The ZltAtmcnu Solin Ofgonu Thursday; June 1. 1S53 ?mANTHONY; MY.' PROBLEM IS !'4 c M Favor Strays 17. No Fear Shall Ave" , Frem First Statesman. March 28. 1851 - ' THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY . CHARLES A. SPHAGUE. Editor and Publisher v rvbUshee erery nornlnc. BmImm (Ah tlS 84 daw matter under act ef eenaxesa March . 18TH Entered at the estoftice at 8 Mem. Oregen, aa eecen Commercial Salem. Oreion. Telephone 2-2441. New Light on War and Peace rm i-iil 11.. i:V Vmi rhlftt 1 IM TTrrt 1 elearly comes from unexpected sources. The great and powerful-nations are not the gourde of all wisdom nor the exclusive pro ducers of great statesmen. In a superbly logical statement made before UN, Dr. Charley Malik, delegate from Lebanon, sheds niich illumina- tlon on the paramount question of war and peace. " .. v - - Here is a man. from a little republic under the shadow of the hammer and sickle, speaking courageously and objectively to both East and West, pointing) out the vices and virtues of each and pointing a way to peace. (One of the im portant services of United Nations is that it pro vides a forum where the thoughts o? great minds from small nations can shine before all - the world, not even hidden under the bushels of Dr, Malik seeks to dispel the confusion -generated' by that propoganda by considering the original well-springs of communism; the writ ings of Marxi Ertgels, Lenin and Stalin. These Knur that tfc lin-service to neace Dald bv lat ter-day party-liners is, in reality, "a tragic circumstances.' .The century-old communist -ideology deter mines the course of communist action, and its " fundamental thesis is" that war, class-struggle nrl rovnlution. are inevitable and must be has tened by every communist. Forcible overthrow of the existing order and violent seizure of power are the orthodox means to the commun- '' . . ... - . .... j . . dety in which the Individual exists Jo serve the state and has value only as a unit for the prod uction of material goods, Malifc-credits the com- I cohomic, justice and for positive enduring achievements in Russia, but these do not balance their disbelief in objective truth; Jn freedom of Inquiry, in individual worth and freedom. These latter values are the tradition or the "WtSit but in the West, also, they are45eing over whelmed by excessive materialism, a -general weakening of the moral fiber,' emphasis on quantity instead of quality, a tragic dearth of great leaders and a bankruptcy of fundamental Ideas. ., - . ... ; ' - . j1e must hope and pray the communists will Jabandon their doctrine of revolution, will allow Intercourse between East and West, will have a real change of heart. Dr. Malik continues. But (to ask communism to change its nature, without satisfying the need to which it is a response, is to offer the world not bread but a stone, he i warns. . "Politically the West will not serve the cause I ef peace by allying itself with dark regimes just because it is more expedient not to disturb L . t- l- it it:' a : it: -i wiciu, tic ds. iur u iv suixiuent in mis cruel century to be happy arid self-sufficient- Nor does it do merely to reject communism. East and West, are engaged in war ' right now, and to achieve peace Malik exhorts the! West: -You must step forth and lead ; . Man -thirsts after ideas. If the habits and lnstitutions of the West are not adapted for the production of a ririging message, full of content and truth, , satisfying tha mind, appealing to the heart, fir . ilng the will, a messag on which one can stake - his whola life, then In the present world In ' which there is, perhaps as never before, a unl- is" iiuuxcr tur truui ana justice ana resx, . th West cannot lead If the western world . can show a way to efadicata the shame and Scandal of poverty, of exploiUtion, of oppres sion of greed, without resort to social revolu- A I . . . muii ana ciau siruggia ana cuciaxorsnip; u 11 can place these material'values In their proper subordinate place within the context of a migh- , ty spirnuu movement, then the necessity lor , communism wiU vanish and the spectre which now walks the earth will be laid forever." This powerful appeal by Dr. Malik was made last November. Ia the five months since then the thoughts expressed in his statement and . held and spread by other, men of his, stature must have been heard. For it seems to us that the recent " speeches by such as Secretary of State Acheson and some of the recent actions by the U.S.! congress and government reflect . those thoughts.' At first falteringly and now with more confidence, the West, led by the Un ited States, is undertaking the leadership thrust upon it by, the threat of communist-inspired - . wax; and peace, therefore, is still possible. , ' V " ' ; :'' ScHool Election Friday On Friday a school election will be held on the question! of exceeding the six per cent lim itation for the operation of our schools in the next fiscal year. We have been voting an extra levy for a number of years now and the need increases rather than diminishes. ? ' The budget committee has labored to Step the extra request within limits so that the millage levy will not be increased. The Statesman urges voters