Capital Journal An Independent Ntwjpoptr-Estobllshed 1888 v BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor ond Publisher , i GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus ; Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che '. meketa St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409. ' ' Wmi mil KM ImlM tt mt AwtUMt ftm mt Tkt Vtltti nn Tt Smirtttill mu to ulwlnlf ntlUad to th. nu lor ud1IcoMod in JltohiriroSltt to H tr olhonrlM ondltod In thu p.i S am am nbUko4 thoma. SUISCRimON RATES: Br Canton Moathij. tlJtl an Uosthj, tl.Ki Ono row. lilt. Br WH1 1 MtrUe. K&Tw. .. bT5.II BUowhtro In Orwom Monthly, tl.oo; BU Mmthj, tM- Oh TtVr 111.00. B Mill Outoldo Orwoa: Mcntblr. II Ji 8i Month.. I7.MI PCI tw. lit-oo THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon DIG THAT! STILL ANOTHER VIEW OF THE CITY MANAGER ISSUE By BERNARD MAINWARING YoiMit Diaries A. Sorasrue in the Statesman and George Putnam In the Capital Journal expressed them erves with their uaual vigor and sureness on the relaj- tiona between the mayor and council on tne one nana ana the city manager on the other. . Today this writer adds his two bits worth and actually it is scarcely more than that, for his residence in Salem is still oi less than three ana a nan momns aumuon His knowledge of the key figures is limited and brief una of the council he does not know at all. But municipal and other public issues are not new to him, and if he Is new to Salem lie is at least iree irom nreiudicea engendered by Dast political controversies. t Yesterday he and Steve Stone, the veteran city editor of the Capital Journal, interviewed mayor ixhicks upon this matter, questioned him closely, noting carefully his attitude u well as his answers. The attitude of the mayor and those of the council who agree with him, which appears to be most if not all, is one of complete confidence in the integrity, diligence and professional competence or tne city manager. xn was expressed with rigor and indeed with enthusiasm by the mayor. Tie complaint of the elected employes of the city about the manager has to do solely with otner pnases oi nis duties, his alleged failure to control some of the city departments, and to get numerous little chores done, to the embarrassment and Harassment or tne counenmen. We suspect now that this complaint has been laid be fore the entire public, the manager, if he has been negli gent, will bend every effort to meet tne criticism. 10 what extent it is justified this writer has not been here long enough to know. ' The average Capital Journal reader will be in a better position to appraise it from his own experience with city departments. We were im pressed with the evident sincerity of the mayor 1n voic ing it, and in his entire lack of malice. : There is evidently another issue of policy between the mayor and coundlmen and the city manager. The elected group apparently believes it should take a more active part in framing city policy through committees of its own members and committees of citizens than does the city manager. We say "apparently" because the city man ager has not as yet made clear his own attitude. Here Is a. basic difference of view on the extent to which the city manager should manage . : This writer never lived in city manager town be fore coming to Salem and does not know which view is right or which represents general practice under the manager plan, which the mayor says he and the council support fully. But he has always understood that policy making is in the hands of the people's elected represen tatives under the manager setup. Here, we believe, it what this headline making "situa tion" is about. We are not prepared to offer an opinion as to who is right, and we doubt if anyone knows for sure. But we think a recital of the basic issues will suggest that they are ones upon which good, sincere men, such as we fully believe the mayor, the council and the manager to be, can differ. ' We do suggest that the present city manager has on the whole done an outstanding job for Salem, this based upon what most everybody appears to believe, and should be treated with the greatest courtesy and consideration by the mayor, the council and the public. And in justice to the mayor and the council it should be pointed out that it was not they who dragged the matter before the public while they were in apparent good faith trying to find an equitable solution to what they viewed as a seri ous problem. STREAMLINING DEFENSE President Eisenhower's plan for reorganization of the U.S. defense administration, recently submitted to con gress followed the recommendations of the three months old committee he appointed to study the problem. Need for revision has lonsr been recognized by both the Pent gen and eongress, but the turmoil created when congress patched up the 1947 Federal Security Act five years ago by the partisans of three services, army, navy and air made eongress and even President Truman hesitant to tackle the project. . So Eisenhower decided to present his proposals in the form of a "reorganization plan," which cannot be amend ed by congress, does not invoke committee hearings and automatically becomes law unless the senate or the house relecta it within 60 days. The president's revision committee was composed