4H5ec.l) Statesman, Salem. Ore, Thun., May 31, '56 4eCrf3iiOCtatesnau f acor Swcyt V$. Nt Ft Swfl Au' ' frani First Statesman. Mirth M. 151 V Statetmaa PuLLLin Companj CHAMXS A. SFRACUE. Editor & Publiiher C.Kli AiNU BEAK il By Lichty at tha whole record, and acrutiniia particu larly his performance ai governor, or he k i candidate lor an executive office. The bi( ota he received in the primariea a candidate for the gubernatorial nomination nd for delegate-at large to the GOP con vention Indicates that a far at Republican are concerned they approve that record. ' runuaha) every varniaf. Nortk CnurcS St MM aflMa M it. Saiem. Or roiophaa t -"' tntaraa X tke pi Or, eleaJ matter unflaf act ef Caasroos March t 1ST Nesaher Associated frm Tbt MIW PTM St MtltM RlUVly tar reaubllastioa al aU asml im analed Cot. Smith and HjvU Rights' Senator Neuberger has taken time from his national duties as senator to dig into the record of Elmo Smith, now governor, when he was state senator. He finds that Smith, alone among senators, voted against wuch civil rights measures as the Fair Employment Practices Act of 1949, against a biU in 1951 forbidding discrimination in trade and pro fessional schools because of race, religion, national origin, and in 1953 against a bill forbidding discrimination in public places such at theatres, hotels, restaurants. Neu berger queries: "I ask the Republican Party what It plans to oo aoout um t- oimiu. Republican candidate for Governor of Ore- ton and now bead of his party's 1954 ticket Si the state." We eant pose si the Republican "oracle" but venture this answer, that the Republl cans will go ahead and elect Smith to the office he bow holds. . This doesn't mean that we agree with Smith' votes on these measures. Had this writer been a member of the Legislature he would have voted for these bills because of li. - MnJMjAnt An human rlphtl. . fill (J CTTfaO l CU VWM , V waa - "O But he would have done so with considerable reluctance becsuse of a distaste for 'compul sion to matters of this kind. There are two principles involved , in legislation of this character one is to respect individuals in their essential personal liberties; the other is to employ the whip of the law to require , all people to recognize those rights. We do sot see how anyone in this day and age can deny the first, although old prejudices . do survive; but even "true liberals" may be : unwilling to say "thou must" ; to hotel keepers, employers and resort operators, . forcing them to do what they ought to do willingly. We concede that such legislation appears to be necessary because 4f retarded . : moral development; but it is noteworthy that the objectives have been attained largely ' through education rather than enforcement The laws have set up standards which for tunately the people of Oregon were ready to accept - Governor Smith will do his own explain ing of his votes on these measures. The Ore gonlan, we notice, cited his defense of the rights of Japanese-Americans during the. war when he was mayor of Ontario as proof that he is free from race bias. It Is a mistake, however, to Judge a member of a legislative body strictly by votes on particular meas-, ares, rather than on his record as a whole. And for the office of governor there la one fundamental requirement, that t man, have plenty of intestinal fortitude "guts" in the : vernacular. It probably took more courage' to vote as one in minorities of two, five Ind nine ss Neuberger says Smith did on these issues, than to vote with the .majority. I It Is quite in order for Neuberger, long a strong supporter of civil rights legisla tion; "who doubtless was one of the authors Of these bills, to open up Smith's record en them. We are sure the Democrats in view of their labor alliance will also crack ; at him for his votes on some of the labor bills. ' Voters win do wen, however, to look Weekend Tour Many folk are accustomed to make week end tours py auto. UsuaDy the coast is the destination, especially in the summer time. We want to suggest another short tour, this one by rail from Portland to Spokane. Take the afternoon SP&S train with its dome cars. Sitting in one of them you get an unrivalled view of the mighty Columbia, and a cross river view of Multnomah and other falls. Just now the- river is at flood stage, and perhaps for the last time you may see ' Its waters raging through Celilo rapids above The Dalles. In another year or so the falls will be submerged in the backwater from The , Dalles Dam now a-building. There are interesting developments along the Columbia