The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, April 28, 1955, Page 4, Image 4

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    4 Sec lV-Statesman, Satem, Ore., Thurs., April 28, 1955
GRIN AND BEAR IT ByLichty
""Ao focor Stccys Da, No fear SioIl Atee
Ironi rlrst Statesman. March tS. 1S51
Statesman PublUhing Company
CHARLES A. SPRAGUS. Editor and Publisher
Puolisrted every morning. Bunnell office 280
North Chureo St. Salem. Or- TelcpBone4-681
Entered at tfte postal flee at Salem. Ore. aa aecond
elai matter under act of Congress Marcn i. 1H9.
- Member Associated Press
The Associate Press ta eatiUed exclusively to the BM
for republication of all local ntn printed In
tola newspaper. -
r
Trout Season Set to Open
i -Tlie
season is here when trout-fishermen
once more? face a challenge, or two of them.
One is the challenge of the fish itself, of
course, but an even more important one is
the challenge of sportsmanlike conduct so
essential if Oregon's favorite sport is to be
available freely in all parts of the; state.
The State Game Commission says "wheth
er fishing continues depends largely upon
the anglers themselves. Past acts of van
dalism and disrespect for the rights of others
have closed segments of Oregon's fishing
waters to the general public. Disregard of
the . regulations x x x also jeopardizes
future fish crops and consequently future
fishing."
Certainly most fishermen are good sports
men. But it's those who aren't, who cause
landowners to rule out all of them. Thus
each individual has a responsibility to, every
one of the more than 300,000 fishing license
holders.
Oregon s trout season opens Saturday and
Oregon's miles" of unpolluted streams and
lakes will have visitors by the thousands.
They should have a fine time.
It might be well, too, to remind ourselves
that all of the state's fishing waters aren't
open Saturday and that the law doesn't
recognize ignorance as an excuse for vio
lating regulations. Places which sell licenses
have available free copies of fishing rules.
Such an admonition isn't necessary for the
veteran fisherman, but each year hundreds
of folk hie themselves to the forests for the
first time. We wish them luck, and we hope
everyone will conduct himself as he would
have others do to preserve one of Oregon's
greatest attractions:' -
As for the stories to be told-Saturday
night, or any other time, for that matter,
anyone who wants to add a few inches to
the fish he caught can do so in full confi
dence that no one is going to believe him,
anyway unless he has the proof.
Higher Education Budget
Administrators of state institutions of
higher learning know how the dog feels who
had his tail cut off an inch at a time. That
is what happened to the , estimates they
turned in for operating their schools in the
coming biennium. At the chancellor-board
level the aggregate of estimates submitted
by the presidents was cut by over a million
dollars. On the next level, that of the budget
bureau, another million-dollar slice was
made. Then on the next step, the ways and
means committee of the legislature, still
another cut of over a million .was made.
This brings the total budget for the state
system down to $42,844,000, of which the
state appropriation would be around $32,
000,000, some four million dollars more than
for the present biennium. J
Cuts contemplated by the ways and means
committee are in number of additions to
teaching staff asked for to meet anticipated
enrolment increases, elimination of subsidy
to certain dormitory operations, and reduc
tion in salary increases. The committee
recommends an increase of $30 a year in
tuition charged students which would pro- ,
vide an estimated $900,000 additional.
Forty-two million dollars sound like a big
chunk of money and so it is. The lay public
is unable to pass judgment on a budget of
that magnitude, nor hardly on the several
items which it contains. What deserves
mention, however, is that the proliferation
of higher education over Oregon is costing
money. The budget submitted by the board
of higher education reflects additional costs
because of changes imposed on the system
bv the Legislative Assembly itself: dental
school, Portland State, expanded curricula
at the several colleges and the university.
With all the spreading of higher education
unaccompanied by corresponding grants of
funds we cannot expect increments to quality
of instruction which might be obtained by
greater concentration of the spending.
