of declaration of independ ence, with special emphasis on civil rights and amendment of the Taft-Hartley act, in which he may be joined by upward of a dozen senators. Thus the central issue within the republican party, between acceptance of the pres ent and a hankering for the past, may be at last clearly defined. (Copriicht, ie. Mew York Herald Tribune lac.) Half-Ounce Tarpon Caught In Florida' By Henry McLemore DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Feb. 12 After reading Dave New ell's story in the February 4th issue of Satur day Evening Post entitled, "I Make a Living Doing What I Like," I drove over to Homo- sassa Springs, Fla to ask Brother Newell if he could use an assistant I hadn't seen the former edi tor of Field and Stream for quite ia few years but I well recall that last meeting. We were at a fishing lodge in the Florida Keys and Dave used to entertain us at night by sit ting on the front porch and cal ling owls in from the trees. I wrote a story about his ability to make owls stop what they were doing to come in and visit him, and I must, have gotten a hundred letters calling me a liar. But It was the truth, so help me, and what I found him doing a few days ago undoubtedly will get me another 100 letters of the same sort, but it's also the truth. Dave was preparing to do a taxidermy job on a tarpon that weighed exactly one-half ounce. I know the tarpon weighed that because I weighed it myself on postal scales. The little cuss was about the size of my little finger and Dave, who has caught just about every kind of fish in his time, and hunted everything from grizzly bears in Alaska to jaguars in Brazil, Is prouder of that tiny tarpon, I think, than of any other fish or animal he ever caught or shot. He caught the tarpon, which he believes to bo the smallest ever hauled in, on a No. 14 trout fly and 3-X leader. I asked Dave what sort of board he was going to mount his battler on and he said he thought he'd use either an air mail stamp or a special delivery. Asked how long he had ,to fight the tarpon before bringing him to gaff, Dave said almost three seconds of fierce fighting took place before his savage eaten was in the boat As he explained In his Post article, Dave now is .part owner and operator of Nature's Giant Fish Bowl in Homosassa Snrines. a fantastic place if there ever was one. The Springs are 55 feet deep, and flow better than 9,000,000 gallons of crystal clear water per hour. It Is the source of the Homosassa River, which runs nine miles into the Gulf of Mexico. For a reason no one has been able to explain, thousands of fish of every variety swim up the salt water Gulf to the fresh water pool and stay there the ' year round. The pool is jam- pacxea witn ash all the time, The Homosassa River affords magnificent im and It Is nob sible to anchor your boat near wnere the Gulf and the fresh water meet and catch a salt water fish on one side of the boat and a fresh water fish on the otner. That sounds like a fish story, but it is a true one. f If you ever come down the west coast of Florida don't miss Nature's Giant Fish BowL For sheer, unspoiled natural beauty xwnaa nas nouung to match it. And for your information, just a mile away from Newell's place is the Homosassa Sorines hotel- run by Vicki and Oscar Johnson. For comfort and out-of-this-world eating, it can't be beaten anywhere. After the first meal Jean always took a notebook in to the dining room with her to copy down recipes. The fish, the turtle steaks and soup, the ducks and auail the Johnsons serve make you want to pitcn a tent in the dinine room and never leave the place. The hotel has the charm and easy aunospnere 01 a private anglers' ciud rawer than that of a hotel If the government ever gives me another bonus I'm going right back to Homosassa Springs ana eat up every penny of it (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate, inc.) DIP &33QDQB (Continued from Page One) warrants forged by a school dist rict .clerk, on the ground that a warrant is not a negotiable in strument and when the bank cashed one it did so at its own risk. That stirred up the banks to the point where they demand ed a change so they would not be expected to cash non-negoti able paper like school warrants. Accounts, lawyers, bankers and the state department of educa tion have been in a huddle and have figured out a solution. Un der the plan which Is now get ting its final review a warrant will be drawn in favor of the clerk who will then write checks (which are negotiable instru ments) on the bank where the account is kept The checks then