4-Se& I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sat., June 21, '58
tt (ftreflontatesraau
mNo Favor Sways Vs. A'o Fear Sliall Awe."
From Flrit Statesman, March 18, 1KI
CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor & Publisher
WENDELL WEBB, Managing Editor
Entmd at the post offlca at Salem, Ore., ai itcond
class matter under act or Conireti. March 3. 1S7.
Published every morning. Businett office 280
Church St.. NE. Salem, Ore. Tel. EM 4-6S11
Member Associated Press
The Associated Preaa Is entitled exclusively to the use
for reproduction of all local news printed in
this' newspaper.
Aftermath
Of McCarthyism
Back in 1953-54 when Sen. Joe McCarthy
was chairman of the Senate committee on
government operations he kept his aides
Cohn and Schine busy ferreting out subver
sion. One of his leadsman to the Army Signal
Center at Fort Monmouth, N. J., a highly
sensitive branch of the service. Besides turn
ing up a dentist-officer who had been given
an "honorable discharge" in order to getrid
of him sooner, the ferrets stirred so much
trouble that the Army suspended 25 em
ployes as possible security risks. Of these 17
were later reinstated. The others were dis
missed but all have won reinstatement. The
U. S. Court of Appeals ruled Thursday that
six were entitled to get their jobs back, along
with pay for time lost. The ruling was based
on failure of the Army to follow its own regu
lation and supply the accused with the find
ings of the security hearing board. In other
words their discharge wasn't made after "due
process."
It was the New Jersey probings which led
to the row between McCarthy and Secretary
of the Army Robert Stevens, and then to the
famous Senate hearings, a sequel of which
was the Senate's adoption of a resolution of
formal rebuke of McCarthy. With the passing
of McCarthy the fog of fear which he
whipped up is largely dissipated. Few in our
political history have raised so much stir,
and yet when the accounting was made it
showed that he never rooted out a single
Communist in government employment.
From the time of his radio speech in Wheel
ing where he charged that the State depart
ment was infested with 105 Reds on through
his later speeches and claims to "hold in my
hand" lists of subversive government em
ployes his numbers never held up. In the
1956 political campaign Vice President Nixon
tried the "numbers" game too, only to have
his innuendos exposed when the numbers
were checked.
Some may claim that McCarthy alerted
the country to the danger of Communists
from within, but the country already was
alerted, had ample legislation for self-protection.
In the hysteria resulting from the
spasms of McCarthyism many innocent per
sons suffered degradation and loss of em
ployment. The Signal Center six now have
been restored to position and back pay:
others were not so fortunate.
Valley Drive
Here's a suggestion for an afternoon or
evening drive through our lovely valley: Take
the Wallace Road to Newberg, then turn left
in the center of the business district on Ore.
Lebanon President Considers
Asking Anglo-U.S. Military Aid
By JOSEPH ALSOP
BEIRUT, Lebanon As a last
resort. President Camille Cham
oun is reluctantly but grimly con
sidering a request for Anglo
American military intervention
"to defend the Lebanon against
enemy attack.
"Certainly I greatly prefer to
do the job with our own re
sources," the Lebanon President
told this reporter. "I hate the
idea of making an appeal to our
friends, who
have on several
occasions a f
firmed their in
tention to pre
serve the inde
pendence of the
Lebanon1. W e
ourselves must
do our utmost
to put down
this rebellion
without making Jcpi AW
ih an nni w"""""'
such an appeal.
But the appeal must be con
sidered if the interference of the
United Arab Republic cannot be
definitely stopped. It is a very
delicate matter delicate for us
and delicate for our friends. I
don't want to involve our friends
if I can help it. But you must
realize that the Lebanon today is
a country under heavy foreign
attack."
The question of calling for
Anglo-American aid was being re
viewed on a day-to-day basis as
the President indicated. But as
the statement implied, the final
decision may be delayed.
President Chamoun received his
vuUUr In a moment of lull In
this city of treet-Bghting. The
eagerly arguing erewds of visit
ers, occupying every seat la the
big ante-rooms of the fine eld
Presidential Palace, were the
chief aarfaee symptom ef the In
tensity M the crisis.
Beyond the crowds there lay
the President's guarded, quiet
study, and here again there was
, a lesser symptom. Tension had
driven President Chamoun to
chain-smoke the big cigars he
likes. On the worst, night, he
: had seized his bunting rifle he is
a famous shot to exchange fire
; with the rebels who were attack
ing the Palace.' But now he spoke
coolly
impressively, . with
h t
only an extra note of earnestness
to indicate his feelings.