The state system will "get along." It has
survived crises far more severe than the
. . . . . j a.
in sight. Jsniorcea economies ao jiui.
"Qui is always nhashing old staff ... H k isn't what happumd mt
Yalta, tfs what happened to last week's salary! ..."
D awnjJf
one
always injure results in education, wnai
must be fully understood, however, is this:
having gone in for mass higher education
the aggregate . costs are bound to increase.
And in a state of limited resources, like
Oregon, the expansion will be at some ex
pense to the quality of work in our institu
tions of higher learning.
1 Jr ...
It A-
Let GEORGE Do It
Under pressure the State department has
rased one of the conditions "laid down for
. conversations with Red China on the Far
Eastern situation. Under-Secretary Herbert.
Hoover, jr., had said on Saturday that Na-,
tionalist China 'would have to be included
in such, a conference. Saturday night Sen.
Walter George, chairman of the Senate for
eign relations committee, recommended ne
. gotiations without such a requirement. On
Tuesday Secretary Dulles, having returned
to Washington, said he would negotiate di
rectly with Red China respecting a cease
fire in the Formosa region; "but on discus
sions of, rights and territories Nationalist
China would have to be consulted.
This serves to keep the door to negotiation
open, at least.
- Latest recommendation of- the second
Hoover Commission is that the post office
parcel post service be shrunk back greatly
by turning the- business over to private
agencies. Parcel -post has been, in existence
since 1913, after Congress in 1912 passed the
bill introduced by Sen. Jonathan Bourne of world in terror and achieve such a tyranny' as
A slight degree of sanity is coming into
the business of money lending for house
construction. The Veterans Administration
is discontinuing its policy of "no-no down
payment." That's the kind where the bor
rower doesn't have to put up any cash even
for such matters as title insurance. The
VA found those terms were just too, too
generous.
Editorial Comment
DAR YIELDS TO NONE
IN .BEING UNYIELDING
The Daughters of the American Revolution,
whose approach to "the day's political, social and
economic problems bears little family resem
blance to that which impelled their fathers to
risk life, fortune and sacred "honor, have now had
a formal, organized look at atomic energy.
It seems to have frightened them out of their
wits. That is the plausible and kind explanation
for the resolution unanimously adopted by 2,416
delegates to the 64th "Continental Congress" of
the DAR. The ladies called for immediate aban
donment of any such plan as President Eisen
hower has proposed, and Americans of all politi
cal faiths have acclaimed and the nations of the
world have embraced, for the sharing of atomic
power. The ladies are deathly afraid of the Eisen
hower atoms-for-peace plan.
Their resolution recites that any such plan is
a step toward national suicide; that it will give
"an international oligarchy" (meaning the United
Nations) the means "to hold all nations of the
Oregon. We-doubt if the people will ap
prove any substantial curtailment of the
service. In its zeal to get government out
of business this second Hoover commission
appears to be turning the clock away back
beyond the New Deal era. Its extremes
may defeat itsr purposes.
never before has been witnessed in the history
of the world.
The ladies of the DAR have every right to be
disturbed and to say so. The ladies also have
every right to be mistaken. It seems to us they
exercised that right without stint at their recent
Continental Congress.
(San Francisco Chronicle)
23
Anyone who has ever been involved in military tactics
knows that an order of reassignment usually includes the
orders for a group of men, rather than just one. Well,
when AFROTC Maj. Gilbert Charters, air
science prof at Willamette got his packing
order the other day his riame was included
in a list of six other men stationed all over
the U. S. And strangely enough the name
of the man directly below his on the order
sheet was that of. a friend who was com
missioned with Maj. Charters in 1949 in
Miami, and now stationed at Stanford.
Maj. Charters' number is A05 60 777. His
friend's number is A05 60 778. And it'll
take the men in the Pentagon a Jong time
to figure out the odds involved for those two numbers to
find their way onto that sheet in that order ....