below Patterson on the Wash ington side the use of sprinkler irrigation on what were sand dunes. Now many acres : are green with alfalfa on which beef cattle are grazing. Just below Kennewick exten sions of the irrigation works of the Yakima Valley have brought land under cultivation. The lake behind McNary Dam extends to above Pasco where the railroad leaves the Columbia Pulling into the GN station at Spokane in the evening one gets a splen did view of Spokane Palls, the capture and use of whose power contributed greatly to Spokane's progress. One can make the trip by Union Pacific but its Spokane train carries no dome cars; or by automobile but attention to the high way denies passengers (especially those in the back seat) from the steady view one gets on the train. , At any rate this is a short and very en joyable tour which provides the "novelty" of a train ride with the superb scenery of the Columbia River and gorge. .Rule by Firing Squad The present bosses of the USSR may de nounce the "cult of personality" and degrade Stalin for his ruthless tyrannies, but they do not hesitate to invoke the same instru ment of government execution of dissenters. Beria, one of the first triumvirate, was the first to face the execution squad. This week it is reported that four who once were lead ing officials of the Communist party in the Caucasus have suffered the same fate, and two were sentenced to prison terms of 25 years each. Just when these penalties were applied is ; not clear. The first the world heard the news was in dispatches from Moscow citing re ports in an issue of the Baku Worker, a local newspaper. Evidently the home paper was allowed to print the facts, but Radio Moscow remained silent The trials were held last month and the sentences were confirmed when the pre sidium of the USSR's supreme court rejected the appeals. The offences were, as might have , been expected, "treason" and having been accomplices of Beria which is just a revival of the Trotskyitt charge with which Stalin pursued so many of his contemporaries to their death. Whether these trials grew out of , the riots in Tiflis when citizens loyal to Stalin's mem ory made demonstrations which were sup- pressed by force we do not know. The im portant thing is that force majeur is still dictstor in Russia, that dissent still is dan- gerous. One can't help wondering, though, if the wheel will make another half-turn when the then bosses will officially declare the rehabilitation of these victims of a minor purge though not their resurrection. ...... Parents Gather Here for Visual Handicapped Meet Eighth anual Institute far par ents of visually handicapped pre school children opened Wednesday at the State Blind School The five-day affair will continue to day? with greetings from dignitar ies and discussions by several authorities. Approximately SO families are Canada Fights 2,000-Acre Forest Fire "Don'fvou have something that just smells nice and lady-like? j . .. I'm a little old for all this action! ,. ." i "" KPHMJJLEj 'tKDOHH tCentianed Im Pago Oae) not subject as wan the hydro electric commission to the veto of tome other single interest agency. This partnership surely makes sense. means of an improved road it is desirable to determine its status and what steps are need ed to make It serve the people as a place for recreation and Inspiration. What makes the joint study advisable is shown in the com ment of Melvln H. Burke of the forest service: : r -p The Water Resources Board JioilOr DcgrCC can manage the water but not , o the land. The forest service can m C a a manage the land but not the 1 Q OClCiltlSlS water. I nil wm mass a partner ship operation.1' OSC to Give VANCOUVER. B. C. - A new forest fire 100 miles north of Vancouver Wednesday raced uncontrolled through l.ooo acres of powder-dry forest, forcing two logging companies to close down. The fire was fanned by a light wind at temperatures headed into the SOs and humidity remained low. The southwest coast of Brit ish Columbia is experiencing its second month of sunny, almost rainless weather the driest spring and early summer in SO years. District Forester D. B. Taylor described the blaze as "very dan gerous." Not Yet Merged A small, supervised blaie at Birken on the Pacific Groat East ern Railway flashed out of con trol and swept through fir and cedar country. Taylor said it has not yet merged with another fire at nearby Pemberton which is under control. "It depends largely on the wind," Mr. Taylor said. "If a dry wind blows up, it could be come a serious fire." A few miles away