1 I - I . . . . I 4 ... - v - . , . ........ j ... - t . And Baby Makes Three i wUm Www EDITORIAL PAGE LA' GRANDE OBSERVER Friday, August 28, 1959 "A Modern Newspaper With The Pioneer Spirit" RILEY D. AIJ.EN Publisher PDBLIBHED HT THB ai iuunaucr Vk orandb joiBUBHiNU com pant GEORGE S. CHALLIS Adv. Director TOM HUMES Circulation Mgr. Day's Complaint Is Off Base Albert M. Duy, Oregon state fisheries director, is way off lnwe in a complaint made to Ia Grande's city manager about conditions at the city airport. Duy apparently got the heck scared out of him recently during a nijjht land ing at the field. At least, such was indicated in a letter to retiring City Manager Fred Young. Day had been over into the Snake river country, and returned to Ijji Grande after dark. His pilot was headed toward the north and approached for a, landing on the north-south runway. The field's longest runwgy had been closed for re pairs, and such information was on file at all civil airways radio facilities. "As the pilot came into the darkened field for a landing, he noticed the (tower and telegraph wires alongside the rail road track at the south end of the field. Kortunutely, he jumped his plane over these wires just in time to avoid a crash. ... It was one of the most, dangerous landings that I have ever experienced, and I have flown in Alaska, Mexico. Canada, and all parts of the United States," Day Mated. To begin with, the pilot was way too low. The wires at the south end of the field are only about 35 feet high, and are considerably more than a quarter of a mile from the end of the runway. Had the pilot not seen the wires he could very possibly have hit the ground 300 yards or more short of the runway. Irct-he second place, the wires are noted on the reverse side of all aviation charts. Most pilots check these charts, the Airman's Guide or the Notices to Airmen (NOTAM) before flying into strange fields. In the third place, the runway in ques tion has approach lights, which were on at the time of the incident, but which were not observed apparently because the pilot was too low. ' Any one of three or four routine checks by the pilot, either in person or by radio, would have informed him of the condition, which is so slight as not to k considered dangerous by Federal Aviation Agency officials, who certainly do not take aviation safety matters lightly. No one likes to be frightened by a near miss, in an airplane or in a car. Mr. Day reacts to near misses like every other person. He was frightened. l!ut rather tliau complaining about the , airport, which is a good one all things considerod he sholud either get Jiis pilot on the ball or change pilots. Inflation Talk Brings Times are good, but people are uneasy. Increasing labor strife is a symptom. Kmployment rose to an all time high of C7.C million in mid-July. More people than ever before have jobs. I'.ut another report from the government fact finders shows that the cost of living is still inch ing up. It is at an all time liiuli too. At the AFI-C10 convention one speaker took the position that too much talk about inflation is bad for the coun try. He said such talk scares people and makes them reluctant to invest and take a chance on the future. He thinks a lot of inflation talk is generated by em ployers intent on blaming rising wage rates for rising prices. Putting it the other, way around, it could be said that this union speaker is touchy on the subject of !alor's con tribution to inflation and is trying to minimize inflation in order to take the wind out of the sails of employers who shed tears over inflation at the bargain-, ing table. We are Inclined to agree with those vho contend that inflation moves along partly because so few understand it. The Uneasiness Cabinet Committee on Price Stability for Kconomic Growth took this position when it wrote its recent 1,000 word comment on the nation's economic position. When ever it came to a place where the word "in flat ion" normally would have been Used, it wrote "rises in the general price level." Kveryone is aware that prices are high. If we talked more nlxitit high prices and less about inflation the whole problem might be more understandable. Whatever pushes prices up Is inflation ary. " And if anyone tells you it doesn't niakq any difference at a time when more people i than ever are working, nsk the person who is retired and is living on a pension, or the man who invested In government bonds and held them to ma turity, or anyone who is trying to pro vide for his future by saving for retire nieut. Or nsk the union member if he still ' enjoys the benefits of the wage increase he had to go on strike for or whether it somehow vanishes, due to "rises in the general price level," known otherwise as inflation. DREW PEARSON SAYS European Leaders Worry Over U.S.