Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 20, 1955, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFORD&wTRIBuKI
"Everybody In Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune
Published Daily Except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
27-29 North Fir St. Phcne 2-gl41
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
E C FERGUSON Managing Editor
ERIC AIXEN JR. City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN. Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE STAR CHER. Society Editor
JACK JACKSON Sunday Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
Marcn a. iop
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
10 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Sept. 20, 1945
(It was Thursday)
Central Point to vote on $35,-
000 water system improvement
bonding Saturday,
i .
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The deer
season in Oregon Saturday, Sept.
29, and the more cautious hill
men have started training to
beat their cougar dog to the
hole under the barn.
20 TEARS AGO
Sept. 20, 1935
(It was Friday)
Halle Selassie, emperor of
Ethiopia,' receives one vote for
Democratic nominee to New
York state assembly.
Plans presented to county
commission for building road
way into Oregon's Switzerland
east of RoxyAnn.
30 YEARS AGO
Sept. 20. 1925
dt was Sunday)
Sham National Guard battle
put off because of muddy fair
grounds.
From the Local and Personal
column: The ceremonial com
memorating the discovery of
Crater Lake, to be held tomor
row afternoon under the aus
pices of the Klamath County
Chamber of Commerce, will be
held regardless of weather ac
cording to a telephone message
received in the city this morn
ing. If the weather should prove
to be inclement the ceremonies
will be held within the lodge.
40 YEARS AGO
Sept. 20. 1915
(It was Monday)
Western foothills covered with
heavy Dall of smoke from Evans
creek and Arraleeate forest
fires.
Elks here to dedicate new tem
pie Thursday and Friday.
What's the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Cepr. 1955, Editorial Research Report
1. bout one-third, one-half,
or two-thirds of all U. S. families
report their cash income is as
high now as ever before?
2. The Berbers and the Arabs
in Morocco are of the same re
ligion or different religions?
3. The Senate or the House
was in session for more hours
this year, or was it about 50-50?
4. A small businessman ap
plying for a loan from the Gov
ernment must first try to get one
locally; right or wrong?
5. U.S. coal exports to Europe
are increasing, decreasing or just
about holding their own over
last year's?
6. Cash dividends from cor
porations to stockholders are
about five per cent less today
than a year ago, or the same, or
five, 10 or fifteen percent high
er?
7. Which one of these gen
erals was once superintendent of
the U.S. Military Academy: U. S.
Grant, Robert E. Lee, J. J. Per
shing, George Patton, D. D. Eis
enhower?
The Answers: 1. About iwo-
thirds. 2. The same (Moham
medanism). 3. The Senate sat
for more hours. 4. Right. 5. In
creasing. 6. About 10 per. cent
higher. 7. Lee. - .
No charge is ever made for
Red Cross supplies or services,
national defense.
I - 4
Editorial Correspondence
San Francisco, Sept. 18
started. Along the banks of the
Vice President Nixon promised
parity for farmers."
But that is what Secretary
fighting against ever since he
judgment with great courage and consistency.
During the state labor convention in Medford some weeks
ago, one of the chief speakers said the approaching presidential
campaign would hit a new high for "double talk."
He was 100 per cent right. Here is a perfect example of it.
The Republican spokesman for agriculture is for flexible price
supports and against full and firm price supports. But with farm
ers in revolt because of the continued decline in prices, the GOP's
chief political spokesman, promises UNCEASING effort against
such a program.
Who is to be believed?
We don't know.
Any more than we know what Secretary of the Interior Mc
Kay means, when he does everything in his power to prevent
public power development and then declares he is not opposed
to it.
More "double-talk." But we predict this is merely a drop in the
bucket compared with what the poor defenseless voters are going
to get a year hence.
At the recent $100-a-plate dinner held here by the Democrats,
the key-note was to get after Ike and dispel the myth that he is
invincible.
