FOUR MEDFQUD (OREGpON)
MEDFORDl&WriaBUNE
. Evervbociy in Southern Oregon
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Flight a Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the filet of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
iO years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 23, 1946
(It was Wednesday)
Sale of Woodlawn Farm near
Central Point for use as a din
ing establishment announced by
Mrs. Lillian Ehrheart.
. From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Farmers
report they can hardly waif to
start spring plowing but they
will. They have nothing good
to say about the weather, ex
cept it hasn't raised the taxes.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 23, 1936
(It was Thursday) '
Moore Hamilton, state repre
sentative from Medford, to dis
cuss measures in special election
with Applegate Grange.
Fog continues to tie up air
service into valley; no relief in
sight.
80 YEARS AGO
Jan. 23. 1926
' (It was Saturday)
, Newton C. Chaney of Jackson
county elected to executive com
mittee of District Attorney's of
Oregon.
Rogue River man places class
ified ad wanting to trade a
2,700-pound team, harness and
wagon for car.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 23, 19W
(It was Sunday)
From Table Rock Tablets: The
farmers of this district have less
grain sown at this time of the
year than for many years.
From Local and Personal col
umn: The present storm has so
far spent itself in wind with no
precipitation in the valley.
though on the southern side of
the Siskiyous heavy rain and
sndw are falling.
What's the Answer?
0Can You Get 4 of th 7?
Copr. 1955, Editorial Research Rpr1
1. The Federal Power Com
mission does or doesn't now reg
ulate prices at. which producers
of natural gas sell it to pipe
lines for out-of-state distribution?
2. Most persons in the U.S
over 65 have incomes of more
or less than $1,000 a year?
3. "Peril point" as used in
Washington refers to drinks at
a cocktail party, driving speeds,
tariff duties, or strapless gowns
for women?
4. The Order of the Purple
Heart is bestowed by the Roman
Catholic church, British Crown
Masonic Order or U.S. armed
forces?
5. U.N. Secretary General
Hammarskjald is a Finn, Swede,
Norwegian, Dane, or German?
6. Which of these averages
the warmest weather during
January ofo normal years: Gal
vestdn (Tex.), Miami, New Or
leans, Phoenix (Ariz.), San
Diego?
7. J. W. Fulbright is a U.S
Senator from Alabama, Arizona,
Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississip
pi or Oklahoma?
The Answers: 1. Does; 2. Less
3. Tariff duties; 4. U.S. armed
forces; 5. Swede; 6.- Miami; 7.
Arkansas.
CAB DENVER ROBBED
Oregon Cty (U.R) Walter
Pabst, an Oregon City cab
driver, was held up and robbed
of 25 here early yesterday.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Controls in the Air
!
As those "confidential" letters out of Washington
say: Look for more activity from the Civil Aeronau
tics administration.
A fight, pretty much unpublicized, has been under
way over the future of air traffic control. A new ad
ministrator has been appointed. Appropriations for
air traffic are up. .
And the end is not yet.
TT ALL STEMS from the fact that the number of
- airplanes in the sky has been shooting up, and the
increase shows no signs of slowing. And perhaps
equally important, the day is approaching rapidly
when the skylanes will be filled with jet aircraft.
The jets will give a new dimension to the prob
lem of air traffic control, which is already so overbur
dened that aviation officials are highly concerned
over the increasing probability of more collisions in
the air.
TTHE magazine, Aviation Week, warns :
Unless the Civil Aeronautics Administration takes the
lead now in building a federal airways and air traffic con
trol system that can handle these jet transports, American
aviation will drift steadily toward the worst crisis in its
history.
It is this problem, and its implications, which last
month resulted in the firing of Frederick B. Lee as
CAA administrator, and his replacement by Charles
J. Lowen Jr. Criticism of the CAA had been mounting
steadily for months principally from the airlines
and the Air Force, which do a majority of the airline
flying.
TT' IS FAIR to expect that Lowen will attempt to
bring a fresh and more active approach to the
problem. Since he has taken over, news releases from
the CAA, a branch of the department of commerce,
have shown somewhat more imagination and greater
attitude of vigor.
