Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 04, 1954, Page 4, Image 4

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    Far 4
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Ettobjishtd 1888
. BERNARD MAINWARING. Editor ond Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM. Editor Emerrtui
Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 280 North
Church St. Phone 22441.
mi lmm4 m' knxi m u i I tnm rw a-ius eras.
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It M 41iMltbM rdltS t N f MkrlW traSHa SB Ik. aaf 04
. SUISCRIPTION RATES:
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MaaUUJ tJ: au Maataa. tl.Wi Oat Tmt. (MM
WHY THE CONSOLIDATION?
The Capital Journal in published today in unfamiliar
surrounding's, in what will henceforth be known as the
Statesman-Journal building at 280 Church street. Print
era, reporters and advertising men are scurrying; around
trying to find things not in their accustomed places now,
all hoping that somehow this first issue in the new plant
will come out this afternoon. We write this in the confi
dent hope that it will somehow.
Many must be wondering why this comes about in Sa
lem.which since far back into the last century has had its
newspapers published competitively in separate plants.
The answer is: Rising costs. It is costing more each
year to publish newspapers of equal quality. But the de
mand is not for equal but for improved quality. The
Salem papers, like others, try
narrow steadily, yet the need
techniques Just to keep up with the procession, let alone
lead it.
Publishers are therefore under growing pressure to
eliminate all wastes possible, to make each dollar buy more
newspaper. Publication in separate plants is a very large
waste, every advertisement run In both papers, as most of
them are, . omposed twice, two buildings and plants to
maintain, etc. .
To meet this situation the two papers in one plant setup
has evolved. It was pioneered many years ago, proved
feasible and was widely copied. So widely that Salem
was prior to today the only city in the United States west
of the Mississippi river of fewer than 100,000 population
with competing morning and evening dailies published in
eparate plants. Save only for two or three cities where
new papers were started as a result of strikes. Colorado
Springs and Las Vegas are
Cities like Minneapolis, St. Paul, Kansas City, Des
Moines, San Diego, Long Beach, Spokane and many others
have only one newspaper plant. Large cities like Omaha.
Akron, Oakland, Calif, Tacoma and others as large now
Jiave only one newspaper.
. Two plant operation has lasted longer in Salem than in
almost any comparably sized city because the publishers
prized their independence and sought to retain it, as they
still do. The present operation was embarked upon reluct
antly, as it involved many concessions 'all around, but with
confidence based upon successful experience elsewhere
that it will prove good for everyone involved, the public,
the employes and the publishers.
.r J . -r . ' .
In the meantime the indulgence of the public during a
brief period of readjustment
END OF "JUDGE LYNCH
x "Judire Lvnch." that odious
survived so long is now officially dead.
There wasn't a lynching in
Ur in 1952. I wo years without one, so TUsKepree Institute
the famous negro college founded by Booker T. Washing
ton, which has kept lynching
century, will keep them no more- Instead Tuskegee will
devote its attention to record keeping on other phases of
race relations which are far from ideal, but which are im
proving steadily. The worst phase by far is licked.
Lynching was a common practice, even in the north, but
particularly in the south where a negro was virtually al
ways the victim. It represented mob rule and like as notj
the victim was innocent If so that was too bad, but there
was no way of undoing the wrong.
Many years ago public spirited men and women in the
south began attacking lynching. This took a lot of cour
age and some of them paid dearly for their efforts in the
form of. social ostracism or more violent reactions.
But they kept up their efforts and eventually grand
juries began to indict and trial juries to convict persons
guilty of these depredations, to treat them like any other
murder or murder attempt.
When this happened old "Judge Lynch' was on the skids
and now he is gone, though we doubt not that there may
yet be a very rare instance.
America is coming of age, shuking off customs that
mark an immature people. Now let our foreign enemies
find something else to damn us for. Not that it will take
them long, even if they have to invent it.
A HOPEFUL SIGN
. There is a hopeful sign to those who are old fashioned
enough to prefer comfort and convenience to style not only
In furniture but in houses as well funished by a preview of
the annual Winter Furniture Show at Chicago for 1 054
styles. Chairs have recovered backs and arms, and tables
are really tables again. The
less prominent Part in house
ine nign anu zany gimcracks of the post-war period are . Z . in
fcornmiiiff Thn ,! i 1 . . is taking a walkout on Uncle Dan.
