1 . . . . ' - - , : - - , . -, '.I - I -i .' v .; .;,- ; . . r ..v-i . ' - - .'" ' . . a ; ... x :. : . ' .. v - ' :- ' - -- - V' . '- -' ' t . . ."' j -A ' - - , ' : - ' """;" -J . ' ; . . - 1 - t - V i- i.:-;':.-.-. V- .,-.v-'..:-j. ytijvV' 'v;v:f :--T'.,;-;-;i. .:..-''. ' : :;" '-'I -r -"! VTeather Wlllamtts River 17.B fet. ' FORECAST (from U. S. Weather Bu reau. McNary field. Salem): Partly cloudy today with patches of valley fog la the moraine partly cloudy to night, iacreaxlnc cloudiness Monday with. rain. High today near 84. low near 40. - . ..f 1 v ' . - Max. Mfn, Pierlfw Salem , IS 49 .! Portland - M . SI .1 Saa Franciaco ., S3 4S trac Chicago . 3 S3 tra Ntw York 4 . .3 i - to trod Newsweek: "Make no mistake about it, the new Administration has committed the-U. S."to two historic shift in attitude. Both involve 'getting tough'. - - ' What Newsweek , refer .to , ia both China and Europe. Secretary of State Dulles has been telling NATO countries in effect to "put t up or else . .. and - presiaenx Eisenhower nas mxea me quim China for Chiang Kai-shek. The new foreign policy also con ' templates abandoning containment Jof Communism for '( peaceful) libr eration of enslaved peoples, a roll back of Communism. The, proof of -the pudding "will have to be in the -eating.--.As in bridge if the player wins his bid hi bidding was correct, regardless of "systems." It may be that "get ting tough will pay;-, .off; then again it may not. .7 The lifting of restraints on Chiang Kai-shek may be follow ed with delivery of jet planes to Formosa and with an order to the Navy to enforce a blockade of the China coast. Forecast of this is attended with comment that-it is not expected to draw Russia into the war. That, however, is not the big question in my mind. Rather, will it bring the present war to an earlier end? f I do not see that these moves in the Far East would have more than diversionary value. The Na tionalists are unable to launch and sustain an invasion of the mainland. Jet Dlanes might do damage but would stab no vital. Since most of China's war mater ial comes from Russia overland the blockade fwiu not strangle its war economy. Whether it would pinch enough to force the Reds to agree to an armistice in norea can be determined only by trial. Undoubtedly the Reds would use it as propaganda to encourage the Chinese to continue their war effort against the "American im perialists," with the Russians egg ing them on. As far as Western Europe is concerned after its initial flareup it should settle back and face (Continued on editorial page) AtPe Perrydala Verda Wall, 13-year-old 8th-grader at Perrydale School, will represent Perrydale in tne semi-ii- nals of the Ore gon Statesman- KSLM Spelling Contest at Dal las on Wednes day night,' March '4 i Verda, whose 1 favorite hobby is v reading, was cer , tified as champi- s on speller of this Terda Wall Polk County schoo by Prin clpal Hugh Hanna. Her teacher is Glen Burch. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wall, Route 1, Box 340, Dallas. Second and third places at Perry dale went to Ruby Rempel, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Rempel, Route 1, Dallas, and Shir ley Neufeld, 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Neufeld, Route 1, Box 314. Dallas. Both are 8th graders. All semi-finals are open to the public, as is the grand finals in which the top two spellers from each of 10 semi-finals will compete at Parnsh Junior High School in Salem, Wednesday night, March 25. - . ! Young Mother Polio Victim - StatesBum News Service .TURNER A young Turner mother was placed in an iron lung Saturday after she was stricken with an acute case of poliomye litis. The polio victim was Mrs. Ches ter McNeil, 22, Turner, mother of three small children, one of them just a few months old. Attending physicians ' said she had been ill about t week, -i --- - : She was taken to' Salem Me morial Hospital Saturday morning after the . bulbar polio ' diagnosis was made and she was placed im mediately in the respirator.' Her condition was described by hospit al officials . as - -fair" Saturday night, r ' , - Daily Speller! (The following words are among those from which will the chosen the words for. the ' 1953 , Oregon Statesman-SSOI Spelling Con test for 7 th and Sth graders of Marion, polk and part of Yamhill County: . .v": . - national . carriage ' ' ' : status carnival", y Tiospital . commencement mistaken, behavior ' choir -circular excellent ignorance honor discipline terrible . Solicit Circulation capacity , domestic .halibut - Girl Winner m Spelling Work rrvdale ' i -v. Vr.i I I ' . 