to cast their ballots in favor of the pro posal. They should note that more, voting -places have been set ip ana go to the one in which 'their precinct is grouped. (See map in last Mon day's paper). This election is not to be confused with one set or June 19th when a director is to be elect ed and two proposals submitted for funds, for capital outlay (new J buildings), a special tax -levy and a bond issue. p Don't overlook the Fridxv election to author- u ize funds to take care of the current budget. - f ft A fl 'i ' r'1 , S; d i f $JL EQiiTOSALOTMORE To My Aurit On National Doughnut Day By Henry MeLemor '. EACH. Fla ' May 31 1 have nbtalwsys told the truth. There have been times when I havent been as honest as the rules and regulations gov- fiilnv - hiinuiv i r s, if lr e e n I (Wash- I d my p-" To ourV reference to Ashland as a "staid old town," Robert Edwards of the Ashland Tidings comes back with a punch that shows there's life in the old berg yet! Why Ashland, he says, estimates (where have we heard that word be fore?) that its population has grown 75 per cent in the last decade (to 39.3 per cent for Salem), Besides straightening out its city political mess, citizens voted a h,alf million dollar bond issue to improve the water system and another half million for better schools. Sawmills humming,- pear trees thriving, peach es and tomatoes more than locally famed, and Southern Oregon College of Education booming along why, Ashland is top, of the heap, says the Tidings man. That's fine! We bet, though, Ashland doesn't have a marble service station. L I U ftPCDODO Literary Gui depost Judging by Tuesday's experience patriotic holidays should be held in the middle of the week and not on week ends as is advocated by JSrtv K wuu wn lung ioa pernaps iosv ) wees ends. For the .observance of Memorial day Tues day drew more for the parade and more for spectators and listeners to the program than in many a year. It Is altogether too easy for citi zens to skip the holidays especially if they come at week ends and' leave the ceremonials to a few committees. But these days are for all the people and the public exercises merit 'general attendance. .Those- who took part Tuesday should be complimented for the fine program they presented, one which well befitted the cap ital of the state. (Continued from page 1) running as a republican; and .this year had the support of the reg ular republican organization in North Dakota. The Non-partisan league flourished for a number of years, though it never spread far from its native North Dakota. Organ izers did enter the northwest, but farmers out here hesitated to pungle up the $18 a year levied as i membership' dues. It still functions in North Dakota but now exists, largely as a political grouping within the republican One of the recent films in which Elizabeth Taylor was a star is "father of the Bride." Her newest release is The Big Hangover." . . Won der if that is the result of all that champagne at the wedding? Civil Defense of America Declared in Need of Public Airing; Fear of Hysteria Held Nonsense t The North Dakota experiments had pretty hard going, especially on their money-lending. The state bank' and state flour mill are still running; but the adven ture' in state ownership of in dustries has been halted. The regular republican organization pretty well dominates staft pol itics, and the league has lost control of most of its state and local offices and their patronage. It gave a scare to private bus iness for a good many years, but is no longer a threat to the econ omic order, even in North Dakota which is now both prosperous and conservative, though 'the seed of radicalism are no doubt still in the soil there. Lemke was one of the last of the old leaders of the Non-Partisan league, though I believe ex-Senator Fra iler is still living In retirement in North Dakota. Townley, the founder, died a number of years ago. I Lemke's passing revives memories of one of the bitterest political conflicts in the history ol any western state. w By Stewart A1m unina lacked Door: II . WASHINGTON, May 31 No one paid much attention to an I announcement which emanated recently from Moscow, to the effect that the ; five-year pi en ! sicfn of Soviet r industry is loor- i fifths complet- ed. Russian i rlvetear nlans f. are very old tuff now. But "this par- Sment was not , Mr rt: K)m9 lihout interest. For the Soviet dispersion plan is primarily ' in tended sharply to reduce Soviet vulnerability, to atomic attack. .Put this fact together, with an other fact that whether or not war is probable, war Is certainly possiblel A rather obvkus ques tion then springs to mind. What ta the United States doing to re duce American vulnerability to atomic attack? " After au. the Soviets do have' the atom bomb, and the means of delivering nuclear weapons to American targets. Therefore, the answer to the question above should be of interest, perhaps . especially to the Inhabitants of the eleven mstfe cities, con- attack Boston, New York, Phil adelphia, Baltimore; Washington, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Chicago, St. Louis and Los An- The answer to the question ap-. peers to be very simple "Nothing- . ; : . . . a . Aa important civil defense" plans was, to be sure, filed with '.the atomic energy commission about e year ago, but the AJLC hit nfiiuw1 to riisc It T?twr lethargic 'hearings have beenf security resources board, which Is being brought back from the dead by its new chief, Stuart Symington, has promised plans In the future. Yet the word "nothing" accurately describes what has actually been done to reduce American vulnerability to an atomic strike. . All the experts who nave. real ly studied the problem of civil defense in an atomic war have reached the same conclusion " with -which, the Soviet experts apparently agree). This is that dispersion of population and in dustries, so that no one bomb can have decisively crippling ef fect, is the only real answer to atomic bombardment ' - i -' j It is true that very deep shelt-. era might be useful. It is inter esting, for example; that a num ber of Japanese were-in an or dinary concrete shelter almost directly below the explosion point, of the Hiroshima bomb. These Japanese survived, while othersA unprotected,' died a mile or more from the tenter ?f the blast .4 : Yet shelters would be , at best a palliative. Aa for other con ventional civil defense measures This would gradually but effec tively, decrease American vulner ability over a period of years. Yet one reason why no such program is now being seriously considered can be found in e single sentence in a recent article by Dr. Ralph Lapp, nuclear phy sicist and civil defense expert: "Any real civil defense program will require an organization comparable in authority and in annual budget appropriations to' the national military establish ment" In other words, a real program would cost around $14, 000,000,000 a year. Another reas on may be found in this question: Is Senator Brien McMahon of Connecticut going to sponsor a program to encourage the air craft industry to leave Hartford?" It is for such reasons that the .authorities concerned have ap parently abandoned the Idea of any serious civil' defense pro gram, as economically and polit ically impractical. But such de cisions, which may most intim ately affect the lives of a great many people, simply cannot be taken behind locked doors. The whole question of civil defense should be debated aa ' a rt lire waicners, iutr aui stations, , national issue, rather than : Better English I By D. C irmiaaaa 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "We made fifty : dol lars over and above expenses . 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "venal?" IS. i Which one of these words .By W. G. Rogers A SUMMER IN ITALY," by Sean OTaolain (Devin-Adair; . $30): ' . The trip on( which this Irish " author reports. was made less than 'two years ago, so we may assume, that the Italy v he visited, and loved, and questioned, was mucfi . the same country, Inhabited by 'Hhe same people, that American tourists will see this season. I OTaolain's interests, as we might expect of a writer, were not so much political and econ omic as cultural and humane, and also, for he's a Catholic, re ligious. Ha talked with the people rather than their leaders; in Rome, for Instance, he pon ders on the whereabouts of Pet er's remains, and he is gratified to meet an aged guide who "took his Catholicism as mildly and naturally as breathing," but one distant look at the Quirinal is enough, . He does not travel, he wanders, to Turin, in and out of Genoa and - down the Ligurian shore a way, cuts inland at Lucca, goes on to Florence,' Siena and. after Rome, to Venice, where a first visit "unseats the reason," and to Ver ona. He goes to the fairs, watch es -a horse race, looks at church es and paintings, admires the sky, deplores the heat talks to other foreigners and natives. "I am merely a man traveling "for pleasure. Pay no .heed ? to me whenever I seem to forget.". Yet he does forget, and for an his conviction that a man should feast his eyes and park his mind , at heme, he cannot help reflecting on the failure of the present to is misspelled? Engrosser, oppres ser, ca rouse r, conspirator. 4. What' does the word "ves ture'' mean? ' ! 5. What is a word beginning with In that means to make afraid?" ? 1, Say, "We earned fifty dol lars seere than expenses." 2. Pro nounce ve-nal. e as in we a un stressed. 3. Oppressor. 4. Dress'; apparel , Nature's : vesture is something always to appreciate." S. Intimidate. j 1 live up to the magnificent past . and he does not satisfy his own doubts about whether ft is one nation, and too proud,: too rich in tradition, too wasteful of its fin est qualities. When he goes again, he vows he will not think at all. conduct call for. l Truth is, if l h a d b George Wash ington and poppa naa asx- . ed me who cut down the cherry tree, I undoubtedly would have said, "I dont know," or placed the . blame on the' little scamp who ' lived next door in Mt Vernon. I But today I'm going to tell you something that I saw a short time ago with my own eyes, de ipite the fact that you are cer- i tain to say I am making it up. . Here is what I saw: A greeting card' which read: To My Sister-in-law on Moth-, er's Day." " . Read that Just once more, and 1 tell me what this country is coming