$ The iHaABMaa. datoau Orw thcridcty, nribsgerr ifl 1SS3. auaJisbed ererr moraine. Commerotal St, Salem. Ora, By. curtci ta dtlw Dally and Sunday jDatty only i sunaa? our By audi. Sunday only (la ad aaywoere in w AtxKitud Press fTba Associated Prats la titled axdustrely to the cor rapuoueanoa v au wcv wwi this newspaper). It's Our Port, Too "It is sometimes forgotten that Portland, though not on the ocean, is a seaport of renown." We find that sentence in the biennial report of the Port of Portland commission, a copy of which was left with us by John J. Winn Jr., '3Sart manager. How, true that is. We uplanders, earth-bound, give little thought to the importance of Portland as a world port. Instead we think of it as the largest city in the state, a shopping and whole sale and manufacturing center,, home of an art museum and .symphony orchestra and several colleges, a place to change planes or trains. We know the city is divided by a river and are an noyed sometimes when a drawbridge raised for a ship blocks the crossing. Few of us living up state have realized that Portland ranked second in 1951 among coast ports in tonnage of its ex ports. Los Angeles with its heavy volume of petroleum products ranks first. Over 89 per cent of Portland's export tonnage was dry cargo, chiefly lumber, wheat, barley and oats. The city of Portland didn't grow that lumber and wheat and barley. They were grown in the 'hinterland" and transported to, Portland docks by rail and truck and barge f or loading on ocean-going ships. To quote from this report: ' "The port of Portland serves not only the city . and metropolitan area of Portland, but in addi tion, other areas. Waterborne commerce affects ' not only the counties immediately surrounding Portland, but it is important for the develop ment of a far wider area. The commercial, in dustrial and farming structure of Oregon and 'smarts of Idaho and Washington are enhanced by; the maximum use of the facilities of the port of Portland." In short, farmers and manufacturers over this region have a real stake in Portland as a port. It serves also to ; receive ocean-borne imports, particularly petroleum products and merchan dise. Special projects the Port commission is work ing on include improvement of the channel to the mouth of the Columbia to a depth of 35 ft. and width of 500 ft., development of dry dock facilities at Swan Island and location of indus tries needing water transportation. The com mission also operates the Portland International Airport and faces a tough problem there be cause of the rapid increase in its use. Some 700, 000 airline passengers (in, out and through) were handled at the terminal in 1952, and this number is expected to increase by' a million in. a decade. The airport requires more land and larger and better located terminal buildings. The commission is a state body in that its members are appointed by the governor. Its re sponsibilities are by no means local because its ports water arid air - serve a wide region. Hence the tributary country is interested that its port facilities are kept modern for efficient and economical operation. For us in the Wil lamette Valley particularly! it's OUR port too. Administration Policy Seeks to Leave Asians Fighting Asians in Korea Theatre By Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON The basic j Administration policy is to dis- j engage" the Western forces, and ; I particularly tne American for ! c e s. now tied down in local : ' Kwars in the Far ; ' f East. For this ? - purpose, South i - 'Koreans are to ' be substituted j for Americans in the ..line in Korea and the 1 Free Indo-Chinese Army is to i be powerfully strengthened. The Asians are to fight the Asians, insofar as pos sible, as President Eisenhower suggested during bis campaign. This clearly rules out the kind of costly and grinding local of fensive In Korea that has been ?5Vocated by Gen. James Van Fleet. To complete the record, however. It must be added that other moves against the Chinese Communists are not yet excluded. Ia judging the gamble in such moves, it is wise; to remember that the policy of the. enemy is not absolutely fixed. Indeed, the most signif ' leant Soviet re action to Presi