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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1955)
Art ft. r c r. r ' A . 9 -I I i t 4 .. v .. J iw V . 1 4 (Sec. I) Statesman, Stlem, Ore., Sat., Dec. 10, 1955. GRIN AND BEAR IT Bv L.clity 4' Ortfion0tate$iaau mNo Favor Sways U$. K T$cr Shall Aum Vnm rtrtt SUtetmai, Murk tft, 1S51 " Statesman Publishing Company CHARLES A. SPRACUE, Editor k Publish Publiihae avary mornlnf. Buaina offlr tm J North Church it, Blm. Oi. llphon 4-SS11 Cntered illln poatoffie at Salem, Or. aarone Claa wit'tr imew ct at Comrtu Mrch 1 Hit, Member Asaecisted Pre Th Aaterlitva Prvn It ntitlwa asetuaivlv to th am (or republication ( all lor, I nawa pnad la thu wwiwwt Federal Aid Not Needed in Oregon Governor Patterson says he is convinced the federal government should help Oregon build the schoolhouses it needs, but he is op posed' to federal aid for operating schools. He cites the estimated need for $88 million worth of new construction by 1960, and cited particularly the residential districts around Portland whose .valuations are not sufficient to carry the bonded indebtedness required. He states further that the state does not have the money to assist the districts. But how about the federal government? Does it have the money? The treasury has been operating on a deficit basis almost con tinuously since 1930. Would the Governor have it merely run the printing presses a little longer and draw farther on the na tion's credit to give aid to Oregon? The state, it should be noted, has maintained a surplus ever since 1940, living steadily within its means. If the federal government is to provide money for schools, payment would need to come eventually by, taxes which simply means that we would send money to Wash ington and then get back whatever the law said was our share. Why shouldn't Oregon provide the educa tional facilities it needs for its childien? They re our children. Their parents are able to feed and clothe and house them, provide for them the comforts of modern living. Can they not also provide schoolhouses and teach ers, for their education? If there are dis tressed districts whose problems cannot be solved either by the districts themselves or by consolidation, there are two alternatives: in creased county aid or increased state aid. We disagree with Governor Patterson when he tosses the burden to the federal govern ment and absolves the state from added re sponsibility. The Salem district is a good example of a community rising to meet is responsibility. Through consolidation the frinee areas hiive been brought into the central school system. City property owners have voluntarily as sumed added burdens to help the suburbs where the per capita valuation is relatively low. Other communities have done the same. If there are districts where needs are acute nd such alternative is not available the state could set up a fund to provide special aid to relieve the distress. This should not be made t grab-bag, however. , The only federal aid which we feel is re quired, is for states at the bottom of tha scale in educational facilities and in wealth and income. Oregon is not in that group. It can take care of its own. Governor Pstterson ought to announce that Oregon will take care of its own. L2vetoek Price tnd City Wages Sensitive to the drop in prices of livestock the Marion County Livestock Association " adopted a resolution objecting to further in creases in salaries of employes of government agencjes.,.:Jt also admonished private employ-, es to have regard for the effect ofwage in creases in view of the present distressed con dition of the livestock market. This imbalance between business and industry and agricul ture is naturally galling. Farmers fear that further wage increases to city folk will widen the gap for them by increasing the cost of their purchases. Wage increases for city workers, however, is not without its favorable side, especially for livestock growers. They enable workers to buy meat and better grades of meat. The employed workman eats well, and if his wages are high enough his wife buvs and serves him plenty of good red meat. The de cline in-'livestock prices