102nd YEAR Police Force J Eighty year of police work is represented by these four sets of brothers on the Salem roiiee Depart ment who are paired off seated and standing. Front row, left te right: Donald Goody, one week; Walter Esplin, 11 years; Paul Nicholson, 18 years; Jack Creasy, six years; back row left to-ritht: Raymond Goody, one' week Charles Esplin It years; Don Nicholson, 2f years; Charles Creasy, 11 years. . ' British Editorial I Aghast at Ike LONDON trV-The mass circula tion Sunday Pictorial said Satur day night in a front page editorial offered as a pro-La borite open let ter that President . Eisenhower's first 18 days in office "have been disastrous" and ' have caused ; a crisis between Britain and. . the United States." ; The Pictorial claims more man 5,000,000 circulation, Farmers Union Opposes 20 Power Charge Statesmaa News Serriee BETHEL Marion County Fann ers Union members at their quar terly convention went on record against the 20 per cent power surcharge and the buiding of the Pelton Dam. The' surcharge resolution claim ed that the 20 per cent hike in power rates is already taken care of through the lower rate charged to private power -companies by federal sower agencies. About 73 attended the meeting held at Bethel School, East state Street Road. ? Other resolutions werer Annroval of President Eisen hower and Secretary of Agricul ture Ezra Benton's stand on price support for ' farm products. That tax levies be printed on the back of tax receipts for the taxpayer's information. Urged that the legislature and Gov. Patterson preserve the two TV channels allocated to the state for public use. v ! Onftosed anr effort to change the law relative to initiative and ref erendum. 1 I John Bollinger, manager of the Farmer's Union Co-operative Store in Salem, was guest speaker. He emphasized the value of a well co-ordinated farmer-union, pro gram. . Other speakers Included IMrs. Vera Bassett of Central Howell, county junior leader, and Mrs. Percy Lamb, state junior leader and president of the Polk County Farmer's Union! . Next convention is slated for the evening of May 2, with the lo cation to be announced. COL. GRAF TO VISIT DAMS PORTLAND vB Lt." CoL John A. Graf will visit Willamette River dams, completed and . under, con struction,: after he becomes execu tive officer of the Portland District Corps of Engineers Monday.. v' CoL -Graf, succeeds r LT. .CoL James W. Sloat, assigned to Brem erhaven, Germany. . . " GINGER ROGERS WEDS . PAI SPRINGS.. Calif! VF) - Film star Ginger Rogers, 41, and Paris lawyer Jacques Bergerac, So, were married Saturday night. It was the fourth marriage for her and - the first for . Bergerac, whom she met during a European tour last year. , . ROAD CLOSED AT BRIDGE i The Salem-Independence high way is closed by high water just east of the Independence Bridge, authorise reported Saturday- 3 SECTIONS 42 PAGES Has 4 Sets of Brothers in Arm 1 i V Bids Sought For Memorial Bids on a Salem Memorial Hos pital building project which will add space for 42-beds were called Saturday. The three-story and basement wing Is scheduled to bring the South Winter Street hospital to 105 beds and add other facilities for treatment, storage and me chanical equipment. .The call for bids, to be opened here March 7, marks the second major hospital project for Salem as a result of a hospital develop ment fund drive. The camDaisrn contributed $100,000 of the esti mated $300,000 cost for the addi tion. Other funds are helping pay for construction of a new hospital minding for Salem General hos pital. J Remaining funds for the expan sion wing, will come from a $89, 468 federal grant and from the hospital's own accumulated build ing funds. Manager Irwin F. Wed- el said Saturday. More than 13,000 square feet of zioor space will be added by the project. The new wing will include tne entire birth department with ultra-modern deb very rooms, la- Dor rooms, -latners lounge" and private rooms and wards on. the third floor. The first and second floors will hold wards and private rooms witn a solarium on each floor. Dining area, storage space and mechanical equipment will be in tne basement. - i Architect -James L. Payne said the addition will be of smooth faced architectural concrete with concrete slab floors. The . struc ture will also feature intercom municating phones, asphalt and terrazo tile flooring and metal doors. . Hindu Mystic Made Mistake In Burial Plan NEW DELHL India (A J A Hyderabad . sadhu .