And then there is the strange case of the Linotype
numbers. A coupla years ago the Statesman bought a brand '
new high-speed-type Linotype called the Comet. Last week
the Statesman-Journal plant got its second Comet The first
Comet was the Mergenthaler Co.'i 829th. The one arriving
this week was number 1,829 ....
No one was smiling at the- Senator Wednesday over
Tuesday night's bomb gag. Those involved agree it was a
cruel jest and could have caused a lot of harm. When the
word was passed to room occupants to vacate, a surprisingly
few guests put up arguments. Nearly everybody took the
hotel's word for it ... . And after reading recent Portland
headlines a reader was moved to recall the time when his
literature class prof noted that one of the troubles with
author James M. Cain was that some of his plots (wife vs.
husband vs. a scheme vs. insurance) were not based on
reality ....
'
Speaking of crime, a Salem attorney points out two sec
tions of the Oregon Revised Statutes, still unrepealed, which
prohibits printed material, shows or plays which depict crimi
nal exploits. One section provides a $500 fine and jail sen
tence for exhibiting "in any public place by way of show or
drama or play what purports to be the criminal exploits of
any desperado or convicted felon." .... The other section
prohibits the sale or possession of printed matter narrating
criminal exploits or "accounts or, stories of crimes of lust or
deeds of bloodshed." ....
May issue of Fortnight Mag., carries an article by (who
else?) Sen. Neuberger. In this one the senator spells out
in detail the motives which, he thinks, led Sen. Morse from
the GOP camp to the Democratic one. Neuberger also states
that the outcome of the 1956 elections will determine whether
a politician's conscience can lead him from one party to
another. Neuberger says if Morse is "punished by defeat"
it'll probably be a long time before another politician
changes party ties .... Fortnight describes itself as a "lib
eral Republican" publication and says it doesn't always
. agree with Neuberger. '
Diplomats Use
Newspapers
As Couriers
By J. M. ROBERTS
Associated Press News Analyst
One of the great troubles of com
munications between governments
these days, one that President
Eisenhower has been trying to get
around in his correspondence with
Marshal Zhukov of Russia, is that
so much of it is attempted through
public, non-official channels.
The other day when Chou En-Lai
wanted to get across the idea to
the United States he used a public
forum in Bandung and depended
upon newspaper dispatches to
carry the message.
It was typical of the way in
which diplomats now use the
oblique method of approach. The
problem of non-recognition, of
course, complicated the Chou case.
But the business of issuing public
policy statements and replying to
them the same way produces fric
tion which sometimes even seems
to transcend the important issues
themselves.
a -
When Chou spoke out in public
he put the State Department on
the spot to get in its licks while
his statement was still fresh. The
department replied too hurriedly
with a list of prerequisites for ne
gotiations which virtually amount
ed to refusal.
Then Chou felt his own words
needed some interpretation, and
came up with his removal of For
mosa's future from the field of
things that could be negotiated. It
.meant that if he talked about For
mosa at all it would only be on the
terms of its surrender. But it also
meant there were things to talk
about without involving Chiang
Kai-Shek.
Secretary Dulles put the business
back on the track with a state
ment that bilateral negotiations
with the Reds might be possible
on issues not directly connected
with the future of the Chinese Na
tionalists. Now it is revealed that the Presi
dent and Zhukov have exchanged
views, and Eisenhower thinks it
may have done some good. But
he's not going to publish the letters
unless Zhukov wants to.
That leaves the field open for
further communications in a deli
cate situation where nothing more
than exploration can take place
and neither man is in a position to
make commitments. Addressing
each other as friends can be ac
complished without weighing every
word for its effect on others than
the addressee.
If Chou really has any desire to
essen tensions in Asia which is
certainly open to doubt and if he
had possessed normal means of
communications, he could have
bllowed a much more sensible
course. He could have advised the
United States in advance of what
he intended to say, giving time
or a considered reply and enhanc
ing the possibilities that something
would come of it.
