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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1955)
R (Sac. D Statesman, Salem, ' r "No Favor Sicayt Us, No Fur . From First Statesman. Muck Statesman Publishing Company. CHARLES A. S PRAGUE, Editor and Publiiber Publianed every morning. Business office HO North Church St, ttalem. Ox, Telephone 4-4SU Entered at the postozfic at Salem. Or as second clau matter under act of Centres March J. 1171. Member Associated Press The Aaaociaiea Press u entitled exclusively to the nee , or republication of aU local news printed is toll newspaper.' , Ladejinsky 'Jinx V Though the : uepanmeni ox Agriculture i thought Russian-born Wolf Ladejinsky was j come sort of SKsecurity risk in Japan where in land reform, the Department of State has picked him up for similar work in the far f more sensitive area of Vietnam. This makes f the government look foolish in its obsession I for "security", Ladejinsky may be the oner to put the jinx on the fear psychosis which I has gripped administrators in their zeal to J keep two steps ahead of Joe McCarthy. : And the case certainly has put tee "jinx"! on Milan Smith who "went recently from! Pendleton to ' become personal assistant tor Secretary Benson. Smith, in trying to justify we uring, gave repuner a wpjr Imam. An riMM T7i4 m nvtvata New. York, upholding the firing but taking; a crack at Ladejinsky as a Russian Jew' That brought down the wrath of Jewish lead ers who are very sensitive to signs of anti Semitism. Whereupon Benson declared if was "a "mistake" to have released the letter and that he was "shocked" that anti-Semitic; implications have been raised. . Just where) that will leave Smith is not clear but he cer4 tainly got tangled, up. in a Washington buzi saw in .short order. t s t Perhaps this flareup will bring Washing-? ton to its senses. There have been too many rjersonal tragedies caused bv aossro. rumor. suspicion,, all in the name of security. John Paton 'Davies was another recent victim of the polite purge whose loyalty was affirmed but his "judgment? held in. doubt. He was, fired by Secretary Dulles and no other de partment opened a gate to give him employ ment, j ' ' . '.'A Ladejinsky at' any rate has another job; whether Smith will keep his remains to be " seen. ' . The city council at Corvallis has banned sale of alcoholic beverages within a half mile of tha OSC campus. Restriction of tav erns in close proximity to the campus is desirable, butin these days of college jalopies distance.no longer means very much. Cor vallis itself recently lifted its ban against ; dispensing of hard liquor in recognition of ine iaci in a i wuu liquor ouueis.at x-nuomata . and Albany the ban was not very effective, under modern conditions of ease of -travel. 1 x ai a a i ,s it i . ' After March 3 1st - postal carriers will no longer be burdenbearers for advertising ma terial merely addressed to "occupant" After -a triah the post office department had so many , complaints about the junk mail pour ing in on them that termination of the ex periment was' ordered. It greatly increased labors of the postal workers with a minimum increase in revenues, and caused irritation from householders over the flood of unsolicit ed and unwanted mailings. . j 5 ' Since he moved to Salem from Ashland seven years ago Bill Healy has been as active iii community affairs as his duties as deputy secretary of state would permit. Now he js taking on the joband it is not all decorative by any means as King Bing of the Salem Cherrians. He'll keep these high-steppers stepping. ' , 1 Russians Appear Now That West Reich to Be Rearmed By STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON The American and Soviet governments appear to have one thing, at least, in common. Both governments are Internally divided about the di rection their foreign policy should take, now that the basic decision to rearm Western Germany has at long last been made. j The evident suggestion that the Soviet government is divided on this question is, as always, frag mentary and inconclusive. But it is a good deal less so than usual. When Ambas sador Charles E. Bohlen returned to Moscow re cently, be re ported back that the sense of ten-' sion, had meas urably increased there in the few days since he had left The British Ambassador, Sir William Hayter. who also returned to Moscow at about the same time, reported, back to London precise ly the same thing. i One obvious reason for 'this tension hi Moscow was. of course, the French voting on the German rearmament issue. ; But another reason also appeared,- when long editorials about the future of the soviet policy were published just before Oiristmas in Pravda and Izrestia.. 