is not due to high urban wages but to growers putting on the market more hogs and cattle thsn the mar ket will absorb at previous price levels. Jan Sibelius Stern-faced Jari Sibelius, the Finnish com poser, came in for well-earned plaudits from both sides of the Iron Curtain a few days ago on the occasion of his 90th birthday. Sibelius, whose best-known works are his seven symphonies and the symphonic poems En Saga, has had the type of life about which most artists can only dream. For the last 58 years he has been provided an annuity , by the Finnish government and been . free 1o compose at will. The loss was to Helsinki University where he taught violin and com position until 1897. He is known largely as one of the chief composers of symphony of the 19th and 20th -centuries, basing his works in great extent on Finnish folk material, but his operas (Maiden in the Tower), choral and orches tra works, piano pieces and several score songs also will live long after the span of his waning life. Two Navy air disasters are repoited. In one the new jet bomber Seamaster, exploded and fell into Chesapeake Bay. In the other a two-engine bomber crashed at sea in Hawai ian waters while on a training flight. One can see the risks in flying a new type plane such as the Seamaster, but the number of accidents with military planes seems quite excessive. We just en't afford the lo--. of personnel to say nothing of th" loss of the planes. Professor MacDonald of Midland. Tex., is a $40S-a-month county school superintendent but there are no county schools in his area; Mrs. Marie Ward of Yreka, Calif., is a $375-a-month teacher with no pupils in her rural school. If we could get them together, along with Mrs. Ward's school building, it would help some area's school congestion consid erably with no additional cost to the taxpayer. Secretary Dulles accuses the Russian dele- fation visiting India with prodding India to seize Portuguese-held Goa by force. We hope though, he isn't hinting at another Formosa resolution to protect the island. If so, it's no Goa. President Strand has extended an open in t vi tat ion to politicians to express their views on the Oregon State campus. That is a clear, clean-cut policy, but it may draw fire if some radicals crowd in to spout from the col lege platforms. As we recall, it took some sort of camous legerdemain to clear the decks for Frank Knox, candidate for vice president, to talk there during the 1938 campaign. By the time Dec. 25th does arrive, surely the children as well as Santa Claus will be pretty well fed up with Christmas. Great Britain, U. S. About to Embark on Giant Project of Building Upper Nile Dam By JOSEPH AND STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON - The United Suites, with Great Britain and Egypt, ill soon embark en Just about the greatest engineering project since the building of tht pyramids. A firm decision has now ben made to build the great Aswan high dam on the Upper Nile. The dam is a really excit- LalV A. ng undertas YVSSl I Int. It will back fl I up a huge lake uiree limn larger than any ther man made body of water in the world. When it ls'completed-rwhich will take fifteen years the dam will irrigate more than two million acres of now arid land, and it will supply cheap power for the industrialization of Egypt. It will. in short, trans fa r m utterly the economy of the Kile Delta. The whole job will cost shout IT billion. Tha Egypt ians themselves will pay the labor costs In local currency, bat they will need bet wen $4 8 . and SjOO million in foreign ex -change to buy earth-moving equip ment, dynamos, and the like. The International Bank will put up aome (200 million of this sum, while the American government wilt pick up the tab for most of the rest, with the British supply ing soma needed sterling. Thes the east to the Aaaeriraa tax payer la awt areatk-teklag. Tat the decistoa to g. ahead with tha project is nevertheless highly stgaiflcaat, in terats a Elaes bawer admiatotrattoa pettey. Tha deeiston Is a allrees respanaa to a garlet ehalleage. When tha Savleta saade their arms aVal with Egypt, they ale ataaa a tagaety warded hat allaf-Uf offer to balld tha