? trend is toward modernistic furm-, when Reed was invited to the
' 5 the consumers revolt against ultra low pieces ere- three-day sessions attended only
ted for modern apartments and ranch houses has had its by GOP leaders to shape the leg
effect. ; islative program, he sailed off on
Chairs and sofas shown at Ch ieago are still low and ' cruise to Panama. Privately, he
loungy, out mere is less emphasis 011 the squatty low
lung oriental type. That is because they are well suited
to television viewing. So some manufacturers produced
Identical designs in different sizes to accommodate three
or four persons.
It is hoped the new architecture h h.l it- .luv .l.n
and that new dwellings will
hen-coop and shed type that
DuiKling projects and the
i) I; in uusiness structures.
tractive or beautiful alniut
1:- j 1 .l
periodic decadence of the "new art" in painting, sculpture
ml music as well as architecture that permeates the na-
nauon, a passing I HO 11 is
Human Pilots
j Obsolete in Era
: Of Space Travel
. PHILADELPHIA oPi The era
ef space travel will make human
,' pilots obsolete, says Dr. 1. M.
I Levitt, director of the Franklin
, Institute'! Fela Planetarium.
I As he sees It man la incapable
ef handling present-day speeds.
"Yet the speeds which art on
in noruon lonav." nr. i,tt
points out, "are 1 small fraction
J of those needed to leave the
earth."
Solution? Mechanical controls
which act as the hrain for the
(pace craft, Dr. Levitt says.
to meet it. Profit margins
is for new machinery, new
two examples.
...
is earnestly solicited.
American character who
the united (States in 1053.
statistics since early in the
"bucket of stilts'
furnishim.-
is playing
get away from the flat-topped
dominates so many of the new
window leas barn and morgue
1 here is nothing artistic, at-;
them, thev merelv reflect the
. J '".- v"-l.1
to he hocd.-
(i
p
' .
.,,. . . .
"When space travel becomes a
rrahty.- the seen,,,, TT
then man will to ilonu tw th o n.. . j
ride, since he is eanahu
physically nor mentally of coping
with the problems this tvp ot
. .,
speeo win pose
MAN PAYS W T K.5&0
TARKAliONA. Spain iP Pe
dro Ramim Olastrgui has a cul-
1 irc.iun 01 .amuus cigar oui.s. l(
has cost him about 2 SOO lie ha
1 1 network of theatre ushers, hotel
1 bellboys and nightclub and res
1 taurant waiters working for him.
The butts are enclosed in glass
piim with eardt namina fh. nun.
er and where the find was m de.
Most expensive so far was one
ex King Farouk of Tgypt smoked
in Rome. II cost $12.
IF YOU
WASHINGTON MERRY
Ike to Move to the Left
In 1954, Pearson Claims
By DREW
Washington President Eisen
hower definitely plans to move
to the left in his forthcoming
State of the Union message by
'proposing a ten-dollar acrnss-the-
M..,i.i.. t i. r.A
- .
age pensions. ne move annum
win Democratic support but will
nring a nowi irom some oi nis
own riffht-wins oartv members.'
nariiroiartv rnnirntmin Carli
Curtis of Nebraska and the U. MsJI";i
... l . . .
Chamber ot Commerce.
Details of the pension increase
nave not oeen worked out,
but in
general way the $10 will be
paid for by broadening the tax
payer's salary base. At present,
m per cent is deducted from
eacn salary up to 53.600 annual
ly. Above $3,600 there is no de
duction. It's now proposed to in
crease the S3,00 limit to $4,600
or $4,800. From this larger sal
ary there would be payroll de-
I ductions, but not beyond.
Ike also proposes to drop the
increased social-security deduc
tion from payrolls, which went
into effect automatically on Jan
uary 1. Administration leaders
are extremely anxious to get rid
of this added payroll deduction,
since among lower-bracket tax
payers it would offset the auto
matic 10 per cent income-tax de
crease.
Many Republican congressmen
are muttering that a $10 increase
in old-age pensions is reminiscent ;
of New Deal, ham-and-egg, pie-in-the-sky
days. Fact is, however,
that, with increased prices, U. S.
oldsters have a hsrd time making
both ends meet.
Grumpy Uncle Dan
Relations between the White
House and grumpy Congressman
"Uncle Dan" Reed of Dunkirk,
N. Y., chairman of the tax-writing
ways and means committee,
are drifting from bad to worse.