That sounds sensible from a partisan standpoint and Demo
cratic dinners, like Republican dinners, can hardly be called NON
partisan. But we think the distinction should be drawn between Presi
dent Eisenhower as a person and a VERY popular one and his
political beliefs and those of his party. A similar distinction should
be drawn between the President's foreign policies and his domestic
ones the former we believe are generally approved by the Ameri
can people, the latter not.
We grant, however, that in as rough-and-tumble a campaign
as next year's election promises to be to make such distinctions
stick will be difficult.
There is great public interest in football here as the season
starts. A week from today the local club, the 49ers, will meet the
L.A. Rams up in Kezar stadium. All good seats have already been
sold. Judging the regular season by the preliminaries, the officials
are going to get more exercise than the players, not in enforcing
the rules so much as preventing mayhem and manslaughter. The
last game we saw over TV even the coaches of the rival teams
had a try at fistcuffs. This may be bad for the great outdoor sport
but it isn't bad for the gate. (Perhaps that may be the old profit
motif just working its way out!)
Speaking of this greatest of all college sports, just what is a
POLITICAL football? We note the Republicans are severely
scoring the Democrats for trying to make political footballs out
of the farm and public power issues. Apparently a political issue
becomes a football, when the opposition threatens to make votes
by kicking it around instead of
Again speaking of football the San Francisco C of C is miss
ing a bet by not advertising the fact that it has more genuine and
stimulating football WEATHER than any other section of the
country or of the world for that matter. That is true of the year
as a whole, not just a portion of it. One might wear a raccoon coat
here the year around, (but one this one at least won't!)
A communication forwarded from Medford accuses "Ye
Editor" of asking Secretary McKay for the reasons for his policy
and then refusing to print them.
We have never received any
(or anyone else) to print the reasons for his policies regarding
public power, conservation, or
Those reasons we think are
tary or anyone else wishes to put
would be glad to give them space.
As a matter of fact while we
we thought we knew them we
criticisms of the McKay policies have never been answered. His
defense has been almost entirely the sympathy slant the claim
that he is being made a scape-goat, just a "punching bag," the
opposition politicians being afraid
take it out on one of his more
We trust before the campaign is
made public chapter and verse,
Mail Tribune will be glad to publish the answers from the Secre
tary himself or from anyone else. '
Another charge in the same offering is to the general effect
that the Mail Tribune is against Big Business, whereas Big Busi
ness is the life blood of American success, and without it Uncle
Sam would have to close up shop and hand everything over to
the Soviets.
"Ford and John D. Rockefeller," our communicant avers,
"did more to benefit the people than all government-conducted
industry ever did.
No doubt of that as the Rockefeller and Ford funds attest.
But outside of the post office, and a few government power plants,
we Know oi no government-coNDUCTED industries.
As far as that goes we know
who is against private business,
is a socialist.
But we do know several
THING turned over stock, lock
gardless oi wnetner tnat action
public welfare, or injure and retard it.
We believe it will take very
oi tne country s greatest Republicans, Abraham Lincoln and Teddy
nooseven, naa xne same idea.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although
unoer certain circumstances tne use or pen name or initial for publication
is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a
view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must
not exceed tuu woras.
Long Live the Loggers!
To the Editor: It seems the
prairie driver, W. J. Wilkings of
Moline, 111., must be a very ner
vous driver as he nears the re
tirement age. Of course he is
not used to log trucks, but they
are no more fearsome than ex
press trucks or oil tankers. He
must be used to the sight of
those, so they don't bother him.
True, we have had two bad
logger truck accidents recently.
One was faulty; chains, not
speed, the other was caused by
a man that couldn't tolerate be
ing behind another car, so pass
ed without sufficient clearance
and hit the truck and caused it
to dump its load, causing sev
eral deaths. The logger was not
to blame. .-
The logger is as courteous on
the road as anyone else. There
are exceptions to all of course.