at Ruby Lake on the Sechrlt Peninsula, a stub born fire which last week chewed through 3.000 acres ot timber, was expected to register by Saturday for tbe institute, which is designed to acquaint parents with proced-, ures that art of help to the visu ally handicapped youngster. Spon sors of tbe affair are the State Blind School and the Oregon Aux iliary of the Lions Club. The agenda will feature a Sun day speech by Miss Geergie Lee Abel, consultant in education for the American Foundation for the Blind. New York City. Her sub ject will be "When the Child Grows Up." Walter R. Dry. longtime super intendent of the blind school who retires July 1. will preside at all institute sessions. Opening event Wednesday evening was a discus sion centering on "work and play", with Dry and other faculty mem 1 bers outlining operations of the school and the institute. Sig Unander, state treasurer, will convey official greetings to participants this morning. Other speakers today include Mrs. Ken neth E. Rodgers, president of the Oregon Lions Auxiliary: Dr. Ray O. Wolf, director of child services for Portland public schools: Mrs. Richard Scott, children's librarian in the Portland library system: and Dr. W. G. Burrows, Salem psychiatrist. Members of Lions auxiliary groups throughout the state are Succumbs OSC Students To Receive Commissions CORVALLIS Commissions in the Army, Air Force and Navy i will be given to seven Silem area seniors June 4 at Oregon State ' College commencement exercises. Stanley Crawford. Marlia G. ' Nelson and Ronald J. Nelson, all of Salem, will receive eommis slom as second lieutenants in the Army; Robert Carl Ruhle, Salem, and Amos Terry Show alter, Cbemawa, Navy ensign's commissions; and Raymond L. iConder and James L. Kinkaid, I Salem, will receive commissions as second lieutenants in the Air Force. They will take the oath of of fice with 160 other senior men have completed advanced PORTLAND. Ore. C, C Ckae- ua, founder of Tbe Oregon who , Voter, weekly political maga- rqtc training in the Army pro- sine, aiei weanetaay ron- gram, the Air Force, Navy and land. (Story on Page 1.) Gas Station Blown Apart In New York Marine Corps. Crawford and Marlin Nelson will be commissioned in the ar tillery and Ronald Nelson in the infantry. Conder will be on a technical branch assignment and Kinkaid on an observer assign ment. Active1 duty orders for the Army and Air Force lieutenants will come within a year. The Navy officers will receive tbeir orders within a month after grid- WATERTOWN, N. Y. (Pi An ovnlmlnn hlrw i casoline sta- ...,.L k.ku .illari itrtni, lha linn inirt Wr1nfrfav inilirinff 1 Uation. Ki.iiill.. v "K "; ; nd' I i il. I... Families will be quarter-; 13 person, including a 21-year- " old business collctfc student wno ",c " n a suffers from hemophilia a ten- training in all branchei ot the dency to bleed profusely from service. Sixty-two students were even slight wounds. -commissioned by the Air Force v.i. r.ctm i, k. ...iur.A lhl yar t 0SC 75 10 Army, Frank Castro Jr. who suffered . a number of face cuts from fly- ,. rw. inn nine HrO tBlrAVt I f MAMU 1 " Hospital where the cuts were sewed up. His condition was list ed as good. The blast injured seven fire men who had been called to put out a minor fire. Five young chil dren among bystanders were cut They; institute ed at the blind school. Youths Riot On Steamship, Several Hurt BUFFALO, N. Y. Rioting broke out Wednesday night on a steamship plying between here and Crystal Beach amusement hv ftvins sand and glass still a dangerous hotspot. The fire Park- 0nl- fllow'n dy oI r" jwere treated at' hospitals or doc is Being new under control ny wi vu.- hu ui..ii4;u about 200 men and eight bull- Ten persons were reported in- The fire followed two small ex dozers. Other firefighting equip- jured at the park and 12 persons plosions in a service pit. The Bids Asked on River Work CORVALLIS-Two disinguished ; ment was lifted in by helicopter PORTLAND The Portland District Corps of Engineers will invite bids for repair of revet ments along the left bank of the ! scientists will receive honorary doc- ,torate degrees from Oregon State College at the 87th commencement Tuesday night 22 Forest Firei Nearly 400 men were engaged Wednesday in battling 27 forest fires in the sprawling Vancouver : district which stretches about 100 Burke is also quoted as say ing the forest service recog nizes that the water belongs to!,!;,,,, Monday. luln. Tm'" ,5 ..i They are Dr. William-Justin ? !ldlnv"T.LelJ",.W; Kroll of Corvallis, internationally- ,k. wJT 1ZI r" metallurgist, and Dr. Roger, miles inland and north and takes Ik- i ESL' Jhn Williams, director of the Eio-'in Southern Vancouver Island. cision this has been a touchv hLmical ins,itule at the diversity subject. Fearful of loss of all of Texas: authority on water rights the Dr. Kroll set up his own labora western states have become ac- tory in Luxemburg in 1923 and live in support of legislation to developed a process for the pro make their control more posi- duction of titanium and zirconium, tlve. . 