-Soviet Deal WASHINGTON The big (actor behind President Eisenhower's talks as he sits down with the leaders of Western Europe results from essentially the same problem as that which confronted Franklin Roosevelt at Yalta when he sat down wtih Stalin. Stalin at that time was ready to make a deal which' virtually amounted to dividing up the world into three spheres of. influence among .the then three great pow ers. The British were to be su preme in Western Europe and Africa: the United States in the Western Hemisphere and the West ern Orient including Japan, the Philippines. Russia was to be supreme In Central turope and the rest of Asia. Roosevelt vetoed the Idea, though a modmed deal was made be tween Winston Churchill and Stalin to divide up the Balkans under spheres of influence, the British taking jurisdiction over Yugoslavia and Greece; the Rus sians over Rumania, Bulgaria and Albania. Stalin, it should be noted carried out his part of the agree ment to the letter, according to Churchill's memoirs. During the years that have passed, the French, British and other West Europeans have nursed a lurking worry that the world's two greatest powers, the USA and USSR, might form a loose al liance which would devide the world into two general spheres ot influence. USA-USSR Deal? Basically this is what worries De Gaulle and Adenauer and Pre mier Segnl of Italy right now. worries the British much less The British, fearful of being caught in the middle of an atomic was between the USA and USSR, have reversed their position completely. Once worried sick over the idea of American-Russian partnership, they are now encouraging it. But Chancellor Adenauer knows that close cooperation between the USA and USSR means that his ideas for the unity of Germany will go glimmering. He also knows that German ambitions for regaining the provinces of east Germany now held by Poland will never be fulfilled. He also knows that Germany's best role is to be the balance of power between Rus sia and the United States. President De Gaulle also sees Russian-American friendship as blocking his grandiose ambition for a French comeback. The Idea of Khrushchev and Eisenhower sitting down together infuriates him, chiefly because it is tacit recognition that they represent the world's two great powers. And France is not included. De Gaulle has been spurring his diplomats to organize the United States of Europe so that in' the future there will not be two but three world powers the USA, the USSR, and the US of Europe with Charles De Gaulle represent ing the latter. It's this personal Jealousy plus balance-of-power politics that Eis enhower has to cope with during his conference in Europe. Taxes Vs. Taxes High-ups in the justice depart ment once again are dragging their feet on the Alabama income tax QUOTES FROM THE NEWS United Press International TO OPEN CONSULATES WASHINGTON UPI) The United States and Poland wijl re open their consulates in wach other's country "in the near fu ture." The State Department said the action stem from an agree ment last year and reflects a gradual Improvement in relations with Poland since the end of the Stalin era,. .... SULLIVANS VISIT SULLIVANS LISBON Portugal dpi Five young Sullivan brothers were guests Wednesday aboard the U. S. destroyer "Sullivans." named for the five brothers killed in nnvnl action in 1942 The young Sullivans are sons of Col Charles P. Sullivan, of Eureka. Ill . U S air nttarhe in Lisbon. They arc mA rvUfcui to the "lighting Sul- SCHINES ANNOUNCE BABY HOLLYWOOD (l'Pl-The wife of hotel heir G. David Schine gave birth Wednesday night to a 6 pound. B ounce girl at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, it was dis closed Thursday. Schine was an assistant of the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy. livaiis" of World War II fame. NEW YORK Boris Kolod ozhn. first secretary of the So iet Embassy, criticizing Ameri can courts as he put the four young Kozmin brothers aboard a plane for Russia to rejoin their parents: "American justice detained them for live years. They were taken from their parents. We are glad to deliver them back to their parents." NEW YORK The Rev. C. Kil mer Myers, conducting in New York's richest and most famous church the funeral for a 15-year-old Negro girl killed because of a gang fight Sunday night: "If you cared about her. then let this be your memorial to her. Let there be no more sudden death in the streets ot the lower east side." LONDON Novelist A. J. Cro nin, complaining that after a 23 year fight the Soviet government would not even pay him in caviar the royalties for three million copies of his books sold in the USSR: "Meanwhile, I receive from my Russian readers an enormous ef fusive fan mail and requests for autographs and photographs. This is undoubtedly the unkindest cut of all." MOSCOW Leonard Bernstein, conductor of the New York Phil harmonic orchestra, replying to a Soviet music critic who called him "cocky" and Immodest for interrupting a concert to explain modern music and for repeating one composition. "Repetition of it had been de manded by the audience ... their rhythmic clapping meant 'again.' So in my very best Russian asked if they