First. Uncle Dan took a walk-
out on the White House legisla-
nve conicrcncrs just Dcinre
told friends his committee had
decided on what kind of tax bill
to write, and he didn't need to
have any White House advice.
ve any White House advice. I limitations run on any federal P"? du?ng he president s re-j. "There is too much heat in; ten. half a chance of being cor
Understandably, the W h H e j ,utu. . , h, ' k,,nlnt visit was Harold Lieber 1 this room," Adams said. "I want 1 rect. The estimate bv the exoen-
,u. 11.. h,k
aides made up the list of both
,, D , 1.. 1
Democrats and Republicans to be'
.
liC? Z'g .omorr"ow (Jan
5. Reed's name was omitted Ike
didn't want to be stood up twice
i Th 78-year-old congressional
j- t
;PT i rtoni"': '
J ,
i,iiirvr, m nave
For. in addition to
taves. Riri"a rnmmitl hnlH lha
' - -
My 10 ,he new social serunt
I,w ,n" ,nr reciprocal-trade pro- i.., .. "
1 i . . , nn three issues as Congress con-
' lmost impossible for,..,, stratecv nn the confirm..
iZn,'
of Robert E Lee from the Fed -
'"" " "
and thereby avoid a nasty knock-
down ficht with the Democrat.
The latter are sore over Lee's ap
pointment after they had shown
up his strange activities (or Sen
ator McCarthy in the Mrrvland
election of 1950 They hv!;evt
they can defeat Lee'a confirr-.a
Hon in the senate.
On
, . l . 1 . ., ,
".: . ""A"" "
1'rrsident Sherman Adams thinks
Ike has to go through with the
1 .. ..Intm-nl . . it . .
that the Dehocrals (inally deleat
his confirmation
Adams confides that a deal was
I made only he calls it by the
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salea, Oregoa
WANT TO GET ANYWHERE
wLX .aAI-P" ''M' HLX. 1. V .TPT
- GO - ROUND
PEARSON
more highfalutin term of "quid
pro quo." Anyway, the deal, or
whatveer you want to call it was
with Sen. Styles Bridges of New!papeni lnd we fee) it j, worthy
nimpsmre ana vonKrmn
John Taber of New York, pow-
erful chairmen of the senate and i
h .nnmm-iaiinn. n,.
wanted Lee, who was work-i
jn(, wjtn Taber's committee, an- i
pointed comptroller general of
the United States.
This is one of the most imnnr-iucn
K i
icinmem. im appointment IS inr
- 14 . ...n. v...
the President, and t s the lob of
the comptroller general to scru -
tinize all government expend!-
tures. ne la tne watchdog of the
treasury.
Senators Are Sore -
The post is now held by able
old Lindsay Warren of North
Carolina, who has saved the tax-
payers minions, warren, not in
good heaUh. is not averse to re-,
signing, uut balked at the idea
01 acting a mccariny man, wno
nao oeen nnacr lire in a senate
investigation, take his place. He
wanted his career assistant, able
Frank Weitzel, to suceed him.
So, to appease Senator Bridges
and Congressman Taber. the
White House appointed Robert E.
Lee to the Federal Communica
tions Commission.
"It was a case where
thought he would be less dan-
gerous over there," Adams ex-
Plained to a friend.
However, Democratic senators
don't see why Lee has to be ap
pointed to any post unless qual
ified. And his chief qualifications
to sit on a commission which i
hands out TV and radio licenses
worth millions is that he has been
a producer on the McCarthy-Hunt
TV program, "Facta Forum."
Lee also handled a check for
$5,000 in the McCarthy campaign
against Senator Tydings and
used the money to mail 300,000
postcards to Maryland voters. He
did not, however, properly record
the check, which came from Con
gressman Alvln Bentley of Mich
igan, and a senate committee fo
cused aucn severe attention on
various campaign operations that pch consultants at Augusta 1 "8ive me tne hei' eradicator." economists on the course of busi
a Maryland court convicted Jon wor't on tn Sla,e of the Un- It developed that Adams' 1 ness and found them to be only
Jonkel, campaign manager fori' message. He erformcd a ! room was too hot and he wanted ! 33 per cent correct. This sug-
GOP Senator Butler.
