50 '57 '58 J59 '60 ''nit llll A 'jiirt, Inc. 'Watch How She Takes This Hill" Observer, La Grande, Ore., Mon., April 6, 1959 Page 4 ' EDITORIAL PAGE LA GRANDE OBSERVER "A Modern Newspaper With The Pioneer Spirit" Published liy ttio La Ornmlu 1'ti 111 inIi I nic Conipfiny Hohfrl W. Chandler. President J. 11. MuCli-lland, Jr., Vlro I'ronlilclit RILEY D. ALLEN (ii:01((iK S. UIAI.LIS II. I'lIIIJSY TOM HUMES , Publisher Adv. Director Managing Editor Circulation Mgr. Born 20 Years Too Late Our Eastern Oregon neighbor, the Mak er Democrat-Herald, comments on a re cent timber sale in tho Wallowa-Whitman National Forest and voices a fear that tim ber in the forest will go to an ont-of-the-, area lumber company. The Baker newspaper fears the interest expressed by the Boise-Cascade company, an Idaho firm, in a recent sale, in which the Idaho firm was outbid. The Baker daily notes that even with liuj closing of the Pondosa operation of La Grande's Mt. Emily Lumber Company the milling capacity of the Wallowa-Whitman forest "is at least 25 per cent over tho volume of growth." These are facts, of course. But this area fares no worse than other Eastern Oregon areas excepting the Burns-llines locality in this regard. Over-installation of mill ing capacity is common throughout the west and has led to the continuous running fight on the part of some logging inter ests with the U.S. Forest Service. But, our Baker collogue has suggested a solution to this problem. "II is the opinion of the Democrat-Herald that in the case of a forest such as the Wallowa-Whitman, where the growth and normal cut are out of balance, that it would serve the best interests of tho geo graphical and economic area lying within or contiguous to the boundaries of the for est as well as the national government to impose some type of restriction favoring established mills within the area over those outside it." This is quite a mouthful. It means that outside biddcr.s should be kept from bid ding in future -Forest Service sales in the area. It's also quite an idea. The only trouble is that our Baker colleague is 20 or more years late in suggesting it. A law allowing just what the Baker newspaper suggests was passed by Con gress a number of years ago. But the present administration of the Forest Service refuses to . schedule the necessary hearings to allow establishment of the "sustained yield units" which can be set up under the law. If it could, the USl'S would do away with the few sus tained yield units now in operation. And we're not sure the Forest Service is wrong. The' sustained yield units have had the effect of lessening bidding competition on Forcsl Service timber sales in their areas and lowering the price received for stump age. Much as there have been times when we'd like to see the sustained yield unit or some version of it enforced in other com munities, we are being practical when we note that it is a dead issue. The Baker daily had better come up with some other solution to the problem of outside bidding on the Wallowa-Whitman. It's idea of (he other day came about 20 years too Into. Looking Out For The Wrong Party . When members of the Oregon State Bar passed the lawyers' indentinity pro posal at their convention a few months ago the move was hailed as a forward-, looking step. The proposal was that each lawyer in Ihe state pay $15 annually to build up a fund to reimburse clients bilked by the oc casional bad egg among lawyers. The plan would cost the taxpayers noth ing, but under the peculiar form of self government enjoyed by the lawyers, the legislature would have to approve the plan: A bill to set the program up was intro duced in the lower House of Oregon's leg islature. It was referred to the House Ju diciary committee, whose members are ' lawyers. This, one would think, would really set the whole tiling up. Since the majority of Ihe state's lawyers favored the proposal, and since it bad been called selfless by al most everyone who had heard of it, the Judiciary committee would recommend its passage right away. But apparently the lawyer members of the committee are more interested in sav ing themselves the $15 the plan would cost them each year than they are in look ing out for the wronged clients of the wrongdoing few. Thai, at least, is the answer which im mediately conies to mind when one won ders about the strange unwillingness of the .ludiciarv committee to report out the bill. He'd Gladly 'Shoot Them' For Us JL Premier Castro of Cuba is still a diffi cult person for Americans to figure out. He is alternately friendly and antagonistic. Sometimes, too, he displays a sense of hu mor. The other day, for example, he said U.S. authorities have asked him to arrest Amer ican gangster gamblers in Cuba. He re plied that he would not only be glad to ar rest them, but be would "shoot them" too, if asked to do so. Then he complained that the U.S. is providing refuge for what he described as "Cuban war criminals." He indicated he would like to trade some gamblers for his own enemies who fled the country. Some might have expected that he sug gest a procedure that would save transpor tation costs we shoot his war criminals and lie shoot our gangsters. Steel Strike Faces Industry By TOM CAMPBELL Editor In Chief, The Iron Age NEW YORK UPI) If we lived and worked in a vacuum there would be no steel labor management hassle this year. And if we were logical in our ac tions there would be little or no chance of a wage increase or a price increase this year. But we don't work in a vacuum and logic is one of the last things that is being used by many labor leaders today. But when was it