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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1957)
Page 4 Section 1 Capital AJournal An Independent Newspaper Established 1888 BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus Published every afternoon except Sunday at 280 North Church St. Phone EM-468M TuU Leased Wire Service of The Asunriated Pren and The United Press. The Associated Press n exclusively entitled to the use for pub Ucation at all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and alto newt published therein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier: Monthly, 11.23; Six Mnnths, f7.Mi; One Vrar, flVOft. By mall In Oregon: Monthly. 11.00; Six Month, 5 UU; One Year, 19.00. By mall Outside Oregon: Monthly f 1.25; Six Months, 97.30; one Vear, 115.00. The Filibuster Dies Hard Reform of the ancient Senate rules will come hard. A dcler ; mined attempt was made by a coalition of members of both ; parties to change the rules to make it harder for a minority to filibuster. But when the vote was taken they failed, 55-38. The party division was very close and among the leaders there was division too, Nixon supporting the filibuster foes, though he got no vote, Knowland opposing the change, as did the Senate's Democratic leader, Johnson. To most people civil rights was the big question, but to sena tors much more was involved. Kvery senator could remember when he'd been in the minority and most of them had filibus , tcred or sympathized with a filibuster. It might happen again. Some raised the point that tho majority is not always right, which is true, and that it is ofen against public interest for a domineering majority to ram legislation down the throats of opponents who may tomorrow be a majority. The obstacle encountered in hamstringing the filibuster ; right suggests that abolition of another hoary old Senate rule, ; that the oldest member In service in the majority party be the committee chairmen will also come hard. Our congress is about ' the only Institution left on earth that chooses leaders by their age, but political longevity is the sure way to power in con gress and members are reluctant to destroy it. After all, one may get to be a chairman that way himself. ; Both the filibuster and the seniority method of picking com ' mittce heads are outmoded and should be abolished. The more progressive senators should not quit because of this rebuff. Eventually they will prevail. Time's Man of llic Year Time Magazine's "Man of the Year," is an appealing selection ; which millions of persons, snmo outside the United States, i await with keen interest as the year ends. ; Usually Timo picks a particular man, not always an Amerl .' can. Stalin, Hitler and Churchill were winners, as were our own Roosevelt, Marshall and Eisenhower. But sometimes a symbol is named and this was done for 1956, when the free dom fighter of Hungary was accorded the honor. The right eousness of this award can hardly be disputed, for these brave men probably changed the history of the world by their sacri fices. Suppose an individual had been named? Who most rated the distinction of having most influenced events? His influence need not have been helpful. Stalin and Hitler weren't when they won. President Eisenhower could well have been named, for lie reached a new high in world wide acceptance as the leader of the whole free world. However he had been named before and Time docs not like "repeaters." Nasser of Egypt had as much Influence as anyone, for he provoked tho Suez crisis t hat was the worst diplomatic mess of the year, which could still create a great war at the year's end. Nobody came to the front In Russia. AH the big leaders there Buffered reverses. Probably Anthony Eden's prestige fell the farthest of any of the great national loaders. If Time didn't want to repeat with Ike or "honor" Nasser the Hungarian free dom fighter probably was Its best possible choice. Knowland Springs a Surprise Senator Knowland's announcement that he will not seek re-election in 1958 appears to have taken everyone by surprise and left many wondering what tho energetic Californian in tends to do. Ho might be planning to retire from politics, but few will believe that. Most probablo is that Knowland will run for governor of California next year. "Goody" Knight, the present incumbent, hasn't done too well and may not be able to win re election if he seeks it. Knowland is probably unbeatable in California. If ho becomes governor ho can then run for president in 19ii0 with every chance to gain a tight grip on tho California delegation against Nixon, or he can give up further thought of political advancement. After all, governor of California is , honor enough even for the most ambitious man. And if he eleps aside for Nixon he can probably have his choice of the cabinet positions if Nixon is elected. Further, retirement from the Senate two years before