The 1957 budget includes $40,00(,000 for new air
navigation and traffic control facilities.
Funds to aid local airport improvements have
jumped from $15,000,000 this year to a proposed
$75,000,000 in fiscal 1957.
JUST what form will the new program take? Will
it be the erection of a vast and costly network of
controls and stations by the CAA?- Or will" it be a
combination , and expansion of existing facilities of
the CAA and -of the military flying services? -
The picture is not clear
cision will probably depend on experiments being
made at present.
For instance, a new CAA air route traffic control
center went into operation at New York's vast Idle
wild International airport earlier this month. The
CAA says of it:
With its modern equipment and 208 trained personnel,
it will be called upon to do the biggest en route traffic job
in the country, that of controlling the traffic into and out of
the New York terminal area, and along the complicated net
work of airways running in all directions ...
The nvm'p.ct makes use of new Ion? rane radar.
- j
supplemented by medium
operated ingnt progress ooaras.
fN THE other hand, the CAA has agreed with the
Air Force to make operational use of -the Air De
fense Command radar for
a certain specified area of
Under this cooperative
use the Air Force's facilities and will direct military
as well as civilian traffic.
Whichever pattem is the one which will develop
and be used in the future depends on the success of
these projects. But whichever. it is, it is to be hoped
the pattern of the future can be laid out clearly and
soon. ' , . .
The rapidly increasing . number of people who
travel by air are utterly dependent for their safety
on the measures taken by the CAA and the airlines'.
And the government itself has repeatedly warned
that the problem of overcrowding is becoming crucial,
with an average of four near-collisions each day.
When jets double the speed of air travel, some
solution had better be ready. E.A.
"On Center"
One of the more interesting publications to reach
the editorial -department is a little mimeographed
magazine called "On Center." It is published by pa
tients at the Oregon State Hospital in Salem, and is
devoted entirely to the problems of alcoholism and
alcoholics.
The current issue, March-April, 1956, marks the
first anniversary of the booklet.
A BRIEF history of the publication also appears,
and because of the highly unusual nature of the
magazine, we are reprinting it here :
Without fanfare, On Center came into existence one year
ago with its first issue of 250 copies, which had a circula
tion mostly within the state of Oregon. The present issue of
1,600 copies will go to interested persons in all parts of the
world.
Publication has been carried on without the support of
paid advertising, or the solicitation of paid subscriptions.
This has been accomplished by means of supplies and mate
rials provided by the Oregon Alcohol Education Committee,
the Oregon State. Hospital' and through donations of our
readers.
Inasmuch as this, the first and (so far as we know) only
hospital periodical on the subjects of alcoholism and sobrie- .
ty in the United States, is entirely patient promoted, pub
lished and edited, 'we feel that this first year of On Centers
life has been a gratifying one. Reader response has corrobo
rated this optimistic conclusion.
It's for sure that any degree of success our pioneering
venture has had is largely due to the readers' interest and
response. To them go the kudos and to them the thanks for
On Center's continuing and flourishing existence.
- E.A,
Monday, January 23, 1956
at the moment. A final de
- o o '
range radar and manually
civil air traffic control in
Kansas and Missouri
endeavor, the CAA will
Editorial Comment
ED KENNEDY'S STORY
By ROBERT W. CHANDLER
Editor and Publisher
Bend (Ore.) Bulletin
New York One of the mem
bers of our 27-man study group
here is Edward Kennedy, assist
ant editor and publisher of the
Peninsula-Herald of Monterey,
California.
Now the name Edward Ken
nedy probably doesn't mean
much to many readers of news
papers. To newspapermen active in
the business 10 years or longer,
however, it brings back a real
memory.
If you have a long memory,
you'll remember that it was Ed
Kennedy, then of the Associated
Press, who broke the story of
the end of the European War in
1945.