Aswan high dans far tha Egyp. Haas, wfak-a warrtof Aaaerkaa policymakers evea mere thaa lha tha arms deal. And aJthoagh tha tateranttomd Baa was eaMer lag the dam prejeet hefore the ftaviett stepped la, there la as. daM that the erliea to fa ahea was sparred by tha Soviet effer. But the decision on the Aswan dam is also a part of a much larg er decision. The dispute within the Administration between the "Four H Club" and "The Young Turks" has been well-publicized. The "Four H Club" members are the conservatives, who supposed ly want to keep foreign aid at or below present levels. "The Voting Turk's" want to respond to the new Soviet technique of offering arms and money abroad by a new, expanded, and redesigned foreign aid program. Ia priurlple, al W-a "The Yaaag Tarfcs" have waa the arsa meat The Una. weal ta th. PretMeai last week, al the Na tional Secarity Ceaaril meetiag. The President rated thai the' new Sarirt rhalleage maal ' somehow he met. II remains to he seen, af raw, how this Presidential de- , eisiaa la principle will be carried ant la practice. Bat U certainly meaas a hard new took ai lha whale fareign aid pragram. It is time lor such a new look. Take, for example, the sad. cautionary tale of ,the streets of Kabul, capital of the small, poor, Shtaanalaraaaaas'j 'a L tgMgaaadABlaugMiaaaaaa(adf 'sa'atMht Better Knplisli . By D. C. WILLIAMS 1." What is wrong with this sentence? "He acquired the dis ease through ctrelesHneu; don't blame it on me." 2. What is the correct pro nunciation of "mannequin"? S. Which one of these words is misspelled? Indelible, illimi table, impssssble, intelligible. 4. What does tha word "equa ble" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with av that mesns "greediness aftes wealth"? ' ,; AN8WKRS L' Say. "Ha contracted tha disease through carelessness; dont blame ma. far It." 2. Pro Bounce lha last s) liable as kla, not as kwln. I. Indelible. 4. Uniform; tranquil. "The author has so equable style." S. Ava hen, but strategically Important state of Afghanistan. The Afghanistan government had its collective heart set an getting the streets of the capital city paved wih av phalt dirt roads were below the dignity of the capital. But the American aid experts sternly ruled that (here were no sound economic reasons for paving Ka bul's strets, which were trsver sed Isrgely by donkeys and pedes trians. Instead, they ruled, a dam should be built in the hinterland. At this point the bitterly dis appointed Afghans asked the Russians if they would help pave Kabul's streets. The Russians In stantly agreed, paved the strets, and threw In an asphalt factory into the bargain. The S a v I e t Investment la Afghaaistaa Is a fraction a( the American Investment, . nnd the dam certainly makes belter eraa amlc sdhsa thaa the paved streets. Bal the Afghans did not mark wnnl the dam and they did very badly wnnt Ihe paved streets. Aad' Afghaaistaa Is la real daager af beeamiag a Soviet satelite. Or lake the stery af a rertaia district la Italy, daring Ihe elre ttons a eaaple af years aga. As a sari 4 test ease, especially large amenats af Ameriraa aid were peered lata Ihe district, with n maximal af haepla. The sad den Injertiaa af maaey npsrl the eenaamy af the area, and the haepla was sppareatly reseated. The Cemmeaist vale was far higher thaa ever kelare,. This is not to suggest that for eign aid is useless. On the con- trary, the President' ia certainly right that the Soviet challenge must be met, and tha Aswaa Dam is an excellent start. But the United States has got to stop act ing like a stern governess, who always knows what is best for her small charges, and who expects ta be thanked for telling them. The purpose of foreign aid is not sentimental, or even economic, but political. This Is a lesson lha Soviets do not need ta be taught. It is a lesson a let of Amer.cnn ' administrators and experts badly need to ieara, now that tha Soviets have directly challenged us ia aa area we had always thought was an American monopoly, Copvrh 1M. ayi -H BHM. fM eraeUos,kbW " ' ',' , CS"" a ' OT ;y. , " . & ;.: Veteran Tells Of Murdering IUinoisTair Timo Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES "I wouldn't ask to go out if this home had the proper recreational facilities. Top . , , No juke box, no pin-ball machines, no nothing!" Demand for Polio Vaccine In Oregon Up PORTLAND Demand for Salk polio vaccine in Oregon ap pears to have been increasing. Whether the increase has been enough to ssve the state's vaccine allocation is not yet certain. Dr. Harold M. Erickson. state health officer, said he was expect ing a report Monday on use in the state.