'Izresua U the orgaa of the Soviet goverameat, aad b thus eeoiuted Ue inoutftpiece - of Ptemler'Georgl Makakor. Prav da is the organ of the Soviet Commaaist party, aad is thus ae eouteaVtae mouthpiece of N. S. KnrshcheT, Secretary af . the' Party. The twa papers took al sot oJaaetrieany opposite lues. , Izvestia called for a xontinua Uon of essentially the present policy ..increased emphasis on production of consumer goods, ' and a "coexistence" ' policy abroad. Pravda called, in effect, I .15 Stewart Altp Ortw Thus Jcnv 8. 18S5 SEC Raises Requirements ' The action of the SEC in lif tirfg the margin requirements on stock market trading from 50 to 60 per cent is more of a preventive than a cure. There has been no special strain on credit by demand for call money which is the way brokers, handle borrowing to finance margin trading. The SEC doesn't want any such strain to develop. Also the action may be interpreted as something of a signal. Strength in stocks has been paralleled by weakness in the gov ernment bond market. The treasury 2 Vis of 1967-72 which touched par several months ago. now are' selling at . around 984 The. 1953 issue of treasury 3 Vis which zoomed to around 112 are now selling below 110. . With the treasury hopeful that conditions would permit a long-term funding of some of the short term debt the sagging market on outstanding issues is discouraging. A slowdown of stock .speculation might divert' conservative money into government bonds. It's time the stock market paused to catch its breath anyway. ..: .-. Shall Atec IS. 1451 Coalition Congress Bob Ruhl of calls this a "coalition Congress.'" , Much of Eisenhower's program if it is enacted will be by assistance of votes of Democrats. ,ThisL is clearly foreseen because the Democrats:, have a real majority in the House and, with? the Morse vote, ux rHWon nf Senate. : , . j But hasn't our Congress been run princi pally by a coalition ever since the defeat of the court-packing bill offered by TDR? Only the coalition has usually been anti-Roosevelt,' . or anti-Truman, except on international issues. It will take all of Eisenhower's per--sonal appeal to get a majority for such measures as more federal, housing, health reinsurance, and freer international trade, j We criticise France for its splinter parties which make the resulting coalition govern ments unstable, but our own big parties splinter too; and for 20 years1 a great -deal of the legislation has been by coalition of 1 segments of both big parties. . Most of the states : of Washington, Idaho and California are declared off limits for travel by citizens of the USSR, but all of Oregon except Portland is , left open. We hardly know whether to be pleased or pained at, this discrimination. : Is Oregon's exemp tion due to its solid loyalty or to fact there is nothing here the Russians should not be allowed to see? ; .. . . j A Las Vegas hotel picked up the food and drink tabs f its patrons New Year's Eve but let the "take" on gambling go full-tilt ahead. Maybe a generous gesture but at a distance it looks like it was a matter of taking the money out of one pocket and putting it into .another. ..: i . ' : fr-:"T';" '! .a T" : i Ai- Eugene got through 1954 without a single traffic fatality, and adjoining Springfield has an even longer record of death-free motoring. If these cities can'do it, so can others.' Sup pose we all cling to that New Year's resolu tion through 1956, and Tkeep Salem, free of traffic fatalities. ; ' , - j , If Oregon had to have a Democratic mem ber of the lower house of Congress, at least it can be proud of the one chosen. She will compare very favorably with other members both for looks and intelligence, and has had enough experience in public life to have plenty of savvy. ! j The Minnesota high school girl who packed 48 quarts of milk off to France didn't get to present them to Premier Mendes-France after all. She got publicity, though, which was'the purpose of her trip; so there's no eying over the unspilt milk. ? I Undecided on for a ."hard" line abroad, and a return , to J all-out priority for heavy industrial production, which means arms production. The next day, Pravda published another long editorial, and this time Pravda fell m llae with Isvestia. By knowledgeable Rus sians as wen as foreign observ ers, this episode was universally takes U mean that there had been a bask disagreement on policy as between Malenkev and KrashcaheT, aad that this ' dis 1 aaTeemeat I had heea settled