Kennedy was one of the top
wire service correspondents dur
ing the war. He had a long and
honorable career with the AP,
and in early 1945 was the head
of AP coverage on the Western
Front in Europe.
When Germany surrendered,
Ed Kennedy, along with a num
ber of other newsmen, had the
story. The release was held up
by the U. S. Army, although its
own radio stations were broad
casting it all over Western Eu
rope. So, Ed Kennedy broke the
story, and a great outcry arose
to the skies.
Some competing correspond
ents claimed he had broken a
pledge. Others felt he was justi
fied.
The loudest screams came
from some of the large papers
represented on the AP's board
of directors. Their editors were
unhappy' because they had to
use Kennedy's story, instead of
stories by reporters from their
own newspapers, who also had
been on the scene.
' Ed Kennedy came back to
this country, and the then heads
of the AP told him to take a
vacation, until they learned
what the members of the AP
felt about the matter.
He vacationed, and vacation
ed, and vacationed. . One day his
paycheck stopped coming, al
though the heads of the AP still
had not announced a decision.
No decision has been an
nounced as yet, although eleven
years have lapsed. And there is
ample evidence that the new
heads of the big news-gathering
agency still are embarrassed
about the whole thing. Most
American newsmen feel their
predecessors did wrong with Ed
Kennedy's back-door dismissal.
The members of the group
here have had a chance to go
over the whole thing once again,
and a number'Of us have .ques
tioned Kennedy about it, over
the dinner table and during "bull
sessions." '
AU of us think Kennedy was
in the right, and the AP in the
wrong. The organization should
have been able to reach a decis
ion by now.
Personally, of course, Ken
nedy is far better off than if
he had remained with the AP
We'll wager his income is high
er, and he works on an ex
cellent paper its excellence
due in no small part to his ef
forts in a very pleasant place
to live.
As far as Kennedy is con
cerned, he is not bitter about
any of the whole affair., But
he does deserve some sort of
final answer.
SEEKING FRINGE
PROBLEM ANSWERS
Problems of the rapidly grow
ing fringe areas that surround
Oregon cities are being laid be
fore the legislative interim com
mittee on local government in
all their stark reality.-
Hearings already held at
Salem, Eugene and Roseburg
have attracted intense interest
at the grassroots level.
The problems growing out of
the relentless flows of people
into the suburbs are remarkably
uniform in some fields, but they
also involve some tricky and
vexatious local situations. But
general or specific, the testimony
given to date confirms the belief
of state, county and city officials
and citizens that a co-ordinated
attack must be made on fringe
or metropolitan area problems
before they become overwhelm
ing.
In general, the interim com
mittee (headed by City Commis
sioner Ormond R. Bean of Port
land and including city and
county officials and legislators)
already has determined that the
people living in unincorporated
areas around Oregon cities need
help on such common problems
as sewage disposal, drainage,
police and fire protection, roads
and schools.
All too often they find them
selves enmeshed in a whole
series of overlapping local im
provement districts designed to
provide necessary services, but
inadequate to meet minimum
needs.
Many areas are paying high
prices (taxwise) for these serv
ices without receiving adequate
returns on expenditures. They
need guidance. They need clear
er and broader enabling legisla
tion. They need the govern
mental and financial machinery
to bring order out of the chaos
of conflicting agencies with
limited powers.
It would be premature to in-
dipate at this stage what the in-
terim committee's conclusions
and recommendation will be.
Some of them are self-evident.
But the important thing right
now is to complete the assembl
ine of facts at other trouble
spots such as Portland, Corvallis,
Mediorc, Klamath tails, Coos
Bay and the northern beaches,
Pendleton and the Bend area. It
will be time enough then to get
down to cases.
We are confident, in any
event, that the committee is
broadly based and ably staffed.
It is receiving excellent com
munity co-operation. It certainly
will come up with some realistic
answers to the metropolitan
area problem for the considera
tion of the 1957 legislature.
Oregon Journal, Portland.
!n the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
The bureau of the census has
just come out with a new esti
mate of the population of the
United States which it places
at 164,300,000 as of mid-1955.
