Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1952)
n fcRJMf AND BEAU IT I i Hi . l' & i' i by Llchty Levees1 Continue to Hold . i t V ' statesman "No Favor Sway U. No Ftar Shall Aw 9 From First SUtesmtn. March SS. 131 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHAR1.FS A. SPRAUUt; Editor and Publisher r a bushed every morning. easiness office 2 IS S Commercial, Salem. Oregon. Telephone 2-244 L. Catered at the postoffice at Salem. Oregon, aa sees ad class matter uder act of congress March S. 127ft. 4 TWCtoscAtei fiWOrq Iftlffa ' Two Sides to "Insubordination" We are somewhat surprised at the punish ment meted out to an Air Force officer, called back from the reserves, who refused to fly com bat planes. But versions of the incident have been somewhat conflicting and no judgment can be passed on the basis of present information. However, as a general rule it appears the Air Ferce would not want a man responsible for lives and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of equipment if that man was so averse to his job as to publicly proclaim his refusal. Why not put him in the infantry or in the ground service of the air force, if he'd prefer, instead of making a major issue of the case? In some cases, skilled pilots and other air ferce officers have been called back into service evefct though they have not been voluntary, re servists. Since their active service, some of them have acquired new responsibilities, wives, chil dren. They feel they have taken their share of chances previously, and should not be called on for the extra hazardous duties of defending their nation especially when it is not even formally at war. Certainly, no one can sanction insubordina tion in the services. But the air force as an elite group could well afford to drop older men who feel that so long as they are forced to serve again they are better adapted mentally and phy sically for other branches of the military. General Vandenberg, the Air Force's ranking officer, says "the increasing risk is dampening the enthusiasm for flying" and that the Air Force "is meeting increasing difficulty in at tracting a sufficient number of young men phy sically and mentally qualified for flying." Both of these statements are understandable, and considering the belittling that has sur rounded the so-called police action in Korea it is all the more understandable. The general also should be supported in his insistence that extra pay be applicable for extra hazardous service. But the Air Force could do well to re-examine its regulations regarding recall to the end that its officers and men can feel they will not be indefinitely required to carry out the more stringent duties which youthfulness and patriot ism first led them to elect. years in employment for which he just wasn't suited? Another benefit of "Career Day" programs is the opportunity for businessmen, public ser vants, unionists and professional men to dispel common misconceptions about their particular fields. Despite their alert response to the day's realistic teachings, these youngsters could well fall under the spell of movies and writings which over-glamorize or distort the lines of work which happen to provide good story back ground for a boy-meets-girl yarn. Yes, "Career Day" deserves considerable cre dit. Its success can be measured in the intent faces, the sensible, searching questions of tho students. One such vocational preparation course went off successfully Thursday at Cen tral High School, Independence - Monmouth, where fields covered ranged from truck driver and designer to stewardess, mechanic, police woman, photographer, bookkeepers, beauticians and, bless 'em, newspaper reporter. . . . Tho chair will bow consider oxrestions as to what wo should do with thooo men la tho Kremlin ..." A Commendable Project ' Career Day" is getting to be a popular and profitable event for high school youths begin ning to turn their thoughts to the adult tasks of jebhunting and making a living. A "Career Day" program, whatever it happens to be nam ed, usually takes the form of several simultan eous discussions of various vocations, by small student groups led by representatives of the various vocations. This enables the students to point their speci fic questions at a practicing member of a par ticular profession or trade, rather than at their teachers or school counselors. And their ques tions can be pointed indeed. They want to know just how much starting salaries amount to, what tho chances are for women in that field, how many days a week are worked, what about phy sical appearance, health standards, etc. But most often they want to know what op portunities exist for advancement and what edu cational or other preparation is required. These and all the young folks' questions deserve thoughtful answer. Getting a young man or young woman head ed toward a vocation to which he's adapted or to which he will likely adapt himself is an im portant thing for society as well as for the in dividual. Who is there who cannot recall a per sonal friend or acquaintance who wasted away Revising of Opinions The Statesman's current poll of the presiden tial choices of candidates for democratic con vention delegates, while yet incomplete, has brought out some interesting data. And some of