to when a card like that ' can sell. And it must sell, or otherwise greeting card publish ers wouldn't print such cards. i- : . I X . have been a collector of greeting cards for years because , tc me they represent one of the most laughable phases of Amer ican life. They also represent unbelievable ingenuity, gall, and an understanding' of American gullibility by the publishers' of these cards. My greeting card collection numbers in the thou sands 'and I am quite sure that no more' than half a dozen of them, with . the exception of Quistmas cards, "make much more sense than a vest with L- sleeves. My , collection Includes cards which say this: "To Grand- mother on Arbor Day," "To My Aunt on . National . Doughnut Day," "To the One I Love' on the Fourth of July," Best Wishes for a Speedy Recovery During Dark Glasses Week." ' Speaking of "Dark Glasses Week," there is really such a thing coming up. It is some time late in June, and I was tempted to cancel my trip abroad In order to be here and help I ""celebrater It didnt seem-right" to leave this country during what is sure to, prove seven of the silliest days of all time, , I im- . agine Vm right when I assume that "Dark Glasses Week" was - originated by manufacturers of dark glasses, and that the aim of it is to get every man, woman, child, dog, cat muskrat and all other two- and four-footed crea tures to wear dark glasses. V , I also imagine that the spon-. sors of this' amazing week would -jump with joy-if everyone wore dark glasses not only during the day, but at night also. I am. not a particularly easy man to " amuse, but I do believe I'd get a great laugh, after I had brush ed my teeth, put on my pajamas, and said my prayers, to slip on my dark glasses and hit the sacki. .And the thought of millions of t'other people, stretched out in their beds, all wearing dark glasses to guard against the glare of midnight would increase my " merriment to the point where I might possibly violate the sacred "Dark Glasses Week" by shaking them off my face. - ' Greeting cards that are ridic ulous, and Weeks that .are hand running companions in silliness, do not annoy . me or make me doubt the sanity of this country. As a matter of fact such non sense heightens my faith In what I like to call The Republic. ! The world Is head-over-heels In gloom, and if any country has the, right to be gloomy it's this one. But is it gloomy? No. The man who writes those greeting cards which read, "To My Sister-in-law on Mother's Day" un doubtedly has enough: problems to gray his hair. ' But what does .. he do he carries on and writes greeting cards like that , This is the time when any other country except this one would put on a "Rose-Colored Glasses Week, if it were going to put on any eyeglass week: The last choice would ; be "Dark Glasses Week." But not the TJ. S. A. This is a happy and confident country, largely pop ulated by 1 happy, - confident , people, and who can fuss at that state of 'affairs. No. I. ' l : i (Distributed by McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) I Construction workers on the steel framework of m skyscraper wear metal helmets similar to those of the first World War to protect themselves from a possible misthrown hot rivet or other in jury. ' ! GRIN AND BEAR IT by Lichty end "the rest these would be. in . the words' of one expert "luce trying to cure cancer -with an aspirin tablet" Moreover, only dispersion , will afford any pro tection . to American industry, which means to the American war potential. e a ' f Yet aU estimates of the cost of any serious dispersion pro , gram are astronomical. To trans form every American city into the dvil defense expert's ideal r the dispersed, "strip city" would mean changing the whole ' fare of America, ' and this is of "course- silly. A less ambitious program, designed to subsidize and encourage the already exist ing tendency towards decentral- Jield before the ioint committee1 , ballon of industry, has been put en atomic energy The national ' forward by some of the experts. shrouded in secrecy and shoved tinder the rug. - Some officials are certainly worried about public hysteria if the real facts are brought out But this is nonsense. European civilian populations have lived . for years under the shadow of r sudden enemy attack. Although : It is a new experience for them, Americans arc presumably eap able of living under the same shadow. The shadow wi3 only , really begin to hang heavy, more over, if the Western world is al- , lowed to grow so weak that the : Soviets, wii conclude that they . can win a war if they start one. And ft is darkness, not light , ; (however harsh the light) which leads to unreasoning fear. ' Cwxiumt. tssa ' firw Term Her aid Tni a. 4 . r 1 ahaS an laves tixatiaa af basahliax ta say district they're betting twe-te-ee I went eeje-eJecte , the new UPPEUUEiniiR GADARDOG is a 3-season suit This superlative doeskin gabardine tailors with beautiful smoothness and suppleness, draping "in figure-flattering lines that owe much to Kuppcnhcimcr'i longer, lower, looser, loungier styling. This distinguished tbric is pamcukrlj effective in the new CUy Colors. 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