the end of President Eisenhower's term will relieve tho senator of the necessity of fighting the administration in order lo pro mote his candidacy against Nixon, who is becoming mure and more evident as the president's choice. Even if Knowland is secretly planning to quit politics he will not bo idle. His family owns the Oakland Tribune and bis father is now 83. In fact any way you look at it, Bill Know land's future looks all right. Ike Didn't Purge Herman Joe McCarthy broke his unnatural silence the other day with a blast at President Eisenhower, whom he accused of purging his friend, Senator Wclker of Idaho. If McCarthy would tune around Idaho a little, be would soon learn how wrong he is. Idahoans felt so strongly about Welkor : that what Eisenhower, McCarthy or anyone else outside the stale thought would have changed hardly a vole. "Aflcr all. what can lie tell us about Herman'.'" would be the typical re action, if Eisenhower had intervened, which he didn't beyond the perfunctory statement that he favored the senator's re election. This was nunc than the senator had done for most o( Ike's measures. Wclker was defeated because his people didn't want him ' any more. If the people o( Wisconsin feel the same way about their junior senator, fear of which may be what is presently biting him, nothing Eisenhower or anyone else can say will make any difference. The people of any state know or feel that they know- their senators belter than anyone else. Little can be done by even a very popular president to chance this, as both Roosevelt and Eisenhower repeatedly discovered. A (ood Official Kexigns In the only state that lias a one-man public utility commis sion Charles H. Ileltel, who has held the office in Oregon for five years and who resigned Monday, has done a good job. ' As the man in the middle between the utilities and the peo ple his decisions have drawn remarkably little criticism from either side. The law gives right of appeal from his decisions to the courts, but we recall no order that he lias signed that has been challenged in court. ; Ileltzel has been called upon to adjudicate several important ; rate cases in a time of rising operative costs and be must have been faced with many a knotty problem to give the utility a fair rale of return and at the same time keep the monthly Utility bills of consumers from Ivme too burdensome. This 1 he succeeded in doing, to a remarkable degree. ! If Hcltrrl is ever again willing to sacrifice a more lucrative law practice for public office we suggest he is good material for a future high judgeship. The Mayflower thcnlr in Vmg ha Ju "clvod for tet," jfln poor crowds or.d fw food fJms This baws ml? one 4$WArfe in tMfwie tind one In Springfield, toaapnrvd th ftae .frftfjifn 1V.n" A runt ini1ivtr J limnn trv h-.iri Tvo ' SSSmm m 10 pu- frr 1tt,n' long Wl want I'm t f -Midi $m POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Hal Comes Up With Odd Facts Ahout Almost Everything By HAL NEW YORK Ifl - Things a col umnist might never know if he didn't open his mail: That Jayne Mansfield, Holly wood's greatest natural acting talent since- Lassie, sleeps in a king size bed covered wilh black silk .sheets. ..nut doesn't every body? That new generations of the boll weevil are getting M resistant to DTT it no longer gives them Hie DT's. . . proving that one in sect's poison is another insect's mouthwash. That the new 17 million dollar Americans Hotel in Miami Beach is lo luxurious. . . so help us. it has wall-to-wall carpeting even in the bathrooms, That there are now 70 million car, bus and truck drivers in the United States. . . This leaves only 99 million pedestrains to leap out of their way. That the blouses worn by Edith Adams as Daisy Mae. homespun heroine of the Broadway musical. L'l Abner, cost more than $100 each. That paintings left by ancient cavemen on their indoor walls indicate they preferred their women fat, a beauty ideal still held by some native tribes. That expectant fathers oflen suffer such psychosomatic ail ments as headaches, dizziness and stomach upsets. Tli.it Dr. Frank S. Caprio. n Washington. D. C, psychiatrist . says "infidelity is closely allied with excessive drinkinc" . , . The W.C.T.D. has been saying this for decades. That each cubic mile of sea water contains 4.500,000 tons of magnesium. That atomic healing of factories. office buildings nnd other large structures eventually wm n c 1 p solve the smog problem . . looking for Ike Sounds Like He Has lost Confidence in U.N.'s Power Hy I.YI-K C. WUJiON 1' idled tvk staff Correspondent The United Nations can always be the language in the speech and tnin ntprnational peace and se WASlllNilTON IT' President , helpful, but it cannot be n wholly th.it in the resolution. It's the curit'; MMsures taken by mom Kisenhower's explanation of his ; dependable protector of freedom . liincuace in the resolution which rs 'n exercise of this right