The near accidents which
made my hair stand on end have
been caused liy passenger car
drivers, both local and tourist
A flat country driver who is
afraid of a mountain road and
only feels safe when straddling
the center line is something to
Tuesday, September 20, 195S
Yes, the campaign of 1956 has
Wabash in Indiana yesieraay
"unceasing effort toward a iuu
of Agriculture Benson has been
entered the cabinet, and in our
playing "footsie" with it!
Since when?
request from Secretary McKay
anything else. .
fairly obvious but u the Secre
them in 400 words or less we
never, asked for the reasons
did express some surprise why the
to attack-the-President so they
vulnerable subordinates, etc., etc.
over the McKay record will be
and assuming that is done, the
of no one except Norman Thomas
.big or little and he, of course.
who don't care to have EVERY
and barrel, to Big Business, re
would benefit and advance the
little research to prove that two
K.W.R.'
meet. A tourist poking along to
look at the scenery, and yet in
too much of a hurry to pull out
and stop to look is more of a
hazard than the trucks.
I am also near the retiring
age, but the loggers don't scare
roe any more than the freighters,
tankers and busses. It is the
pleasure driver that gets mixed
up in most accidents. And none
of them are going to scare me
out of any place I want to go,
and can drive my car.
As for our invisible highway
patrol Mr. w. mentions, he
should read the court news
There are plenty of overload no
tices there. So anyone can see
the loggers are not allowed to
break the laws. And they do
keep within the speed laws. It
is the driver with nowhere to
go but in a whale of a hurry
to ' get there that breaks - the
speed laws. I can't see the sense
of being afraid of something just
because you are not used to it
The percentage of log truck
accidents compared to others is
no larger! And "what roads1
when off the highways!
I might as well say I wouldn't
Matter of Fact Joseph aisp
Washington According to an
official report that has been pre
sented to the National Security
Council, the
Soviet Union
is now over
taking the
United States
in the air
atomic weap
ons race.'
As of now, by
this report's
estimate, the
f r e q u e ntly
m e n t i o ned
"American
Joseph Also
lead" may be . expected to be
come a Soviet lead in the period
1960-1965.
The basis of this estimate is
the expectation that in 1960
1965, the Soviets will enjoy a de
cided superiority in inter-conti
nental ballistic missiles. These
are the multiple-staged rockets
that will be able to carry A- or
H-bomb warheads, at speeds of
many thousands of miles an hour
through the upper air, from Rus
sian launching sites to American
targets.
The report that the National
Security Council now has before
it .also includes recommenda
tions for reversing this unfavor
able trend in the Soviet-American
balance of power, to imple
ment without upsetting the Ad
ministration's present budgetary
and fiscal plans.
Such, it can now be revealed,
are the essential results of tne
most important and intensive
high-level study of the relative
curves of boviet and American
armed strength that has yet been
attempted. The study was made
by the Killian Committee, so
called from its chairman, the
president of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, Dr.
James R. Killian Jr.
The committee, which includ
ed both leaders of science and
leaders of industry, was set up
by the National Security Coun
cil by direction of President Eis
enhower, in the troubled after
math of the second American H-
bomb explosion at Eniwetok in
the spring of 1954.
rpECHNICALLY, the Killian
Committee was a sub-committee
of the President's Scien
tific Advisory Committee, on
which Dr. Killian serves under
the chairmanship of Dr. Lee A.
DuBridge, president of The" Cal
ifornia Institute of Technology,
But in practice, the Killian Com
mittee was virtually another
name for the Scientific Advisory
Committee, with the chairman-
ship temporarily transferred
from Dr. DuBridge to Dr. Kil
lian, and with a number of ad
ditional members co-opted for
this special study.
Besides Dr. Killian and Dr.
DuBridge, . among -; those - who
served w.ere Dr. Norris E. Brad
bury, director of the Los Alamos
Scientific Laboratory; Dr.