This figure d o e s n't include
American servicemen in foreign
countries.
So it is a safe guess that our
present population is about 165
million. It is expected to ap
proach 200 million by 1975. This
rapid increase in our nation's
populations lies at the root of
most of the optimistic predic
tions of steadily improving busi
ness in our country over the
next couple of decades if we
can stay at peace.
In a nation where living
standards are high and getting
higher, more population means
MORE MARKETS and more
markets mean more possibilities
for business expansion.
SO MUCH for the nation as
a whole. Let's now take a
look at the Pacific Coast and
our own area of southern Ore
gon.
This new estimate just made
by the census bureau, discloses
that California LED ALL OTH
ER STATES by a wide margin
in population growth in the five
years since the 1950 census
California gained nearly two
and a half million persons be
tween 1950 and 1955. This puts
the Golden State in, SECOND
PLACE among the states of our
Union just behind New York.
California now .has just over
13 million persons. New York
has 16 million.
lyHAT does that mean
' Southern Oregon?
It means a LOT.
to
It means that we have J, AT
OUR DOORS the biggest mar
ket in the West and the second
largest one -state market in
America.
It is MORE MARKET that
makes room for more industrial
development.
T SUPPOSE everyone is rough-
ly familiar with the industrial
situation in the states of Con
necticut and New Jersey, which
border on the great and popu
lous state of New York and the
vast market potential of New
York City.
In these states, industrial
towns are only a few miles
apart. They vary all the way
from the one-industry viUage
up to huge industrial centers
like Newark. Driving through
these states, you're hardly ever
out of sight' of factory chim
neys. You're hardly, out of the
limits of one factory town be
fore you enter the' limits of
another one.
It is true that these indus
tries find markets ALL OVER
the populous Northeast, but
their most profitable market is
in the state of New York, where
more people live than in any
other state. -
PEOPLE make MARKETS
and the closer the markets are
the more attractive they are.
rFHERE was a time when the
West was acutely handicap
ped in the way of industrial de
velopment by its remoteness
from the important consuming
markets. Everything we pro
duced in quantity had to be
shipped to the more populous
area east of the Mississippi river.
This long haul put us at a com
petitive disadvantage with the
East.
That handicap is being re
moved. It is being removed by
the growth of population in the
West. Our own Western area is
now able to support LARGE
industrial enterprises out of ITS
OWN markets. It is able to do
so because it has a large and
rapidly growing consuming pop
ulation.. Hardly a week passes
any more when some large East
ern concern doesn't announce
a branch somewhere in the West
to take care of its Western busi
ness. Our own native Western
industries are expanding to the
point where they are able to
invade Eastern markets.
SOUTHERN Oregon has great
resources. It has rivers to de
velop power for its use. It has
a wide range of industrial raw
materials. It has agreeable cli
mate. It has industrious and am
bitious people.
And
In addition
It ,is advantageously close to
the markets provided by Cali-
USSR Said Moving Into Africa
In Big Way; Libyan Move Seen
Br CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Soviet Russia is moving into
Africa, the world's second larg
est continent, in a big way.
It started
with the deal
under which
C o m m unist
C z e c hoslova
kia is supply
ing Egypt with
arms.
Next the
Kremlin estab
1 i s h e d rela-
Charles McCann lions Wltn tne
new kingdom of Libya, which
lies between Egypt and French
North Africa on the Mediter
ranean coast.
Now relations are being es
tablished with Liberia, the
Matter of Fact ey
IF HEALTH PERMITS"
Washington The first gen
eral press conference since the
President's heart attack was a
decidedly re
assuring occas
ion. Dwight D.
E i s e n h o wer
looked well.
His color was
good. His grin
was as infec
tious as ever.
He was not
Joseph Alsop treated lignuy
by his questioners; yet he
handled the questions with the
sure . mastery that he has grad
ually developed since the. early
days when press . conferences
were so obviously grave ordeals
for him.