"The American people should
understand that the Lebanon has
in fact been under attack for a
full two years," he said. "The
reason for the attack is simple.
The Lebanon chose friendship
with the West. The attack started
in December, 1956, with an out
break of terrorist activity direct
ed by the Egyptian Embassy.
"The resources, the propaganda
instruments, the agents of the
Egyptian government, the strong
net if the Syrian biteuigence, the
Palestinian terrorist bands the
Egyptians and Syrians have train
ed all these have been employ
ed to the full. Some politicians
here in the Lebanon have been
won over to serve Egypt.
"The process culminated in the
present rebellion. It was started
and it has been maintained by
huge amounts of Egyptian and
huge
Syrian money, massive smug
gling of arms into this country,
and the infiltration of very large
numbers of foreign military per
sonnel, officers, non-commissioned
officers and even soldiers
in organized units."
President Chamoun here made
a long list of detailed charges. He
said that the exiled Jordanian
military plotters, Ali Hayari and
Ali Abu Nuwar, were command
ing elements of the ' Lebanese
rebel forces. He said that in the
Druse area, a whole battalion of
Syrian Druses had crossed the
border to Join the fighting. And
there was more of the same sort.
In this connection, he was ask
ed about the passible usefulness
of the U.N. mission that has came
te Lebanon. Great numbers ef
men, great quantities ef money
and arms hare already been aent
acrees the Lebanese borders t
aid the rebels. In view ef this,
would not the establishment of a
U.N. border control at this late
date be rather a case of shotting
the barn door after the theft of the
bone?
"If the U. N. people can stop
the flood of arms and terrorists
and soldiers," he replied, "it may
give us a chance to do the job we
want to do ourselves. I don't
know. It is very difficult, but I
have not lost hope that we can
put an end to this by our ewa
210. This takes you over Chehalem mountain
from the crest of which are glorious views
of the Willamette Valley and the Tualatin
Valley. At the foot of the grade instead of
turning left to go into Hills boro follow 210
through a beautiful agricultural section to
Progress, a point on the Tigard-Beaverton
highway. One may turn left there and go into
Beaverton and thence into Portland over
the Canyon road; or turn right to Tigard with
its options of going into Portland or coming
back via 99W or the Baldock freeway. Allow
time for a leisurely drive, and for dinner
somewhere along the way. -
Science Talk
Outpaces Action
SpaFe science and push-button warfare ad
vance far faster in newspaper stories and
Pentagon planning than they do in actual '
fact.
This was brought home emphatically this
week with the announcement that the first
unit 6t the SAGE (semi-automatic ground en
vironment system) in the New York area will
be activated within two weeks. SAGE is the ,
electrical computing system which can track
and plot hundreds of planes in the air simul
taneously. Such a unit is under construction
at former Camp Adair near Corvallis.
This SAGE process is not the computer that
can track guided missiles. It is the "old fash
ioned" computer which can guard our skies
against manned bombers and is just owning
into operation. The computer that can spot
a Russian missile over Siberia, determine its
course and compute the necessary course of
an anti-missile missile is still in the planning
stage.
In considering how far our defense hard
ware lags behind our talk on the subject,
however, we cannot escape the thought that
perhaps the Russians are caught in the same
"time lag. We hope their tongues have out
raced their missiles as ours have'
Intervention
Juvenile delinquency is a problem on both
sides of the Iron Curtain, as disclosed jn stor
ies of new curfew regulations being imposed
in Warsaw, Poland. The Communist ap
proach to the problem would raise a storm
of protest from U. S. business bosses if the
system were tried in the U. S. The Commun
ists will bring pressure to bear on the parents
of erring juveniles by asking the parents'
employers to intervene.
California is still siphoning off Oregon
scenic attractions. This time it is the Rogue
River. In the current issue of Holiday maga
zine, which features U. S. scenery, a writer
describes the river saying "Californians have
their Rogue." The Eugene Register-Guard re
ports one of its local citizens as commenting,
"Well, they're not far wrong. The Rogue is
in Oregon, but the Californians have taken it
over."
fr ft ft ft ft
The Cult of Conformity against which Phil
ip Whyte rails in his book, "The Organization
Man," is apparently still at work in the na
tion's big corporations. A recent edition of a
General Electric employe publication makes
its contribution to the "team thinking" idea
with the admonition to the workers to "Co
operate! Remember the banana every time
it leaves the bunch it gets skinned."
means.
