Capital A Journal I legislators o byMU,rayw0d. An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 ' BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sundoy at 444 Che meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont- Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. M IMM Win Ink! W tk AnattatoS rnm mmi Tka VmHrnt timm, T AuoctetM rrwi U adwlTtlr ratluM U u mm lor Mblluuw at all am UMtchM cnaua I it tr MbanrlM sradllaa Is tbu mmt mat alia am aakiuaal IbarMa. Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, March 3, 1953 HAS VAN FLEET A KOREAN SOLUTION? General Omar Bradley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Mali in a major military speech at Palm Beach, Florida, Monday outlined four courses of action the United Nations could take in Korea. He warned that most of them carry the risk of touching off all-out war with the Chinese Reds or even of starting World War III. Bradley stated that he was not committed to any of them, either for or against, as the decisions were not for him to meet He listed them as follows: ' 1. Get out of Korea, an action "which I believe the American people and their allies would not condone" because he aid, it jeopardizes U.N. authority and five communism tree rein In Asia. 2. ' Continue the war as is, keeping; up pressure, keeping down u.N. casualties,-inflicting the maximum possiDle casualties on ilea Dauieiront forces. 3. Continue the pressure In Korea, but be ready to "take the additional military steps, from time to time, where a military advantage might accrue." Bradley did not aay whether this might mean a U.N. offensive. The hope obviously would be the pressure might eventually tire Red China and lead her to quit. 4. Take any one of any combination of military steps to get a decision in Korea "even while we realize it might eventually involve us in all-out war with communist China." Broadening of the war in this manner, Bradley said, "might pin down the bulk of our military power on the continent of Asia, and could eventually develop into World War III." WUm REP.HARVEyVeLLs7 I jSAYLORjfll I if wLl , II Wg w 4OOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER ; 0PEN FORUM Signs of Spring Already To Be Found on Manhattan . ly HAL BOYLf President Eisenhower at the end of his trip to Korea during his campaign for election summed up his dilemma about ending the war, said that the first task of the new administration to bring the Korean war to an early and Honorable close. ' To the news conference he said he had "no panaceas" for ending the war and he spoke of the "grave risk of en larging the war." That was his appraisal after looking over Korea. That was also the problem faced by President Iruman. But if Ike has worked out any bold .plans for ending the war without "risk of enlarging it," they have not Deen made public. ' It may be that General James A. Van Fleet who is being given a hero s welcome in Washington today will solve this dilemma. He is the foremost authority on Korea, soon to retire after, commanding the American Eighth American army jn Korea for 22 months, is a long time friend of Eisenhower and a West Point classmate. Some time ago, when about to leave the Orient, Van Flett said "certainly," the Eighth army could make a successful offensive against the communists In Korea. The deadlock he continued, "was of our choosing and not inspired by the enemy." It was begun under Truman and not Eisenhower. Van Fleet is to appear before congressional committees this week and what he says may determine the future course of history and make our allies still more jittery. WILLAMETTE'S INITIAL OBJECTIVE President G. Herbert Smith made an extremely effec tive presentation or wmameues new iu-year expansion program at the Chamber of Commerce meeting Monday, particularly in regard to its first phase, $400,000 to enable construction of the first two buildings to proceed. . Some Willamette supporters were probably a bit flab bergasted at the announcement that five million dollars would be sought, for that is a lot of money even in a town where the legislature tosses tens of millions around. For the five million was to be raised by gifts, not taxation, which is a horse of quite a different hue. - But the first phase of the campaign is easily within reach of fairly early success. It is for f 400,000 which when secured will make a $$250,000 gift available. This gift from an unnamed donor outside of Salem is conditional upon $400,000 from other sources.' When this $650,000 is nn hanrl PAafdan Cmltk ABftin. il.i 41.. J :i trustees will be justified in proceeding with the first two buildings planned, a $750,000 fine arts-auditorium and a $250,000 housing unit. Other steps in the biar orotrram which contemnlates doubling Willamette's endowment and her physical plant value within a decade can then proceed. It is certainly-an ambitious undertaking considering that it has taken more than a century to bring the university to the point where it is now. However progress has been much faster in the past aecaue, wnicn saw three quarters of. a million added to the endowment fund, Baxter hall built and almost all paid for, ana ine new athletic plant in the Bush pasture developed President Smith made another telling point to the busi. ness men. Willamette is and always will be one of Salem's major economic as well as cultural assets. Her budget has ballooned enormously in the past