ever different? There is a 70 30 chance of a long and bitter strike in the steel in dustry this year. Of course there probably won't be one if there is a war on in East Germany. But that should be so obvious that it is not a point in trying to judge ahead of time what the steel labor-management climate will be at midnight June 30. True, the government has called upon both sides for a. settlement that will be non-inflationary. Also. Senator Kefauver will do his best with political overtones to at tempt to scare both sides into an agreement that will, in his eyes, be non-inflationary. But the administration and the senator are but small factors in the coming labor hassle. The rea sons why steelworkers' uniop chief Dave McDonald must get a raise with fringes are many. And the reasons why the steel industry this year must stand up and fight to the bitter end are many too. For the first time since the cel ebrated pension strike in 1949 the immovable will meet the irresist ible this year. Something will give -rand it will be both sides after a strike that this week seems al most certain. The strike is a weapon of the union. There is nonsense in the statement that industry "forces ' a strike. It "takes" a strike and it is not so dumb but that it knows it must think long and seriously before it submits to a strike. Economically there is, according to many steel leaders, nothing lo negotiate this year with steel labor. While this may be a pose on the part of some steel officials, others actually and sincerely believe that to be the case. Their point and it is well taken is that a steel wage raise with more fringe will require a steel price increase. They also argue that steel labor is about the best paid in the country and that more wage increases will only give us more inflation. They also assert the high wage rates are pricing American steel out of the foreign markets and also to some extent out of home markets. Dave McDonald will lend a deaf ear to all this logic. He is a first class labor man well trained by the late Phil Murray and also by his experience before and since then. His job is to get the boys a raise and fringe. They may claim they are not for a strike. But if a strike will get them more of the green stuff they will take that rather than an economic treatise from either Dave or the steel in dustry. There is also the little question of Dave's reelection as president of the USWA coming up in 1961. Of course he wants to be reelect ed to his $50,000 a year job. There is no difference between him and his counterparts in the steel in dustry except Dave has to be elected to the job. Naturally he will have to think of this when he goes for a big package this year, tie also has George Meany's blessing to get the best contract possible. ' Then there is the age old rea son why Dave has to get some thing: Any labor chief who comes away from a negotiation or a strike without a raise and fringe can pretty well expect to be re placed by the opposition at the next election. And it has to be remembered that the steelworkers union is a well run and relatively democrat ic union. Dave is no dictator; he has to bring home the bacon. Of course this law does not necessarily ap ply to a leader of a union in a depressed industry. But cvep there the law of "produce or get out" has some effect: Unless the top man is an entrenched dictator. Commie Propagandists Use Article By LOUIS CASSELS WASHINGTON UPI Propa ganda sparks are flying in Rus sia because of the latest issue of "America Illustrated." the Russian-language magazine distribut ed in the Soviet Union by the U. S. Information Service. The article which touched off the sparks is a two-page spread of text and pictures depicting the "generally improving status" of America's 18 million Negroes. The text tells of the dramatic progress U. S. Negroes have made in recent years in income, education and housing. Sample statistic: The average dollar in- Quotes From The News WASHINGTON Gen. Thomas S. Power, head of the Strategic Air Command, warning the United States must impress upon Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev the fact that he cannot attack this country with impunity: "I think the minute he thinks he can strike this country with impunity, we will 'get if in the next 60 seconds. The only thing to keep him honest is full knowledge of what will happen to him." NEW YORK Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher (D-N.J.), expressing confidence this country will not bow to the Soviet ultimatum to get out of Berlin by May 27: "I am confident we will be there this May 27 and the next May 27. The honor of the United States is being tested on this issue.' NORWALK, Conn. Alva I. Cox Jr., director of the audio-visual and broadcast education division of the National Council of Church es, expressing approval of a jazz Mass at St. Paul's Church on the green : "But the music is so bad I hope the experiment is not judged on the quality of the product." LONDON Field Marshal Vis count Montgomery, expressing un concern at adverse British news paper criticism of his impending visit to Moscow to talk over Last West affairs with Soviet Premier Khrushchev: "I am always being criticized I am used to criticism. I should feel unhappy and think there was something wrong if I were not being attacked in some way." Neuberger Wants Billboards To Go PORTLAND (UPI Sen. Rich ard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) says he hopes an Oregon group will go to work and get a measure placed in the 1960 general election ballot to limit billboards on federal high ways. A similar measure died in com