Look Who's Protesting T V ' NEA Stmct, Inc. EDITORIAL PAGE La Grande Observer Monday, June 1, 1959 "A Modern Newspaper With The Pioneer Spirit" PUBLISHED BY THB LA GRANDE PUBLISHING COMPANY Robert W. Chandler. President J. M. MeClelUnd, Jr., Vice President RILEY D. ALLEN r. Publisher GEORGE S. CHALLIS Adv. Director H. E. PHILBY , Managing Editor TOM HUMES u Circulation Mgr. Time For Inflexible Resolution As the horrors of nuclear war grow more apparent to the civilian populations of the West, there is danger an. attitude Will gain wide acceptance that we should acquiesce in Communist aggression or appease Communist tyrannies rather than stand up to the" dictators and possibly invoke a death-dealing missile barrage. '., U. S. Sen. Paul Douglas (D-Ill.), writ ing in the current issue of the magazine Western World, said there is danger that this acquiescence and appeasement "will grow in direct ratio to the fright fulness of any alternative." " In reviewing the events that led up to World War II and the actions of the West in post-war dealings with Com munist nations, Sen. Douglas said the record seems clear. "Whenever the democracies have chosen to resist the aggressive spread of impearilism, they have been successful," he said. "Whenever they have yielded or appeased, this has merely caused more trouble later.!' i The senator believes that a dictator ship, whether Communist or. Fascist, is expansionist by its very nature. To justify its internal suppression of civil liberties and political rights, he said, the dictatorship must create external ten sions and provoke international inci dents; to compensate for its failure to improve the material and spiritual con ditions of its people it must seek to ab sorb their interest in foreign adven tures. Although these dictatorships may have their beginnings as party or class affairs they eventually become personal in na ture. Because of the ultimate concen tration of power in the personal dictator ship this form of government is directed to desperate end. Sen. Douglas argues that Communist aggression is far more likely to be check ed by military, economic and . spiritual resistance than by territorial acquiesc ence. This does not mean, he adds, that all non-Communist territory must be de fended where such defenses would be untenable. One such "untenable" position he would defend, however, is Berlin. But who is to provide the checks to Communist ambitions? "Today," he stated, "the power of Soviet Russia and Communist China plus that of their satel lites is so great that only the united, determined and prolonged resistance by all of the free world will be sufficient to check it, and we hope to set the whole world itself ultimately free." There is too much of a tendency among the smaller nations nt present to think and act as though the defense of the free world is virtually the exclusive responsibility of the big powers, Sen. Douglas said. Unless these countries and the big powers can work in concert to check the ambitions of the Communist world and agree that the threat of fighting skir mishes now is preferable to fighting wars later, the forces of tyranny can snuff out freedom. , t Of all the evils that beset the world . today, tyranny seems to be the worst. Sen. Douglas said. He predicts an "ice age" of tyranny will set in if the doc trines of dictatorship are permitted to prevail. The prediction seems too real to be ignored, too close to reality to idly' hope that by making concessions to com munism we will not have to face a more difficult alternative. This is not a time for inflexible diplomacy ; it is a time for inflexible resolution. Steel Industry Sets . The Pace . Steel industry leaders have been try ing to contend that it is false to assume that steel sets the inflationary pace in wage and price hikes. But now David McDonald, head of the steel union, says -that if the steelworkers are denied a, wage boost, "the precedent of standing still will be reflected in the pay en velopes of virtually every major group of wage and salary workers in the na- ; tion." That's pretty plain. As far as McDon ald is concerned steel 1s the "bell cow." It leads. Others follow. What McDonald acknowledges to be true of wage patterns is true also of what steel industry leadens decline to acknowledge is true of prices. Steel sets the pace with a price increase following its customary wage increase. This has happened so often that the average steel wage is now $3.13 an hour.- Then other industries follow along. Then up goes the prices of consumer goods. Up goes the cost of living. And soon wiped out are any gains that workers may have realized with a wage increase. Barbs ' The most popular endurance contests are those on the telephone. Doctors advise against scratching the Bkin. Why worry? We're not up to scratch these spring days, anyway. The lighter the jockey the more weight he carries with some of the bettors. The energetic man never knows When he's licked, unless he's married. When speeding across the country there are two things to think about: the scenery you miss and the things you might hit. Soon there'll be the old-fashioned skin diving . at the ol' swimming hole. DREW PEARSON Sec. Brucker May Resign Oyer The' Missile Feud WASHINGTON Tension is so taut around the Pentagon that Secretary of the Army Wilbur Brucker may get the ax. Reason is the row over missiles. Brucker, . an ex-governor of Michigan and a potent power in the Republican party, has become so immersed in the Army feud with the Air Force over missiles that he authorized two "Nicker son-type" Memos on the subject of missiles and