Attorney General Brownell. on
th. nik.. k,-.! i., ik.
violated, instead, Lee was pro-
. ,k. i.-.i.i - ;
moled to tne rederal (ommuni-
- ,--,.:;
cations 1 nmmissinn
Democratic sena.or, believe j
Ihis is an excellent chance to test 1
,nrlr ""-ngin on an issue wnere
the facts are clear-cut. and where
ntih or nnninn will hi- tlrnnc-lv in :
' . -
,nr,r Ia4"r-
i ....
1 nnri inr iromB
, c.,. rv -,. -m
tion fight against FCC Commis
sioner Robert E. Lee; alleged II-
'' "ring of postmaster, with
; crN Yum'ber of Demoi
crats on senate committees, now
that the Drms have a majority in
the senate. . . . Potent Sen. Dick
Russell of Georgia can get his
view of U. S. military strategy if
he wants it. Senator Saltonstall
of Massachusetts. GOP chairman
of the Armed Services committee,
has been blocking the review, but
U ...... 1 1 1.-. ,k. ...... . ( I
.m."?vii 1 imp inr i'it-a 11 wuu
i l push his probe.
r.nnn cinv m -
' '
Memphis, Tenn. wV-Classilicd
ad in a Memphis newspaper
"rate for sale . . . Owner has
ulcerated stomach."
What's Ahead
Bend Bulletin
In today's Bulletin you will
find the opinions of a number of
Central Oregon business and civic
leaders 'on the outlook for the
coming year.
This, we believe, is an unusual
practice in small daily news-
..--. ,,.,
For almost as long as we can
iremember, it has been the prac-
' "ie newspaper editors
,0 preview the coming year in
"" ,MUC ""-"
The Bulletin, however, feels
statements might better
. ..."
Z irrZ
----; ." " . '
much of the news of interest to
" """-
in ,he last year-
In today'a paper,
therefore.
you will find opinions of such
persons as the general manager
of the region's largest aingle em
ployer and officials of various
civic and other groups, as well
as a comprehensive report of
195S in the area and state.
We heliev th.ir nnininn
the whole showing optimism for
the coming year, are well worth
reading.
Backstairs at
ByMERRIMAN SMITH
Washington
tu n Backstairs ,
at the White House:
President Eisenhower probab
ly will do no more extensive
travel until spring. And nothing
could be more welcome news to
the staff.
His Augusta, Ga , holiday
which ended yesterday just
about had the staff on the ropes
because ot the early working
hours.
Mr. Eisenhower tried to get
some of his work done during
the early morning hours to leave
his afternoons free for crnlf fnn.
scquently, some members of his
entourage had to he at work be-
fore 7 o'clock in the morning
on papers for his inspection j new! te Lieberman. , erraneous. Even in economics,
starting about 8 a.m. The day showed signs of the most highly developed of the
Most Harried Man j brightening until Sherman Ad- social studies, there has been
John Jessup, chief editorial I an, tne assistant to the presi-' plenty of error. A very distin
writcr for Time magazine, j 0fnl- Picked up his telephone guished economist made a check
joined the stable of Eisenhower and barked at the operator, of the various nreHietinm nf
similar chore last year.
' . v j , .
! The most named man in Au
man, manager of the Bon Air
notei wnere tne president s statf
1,1 ,
tormujm interest on savings in
Save in a
2 fa
m tie om
. I O I c.
Senatorial Diet
Beae Balktla
Oh correspondent recently
suggested The Bulletin was fit
material for a congressional in-
vestleation because we are
against the tactics followed by
Senator McCarthy.
The same person gave ua hell
because we occasionally question
tome of the statements of Sena
tor Morse.
We didnt know it was possi
ble to be for both of the good
senators at the same time.
But on looking over our edi
torials for the past few months
we realize we've been getting
sort of weighty on the subject
of senators.
So we're going on a senatorial
diet, and aren't aoing to mention
either of the gntlemen oftener
than once a week in the future.
Salem 14 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
i January 4, 1M
President Roosevelt had asked
Congress to slash farm relief and
public works spending in a budg
et message requesting wu.wu,
000 in special defense Uses.
WPA employment by terms of
- Dissident's budget would be
oi
th
presidents budget would be
reduced from 1.850.000 this year.
to an average of 1.350,uuu next
vear. Beginning July 1, 1
had been proposed to spend
300,000 for relief.