dent Eisenhow ars election clearly h 1 n t ed mat the Krem lin might mod erate its Far Castern- policy, rather than al- w the Far Eastern War Jto Stewart Afaq; widen. This was implied by the exceedingly curious but hitherto unremarked behavior of the So viet Ambassador to Washington, George N. Zarubin, immediately following the December inter view in which Stalin declared he would like to meet with Presi dent Eisenhower. ' Zambia, it must be remember ed, is an official automaton, who does what he is told, says wha he Is told, and qaite probably 'JhEaks what he is told. From Sep tember, when he presented - his 11 " Wo Fapr SwayiJJt No Fear Shall Aioe" From first SUtcnuuv Marc 4. 1XS1 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher office SIS ft. Entered at Telephone X-244L class matter iciucvraoN um By aaau, Oalty .8 L4S par i L29 par i JO week IB HI counties (Benton Marion. Bantoa. . 80 par . 1.75 six Bhwwhere la Oregon la O ft. outside Oregon jraar HXMBKB OF! at tea pnam w Aadtt Boreas (Adverttstng new York credentials, until the Issuance of the Stalin Interview in mld-De- cember, this new Soviet Ambas sador mlgrht lust as well have been on the other side of the moon as In Washlnrton, D. C. The Stalin Interview was. of coarse, the Kremlin's maturely ! considered public reaction to the r November, votinjr la this country. 'r Following the Interview, the formerly dam-like Zarubin sud denly and somewhat astonishing ' ly began talking politics with his . fellow Ambassadors here in i Washington, conspicuously . in : eluding the Ambassadors of the ; leading Western i allies. These talks all followed about the same : pattern.. - Zarnbin eoaimonly opened by referring to Stalin's 'important" statement, which he slescribed as , "sincere, really staeere." He ex patiated en the tmprovement ia , the sitnatioB that snlxht resalt front a resmnptioa ef East-West neguatlons. He particslarly em- phaiized the possibility ef a peace la Korea, althoash at that time Andrei VUhlnsky had jast ruth lessly rejected India's attempt to achieve a Korean connunise la the TJ. N. ! Zarubin did not ignore this r e cent event. Instead, he brushed . the U. N. debate scornfully aside,' Intimating that serious negotia tions could not be carried on in any such public market-place as the U. N. Assembly. He remark- ed that the Panmunjom talks had already produced complete agreement" about a Korean arm - istice, except on the thorny Issue ef the exchange of prisoners. Without entering Into- detail, he -predicted that the prisoner issue - could also be compromised with ease. - The impression conveyed by Zarubin was strengthened by the lesser members of the Soviet Em bassy staff, who sought out their colleagues of equal rank to tell the same story. One of the atta 1 ches even : asked his opposite (numbers in the British and French .? Embassies, what was J wrong with President Eisenhow er? Did he not wish to meet . with Marshal Stalin? Did Eisen- hewer really want war?" that nMtafflae At &aUraOr uuter act coagrass Until V IsTa, aaa Sunday (la ad' f IXf par 10M yaar Clackamas, rout. YambUU. MS Boreas of aeveraatag Newspaper PasUsac representatives Ward -Griffith Co Gucag icago. ftaa Crandaco, Detroit). Senator Bel ton's protest against the highway bond issues bill reflects discontent in Clackamas County over expenditures of the highway com mission. Canby and Oregon City are unhappy over the construction of the Wilsonville cutoff which will divert Salem-Portland travel from present Highway 99E. Oregon City has two proj ects which it wishes . to have advanced, one is widening of the 82nd Street-Oregon City high way which carries a heavy volume of traffic, and the other is relief at the Oregon City-West Linn bridge. From our observation of traffic at this bridge at the rush hour it provides the No. 1 traffic jam in the state. Apparently the only solution is another bridge, and finding places to hang the ends is not easy. The commission will have to give this situation early attention. It looks as though the competition for per mission to build a natural gas pipeline to serve the Pacific Northwest will simmer down to two concerns: Westcoast Transmission Company which has authorization for gas