ia MalenktvV favor. . The episode was further taken to mean that the Russian rulers wished to make known the ex istence of the disagreement The purpose was. presumably, part ly to remind the West that the Soviets could adopt a tougher line if they wanted to. But an other1 purpose certainly was to give Krushchev, as it were, his. day in court, and to remind the Russian people that no one had inherited all the powers of the dead Stalin. . It is quite 1 Keaaiaely trae, la .the view of Bohlea aad an other foreign observers, that there Is still no single ahsalate dictator la postStaBa Rassia. Moreover the extent; te which the Soviet ralers--4hosgk notably not the raled fed free to disagree with each other 'la remarkable. . i , . r For mPle. ere was a re- ci meeting oetween "neuu-ais and a' number of the Russian leaders, including Malenkov, Krushchev J and Foreign Minister . V.' M. Molotov and Krushchev en gaged in a lot of , free-wheeling about Soviet . policy. Molotov quite obviously felt that his spe cial province was being invaded by amateurs, and made no at tempt to conceal bis irritation from the foreigners. The meeting very; nearly became a sort of three-cornored argument between tWaa Qiiaierismar . w. V s ' There is a good deal to suggest, la short, that' a "great debate' of aorta Is la procreM wttfcia the Medford Mail-Tribune a: majority of one in thejJ Course to the Soviet goverameat. No of eourse, believes that the essen tial objectives af the Soviet re 'gime have ehaaged. But It iIm aataral that the Soviet rulers should debate whether the "soft" policy which achieved a triumph lai Asia, and almost achieved a greater: triumph la Europe, has about played Itself out, now that the French have at last agreed i to the rearmameat of West Germany. Malenkov's recent equivocal re marks hbout the desirability of a four-power "meeting at the sum mit" further suggests that the issue has not yet been fully de cided. The Soviet rulers, appar ently simply have not made up their minds whether such a meet ing would serve Soviet purposes, since it . is now seemingly im possible further to delay German rearmament A great debate Is also, of eourse,' ia progress within the American goverameat. This de bate also cancers whether It to worth tryiag to negotiate with the Soviets, bow that the German rearmameat issue is aresamably setUed; and If so whether this to the time to try it tOa one side are those who believe that the So viets at least share the West's Interests ia avoiding motaal b ciaeratraa: and that tt Is worth trying ; to agree oa a set' of groaad rues to this ead. At least to some extent, Pmident Elseav bower laehaes to this view as does British Prime Mimiater Sir Whatea Churchul. . On the other side are those ; who have strong doubts -about the value bf any. negotiation with the : Russians except on the 'most limited and specific Issues. Sec retary of State Dulles entertains these doubtsand British For elgn Secretary Eden shares : them, Thus a kind of global great debate is going on, in Washing ton, ia Moscow, in London. No doubt it will be settled one way or another before this year ends., ic-it. tass. k -.a mraM M Tribuae toe ) GRIN AMU BEAR IT . voljgsr?c I lfs?l srfcxss t4U(S v mm fTm iiv i X' l VNl T i 3 ,i .njfi -A . . . Ami Inn's proot that mf cowpowy arm mm busincss-lik monnt . . . k mi f tt ftWe Vr W tthrmtmrhrwstk kirn . agMMiwaMPjMi-,iaiMLiiw 'A pamphlet just out by the Rubber Manufacturers Asso ciation, Inc. for Inclement) comes through with the nosey news that right now, this .minute, there are over 20 million .. persons having colds. Not only that but the rrv-j s r . . " -r Jm". t I uion p81 year Most scientists think Out colds are transmitted through the air by tiny viruses. One good sneeze cam send 20,000 infection-laden droplets shooting as far as 12 feet at a speed f 150 feet per second. After half aa hoar 4,000 of them will still be In the air. You can be passing on aj cold to others two days before you know you've got a cold. Rapid changes ! i of temperature sets the stage for colds. Worriers catch cold easier than non-worriers. Only man and chimpanzees suffer -colds. Dogs, cats, rabbits and other animals get kicked by grouchy people who have colds but they don't catch colds. 