mittee at the Oregon Legislature last week. Neuberger said he was sorry the bill was tabled and predicted that it would pass by "at least a four or five to one vote" if sub mitted to the people in 1960. "Orcgonians are proud of their wonderful scenic grandeur and de plore billboard jungles along their highways," he said. Broadway Bank Makes Move To Broadway NEW YORK lUPI The Broad way Savings Bank has opened a new branch office at 239 Broad way and the event was a banner one for the 108-year-old institution. The opening marked the first time in its entire history that the bank has actually had a location on Broadway. come of Negro workers has gone up 415 per cent since 1940, while the average income of white workers has risen 277 per cent. Accompanying pictures show mixed Negro and white groups at work in offices and scientific lab oratories, worshipping in church, playing basketball, attending school and participating as equals in civic meetings. The article directly contradicted the stereotyped picture of Negro life in America which the Soviet press has assiduously created. It promptly came under heavy prop aganda fire from the widely-circulated Soviet youth newspaper "Komsomolets." "Komsomolets" published a full page spread purporting to show "what the magazine America was silent about." It featured pictures of a white-robed Ku Klux Klans man carrying a hangman's noose, and the body of a lynched Negro hanging from a tree. The Soviet newspaper charged "America Illustrated" with "jug gling figures" and "hiding facts" in an attempt to "prove that a paradise for Negroes has been created In the United States." But, it said, "reality tells us quite the contrary." It then went on to give a lurid description of "Negro ghettoes" in New York, Washington and Chicago, laced with accounts of attacks by "racialist hooligans" on any Negro family which seeks to move into "the prohibited areas reserved for whites only." U. S. propaganda analysists are intrigued by the vehemence of the Soviet reaction to the "Amer ica Illustrated" article. "It indicates," said one official, "that we drew blood. They wouldn't have been so upset un less a good many Russians were reading and taking seriously the articles in America Illus trated." He said this is the first time the Soviet press has attacked the monthly U. S. magazine since it went on sale in Russia in Octo ber, 1956. Under an agreement negotiated in 1955, Russia permits the U. S. Information Agency to sell 50,000 copies of "America Illustrated" in Russia each month. In return, Russia is allowed to circulate in this country an equal number of copies of its English-language magazine "USSR." "America Illustrated" is sold at news stands in 80 Russian cities at a price of five rubles per copy $1.25 at the official rate of ex change. A British newspaper, the Economists, reported in a dis patch from Moscow last month that the U. S. magazine is so pop ular with Soviet readers that "it is snapped up the moment it ap pears on the bookstalls and there after changes hands briskly at three times the published price." The avowed purpose of "Amer ira Illustrated" is to "promote better understanding of the Unit ed States in the Soviet Union. To tell the story of America today: What American people are doing and saying. . .how they live work and play." About half of each month's 60 pages of pictures and text con sists of articles reprinted from leading U. S. Magazines. The re mainder is produced by the US1A staff. The article on Negroes was in the latter category. Letters To The Editor The Oharrvtr mlromn Irtlrra from Ifa rradrrn. All totter ml hrar the name and addrena of the writer, bat will be withheld an reqaent. Lettera should not ex eeed 300 word. To the Editor: Your editorial on Bob Aufder heidc in the Observer of March 30, was much appreciated. I did not have the pleasure of knowing Bob Aufdcrheide but in my three years in Oregon I have heard many nice reports about him from colleagues. The nature of a Forest Super visor s work, a balance wheel among special interest groups, does not often bring him before the public in a favorable light. As a subscriber to the Obscrv- er. I have enjoyed your editorial column. We need frank discus sion of local and national issues. Very truly yours, John M. Wick, District Ranger La Grande, Ore. March 31, 1959 To the Editor: What happened to our pioneer stories entitled "Do You Rcmem ber"? We enjoyed reaading the articles very much, having been residents for around 50 years in this valley, a wonderful place to live. The story is also scrap book material, signed Mrs. Clara L. Johnson, 2104 N. Fir St., La Grande, Ore. To the Editor: I was pleased and impressed that one of our local musicians should have been chosen to be a soloist in the secular cantata "Carmine Burana'' in Portland this month. It is disappointing to find the account of the selection being given no better place in our local paper than on the page with the classified advertisements. Very truly yours, Fred J. Young City Manager To the Editor: I want to ten yod how disappoint ed I am to have read the small writeup on Neil Wilson's coming performance with the Portland Junior Symphony. I simply cannot understand why of all the many things that happer around here, something like thit shouldn't be given special recogni tion. Mr. Wilson has worked hard to become the fine singer he is, and being a so'oist with the Portland symphony will be an important stepping stone in his career. No1 only will his performance brine recognition to himself, but it will also bring recognition to Eastern Oregon College, where his voice teaching and