from northern Alberta, and Pacific Northwest Pipeline Co. which has a deal for gas in the San Juan basin at the four corners of New Mexico, Utah, Ari zona and Nevada. The pending hearing before the Federal Power commission should result in some definite decision. This is the only -large section of the country not supplied with natural gas, and one which needs it for lack of other fuel. President Peron of Argentina wants union ol his country with Chile. That would give a coun try with 1,370,000 square miles of area and 23, 112,000 inhabitants. Their resources are rich and diversified; and their populations are quit progressive. Chile, however, has been more de mocratic and it is doubtful if it would consider union with Argentina so long as Peron is dicta tor of that country. Since unification of Western Europe is being urged we can't be much sur prised if a similar step is urged elsewhere. Such is the love of seU-determination, however, the advocates of union find the going hard. The AFL sits closer to the high throne than it did in recent administrations. It was the CIO (Sidney Hillman, Walter Reuther) who seemed to have the most drag with the Democratic ad ministration, though old Dan Tobin of the Team sters was a White House favorite. The CIO was most active in the Americans for Democratic Action, the sidearm of the new deal. With the Labor department pretty well staffed by AFL men the CIO feels quite left out. That's the rea sontoo far 'left." The Jefferson public library, notes Gladys Shields in her column in the Jefferson Review, has added "The Complete Book of Beauty and Charm," and she notes "it covers everything from good grooming to poise and self-confidence." With that boost it should be a good circulator. There were some curious fea tures in these conversations. To ne colleague, for instance, Zarn bin declared that the Elsenhow er administration weald be "very strong there' are so many bix businessmen." There were also some suspi cious features. For example, Za rubin talked more in terms of an other meeting of the French, British, Soviet and American Foreign Ministers than of a di rect meeting between Stalin and Eisenhower. Obviously for French consumption, he repeat ed the well-worn Soviet hint of a German settlement as well as a Korean settlement. There were reasons, in short, to regard Zaru- o regard Zaru- bin's behavior as another diplo- sons, because of past disappoint ments. and because of tha increa- . sing rigidity of modern diploma cy, the Zarubin overtures if ov ertures they were have as yet led to nothing. On Its face, nonetheless, Zara . bials behavior would seem to eeaflrm the report that Ambas sador George F. Kennan sent from Moscow before his expul sion. Many months age, Kennan, the alleged advocate of passive containment, began to eapiesa the view to the State Department that the only way to get peace ia Korea was to make the war there snore costly for the enemy. He added that the mere Intention to do this, if it were a firm in tention, might bring results. The basic policy which Presi- dent Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles have , now adopted Is intended, instead, to make the struggle In the Far . East less costly for this country and the West. This Is another, very sensible, way of changing the balance. It remains to be .seen whether the Administration will accept the heavy risk of changing ; the balance still fur ther, by simultaneously, seeking : to increase the cost of the war to the enemy. The answer, which should be given soon, will be a historic turning point. f Copyright 1953. . New fork Herald Tribune Inc.) Our Washington grapevine notes that when -Willamette U Prexy G. Herbert Smith went to Washington to-help dedicate Oregon's statues at the U.S. Capitol he tucked into his brief case name. "When yea make a speech off campus," Dr. Baxter once said to Dr. Smith, "be sure yea mention Willamette at least three j times. So . . . in his speech wader the giant Capitol dome ia Washington, with VP Nixon, Secry. McKay aad congressmen lis tening. Dr. Smith told how: (1) Jason Lee "established a mission in the valley ef the Willamette." (2) The crops they planted that spring were "the first ef the Willamette