new Middle hast docinne reaus like a slalemenl of failing confi dence in the United Nations as a protector of world peace. That's a new tune. The President's message to Con gress outlining the doctrine was heavy with pledges to act within the framework of the United Na tions, lieluinee upon the United Nations appeared, however, to be more lip .service than real. ( Mr I-iM-nlunvcr reviewed recent U N el forts to deal with the So- vie- Union's invasion of Hungary! and telt compelled to report lo Congress that in light of events in Hungary the United Nations is not a dependable protector of world peace not. that is. when Communism is the aggressor. Kremlin Knjoys Veto Mom'ow enjoys a built-in veto to preent UN. Security Council nc- for blank check authority to make Council. The United States and asked, -Can vou identify vour tion against any commotion m hot war m that area and upon Russia both wanted the veto solr" " ' which the Kremlins men may choose to engage I he Security Council's muck action against Communist aggression in Korea in June ot was a lucky fluke. The Russian council member had abandoned the council and had no opportunity to veto organisation of a U N. military command for Ko- re a The Sonet Union was present and voting, however, when the Se- curity Council sought to require it ithdr.iwaJ vi lUssno .o ined traro fYirm Hungary Having c rd fhui fra;rif in fai in hi daci' c me.. Mr. Fcnnorrcr jnrt U ihur y "And U 'he Soviet tftioU has shown cauVut ir&ffftrftce U tv I rrcpmnaifr.!iitOfft, vo ttw cen-, an Old Cowhand BOYLE Los Angeles can locate it by ra dar. That Japan is the only country where pearls have been success fully cultivated. (In America men who can afford to buy a girl pearls are cultivated even more successfully.) That although former President Truman was photographed sever al times holding up fish while in office, the Fisherman's magazine raises this burning political issue: "Did he actually catch any of them himself?" . . . Well, HST. how about it? . . We pause for reply. That lobsters have sex just like most everything else . . . There are hen lobsters and cock lobsters . . . Anyone seeking further in formation on this vital subject is hereby referred to the Fulton Fish Market. That Kate Smith, who never took a singing lesson in her life. once aspired to a career in opera . . . cave ll up on me anvice oi Leopold Stokowski. That a medical survey showed a trend among doctors of all types to reduce their cigarette smoking. That a lawyer named John C. Argue has been admitted to the California state bar. That prosperity may make peo ple even more jittery than pov erty . . . Else why did U.S. physi cians write 3T million proserin- . . , j i , tionsfor tranquihzing drugs last yclr? .,a-.fc- i- null I. : )iiiiii!iit i suited tnem. Sanlayana who observed. "The Thanks to one of those loop young man who has not wept is: holes, Eisenhower was able to a savage, and the old man wnom,ike the proposition he laid be- will not laugh is a fool.' IW n VWv Driver .. "J". "" " . u.x.i I... w mi .n.pmu.m huih to make, don l trv to dc sum e or ; clever. Use n pile driver. Hit the i point once. Then ennie back nnrti .hit it again. Then hit it a third ; time a tremendous whack. ! sure, of the General Assembly. wnen me amnuions oi me m ici Union are involved. "Under all the circumstances 1 have laid before you. a greater responsibility now devr'vrs ipon the United States. Vein Power Crippling mere 11 is in snmp w-oun words: The Soviet Union veto pow- er nas made tne l nited .Nations undependable as the protector of world peace. Therefore, the United States must assume greater re - sponsibilities. The responsibilities in this in- stance involve the possibility of a hot war in which the United .states, with such allies as might pitch in on their own. would op - pose the armed might of the So - iviet Union in the Middle Kast, ( Mr. Eisenhower's Saturday mes - sage to Congress was a request mat potential enemy without fur- ther reference to Congress. Money Cost Huh There is no knowing whether the ; United States eer will have to make good on the hot war phase of tne Eisenhower doctrine, The money phase of the doc- trine. howeer, already is in the planning stage. The one certain factor in the new doctrine is that it will cost a lot of money. The down payment will be ftoo m-1- lion, plus whatever may he spent from available funds during the remainder of the current fiscal year. o ' That means that taxes will re- main where they are for a lone time to come, probably as long as two or three ) cars. THE CAPITAL' JOURNAL' Debutante in Babylon Newsweek History is anything but precise as to the identity of the first debutante, but Herodotus, antici pating the first society reporter, notes an affair in Babylonia which might easily qualify as one of the earliest coming-out parties: "Those who had marriageable daughters used to bring them once a year to a place