it, because of Governor Stevenson's apparently definite announcement that he will not seek higher office, will need revision. Delegate candidates who have named Steven son as first or second choice will be re-canvassed in the light of the development. So far, 80 per cent of those responding to tho questionnaire have listed Estes Kefauver as their first choice. Only one has given Stevenson top billing but others have listed him as runner up in their personal favor. Senator Russell is the other potential named oftenest in the one-two category of personal preferences. One candidate has listed Senator Douglas of Illinois. The candidates for democratic delegates are pledged to work for whoever Oregon gives its preferential vote on the -democratic ticket May 16. But when and if that person releases them, personal opinions will bo a big factor. Editorial CommenT TRUMAN'S SEIZURE OF STEEL . It is a bit difficult to show wherein President Truman's seizure of the steel industry to ward off a strike goes beyond the preceding seizures of rail roads and coal mines for the same purpose the protection of the national welfare in a time of emergency. The difference lies in the fact that in this case President Truman had NOT exhausted tho possibilities under existing law. The Taft-Hartley law may not be a good law. It may be distasteful to President Truman as it is to a great many people, but the fact is that it is a law and the President deliberately chose to ignore it and to claim "implied powers" to act as he pleased . . . There are many other editors who make lurid analogies to Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin. These bit ter comments, in our opinion, tend to obscure tho real seriousness of the issue which has been raised by Truman's act. The real issue is the President's assertion of the right, under certain circumstances, to take private property without process of law and without compensation ... Truman has gone a step farther than any Presi dent has ever gone in the taking of property with out process. This policy would not be fatal if it were limited to steel, but it is erroneous to suppose that it can bo so limited or that ambitious politicians will not seek to apply the precedent all the way along the line. There are many professed "libruls" who are extremely ruthless in whatever they con ceive to be necessary for public welfare . . . If President Truman had exhausted every re source of existing law, we would not challenge his right to invoke the "implied powers" for the na tional defense. It Is his decision to make the law for himself which threatens all of us, not merely those natural political targets the steel barons. (Eugene Register-Guard) Casualty After a yeasty life of 20 years the well-known humor page of the Forest Log, official blurb of the State Forest ry Department, has been killed. On suggestion of the State Fi nance Dept. the publication has reduced itself to four pages in its latest issue. And the yak filled Duffel Bag, favorite of many in this harsh world, is a gone goose. In the last col umn of the last page in this week's issue, The Duffel Bag, encircled in an appropriate black border, bowed out with one last fling from the Bag's author, Hazel Hoe, as follows: "Well, S'long Folks. As the soup sez to the moustache, 'Things seem to be gettin' strained.' " And the Identity or Hasel Hoe, lone kept a flr-boag hned secret, is finally revealed. "She" Is none other than Albert H. GUle, forestry department veteran and city alderman. For 20 years ho has turned oat Basel's fan -loving- frolics on his own time, often working into the wee hoars to make her oft quoted remarks click. He received, through the department, fan mail from all over tho country, including many a newspaper editor. And he saw his work lifted (often without credit) by many a publication . . . Most people thot Hasel was Editor Lynn Cronemllier, who fathered the Log- back In 1930. Sagie Nishioke, the American-born Japanese war veteran, aroundwhom a recent state employment fuss was kicked up, tells friends in Seattle he is ready to go to work for the State Tax Commission about April 22. He says he has asked the com mission to place him in a Portland office. His aged mother lives in Hood River and he would be near her if he got the Portland job. He has told the commission he is willing to work any place but prefers Portland. Oregon Teamster reports that Attorney Gen. George Neuner, who says he's ready to retire at the end of his present term, was once a teamster. Seems that George ws a mule skinner in the early days of undeveloped Oregon. He drove a string of mules over the mountain trails and rugged roads . . . Neuner's home town paper, the Roseburg News-Review, Indicates that this early voice training probably accounts for the Georre's present tonal culture. Wonder if the papers will run TV programs as they do radio programs now. If so will they get calls and letters raising Old Ned because the programs are listed wrong? Actually papers have a terrific struggle trying to keep their radio logs up to date. They (the papers) would be happy to have the printed logs more accurate and they would, too, if radio stations would make late program corrections. Even stations have last-minute changes which can't always be corrected on