Valley." (3) After re turning east Jason Lee set out once aaere eav his "second trip to the valley of the WlUamette. . . . . ! It was bound to happen dept ... A lady named, "Mrs. A. Oregon" of Wisconsin wrote the Oregon Highway Travel Bu reau for tourist 'information about Oregon. And she didn't once clear up that burning question: What the heck does that "A" stand for? ... Seems that baby sitters and ether teenagers In Salem have dreamed up a fascinating new game to ease the pain ef those long-sitting hours. They dial f oae numbers at random around X aan. and seem to get a charge out ef dragging citizens eat ef 1 their beds at that hear. One irate resident answered the fone twice the other early morning and got nothing but giggles aad other sounds of Juvenile hilarity on the other end. The third time he played It smart and let his wife answer. Fone company and ethers say they have received similar complaints. If one ef those citizens, who answers a fake call in the early! dawning, gets his hands on one of those calling sitters' somebody wont be doing ranch sitting for awhile. . Don Dill, Secry. of State's office staffer, wasn't particular-; ly miffed over the gas-oil price boost. But he felt things were carried too far when he got his gasoline bill. The envelope the! bill arrived in was minus 0 .cents postage which Don had to pay . . . One reminder of the national Democratic regime will stand for a long time in Republican Oregon; The Liberty Bell replica installed recently on the Capitol grounds ( Willson Park) notes in large letters that the bell was dedicated to the state by the Hon. John W. Snyder, ex-secretary of the treasury. f-kt a, gain ni"an i V7KIIM XU DCMK II I it , " " t I I I t Yrf 'T1:WR-(V 1 Jn - i 1 "Comrade agent la happily report that TJ. is hopelessly d! vi Jed . , , half would like to drop Il-bor-S cm us . . .ether half . thinks A-bomb would be enough.'" NO MILK, NO HAYf a carefully prepared brief on the life of the Rev. Jason Lee. Listeners at the dedication ceremony were surprised that Dr. Smith did not once mention the name of the local insti tution which he heads and which the Rev. Mr. Lee is credited with having founded. And yet when he wrote his speech: Dr. Smith followed caref ully the dictum of his predecessor at Wil lamette Dr. Bruce Baxter, who had a hard and fast rule on mentioning that glorious by Lichty (Continued from page one) use of the water and power, which would make it a continu ous thins nver 100 nr 200 vear . ."I , .' as long as the project lasted, That was contrary to the original concept, at least I can say most of us in the West, where these Droiects wera located, holi it t h. Tn fw TOM.Z . crnmeni aoes not go into making money on the projects. They got in to get money out of it in the 1 case of irrigation, and with in- terest, on the power, but when -t u Hnn. it hoinnM . h Senator Kutchel, the new sena- tor from Tj.iffnmia Mn tion to a "utility type of contract for the sale of water" in the Cen- tral Valley project in California which a California court had mlaH I - I Veteran. t will resist T oTirK. " HSL1 "SKLiSJffiS "seir water Water iTUhit to dLoosaT and use uLir 3L aisposai ana use under, state Ccial i on . nZJZZ: " oumned by Stalin at Yalta. Im S?131 lf Perialism and .intransigence b- nuirpH TT RMTTrr.C" r I ings with the state offices for di version of water for its irriga tion projects, and this provision still stands. Mr. Nelson, the Bureau engineer, said In his talk before the Willamette Basin com- w- w i-r7rTrrtrf ir, I ing with the State Engineer. It Is apparent from the refer ences made that the Senate com mitee will look with a jaundiced eye on a proposal to legalize the conract ; method of supplying water. lor irrigation. At the same timo It nmt h. r.m.mi .lerauon nao creaiea m Moscow, u th ltMnn In , tw- singular. Here the users of Ir- reervohcdotxM arm!,iH,JfS, Sffiarn.TSgP ' n. ftLSfln i,d- on a contractual basis with an I annual charge. What Is clear Is that there will STinH t Srwr ifn-.i3 Si?SJS L? Boislfnd v3 !!Hlnoi take kindly . to the old type of Irrigation dlsWcts where, land could be voted in against the will they will want to draw on those stored waters for irrigating their