The difficulty of the situation,
he noted, was that the small
Lebanese Army of 9,000 men was
already spread out very thinly,
trying to contain the trouble at
the many different points where
revolts have started. He refused
to discuss the much-mooted ques
tion of the reluctance of the Le
banese Army commander. Gen.
Shehab, to press home the fight.
On this point, he merely noted
that the "foreign interference was
so heavy that the Army did not
have an easy task" and that Gen.
Shehab was quite right to argue
that it was impossible to risk de
. feat anywhere "which woulr be
fatal to the morale of the Army
and the people."
As to the time factor of the
grave decision, for or against a
request for an Anglo-American
landing in the Lebanon, the Pres
ident said that it was only possible
to watch the way the situation
developed, and to struggle to
bring it under control by every
means possible. Maybe a political
settlement could be achieved, he
said. But on this point, he spoke
bitterly of the opposition charge
that he intends to try to succeed
himself if the rebellion is halted.
"I have no Intention ef seek
ing tw amend ear constitution la
order to gain another term ai
President," be said forthrlghtly.
"I could not If I wanted to do so.
since Prime Minister Samy EI
Solh has declared that Us cabinet
win not support snch a move.
"But I am the legal authority
until the 23rd of September." he
added, with a new note of irony in
his voice. "I will remain the
legal authority until the 23rd of
September, when I can be suc
ceeded by another legally elected
President of the Lebanon. I am
determined never to give way on
those points. And there is another
point that is all-important to me
too. I want to insure the continue- with me that means "being, sit
tion of my policy of neutrality uated, or occurring In the mid
amoung the Arab states and
friendship for the West. It is a
policy which does not imply
hostility to another 'nation. It is
a policy that the great majority
Of Lebanese support. It is the
right policy. And it is a policy
that my successor must carry
(Copyrlsht lflftS.
new xorn Htram Trim
GRIN AND BEAR
"A new carl ... A color TV set! 4 .' . A deep-freeze! . . . Now
we can afford all those things we've ben wanting for 4 years,
dear! ..." '
Federal Funds for
Campaigns Backed
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Statesman Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Both of Ore
gon's senators support the idea
of changing the prevailing system
of election campaign contributions
to r e p 1 a C e mmtimmmt .,wmm
large private y
by business vf - . 1
and labor, with VV l
federal fundi. 1 tmr . -f
Sen.Richard VrrTT T
L. Ne u berger ,v.
nas worked out
a detailed bill,
which Sen.
1
Wayne Morse I
is cosoonsor-"
kig, which" Smiui
would relieve candidates of hav
ing to go hat in hand to those
economic groups upon whom they
are now greatly dependent for the
bulk of their operating expenses
during a tough election campaign.
At Neuberger has pointed out.
this idea of federal financing of
elections is over SO years old and
was offered to Congress origin
ally by President Teddy Roose
velt in 1907.
He said: "The need for collect
ing large campaign funds would
vanish if Congress provided aa
appropriation for the pre per and
legitimate expenses ... which
requires n large expenditure of
money."
Roosevelt In 1907 couldn't have
dreamed Just how large the costs
f electioneering would get. Cam
paigning la those days was still
largely a face-to-face affair be
tween candidates and voters la
pubUe squares, from the plat
forms of railroad coaches and la
public auditoriums.
The high cost of using radio
and TV to communicate with the
voters today has made campaign
costs soar. Billboard and news
paper advertising are the other
media most commonly used at
considerable expense.
"The time has come t recog
nize that in a democracy the
presentation of political can
in a campaign is not something
done for the candidates, but for
the public who must exercise as
informed a choice as they can
among them. The expense of
making this information equit
ably available to the electorate
is a legitimate cost of democratic
self-government," said N e u
berger. There are many methods of
carrying out this principle, he
said, and it might take trial and
error to hit upon the most prac
tical plan. One would be to make
direct payments to the political
party committees before elec
tions, allowing them to distribute
the funds ai they saw fit for use
In what ever media Is preferrable
to the candidates. As it works
new, candidates for Congress
usually rely upon their nntional
committee's to supply them with
substantial contributions.