wanted the piece again and, when they responded with cheers, I played it." case involving three political henchmen of Gen. Wilton B. Per sons' brother, the ex-governor of Alabama. The case appears on the way of becoming one of the most politically influenced in the Justice department. On Jan. 12 this column exposed the fact that the Treasury depart ment had recommended criminal prosecution of three Alabama poll ticians who had raised money for Ex-governor Persons when he was Governor of Alabama. Persons Is the brother to Gen. "Slick" Per sons who replaced Sherman Adams as No. 1 White House assitsant It was revealed on Jan. 12 and in subsequent columns that the Treasury recommended criminal prosecution on Dec. 15, 1957, but the Justice department in a letter dated March 10. 1958 refused to prosecute. Usually tax recom mendations by the treasury's in ternal revenue service are consid ered almost mandatory upon the Justice department. If the Justice d-partment does not prosecute, it usual'y develops that political influence has been exerted. One day after publication of the Jan. 12, 1959 column, the Justice department hastily reopened the Alabama tax case, and, after a flurry of activity, arrested the three men named by this column. They are: Jimmy Thrower, ex mayor of Dothan, former member of the Alabama ABC liquor board; S. E. Gellerstedt, who was on the payroll of Berke Brothers Dis tillery and Taylor Wines: Donald D. Solomon, in whose Headland National Bank some of the liquor political money was deposited. Finally on March 9 the three men were formally charged with tax evasion. The charge was made just a few days before the statute of limitations would have expired. This, however, was five and a half months ago. Since then noth ing has happened. A federal grand jury has been called in Birming ham to consider various fed eral cases, but the Justice de partment in Washington, as of this writing, has not sent the three cases to Alabama for prosecution. Officials In the U.S. attorneys office in Birmingham say they can't prosecute without the facts and files, and the files are care fully secreted in Washington. Baker Boy In Critical Condtion In Portland PORTLAND (UPD Barton Wood, 9. Baker, remained in crit ical condition in a local hospital today from a head injury suffered Thursday in a fall from a bicycle at Baker. The youth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wood of Baker, was flown here by Don's Flying Serv ice. Attendants at Providence hos pital said his condition remained unchanged throughout the night. House Space Group Concerned More Of Missilles Than Stork By FRANK ELEAZER UPI Staff Writw WASHINGTON (UPI) The trouble with so many graduate students, the witness seemed to be saying, is their wives. They keep getting pregnant. So naturally I stuck around to see if the House Space Commit tee had anything to propose. This committee had always seemed more concerned with mis- plenty of worry. As I siles than storks. As a matter of message, when we bun fenses, efficiently until we know more about the ocean." And it's not only the Russians we have to worry about, accord ing to Riley. He said we may be bringing on another Ice Age. This could bury our northern states un der glaciers and snow, right down into Ohio. That's just a theory, he said. But it's causing oceanographers got the coal aid fact it's been so busy star gazing 0il we throw off carbon dioxide, this year it hasn t had time for which tends to hold heat a number of pressing problems on earth. One of these, committee mem bers heard recently, is what all we don't know about our oceans. So they had called in some ex perts on oceanography. And I'm afraid the experts confirmed the worst that the members had heard. We know more about the sur face of the moon, said Dr. Gor don A. Riley, than we do about tne floor of the ocean. Kiley is professor of oceanography at Yale and a member of the Oceanogra phy Committee of the- National Academy of Sciences. How About Ice Aoe He said while we spend billions of dollars to try to get into space, we've doled out a paltry few mil lions to una out what goes on in the ocean. And he seemed to think we could lose the next war under the water. "We have a wonderful new weapons system, probably the best in the world, in the Polaris missile submarine," Dr. Riley said. "Yet we cannot use our sub marines, and our submarine de- Sen. Humphrey To Take Swing Through Oregon FUKTLA.NU (DPI) Presiden tial aspirant Sen. Hubert Hum phrey ID -Minn) will make a whirlwind five-day tour of Oregon Oct. 4 8. according to Beulah Hand, acting chairman of the Democratic party of Oregon. Humphrey will open his Oregon visit with an address at the an nual Tillamook Chowder Feed, Sunday, Oct. 4. A two-day stay in Portland will be highlighted by a $2.50-a plate dinner Oct. 6. He will make a two-day flying tour of Oregon Oct. 7-8. He will address a breakfast in The Dalles, a luncheon in Pendleton, an after noon meeting in Redmond and a dinner rally in Klamath