School Reporter
By BARBARA BONIFACE and WILL BATESON
Promotion Exercise Speakers Listed
PARISH JUNIOR HIGH
Two Parish students were
picked Wednesday .to be the
speakers at the school's promo-
r tion exercises.
The two ninth
graders are Joy
V Brown and John
CI Socolofsky.
. They
Agreement With China Reds on Formula to tflP IjQDOuDClj
oave u. o. race on rormosa issue rorecasT
(Continued from page 1.)
Stewart Alp
By STEWART ALSOP
WASHINGTON, - For those
who enjoy guessing games, the
following projection of events
may nave
some interest,.
It may be. of
course, dead
wrong i t
might be rath
er, bitterly en
tertaining to
read what fol
lows six months
from now. Yet
it does repre
sent the best
guesses of
what are generally called "in
formed circles" in Washington.
First, the Chinese Communists
will not now -attack the off-shore
islands . of Quemoy and Matsu.
The reasoning here is that, hav
ing made an ostensibly peaceful
gesture in Chou En-lai's care
fully imprecise offer to negotiate
on -the Formosa Straits crisis,
the Chinese 'Communists could
hardly turn right round and .kick
off a war.
This may turn out to be a very
bad guess indeed, of course. The
Communist build-up opposite the
oCT-shore islands continues un
abated. Yet it is being rather
confidently-perhaps much too
confident assumed that the
Communists will not soon attack.
Instead, what is now believed
to be in prospect is a long feeling-out
period, a time of negot
iating aboat negotiating very
much the same sort of thing that
west oi after Soviet Ambassador
Malik made his famous offer ia
the United Nations to negotiate
a truce ia the JCoreaa War. The
feeling-out period1 h believed
likely to continue for months,
with many an alarm and ex
cursion. While it is going on, a rather,
embarrassed but nevertheless
eventually effective effort will
probably be made to persuade.
Chiang Kai-shek to pull back
from the off-shore islands. This,
of course, could be a bad guess
too.
Chiang will certainly resist ,
and with excellent reason, es-
pecially as he was first persuad
ed by emissaries of this coun
try to make his heavy commit
ment of troops in the off-shore
islands. But eventually, it is be
lieved, he will agree, simply be
cause he has no alternative 4r
Just as eventually Korean Presi
dent Syngman Rhee agreed un
der; pressure to accept the Ko
rean truce.
The off-shore islands wQI thus
in time be turned over to the
Communists, on certain condi
tions. Conditions number one is
that the Communists will make
some sort of a vague promise
not to attack Formosa, at least
for the present.
No one seriously believes any
more that the Communists are
going U agree to any formal,
permanent cease-fire in the For
mosa Strait. Sack a cease-fire
would amount to abandonment .
of Chinese Communist claims to
Formosa, and if anything is
clear it is clear that the Com
munists will not abandon these
claims.
What , is now hoped for, in
stead, is some sort of face-saving
formula. The face to be
saved is, of course, that of the
United States, simply because
the United States cannot easily
agree to abandon the off-shore
islands to the Communists with
out receiving anything whatso-'
ever in return. But a vague
statement by Chou En-lai,
promising to seek a peaceful
solution of the Formosa question,
or something of that sort, will
probably suffice.
Another likely condition is (he
kind of British commitment
Formosa recently forecast in
this space. For British domestic
political reasons, no such com
mitment ran be made before
toe May 26 elections. But after
that, a carefully hedged British
ind Commonwealth promise to
come to the defense of Formosa, .
if the island is attacked by the
Communists, is more probable
than possible. As one British
spokesman has remarked, "It
looks as though we'd have to get
into the Formosa act somehow."
i The purpose would not be to
please Chiang Kai-shek who
would not be pleased at all
but rather to put the best pos
sible face on the kind of settle
ment outlined above. The Brit
ish commitment would make it
possible to argue that a reason
able deal had been made, since
British support would be worth
more to Formosa than the small
and exposed off-shore islands.
