Salei". Oregon', Wednesday, January 16, 195? ' THE CAPITATJ TOURNAD Section I Page 3 Syracuse Fire Razes Church, Printing Plant 2nd Methodist Church, 2 Other Buildings Damaged .YRACUSE, N Y. Uft-Fire last iCht UTPflcpri tho hn.d mauifuai ii-ia church of the Central New York Aicinodist Conference and a near by publishing plant. A second church and two other DUiiaings were damaged. The fire raged out of control in a down town block for four hours. Hre Chief Francis R. Ferren said. There have been too many oi mese cnurch fires for us to chalk them off as accidental." He ordered an investigation. Fire officials said they thought the fire started in the boiler room ol the hirst Methodist Church, which was gutted. One wall collapsed. Also wrecked was a building that housed the international headquarters and the publishing association o the Wesleyan Meth odist Church of America, which is separate from the main Metho dist denomination. B. Churchill Loveland. presi dent of the board of trustees of the First Methodist Church, esti mated loss of that structure at $700,000. it was built in 1904. Damage to other structures was not known. The Wesleyan Methodist Church was damaged slightly by fire and more extensively by water. The two-story, brick publishing house was between the two churches. Also contained in the triangu lar block were the two office buildings that were damaged. Both were two-story, brick struc. tures. One houses Onondaga Coun ty Public Works Department of fices. Three firemen were hurt, none seriously, fighting the fires in subzero temperatures. THIS IS THE MIDDLE EAST II How Can U.S. Head Off Red Subversion in Arab World? Queen Mary's Brother Dies LONDON W-The Earl of Ath lone, great-uncle of Queen Eliza beth II, died today at Kensington Palace. He was 82. He had been in failing health for some time. The earl was a younger brother of the late Queen Mary, wife of Britain's King George V. Born Prince Alexander Augustus Fred erick William Alfred George of Tcck in 1874, he became the first Earl of Athlone and Viscount Tre- maton when titles of German ori gin were abolished in Britain in 1917. By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst Two world wars started in places few Americans knew about. It was Sarajevo id 1914, Danzig in 1939. World War III might start in some unheard of dusty outpost of the Middle East. The Eisenhower Doctrine says the United States will fight any Communist-led invasions of the Middle East. But will the United States fight to save the Middle East from communism? That fight is much more difficult. The Russians already are attack ing one of the Arab Worlds. The Communists care little for the world of the Arab leaders. They are more interested in the world of the Arab people, and particular ly that small world of educated Arabs whose pent-up bitterness against the West makes them in viting targets. The Arabs themselves are hope lessly divided on virtually every question except common enmity for Israel. They are highly vul nerable to the sort of indirect attack Communists use. Even on the question of Israel there is no real agreement. Many Arabs would like to turn their backs on the problem and devote themselves to trying to bring about some measure of stability in their world. Israeli leaders I have inter viewed say they would gratefully welcome such an attitude. They too say they believe only stabil ity among the Arabs, in govern ments and economies, offers any chance of peace. But in the Arab East there is a desperate poverty of leadership. Much of it is leadership by dem agogucry. Arab politicians can arouse passions over the Israeli issue, and this is an invitation to political power. For many reasons, Soviet armed attack in the Middle East seems unlikely. But the Commu nist world covets the Middle East not for the oil so much as to deny that vital commodity to the economies of Western Europe. If that could be accomplished, the Communist job in the West would be easier. This is what the Middle East Is like today: Iraq A nation of about five million people, 90 per cent illit-l erate, a third nomadic. Rich in resources oil, minerals and above all the precious water of the Tigris and Euphrates. A forward-looking program using oil money is reclaiming long-neglected land. But the program is long range, and the lot of the average Iraqi remains a sorry one. Per capita income is $85 a year. The government of Premier Nuri Said, now 68, is called the West's best friend in the Arab East. But most literate Iraqis are against it. Fourteen times prenv r. Said remains a virtual dictator mostly because of the lack of any other responsible leadership. If anything happened to him, Communists surely would try to fill the void but not by military means. The Tudeh (Com munist! party of neighboring Iran, strong in numbers, is ready to infiltrate. Syria This country of four million is dominated by its army intelligence section, whose leaders are pro-Soviet, but not pro-Communist. The Russians are supply ing Syria with significant amounts of arms. Officially outlawed, the Syrian Communist party operates openly and wields influence through its wily leader, Khaled Bagdash, a member of the Kurd minority. The regime is at sword's point with neighboring Iraq. Syria's economy is rocky. The