(holy man) crawled into a box Jan. 28 ' and told his disciples to bury him three feet, below the ground. They .were ordered to leave him for 10 days. That was Narayan : Acharya's idea of doing a penance in the cause of world peace. Followers of the 56-year-old mys tic were confident'" their master would be - alive when he was dug up Saturday. A crowd of 3,000 shouted "Jai ram" (victory be to God) as the box was opened. They looked -at the still form and said the sadhu . was in a state of "divine unconsciousness.?' They recalled that twice -before - their leader had had himself buried for periods of one day and emerged alive'- :i : ,UJV r;.,: This time doctors said he was dead. But his people- thought other wise. ' All day they shuffled past his body, offering., flowers and coins and ' chanting that Narayan Acharya still lived. - Saturday night a police magis trate took charge.- He arranged to cremate the body, . since, no rela tive claimed it. Sunday Narayan Acharya's -ashes will be thrown into the sacred Jumna River, his Denanco lasting one. - Hospital Wing Yellowjacket Nest 10 Feet High, Now Lodged in Museum GAINESVILLE. Fla. M A yellowjacket nest 10 feet high and 3 feet in diameter, the. largest ever found in Jt londa, now is museum piece. v '? University - of Florida ' entomo logists sawed the stump on which the nest was built in Lafayette County, chloroformed the nest, cut it into sections and loaded it on two trucks. No one was stung al though hundreds of yellowjackets were buzzing around. Dr. A. N. Tissot of the univer sity agricultural experiment sta tion found 70 levels of combs in the structure. He estimated that when it was fully inhabited it housed probably a quarter of a million yellow j ackets. one section or tne nest was placed in the Florida state mu seum hero and the other in the Florida geological society museum at Tallahassee. Santiam Route May Reopen Wednesday State sauiBi News Service . DETROIT The North San tiam Highway, closed Thursday night by a slide, will be re opened by Wednesday "with luck, W. F. Mizner, public roads foreman, reported Saturday. ' The by-pass road on which es sential traffic . is permitted to travel will be open Sunday from 7 a jn. to 6 pjn. A pilot car will be used to direct traffic -Several residents who live east of Detroit Dam reportedly were caught away from home when gates on the by-pass road were locked at 9 pjn. Friday. : Mizner said that the slide was being moved at the' rate of 2,000 cubic yards per day. About one fourth of the 16,000 yards had been moved Saturday night. The crew will work Sunday. 1 Mizner said he felt "quite jure" Saturday that no cars had been trapped under the slide, r Friendly Dogs Also Provide Trouble For Mail Carrier LIMA. O. IMi - A dog may be man's best friend, but at least one Lima housewife . thinks her mail man is carrying the idea too far. 'An irate housewife -: complained to Postmaster Earl Leach: I " wish ' you'd - stop that mail carrier ' from bringing all ' those dogs on my porch every time he comes here. I- didn t mind it as long as , it was only that great big . brute with feet like pie pans that always follows him around but yesterday six dogs ' followed him" and . tracked up . my. clean porch." Vv- v:. I - Tne postmaster, Jong accustomed to mailmen's complaints about un friendly , dogs delaying them -from their . appointed rounds, assured the woman he d investigate and caution the carrier about bis friends. -.v., - . r SALEM FRECIPrr AXIOM Since Start ( Weather Tear Sept. 1 This Year Last Year 32.90 ' Norur.-r j . SA23 The Oregon Statesman Salem, Oregon, Sunday, 2 Divisions TOKYO tf U. N. commander Gen. Mark Clark said Sunday auth ority has been received from the Department of the Army to in crease tne Republic of Korea Army from 12 divisions to 14, with appro priate supporting units. : - ! Clark's announcement said Gen. James A. van Fleet, commander of the U. S. Eighth Army of which ROK forces are a part, has been directed to activate the new divi sions at an early date. j It emphasized that the order to activate the new divisions does not mean they, can be made combat ready in a matter of days or weeks. Nor does it mean that U. S. divi sions will be released from front line duty in the immediate future. , It was the second authorization to increase ROK ' forces in four Months. Last j October authority was received to build up the ROK Army from 10 divisions to 12. Two additional divisions will bring the ROK Army to 200,000 soldiers, not counting thousands of Korean service troops. f The increase to 14 divisions would make the ROK Army six divisions short of the 20-di vision goal rec ommended by Van Fleet. Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, who will succeed Van Fleet as com mander of the Eighth Army Wed nesday, has pledged to carry on Van Fleet's program of! expanding and strengthening the ROK Army. ROK troops now man about two thirds of the 155-mile Korean battle line. ; Van Fleet told a news conference Jan. 26 that he believed the South Korean Army could be built up within 12 months to hold the entire battleline. if Allied forces decide to keep the present front. j He said more troops from other U. N. countries would be needed if the U. N. decided on a large scale offensive. DA Orders lAbolition of Polk Pinballs DALLAS One-ball plnball ma chines in Polk County got the axe Saturday from Walter W. Foster, Polk County District Attorney, i I have instructed Sheriff Tony Neufeldt to confiscate all one-ball type machines," the recently -elected D. A. declared. Foster said his action was prompted by complaints about, the machines, which dispense only one skiU ball to the player for each coin spent. The type of plnball machine that uses . five balls ! is considered more common. I Locations of a dozen one-ball machines are known by Foster, who estimated there might be 25 in operation in the county. He said there appeared to be some in sev eral parts of the county with the exception of West Salem. t A Salem city ordinance pro hibits all pinball machines. ' j Foster said any punchboards found will be confiscated, too, al though no complaints about . them had been received. NEWSMEN TO HEAR LUCE f EUGENE (A The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, meeting here Feb. 20 and 21, will hear an address by Henry Luce, editor of Time, Life and Fortune magazines. He wul deliver the Eric W. Alien Memorial Lecture ' at the . Oregon Press Conference, r ; - ; ROK Ajpproved Oregon Legislators Losing Hope Session as Maior Lesisl By PAUL W. HARVEY JR. ! ; Associated Press Correspondent Deluged with a record, number of bills and with , none of the ma jor legislation considered i by either house during the first, four weeks of its session, Oregon's leg islators are losing hope that they might Adjourn on about the 90th day. V ' . -The House had hoped to begin action on the first of the major bills taxation and highway bonds this past week. But technical difficulties of having to maice. ail the bill conform with the new code .forced a delay - until next week. -v:- "', These technical difficulties also will delay other bills. '- ' i' - The six tax bills, which simpli fy the state's tax system, and the 32 million dollar -highway , bond issue, received .favorable commit tee reports during ; the week. The House probably will pass both pieces of legislation early next week and send them to the Sen ate. There have been 578 bills intro duced, compared with 516 at the same stage of the 1951. session, when an all-time record of 1,214 bills were introduced, i . i Here's the status of th$ fctop legislation: Finances: The ways and. means February 8. 1953 1 J 7' 0s ' MRS. CLARE BOOTHE LUCE Nominated as Diplomat Ike Selects Mrs. Luce as to WASHINGTON W President Eisenhower announced Saturday he would nominate Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce as ambassador to Italy and all indications were the senate would confirm her. This would give Mrs. Luce, the granddaughter of a Baptist mini ster and a convert to Catholicism, the honor of being America's sec ond ; woman ambassador and the first' to a major power. Since the last President Franklin D. Roosevelt named Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen Robe as U. S. minist er to Denmark in 1933, four women have served as american repre sentatives to foreign countries. Mrs. J. Borden Harriman as in Norway as American minister when germany overran that coun try in the early days of World War II. Mrs. Eugenie Anderson as am bassador to Denmark and Mrs. Perle Mesta as minister to Luxem burg, both appointees of ' former President Truman still are at their posts. : There are. reports that Eisen hower plans to name Mrs. Hiram Cole 'Houghton : Of Red Oak. la.. former president of . the General Federation of Women's Clubs, as ambassador to : The Netherlands. .Mrs. Luce,- glamorous blonde playwright and wife of Editor-in-Chief Henry Luce of the Tim -Life-Fortune magazines, served, two two-year terms in the House of Representatives, beginning In 1943. At her, Ridgefield, Conn., home she said of her selection: "It is a great honor and a privilege." She declined to. comment further. Early comment from .senators who will pass on the appointment was favorable. Sen. Sparkman (D Ala.) re called that as a representative he had served with Mrs. Luce in the House. "She is a very able per son." he said. "I see no reason why she shouldn't bo confirmed." Sen. Ferguson (K alien.) com mented: "I think she will make a very fine ambassadoress. I think she'll represent the United States very wefl." - Drive-In Theatre Due Near Sheridan Statesman News Service SHERIDAN