AO this. It should be hastily
and "rather nervously repeated,
is strictly a guessing game. Bat
if things do work out this way, at
least war will be avoided. And
at least there win be another
area ia the world ia which the
lines are firmly drawn, and both
sides know- where thrr stand.
Moreover unless the Pentagon
grossly over-estimates the capa
bilities of the Seventh Fleet
a de facto cease-fire will be im
posed la the Formosa Straits,
and a cease-fire has been the
object of American policy ia the
area since the start of the crisis.
Yet there can be no disguising
the cruel fact that this kind of
settlement will be another big
retreat in the face of Commu
nist pressure. The extraordinary
twjstings and turnings of Ameri
can policy in the last six months,
moreover, will have the effect
of making the retreat look even
bigger than in fact it is.
(Copyright 1955. New York
Herald Tribune, IncJ
little attention was given news
wise to other cases where de
segregation had been put into
effect without much stir. It seems
to be an example, as he said, of
"No news is good news."
McKnight also pointec" out that
problems in race relations are
becoming national in character.
In the South the Negro popula
tion increased only two per cent
from 1940 to 1950 while in the
non-South the increase was 56
per cent. He made a plea for
the press to give greater, at
tention to this "controversial,
emotion-ridden", subject of race
relations.
system if desegregation is forced
upon them.
In the discussion period which
followed McKnight's address ed
itors of northern papers kept
silent. A few of those represent
ing southern papers did. One
,man stressed the point that in
elections in his state areas where
Negroes predominated voted
strongly in favor of continuing
separate schools. Another speak
er repeated the accusation of the
heavy incidence of venereal dis
ease among children of color as
one reason the whites opposed
desegregation. Then an editor
from Jackson. Miss... declared
flatly that in his state the white
children would not attend schools
where Negro children were ad
mitted. He branded the Court de
cision as sociological opinion not
based on law. He said if desegre
gation is forced blood will be
shed,' and that blood win not oe Court case, valid as that is. to
I think most of the leaders of
the South recognize that segrega
tion will have to go in a demo
cratic society. They want time to
make an adjustment some a
much longer tune than others
Their problem is to pull the
teeth of the radicals who would
not hesitate at use of force to
stave off the mixing of races in
schools. Even in Mississippi
there is one editor, Hooding Car
ter, of the Greensboro Delta
Democrat-Times, who is bold
enough to resist these extremists
His denunciation of the pro-segregation
Citizens Councils has
brought him condemnation from
the Legislature and now he re
ports uiey are employing econo
mic terrorism" directed at him
and his paper and its advertisers
and at citizens who decline to
join the Councils. Carter's fear
is that these Councils will turn
into modern Ku Klux Klans
which will do grave damage to
the South
In his paper Carter said he
had a hunch that relatively, few
would knuckle under to .the pres
sures of the Councils, and added
"If we are wrong, it's not only
our heads that are going to be
chopped off. What will be Jost is
freedom of conscience and of
speech and action."
I report this to inform our
people of the gravity of this
problem. It will not be easy by
y were
nominated by
the students but
the final selec
tion was left to
promotion exer
cise will be
'the faculty. The
Barbara Bonifaca June 7.
The annual play day will be
held for the seventh graders this
year at 2 p.m. at Olinger Field on
May 10. The eighth graders will
have their fun the next day.
NORTH SALEM HIGH
As the date
i for graduation
nears, the sen-
, iors Iook ior
ward to an
nouncements of
scholarships to
various colleges
and universi
ties. It was an
nounced Tues
day that North
Salem High sen-
wuiBateaoa ior and song
queen, Jane Morefield, had been
picked as one of 13 girls in the
state to be interviewed next
month for the Aaron Frank schol
arship. In the state, there were
86 students entered by their
schools. From these applications,
16 were picked to come to Port
land for a personal interview.