time. So-o-o . . . Worried France Seen As Only Obstacle of Plan For Joint Western Europe Defense Program Your Health By Herman N. Bundesen, M.D. By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst Among the last matters to be settled before West Germany be comes a working partner in the European De fense program -is France's de sire for an An gle - American guarantee that - --. .... n.;n not be permit- tea to cnange - many sufficiently strong to phy sically break such agreements. But if things reached such a point, what could an Anglo American - French agreement do to prevent it anyway? Would they agree now to go to war against Germany on the basis of some hypothetical future? Or try to work out now some system of sanctions and controls? The natural effect of any sort of Germany breakaway would be to call into play tho factual forces which now op erate under the Atlantic pact. France, Britain and the United States are the core of that pact. History and tho facts of life, far more Important than any agreement, assure that they are not going to run out on each other. To attempt some formula now would actually amount to an al liance against Germany within an alliance of which Germany is a part. It would create doubt and disaffection in Germany, and weaken the over-all alliance, which will prove unworkable anyway if it has to be held to gether by coercion. how France wfijee satisfied without it. In the first place, nobody seems to have a very clear idea of how such a guarantee could be made. In the second place, there is no indication in Washington that it is believed necessary or prac tical. Franca is afraid Germany, aft er once committing troops to the new European army, might take notion to pull them out and start a war with Poland with the Communist sphere including Russia in an effort to regain the territory beyond the Oder-Niesse line after the last war. And In tho background Is the fear that Germany might be reunited mum day and lino . with Russia for a new try at world conquest. It is net the present West Ger many of which France is afraid. But Franco has seen Germany change its face too often to be complacent. To an American the Sehu aaaa plan, which pats Ger niiy'i eoal and steel Indus try sudor international con trol mm therefore omits her ability to make war, would ooaso to be enough. But France is afraid of Ger- Literary Guidepost By W. G. Socerte THE REBELLION OF THE HANGED, by B. Traven, translated from the Spanish (Knopf; $3.50) 'East and speed are not good for revolutionaries," says the Professor, one of the characters in this novel. Good or not, ease and speed are not the mark of revolutions, or so this fierce, grim Mexican tale proves. This is a record of how dreadfully long it takes for a man to make up his mind to revolt, how great must be the provocation, how the actual fighting drags on. Candido, a Tsotsil Indian, has' a wife Marcelina, two little boys Angelino and Pedrito, and five acres of poor soil. This land, though it barely keeps the small family alive, is Candido's, he is his ' own master, and h rejects the alluring offers of the wealthy who will pay him a lot to work for them yet leave him without the right to call his soul his own . . . this is the time of Diaz. Bat Marcelina falls ill with a fearful Earn in her side; Candido puts er on the mule to take her to a doctor in town; the doctor ad vises an operation, but demands for it more money than mis poor Indian has seen in all his years;' and so, providentially, along comes a labor contractor with tho necessary money if Candido will sign up for a job in tho ma hogany forest. He signs, but Marcelina has just died. Still he has signed, and off he goes. He goes to an abominable slavery so deep in the forest there is no rescue from it. Tho foreman beats the laggard with a whip, buries the unruly up to their nostrils in the sand or hangs them by hands and feet where ants can devour them or laguars tear them to pieces. .Such desperate, barbarian repressioa can inspire only an equally fero cious and pitiless revolt. The ap proach to the limits of human en durance and the inevitable re bound are tho subject of this tense tale. Even tho publisher claims ho doesn't know who B. Traven is, for if s a pseudonym. All I can say for sure is, he's certainly writer ALLERGIC REACTIONS TO FOODS One man's meat Is another man's joison when one of them has a food allergy. A great num ber of people have this type of allergy. An allergic person, we know, Is unusually sensitive to certain substances when his body comes in contact with them. A familiar complaint is hay fever, which is due to an allergy to ragweed pollen in the air. Many people are sensitive to different drugs, skin lotions, industrial materials, dusts, foods, etc. When a definite article of food is the guilty substance, it is usu ally possible to identify it. Most often it can be proved that the patient has his allergic symptoms after eating this food, or he may show an increase in symptoms al ready present. In some cases this is not as simple as it sounds. Foods can produce may different types of allergic symptoms, sometimes baffling, such as headaches, asthma attacks, and increased severity of hay fever. There are many symptoms and disorders in -which a food allergy is strongly suspected but