of Nelson Rockefeller, chairman, General Omar Bradley, Scientist Vannevsr Bush, President Milton S. Eisenhower of Penn State College, Office of Defense Mobilization Chief Arthur Flemming, former Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett, RCA Board Chairman David Sarnoff. In presenting the program on a subject with which Eisenhower had a more intimate knowledge of the na tion's military machine and its failures than anyone else, he said, 1 address the congress on a subject which has been of primary Interest throughout all the years of my adult life." And it unquestionably presents his solution of the problem. The program has three major objectives: More effi ciency, improved strategic planning and greater civilian control, stated Ike. The magazine Time thus summarizes the changes necessary: "Transfer of management of the Joint staff, an Important working-level panel of about 100 top offlceri, from the Joint Chiefs of Staff as a body to the chairman of the joint chief lona. End result substantial Increase in the authority ot the chairman, at the expense ot the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "Abolition of three 'kw and clumsy tools' the munitions board, the research and development board and the defense supply management agency. To take over their functions as well as those of ether boards, committees and advisers, the president recommended the creation of six new assistant sec retaries of defense. Result: strengthened control for the aec ' retary of defense and, incidentally, elimination ot about B00 defense department employes. "Transfer of executive responsibility for a unified, multi service command from one of the Joint chiefs (e.g., Korea - tinder Army General J. Lawton Collins, Alaska under Air Force General Hoyt Vandenberc) to a civilian service aecre- . tary. Result: snore civilian control and a further confine ment nf the lolnt chiefs to their role n military advisers.' "Affirmation of the authority of the secretary of defense to delegste ma runcuons as ne sees fit, to insure uexiow au ministration, capable of decentralisation." YyiPEs! V - ' THAT' TAX 1 POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER 'Hurry Up and Wait' Is Airplane Traveler's Fate By HAL BOYLE At a Midwest Airport () man who travels regularly by air today no longer lives at home. He spends most of his life at airports. The slogan of the air age is the tame as the Army's: "Hurry up and wait." A fellow might just as well divorce his wife and marry an airplane. You don't have time in one life to wait for both of them to get ready. The airplane 1b an instru ment of hurry which is sup posed to get you from city to city. It doesn't do that at all. It gets you from one reformed cow pasture to another. Then you sit down and wait for your baggage, which supposedly is in the belly of the plane but actually follows by oxcart. Then, when ' you and your suit case are reunited, you bor row a compass and set out for your real destination the city. All airports are waystops in futility. They all look exactly alike and have one thing in common no matter which direction you go from any of them you are bound to get closer to civilization. The typical airport has a soft-drink machine which is empty, and a pinball machine that is broken but will accept your coin anyway. It has a few hard oak benches, a news stand with yesterday's papers, and a lunchroom stocked with tidbits left over from the Spanish-American War. There is absolutely nothing to do at an airport except take off your shirt and contem plate your navel, and If you do that they arrest you. A man who can invent something you can do while waiting at an air port anything at all is sure of a niche in the hall of fame. The least they could do is put a widow's walk on the roof, so a passenger could pace back and forth and scan the skies, waiting for his ship to come in, My theory is that the air age has brought America to the crossroads. Sooner or later we are going to have to choose between living at airports or In cities. The prospect of com' merclal jet plane travel will orobably force a solution. The Jets require airports so dls tant from any settled place it will bo longer be practical to make the Journey from airport to city. Since the big aluminum sky birds can't adjust themselves to man. I think man might as well start adjusting him sell to them, tt is high time we started gradually deserting our out-of-date cities, and began building new temples of cul ture around our airports. What good does it do to zip through the air from Chicago to New York in three hours, If a man can watch his fingernails grow while he is trying to get from the airport into town? Fifty years from now Man hattan, Chicago, St. Louis and Los Angeles probably will be abandoned, crumbling symbols of the past, inhabited by wood chucks and visited only by the more adventurous tourists, willing to under go any hard ship to get a snapshort of quaint, former way of life. Yes, sir, the bright new cities of the future will be ringed around the big paved cow pas tures where the sky birds nest. The airport will be the city. The trouble with the air voyager today, stuck at an air port with nothing to -do be tween planes, is that he was born just a half century, too soon. OWN FORUM Sheep in Cemetery , Poor Ad for Salem - To the Editor: Sheep In the cemetery, walking over the graves of the dead. This is a poor advertisement for Salem with all the people passing this cemetery on the highway. It looks like there ought to be some other meth od of cleaning it up. R. MARTIN, Salem, Ore. Faculty Monopolize 'Ugliest Man' Event Berkeley, Calif. UJ0 Twenty entrants filed their names in a contest at the University of California to determine "the Ugliest Man on the Campus." In the early polling, the lead' ing seven contenders were all faculty members. There are 676 historical markers along North Caro lina's highways. Anti-Red Thailand Now Menaced by Laos Attack By PHIL NEWSOM (United rrou Poroltn Anolrot) Of all the Southeast Asia na tions Thailand is the most out spokenly anti-Communist. - She has troops fighting along side those of other United Na tions in Korea. Her premier and minister of defense, Field Mar shal Plbul Songgram refers contemptuously to the official Communist publication Pravda as "Blulfda." In a matter of two weeks, Communist Invaders of the lit tle Indo-Chinese kingdom ot Laos overran a third of the country and pushed to within 23 miles of the Thailand fron tier on the Mekong river. Not Much Defense It illustrated the pitiful state of Southeast Asia defenses. Now if, as the French say, the Communist invaders of Laos are on the retreat, It must be due to the imminence ot the rainy season rather than to any opposition the Reds met, Nor will It be any perman ent salvation. Like some other Communist actions in the past, the invasion of Laos seemed contradictory. It began in the midst of the Russian "peace offensive" and at a time when Chinese and North Korean Communists and the United Nations were resuming Korean truce talks after an eight-months' delay, A Little Mixed Up It seemed as if the Chinese Reds might either have gotten their signals mixed or deliber ately had double-crossed their Soviet partners. But it served to remind West ern nations of something that military leaders have known all along that we would find It almost impossible to fight oft a full-scale invasion of South east Asia while at the same time making a major effort in Korea. The biggest species of ani mal that ever lived is still living the blue whale. WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND Reds Win Power in British Colony Near Panama Canal Washington While most of the nation has been worried about Indo-Chlna, Korea and Europe, the state department has been exchanging iranuc cables with the Britith foreign office over the surge of com munism In the Caribbean just across from the Panama Canal. Both American and British authorities were stunned by the communist sweep in Brit ish Guina's recent elections. The Reds, parading under the banner of the Peoples' Progres sive Party, won 18 out of 24 seats in the house of assembly. This means the communists are in complete control of the legislature and will have a ma jor voice in running this Brit ish crown colony. The only way to prevent communist control would be to take away the peoples' new political independence and re store the full authoritarian power of Hie British governor. However, the British fear this would boomerang and drive even more natives into com' munist arms. What worries officials even more, is that communism may be spreading throughout the British West Indies, threaten ing the vital American life line through the Panama Uanal. The' United States is now main taining an air base id British Gulna itself, though the base has been reduced to house keeping status. The man responsible for the Red coup in. British Guina Is Cheddi Jagan, a tough, ruth less communist agent who studied dentistry in the United States but got his political training behind the iron cur tain. He is now Red boss ot the house of assembly, which means that Moscow, in effect, is giving orders to a British colonial legislature. Jagan. was able to inflame and dupe the natives with the help of his American .wife who stumped the countryside in a native sari. Mea'hwhile, British and Am erican diplomats are still at a loss as to what to do about this grave, new communist threat in our own backyard.. DANGEROUS DE FENSE CUTS You can write it down as certain that the democrats will split seriously with Eisenhower for the first time over his dras tically reduced defense budget. The Issue will be drawn on the argument that Ike Is endanger ing national safety. Here are some of the facts which are sure to come up dur ing public debate and back stage huddles over defense re duction: .. '' 1. The Soviet, despite talk about peace, hasn't reduced its defense by one plugged ruble. ' 2. A little over a year ago, Elsenhower himself, then NATO commander, was calling for 120 European divisions. Now we're settleing for some thing over 60. 