will be sent to the teacher, jan Jor or supplier with a claim gainst ine uismci. When a district is short of funds, interest-bearing warrants will nave to be drawn and ar rangements made to have them cashed by the bank and" held un til they are called. This system will doubtless bo adopted very soon. It would work even better with the cen tral accounting agency where the disbursing officer could bo under -substantial bond to pro tect the public funds. I "1 1 I 1VM GRIN AND BEAR IT mm W fifH i cp - J 1 M tM "As I understand It a eouple of Hydrogen bombs could flatten the world however, r r committee favors less drastlo measurta, first! . . A-ControIPlan Rumors Heard In Moscow By Eddy Gilmore MOSCOW. Feb. 12 -4JP)- Talk of the possibilities of achieving world-wide atomic control has been revived in Moscow's diplo matic circles: Within the last two days it has become the main topic of conver sation among many foreign en voys in the Soviet capital. They feel there is something in the air and perhaps a new chance of achieving some kind of agreement Most of them are convinced that new efforts are being made or are about to be made in that direc tion. (The fact that the Moscow dip lomatic colony is interestedly dis cussing possible agreement on atomic controls may simply be a backwash from several recent pro posals in Washington congression al quarters that, a new approach be made to Moscow. (The fact that this dispatch passed Soviet censorship might be significant in either of two days. It could indicate official Soviet receptiveness to new proposals. though not necessarily. It also could indicate simply that the Soviet Union is willing to keep the question agitated.) When VS. Ambassador Alan G. Kirk appears at a diplomatic func tion, which is fairly often, it is never long before he Is the cen ter of a huddle. "What's new on the atomic con trol question?" he Is asked. Kirk usually suggests that his colleagues continue to read the papers, listen to the radio and di gest the UJS. information bulletin for the American side of the ques tion. He then begins talking about plans for his vacation that starts Feb. 25. His colleagues look disappoint ed. When he moves away to an other group a "buzz-buzz" rises in his wake. Every envoy seems to have a theory, and rumors are as thick as Moscow snow. fHelP Bomb Said Miniature Replica of Sun BALTIMORE, Feb. 12 -(iP-Pulitzer Prize winner William L. Laurence today described the hydrogen bomb as "something several million times more pow erful than the atomic bomb ... a physical monstrosity." Laurence, New York Times science writer, spoke -at a Sunday series on atomic energy sponsored by the Enoch Pratt library. "The greatest and probably the most ominous, terrifying, and frightening aspect is the radio activity this type of missile can give off," he said. "Some radio active substances will last hundreds or thousands of years. Bombed cities will be uninhabitable for possibly thou sands of years.' The United States and Russia, he said, could annihilate each other in H-bomb warfare. Laurence compared the H-bomb as the sun in miniature. The sun is actually an enor mous hydrogen bomb in space, and we yrUl create on earth a min iature replica of the sun, ho ex plained. Better English By D. C. Williams 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "Don't feel badly about the matter." 2. What is, the correct pro nunciation of "intermezzo"! 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Embezzlement, crescent pageant fricassee. 4. What does the word "in culcate" mean? S. What is a word beginning with fe that means "capable of being done T ANSWERS 1. Say, "Don't feel bad about the matter. 2. Pronounce in ter-med-zo, second e as in medal. as in no, accent third syllable. 3. Pageant 4. To teach and im press by frequent repetitions or admonitions; to urge on the mind. "Christ inculcates on his follow ers humility.' 5. Feasible. by Llchty Colombia Seizes Radio Stations BOGOTA, Colombia, Feb. 12-(JP)- The government said today it had seized three Clandestine radio stations it said were broadcasting "subversive propaganda. At the same time the govern ment ordered provincial author ities to locate any other Clande stine radio stations. Two of the seized stations were said to bo located in Bogota and one in Sevilla, a provincial town. Buzzing Bag Stirs Furore In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES. Feb. 12 -GT) A huzzine suitcase, which had keDt police and employes in a furore all day at Los Angeles International airport, was found to contain nothing but an elec trical vibrator. Saturday. The