1 .j . More women catch colds than men. (Ed.'s note We can't prove it. But this is probably because more women expose more women to colds. ever see a chimpanzee in a lowcut gown?) Signs-of a cold appear 1 to 4 days after exposure. Thirty per cent of the cold's irritation is in your nose. (Coldfeet don't count.) So don't blow your nose like course if you're a child your parents won't LET you sniffle.) Use your handkerchief to stifle coughs and sneezes. Go to bed. Call a doctor if necessary .... . And, lastly, the pamphlet notes that the cause and cores ; of colds have been medical mysteries for ever 2,000 years ... Well, apparently the Rubber Manufacturers Association, Inc., has been so busy manufacturing rubber overshoes and rubber , stoppers for nose-drop bottles that it hasn't had time to listen ;. to some of those TV and radio commercials. There is any : number of sure-fire cold remedies floating around. Ask any announcer. If they won't cure your cold they will at least ! make it so pleasant to have you wont want to get rid of it . As for causes of colds. Well, any mother worth her weight in nervous breakdowns can tell you that the most common cause of colds in kids is disobedience. Adult males blame colds mostly . on overwork, performing a household chore (at the request of their wives) in the rain and wearing last year's leaky fishing boots. Adult females are wont to blame their colds on washing the car (which their husbands were supposed to do), overwork, and wearing last year's threadbare coat ..... Time Flies: 10 Years Ago Jan. S, 1945 ... , Priorities for construction bf 100 new residences in a. five-, mile radius' of Salem were made available to private builders, George W. Coplen, regional rep resentative of the national hous ing agency, revealed. Important event on the social calendar, was the informal re ception for which members of the First Presbyterian Church were hosts in honor of-the new minister and his family the Rev. and Mrs. Chester W. Hamblin, Bob and Janet American .casualties on the European war front for Decem ber totaled 100,000, Lt CoL K. D.'Pulcipher,-Washington, D.C., of national selective serviee headquarters, reported. 25 Years Ago I J Jan. f, 1930 Willamette University was one of two schools represented at the meeting of the National Fed , eration of America held at Palo ' Alto which prohibits student dancing, reported William Mum ford, student body president The other school was in Iowa. (Willamette students now dance). ,, : ' Jimmy Campbell, son of Mr. ' and Mrs. Jessie C Campbell, Sa lem, who had : been associated with the F. S. Harmon whole sale furniture store in Portland, kft for Boston where he will be associated with' Bird & Co. j The Sanborn-Cutting cannery, operated by the Burke Packing Company at Astoria, was de stroyed by fire of undetermined origin. The loss was estimated effldato rf-ths company at more than $250,000. By Lichcy U.S.A. (United Sneeze of America) pro duces 500 million colds per year. This pamphlet also notes that two out of, three persons have three- colds a year. And that a three-day cold belts the average person for $25. That colds cause 50 to 60 per cent of all absences from work, and cause five times as much loss of work as do strikes. And that colds cost U.S. sneezers over $2 On the other hand did you a bugle just sniffle. (Of From The Statesman Files 40. Years Ago , Jan. t, 1915 Former Governor William T. Haines, Orono, Maine, whose , term of office expired a week 1 ago, registered as a student in . the University of Maine. He! planned to take a course in agri culture. By an almost unanimous vote the Marion County Taxpayers' league decided to urge the leg islature not to pass the appro-1 pnation for $123,000 for the construction of a livestock at the State Fair grounds. Miss Carolyn Hurst, daughter of Mrs. E. Hurst , of this city, arrived home from an extended eastern tour of three months. In New York City she was the guest of her brother Albert Hurst , By D. C' WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? I am going to put in a few days visiting my friends.'' ! j 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "obsequies"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Elixir, hauteur, languer, torpor. ; 4. What does the word "rec titude' mean? ; 3. What is a word beginning with di that means "to under stand; to detect"? ; j' Answers .' - ' 'r . 1. Say, "I am going , to spend a few days visiting my friends. 2. Accent first syllable, not the second. 3.- Languor. 4.' Undeviab ing adherence to moral stand ards. "He has never wandered from the path of rectitude." 