- - - . .A spot check showed, be said, the greatest demand on drug stores in the downtown Portland area and the least in more re mote areas. He said this was in terpreted to mean that downtown Portland physicians, who are close to supply houses rarely carry big stoci:., hrrl noted iin increased dem.ind Inr polio shets. Whether physicians in outlying -area wh'i normnl.y enrry larger supplies on hand also have had more requests for inoculations, cannot be deter mined yet, he said, although it is believed they have. The state hss been faced with loss of some of its vaccine if it is not used. It would be sent '.o other parts of tha country where demand is greater. 10 Years Ago Dee. II, IM Judge Louis P. Hewitt, SJ, of Multnomah county circuit court, died in the Portland sanitarium following a heart attack. The jur ist, dean of the county court, had served since 1922. A chsnge in zone to permit in dustrial development in northeast Salem properties owned by the Keith Brown interests was ap proved by the city's planning and zoning commission and will be " recommended by that body to the city council. At Los Angeles servicemen were packed like sardines at both the harbor and union station as railroads tackled "their busiest 15 dnys" to get tie boys home by Christmas. 2. Years Ajro Dee. IS, IKS A turnip which weighs 19 pounds is on display at the Cuts-! forth Bros, meat market at Ger vaii. It wasy grown on a ranch belonging to C. W. Cutsforth near Eddyville. W. H. Daney. who announced his retirement from the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph com pany after 38 years of service, and Mrs. Dancy were accorded a banquet and ovation in the Ma sonic temple banquet rooms. Mr. Dancy was given s gold watch. Uptown Fifth avenue with its Christmas shopper., and traffic was the scene of plot and strug gle, jeers snd cheers, for nearly an hour as several hundred com munists attempted to carry ban ners of denunciation past the French consulate. 40 Years Ago Dee. 1, 1U Effort to bring tout legisla tion for the printing by the state of all text-books used in the schools of Oregon was set in " motion when State Printer ArW1T TT11 thur W. Lawrence launched thellflctll IlCltl Oil movement at a meeting of the! Salem Commercial club. 1 Secretary of State Olcott mailed ( 5200 automobile. 200 motorcycle, and 32S chauffeur licenses for the .year 191 covering all 1918 appli cations as have been received in his office up to datt. ' Photographs of scenes from "The She Devil" picture (Reli ance) and from "The Acquittal" Triangle) in both of which Steve Henderson, formerly of Salem ap pears, have been received in Salem. BKLLEVILLF. III. m - A husky, 200-pound veteran of two wars i Friday told of shooting to death ! an Illinois man snd wife and dump 1 ing their bodies In separate water wells. Authorities late Friday said 'hey were placing more emphasis on the possibility that Fillmore Young, 3t-year-old Carlyle, III.. Negro, may have had an accomplice In the kill ing of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith of nearby Lebanon, . HI. ! Young, a poultry worker. Is held without bond in the St. Clair Coun ty jail, charged with murder .in two warrants. He led authori ties to the wells where the bodies 'of Smith, a 30-year-old carpenter, and his wife, Arline, 35, were re covered. Arrested at Home I Young, arrested Thursdav night at his home, admitted the Nov. 17 double killing after two hours of questioning and later signed a writ ten admission here. Sheriff Leonard O. Reinhardt said that while under questioning ioung frequently used the term "we" in referring to commission of the crime. When pressed on this point, how ever. Young insisted he acted alone, officers said, and