To be sure, the President
seemed to lack a little of his old
bounce and
fast- striding
energy when
he entered the
crowded cham-
ber. The
pouches under
his eyes were
n o t i c e a bly
heavier. The
eyes them-
stewart Alsop selves, wnen
he did not laugh or smile, seemed
restless and even a little
troubled. Yet the total impres
sion, conveyed was one of vigor
and assurance.
What a difficult year ahead,
in which governmental paralysis
can be appallingly dangerous, it
was deeply encouraging to see
the President with his : hand
again firmly on the helm.
TUT it is quite another ques
A tion, whether this impression
should also reassure the Repub
lican leaders and all the mil
lions of others who so strongly
hope that the President will de
cide to. run again.
The distinction between Ei
senhower's present state and his
future great .. decision was un
derlined, as it were, by his tele
gram permitting his name to
be entered in the New Hamp
shire primary. Careful study
should be given to the language
that he used about his own con
dition, which is as follows:
"It would be idle to pretend
that my health can be wholly
restored to the excellent state
in which the doctors believed it
to be in mid-September (just be
fore the attack) . . . My future
life must be carefully regulated
to avoid excessive fatigue. My
reasons for obedience to the
medical authorities are not sole
ly personal; I must obey them
out of respect for the responsi
bilities I carry."
TTERE, once again, and in even
stronger tones, was the same
note the President had struck
in the special conference on his
health that he granted the small
group of reporters at Key West.
In Key West he had intimated
that it would be wrong for him
to run again if he did not have
a good chance of serving out a
full second term, because "It is
a very critical thing to change
governments in this country at
a time that is unexpected." Now
he was adding the further state
ment that despite his mercifully
splendid recovery, the fact had
to be faced that his heart at
tack had in some measure pre
manently impaired his health.
Put the' two together, then,
and ft becomes rather clear what
the President is asking himself,
and what he will ask his doctors
when they complete their final
check-up. He will ask, not
whether he is out of the im
mediate woods, but whether a
man in his condition is likely to
fornia, which is now, in point
of population, the SECOND
state of the Union.
PICTURE TUBES
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18 N. GRAPE
PH. 3-1971
Negro republic on the West
Coast.
Great Britain is already get
ting alarmed at the possibilities.
Advices from London say the
British government is sounding
out other countries on the possi
bility of holding an internation
al conference on the defense of
Africa this spring.
Prime Minister Anthony Eden
is most likely to discuss the
situation with President Eisen
hower when they meet in Wash
ington next week.
Africa Is Rich Field
l. Africa is a comparatively new
field for Communist political and
economic penetration. It is ' a
rich field. For the Western Al
lies, it is a dangerous one.
Africa is still rightly called
the Dark continent. Civilization
Joe and Stewart Alsop
survive the heavy pressures of
the Presidency for another full
term.
IT IS a grim question, not easy
nr nlpsQanf in HicrMicc Trip
most authoritative study, based
on case histories of 390 cardiac
patients, seems to have been
made by doctors David R. Cole,
Evelyn B. Singian and Louis N.
Katz of the Medical Research
Institute of Chicago's Michael
Reese hospital. "The U. S. News
and World Report" has recently
reduced the Cole-Singian-Katz
statistics to tabular form.
ine taoie shows that a man
of the President's age, who has
successfully passed the first
months of acute danger immed
iately, after his heart attack,
then has five chances in eleven
of living more than five years
which means five chances in
eleven of serving out a full
second term in the President's
case. The chances must be some
what further weighted against
the President, curiously enough.
because he had his attack while
resting. But his exceUent state
of general health and his fine
recovery constitute even bigger
items on the favorable side of
the balance.
In cold statistical terms, this
is the best available answer to
the President's big question. It
seems likely that the. Cole-Singian-Katz
statistics are not fully
accepted, or at least are differ
ently interpreted, by the Presi
dent s civilian heart specialist,
ur. aui .Dudley White.