Falls on Oct. 7. Then he will finish his visit of the state on Oct. 8 with break fast in Medford, luncheon in Rose- burg, and a dinner meeting in Coos Bay . He will return- to Portland that night. Mrs. Hand said Humphrey also will attend meetings in St. Helens and Oregon City during his two days in Portland. Theory Explained It's a fact the earth for years has been getting wanner, lie said, and the arctic ice is beginning to melt. This means more open waler in the arctic which, in turn, means more evaporation. This re sults in more snow. And this starts another pileup of ice, a-;d eventually another go-round with the glaciers. Some people think this process could show some upsetting effects within the next 100 years. Whe'h er man is bringing it on himself or not. by releasing all that car bon dioxide, Riley said, we ought to find out for sure what's going on. .( That's how he happened to stm t talking about graduate -studies, their wives, and their babies. ,Jle said there are Only about tioo qualified oceanographers In this country, and not near enough young scientists learning the trade. Described As "Poor Relations" Bright young men in other set entific pursuits get fellowships and help from the government while they learn, he said, but "we are poor relations," and about all a g-aduate student in oceanogra phy can hope for is maybe $1,500 or $2,000 a year. "A couple can live In reasons b'e comfort if the spouse has a job," he said. "But there is hard ly a professor in the country who has not faced the dreary specta cle of a student with a pregnant wife. "What should be a source of great happiness in any family it a dreaded occurrence in the life of a g-aduate student. It general ly means dropping out o( school or a poverty-pinched prolonged existence at the graduate level", Kiley said Congress should pass a law to give oceanography stu dents special government help, like maybe $4,000 a year. Then they could enjoy their pabies and this branch of science could start catching up. Chairman Overton Brooks D La ) said (lie committee would Ihink about this. Meantime, I guess we remain at sea. rP .))). Judy Lynn GRAND OLE 0PRY Direct from Nashville, Tenn. Mammoth stage performance. La Grande Hi Auditorium . . Sat., Sept. 5, 7:30 P. M. Adults $1.50; Child ren 6-12 $1.00. " Dance at Armory at 9:30 P.M. same date, with Judy Lynn and her band. Adults $1.50. Webb Pierce Dcica Recordings Jimmy Newman , MGM Recordings Smokey Pleacher Comedian Don Slayman Jackie Moffitt Don Judy Lynn Champ Yodeler , Pat Kelly , Jubilee Artist ,.. ... Joel Price Emcee Leon Richardson Howard White Windle Sponsored by La Grande Jaycett. Tickets are available at Birnies, Grahams, KLBM, the Chamber of Commerce and thru local Jayce members. ;r ' .. - CHEVROLET j t c c-v$?3k:a w v iv' ivnsc were tr. it . t j 't is.. . jvv : ttVtf, k,-Kti . -TX- v-w - 'J sag '4 '.V w v j e, - MUM. u.Al most mp.g. miles per gallon one of 7 big bests Chevrolet gives you over any car in its field Proof that Chevy delivers the most miles from a gallon comes from an in disputable source: this year's Mobilgas Economy Run. For a pair of Chevrolet sixes with Powergllde walked away with the first two places in their class got top mileage, in fact, of any full sized car. Over the Run's long, rugged course, over mountain and desert in the long, long haul from Los Angeles to Kansas City, the winning Chevrolet averaged a whopping, 22.38 miles per gallon. That's the kind of economy engineering that keeps you saving while you drivel BEST STYLE-It's the only ear of the leading low-priced 3 that's unmis takably modern in every line. "In Its price class." says POPULAR SCI ENCE maeazine. "a new hieh in far. ing styling. BEST BRAKES In competitive tests of repeated stops from highway speeds, conducted by NASCAR", Chevy outetopped both of the "other two. Naturally Chevy brakes with bonded linings are far larger, built to lengthen brake life by up to 66 BEST TRADE-IN Look at the record the used car prices in any N.DAf Guide Book. You'U find that Chevy used car prices last year averaged up to $128 higher than com parable models of the "other two." BEST ENGINE-Chevrolet engines have long won expert praise and, just recently, Chevrolet received the NASCAR Outstanding Achievement award for "the creation and continuing development of America's most efficient V-type engines." BEST ROOM Official dimensions reported to A.M.A.f make this abun dantly clear. Chevy front seat hip room, for instance, is as much as 6.9 inches wider than in comparable cars. BEST RIDE MOTOR TREND magazine names Chevy ". . . the smoothest, most quiet, softest riding car in its price class." But this is one Chevy feature you really should dis cover for yourself, at your Chevrolet dealer's. Stop by soon! t-VoftrtwoJ AmlnmnhiU OraZrft Atm, lAufmabil Mammjttmrtn Am. Visit the General Motors Exhibit at th Oregon Centennial Exposition in PortlanOnd see your local authorized Chevrolet dealer II. J. GOSS HOTOR CO. 1415 ADAMS LA GRANDE WO 3-1712 . !