1 In 1940 he came to the United This controversy was said to States and in 1945 he joined the have been a factor in the selec- U.S. bureau of mines at Albany tlon of Fred Seaton for Secre- where he took charge of producing were reported arrested by On- firemen thought the fire was out Santiam River at the Crown- Dr. C. D. Orchard, the ince s chiet forester in Victoria, warned that the Vancouver dis- tario Provincial Police. Disturbancei broke out on tbe Canadiana during its second trip from the park. The first wu quiet. Officials of the boat said at least 30 teen-agers were locked up in the dining saloon for their Prov- protection during the 15 mile ; trip across Lake trie. One teen-ager was reported in when the next blast ripped off the roof and leveled the story brick and frame building. The seven, trapped inside, were pulled out by other firemen. Five were hospitalized for face and band burns. trict may soon be closed to.trav- jured seriously when struck on ellers because of the critical fire the head with a beer bottle, hazard A partial closure on in-. Some reported injured at the dustrial operations was imposed nark were hospitalized here and tary of the Interior in place of Clarence Davis, prejent acting secretary. Fourteen senators ad dressed a communication to the President asking for the Davis lirconium needed for the atomic submarine. Dr. Williams is the 1957 presi dent of the American Chemical appointment (This was a mis-1 ,mnnP.,n rn(rihHnn. important medical science in fields of alco holism, mental disease and cancer research and B-vitamin discover ies. Dr. Williams was on the OSC take, for an executive doesn't react with favor to such "round robins"). Because Davis Is said to favor the western position on vitor riffhta Attnrnv ftenril BrowneU is reported to have aff from 1932 to 1939. frowned on his appointment I President Eisenhower backed j . iway from the controversy by IJpnpo a, mt nf naming a man not committed to! lat-lUL tlllUIl Ul either viewpoint. I . ,.Kh"..c!!SE?.-w.'IL Er.Livil Defense iraiisttivu ma suuui ass tift; - rett bill is a question: but its Syrians Eager to Believe Happiness Boys Of Kremlin and Their Support for Arabs lack makes even mere necessary the cooperation of federal and stat agencies which is sought In this partnership study of the Upper McKenzie. And now we have a water resources board which for the first time Agency Seen WASHINGTON UP -Sen. Butler, (R-Md.) said location of the Fed- a week ago but. Dr. Orchard said, restrictions will be enforced. Wlipoping Crane Baby Nearly Due in Canada. When the Canadiana docked on its first' trip, at least IS Buf falo police armed with clubs stood by. There wai no trouble. The Buffalo Courier-Express quoted provincial police in On tario as saying thst most of those taken into custody were "Ameri can Negroes." Approximately 15,000 to 18,- 000 people, many of them Ameri- NEW ORLEANS tfi - Audubon 1 cans were it the todty Park expected its second baby whopping crarte to emerge from its shell Wednesday night and be come the 32nd member of the al most extinct family. Zoo Director George Douglass reported the second egg in the nest of Apa Crip and Mama .Jos- Patrons told the Buffalo news paper that a series of fights broke out in the amusement center. The cause of the disorders was not determined immediately. The newspaper said about 35 Actress Files Divorce Suit JUAREZ. Mexico (Ph-Rhonda Fleming Wednesday filed for di vorce in tbe first civil court here from her husband, Dr. Lewis V. Morrill. She charged incompatibility. Her attorney, Luis Garcia Rojas, said ' a settlement has been reached and the property of the screen star and her husband will he equally divided. The divorce is not contested. Morrill is a Beverly Hills, Calif., physician who married the red-haired actress in 1952 at Kenah, Utah. Judge Ignacio Martinez At;uayo said the final divorce decree probably would be granted by Willamette location and slong the right bank at the Tomasek loca tion, downstream from U. S. highway 99E bridge, three miles northwest of Jefferson. The