TUT it can be stated on posi-
tive authority that the emin
ent Army heart specialist, Dr,
Thomas E. Mattingly, does not
make so light of the permanent
impairment caused by a heart
attack as Dr. White has recently
aone in puDlic:
These facts, in turn, give a
somewhat new twist to the re
peated, boldly positive assertions
of the President's chief political
advisers, that he will certainly
run again "if his health per
mits. Jjor their certainty is al
ways carefully conditional; and
it is very clear from the statis
tics cited that their, "if" is con
siderably bigger than most peo
ple have come to suppose.
Copyright 1956. New York
Herald Tribune, Inc.
Stevenson, Knowland
In Illinois Primary
Springfield, 111. j(UJ!) Demo
crat Adlai E. Stevenson entered
his second presidential primary
today and Republican William
F. Knowland may find himself
in his first.
Backers of both men were slat
ed to beat today's deadline by
filing their names in the April
10 Illinois presidential prefer
ence prirnary.
' Stevenson, who already has
filed for the March Minnesota
primary, probably will be alone
in the IUinois Democratic pri
mary race. He also intends to
enter primaries in California,
Since 1 908
PERL
Mortuary
o
Phone 2-6675
FINER
FUNERAL
SERVICES '
came to it thousands of years
ago. But civilization has yet to
penetrate large parts of it where
bow and arrow and spear are
the standard weapons.
Africa's 200,000,000 people
are scattered over an area of
about 11,640,000 square miles.
It is the greatest remaining col
onial area.
There are but six independ
ent nations in it Egypt, Libya,
Ethiopia, the Sudan, Liberia,
and South Africa with popula
tions totalling about 63,000,000.
Of these Egypt, Libya and The
Sudan have attained independ
ence since the end of World
War II.
Africa's remaining, colonial
peoples are getting more and
more restive. Witness the Mau
Mau revolt in British East Af
rica, the little-mentioned riotous
unrest in the French Cameroons
in West Africa, and the open re
volts in French North Africa.
It is evident that the Kremlin
has decided to exploit this rich
field.
Center of Penetration
There are indications that Lib
ya may be made the center for
Russian penetration in Africa.
Incidentally, the United States
has a big Air Force base there
just outside of Tripoli, the cap
ital. Russia's first ambassador to
Libya arrived in Tripoli this
month. It is interesting to note
that he is Nikolai I. Generalbv,
a Soviet, diplomat of first rank.
Generalov was ambassador to
Australia when Vladimir Petrov,
his third secretary, surrendered
to the Australian Secret Service
and asked asylum.
Documents . which Petrov
handed over disclosed that he
was the chief of a big spy net
work, operating from General
ov's embassy.
Generalov personally was not
implicated. But it is hard to be
lieve that he did not know what
was going on. His appointment
as ambassador to little Libya
may be significant.
FILM PAIR TO WED
Hollywood (U.R) Actor
Robert Stack, 36, and actress
Rosemmarie Bowe, 23, said they
would be married today at the
Beverly Hills Lutheran church
in a double-ring ceremony. The
couple met two years ago. It is
the first 'marriage for both.
Florida and Pennsylvania.
A group of Chicago backers
served notice they would enter
Knowland in the GOP race,
even though it means he will
buck President Eisenhower.
Car Wreck Due
GEO. N. TAYLOR
A clear sunny day with the
driver of the o n coming car
either alseep or else. His car
seemed to steer
itself over to the
wrong side of
the t w o-w a y
highway. A
wreck was due.
To escape a
smash, the
driver who was
on his own side
of the road and
had the right of
way, steered off
into the ditch
to let the wild car pass. So you
see the car that had the right
of way, forced off into the ditch.
But underneath that bouncing
car there in the ditch, were the
every-lasting arms "The
Angel of the Lord encampeth
round about them that fear Him
and delivers them." Ps. 34:7
BIBLE. Trust him and God
stands back of His word. As God
put your sins on Christ and He
died for you, now receive Christ
into your herat, Let Him be your
Lord and Saviour. He will up
hold you until your work is
done. So what for you? The pass
ing show or eternal life?
This message sponsored by a
Scappose dairyman. adv.
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ISP