9. Discern. Archery Champ Has Eye Removed 1 ' :' . '- :-: f r ' ... BOISE (UP) The , IMS national archery champion has lost the use of his shooting eye through a bow stringing accident Monday eve ning. It was reported here. Jess Baker of Payette, Idaho was in a Boise hospital recovering from an operation on his right eye. Dr. ' Calvin C. Rush, Baker's attending physician, said he under stood . that the former archery champ was stringing a' bow when the string broke, sending the bow plunging into the eye. The eye had to be removed. Dr. Rush said. s Danny Kaye jWins Humanitarian Prize HOLLYWOOD (UP) Comedian Danny Kaye has won the Humani tarian of the Year award for 1954 because of his work as ambassa dor at large for the U. N. Inter national ChOdrens Fund. t The announcement that Kaye bad won the award came Tues day from Noah A. Atler, president of the Denver Hospital and Sani tarium, which annually honors out standing service to humanity.: - jJCDEDBl (Continued from Page 1) -the will of the United States; and there is nothing to indicate a readiness to throw in u. b. military power to protect Laos, Cambodia, Thailand. Thus there is a deceitful quality in U. S. policy in Southeast Asia, and the presence of an American mili tary mission in Vietnam height ens the impression that the United States hi ready to main tain the independence of South east Asia. , Without doubt one of the major debates in Washington this win ter will be over U. S. policy in Asia. The administration appar ently Is turning to economic as sistance, hoping that will help the natives build their own bul warks against Communism. Sen ator Knowland calls for a thor ough debate on the issue. If one is not staged in the Senate the issues may be' posed in commit tee bearings when senators and congressmen interrogate cabinet officials and 1 members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This may get the conflict of opinion within the government before (be peo ple. . - 'j 1 What should be the policy a the United States? My own theory has been that we should seek to withdraw from Asia rather, than become more deeply involved there. This is for the reason that we cannot assume too many international obligations and are already fully committed in Europe. Secondly, there is the indifference of the Asian peoples themselves to fending off Communism as was demonstrated in China and m Indochina but not in Korea. Whites of Europe and America are aliens, in Asia. U. S. inter vention would be interpreted as a fresh attempt to impose alien domination on Asian peoples. The United States cannot, how ever, just "pull out" of Asia, The ensuing power vacuum would immediately be filled by Com munist .China. The immediate task, as I see it, is to build some kind of , bridge permitting our honorable withdrawal in due course., I still cannot justify American military intervention in force1 to sustain the regimes now ruling Southeast Asia. Once we, had a Monroe'' Doctrine for the Americas. We cannot well go counter to a similar doctrine ' of Asia for the Asians. It is in our .interest to see these coun tries develop j and to keep on friendly terms with them. These ends may better be achieved by peaceful means rather than war. GET JtP Walnut meats Wanted! Iff ic BUYING ALL GRADES ! (( j )) J WE PAY TOP PRICES )) U I CASH ON DELIVERY (( ill - . sl rinij pwi . .a. r-., s i i . , , )i urrurr nenea iNuruo. ;ji i,r5"view Jl 4907 N. River Rood rnon uui i ; 1 FOR YOUSt MONEY aTKl nf Earn Z72,o Open a WdUmtllt VMtj Bank Bonus Sitings Account now and add $5 or more each month to keep your account growing! By saving this systematic way funds on deposit increase steadily and earn interest at the greater rate of 2Vz. , . : i . rot moii nmiisT on rout savings, savs - AT SAUM'S INOIStNDENT, HOMI-OWNtO SANK Htod OffUos 990 Fourevndt lood Uoiveratty rmmh 1310 Siote Street I W 1 Aatplo perkiaf Krushchev's Power Shbwn l By 'Depurge7 . By WILLIAM X RYAN ' A purge has just been depurged in Moscow. This is important news for the United States because it testifies to the growing power of Nikita ' Krushchev, chief of the Communist Party, and also to a belligerent Stalin -like Soviet for eign policy in the making.: ; The indications of Krushchev's rising fortunes come amid hints in the Soviet press that two factions in the Soviet hierarchy are strug gling, for supremacy. ; News has just reached this coun try that Soviet President Voroshi lov, at a Kremlin ceremony New Year's Eve. decorated a group of generals including CoL Gen. L V. Shikin. This general disappeared in 1949 after the death of Gen. Andri Zhdanov, onetime heir-apparent to Stalin. . - ; " , j., 7 Many of Zhdanov's followers were purged after his death, in cluding Politburo member Nikolai Vosnesensky, and the way was cleared for the rise to power of the present Premier, Georgi Mal enkov. .. : t - -- ' i ' Shikin was an adviser to Zhda nov during the Germans siege of Leningrad, which