where a great number of men gathered around them. "A public crier made Ihcm stand up and sold them all. one, alter another. He began with the , most beautiful and having got a ' large sum for her he put up the second fairest. But he only sold them on condition that the buyers marry them." Marlow Thinks Ike's Plan Would Circumvent the U. N. By JAMES MARI.OW each to block the other in a tough Associated Press News Analyst situation, or to try to. For ex WASH1NGTON Wl-Wherc does ample: President Eisenhower's plan for sending American forces into the Middle East to stop a Com munist attack leave the United Nations? About where it was be fore. Tho U. N. will work only so long as its two biggest members, the United States and Russia, want it to work. Because they don't trust each other, and didn't when they creat- it could veto a request hv Kiscn ed the I'. N. almost 12 years ago, hower to approve his use of Amer- "" - .......... ........ irnl loopholes to let them maneu-! !vcr prc"y freoly '"' fore Congress and still maintain he was acting within the spirit and meaning of the V. N. Jfe asked Congress for advance authority to use. when he wished. , Amril,.in nrm.j itl m . : t . ::":.: , :Vl"a;p r'J-sl l" ncin ' T , T ' , V 1 "'" ,-V", l,mmi- UUIIMU,UU u international communism. J??? X '""LJl ',!!!'! impair the inherent right of ways: first, with a personal plea inrii..iHll . , th, m1H k ,fc. to ( engross last Saturday; second. ,.:, A . n .- j with a carefully worded resolution' J 1 i7 ul r prepared by his aides. It s notlnJ ,lha could bf ?e lm ed the speech, but the resolution. I Stte a,ndJ JT, C0Untr5, which he akcd Conqress to ap - tprove , The'rP rfiifWonrA h.Mun , counts because, when Concress 'approves the resolution, that be- , comes the formal policy of the 1 covernment In his address Eisenhower said: any use he made of American for eon would he "snhioet to I hp overriding nuthintv" of the V. N. Security Council. What does that me:in" Nnthine if von then eo on ( rcnd the wording of the reso - jution: - if an emergency arose and Ki- senhower sent troops into the Mid-! d,. Kast. he would nottfy the Se- i cuntv Council "immediate.v.' In short, what he would really do is net first and tell the council about j 1 it later. f The reason, from Eisenhower's (standpoint, ts understandable. The 1 big powers have a veto over each other's actions in the Secuntv in the charter. It was the crowning mark of their mutual distrust It enables ' 444 STATE ST. Inaugural Joh Falls Squarelv On Ike's Staff By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer WASHINGTON UP) Back stairs at the White House: This is really the first time the staff of President Eisenhower has felt the full brunt of an inaugura- lion. j In 1953. the Eisenhower adminis-1 tration was taking office for the , first time and the bulk of the in auguration planning was done by an outside committee. This year the Eisenhower staff is confronted with many more problems than in 1953. One of these hinges on the fact that a president's staff increases consid erably after four years in office. At the time of his first inaugura tion, .Mr. Eisenhower had really not developed a staff of any con siderable proportions. Now his staff runs into the hundreds of men and women, ail of whom ex pect tickets for the inaugural pa rade on Jan. 21 ana, wnenevcr possible, a chance to attend one of the four inaugural balls. The inaugural committee on the other hand wants to sell as many tickets as possible rather than pass out free ones in order to meet the expenses of the lavish ceremonies which run over a per iod of three days. Thus, it becomes inevitable that some people, even though close to the White House, must pay to sec the parade. There just are not that many free seats available. Another big headache for top members of the White House staff is the daily load of mail and tele phone calls from administration friends who are perfectly willing to pay for tickets, but want "good seats." By "good seats," most of these friends really mean that they would like to watch the in augural parade virtually in the President's lap. They, too. arc doomed to a certain degree of dis appointment because the presiden tial reviewing stand for the big parade will hold less than 200 per sons. Mr. Eisenhower had better fig ure out some way of getting a long nap on inauguration day be cause he will be up rather late that night. He and Mrs. Eisenhower will drop in at all four inaugural balls. They won't start out until rather late, probahly arouna iumu p.m. Theoretically, the Eisenhowers won't spend much more than 20 minutes at each hall, but only the incurable optimists believe it will be possible to stick to this sched ule once the Eisenhowers arrive at a place and are engulfed by friends and well wishers. Suppose a Communis-dominat- ed nation attacked an Arab coun try which asked American help. Suppose then if. instead of re sponding