made 12 public speeches between May 11 and May 16. . . ? This may be more than Secre tary of Defense Neil McElroy can take. The issue is the same basic one which caused Col. John Nicker son to get court-martialed, name ly the distribution of a memo spelling out the Army's demand that it share in building missiles Nickerson fought the battle of the Ajmy'S Jupiter, an interme diate range ballistic missile, against the Air Force's Thor Brucker is now fighting for the Army's Nike-Hercules, a short runge defense missile, against the Air Force's Bomarc. One 12 page memo which Brucker sent to Senators is al ready well publicized . This memo No. 1 which went to Senators who were not members of the Armed Services committee. It was also given discreetly to the press. This made Sen. Dick Russell of Geor-i gia, cnairman 01 me cummmee, sore as blazes. He considered it an attempt to undercut his com miltce which already had taken a stand against the Army's Nike- Hercules. Memo No. 2 hag not yet leaked out. but this column has secured a copy. Dated May IB, it is ad dressed to ' Secretary McElroy from Secretary sof the Army Hrucker, urging that McElroy hold up production of the Air Force Bomarc missile until the entire United States air defense effort for the 1960-1970 era" can be reviewed. Both the Army's Nike-Hercules missile, and the Air Force's Bo marc are1 aimed at protecting American cities from enemy sup ersonic bombers. The-Army pro poses to shoot down bombers over or near American cities. The Air Force claims this is letting enemy bombers get too close, and has designed the Bomarc missile to shoot down enemy bombers in l given geographic area. However, when the weapons system evaluation group tested both missiles, it found that 65 per cont of the enemy's planes got through the Army's Nike-Herculcs as against only 15 per cent which got through the Air Force's Bo marc. This was what caused the Senate Armed Services commit tee to curtail Army production of the Nike-Hercules. It also caus ed Canada to choose the Bomarc. Note Some critics, such as Sen. Stuart Symington of Mis souri, however, claim that both systems are weak, that we must strike at the enemy before his planes even get near our cities. .1 Memos Instead of Miuilet With the Army seeing its en tire air defense program going down the drain, Secretary Bruck er began launching not missiles but memos. In memo No. 2, so far secret, he aimed indirectly at the curtailment voted by the Sen ate Armed Services committee. "The very nature of these ac tions (by the Senate committee) have seriously degraded the true value of the Hercules system while at the same time provid ing a grossly distorted picture of the Bomarc system. 'Thus it has become impera tive," Bruckor added, "that the Army set forth its grave reserva tions concering the ability of Bomarc to achieve operational ef fectiveness during the time frame under consideration. "Up to the present moment, the Army has carefully avoided cri tical comment concerning Bomarc, even while being subjected to cross-examination as well as re peated and unwarranted attacks on the effectiveness of the pres ently operational Nike-Hercules air defense." Brucker listed what he thought was wrong wth the Air Force missile, then concluded: "Con sidering the changing nature 'of the air-breathing threat and the imminence of ballistic missiles, I believe that a disproportionate amount of money and effort is being expended on a weapon for defense against a relatively unso phisticated segment of the air breathing threat." He asked McElroy to review the rival defense systems. "Pending this evaluation of the ever-all defense effort," the Army secretary wrote, "I recommend tnat the Bomarc programs be re duced to a deployment which uses only equipment alrady fund ed." ' So goes the civil war on the Potomac. 'Old Lady' Getting Gussied Up For Her 100th Birthday Party VIRGINIA CITY, Nev. (UPD They are giving an old lady a birthday party on June 12, 13 and 14. The old lady is 100 years old, and her veins long since have been drained of most of the fluid which brought her international fame. She is wizened now, and much of the glamour she had in her younger days has faded. However, come June, she will be all dressed up in her finery, ragged and tattered as it is. She will have one last whing-ding be fore, she is whapped in the shrouds of memory and deposited in the limbo from which few re turn. Yes, - they're giving Virginia City, once known as the Silver Queen, a big party because she was born 100 years ago on June 11, 1859. This Silver Queen was quite a gal in her younger days. She be came a roistering youngster about the time the Civil War was being fought. It was the strength of her veins which supplied the largesse needed by the Union to pay the huge price which the conflict cost. Had it not been for the Queen, there might not have been a United States. - San Francisco Debt Not only that, but the growth of San Francisco might have been delayed had it not been for the Silver Queen. Nabobs such as John Mackay, James Fair, James Flood and their bartender partner O'Brien, were given their sta-t by draining the veins of the Queen and giving the Bay Citv the trans fusion it needed to become one of the most thriving communities of the gold rush days. There might never nave been an Atlantic Cable, either, had not the wealth of the Silver Queen found its way Into the hands of Mackay. The Queen also nurtured a band of offspring who contributed much to the literary wealth of America. Such men as Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens), Dan de Quille, Sam