Zhdanov finally lifted. Later, on the death of Polit buro member A. S. Scherbakov in 1945, Shikin succeeded him as po litical administrator for ue army. Scherbakov's name came up in January 1953, two months : before Stalin's death, in the notorious "doctors' plot." He was alleged to have been assassinated by medical mistreatment in a plot against So viet leaders. The whole plot was discredited after Stalin's death in a swift series of events leading up to the purge of police boss La vrenty Beriaw. ...v-j r-;, Shikin's public reappearance on the political scene came just a week after .Moscow announced its execution of CoL Gen. V. S. Aba kumov, former minister of state security, as a Beria co-plotter. Significantly, Abakumov was ; ac cused of skullduggery in a shad owy "Leningrad case. He fwas supposed to have used illegal po lice methods to force confessions there. Leningrad was Zhdanov's bailiwick. " ; Shikin's rehabilitation may; not mean Premier Malenkov. oldtime foe of Zhdanov in the long strug gle for Stalin's mantle, is in im minent danger. However, it does nothing to diminish the stature of party boss Khrushchev. . s The current line of Soviet for eign policy sounds like the Stalin Zhdanov policy of old. It i also sounds like .the Khrushchev ap proach as exemplified , in his speech in Prague last September at the 10th Czech Communist Par ty congress. " I More and more ' Khrushchev seems to have been throwing his weight around. He has gone into Central Asia and laid down the law to republic ministers on how to raise agricultural production; that trip cost at least one republic premier his job. ' ' ' . .. The Soviet press has been build ing up Khrushchev. New Times j recalled his role as a comrade-in-arms of Stalin during the civil war which followed the revolution. In those days, Malenkov was ' a teen-ager i There has been a noticeable trend back to Stalinism in the So viet press, along with unmistak able references to serious heresies and factionalism within the Com munist Party. Such statements are ominous in sound. Perhaps the "collective leadership" principle of committee government which followed Stalin's death is begin ning to come apart at the seams. SCHEDULED READING 1 LANSING, Mich. (JP) Only newcomers to the State Library even look up now when an alarm clock shatters the quiet of the reading room. Oldtimers know it is just a reminder for Mrs. Rich ard O. Malcomson that her park ing time has expired. A regular visitor from Mt Pleasant Mrs. Malcomson got tired of accumul ating parking tickets. on Savings fotib'tiei at aoifc aoakiaf eftics. Pope Recovers From Hiccups VATICAN CTTY (UP) Jw Pius XII, fully recovered from U miio: attack of, hkcups he suffere Monday nicht rose early Wednei day and attended a special mass h hia private chapet ..;.- Pra.- Riccardo Galeazzi-Lisi the pontiffs physician, visited bin after, mass. He said he found th Pope in excellent spirits, cheerei by . reports of favorable reactio to his Christmas message. Dental Survey OfOiildren Scliedtiled PORTLAND m The Stau Board of Health plans denta surveys of school children in fiv: Oregon cities within the next fe weeks. . ": Dr. David M. Witter, head or the board's dental health section said the first will be at Bend. Ai examination of teeth of first second and seventh grade childrer there will be made both fot general information and to empha size new dental health educatior techniques. A study will be conducted al Gearhart to determine the effect of fluoridation of drinking watet on the teeth of 'all grade school children. An Astoria study is U show the effect of fluoridation or six-year-olds. - At Warrenton, where . watet fluoridation was started rerntiv tests will be made to provide future comparisons. . , At a fifth city. Seaside, a survev will be made at the request of local dentists to discover needs of school children there. Central Oregon Reservoir Plan Given Approval WASHINGTON (UP)- Haystack reservoir in central Oregon has been approved by the United States budget bureau for an appro priation to get the project started, it was .reported Wednesday. Haysack reservoir, a unit of the Deschutes project which would also provide stream regulation, was authorized by the last Con gress. Approval by the budget bureau in effect puts requests for initial appropriations in the budget President Eisenhower will send to Congress Jan. 17. . The Oregon project was one of four "new starts" on reclamation projects approved by the budget bureau. The air-in a cube shaped room, 30 feet on a tide, weighs a ton. 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