crops. How to get water to those who want it and are willing to pay for it, In a valley with as much diversity'as this, with con ditions quite different from those in the usual type of Reclamation Bureau project, is a real puzzle. Farmers and lawyers . and engin eers and public officials : must set about doing more home work on mis pro Diem. -' - MtMawmvaaggaafan AXiBirwol'.rrlSl L Ike Relaxes , British Fear of - - -S .... . . ". ' 1 S ... . Canceled Pacts INTERPRETING T1US NEWS By J. M. ROBERTS. JR. ' Associated Press News Analyst President Eisenhower has made it clear that when he spoke about "repudiating secret . agreements' he was actually talking about ex plaining America's attitude on some of them, rather than any definitive action. j x Other nations, particularly the British who traditionally insist on respect for international commit ments. looked askance when the President asked for congressional repudiation of all secret agree ments which had led to the en slavement of peoples. - That would have meant expung ing the diplomatic record which Russia has so flagrantly: violated, and would tend to make Ameri ca's executive agreements less val uable in the future. It would permit the Russians to claim that the Western Allies had merely considered Tehran. Yalta and Moscow agreements as temp orary, so why blame Russia for repudiating them first. It would have created 'the im pression that the Washington ad ministration could talk and seem to agree on all sorts of interna tional affairs without considering anything binding until It had been formalized by Senate approval. Eisenhower said at his first press conference as President that he byX ZUTiJ m mna infant n..t k ana me reST UX everything agreed upon at. such and such a place at such and such a time was void. He just wants a statement from Congress that the heart of Ameri ca had never agreed to the enslave ment of any people. That's purely to assure subjected pepples that the United States, if an occasion to help them ever aris es, will not be bound by the tech nicalities which Russia has already twisted to her own benefits. It says particularly to Poland that the U.S. never intended the Yalta agreement to work out the way it did. It is part of the long range encouragement -regarding eventual liberation of Eastern Eu rope which Eisenhower and Secre tary Dulles have so often stressed. Congressional action on the reso lution will of course revive the argument over the faults of Yalta, who was responsible, and how much. . " j e e e The record shows pretty clearly that Roosevelt and Churchill were operating under considerable diffi culties. They wanted to assure Rus sian participation in .the war against japan wnen tne war against Germany should be over, although it seems fairly obvious that nothing could have been done to keep Russia out. But the Battle of the Bulge was Just over, and Germany had thrown Allies into .toght. The end of the European war was not posi tively in sight. NotWng could be left undone to insure winning the K10031 war. R,sia troPs hd dvnced "P17 ,Jhrou8h ste Europe Roosevelt and Churchill could merely rgue f8" f waj Russia was about to do. Stalin did mak,!! concessions, aPd.h uPP?rt r tte estabhshment toe ; United 'JT " ? www T 1 it XL - til . wr, , ui id n, uuui uic onusn foreign unice ana me American stale De- partment suspected that Stalin had Uotten himself in trouble with the Politburo by being too agreeable. therm to b notlccd drastic change in Russian policy cam tocreasmgly apparent. iwa rxesKient iruman, : acung almost entirely on his own, startled America, British and Russian dip lomats by Jerking the. lend-lease rug right out from under the war time Allies . i :. Stalin said It might not have been so bad If It had been done States wanted to play that way. Russia could double it, or words to t effect. L O O ' Suspicion immediately wiped out any goodwill which wartime coop ever W sincere gooa- SuTT Sg..Ew&tti loan. , The request got bandied tSS?' " Sere ever . had been anything wZTYT -...i.riri nnmimtt nini fnr innict inn fu"' "4 All the events of , the times seem to boa It down to one conclusion that the Western, diplomats Just did not conceive of what Russia was up to. Bernard