Davis and others started their lit erary careers when the Queen was young and carried on their writings to bring credit and praise from the world. There were" others of her youngsters who won fame in oth er endeavors. Adolph Sutro, for RUSSIANS PUSH PRODUCTION OF STEEL AT A RAPID RATE NEW YORK (UPD The Soviet Union in 1958 produced 60 million tons of steel, about 40 per cent of the present U.S. capacity. A representative of the Soviet Ministry predicts- the USSR will produce 10 million tons of ingots by 1960 and 125 million by 1975. The seven-year plan calls for 95 million to 100 million tons of capacity by 1965. These are Soviet figures and no one has any way of checking their accuracy. However, the Russians are making steel and expanding their plants at a rapid j-ate, according to American steel ex perts who visited them last year. This group headed by fcxlward 1. Ryerson, director and former chairman of the Board of Inland Steel and Col. Merle R. Thompson, secretary of the committee of foreign relations, the American Iron it Steel Institute, has just published its findings in a book entitled "steel in the Soviet Union ". ' 4 The' book is meticulously put together to include details of the steel making processes from min ing of iron ore to the rolling mills. There are no marketing, advertising, or public relations problems in the Soviet Union to worry about. The one customer is the government. Also it owns the plants. Although the Soviet Union may possibly have greater proven iron ore reserves than any other coun try, Its ores are generally lean in iron content, the book points out. Many of the ore deposits are high in silica and some have an objectionably high zinc content. Others are contaminated with ar senic. The book adds that it will take a great deal of experimentation, planning and - capital investment to bring the Soviet ore reserves into production. t Right now there is sufficient ore being processed to run the existing steel mills and more is in prospect. The steel plants them selves are said to be good ones but the steel produced would not be competitive with the higher quality made in the United States. "The general designs of the rolling mills observed in the So viet plants," the book says, "are quite similar to the older type American mills installed 20 to 30 years ago. Many of them are sub stantially duplicates of U.S. mills and produce about the same ranges of product for any given mill size. Russian mill? operate continu ously and there is no trouble from strikes because the workers are told they own the mills and it would be folly to strike against themselves. ' They have unions but nothing like ours. The big function of the unions in the Soviet steel industry is to develop and promote .plans for increasing steel production. The Soviet steelworkers' union is comprised of both workers and management people up to and in cluding plant directors. The unions also function in edu cational schemes and most of the workers study in their spare time to enable them to move higher in the steel making scheme so that they can collect higher bo- Bud Abbott Says Tax Audit Left Him Completely Broke QUOTES FROM THE NEWS CHICAGO The National Safc tv Council, on the record number of Memorial holiday highway deaths: "It is no explanation to say Memorial Day is the start of the vacation season. It's the start of the vacation season every year, yet this 'year's mark is the worst." WASHINGTON United Mine Workers President John L. Lewis. charging that the government, supported by the press, has tried and failed to convict Teamsters President James R. Hoffa of any crime: 'The pack is after Hoffa and hasn't got him and I'm not run ning with the pack." NEW ORLEANS A deputy sheriff, after evacuating 12 elder ly persons by paddy wagon from a flooded home for the aged dur ing tropical storm Arlenc: They were glad to get out of there In anything. They didn't mind the paddy wagon." WASHINGTON Dr. T. II. Reed, Washington Zoo director, on efforts to capture an elusive black bear roaming the nation's capital: The trouble is we don't know where he is or where he's going to be.'' HOLLYWOOD (UPD Bud Ab bott, 'straight man of the Abbott and Costello comedy team, said today a government tax audit has left him broke. And all my so-called pals sud denly don't know me any more now that the booze has stopped flowing," the 63-year-old star told United Press International at nis home, which is up for sale to helo pay the taxes. "The government took it all but peanuts. The thing that toid it was when they disallowed a half mil lion dollars of deductions. Then they put a lien on practically everything." Abbott, white-haired, shorn of his mustache and heavier than in the days of his great successes, said In his rumpus room: Cava Too Many Gifts "One tax guy asked me, 'where do you get off wearing $25 shoes? I pay $9 for mine.' I answered, 'I make so much a week. How much do you make?' So he said "Zt T11 iw v,. hair HHand Costcllo made lot "o"- well, III alow you half Hel m hn.,. Ho thinks went down the line and picked out half a million. He said I gave too many gifts to friends friends, ha! and that I spent too much money by having a chauffeur. "I'm at a terrible disadvantage without the chauffeur. I don't drive, and Mrs. Abbott don't drive. I can't get off the proper ty unless a friend comes, and the friends don't come because the booze don't flow. "I was told people are like that, but I didn't believe It. Some times I laugh at myself when I think of the $100 . bills I handed out to guys who needed a touch." Abbott said his former partner, Lou Costello, who died last March 3, also lost a great deal in the audit, which covered a seven year period. "But," "he said, "at least Lou owned 52 TV shorts outright I merely got a salary from him." "They made me sell .three of my four acres here," he said. Sold Swimming Pool "Do you see that swimming pool on the other side of that wire fence?" "That used to be off both sides of my property. I had a beautiful ranch up in Ojai (Calif.) 