German and English seamen, .n .... """" ""'.ended '
engaged in naval combat off Men-; when prediction, an busting out He kicked
tevideo last December 13, 1939 aj over, I shall make my mod-. rubber-toed shoes designed to
were now drinking toasts to one erf cor,tribution and then, in line cause s minimum of pain and an
another in the bars and clubs of , with , wellsUblished praCtice, ger. In calling no names, he
Buenos Aires (A British k ' lbnAy ., ... d.nIer,W out insurance deliberately
force had destroyed the German warn everybody oi me dangers .e,int keine ..ii-j ., '
pocket battleship Admiral Graf and fallacies In making any pre- "Crn Anri he st"l wore
SP'- 1 dictions at all. 1 armor of his immense oonularitv.
Professor W 1 St'lev had died 1 My predictions are: He had aome practical reunns
and hundreds of his former pu- 1. There will be lots of bust- for aticking to his policy of pa
pils who had attended his Cap-'nesa in 1934. - tience, restraint, and mildnrss:
ital Business college during the' 2. The rate of baby produc- with congress so evenly divided
past 50 years were present at his 1 tion will be normal whatever between both parties he'd need
funeral services.
Engineers at Willamette Falls
locks at Oregon City had report
ed the greatest volume of busi
ness since the locks were built 70
years ago. A total of 142.1ZU.00U
board feet of logs, the equivalent
of 17.750 carloads, had passed
through the locks in 1938.
Salem centenial conmmittee
had met to consider a pageant
appropriate for Salem's 100th
anniversary in 1940.
Fred Zimmerman, Capital Jour-
n,i jhuiu niiuii, imu m i ,i ii.i
noisiing tnose luu toot ur poiesi
at George E.' Waters baseball park
1 : 1 ai- : -t j 1
"'r l".e..!y , ". " L...Z
duty truck.
W. R. McKay, born at St. Paul,
Oregon. December 30. 1849. had
I celebrated his OOth birthday.
A WEIGHTY PROBLEM
Bend Bulletin
Having started on our annual
weight-losing diet this morning,
we were wondering on the way
to work why the holiday seasnin
almost always means an extra
five pounds around the Waist-
line. It;s too baw we can't take,ences at all is contained in a re -
the weight off as easily as we
put it on.
White House
lived, along with the reporters
and photographers assigned to
the White House.
Lieberman's b'ackest day was
New Year's Day. One guest, a
man of quite some national dis
tinction, reported indignantly
that his toilet was supplied boun
tifully with hot water, but he
could get nothing but icy water
in his wash basin.
Day Gets Duller
Then a child darted into one
of the rooms, scooped up an
crmtul ot
valuable news cam-
! eras n(' ma'e f with them.
The boy became contrite a few,
hours later and turned over his
j loot t0 Io"' clergyman who
1 luickly telephoned the good '
something done about the
' ',or, Tne "P"10' connected
him with the hotel engineer.
; you to come
here and remove
!
it.'
. J
lillameue f
Walley Dank
BOMS SAVINGS ACCOUNT
interest is paid on Vallcv Bank Bonus Savin o Arm,,nr,
To qualify for this greater interest earning, simply add $5 Of more
each month to your account.
Stirt tkt Niw Vter kf saving systematically .t Salem's km-wnee bank.
Deposits en or before Jos). 10 earn interest from Jan. I.
Ike Must Decide Whether
To Be Liked or Esteemed
By JAMES
Washington OPhr-In his talk to
the nation tonight President Eis
enhower steps across the line dl
Tiding his first and second years
In office and two periods in his
life.
By the calendar his first year
doesnt end until Jan. 20. But
his second year actually begins to
night with his broadcast report
which is preliminary to the re
turn of congress Wednesday.
For Eisenhower 1033 was a
neriod of Dreparation. The pub-
lie, regarding him with high es
teem and patient expectation,
waited while he postponed action
nn anme maior issues and got
ready the program he would hand
congress in 164.
Now the period of performance
begins.
Because of the wide differences
in congress on almost any ma
jor issue, Eisenhower will have to
fight for his program.
Allan Nevins, a historian, in a
nf the adminis -
itration in Nation's Business, a
a-
Vnmo rallOCieS
rear -
SjOf Forecasting
Br RAYMOND MOLEY
.l.. .u- j. k.u
normal may be.
3. The professors will contin-
ue to denounce McCarthy.
4. The campaign for the con -
trol of Congress will be hotly
contested.
5. The Boston Red Sox will
not win the pennant This is
based upon the fact that for a
long time the BRS were regu
larly picked ond did not win.