choir directing if greatly appreciated and valued b both faculty and the students. I have talked with several in dividuals who agree with me that Mr. Wilson, or any person wh can qualify for such a feat equa' to this, deserves a special featun on the front page. We feel tha' the Observer has slighted him by printing such an insignificant ar tide. Very truly yours, . Barbara Myer Money Discovered In Donated Coat YONKERS. N.Y. (UPI A Sal vat ion Army worker unable tt fold a tattered old Army jacke' donated for the needy slit opet the lining and found it neatly pad ded with $4,526 in cash. Detectives called in by tht charitable organization traced tht old jacket through a cleaninf mark to the home of James Ross who identified the jacket as the property of his late brother-in-law, James Cashin, a former po lice captain. Ross said he had given the jacket to the Salvation Army aft er Cashin's death last February. The money was turned over to Cashin's estate. I NEA faltpaoh) PONDERING President Eisenhower appears lost in deep , thought while he waits to mdke his address to Gettysburg College's spring, convocatfqo; at Gettysburg, fa. in his speech the President citedtVietnam, Japan, and Berlin as examples of the needfor firmness in the "face of Soviet challenges. Paraguay President Fears U. S. Aid Cut By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor From the foreign news editor's assignment book: - New Deal? , ASUNCION, Paraguay The Colorado Party which has gov erned the country lor 12 years un der a slate of siege and with one- parly elections officially has- asked President General Alfredo Strocssner to restore democracy by stages. It would include a lift ing of the state of siege, declara tion of political amnesty, elec tions and constitutional reforms. Stroessner gracefully accepted in a speech last week. However, informed Paraguay ans say the government has gone through this act before. They be lieve the present activity stems from the tide running against dic tators in America generally and from the fall of Batista in par ticular. Top government men fear Stroessner's bad press may influ ence a Democratic Congress in Washington to cut off Paraguayan aid. Employment Report May Halt Spending WASHINGTON UPI Adminis tration officials hope that a re port on March unemployment would blunt Democratic and labor demands for multi-billion-dollar spending programs to spur the economy. The government was expected to issue a report Tuesday showing that the number of jobless in March declined by about 300,0(10 from the 4,449,000 unemployed in February. This would be more than the normal seasonal drop. The Democratic Advisory Coun cil charged Sunday night the Unit ed States is headed for disaster unless the Eisenhower administra tion stops trying "to balance the budget without balancing the eco nomy." In a special statement on un-' employment, the 27 Democratic Party leaders called for new pro grams to improve schools, hous ing, medical care, transportation facilities, natural resource protec tion and slum clearance. Similar demands for government action were expected from the AFL-CIO conference on unemploy nent opening here Wednesday The decline to three million, he ?aid, would be "practically full employment" in the U.S. economy. Moving Day BERLIN The Soviets appear to be preparing to move their Berlin troops out of the city. In telligence sources say the Soviets are building barracks and homes at Bernau. about 12 miles north east of Berlin. It is believed vari ous army headquarters now in East Berlin will be moved to Ber nau if and when the Soviets par ry out their throat to turn over occupation controls to the East German government. The gener ally accepted date now is May 27. Change In The Weather ' LONDON Watch for Russia to choke off quietly its ambitious promises of economic and mili tary aid to Egypt. Yugoslavia was cut off when it disagreed with Moscow. Now President Ca rnal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic is even more open ly condemning Moscow for its in trigues in Iraq. There have been protestations from Moscow that there are no strings attached to the aid prom ises to Egypt. But it was signifi cantly leaked in the Soviet capi tal last week that Russian "letter lo the editor" writers are attack ing aid to Egypt. In Russia, such letters are often the first step to ward definite action. Off With The Old? TOKYO With the approach ing wedding of Crown Prince Aki hito and his commoner sweet heart, Michiko Shoda, rumors per sist that Emperor Hirohito is planning to abdicate. Perhaps no one, except the emperor, knows how much truth there is in these rumors. But it is not expected to come if it comes off at ail before the wedding of Princess Suga, his youngest child, some time in the fall. Power Struggle BUENOS AIRES - A tremen dous behind-the-scenes struggle for power is going on in Argen tina. President Arturo Frondizi's austerity . program has created new converts for the Communists, and unemployment threatens to create even more. Meanwhile, former Peronistas are drifting into sort of Trotsky-type direct action groups because of bewil dering and contradictory orders purporting to come from former President Juan Peron in exile in Santo Domingo. The Catholic Church is concerned about the Communist gains. In another arena, the church is engaged in a battle with Free Masonry. Many officers fti the armed forces, as well as some politi cians, are Masons. Side Glances few iftfr1 t-7 T M. tt. U S. PbL ML C mt .7 MCA Urm, tm. "I always come to the supermarket on rainy days. It's grand place for the kids to run off their energy 1"