The interview will be held May 7
at the Multnomah Hotel
If selected, Jane said she would
use her four-year scholarship at
Oregon State College where she
will study education. Earlier this
year she was given the Daughters
of the American Revolution citi
zenship award. She is a member
of National Honor Society, Y
teens, Latin Club, Civics Club
and was the queen of the Inter
Club Carnival.
Jane is the daughter of .Mr.
and Mrs. B. J. Cleary of 1875 N.
24 St
Preparations are being com
pleted this week for the student
body spring formal to be held
Friday in the gym. "Candyland,
as the dance is called, is the first
of three important spring dances.
The Cotton Ba1 and the Junior
Senior Prom will come later.
SOUTH SALEM HIGH
Eighteen South Salem High
School students have shown high
music ability and experience,
qualifying them to represent
South Salem at the eighth annual
Music in May festival at Pacific
University in Forest Grove, May
12-14. ,": ;
Chosen from a select list of
Washington and Or prim hioh
school musicians were Dick
Claus, clarinet; Joan Kleinke,
clarinet; Patricia Whelen, oboe;
Lane Olson, French horn; Mike i
Corcoran, baritone (horn); My
ron creaanj, cornet; 'Georgia
Walter, Sandra Mischke, Nancy
Owens, Carole Warren, . Betty
Bishop, Joyce Thurwell, Sally -Hoffman,
Ralph Alexander,
chorus; Reidun Iverson, flute;
John Gibbens, cello; Vera Moore,
cello, and Rodney Schmidt, violin.
Victor Palmason is their director.
Each spring 500 of the top per
formers of Washington and Ore
gon are selected by their direct
ors, to form a 20OrDiepp hand a .
220-voice chorus and an 80-piece
syrapnony orcnestra to play un
der wen -Known guest conductors.
During the three davs nf th
festival there will be a network
radio broadcast and. a concert by
three groups at the conclusion of
the festival. . -
Cherry
City
Time Flies
FROM STATESMAN FILES
on the hands of the people of
Mississippi but on the steps of
the Supreme Court.
This raising of the "rebel flag"
drew no support, but it does re
veal the intensity o. feeling
among many in the South on
this issue. This is proven again by
the action of four states, South
Carolina, Georgia, ' Mississippi,
and Louisiana to permit the
abandonment of the public school
. uproot the prejudices built in for
generations. It is easy to take
the side of the angels where the
stres3 and strain are remote. In
this case we of the North should
show a measure of sympathy for
those of the. South where this re
adjustment in mores. is painful,
and a large degree o support for
those leaders who ar? working
to make the transition as speedily
and with as little turmoil as possible.
10 Years Ago
April 28, 1945
Austin F. Flegel Jr., headed
the Willamette Iron and Steel
corporation as president, suc
ceeding the late Amedee M.
Smith. Flegel had been execu
tive vice-president of the firm
since 1940 and its secretary
treasurer from 1934-40.
The Lorillard Spencer pitcher
was recently awarded to region
11 of the Boy Scouts of America
for outstanding membership
growth in 1944. Region 11 in
cludes the Cascade area of the
Salem area and includes all of
Oregon, Idaho and Washington,
and the territory of Alaska.
25 Years Ago
April 28, 1930
Unofficial weather reports
compiled here for the month of
April "show more than twice the
amount of rainfall this month
over the precipitation accorded
here during the month of March.
The rainfall for April showed
3.94 inches as compared to 1.93
inches for March. .
F. E. Huston, graduate of Wil
lamette University in the class
of '23 and distinguished on the
campus as a tennis player of abi
lity, recently was appointed act
uary of the insurance depart
ment of Washington.
Over 150 members of the Ho
tel Greeters of America, north
west district were guests of Jim
Linn at his farm near Salem,
for a picnic dinner. The con
vention was held in Portland.