added: "I know I am going to die. Why should I drag someone else along with me?" . Refases Ue Test Two Illinois state officials said Young hasjrefjised to take a lie detector Test. Further strengthening Ihe theory another person might have been involved, was a broken tooth found in the Smith's home, but which authorities said came from neith er of the Smiths or Young. Young insisted he didn't knowi why he killed the couple, hut auth orities believe he isn't telling the full story. " SGhbolReporter BY WILL IATESON AND BARBARA BON IF AC! South Salem H igh Sees Jungle Film SOUTH SALEM HIGH , 'Beyond Singapore'' was the title of a movie shown to the South Salem Hith students in an assembly Friday by Captain I Harry Schenick. Accompanying the movie was a lecture, cover ! ing a trip he made to the Malay an Penninsula as part of a survey ; company. Durlns the lecture and movie, stu dents learned of the many i dangers and thrills of the jungle. Fella wiag the Friday a I g h t double header basket ball game la ralvlaf South Salem-Fraaklla aad North Salem Cleveland, the three Santa Salem Ht-Y clubs. Claade Kelts, A. A. State aad C. R. Matt, spanssred a dance far the 'anV dn V I , ' . I I rs? n. Baaltae. MS af h Ihe h Will Balewa stadeats f sa r schools G e a e ra I rhalrmen were John Hammer ttad, J a 1 1 a a Tharstoa and Jerry Carle, ton. A s s I is I lag were Bill Rich I e r, Larry Bnrkhart, Rag- er Ay res. Mike Taxical) Firm Named in Suit A Salem taxirab company was named Friday in a $7,(553 dam age suit filed in Marion County Circuit Court by a passenger who says he was injured because of the driver's negligence. The suit was brought by Thomis Hickman, 266 N. Capitol St., who charged that the driver backed up the cab while he was in the process of getting out of the rear seat. He said he was hit by the open door and knocked against a curb, causing painful injuries. Derelict Jet Hits Hospital; Woman Killed SHEFFIELD, England W - A dcrclirt U.S. jet fighter, aban doned by its pilot at 3,500 feet, crashed beside the Lode Moore Hospital near Sheffield Friday night and killed a woman patient. Five others were injured slightly. Hot metal wreckage of the F84F Republic Thunderstreak plowed across one of the wards. A fire started within the hospital, while outside a gas main was set alight and several small fires flared across the grounds. Exploding ammunition was an added hazard. Patients, including some of the injured, were quickly transferred to other wards of the hospital, a 467-bed institution for infectious diseases. The fires were soon brought un der control. A VS. Air Force spokesman at Schullhorpe, in Norfolk, said the pilot landed uninjured. The pilot's name was withheld. Rath, Jim Helisel, Staa Barbee, Denay Belter and Dan Klme. Harrison-Elliot Hi-Y or North Salem will hold a dance following Saturday s double header. Encore club will initiate new members December 11. Providing entertainment will be Ron Thei sen, vocal solo; Rodney Schmidt, violin solo; Karlene Quistad and Ann Cates, piano solos and Phyl lis Dannelly and Beverly Bishop, vocal duet. t LESLIE JUNIOR HIGH "Life 0' the Party," a comedy play, was presented by the sev enth grade to lha Leslie student body on Friday ' ' Characters in the play were por trayed by Julie Dodge, Sally .loch- Imsen, Margaret Lancefield, Ken; ny Empey, Dale Henken, Terrl! Gustafson. Eileen Hadley, Patty Johnson, Gary Grabew, John SaM fron, Richard Hawkins and How ard Kyntych. . Prompters were Linda Reynolds, and Sandra Sneddon; stags crew, ! Richard McKillop, Patty Lea and Earl Pogue. RICHMOND SCHOOL . The Richmond School choir will ' make its first public appearance' this year at the Richmond P.T.A. meeting on Monday night, Dec. 11. ' Members of the choir are: Da- vid Read, David Reimvald, Frank I Schackman, Gary Olson, Lea Rombough, Daila Sefers; i Donnclla Wood,' Pamela Rappe, f Pamela Shaw, Judy Webster, Mar garct MaUory, Alice Windecker, ; Linda Wright: J Marilyn Aleshire, Renee Beard, , Jane Beyer, Richard Bonar. Chris- tine Busick, Kent Evans, Pamela ' Bryant. Stephen Carpenter, Judy J Carroll; ' Vickie Kinton. Wiilette McMfi hon, Nancy Miller, Steve Ladd, Maira ' LezdiQs Susan