at once, Eisenhower went before the Security Council and said: "I think the council should authorize joint action by the whole U. N. to stop this ag gression Russia could veto that, just as . iirtn nines nt-iurc lie st-iu iiit-iu into battle But if he used the forces first and told the council later, it would make no difference what Russia did then. But doesn't the U. N Charter in some way require its members to go through the international or ganization before taking military action, even in an emergency? No. There's a loophole for that too. Once again the United States and Itussia showed their suspicion anu missia sno other by building this , loophole, called Article 51, into the , charter. It says 'V..tVin in K t 1 : 7 ' "5 BVip an 8 , j attack occurs against a member of ,ho ln'1 Nations, to main- oi scu-oeicnse shall be imme diately reported to the Security Council and shall not in any way affect the authority and responsi bility of the Security Council un der the present charter to take at any time such action as it deems necessary in order to maintain or I rrstnro international peace and security 1 That brings up another loophole, .If. after sending American forces into battle. Eisenhower ntifiw! the Security Council and Russia tried to get this country to pull back, the United States could veto that at. Yes, She Could Boston Globe A pretty young th-.nc tried to p.mh a rhr.k .it a h.inl- .-and u:, She irmned.atelv whipped out a mirror, looked into it and said, "Yup. that's me." PHONE EM-3-S528 Ike Now Seeks What Woodrow Wilson Sought 38 Years Ago By DAVID LAWRENCE . . . : I... Inln Thft WASHINGTON. Jan. 7 The I Eisenhower doctrine represents a distinct advance toward we pre vention of world war. It is a great step forward for the present. But someday af ter the pending resolution is passed there could be an extension of its main prin ciple and then t h e Woodrow Wilnn Doctrine would at last be accepted in its entirety as the cornerstone of permanent peace in the world. Thirty-eight years ago next month this correspondent listened at Paris when President Wilson told the gathering of allied govern ments there that a League of .Na tions must be formed to protect weaker nations against external aggression. John Foster Dulles was present as an adviser and attache of the American delega tion. Later that year as President Wilson traveled across the United States, this writer heard him de clare again and again in h i speeches that Article Ten of the charter of The League of Nations was the "Heart" of the problem of world peace. The wording of Article Ten was prophetic. It stipulated that the members of The League must agree "to respect and preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity and political independence of all nations." This riter watched in 1319 the Republican party in the senate at first sympathetic but later on partisanly pressing the destructive "reservations" that killed the pro- Salem 19 Yrs. Ago Postmaster Henry R. Crawford had opened a copper box in the cornerstone of Salem's old post office and found the contents bad ly damaged by water. (Corner stone for Salem's old post office was laid by the IOOF May 30, 1901. The structure is now Willa mette university law school). Milton A. Miller, 76, U.S. col lector of customs and prominent Oregon Democrat, had died. Mil ler, a picturesque figure in a wide- hrimmed hat and a black bow tie, was an authority on the history of Oregon and served three terms as mayor of Lebanon. Busick's 19 years ago, had ad vertised these brands of coffee for 25 cents a pound: Hill Bros., Golden West, MJB, Maxwell House and Si W. Formal opening of the new Scv enth Day Adventist church at North Summer and Hood streets was set for this Saturday in 1938. Secretary of State Earl Snell and State Treasurer Rufas Hoi man had said that Governor Mar tin needn't feci bad because he didn't get an office shower in the new eapitol. The governor, they pointed out, had been given a $15, 000 private elevator while they had to go down the hall to a public rest room. Compulsory premartial medical examinations for the control o f syphilis loomed as an important political question at the next state election. Kesters Golden Moment Albany Democrat-Herald Life isn't overburdened with eolden moments. Hut Randall Kester of Portland : must have felt a surge of high pleasure this week when he took ; his seat as a justice of the State I Supreme court. j It was Kester. we recall, who a year ago did what wise attorneys ! are not supposed to do. Without any personal interests at stake, he told them thev were off base. I In fact, he brought suit pointing (out that the Supreme court was ! unconstitutional in hiring circuit judges part time to help out with the backlog of cases, i While other attorneys were tell ing Kester that this was no way to get along in the profession, the Supreme court granted Kester'6 point and ruled