suspicious suitcase, discov ered this morning at 1 a.m., had been guarded and placed at a remote location on the airport until two police officers finally opened it late today. Sgt. Russell Camp and Inspect or Jack Donahoe went to the piece of luggage and pried it open with a file. They found the battery- operated vibrator. It was turned on and still buzzing when they open ed the suitcase. Owner Couldn't be Found The Innocent little suitcase caused a full fledged "bomb" scare because for hours the own er could not be found and it kept right on with its faint humming sound. Finally this afteiaoon came word from the east that the bag belonged to H. S. Harrison, who left on a plane last night Rela tives said it contained only per sonal effects of Harrison's late father. The bag was accidentally left behind. Doublecheeked Report But police were still dubious and did not open the suitcase un til they had doublecheeked this report. Sgt. Camp, after an earner ex amination of the bag with an X-ray device, reported that he believed it contained a detonator. This increased the jitters of in-. vMatrtr rennrtera and nhotoff'" graphers. When opened the bag contained a little square plastic box with wires, a device that goes with the vibrator, which had been mistaken for a detonator. The tube-shaped vibrator device with a roller on the end was still hooked up to batteries. When Officers Camp and Dona hoe decided to open it they ap proached it by themselves and others in the vicinity were held at a distance. Drop in Milk Consumption Predicted WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 -(AV The government has forecast that Americans' consumption of milk and cream will drop in 1950 for the fifth straight year, posing a double problem for federal food experts. It estimated each person's share this year at 369 pounds, as com pared with 382 pounds last year and the record intake of 432 pounds at the end of the war. Officials said this means: 1. Folks will get a smaller amount of calcium which nutri tionists say is needed for teeth. bones and other body equipment. 2. The government probably will have to put out more of the taxpayers money to buy the dairy products under its price support operations. The agriculture department in making the forecast, did not offer a solution to uus auai aiiemma which is only a part of the mount' ing problems raised under the cur rent farm program. ' In some tribes it is believed that a man is not likely to beget children until he- has killed an other man in combat War Games In Sub-Arctic Ready to Start By Clark Beach WHITEHORSE, Y.T Feb. 12 -(AV; The icy tundra around this little town is teeming with arm ed men. The town Is seething with excitement American and Canadian troops assembled here are ready to com mence the biggest war games ever played in the sub-Arctic regions of the American continent In mid winter. The maneuvers, with the code name Sweetbrier," will be the first joint troop training ex ercises of their kind ever under taken by the United States and Canada. More than 5,200 men have pour ed in by air and over the frozen Alaskan highway. Whitehorse, population 3,500, nas seldom seen so much excitement or so many people since the gold rush of the 1890's. This was a frontier metropolis in those days. Robert W. Service wrote a lot of his poems here about Dan McGrew and the men from the creeks. He worked In a bank here at the time, and the bank is still funning. To the north is the Dawson trail he wrote about and Lake Lederge, where Sam Mc Gee was cremated. Last night the Canadian boys in their berets and colorful uniforms palled around with their American allies in the restaurants and mov ies. There are no bars here these days, but the men can buy beer. 12 Below Zero It was 12 below zero yesterday when eight newspaper correspon dents landed here in an air force plane. That's warm for Whitehorse. It was 55' below zero here a few days ago. ' The Canadian forces are in bar racks and tents just outside of town. Most of the Americans are at Camp McCrea, about ten miles away. Some are in renovated war time barracks. Most are in James- way shelters, a new kind of tent for the Arctic, which is remark ably comfortable. They are well heated with oil stoves, made of two layers of quilted fabric, with fiber glass for insulation stuffed between the layers. The material is stretched over semicircular frames, looking like a quonset hut Long Assembly Preparations for these maneu vers have been going on for a year. Last summer a lot of the ma terial was stored here. The men have been assembling