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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1954)
Poor Example Of 'FlqtLook' FACE LIFTING . WEST'POINT. "Va.-t9 --. This town's bigger and better garbage truck v will change : the v face 1 of things qtSte a - bit A ""survey showed it could not get through the alleys until the power company moved 41 : poles, the . telephone company 39 .and property owners eome 123 other various obstruc Closed Door Acts Treedom Threat' BOTTLE STtmV Statement of MEMORY . PATS . OFF-- . PEARL HARBOR (A. A -good ANN ARBOR, Mich. tfV-U you come upon a bottle with a note in it on the beaches of Lake Huron, it won't be from a sL:p wrecked sailor or thnur a msn -t NEW YORK (UP)-Italian Elm the back in front, that is the fashion,"; Miss ' LoHobriida jiaid, with her ; hands! whipping the fab ric around her un-flat figure. "That Is : the inew ook.r 'What do .you think? It is horrible." f "MADRAS (UP) Joseph K. Car son. Democratic candidate for governor,--said Tuesday that the "growing tendency 'for bureaus, boards and commissions to act be ind closed doors is the greatest threat to free government that we face."" Democratic, rally that if elected he would make legislative acts of the State " Liquor Control Commission and other state boards and bureaus open to the press and public. "Al together too much business is han dled, in such a way that the public is not aware of what is taking memory raid off for both the gov star Gina Lollobrigda arrived here Tuesday 'in a 'tight pink suit and promptly twisted it about eher shapely body to illustrate to re porters the horror of' Christian Dior's new flat look. i ernment and Frank G. Aieceiros, veteran of 31 years service as an army civilian employe. Medeiros some lost treasure The University of Michigan Great Lakes Research Institute set afloat 509 bottles with postal cards inside to study remembered an old water line and Standards Due saved the government $31,430 on a project He received $275. - - iH you-bring a' dress and put Reporters found it 'enchanting. tions. . Carson told . a . Jefferson countv piace, ne said. iane currents . 12 (Sac. 2) Eldesncm. Sclera, Ore Tbur. Sept. 18, 1S54 Senate Moral - i . - -.: m , i- i - : , . . , " rr. : r, : . WASHINGTON . '(UP)--A i mem ber of the Senate censure com mittee said Tuesday the group hopes to include in its report on Sen. Joseph McCarthy a statement of the "high moral" standards all senators -should observe, ! The member, whose name could not be disclosed, told friends the statement would be in the nature of a declaration of principle "to get across the idea that the Sen ate is a body with certain ideals and codes of. behavior." -He made it clear, however, that the statement would be apart from the committee's i report on the charges of misconduct, lodged against the Wisconsin Republican. The, member also said the spe cial six-man committee hopes to chart the main outlines of . its re port this week. But ; he said it .-will not be in final, form until sometime later. Best guess is about ' Oct 1 or later s The group wound up nine days of - hearings Monday on the five , major censure ? charges filed - against McCarthy and is now ham mering out its report Chairman Arthur V. Watkins R-Utah) called another closed meeting this morn ing and said the group will "keep on working" until the , report is in shape.. . . The committee has apparently reached no decision on i whether to restrict its report to "findings" of fact. and law on the charges against McCarthy or include con clusions lor. or against censure of the senator. r - One source close to the commit tee said privately j "I have an idea that the report will. carry conclus- sions. - - ' ; Meanwhile, the committee in its first -announced decision since the . close of the hearings unanimously rejected McCarthy's . request for new "independent'! attorneys to help write the report : ! ' The six senators said in a joint statement that they, not the staff, will make all the decisions in writ ing the report and "do not neces sarily need to rely on counsel. 'Feeds' Jokes To Women (Aline Mosby Is Vacationing; She is replaced today by Jack Bailey, emcee for the "Truth or Conse quences" show, whe talks of play ing straight man to women from Ids audience.) By JACK BAILEY ' Written for the United Press HOLLYWOOD ; (UP)-Somebody asked me the other day, "What is It like to be a comedian?" Frankly, I wouldn't know. I'm a straight man on my television show, 'Truth or Consequences, just as I've been 1 a straight man on "Queen for a Day" on radio for more' than eight years. On both I'm billed, as they say . harVctacr a " mnstpr nf rprp. monies out that is a rather broad and misleading title.' . Straight Man Since July of 1945, for instance, I've been straight: man to women seeking to be crowned "Queen for a Day." I don't pull the gaglines, they do. With questions I actually feed the contestants the straight lines so they can provide their own jokes and punch lines, and they seldom fail to come through. I I thought things would be dif ferent when Ralph Edwards se lected me to be emcee of bis video version of "Truth or Consequenc es" some months ago. I imagined that finally I was going to become a comedian. But instead of being a "great. new comic, I found myself play ing straight man again only this ' time it was straight for a situation rather than to individuals. The ' things I said were intended only to develop and point up a comic situation. It not me would pro duce all the laughs. Fmnleif Line : On the "Queen for a Day" show a woman came through with the fussiest line I ever heard. When asked what her wish would be if she were named queen, the woman said she would ask for an upper- plate so she could play coronet m the church choir. After that the only thing left for me was to shrink into the background. But don't get me wrong. I thor oughly enjoy being a straight man and I've got lots of famous com pany in people like George Bums. Desi Araaz. Sidney Miller,. Roches ter and many others. The comed ians can have their constant strug gle to find gag writers and get more laughs. , ; t To tell the truth, maybe the coo sequences of being a straight man aren't really so bad . after alL . . . Large Increase In state School Enrollment Seen PORTLAND Uf The number of school children in Oregon will go up another 82,000 Is the next six years and exceed . 400,000 by 1369, Rex Putnam, state super intendent" of public instruction, predicts. . . 1 . : Putnam told the Willamette Democratic Society that tremend ous expenditures wi3 be necessary to handle the increase. ' . He said - the cost was 43 million, dollars for school expansion in Oregon in a two-year period from 1S52 to 1354. and added that these schools "will be overflowing witiia a tear years." Jack Bailey Mo ' " 1 : ; . - ...... i ' . . ' : i : . ' ' , - ' , 1 x - ' ,' i t - ! . t r . , - ;!-;,.' .-!,- . -i- : t . -'"; ; ; ! i ' J ' ' ' ' i w " 'J - . I , - ! J i ' ' J7 '"V" K l ' O f l f . -1 i. ., . '''''' I ' ! 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