bids will be opened in the office of Col. Jackson Graham, Portland district engineer, at 2 p.m. June 13. Completion time for the work is 45 days. Bids have also been asked by the Corps of Engineers for re roofing the powerhouse and con trol house at Detroit Dam on the North Santiam River. They will be opened at 2 p.m. June 28. Completion time for the work is 60 days. Br JOSEM ALSO leave the American and British . DAMASCUS. Syria Here in IwetnmenU as gasping and I Syria, which is a small country. !t: (f ;l J ; jJrPa AUst. 1 the diverse elements that make i op Soviet Middle Eastern policy stand out in snare relief. Since 'this policy appears to be com ' pletely misunderstood at home, it is worth listing the elements. J nem oy item, and then seeing wuai uicy iuu up te, ITEM: Da mascus is still agog over the aftermath of the visit to Lottdoa. This was the revela tion to the Syr ian and Egyptian governments, by the Soviet Ambassador! here ! and la Cairo, of the alleged main theme of the Soviet leaders in the 1 Downing Street taM According . to the Ambassadors, Khrushchev and Bulgfania flatly . declared ; that the "progressive and peace loving bloc" would be squarely ; behind tbe Arab states In the ' event of a renewal of the Arab Israeli war. . -.v - Tbe Soviet diplomatists almost -.' certainly . misrepresented . what passed in London. But their ver sion of tbe London talks has of course been delightety accepted , here, and is reportedly credited m Cairo as well . f ITXMt la tte hMt SMfltk. Sot ; let atpleaaats ben, In Cairo aad ! la ether Arab capita li have be ' fan U talk villi Arab leaders i abwrt fbe pesatMe terms of a - settlement wiU IsraL The Arab res pease soay be easily Imagined. ,; js t flr M thai these 8ev. let feelers are a prelude is far ; pellsl eadarsemeat by Moscow M th Unltea Natleas 147 pun helpless "as hopelessly beached salmon." We shall be made to seem the enemies; the Soviets will appear aa the special friends and protectors of Arab national ism. ITEM: Oa the lub-dlplomatlc level three kinds ef activity are belag carried ea eeacurreaUy. Tke local Cemmtalit parties have been given a very special mlulea, eat te lacrease their ewa streagtk, bet te reinforce In an ways possible Hit strength ef Ike ea-Cemmiebt, aaU-Weetera forces here. The Syrian Cemma alit leader KhalH Baqdasb, baa beta aaiag all kis considerable Cham to eewvlaee tbe snare rea servatlve elemeali la Syria that be hi last another nationalist bMrgeola at heart. Hli organi sers, in similar false whiskers, art being eeat eat le aaeist any political grouping tr mevemeat with aa antl-Wetttra Undrary. ITEM: The nationalist appara tus hi being powerfully backed -. up, is turn, by a commercial ap peal. All sorts of Soviet and satellite trade missions are swarming through this country and the other Arab lands, mak- - ing tenders on locally important projects of every sort. Because of the wages paid the workers in the workers' paradise, it is pos sible that many of these bids are quite honest. In any case, they are almost invariably much low er than bids by Western firms. Meanwhile, great efforts are also being made to persuade local business, political and cultural ' leaders to visit the Soviet Union and the satellite states for the full, red carpet treatment. first point that sticks out a milt is that, for the present, tha Kremlin is making no serious effort whntever to promote com munism as communism in this part of the world. Carnal Abdet Nasaer has sternly suppressed the Communist party in Egypt, but here In Syria the local Com musists are more pro-Nasser than Nasser himself. Tbe aec-oad Ot'at that alst standi Ml a mile la that tht Kremlin is making tke moil des perate effort It rapture tht Arab nationalist movement whirk Ctl. Nasser symbolizes and ef frrllvrly leads. The aim, tf course. Is te ate Arab national fom to destroy every Western position la the Middle East, and It substltBte Soviet Influence for Westers Influrnre everywhere throughout this itrilefirnlly vi tal rrf Ion. This the aim. in turn, because the whole Western Alliance can be brought down in ruins here in the Middle East. Let the oil which is Britain's and Western Europe's lifeblood once be shut look at water use as a whole, mmmiwMmmmmm!m.m$ Time Flies FROM STATESMAN m.ES ephine began crackinc Wednes- i lo Pul aown " Disorders day and the young bird began the slow work of enlarging a hole for its exit. The first of the two eggs hatched T , i o.H v aiilh uhwininn f r o n eral Civil Defence Agency ; in Battle ;N ,, btcamint the first ever hatched in captivity. The