Charles Lauritsen,' professor of
physics at California Institute of
Technology; Dr. I. I. Rabi, pro
fessor of physics at Columbia
University and chief scientific
adviser to the Atomic Enery
Commission; Dr. Jerrold Zach-
arias, director of the M.I.T. Lab
oratory of Nuclear Science; Dr,
Jerome B. Wiesner, also of M.I.
T.; Dr. James B. Fisk, executive
vice-president of Bell Telephone
Laboratories; Bruce S. Old, of
Arthur D. Little, Inc.; Robert
C. Sprague, president of the
S prague Electric Co.; and
Charles A. Thomas, president of
Monsanto Chemical Co.
ine foregoing is only a par
tial list of the full members of
the committee. In addition, large
numoers of other eminent ex
perts were employed as consult
ants, so that va total of about
fifty of the most highly qualified
men m this country joined, in
one way or another, in the Kil
lian Committee's work.
The committee was given com
plete access to all the huge mass
of information available to the
American government. It labor
ed for many months, twice re
questing and twice receiving ex
tensions of the deadline that the
National Security Council had
originally set for its report.
In the end, rather more than
two months ago, the committee
laid before the President a unan
imous report, with no significant
dissents on any point. It was
transmitted by President Eisen
hower to the National Security
Council. The N.S.C. then passed
on the report to a narrowly re
stricted circle of policy-makers
in the State Department, the
Armed Services and the Central
Intelligence Agency. The policy
maker s comment and recom
mendations must now be return
live in Illinois because of the
gangsters in Chicago!
Long live the . loggers! But
mind your manners, boys.
Mrs. Grace Kurz,
360 De Barr ave.,
Medford, Ore.
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE
ed to the N.S.C., where the is
sues raised by the Killian Re
port will presumably be debat
ed and decided when the Presi
dent returns to Washington.
OUCH is the background and
3 tory of this disturbing docu-;
ment Three mam factors are
known to have led the Killian
committee to the somewhat
bleak conclusions set forth
above.
The first factor, which is al
most old hat by now, was the
continuous build-up of the Sov
iet A- and H-bomb stockpile. Al
though by no means so great as
the American stockpile, the So
viet stockpile of weapons of ab
solute destruction is still becom
ing great enough to be decisive.
With both giant powers enjoying
relative nuclear plenty, the most
important measure of the bal
ance between them, of course,
becomes the capability of deliv
ering - the absolute weapons,
rather than the number of those
weapons in stock.
The second factor, which was
long suspected and finally posi
tively confirmed by the so-called
Moscow overflights last spring,
was the massive Soviet produc
tion of high-quality long-and-
medium-range jet bombers and
night and day jet fighters.
The Russian strategic air force
is being rapidly re-equipped
with "Bisons" and "Badgers,"
which are the new Russian B-5-like
and . B-47-like bombers.
This process is constantly im
proving the Soviet capability of
striking at American targets and
of neutralizing their overseas
bases on which our own strate
gic air command so largely de
pends. By. the same token, the
rapid re-equipment of the So
viet Air Defense Command with
the new Russian day and night
fighters, the "Farmer" and the
Flashlight," is proportionally
reducing the American Strate
gic Air Command's capability of
striking at Russian targets.
Finally, the third and most im
portant factor that influenced
the Killian report was the pre
sumed Soviet progress in guided
missile development. As has
been pointed out before, the So
viet guided missile effort has
been organized on a Manhattan
District pattern, with a compar
able priority, even since the end
of the last World War.
In America, the Eisenhower
administration has 1 stepped up
outlays on missile development,
and very important successes
have already been achieved with
the shorter range missiles. Yet
even today the American guided
missile effort is essentially or
ganized on a business-as-usual
basis.
.
TT is not excluded that the
-"- united btates wm nave an
intqr-continental missile by 1960.
. The Air Force s ATLAS proj
ect, for a true intercontinental
ballistic missile, or the NAVAJO
project,, for a long-range ram
jet missile, may well have pro
duced a prototype by that date.