Neuberger has another idea for
allowing tax credits to voters who
make relatively small contribu
tionssay up to $50 or $100. This
he thinks would provide Incentive
for more people to make con
tributions to their favorite can
didates and diminish the need for
large contributions. This would
continue the basic system of to
day of allowing private contribu
tions, but in effect would mean
Better Enalish
By D. C. WILLIAMS
1. What is wrong with this sen
tence? "He acquired the disease
through carelessness; don't blame
it on me."
2. What is the correct pronun
ciation of "mannequin"?
3. Whfch one of these words, is
misspelled? Indelable, illimitable,
passable, intelligible.
4. What does a word "equable"
mean?
5. What Is a word beginning
dle"? t
ANSWERS
1. Say, "He CONTRACTED the
disease through carelessness;
don't blame ME FOR IT.." 2.
Pronounce the final syllable as '
"kin," not as "kwln." 3. Indeli
ble. 4. Uniform; tranquil. "The
author has aa equable style." I.
Median.
i
r
IT By Lichty
the government would be footing
the bill because of the loss of
taxes.
One problem Is that even If
federal funds are put up, how
would private spending la behalf
of candidates be controlled, cur
tailed or eliminated? That Is, a
candidate might receive his fed
eral fnnds and allow private
sources, either openly or en the
sly, pick nip the tab for extra
expenses, such as printing pam
phlets la his behalf. Another
problem la what to do about
third party candidates or Inde
pendent no-party candidates?
In both cases, Neuberger sug
gests that public funds could be
withheld unless certain require
ments are met. Private spending
would have to be held to certain
limits in order for a candidate
to be eligible for public funds.
Third party candidates would
have to win at least 10 per cent
of the total vote, let's say, to
qualify for public funds to cover
their election expenses. This
would weed out the fellows who
just enter the campaign as a lark
or for personal publicity with no
thought of getting many votes,
much less winning.
In view of the Adams-Goldfine
case, Neuberger this week wrote
President Eisenhower urging him
to recommend a change in the
prevailing system, as his GOP
predecessor did half century ago.
Safety
Valve
Contributions so the Safety
Valva mast ks slsacsl ey the con
tributor, flying also all adSteas.
Says Nixon
Popular in Iowa
To the Editor:
Since your paper is one which
normally carries the column of
Joseph Alsop, I assume you are
familiar with the, column written
by Rowland Evans, Jr. in Mr.
Alsop's absence, which purported
to report on the sentiment of Mid
Western farm voters about the
recent visit of Vice President
Richard Nixon to South America
and his general popularity among
farmers.
In this column Mr. Evans based
his finding on interviews with 30
fanners in Newton Township,
Iowa, and from this isolated sam
pling attempted to picture the
- Mid-Western farmer as generally
Hostile to the Vice President and
critical of his trip to South
America.
It should be noted that in 1950,
about one month before the elec
tion, Stewart Alsop made a sim
ilar survey in the same Congres
sional District with results unfav
orable to President Eisenhower.
However, the election results were
Eisenhower 4,680 votes; Stevenson
3,649.
Of course I have no way of
knowing just how Mr. Evans pick
ed his sample group, but I can
assure you that his conclusions
are inconsistent with the exper
ience of those of us who live in
the Middle West and come in
daily contact with farmers and
farm groups,
The popularity of Vice Presi-
..... . . . . .
dent" Nixon in 'this area is ac
tually at a new high, and as the
recent Gallup Poll figures demon
strate he would carry the Middle
West in a presidential race today.
The greats courage snd dignity
displayed by the Vice President
during his South American visit
has given additional impetus to
the strong support for him which
already existed in Iowa and other
Mid-Western states.
The next time Mr. Evans wants
to get the "feel" of the Middle
Western farmer and voter, I
would suggest that he obtain a
more representative sample.
Jena Keith Rehmasa
2601 Deaa Ave.
Des Moines, lews
Murders in Hungary
To the Editor:
. It is shocking to hear that the
Reds have murdered Imre Nagy
and the gallant Hungarian, Gen
eral Maleter. The very first thing
I wish the U. N. would do is de
mand the bodies of these men
snd have them autopsied to see
if they were tortured to death.
(continued fnm pg 1.)
in public office. All the governors
at the 1955 conference were given
bolts of his vicuna cloth, as was
the President himself. Senator
Payne of Maine got a vicuna over
coat. The Adamses and Goldfines
developed an association describ
ed as friendship, with inter-family
visits, supplemented by (he out
pouring of Goldfine s generosity.