Now lor an explanation oi my
i technique. As you will see, I am
safe on four of these, so 1 snail.
in any event, be able to claim a
rate of -accuracy of 80 per cen'-
As to the Red Sox. I really stick
o,.t ,t... u.n Biiha,
!" '. pennant or they will not
.v ' "u " "' .L... . :ii
w fi 1 rip npnnani. 11 inev ao noi. i
' shall be the oeerles, nredictor.
If they do, I shall have that nice
soft 80 per cent to fall back upon.
in case anyone wno wants to
adoDt - mv svitem of neerless
prognostication has a tender men-1 "on. oui me oivorce raw went
tality and wants a softer 90 per UP instead of dowa It has been
cent accuracy to fall back upon, repeatedly predicted that im
simply increase the number of I provement in the standard of
predictions i.e., add five sure living would reduce the divorce
things to my list , rate. The standard went up, but
A devastating attack not only so did the divorce rate ... It
on the pretensions of most pre-'has hen predicted that education
dictions in th an-alln in-i.l anH imnrnvcri standards nf liv.
! ences but on the basic assump-
tion that such iWinlin. ....
cently published book which on : livinc than ever before and
my calendar is the book of the j more delinquency than ever be
month, possibly of the year. It is I fore."
"Social Problems and Scientism," I I cannot do better than to
by Professor A. H. Hobbs, of the i end this New Year's message
University of Pennsylvania.
Among me many nooks on the
social studies that I have read
over the years, this ranks near
! the top. As in the caae of many
nooks that represent conserva-l
tive thinking these days, it found ; FRENCHMAN FREED
hard going before a publisher p"s Javques Benoist- Me
was willing to bring it out. And ' cnin- secretary of state in Pierre
as is true of many of the current ! Lava' s Vichy government, has
sound bonks, it ultimately was!0011 Parolled after serving nine
accepted by a small publisher, ! 'ears of 20-year treason sen
the Stackpole Company, of Har-!t'nce-
risDurg, Fa.
Professor Hobbs makes the
most important point that most
of the justifications for radical
revisions of the social order, in
cluding socialistic planning are
on th hai nt hir.hu. ...
dictions.
But when checked later, most
such predictions are found' to ho 1
radi-lgesls that the simple method of
guessing on the turn of a coin
: mieht he heller m- that nf.
sive Bureau of Labor Statistics
of 7,000.000 unemployed in 1949
Monday, January 4, 1954
MA RIO W
magazine published by the United
States ChamDer oi commerce,
nude this remark: .
"Every true national leader has
to take for his motto: 'I do not
wanted to be liked; I want to be
esteemed' Our best administra
tions have been desperately un
popular in wide circles."
He used the administration's
of Lincoln. Cleveland, Wilson and
the two Roosevelt as examples,
and added'
"If President Eisenhower thus
tar has shown a salient weakness,
it is that he wishes too much
to be' liked. In the long run, the
mass of the people admire. a pres
ident most for the enemies he has
made.'
I This
observation may
within bounds,
be sc
but a
' curate
course of action by which a pres
ident makes enemies of the mass
of the people is guaranteed to
make dead ducks of him and his
administration.
The aame state ot political ex-
1 Unction could be arrived at by a
pics.uciu imuugii CAacuy oppos
ite means: by being so anxious
to please everyone that be made
compromises that pleased no one.
So far Eisenhower seem to have
made few, if any, enemies. But
the truth of Nevins' opinion
that Eisenhower wants too much
to be liked will get more of a
: iMt fn ins than in thm vat 4i.f
help from men on both sides to
put his program across.
Moreover, nothing could have
! tarnished his luster so quickly as
'a few cat and dog fights with a
politician.
It'i possible he can pursue that
policy through the four years of
his administration, get his pro
gram through as he wants it,
make no enemies, and have to
endure no personal attacks. But
j it isn't likelv.
' is well remembered.
I In the more immature social
studies, such as sociology, "the
rccorn is isnustic. rroiessor
Hohhs points out several
ex
rmples. of which the following
are typical
"Social scientirts have pre
dicted that increased education
would reduce the divorce rate.
We have the increased edura
ina would reduce delinquencv.
h.n- more education than
i ever before, higher standards of
with the suggestion that the
Hobbs' book is an excellent way
to gain measurable immunity
acainst the claims of fraudulent
I prophets.
PRINTING . . .
for Quality Work and
SpeedT Service
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1954. . .
990 Pif9f4i lootf
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