itself wrong. Rath ! er than incurring enmity, Kester brought respect. SOLA. Vt Easy t0 "aid l0" 1 Insured safety MrmttA, up to $10,000 Wi mji 1 gj. "SAVE where saving PAYS" ffflp Current Hate 3 per annum F Klin' ii wri'iii '9 Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, January 8, 1957 posal lor -American u League of Nations which so many of us were enthusiastically sup porting. Today many Democratic party members of congress, some of whom during the past year the centennial of the birth of Woodrow Wilson have Dcen m a k i n g tnoerhes extolling him as a great leader in world policy are begin ning to behave line tne itepuunc ans of the old days. There is, for instance, evident in the Democrat ic National Committee's statement the same spirit of captious criti cism and quibbling that the Re publicans exhibited in 1919. It may be that the Democrats for partisan reasons will try to block the way now toward what they ought them selves to be advocating an ex tension of the Eisenhower Doctrine to include resistance against ag gression from any quarter. For the President some day may be willing to broaden the guaran tee he now is asking congress to give so it will eventually apply against all kinds of aggression and not just Communist aggression. It is obvious that peace in tne Mid dle East will never be attained un til some outside force or influence either the United Nations or a group of the major powers acting alliance witn tne uniico States is exerted to employ force, if necessary, to guarantee that the boundaries of each coun try in Asia and Africa, when fixed by international agreement, shall be "respected and preserved" against any form of external ag gression. It is plain to see that if such a broad guarantee had been em bedded in the United Nations charter or were included some day in the Eisenhower Doctrine there would be justification for an international examination of t h e problem of Hungary and the use of military force to make secure the political independence of that country now enslaved by the Soviets. It would, indeed, open the way to the unification of East and West Germany by enabling the people there in free elections to decide if they wish to be united under a government of their own. Would this involve war? Not if the intent of the major powers were clearly laid down in advance a warning. It is the failure of the United States and partic ularly of congress to make clear America's intentions ahead of time which has Been responsible for the subsequent involvement of Amer ica in two world wars. Those mem bers of the senate on the Demo cratic side, for instance, who to day are saying that the President already possesses the authority he has asked for to deal with the Middle East situation are dodging the issue and would throw the whole thing again into Uie realm of uncertainty the very circum stance that causes a would-be-aggressor to miscalculate and to mis construe hesitation for American unwillingness to act. After the League of Nations covenant was defeated in the sen FUNERAL "Salem's Pioneer Funeral Home" Established 1878 Need for Economy Will Never Deprive Anyone of the Dignity and Sacred Simplicity of Our Services Salem's Largest Funeral Parking Facilities Advance Inquiry Invited EM 3-9139 LOUGH 205 S. CHURCH AT FERRY rirst rederal savings And Loan Association CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN LOCATION ate in 1919 by Republicans they felt somewhat guilty in liter years and came up with the Kel-l'ogg-Briand Treaties in 1928 which implied that the signatory poweri would come 10 me aiu oi mo victims of aggression." But this was never spelled out by the Re publican administration. Likewise when President Roosevelt. Demo crat, came into power he, too, between 1933 and 1939, refused to be explicit and to announce what the United States would do in the event of aggression. So when Hit ler moved into the Rhineland in 1936 and later into Austria and Czechoslovakia, there was no al liance of powers to check his grow ing aggression which finally led in 1939 to World War II. By approving the Eisenhower resolution now for the Middle East, the precedent is established for' the adoption of similar resolutions at a later date protecting other parts of the world, particularly Eastern Europe, against all forms of aggression. Self-determination through free elections still is the greatest right that can be be stowed on any people, but this right is empty without a guaran tee' against the threat of an ex ternal aggressor. What does a new TV set have to do with "Bank Plan" auto financing? It could have a lot to do with it! Reporti ihow many car buyara hava saved enough for a new TV aet with Stat Farm'a "Bank Plan" of low-coat financing and insurance. Find out bout tba "Bank Plan' . . . befora you buy your next car. It ttp ( kaov par STATE FARM AHt "SI" 01S0N 626 N. 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