W. H. Hibbert, own er of theaters in Sheridan, Willa mina and Grand Ronde, will build a $50,000 drive-in theater to be known as the Sky-Way,, about half way between WiUamlna and Sheri dan. i Construction will begin in April and will be completed in July. The drive-in will accomodate 350 cars, and will be managed . by Ralph Watson. ation committee is holding hearings on! the state budget, with prospects it will begin sending the appropri ation bills to the .floor in about four weeks. The tax bills are ready for House action, with no thought of Increasing taxes yet. ' Fnblie Welfare: This explosive issue was thrown wide open dur ing the week , with introduction of bills to open welfare rolls to public Inspection, and to refuse federal welfare grants. The pub licity bill might pass, but it's hard to imagine the legislature turning down $13,500,000 ft year in fed eral money. Reorganization: The bill to cre ate a. state department of revenue hasn't been introduced, and prob ably will be delayed until. 1955. The bills to set up a new motor vehicle department; consolidate 20 occupational boards 4 and to pay the liquor commissioners' haven't been considered by : coifcmittees yet. Neither has Gov.j Patterson's proposal for a constitutional con vention." "v .kV r.- . j. Education: Committees haven't worked out the new school district reorganization - bill yet, and they haven't considered the -bill, for hteher teachers salaries. Llqnor: The house alcohol com mittee will Introduce its own liq uor by the drink bill next-week. Envoy Italy Piles Hi PRICE 10c WASHINGTON (fl'JThe death : of government wage controls seemed sure Saturday to touch off union drives to recapture pay boosts denied under federal curbs. . -. . The eight million member AFL already has signalled for such attempts, but many employers are expected . to resist the move at least until their present labor contracts run out. President .i Eisenhower s order i Friday ending wage controls cave an official okay to alll employer union agreements-still. waiting for government approval. .There : were nearly 10,000 such ' contracts in volving an estimated million work ers, who will now get the con templated , pay raises.. But 'during the two-year '.period when controls were in effect many proposed boosts : in - pay . and other benefits were denied or partly dis approved by the Wage Stabiliza tion Board. Out of 125,000 cases handled, the WSB shaved down the terms of more than 20,000 employer - union agreements. It is these vetoed ben efits that the unions now will want to get back.. In many cases the. labor groups will be stuck with the reductions unless their employers voluntarily agree to waive them, as can be done now that the wage lid - has been taken off. ; " """ ' Most of the contracts were ne gotiated for time periods, with stipulations that the gains were subject to government approval. WSB Chairman Charles C Killings- worth said in a farewell news con ference that WSB's lawyers view the stipulations as meaning reduc tions can be made to last legally for the life of the contracts. But if balked for the time being at recapturing the gains once for bidden -by the wage stabilizers, unions can be depended upon the increase their pay demands by that' amount when their present contracts expire. From Gave 3 FRANKLIN. W. Va. Uf) Two Washington, D. C, men who had all but given up hope were res cued from a big . cave near here Saturday after being lost under ground for almost three days. .- "We didn t think we would make it out," said Harry C Breeden. Jr., 30-year-old electronics tech- nichian. ' . He and 20-year-old Kenneth Sterner, a power company meter tester, had gone without food and sleep since they started the im promptu exploring jaunt in Trout Rock Cave about 2:30 p.m. Wednes day. They were shaky and almost frozen. Their flashlight burned out hard ly an hour after they walked into the cavern. - - Groping through the dark, most ly on hands and knees, they had worked their way onto a ledge up under the ceiling of the cava, 15 feet above the floor. They could go no farther end in the dark they could find no way back down from their perch. They were struck there when they heard the shouts of a six-man searching party. - . ; . , -'; O. B. mien, ni-aniuin xarmer who led the. party searching Trout Rock, estimated Breeden ana ster ner were about 400 yards from the entrance. ; : . ' g and the House might . vote on it in about 1 0 days The , numerous temperance bills don't, have :.. chance.' j v-'-: ' Highways: The two major. high way bills . already are approved by the house highway committee, and the House should pass them next ' week. One is the highway bond bilL and- the other