for months. A battalion of 750 men was flown in from Camp Carson, Col, The men were flown in fully armed and equipped, ready for battle. Their flight was 2,600 miles said to be the longest airlift of fully armed men ever accomplished. ' Two thousand more men from Camp Carson came up in con voys on the Alaskan highway, a trip of 3,000 miles. The Canadians have been troop ing in from many parts of the country. Canadian jet fighters made a 3,000 mile flight in stages, from St Hubert, Quebec. Arctic Training For the past week the forces have - been engaging in Arctic training. One stunt was a 12-mile march on snow shoes and skis when the temperature was more than 50 below. There were more frostbitten feet on that exercise3 than the doctors here had anticipated. Lieut. Col. R. M. Coats, surgeon of the allied forces, says that eighteen men were frostbitten and will bo hospital ized for a month or two. The rea son, ho says, was that the men failed to take proper precautions to keep their feet dry and warm. He is convinced that their uniforms and equipment are adequate. The exercises are under the command of Lieut Gen. Stephen J. Chamberlain commanding gen eral of the U.S. Fifth army. EX-REPRESENTATIVE DIES WASHINGTON, Feb. 12 Former Rep. Tilman Bacon Parks, 77, of Arkansas, died here today after a short illness. Parks ser ved eight terms in the house, from 1920 until 1936 when he retired. f l ijftf3 Li JAW hot U. S. Plane Hits- Soccer Goal Post LONDON, Feb. 12 -(TP)- A U. S. air force Skymaster hit the cross bar of a soccer goal post while at tempting to land at Northold air port today, but those aboard including Gen. Thomas Handy escaped injury. The plane was not damaged. The pilot put it into a climb, cir cled the airport and then landed safely. - Handy is chief representative in Europe for the American military aid program to western nations. He came here from Germany. Malayans to CombatRed Bandit Bands SINGAPORE, Feb. 12-VTent of thousands of Malayan civilians were being mobilized today for an intended knock-out blow to Chin ese communist bands. Officials said more than 100,000 citizens will take the offensive in "anti-bandit month" against the handful of jungle bands who for more than a year and a half have plagued the country with terrorist-like tactics. Just when they will go into action is known only to British High Commissioner Sir Henry Guerney. The purpose of the operation Is to make Malay's plantations, towns, villages and jungle paths safe from southeast Asian com munism. Already the campaign seems to have been largely effective in en listing the ordinary man to take up arms against the strife, crime, and murder that has kept Malaya in tension for 18 months. The hugee volunteer civilian army will work behind the lines, relieving thousands of uniforznde police and troops who will go into the jungles to clean out the band its. This home guard of every com munity, every walk of life, will man offices, telephone exchanges, police road blocks, act as inter preters and address the public in outlying districts where peasants have bee the victims of the com munist outlaws. The government has released European heads of departments to act as organizers. Some of the de partments are stripped of workers to the point of closing. Prof. Griswold, Historian, to Head Yale U. NEW HAVEN. Coniu Feb. 1J- (AVAlfred Whitney Griswold, 43- year-oia history proiessor, was elected today as president of his toric Yale university. His appointment was announc ed by President Charles Sey mour, who like Professor Griswold taught history at Yale before ho was elevated to the top university post 13 years ago. Dr. Seymour, who has reached the mandatory retirement ago ol 65 years, will relinquish his post to Professor Griswold on July 1. proiessor uriswold. tail, slen der and with thinning sandy hair, was elected yesterday to the pre sidency of one of the nation's old est universities. Announcement of his election by the Yale corpora tion, however, was delayed until today because he was out of the city when the corporation reached Its decision. Professor Griswold. a Yale faculty member since 1933 and member of an old colonial Con necticut family, was formally pre sented to a hastily called press conference by President Sey mour. wow finite SoveTiniacndftloney Faros ore often U$$ thou 1$ daw roll plus Pullman. And you an hour-4n tern com, days "of travel time. 55 P.H. 7-50P.IL ronuNo SIATTU. 90 ml. 2Vt hrs. IMS K.VL L l:5T.tX. SAN ntANCXSCO 4H krs. LOS AMOCLXS . . 7 (hr. UNITED AISl LINES Airport TaralMiL Call 2 2453 Ot. til AM AUTMOtTZBO TBAVU AOSNV ;