All this might be' put down to
the eagerness of the new rich to
rise in social status and there
are plenty of Goldfines at various
levels of society, men who seek
by conspicuous giving to gain
either social acceptance or per
sonal advertising. Or they throw
their money around in lavish fash
ion at resorts and night clubs.
' This is their way of satisfying
their ego. In business deals they
may pinch pennies or cut corners;
but $100 bills get tossed around
promiscuously when they are on
the town and want to make an
impression on a crowd.
In his business affairs Goldfine
was trimming the legal cloth a
little too near the seam, or that
is what some regulatory bodies
felt, namely the Federal Trade
Commission and the Securities
and Exchange Commission. He
has plenty of company in this to
be sure. A person who is cited
for violating regulations has
plenty of opportunity to defend
himself before the regulatory
body, or if necessary in the
courts. What brought the Goldfine
house of cards down was the sol
icitude shown by his friend Sher
man Adams in his behalf.
Whether Goldfine's generosity
with Adams was prompted by the
latter s key position or just the
ongoing of his egoist extroversion
may be left undecided. What he
had to learn the hard way was
that prestige and position are to
be earned by showing qualities of
character, not by trying to buy
One's way up the ladder. To be
sure, the Social Registerites scorn
the nouveau riche (until they have
a hundred or so million) and
manifest extreme snobbishness.
Still they try to maintain stand
ards of social intercourse, with
barriers raised against the bound
ers and the boomers. They provide
a social decorum which prevents
an overrun by the brassy men
and women of wealth, a decorum
sadly eroded by the inanities of
"cafe society," entre to which
comes largely through publicity
and extravagance.
One hopes the Goldfines have
learned a lesson too.
Fli
'Time
ies:
10 Years Ago
June 11. 1948
Editorially Our neighbor, the
old Marion Hotel, is to undergo
remodeling and renovation. The
Marion is comfortable, like an
old shoe. When Architect Bellu
schi gets through, we wonder if
it will look like grandmother
with rouge and painted finger
nails. Elmer Berg, Salem grocer, re
ceived a permit to build a $95,000
supermarket at 12th and Center
streets in the retail trading cen
ter. The building is the first of
a series to be erected at the
site at an estimated cost of Sl,
000,000. 25 Years Ago
June 21. 133
Paulus Brothers Packing Com
pany has completed negotiations
which will permit it to enter the
canning field in Douglas County.
The Salem company has leased
ther North Roseburg 'packing
plant, idle the past five years,
and will install new equipment.
Repeal votes outnumbered pro
hibition ballots more than 3 to 1
Would it not be fitting that the
Hungarian people have returned
to them the bodies of their own
native defenders by the U. N.?
What purpose is the U.N. if it
permits genoicide to continue
without acting against it?
Why are we American citizens
being taxed so heavily to sup
port the Communist satellites?
Russia owes us $11,000,000,000 for
lend-lease aid from the last war.
If their economy is so superior
to ours why don't they prove it
by paying that back? Instead
they have declared economic
war on us.
Who are the men in our gov
ernment who are selling our al
lies and ourselves out to the
Communists? Why are they al
lowed to hold our servicemen for
- nn. .
political ransom? Who prevents
us from going in" and getting
those men back? Why are the
communists allowed to keep
American citizens in slave labor
camps in Siberia???
Hitler was a two-bit chump
compared to the outrages the
Reds have committed against
civilization and was treated ac
cordingly. ' Why do we hold the
Reds to be superior? Are we los
ing our principles? It's time
some cleaning was done and we
need a man like General Douglas
MacArthur to deal with the Reds.
The Reds will never respect kind
ness nor weakness, because they
don't admit the supremacy of
God's law. Their only law is ab
solute bate, deceit and misery
compounded. All aid to Jugosla
via must be cut off immediately,
because Tito is guilty of the mur
der of Draja Mihailovic, who was
loyal to us. Tito is now playing
two-faced to drain aid from us.
Why not send further aid to na
tions loyal to us and then clearly
stamp it "Made in the United
States" and "In God We Trust"?
Joe Spenner,
Staitea. Ore.
t
Youthful Campers to Start
Y Program This Weekend
By ROBERT L. STEVENS
Staff Writer. The Statesman
Youthful campers will have a
on at the rueeed outdoors this
weekend when Salem YMCA be
gins its annual summer eamping
schedule at Camps Crestwood and
Silver Creek.