decade. This money, to gether with what the students themselves spend, goes into the tills of Salem merchants Bnd from there into their payrolls and other local expenditures which help the whole community. Salem people who help their university are helping themselves, he pointed out, a fact which is beyond dispute. BV H. T. WEBSTER Life's Darkest Moment New York WV-It Is hard to tell when spring really gets to Manhattan. But its heralds are already here. . . . The crocus lights a yellow fire In every florist shop window. . . . Three suburbanites, their (noses still running, are galloping about the office, bay Ing, "I caw the first robin!" . . , You put your hand against Rockefeller Center and It feels a little warmer. . . . The breezes blow skirt a bit higher, and the druggist says, "Well spring's about here. . . . More and more people are coming in asking me to help get a clinker out of their eye" ... The kids, UU shivering, begin playing stick ball again in the streets. . . . The sun reaches down with friendlier fingers. . . . The air seems fresher and brighter, as if had been through a filter. But the city itself looks shabby and seedy, like a bum awaking from a hangover in a clean new day. . . . Manhattan always is frowziest just at the last edge of winter. . . . The calendar says spring is still nearly three weeks away. But you can't tell that to the fat strutting pigeons in the park, taking crumbs from pas sersby in waddling contempt. These feathered handout artists take people as just a nec essary evil a bird has to put up with if he wants to live in the city. . . . The tree buds are opening pale hands, gambling against a late frost. . . . The sporting goods stores have jumped the gun a bit, too. Their windows are full of fishing tackle. . . And business men, hunched in their topcoats, look In a dream of a leaping trout. . . . Stenographers quit dreaming of "the one that got away" during the winter. . . . They get out resort folders and start dreaming of the new un known poor fish they will snare on their summer vacation. . . . Dogs scratch and whine at the door to get out more often. The children's coughs and colds dry up, but they ait list less and cross at their coloring books. ... A vaster painter is at work outdoors, and young hearts are stirred with an ecs tasy they cannot understand,! . . . ah nature a cniiaren Know an itch they cannot scratch, and they tremble between laughter and tears, and don't know why. . . . But mother does. . . . Time for the annual tonic, the tuning of small bod ies to a new season. . . . A dullness films the eyes of the grownups, too, and a petu lance comes over him. ... He alternately feels like a million dollars and two cents. . . . His minds turns to faroff places. Who wants to live in dreary here? . . . Wouldn't it be nice to be sitting on top of Capri, sipping wine and watching the DEEP SNOW, SHORT LEGS AND TMt CALL "R DINNER Bay of Naples? ... Or strolling somewhere at peace on the Is land of Ball, where dwell fair women? ... Or just lying at ease under an almond tree by a ruined old Roman temple in Southern Tunisia? . . . This is the way spring comes 10 ine die city. . . . An ache in the night ... An invisible wind that turns every heart to a yearning violin. . , . But the surest sign of all is when you come home and find your wife looking like a gypsy-cowboy, a rag around ner Bead, a dust- cloth in her hands and that now don't - give - me - any - argu ment just - go - ahead and start - moving - the - furniture look in her eyes. ... When a pigeon starts making her nest and a housewife starts upsetting hers, never mind what the calendar says or the weather is up to . . . spring has arrived. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Ike Knows White House Better Than Guides Irked to Learn P.G.E. Boosted Net in 1952 To the Editor: The issue of the surrcharge on our electricity bills is being nicely covered up and perhaps the general public should forget the matter and humbly pay over monthly assess ment. I was in a passive mood until I ran into a news item in the Sunday Oregonian entitled, "Net for P.G.E. Gains in 1952." "Portland General Electric Company made net income of $3,719,661 in 1952 compared with $3,322,861 in 1951, accord ing the company's annual re port," etc. . Maybe I m all wet In my as sumption that we're being taken for, a sleigh-rlde, nevertheless the fuses are at a blowing point C. Ij. WARNER, 4315 Macleay Rd., Salem. In the history of the United States, 12 federal officials have been tried in impeachment pro ceedings, o' whom four were found guilty on one or more counts. Salem 26 Years Ago y BEN MAXWELL March S, 1927 Governor Patterson today signed house bill 58 offered by the Marion county delegation and authorizing construction of a new, $600,000 state office building in Salem. Return of Lem Woom, Chi nese sentenced to hang for a murder committed in Portland 14 years ago, will probably cost him his freedom. Governor West pardoned Lem Woom on condition that he return to China and stay there. Last night he was apprehended in a Port land lottery joint. Strenous efforts are being made by authorities and police to supress names of about a halt dozen high school boys who became involved In a liquor scrape and were expell ed from school. "These boys have been put out and they will stay put," said Principal J. C. Nelson this morning. Poker or "freeze out" will no longer be played