Soviet approach again would not be military aggression, but gradual attrition to break down Syrian resistance. Syria still has many people who worry about Communist inten tions and look westward for ave nues of salvation. Jordan The future of this little nation of U4 millions a million of whom can consider they owe no allegiance to young King Hussein is shaky. The late King Abdullah annexed that part of Palestine not taken by Israel after the Arab-Israeli war, and annexed a headache. A million Palestin ians, many of them educated, now dominate the nation. Jordan, seemingly headed for disintegra tion, may become the object of s Syrian-Iraqi clash. Saudi Arabia King Saud seems worried. Like other Arab rulers, he faces a youthful rest lessness characteristic of the whole area. His economy depends wholly on oil dollars. Lebanon A little country of 14 millions, half Christian and half Moslem, Lebanon often seems to an outsider an oasis of sense in an illogical world. The Lebanese have a thriving econo my. They are subject to pressures from Syria and Egypt, but have resisted the pressure. The govern ment, backed by a small but ably commanded army of about 7,000, remains a staunch mend of the West and a possible bridge be tween West and Middle East. Yemen This feudal country of 4'i millions provides a quick test for the Eisenhower Doctrine. The Yemen, a feudal monarchy ruled by its Imam, has conclud ed a deal with Russia for arms to use against the British in the neighboring Aden protectorate. Nothing in the Eisenhower Doc trine seems aimed at stopping this sort of penetration. Egypt Israelis and Western ers alike said they had g reat hopes for the Arab world when Egypt's revolution ousted King Farouk in 19o2. Washington en tertained rosy hopes for young Gamal Abdel Nasser, who took over as premier in 1934 and later made himself president. The young officers announced a plan ning program which someday might rescue the fellaheen the unshod, unwashed and disease ridden peasantry from their eternal misery. But event! Interrupted (he dream. Nasser, claiming desper ate need to defend Egypt from Israel, got from Russia the arms he could not get from the West. Nasser today is more a hero to IGA HAS MOVED! SEE OUR ADVERTISEMENT THURSDAY -FRIDAY FOR. EXTRA SPECIAL FOOD VALUES! "You Get More At IGA" the Arabs than ever before, after the fiasco of the British-French invasion following Israel's attack. But Egypt has vast economic problems. Her leaders seem wor ried at the extent to which her economy is being tied to the Com munist bloc. Israel Created In 1948 when Britain left Palestine, Israel showed the world what Western know how and determination could do with hostile soil. While her victorious army stood guard, pioneers made desert areas bloom and built a modern nation in the heart of a backward world. Hemmed into a tiny strip of land and surrounded by hostile nations, her economy still de pends on goods imported from abroad. Israel always Is In danger of runaway inflation. Her policy of immigration and program of pub lie health indicate her population, now less than two million, even tually will be too big for her ter ritory. She needs Jordan River water to open up new land in the Negeb Desert, "Syria says it will mean war if the Jordan is divert ed. Meanwhile, Arabs fear Is rael's natural growth will push her. Tomorrow: What the Arabs are asking about the Elsenhower Doctrine. Dallas Blood Day Keport Is Given DALLAS (Special) Twenty eight pints more of blood than the previous time was received when the Red Cross bloodmobile visited Dallas last week, Loren Seibert, blood program chairman, reports. Twelve donors gave their first blood to the Red Cross program, 19 had given a gallon or more. Gillam Is Injured While on Ski Trip SMITHFIELD (Special) Ross Gillam required seven stitches for cut on his leg in skiing acci dent while skiing at Mt. Hood. Becky Brown from California Is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Airs. Hardin Smith. Harold Smith is improved and will return from the hospital soooj. Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No longer ba annoyed or feel 11) it eiksa because of loose, wobbly falM teeth. 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According to the board, only 87 per cent of the 4.545 freshmen in Oregon colleges would have been admitted under the C rating class ification had the plan been in ef fect last fall. Another fi per cent would have been eligible under one of the alternate plans. But the remaining 7 per cent, some 318 Oregon high school graduates, ' would have been ineligible. Record enrollments which have overcrowded the slate's colleges recent years resulted in the plan, drafted for the board by a committee from the staffs of all state schools. Requirements were tightened In 1955 for out-of-state students. They now must have been in the upper 50 per cent of their high school classes to gain college ad mission. me report lor uregon students did not say when it might be ef fective. That will be up to the Board of Higher Education if it approves the plan. But Chancel-: lor John R. Richards some time ago said enrollment limitations should be in effect next fall. Helps Heal And Clear Itchy Skin Rash! 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