40 Years Ago
April 28, 1915
Dana Allen, one of Marion
County's representatives in the
last legislature received notifi
cation from Admiral Gray of the
Dalles-Celilo fleet that he had
been appointed one of the Rear
Admirals of the fleet which
would oass through the Celilo
canal during the opening cele
bration. Word was received by Mrs.
Lafe Hill of the birth of a son
to Mr. and Mrs. Ritch Van Pealt
of Lostine, Ore. Mrs. Van Pealt
is a sister of Mrs. Hill and will
be remembered as Cora Ham
mack, daughter of the F. Ham
macks of Clear Lake.
Fresh from musical triumphs
in the East, where press en
r;mi"ms hear glowing testimo
ny, the Barrere Ensemble of
Wind instruments, under the
leadership of George Barrere,
is director and founder were
.heard in Salem, under the aus
pices of Musical Artists' Course.
County Juvenile
Quarters Getting
Coat of Plaster
Work started Wednesday on
plastering of juvenile quarters in
Marion County Courthouse.
Wire netting is being placed
over the walls which, in turn, will
be covered with cement plaster,
according to Sheriff Denver Young.
The work is being done by Roger
Green, who submitted a low bid
of $795 to the county court. The
area was not plastered when the
courthouse was built.
Scout Camp
Attractsl95
Nearly 195 Boy Scouts and thejr
leaders participated in the annual
Cherry . City District Boy Scout
competitive, camping activity at
Howard Creek recreation area No.
1 in Silver Creek' State Park last
weexena.
Members of the district's camp
ing and activities -committee, head
ed by Don Crenshaw, served as
inspectors and judges.
Scouts and tfieir campsites were
inspected throughout the two-day f
camporee on camping skills, menus
and cooking, health, safety and
sanitation, campsite layout and fire
safety. Judges on these were Joe
Marcroft, George Strozut Sr., and
Stan Rolfness.
Art Lamka judged scouting skills
in use; Bob' Blensley, patrol or
ganization; John Kinney, patrol
participation; and BiU McVay,
final clean-up.
The Saturday night campfire,
featuring group singing and skits,
was conducted by Floyd Witteman
and the Explorers.
The camporee" was concluded
Sunday by a flag ceremony and
awards f certificates to each par
ticipating unit. Twenty-seven pa
trols received proficient awards
and seven patrols' received stand
ard awards. ' .
WRONG CATS
HILLSDALE, Mich tf Four
boys, trying to get a pet cat to
come out tf a pfle of stones, prod
ded in a hde with a stick. The cat
didn't emerge, but two skunks did.
The boys Douglas Bohner, 6; hs
brother, George, 9; Geoffrey
Greene, 4, and his brother; Danny,
9 went home in smelly disgrace,
without the cat. .
Anne Ritchey to
Edit Publication
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON,
Eugene, (Special) Anne Ritchey,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs.. J. A.
Ritchey, 1045 N. 13th St., Salem,
has been named editor of the
Pigger's Guide for the second year.
This publication lists the address
and telephone number of every
student and faculty membr.
Miss Ritchy is currently running
for a second term on the ASUO
senate and is co-chairman of the
Junior Weekend queen selection
and coronation committee. She is
a junior major in journalism.
Pbont 444U1
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A BIT Of
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THAT
George
Huggins
ABOUT PRIZES
The winners of our Free Drawing ot the recent Lion's
Club Home Show hove nor yet been notified. We de
cided to notify them through this column just to find
out if anyone ever reads this stuff! As a matter of
fact, if you are a friend or neighbor of the winners you
might give them a call. The prizes are right here in our
office waiting to be picked up.
A Motorola Clock Radio goes to Mrs. John P. Bucu
rench of 2065 Myrtle Ave., telephone 3-5896; a Gen
eral Electric kitchen clock to Mrs. Ralph E. Boling of
2465 Greenway Drive; a General Electric kitchen clock
to Anna Landreth of Mehama, Oregon.
Many thanks to all those who participated in. helping
to insure the success of the Home Show.
tojjij
i
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