First to brave the wilds will he
some 60 boys, ages 6 to 8. They
Ike Views on
Military Aired
In Secret Talk
QUANTICO. Va. (AP) Presi
dent Eisenhower gave the mili
tary directorate his views on the
world situation and the armed
forces Friday in an unscheduled
half-hour secret address.
The President set forth his
views on many subjects, White
House press secretary James C
Hagerty reported, but Hagerty de
clined to detail them in talking to
newsmen at the annual Defense
Department conference.
For about 2V4 hours, the Presi
dent listened to military, diplo
matic and Intelligence officials
present summaries of situations in
their respective fields.
Then Eisenhower was asked to
speak. The expectation had been
that if he chose to speak at all he
probably would limit himself to a
few offhand remarks.
Instead, he reportedly explored
a wide range oi suojects aunng
his 30-minute address.
Hagerty said he couldn't answer
questions as to whether Eisenhow
er talked on the subject of limited
war, such as could grow -out of the
critical Lebanon ' situation. But in
view of Hagerty's reference to a
discussion about ' the world situ
ation, it was assumed that the
Middle East must have had a de
finite place in the President s talk
About 175 civilian and military
leaders of the defense establish
ment, led by Secretary NeiUMc-
Elroy. were gathered in the Ma
rine base meeting hall when the'
President arrived.
Tunnel Poll Planned
LONDON (AP) Researchers
will poll boat train passengers be
tween France and England this
summer . to determine how many
would use an English Channel tun
nel if it's' ever built. Freight
shippers face a similar survey.
From the Files ef
The Oregon Statesman
in first returns from California's
referendum on the' eighteenth
amendment. By the overwhelm
ing vote, California jbined 15 oth
er states in voting to repeal the
amendment.
40 Years Ago
Jane 21, 11$
With four generations present,
atacey rieeves Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Stacey Reeves, cele
brated his birthday. His little
guests were Paul Hauser Jr.,
Marguerite Hauser, Robert
Ramsden, Harold and Clifford
Craven, and Lucille Brunk.
State Forester F. A. Elliott re
ceived word that a forest fire
eating its way through Tillamook
County tmtber has been driven
over a wider area , by a high
wind. Over 300 men are fighting
the flames.
Building Strike
Threat Eases
PORTLAND (AP)-A labor dis
pute that has threatened to tie up
all heavy construction projects in
Oregon and Southwestern Washing
ton may be near settlement.
"We definitely do think we are
reaching an agreement with the
Associated General Contractors.
said Chuck Hastings of Lomrview.
chairman, for the negotiating com
mittee for tne Union of Operating
Engineers.
A union spokesman earlier this
week had warned that a strjke
mignt start next month unless
union demands were met.
British Aid Offered
KUALA LUMPUR (AP) Brit
ain has offered aid totaling 28
million Malay dollars (about $8
580,000 U.S.) to help Malaya build
a navy. The Legislative Council
was told most of this is in the
form of ships and equipment.
' Phone CM 4-StlJ
subscbiption um
By carrier te eruesi
Dally and Sunday SMS par ir
uauj onu lis par me.
-io ween
Bjt saau Daily aal Saneay
(In advance h
In Orefon 11.79 Mr mo.
4.00 Hire me.
tjo ats mo.
13.00 year
In O. B. outride
Ore ton .
Il.Time.
ST mail Santay ealy. J. areas
(In advance! SSJt year
MIMBKB
Analt Bnreaa ! CirealaHea .
Baraaa r Atvertlslnt ANPA
Oraiaa Newspaper
- fubllihtrs Assoclsdan .
Advertlslnt BanresentatlTast
WEST HOLUDAT CO. '
New Terk Chieass)
WARD osirriTB CO.
Saa rraastsce Ds trait
will be enrolled this weekend at
Camp Crestwood about four miles
south of Salem. The camp is strict
ly a day operation with each boy
returning home in the afternoon.
While the boys are roughing it
at Camp Crestwood for a week
some 150 girls, ages 9 to 12, will
be having a fling at outdoor life at
Camp Silver Creek in Silver Falls
State Park. Unlike the younger
boys, the girls will stay at the
camp for the entire week.
Camp Leaders
Richard Simpson is Camp Crest
wood director and Byron Haley
will be camp supervisor. Conduct
ing the girls camp will be Mrs.
Gus Moore.
After the girls return to their
dolls and dresses, about 150 boys,
9 to 11, will take oyer Camp Silver
Creek for five weeks. They will be
followed on Aug. 3 by 12 to 15-year-olds.