cannot be definite ly proved or disproved. Some people lose their allergies in time. This is not the rule, for most people who are sensitive to a special food will have symp toms almost every time they eat it. Others, however, may "become more or less tolerant of the food. The change may take weeks, months, or even years, and later they may be able to eat the food with safety. Why are people allergic to some foods? Most specialists agree that heredity plays some part in the story. The earlier the allergy develops, the harder it is to treat and the more widespread it may become. Thus, an infant who has eczema has a greater tendency toward food allergy in later life. Some people with a food al lergy show it only at certain times of the year. A good allergy In a person with hay fever may occur only during the hay fever season. Others seem to show signs of food allergy only when exposed to undue cold, heat or light. The allergy is usually relieved once the offending food is dis covered. This is usually done by skin sensitization tests, and eliminating different foods from the diet systematically to find the offending one. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS M. W.: Are all types of menin gitis contagious? Answer: Certain types of men ingitis, such as tuberculous men ingitis and those due to syphilis are not highly contagious. "Martinet," means a strict mili tary disciplinarian, is derived from the name of Jean Martinet, French infantry drill master be tween 1660 and 1870. SAVE Where Savings Pays FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 21 y SsSMssSssSMsl v i iststli Ififa I if 2 Current Rate 129 N. Commercial Salem Tho flood waters of tho Missouri River, spread out as wide as 15 miles upstream (top) pushes Its crest of over 28 feet toward the half mile wide "neck" (center) separating- Omaha, Neb, (left, and Council Bluffs, Ia (right. Tho dikes and levees along this "neck" eontlnne to hold against pressure they never were intended to take. In foreground Is tho Union Pacific railroad bridge and in background tho Ark-Sar-Beu bridge, main ar tery for vehicular traffic. Bot tom, with flood water standing at 28.3 feet at Omaha. Neb, com pared with a previous all-time high of 24.S at Hood stage, there's not too much space left to tho top of tho dike along the Missouri River. Wooden flashing atop the dike Is an emergency measure placed on levee in hopes of containing flood waters should they .go that high. In background, left. Is the American Smelting Refining' Co, which stands well below the present water level. ((A) Wirephoto to The Statesman) Standisli Takes Army Training Pvt. Wayne Leo Standlsh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Standlsh, 2455 N. 4th St., is now taking his basic training at Camp Roberts, Calif. He enlisted in the Army March 14 and has been assigned to a medium tank di vision. He is a grad uate of Salem schools. If rl i . ' - - lUiUMMjjiHtJt Standlsh Russian Building Being Restored MOSCOW (jSVThe Grand Pal ace of Peterhof an outstanding monument of Russian architecture near Leningrad is being restored. During the war the center part of the palace was torn down by the Germans and only a half ruined doorway and shattered windows remained. So far, tho walls of the building have been restored and work has begun on rebuilding the beams of the floors and ceilings of many of the apartments. Idaho Youth Held On Forgery Charge A 16-year-old Idaho youth was held by Juvenile authorities Thursday charged with forgery, after his arrest earlier in tho day for attempting to cash a check at the Walter Zosel service sta tion, at Chemeketa and High Streets. In his possession at tho time were four checks, totaling $47, which the youth admitted mak ing out in the Ballou and Wright Auto Equipment Store at 445 Che meketa St. An attendant at the service station refused to cash the check he gave her, the youth told police. The youth said he had hitch hiked here from Jerome, Ida. Better English By D. C. WILLIAM 3 1. What is wrong with this sen tence? "He was anxious to make a good impression, and he's been pretty successful.' 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "exquisite"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Recommend, conde send, superintend, reprimand. 4. What does the word "longe vity" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with ad that means "to make im pure"? ANSWERS 1. Say. "He was eager to make a good impression and he's been, very successful." 2. Accent first syllable, not the second. 3. Con descend. 4. Length of life. "The longevity of the human race hJ increased." 3. Adulterate. Condensed Statement of Condition of WILLAMETTE VALLEY BANK (Including University Branch) Salem, Oregon As of March 31, 1952 ASSETS Loans and Discounts $1,396,997.33 U. S. Government Securities 1,100,384.07 Other Securities 407,893.80 Cash, Cash hems and Bal. with Other Banks 51 1,096.08 Other Assets - 87,719.56 Total Assets LIABILITIES and CAPITAL Deposits Other Liabilities Total Liabilities ... Capital Accounts Total Liabilities and Capital ....$3,504,092.86 $3,323,026.72 18,054.14 3,341,080.86 163,012.00 $3,504,t92.8o SALEM'S INDEPENDENT DANK 1990 Fairgrounds Road 1310 State Street Phono 3-9281 Phone 4-4451 MMEX FEDERAL DEPOSIT IN SU RAN CI CORPORATION