A4 East Oregonian Thursday, July 18, 2019 CHRISTOPHER RUSH Publisher KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner ANDREW CUTLER Editor WYATT HAUPT JR. News Editor JADE McDOWELL Hermiston Editor Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW Legacy of the moon landing still benefits agriculture F ifty years ago the entire world turned its eyes to the heavens as astronauts from the United States landed on the moon. Those alive at the time remember the story. Younger readers may need a brief tutorial. The space program was as much a political operation as it was a scientific pursuit. In the midst of the Cold War, the Soviets launched the first satellite in 1957 and the Space Race was off and running. The military applications of rocket technology were obvious and mostly went unstated. To the public, the Space Race was a competition between capi- talism and communism for ideological bragging rights. In 1962, President Kennedy com- mitted the United States to sending an American to the moon and back before the end of the decade. On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the Sea of Tranquility as Michael Collins orbited the moon. NASA astronauts made five additional landings, the last in December of 1972. Since then NASA has concentrated on unmanned exploratory missions and manned earth orbital flights. The innovation that led to the suc- cessful exploration of the moon, and those that have followed in the post-lu- Photo courtesy of NASA Man landing on the moon created many benefits for people on earth. nar space program, have been of great value to earth-bound agriculture. NASA has documented several examples over the years. Here are just a few: • Wireless telemetry — the collec- tion of measurements and other data at one location and transmitting it to another location — was not born in the space program, but it was perfected for manned and unmanned space flight. Experiments left on the moon by the Apollo astronauts relayed data to earth for years afterwards. Sensors in farm fields use telemetry to relay a variety of data regarding a variety of crop conditions directly to a farmer’s cell phone. It also makes it possible for farmers to monitor and control irrigation equipment without enter- ing the field. • Global Positioning Systems make it possible to pinpoint the location of an earthbound receiver by triangulat- ing the signals of multiple orbiting sat- ellites. GPS makes possible precision agriculture and self-guiding tractors and combines. • Satellite imagery makes it possible to monitor crop conditions and forecast yields. Through remote sensing satel- lites help keep track of the snowpack and aid in water resource management. • Fertilizer developed for use onboard space stations has found its way to fields on earth. At some point in the 1970s it became fashionable, given the growing social problems of the times, to ques- tion the expense of the space program. But the technology produced as a result of the U.S. space program has changed, for the better, virtually every industry and the lives of every person alive today in ways that could not have been imagined in 1957. Certainly that is true for agriculture and farmers. The moon landing was a singu- lar achievement in human history. But the practical applications of the tech- nology that made it possible, and that have been developed as a result, are the enduring legacy of our quest for the moon. OTHER VIEWS It’s a computer bag, not a man purse D Legislature fails to deliver fire help Medford Mail Tribune T he 2019 legislative session will be remembered more for what it didn’t accomplish than for what it did, thanks in large measure to the two walk- outs staged by Senate Republicans to block legislation they didn’t like. That makes it all the more frustrating that a relatively tiny request by Southern Oregon lawmakers to address the issue of wildfires fell through the cracks of the dysfunctional session, missing an opportunity to tackle the prob- lem right away. As a result, this region must wait through another fire season and maybe longer before anything close to real action can take place. Rep. Pam Marsh, D-Ashland, who sits on Gov. Kate Brown’s Council on Wildfire Response, spearheaded a proposal to allo- cate $6.8 million to thin forests around cit- ies in Jackson County. Despite bipartisan support from Rep. Kim Wallan, R-Medford, the proposal did not pass. We were critical of the governor’s deci- sion to appoint yet another committee to address the very immediate threat of wild- fires and the smoke they bring to our region. We remain disappointed that more is not being done this year, not next year or the Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. one after that — although Marsh’s presence on that council was a bright spot, and she did her best to convince up-state legislators of the urgent need for more funding. But Wallan said lawmakers from the northern portions of the state didn’t seem to understand the need for more resources to fight fires and to help prevent future confla- grations. Let us hope we don’t have to suffer through another smoke-filled summer to get their attention. The Governor’s Council is expected to produce recommendations this fall — far too late to have any effect on this summer’s fire season. It’s possible that a 12.73% increase in the Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry’s budget could provide some additional money for fire suppres- sion, but only after the governor’s coun- cil makes recommendations — “later this year,” according to an ODF spokeswoman. Meanwhile, southern Oregonians hold their collective breath and feel grateful for somewhat cooler-than-normal tempera- tures so far this season. If that holds, and lightning stays away, we could get through the summer unscathed. But that would be sheer luck, not the result of leadership from the governor or assistance from the Legislature. espite the accusations, I deny that To be sure, I’ve made fun of hip, mod- ern fellows who need a man purse to I carry a man purse. carry their sunglasses, notebooks, body According to the New York spray, hair goop, diary and whatever Post, the man purse, or “murse,” is the other items they tote these days. “new must-have accessory taking over One fellow I mocked helped intro- designers’ spring 2020 men’s runways.” duce a “manlier looking man purse” a Murse designs include “cross-body decade ago because he was tired of other satchels, fanny packs, top-handle totes men ribbing him for carrying a more and compact clutches” — whatever the feminine-looking handbag. I’m lucky he heck “clutches” are. didn’t smack me with his murse. Like so many other things in I made fun of another fel- our divided culture, the murse’s low whose chiropractor told growing popularity causes con- flict that has only grown since him to get a man purse because 2015, when the Huffington Post keeping his thick wallet in his asked its Facebook followers to back pocket was misaligning sound off. his spine. How can we defeat “Nope....just nope,” wrote one tough-guy terrorists, I won- dered, if our guys are getting female reader. T om injured by their wallets? Another woman wrote: “Does P urcell But on the other hand, I no this mean I wouldn’t have to COMMENT longer carry a wallet, keys or carry my husband’s stuff in my change in any of my pockets. bag? Then, yes.” I keep these items in an Italian-made One obviously hip, new-age fel- low wrote: “I love my murse. It is the leather computer bag that goes pretty best way to carry my book, notebook, much everywhere I go. e-reader, pens, medication, ID and cash I also keep pens, my iPhone, my and have it all conveniently at hand when computer, a calculator, a hair brush and I need it.” a handful of other unmanly doodads in I hate to admit it, but I see both sides there — not unlike the hip, purse-carry- ing fellows I’ve mocked. of this issue. But let’s get this straight: I carry a On one hand, it bewilders me that computer bag, not a lousy murse! hip, urban males choose to adorn them- selves with fashions — purses, finger- Which brings me to a troubling nail polish, even eye liner, which some accusation I encountered one morning call “guy liner” — long associated with at a local coffee shop, where a group females. of gray-haired retirees gather most It puzzles me that fashion is being mornings. used to whitewash the differences My Italian-made leather computer between men and women and between bag was hanging from my shoulder masculinity and femininity. I under- when an employee of the coffee shop stand that fashions come and go, but I told me, “Those old guys are making prefer fashions that highlight and cele- fun of your purse!” brate the sexes’ unique attributes. How dare those unfashionable cod- gers mock me for keeping up with the This is partly because of the era in times. which I was raised. Like other mascu- line men, my father carried a fat wallet ——— in a back pocket, his keys in his left front Tom Purcell is a Pittsburgh Tri- bune-Review humor columnist and is pocket, and lots of change in his right nationally syndicated exclusively by pocket — which he jangled with his hand Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. as he shot the bull with other men. The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. Send letters to the editor to editor@eastoregonian.com, or via mail to Andrew Cutler, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801