William Cornell and Byron Haley
of the YMCA youth staff will direct
the boys. On the camp activities
schedule will be campcraft, swim
ming, horseback riding, archery,
handicraft, nature lore, hiking,
story telling, canoeing, overnight
trail trips and sports.
YMCA youth activities at the
camp will conclude Aug. 16. A two-
day YMCA family camp will De
held a Silver Creek Aug. 30.
Opea To All Youngsters
The youth activities are open to
all youngsters in the Salem area
at a small charge. Only openings
available at present are during the
week of July 4 and the first two
weeks in August for older boys.
Some 23 boys will return this
weekend from another feature at
traction of the Salem YMCA sum-
Porter Lists
'Program' for
Trujillo Issue
WASHINGTON (AP) A four-
point program was suggested fa
cetiously by Rep. Charles O. Port
er (D-Ore) Friday to meet the
"grave emergency" in U. S. re
lations with the Dominican Re
public.
Dominican Dictator Rafael L.
Trujillo intends to cancel treaties
with this country because his son
was denied a diploma from a U.S.
Army school. Porter said.
The congressman set forth his
program in the Congressional Rec
ord: "1 Call a summit conference,
where President Eisenhower apol
ogizes to Trujillo and decorates
him with the Legion of Merit.
"2 Court-martial and execute
Army officers who dared rate the
Command General Staff School
standards above good relations
with a beloved and powerful ally.
"3 Dispatch selected movie
stars to Trujillo Jr. to urge him
to persuade papa to rejoin the
tree world defense scheme.
"4-Laugh it off as a food rid
dance too long delayed."
Porter said he rejects the first
tnree items and "strongly reconv
mends" the fourth.
West's Atomic
Expert List
Sent to Russ
WASHINGTON (AP) The
United States Friday sent Russia
the names of seven scientists
from four Western countries to
discuss with specialists from three
Soviet-bloc nations ways of po
licing a ban on nuclear weapons
tests.
The 4-to-S ratio of countries Im
mediately raised .the possibility
that Moscow might add to its pan
el a scientist from a fourth Com
munist country, possibly Red
China. Moscow has been insisting
on wnat it calls parity in the talks
due to open at Geneva July 1.
The Westerfi panel announced
Friday is made up of three scien
tists from this country, two from
Britain and one each from France
and Canada. Russia had earlier
notified the United States that the
Communist panel would be made
up of scientists from the Soviet
Union, Czechoslovakia and Po
land. It had defined the Western
group as consisting of U.S.-Brltish
and French experts. 1
' . HSU t
II II
Come As You Are
II . ,: . I
mer schedule - the, Canadian
cruise. This is s one-week cruise
on a 75-foot former Coast Guard
cutter through the 172 San Juan
islands near British Columbia
Next cruise, or older boys 14 to
17, will be July 27. Arthur Church
of Seattle is ships captain.
Workers Attend
Inquest, Into
Bridge Deaths
VANCOUVER, B. C. (CP)-An
inquest into the death of 14 men
who died in the colkpse of part
of the new Second Narrows
Bridge here Tuesday has bpon
adjourned until next Tuesday,
City coroner Glen McDonald
said only sufficient witnesses
would be called at that time to
allow the jury to determine the
cause of the deaths.
"The inquest will not interfere
with the public inquiry which n
to be held into this matter," he
said, referring to the appoint
mtnt of chief Justice Sherwood
Lett as Royal' Commissioner to in
vestigate the tragedy.
Two dozen people ' most of
them fellow-workers of the vic
tims attended the inquest Fri
day. Two or three women who at
tended left the courtroom in
tears during the medical testi
mony. Pathologist Dr. T. R. Harmon
testified that most of the 18 men
lost in the tragedy met swift
death.
He said only three of the 14
recovered dead had died from
asphyxiation due to drownW?
The remainder suffered such
severe injuries when crushed into
the bridge's twisted steel that
death would have come instantly
la almost ail cases, he said.
Four other bridge victims are
missing and presumed dead.
Nudist Clubs
Plan Meeting
ESTACADA (AP) - Some 500
delegates from nudist clubs of
Oregon, Washington, Idaho and
western Canada will attend the
annual meeting of the Northwest
Sunbathing Assn. near Estacada,
July 4-6. ,
The three-day program will in
clude business meetings and sport
tournaments.
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