3. Though Ike is allegedly relying on "push-button war,' actually he has cut the air force more drastically than any other branch of the armed serv ices. And the air force is the chief means of waging push button war. Careful analysis of the Eis enhower budget cuts shows IY DREW PEARSON that the army Ike's oia orancn of the services was actually increased by 11.5 billions. The navy, on the other hand was cut $1.7 billions. In other words the increase xor me army and the decrease for the navy Just about cancel each other out. This leaves the air force vir tually absorbing all oi me budget cut, namejy a.i Bil lions. Yet air power is bdso lutely essential to push-button war. SOVIET STRENGTH CONTINUES Another fact difficult to overlook is that Just three months ago, John Foster Dulles was in Europe rapping Euro pean nations over the knuckles fnr failure to raise 75 land nrmv divisions this year. At the time Dulles was scolding F.nrnnean foreign the United States had exactly the same atomic weapons that it has today. Furthermore when General Eisenhower was demanding that Europe raise 120 divisions one year ago, the United States also had about the same atomic weanons it has today. Yet in the short period that has elansed. and with no im portant change in our atomic strength, we are suddenly re' lying on push-button war though simultaneously decreas ing the air arm which wages push-button war. Simultaneously, Russia has 175 army divisions, the sat ellites have 75 additional diV' isions. and the Soviet is em' dovine one million men in atomic, guided missle and oth er wearaon experiments. In comparison the west has a lit tle over 50 division in Europe. In brief, the Eisenhower ad- minitration appears to be re lying not on a genuine plan for push-button war, out on a po litical promise to reduce. the budget and taxes. Another disturbing change of defense strategy is Charles E. Wilson's switch of defense orders from a wide variety of factories to big U. S. factories. Secretary of Defense Wilson proposes that defense orders now foe concentrated in a few big factories on the ground that their production will be more efficient and less expensive. However, the basic defense dan of Ex-Secretary of Defense Lovett was to scatter defense orders among many factories for the purpose of getting them tooled up and ready to produce munitions in a hurry il ana when war broke. For In war time, a nation has to use less efficient plants as well as ef ficient; so Lovett's plan was to get smaller plants geared for defense work, too. Furthermore, he believed the nation could not risk the danger of having defense or ders concentrated in a few big factories which could be put out of commission by every bombing. Wilson now plans to change this. Probably he will save the taxpayers 1 some money, but defense chiefs fear it will be at the expense of national safety. Note One of the slowest production jobs in the nation is being performed by the Gen eral Motors plant at Kansas City. Given an order to make Tuesday, May 12, 1953 Salem 19 Years Ago By BEN MAXWELL . . . 'May It, 184 J. Money' taken from the city's ' share of the county dog license ' fund Is being used to finance a trip to Washington b John ' W. uunningnam, engineer, who will represent the city in its i negotiation with the publio ' works administration for ! municipal water works loan. I ' Various Santiam highway ! construction projects on the . eastern rim of Linn county now employ 200 men. A net of ZVtc a pound for Royal Anne cherries was paid to growers delivering to Wil-' lamette Cherry Growers, Inc. ' according to an announcement ' just made covering last year's crop. - . ; Flea, beetles, two species of which are now found in Ore gon, constitute a series menace to potato production in this state. ' . A group of professional and business men and women met Thursdav evening to organize ministers!, Holman for Governor" club. Officers are: Hal D. Patton, W. W. Rosebraugh, Miss Golda Wheeler, Miss Eula McCully, Mrs. David Wright, Claude E.' Ellison, Henry W. Meyers and Joseph Roman. Butteville school district will build a new, two story school house on the site of an older structure built 40 years ago. State officials of the Frater nal Order of Eagles held a meeting in Silverton Thursday and reorganized the order in that area. ' New rails weighing 112 pounds to the yard are being laid between Hubbard and Aurora to replace old, 90 pound steel put down in 1910. Labor unions will be thing of the past in 25 to 50 years says Dr. Robert Montgomery, one of the South's foremost eco nomists, in defending the New Deal philosophy of President Roosevelt. George Bennett will return to the local wrestling arena next Tuesday when he meets Robin Reed in a final event of the evening's program. WE HAVE IT TOO (Astorian - Budget) Any time we northerns are inclined to point scornfully at the south for its treatment of Negroes, let us recall such in cidents as the burning of a cross in the lawn of Portland Negro family only one of many such incidents in Port land and other northern cities where Negroes live in substan tial numbers. . The Negro runs into Just as much prejudice, intolerance and segregation in the north as he does, in the south some times more. The Portland family which had the cross burned In its lawn had committed no other offense than to move into a neighborhood exclusively white. It has been subjected to har assment of several kinds, but has decided to insist on its right to live where it wants. Most people, except those in the affected neighborhood, will hope the Negroes win the argu ment. , F-84-F's, one of the hottest plane in the air force. General Motors is considerably behind schedule. (Copnllht, IKS) I .L:.. r.s. 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