sex of the No. 31 still is not determined, j Crip seemed at home in his role ; as father, minding No. 31 and sit ting on the second ef,A before it provincial nolicemen were rolled 1 tomorrow. ins is miss riemings serona marriatfe. She arrived in El Paso, 10 Years Ago May II, IMS can! Creek, Mich., "just hasn't worked out." He predicted the agency would be moved back to the Wash ington area by the end of the year. "Most officials now recognize that moving it from this area two years ago was a mistake." Butler said in a statement. "Top heads of CDA are constant ly en route to and from the Na tion's Capital, When not traveling they are telephoning Washington. The travel and telephone costs alone represent unnecessary expen ditures of thousands of dollars." The Senator said he thought CDA Limb Rams Into Driver SC'ITUATE, R. I. i A 23-year-old coast guardsman was in jured critically Wednesday whn began hatching. Josephine went to a tree limb four inches urm.nH the feeding trough about 20 feet nliinpeil 1? lnh.. it i,:. away for the first time in about jn an automobile accident lWNo looked strong, standing J.'.Tpf i'! , "i H" ' 1,000 LaWVOrS at Tex., just across the border, to day and planned to leave tonight for Hollywood to finish several movie commitments Afterward she plans to go to Europe with her son by her first marriage, Kent. T2 "We tried to work out, hut just couldn't make a bo of it," the actress said "I think divorce will he the best thing for both of us." Parrish Junior High School nffiriota wro lhl tn ffet itu- dents' money out of the school ouht 'oj relocated in Montgom uf whirh hnrslim had dim- ' "3mc aged in an attempt to open it. The safe contained about $1,000. Maryland arras which adjoin the District of Columbia on the north 25 Years Ago May tl, 1911 Old Sol paid Salem a visit which for May was a very warm affair. The official thermometer at the airport stood at 90S de grees at 3, 4 ind 5 o'clock. Indonesia Chief, Son Take Look At Grand Canyon up when Josephine got up to stretch. 1 Douglass said he has received congratulatory telegrams from toos and interested persons. And telephone calls are keeping the too personnel busy, he said. The whooping crane is the tall est bird in North America. It is ground while state police sawed Wwll, r off a protruding end of the ' 81 branch. The accident happened within sight of the state police barracks. Love was taken to Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, where sur geons operated to remove the What does your 1 j next vacation j have to do with I i "Bank Plan" I auto financing? I It could hsvo o lot to do with It ... for nports show many cir buyers hsvo tsvod as much ai 1150 with 8talo FarmV'Bank Plan". .. Ini enough for a family vacation. So, befora you buy a car, call aw about State Farm a "Bank Plan" of low eoit financing and insurance. I Wt n kats na- IUU FUJI long-necked, long-legged, red-faced hranch. Hospital official said and white bodied. The live - tool ",r. '" nao seen a similar SPOKANE Lawyers from Washington, Idaho. Oregon. Mon tana. Utah and Alaska gathered here Wednesday for the opening . of the Pacific Northwest Confer-i ence of the American Bar Assn. ! The 3-day regional meeting will j run through Saturday, with 1.000 ! birds once flew over the nation in great flocks. But the whooping crane is al m o s t extinct now. That's why there's so much whooping over Josephine's youngster. type of accident in years of ex-1 expected to attend GRAND CANYON, Aril. -j President Sukarno of Indonesia and his 12-year-old son. Guntar, 1 gazed into mile-deep Grand Can-1 yon Wednesday and gave the ap pearance of being just as im pressed as the hundreds of thous- nnriu nf nlknp l,,iirit-lB u-kA Charles P. Bishop, one of the tnp mf Pacn vrar delegates trom the first ton-. Thev motored im and down In.. 40 Year Ago May 31, 191 Graduates to Hear Editor From Salem PORTLAND Bernard Main editor and publisher of penence They gave him a 5050 chance to live. Love was driving from his home to his base at Nauset life boat station, Eastham, Mass., when his car went off Route 6 and drove almost 200 feet into the woods, flattening small trees. State Police said Love told them he dozed at the wheel. The principal address Thursday will be given by E. Smythe Gam brell of Atlanta. Ga.. president of the American bar Assn. Panel sessions on many phases of legal practice will fill out much of the meeting. SUUfu 'Sam' - -v f Samuel ' rt: I 2610 J i Crrstview - W. i v in phon t m J u 2-8406 NIGHT MRSKRV PLANNED HIROSHIMA, Japan A new lype baby nursery is opening