in local card rooms, the La Grande city commission has ruled. But pinochle, rummy and like games are all right All rooms In the new wing of Salem General hispital must be furnished by public sub scription, the hospital board has decided. The new wing re cently completed at a cost of $40,000 will accomodate 34 additional patients, an increase of about 70 percent in the capacity of the hospital. "Let There Be Light," But There Wasn't Any Redondo Beach. Calif. n Let there be light said the:iine up Silver Creek, built in Brick laying was resumed today on new Leslie Junior high school after some 4000 bricks were removed because of imperfect construction. Silverton may soon be asked to approve a $45,000 bond issue to replace and improve the present water system. The pipe contractor, has received de livery of a one-half cubic yard speed digger . costing $8000. This machine, first of Its kind to be owned in Salem, will be used in excavating basement for the Nelson building at the corner of 'Liberty and Che me keta streets. Basements for dwellings may also be dug with this 35,000 pound machine. Sale of the newly produced Noble-French prune trees will start in Salem on Saturday. Nable Andrews, route 6, origin ator and propagator of the variety, has 10,000 trees for sale. Formal opening of the new First National (Livesley build ing) bank building and banking quarters' will be held during the evening of Saturday March 19. . Orrln B. Lyday of Indepen-, aence nas been appointer to succeed the late Frank B. Cow- les as conductor on the passen ger train of the VaUey and Siletx railroad. Washington President Ei- enhower not only is proud oi his new home, but has spent hqurs studying White House his tory. Already he knows more about the subject than the guides who've been on duty there for years. - Last week Ike displayed his newly acquired knowledge as be conducted lunching congressmen on a tour. As the group entered each room, he gave a brief his torical outline of the important events that had taken place with' in its four waljs.. Mr. President," said one guest, "you've learned s great deal about the White House in a very ahort time." It's been a lot of fun,"' re plied the new president "Be sides," he added, "if s good job insurance. If" I'm unemployed four years afrom now I can al ways get a good job as a White House guide. I figure 1 11 be worth at least $1.25 an hour. BATTLE OVER IKE APPOINTMENT With big city slums one of the :hief contributors to juvenile delinquency, the question of slum clearance and public nous ing is getting hot on Capitol Hill again. Bob Tan, Mr. Big of senate republicans, has estimated that public housing should comprise 10 per cent of all new housing construction each yea?, in order to keep abreast of the slum problem. On this basis, a mini mum of 100,000 low-rent, public housing units should be built this year. Yet congress has pro vided funds for only one-third this amount 35,000 units. What's really stirred up back stage debate, however, is the ap pointment of ex-Congressman Al Cole of Kansas as boss of the housing and home finance agen cy. Cole is the only republican defeated in the rock-ribbed re publican state of Kansas in many years, and he was defeated in an election which went over whelmingly for Eisenhower. While in congress. Cole was such a bitter foe of public hous ing and such a friend of the real- estate lobby, that even such Eis enhower senators as New York's Irving Ives will probably vote against his confirmation. In June 1949, Cole delivered a bristling speech against the Taft Housing Act, which launched the same program of slum clearance and public housing which Cole is now supposed to administer. That bill, he declaimed, "tends to destroy private homes and private business ... it tends to destroy our form of government. It s a step toward govern ment control of individual fam ily life. . . . May become so strong as to strangle the . people of America. . . . Today the Soviet government has in its constitu tion, article 6, a provision that the homes of the laboring peo ple shall belong to the state." Senator Taft however, who authored the Taft Housing Act, seemed to think that crowded, unhealthy big city slums are even worse breeders of commu nism than the communist po litical platform. mayor of Redondo Beach last night as he pulled a switch in tended to bring near-daylight vision along a mile of Pacific Coast highway. Instead the whole town was plunged Into darkness. Mayor J. Russell Shea's blush was hidden for two hours until workmen repaired a power line, blown down by high winds, and the ceremony of dedlcaUng the new high power lights was re-summed. Canada's Jet Airliner Down in Asia, 11 Die Karachi, Pakistan W) Can ada's first comet Jet airliner crashed and burned on a take off from Karachi airport early today, killing the five Cana dian crewmen and six British aircraft technicians aboard. , It was the first fatal crash for the record-breaking BriUah built Comet 1911, must either be re-built or a new line developed on the Abiqua, the other source of supply, according to Dr. C. W. Keene, member of the water commission. West Salem Community club has petitioned postal author-, ities asking for city delivery in this locality. Gideon Stolz company claims to be oldest manufacturing firm In Salem in respect to continuity of ownership. Early 1 October 1879 Mr. Stolz moved to Salem and started the vine gar and