Baruch suggested later that if -they went to any more con- work first. Before buying any :1 hearing aid, you owe it to yourself to try the 1953 ; Hbaring Aidl ; under our 10-day money-back Guarantee! IIL By mfcsrt ef aorts-Maeat ; Zmitk totovtiJoe 4 redto mU Z:rris OpIxciJ Co. Batteries and Repairs for All -' I. Takes ef Hearing Aids ' '411 State St. rnene J-5323 Contracts for Four By-Pass Viaducts Let Construction of four concrete viaducts on the State Street-Battle Creek unit of Salem by-pass foi $130,580 was one of '15 construc tion jobs awarded Wednesday by the State Highway Commission In Portland. At the same time the commis sion made plans to award some 13 million dollars worth of work in the neat three months. The Salem by-pass project one of five in this areawent to Tom Lillebo of Reedsport. Others were: Clackamas Construct 222-foot reinforced . concrete viaduct at Boeckmah Road over West Port-land-Hubbard Hiahwav. Birkmeier ana saremal. Portland, S45.530. Clatsop, Yamhill, Columbia, Til. lamook, Washington, Marion and Polk Counties Oil mat surfac ing of 28.74 miles on 10 state high ways, J. C Compton, McMinnvilla. $85,288.80. Marion Paving and widening .85 of a mile of Mt. Angel section of Hillsboro-Suverton Highway In ML Angel. Warren-Northwest. Inc., Portland. $63,039.50. Marion Construct four con crete viaducts on State Street Battle Creek unit of Salem by-pass section of Pacific Highway, Tom Lillebo, Reedsport, $130,580. The commission said about seven million dollars worth of jobs would come up at the April 8-9 meeting, and the rest In a meeting here May xo-xv. The commission heard a Clack amas County delegation appeal for a new bridge over the Willamette River at Oregon City. The same group also asked improvement of S. E. 82d Avenue from Portland to Oregon City and for widenina of U, S. 99 from New Era to Hubbard and of the Mt. Hood High way from Sandy to Rhododendron. A Lane County delegation asked construction of a 1 tt-mile section of the Fox Hollow State Second a rr Highway to connect with" the Cres- well-Lorane county road. " A Yamhill County group asked the state to take over as a second ary highway . the 5.8-mile route between Carlton and the Yamhill- Newberg Highway. The commission awarded these projects: Baker Rock surfacing 16.29 miles of Poker Creek-Sumpter sec tion of Sumpter Valley Highway, IX. if. Sussex, BeUingham, $30,800. xuiuitnoman Remove 415 feet of viaduct and construct 5ll feet of viaduct on 102nd Avenue overcross ing. reconstruction on Banfield Ex pressway, Donald M. Drake Co., Portland, $188,223.25. union Grading and paving 2.21 miles of La Grande-Island City section of Wallowa Lake High way, K. F. Jacobson 8c Co., Inc., poruand, $95,983. Wheeler Produce 12,000 cubic yards of crushed rock on Mitchell Willow Creek rock production proj ect on Ocboco Highway, Rogers Construction Co., Portland. $34,500. Lake Pave 7.01 miles on Fre mont Junction-Rose Creek section of Warner Highway 4.3 miles north of Lake view; grade and pave a mile -of the Lakeview section of . the Fremont and Klamath Falls Lakeview Highway in Lakeview; and level .33 of a mile, shoulders and paving on Pine Street North in Lakeview, J. C. Compton Co., McMinnville. $243,975. Coos Grading and surfacing .2 of a mile of Lower Fourmile Road junction section of Oregon Coast Highway, Stanton W. Payne, Eu gene, $11,546. Deschutes Grading 12.09 miles, paving and oiling shoulders on . North unit of the Bend-Lapine section of The ' Dalles-California Highway, Rogers Construction Co., Portland, $756,47L Bids - accepted but referred to engineers to straighten out details Included: Linn Widening 7.83 miles and paving of Noble Slough-Foster sec tion of Santiam Highway west and east of Sweet Home, Warren North west, Inc., ; Portland, $216,618. CARL TENGWALD DIES " MEDFORD (fl Carl V. Teng- wald, 63, a member of the State Real Estate Board and a former chairman, suffered a heart attack at. his home Wednesday and died. He was prominent in military, fraternal and civic organizations in Medford. The widow and three daughters survive. Local or Long Disianco Dial 1-S3.3E "Omr Cepulailon la Tour Cecuziry" s "" pi" Transfer & Storage " EC3 II. Liberty yanling - ' i ' , . . .