here .mhjii. u win nperaip oetween s p ni tn iiiiiv aiiu urc ensuing tvuiiuiiiig . r" l v "wwivmim vim- . for tke pertiUea ef ralesilae. as the only fair ssluUea of the Aran : Israeli freMeas. ; A return to lha U.N. plan of 1947. which was put forward, remember, before the Jaraeli vic tory trver the Arabs, would mean reducing the area now held by Israel by almost 40 per cent. It Is what the Arabs have bees ask- tag for. Any such Soviet move in tha IXN. Security Council will ITEM: The desire ef the Arabs far mere sad aaare arms against Israel Is eeattaatljr belag es sMied. Besides tke new arms deal laataeeeas take to the Bask ing with tbe Chinese In Cairo, the Syria aa here are completing BegetiatteM te purchase another ttt.aN.SM worth of sarplns Sov iet arma throngs the Cseeks. ! """"What, then, is one to make of the complex patten of diplo ' matlc. economic, propagandistie and onder ground action? Tha catastrophe in Britain and West ern Europe can be counted on ta break the Anglo-American part nership, to destroy NATO, and to achieve, almost automatically, pretty nearly every other Krem tin goal oo this side of the At lantic. If this brUllaaUy conceived nernties) succeeds, U will U time far the Kremlin la deal with the Arab aatleaallsta, was will the have abent tbe same caaacei ef ssttItsI aa a naked man in a dark ream wUh a grb Jriy hear. Bl lrt la Pifflascfs, as In Cairo, the emotiona that are driving ikese Arab patriots le serve the KremUa's pnrposri are so strong aad, ao Inflamed that they never aaaee to thlak soberly a bant the dangers ahead. As lew as British Middle East era policy la largely based as despair, while Amerlraa Middle Ksitem pal ley la a minus sjaaa- illy, lb Kremlin'! plan lac the Middle East eaa be eipected te go forward Irea saecess ta asc ent. ' ' tCopyrtfht Its, Now Tork Hiral4 Tribune Int.) vention at Chicago, accompan ied by Mri. Bishop left today for the convention city. Better English Br D. C. WILLIAMS pro- on me if you wish to. 2. What is the correct nunciation of "cohere"? J. Which one of these words Is ipelledT Maiefactori ms leria, malleable, malignancy. 4. What does tha word "con summation" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with op that that means "time ly"! ANSWERS 1. Say, "You may blame me for it it you with (omit "to")." a.- iha 2- Pronounce koe-heer, accent on secona syiisnie. j. Malaria. 4. Completion. "The consumma tion of peace between the two nations was tha result" S. Opportune. a ..- ,.i , ine Drincinsi annress lor inp iwm eu aiairs oiiiciais. i - ' r----- -- - - - . At Yavaoai Observation Station commencement at 4 pm. Sunday President Sukarno asked to be left . at ,l'ewls and "ark College alone for a few minutes while he1. Mainwanngs address for 179 contemplated the vastness of theJune 8rl"t. 5 summer grad uaiei ana one candidate ior an honorary doctor of divinity de gree will be on the topic, "The World You Will Live In." Main wiring is a member of the State Board of Higher Education. The traditional outdoor exer cises in Gnswold stadium will feature a father-daughter combi-i nation when College President Morgan S. Odell confers the hon orary degree upon the Rev. Har-vey-U. rTftnmidtrpasfof tit First' Presbyterian church at Lebanon, and a bachelor of science upon his daughter Alice Ann. The Rev. Mr. Schmidt will be recognized for his 14 years of "devoted ser vice to church, community, pres bytery and synod." and widows who work in night Ichnsm Guntar enthusiastically took pic tures of the canyon, his father and members of the party. Hnni InHianc atnonH a rtanro fnr 1 urk.i i. . . ... .. ' . -n - - - . . , na lnls the group and made liuntar an sentence? 'You may blame it hnnnrarv jnrmivr f th irih They gave him a headdress. Italian Commie Chief Returns From Tito Meet TRIESTE, Italy I - Palmiro Togliatti, Italy's Communist party chief, returned Wednesday night smiling but mostly non-commital after two days of talks in Bel grade with President Tito of Yugoslavia. Togliatti told newsmen he and Tito discussed "means of collab oration between the Yugoslav and Italian Communist parties. INDIA'S INCOME CP NEW DELHI un - India's na tional income is showing a steady rise but is still among the lowest in the world. Tha per capita, in come at 1948-49 prices amounted to 269 rupees (156.49) In 1954-55. Phona -SSU Subscription Rates By rariitt la clUoai Oallvl only 2S per mo Dally and Sunday I i ti per mo Sunday only 10 ttk By gull Suaoaj aalyi tin sdvanctl Anywhtrt in U S I SO per mo. 2 7S aijt mo. 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