would permit tolls to be charged for crossing the highway bridge be tween Portland -and Vancouver, so that a second bridge could be fi- f Labor: Employers1 Introduced a bill to .ban the closed shop this week, and It set off a big fight between labor and employers. La bor's bills to boost unemployment and industrial accident benefits haven't . received committee ac- - Power: The 20 per cent sur charge investigation appears dead, as the senate commerce and utili ties committee doesn't plan to vote on a resolution calling for the investigation. So the big pow er fight, between Portland Gen eral Electric Co. and fishing in terests, will be over whether PGE should build Pelton Dam. The PGE bill would permit it to -appeal from the hydroelectric commis sion order denying it permission to build the dara. , , . Saved After Day for Short No. 339 DHnDH Salem Prices Remain Stable le By CONRAD P RANGE Staff Writer, The Statesman Removal of OPS price controls will have little, if any, affect on ; Salem , area prices In the staple ; items of everyday living, it was ; indicated by a survey this week , end. : ' Leading local merchants in food, "furniture, clothing, depart ment store commodities, used cars -and restaurants were quizzed. The questions were: How will As Controls D the removal of OPS price controls : affect your business? - Will any . of your prices go up?? . -, "There is nothing in the forsee- able future to indicate our prices will increase. We are already selling below the established OPS ceilings now," was the comment . of a large department store man ager. And that just about sums it un . for all the others, too as they see. it from here, that is. The only dissenting' opinion came from a used car dealer. Ho said removal of OPS controls on 1946 autos and older would, (if the lifting actually occurs) prob- ably mean that some "good" used ' cars in that category might in- crease from $25 to $100. -'"As an -example he said he had . a 1940 model car In "excellent condition." The OPS ceiling on that car is $344. . He said if con- trols were removed he would ask at least $450 for It. Below Celling Dealers - in other businesses. however, looked for no immediate) ' price increase. A wholesale food ' dealer said that nearly all gro ceries have been selling here be low (some ' "far below") OPS . maximums. The main reasons for this situation, he. said, are com petition and increased supplies hi ' . ail items of food. fit's different now than in World War II days," he said. fThen food prices were high be . cause nearly all food Items were ia short supply." This statement closely paral leled the furniture dealer who re- ' marked that "lifting of OPS con trols for us will mean less eye- . strain we won't have to worry about filling out those forms." Prices Level Off Competition and a good supply of all furniture goods has leveled , prices off below OPS ceilings for the past several months, he said. The manager of one of Salem's largest, department stores, which handles a wide range of com- '. modities, said that "99 per cenl of eveiything we sell has been go ing at prices below ops maxi mums for the past five months. Unless some unforseen happens I see no price increases In our store at this time." A prominent clothing store dealer said he couldn't recall a single item In his store being held down in price by OPS regulations. ! Most clothing items have been out from under OPS for the past month and children's clothing is expected to be freed next. Meals Below OPS Ceiling The manager of one of Salem's largest restaurants said the re- ' moval : of OPS controls "wont " mean a- thing to us. We are already serving meals below OPS -ceilings and have been for tome, time." A hotel restaurant man ager said , removal of controls . would mean more menu variety. Salem has no rent controls and real estate in general is not ex pected to be affected by Presi dent Eisenhower's recent an nouncement to wipe out controls in nearly all businesses. AH merchants surveyed, how ever, kept one reservation. They couldn't - foresee, they said, , the effect of removal of con trols on wages, factory shipments and raw material supplies on a national scale. These things, they admitted, could change the pic ture overnight. . As one merchant said: "We re tailers are at the bottom of the supply-price line. If someone i above . us raises bis prices we " might have to raise ours." , Sun-Scheduled for Appearance Todays : The sun Is scheduled to make an occasional appearance In Lv.e Salem area today, LIcNary field weathermen predict. The forecast warns, however, that though the Sunday driver may . have ' fair weather for 1 jaunt, on Monday it will be r&is ing again, 7