Gardner, : Lynne Mobley, Monday Pragram The program for Monday night ' will include: "Jesu Bamino" by f Pietro Yon, "0 Holy Night" by Adolphe Adam, and "Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming" by Praeto- rius. The choir, composed of sixth i graders. sings mostly three-part - harmony. The choir will sing at various affairs during tha year. j During Christmas week, the choir f will go caroling at several places. The sixth grade music classes at Richmond recently composed the words and music to a path- : otic hymn called "A mrleisr Hymn". Tha choir recorded it and sent it as part of their entry ia tha Freedoms Foundation competi- tion at Washington, D. C. : Mrs. Wilma Osborn, sixth grade 4 teacher, is the choir director. I Morals Count A Woodburn man was held on (3,000 bail Friday after he was served a warrant in the Marion County jail charging him with rape of a 14 year-old girl. Held was John Larry Edwards, 21, Woodburn Route 2, box 410, who had been 'arrested earlier by Deputy James Painter of the Marion County sherilf'i office on a charge of no operators license. The girl, was in custody of the Marion County juvenile court Safety Valve ("SUar's NM: l.tttrt far Th SUtrmaa'f Safety Valva ralaaan art (Ivra arlar tniSrti If tky art Informative aa arc not nor thaa jaa warea la aaagia. rtraaaai inar aaa nawaiv, aa wvn aa nan, ar i Sa avals. Sal aajraa 1 UII ta air kUrf aaS plalona aa aay alSa all! 4 aay al "IT'S THE EPITORIS'1 To the Editor The Statesman recently pub lished a very informative article by Wei Sullivan, describing the newspaper's practices with regard to handling political news. Mr.' Sullivan's article. ap parently was designed to counter act Ihe Democratic criticisms of our "one party press." The press point of view was well expressed. I but the fact is that in these dis cusions the editors and then1 critics are talking about entirely different matters. It is doubtful that s, responsible Democrat will claim that his 1 party or Its leaders are denied1 proper coverage in the news columns of most daily papers in this state. Certainly such a claim could not be justified in Marion County, where both daily papers, have consistently given excellent news coverage to Democratic ac tivities. ' Democrats do claim that the majority of papers, while pretend ing to act only in the public interest, are biased and partisan nnd lacking in objectivity in their editorial -and feature columns. .They are owned and controlled by persons with the Republican' party point of view, and, their, editorials preach that one party's' line. And what is so surprising about that? ... Democrats would not deny edit-1 e-1 t1? r r-y wh-t Hyl please in their editorials, even to be spokesmen for the Republican party. At the same time, Demo crats have the right to point out that tha editorial comments ars not generally objective and In the public interest but instead express a "one party" Republican, point of view, , Thomas C. Enright Ml Court St. State Motor Pool Charge Reduced For November State departments using the state motor pool will receive a reduction in the charges against them for using automobiles in the pool, atate finance director Harry S. Dorman announced Fri day. The departments pay five cents a mile for using the cars. Dorman said the pool, establish ed a year ago, ii doing so well financially that the departments' charges for November are being cut 10 per cent. He said ha hopes to make five to 10 per cent reductions in the future. Annual Bike Auction Today City police suggest thst per sons with bicycles on their Christmss shopping lists attend the anual bike auction to be held this morning at the city shops on S. 22nd Street Chief Clyde Warren announced that some 13 bikes recovered . in recent months sfter being stolen or lost will be auctioned off starting at 10 a.m. None of them has ever been claimed. Warren, who will serve as auc tioneer, said a number of the bicycles are in aplendid condi tion. Proceeds from- the auction will go into the city treasury's general fund. 2) THEM'S NO QUESTION Sylvania TV with Halo Light (Th fvaaw af Rah fhafl hiad to ayM.) 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