But after reviewing all the
evidence concerning present de
velopment curves, the members
of the Killian Committee con
cluded that we should expect
the Soviets to enjoy an import
ant predominance in intercon
tinental guided missiles from
1960 to 1965. The committee's
judgment, in short, is a judg
ment of relative strength, and
not a judgment of absolute
strength. But it is nonetheless
significant for all that, as is
shown by the committee's re
ported analysis of what may be
called the phases of the Soviet
American power balance.
The first phase, which is def
initely stated to be past, was the
phase of unchallenged American
superiority in strategic air pow
er and atomic bombs. In this
phase, the American bargaining
position was greatly superior to
the Soviet bargaining position
in all international dealings.
The second phase, in which we
now find ourselves, is a transi
tional phase. For the present,
although the United States has
long ago lost anything like un
challenged superiority, this
country still has the edge in
strength. Therefore this coun
try still possess some remaining
bargaining advantage.
On the other hand, this Amer
ican edge is constantly being
narrowed by the improvements
in the Soviet Strategic Air Force
and Air Defense Command
above-noted. Perhaps in two
years' time, the American edge
will cease to exist altogether, if
the edge does not then actually
pass to the Soviets. The bargain
ing position, therefore, is chang
ing and will continue to change
for the worse in the present
phase. .
AS for the third phase, it is of
course the final period when
the Soviets will attain predomi-
. nance in intercontinental guided
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Don't just worry about your family's future or j
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Phone 2-9772
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missiles. There will be a Soviet
lead comparable to the Ameri
can lead that existed in the first
phase of the power balance. In
this phase of the Soviet lead, the
international bargaining posi
tion of the United States, and
indeed of the whofe free world,
will be markedly inferior to the
bargaining position of the Soviet
Union and its Communist em
pire. The emphasis on the- relative
bargaining positions of the con
testants in the world power
struggle is noteworthy. If au
thoritative reports are to be re
lieved, the Killian Committee
made no highly-colored forecasts
that the Kremlin would launch
general war during the pre
dicted period of the Soviet lead.
Whichever side has the lead,
general war will no doubt re
main a fearful risk for both
sides.
What is clearly expected,
rather, is bold and determined
soviet exploitation of a super
ior bargaining position, whose
very superiority, in turn, will
cause a relatively feeble and un
certain American and free world
response to the Kremlin's moves.
The Killian Committee, of
course, had no opportunity to re
late its projection of Soviet and
American strength curves to the
events of the summit meeting at
Geneva. But a good many of the
policy-makers who are studying
the committee's report have
pointed out that if the analysis
of phases is correct, it suggests
a special Soviet motive at Gene
va. Obviously, it is only prudent
for the Soviets to promote a
general relaxation of Western
effort and alertness, pending the
moment when the international
bargaining positions will finally
be changed in the Kremlin's
favor.
The Killian Committee s rec
ommendations for altering the
projection of Soviet and Ameri
can curves of strength are not
known in detail. They take the
form, apparently,- of proposals
for revision of the first N.S.C.
directive of 1955 the first
N.S.C. paper of each year, ac
cording to custom, being a broad
blueprint for the year's defense
program.
TT IS quite clear, however, that
that implementation of the
ruxiian committee's recommen
dations will necessitate a pretty
sharp reversal of present fiscal
ana Budgetary trends. A major
intensification of the long-range
guided missile effort, for in
stance, would show up primar
ily in the form of increases in
the Air Force's Research and De
velopment expenditures. This is
because the inter-continental
missile projects are within the
province of the Air Research
and Development Command.
A couple of months ago, Tre
vor Gardner, Assistant ' Secre
tary of Air for Research and De
velopment, publicly declared
that the Air Force's research and
Calling All
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they're at
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This Week Only!
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development outlays ought to be
currently increased by $200,-
000,000. At present, instead of
granting this increaseSecretary
of Defense Charles E. Wilson is
pressing for a decrease of $200,
000,000 in these same expendi
tures.