200 acres and they made me sell that. "Now I'm trying to get $75,000 for my home and if I sell it, they tax that too. It's the same as if I try to work there's no use to it. They don't split the sal ary. They take it all, and you gotta pay taxes on top of it. Where am I gonna get the money to pay the taxes on the dough I can't keep? "It's like Joe Louis. He'll never get even if he makes a million a week." Abbott said he, his wife Betty and their two adopted children- Bud Jr., 20 and Vickie. 18 are looking for "a small apartment or home somewhere, after we see what we get out of this." May Try Producing He's thinking of trying to be come a producer. But meantime, he is going to see if he can sell 17 or 18 film chapters that he funct TV comedy hour. He thinks his best market is Europe. Would he think of going back into show business with another partner? "It don't make sense," he said. "It's too late in life to build a new routine. It took us 23 years to build the one we had. There'd be too much to criticize. Besides, it would be like building another empire and how many empires can you build on a lifetime? "And I wouldn't try it alone. Lou went on his own at the end and laid a terrible egg, God rest his soul. I took a lesson from him." FAVORS MISSILE PRODUCTION TOKYO (UPD Defense Agency Director Shigcjiro lno said Tuesday that he favored pro ducing the American Hawk ground-to-air guided . missle in Japan, but without nuclear war heads. Reports that . the Hawk would be manufactured in Japan touched off a controversy here whether such a move would make the nation a target for nuclear mine, until I was forced to sell attack. nuses and get merit promotions. Pay is low from 1,300 rubles or $130 a month for an ordinary worker up to 5000 rubles or $500 a month for the top man. The workers pay union dues and In come taxes with a maximum of 13 per cent. Their rent amounts to 4 per cent of their pay. Soviet workers cannot own prop erty other than personal items such as clothing, furniture, jewel ry, bicycles, household appliances, and in some cases an automobile or a house (but they get no title to the land). In the Soviet Union women work along with the men, park ing their children in nurseries provided by the trade' union. Rec reaction for all generally is in mass groups. You don't buy a hunk of cheese and a pail of beer for a little shindig in your home. You go to the social center the house of culture. Each steelworker carries his little labor book containing his record. As long as he applies him self and increases his productivity he's okay. But let him slip back or be absent without good cause and the union gets after him. Among the " union functions in workers is to get them to work harder and harder. "Give more rolled steel for our motherland." It doesn't look as if we have to worry much over Russian steel. Our current capacity is 147,633.670 tons annually, and we push it up each year. Our plants are effi cient. We have the ore and other requirements. But some experts point out that our workers lack the zeal of the Russians the desire to increase productivity, to study and improve their abilities. It is just possible that their steady application to study and work could result in our falling behind. instance, whose Sutro Tunnel set up a new era in engineering. William Sharon, who became a stock manipulator and later a United States senator from Neva da. William Ralston, whose "ring" wrote a fabulous chapter in the banking history of San Francisco. ' . Famed Relics There (s the old St. Mary's in the Mountains Catholic . church which was erected a'ter one of the disastrous fires swept Virgin ia City.- It is the church which was built 1 with money which flowed into the pockets of Mac Kay and O'Brien, two of the big four of the Comstoek Lode. Then there are the famous sa loons of the era " where the na bobs and the peons gathered af ter their shifts in the mines to quench the big thirst brought on by working in the hot holes like the Savage, the Con Virginia, the Chollar and the Hale and Nor cross. Saloons, such as the Sarazac, the Bucket of Blood and others which nightly brought gruesome entertainment which usually end ed in gunfire and another corpse. Available also for tourists' view will be the famous Piper Opera House, where such stalwarts of the boards as Mazurka, Dickie Jose, Edwin Booth, Jenny Lind, the Swedish Nightingale, and a hundred others performed as sil ver dollars fell at their feet as tokens of appreciation from the "hot water plugs." It will be an historic occasion that the Nixons the Vice Presi dent and his wife touch off, be cause it will observe an event which never will die as long as the history of the West is written and re-written. Reserve Shipyards Offered For Sale WASHINGTON (UPD The Maritime Administration has an nounced that it is offering for sale reserve shipyards located at Van couver, wash., and Alameda Calif. A Maritime Administration spokesman said Sunday that the yards must be used for construc tion, repair, conversion or scran- ping of ships, or for other uses which will retain the shipbuilding characteristics of the yard. 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