cider works that has continued to this day. Salem boathouse will open April 1, according to "Captain" John Spong, proprietor. Canoe ing on the Willamette gets to be good about this time. i J. A. Kapphan, excavating 1 j u i n : : I I b ffi ij'-qCrrr? rrf J-f W& 1 iHLH If pi b Y DREW PEARSON Note While the battle over housing administrator Cole gets hotter in Washington, another political public bousing battle rages in Los Angeles -to defeat Mayor Fletcher Bowron, long time champion of slum clearance and foe of the real-estate lobby. PRINCETON PROFESSOR Prim, proper ex-Princeton pro fessor. Sen. Alex Smith f New Jersey, blushed like a bashful schoolboy the other day at a private luncheon he had arrang ed in honor of the nation's high est lady official. Federal Secu rity Administrator Oveta Culp Hobby, former head of the Wac. Starting to introduce the guest of henor, he said, "I have invit ed Mrs. Hobby, who is" The senatotr choked on his words: his face started flaming. Finally he turned to Mrs. Hob by and asked desperately: "What is the name of your office?" , MERRY-GO-ROUND President Eisenhower didn't show it as his press conference. but he was irritated at reporters who tried to bait him Into a quarrel with congress. He com plained afterward about the way "they tried to get me in trouble with the hill." . . . Chatting with democratic senators at a private luncheon, Ike told about his ex periences shooting wild turkey. Isn't that against the law?" blurted Virginia's Sen. Willis Robertson. "I don't know, is it?" asked Ike, a bit embarrassed. This brought on a brief discus. sion as to whether the president had broken the law. Unofficial verdict: Guilty. ... Later, as Eisenhower took the senators on the usual tour of, the White House and pointed out a full- length painting of George Wash. Ington, he called attention to a large book, labeled "The Law,' at Washington's feet. "In view of your trouble with congressmen who want to rewrite the tax law," broke in West Virginia's Sen. Matt Neely, "if you ever have a similar picture painted I suppose it will be more like Dore's painting of a wrathful Moses breaking the tablets of the law." . . . When California's conscientious new Sen. Tom Kuchel had the courage to vote against most of his fellow re publicans snd end the filibuster, he receeived critical letters from California voters. However, the shoe may soon be on the other foot For antl-tidelands oil sen ators may use the filibuster to hold up what California wants most tidelands oil. "BUDGET PRUNER" TABER It hasn't hit the headlines, but a backstage battle is simmering between the administration and powerful Congressman John Ta- ber, charman of the house ap pend the whole complex problem of tax reduction this year. Tsber is determined to cut up to $10,000,000,000 from the bud. get and he doesn't care much what the White House thinks about it or who gets hurt Chief victim of Taper's econo. my drive will be Pentagon's big miltary budget, consdered eaten tal to national defense. Defense Secretary Charlie Wilson recent ly warned congress that it would be "difficult" to reduce military expenditures, but to Tsber, Wil. son's statement wasn't a warning it was a challenge that he's glad to accept. Talking confidentially to col. eagues, Tsber said: "I've been cutting government budgets for years and I'm the ine man in congress who knows how to do it I know where the bureaucrats pad their budgets and I know how to find the padding.' "Be careful, John," said a fel low republican. "You may run into trouble with the White House if you slice the budget too thin." I don't care what the White House, the Pentagon, or anybody else thinks," replied the con gressman from New York, "I'm going to cut government spend ing, if we have to stay here all summer. And I'm going to cut it by billions." (CoprrUrht, 1U) U. S. to Deport Col. Racketeer to Italy Los Angeles The federal government has notified Jack Dragna, identified by the Call fornia crime commission at a gangster, that he Is to be de ported to Italy for illegal en try into the country. Attorneys for Dragna have until March 12 to appeal to the board of immigration afiptals in Washington. They previous ly announced they would carry the case to the U.S. supreme court if necessary. At liberty on $1,000 bond. Dragna was notified of the de portation order by registered mail. Dragna, 64, maintains he is a banana importer. Dulles Considering Southeast Asia Visit " Washington ( Secretary ol State Dulles was reported Tuesday to be considering a fly ing trip to the Middle East and Southeast Asia in an effort to - bolster American prestige in the area. The visit would be aimed, at least partly, at demonstrating American friendship with Arab governments which are regard- propriations committee. On the led as the key to combatting outcome of this battle will de-stepped-up Russian activity. NOW! loans p to $1500 Take p to 24 months to repay $25 to $1500 iimkm m drnrnn nrarp el old bilta ... pay taxaa...iaduua monthly paymaats with a ft ml loan. Phone, writ, or coma in. f $1800, MfRflJtVFVV I rr n 1 umG4mu&&i m Ground Floor, Oregon Bldf., 105 S. HIGH ST SALEM Mian,, 2-24S4 Rex E. Deyte, YES MANagar loom evar $300 mod ay Nneaot nasnca Ca. el Mariae Cemty anear Ike tnavttriol loaa Caataoaiat M af Orasoa. Ink a h mMnH al at aiiiilln mm SMtt tkaai Sh. S-1B. B-US Serving Salem ond. 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