Any real, all-out, Manhattan
District-style effort to build in
tercontinental missiles would
certainly require authority to
let contracts well above an addi
tional 8200,000,000 in the cur
rent fiscal year. And it would
equally certainly have far more
volcanic effects on next years
important budget
By the same token the Killian
Committee's recommendations
for improvement in America's
air defenses are bound to . be
enormously costly if imple
mented. For these recommenda
tions, the extremely able Robert
Sprague of the Sprague Electric
Company, the first . Eisenhower"
candidate for Under Secretary
of the Air Force, reportedly had
the. primary responsibility.
At present, both the day and
night fighters of the American
Air Defense Command are at
least obsolescent, if not actually
obsolete, when measured against
the new Soviet jet bombers, the
"Bisons" and "Badgers." Hence
a crash effort is required to pro
duce the superior American
F-102s and F-104s, which are
now being received in very
small trickles.
Moreover, although the so-
called DEW line, or Distant
Early Warning Line, is already
being built in the Canadian Far
North, no provision has as yet
been made for far Northern
bases. There is nowhere to put
aircraft and missiles which can
respond to the DEW line's early
warning, by knocking down at
tackers remote from their tar
get. Such bases will be very
costly, and added units will be
needed to station on the bases
the bases are - authorized and
built.
rpHEN again, there is a theo-
retical possibility of an anti-
air missile with the range and
speed to intercept and destroy
intercontinental ballistic mis
siles before they re-enter the
earth's atmosphere. An all-out
Manhattan District-style effort
to produce such defensive mis
siles must begin in a small way,
of course. .But from the start,
such an effort will constitute a
commitment 'to an immense
double burden in the future.
Both offensive and defensive
long-range missiles will have to
be produced in quantity, and
launching sites and expensive
manpower to stand ready to fire
both kinds of birds will be
needed too.
In short, if the projections of
the Killian Report are correct,
the report demands a series of
distinctly painful choices. Fur
thermore, the time scale cov
ered by the Killian Report's pro
jections is very short, in terms
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Neuberger Chides
Patterson's Action
Portland (U.R) Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) chid
ed Gov. Paul Patterson yester
day for remaining silent while
the predominantly Republican
Oregon Legislature urged Con-,
gress to . defeat the administra-;
tion's reciprocal trade bilL - '
Neuberger suggested that if
Patterson planned to run for the-
S. Senate it might have been.
appropriate for him to have tried..
prevent the Oregon Legisla
ture's attack on the trade pol
icy. He told the members xorum
the Portland Chamber ot
Commerce that "I do not know
anything which contributed
much - to lining up votes
against the president's trade pro
gram" as the Oregon Legisla
ture's memorial. '
Neuberger told the chamber'
members that he had supported
the President in the field of for
eign policy on "80 per cent of
the roll call votes in the field."
This was more, he said, than the
president received in this field
from Republican members . of
Oregon's congressional delega
tion. 3
of the slow process of weapons
development and weapons pro
duction.
Hence, the choices cannot
easily be delayed until next
year or the year after. Putting
off implementing the Killian Re
port's recommendations will be
another way, in fact, of reject
ing those recommendations. For
the loss of time will mean the
loss of opportunity to change the
present Soviet, and American
strength curves.
Copyright, 1955
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
MR.
INSURANCE
Fred
- Brennan
"There are six times more thefts
than fires in homes," says a maga
zine article. Would personabe
longings stolen from the home or
garage, taken from a restaurant,
or from a cabin or hotel while
traveling, or by a hold-up man,
all be covered by' a Residence
Theft Policy?
For Information Call -MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
Phone 2-4940
SUEDES
from 3
in this
fine flttiaf,
smart looking,
uede exferd. .
Wednesday Until 9 p.m. ;
21 NORTH
CENTRAL
mfS