Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 25, 1956, Image 4

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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
Ihstorv from the files ot The
Mml Tribune 10. 20. 30 and
0 tears ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July 25, 1S45
(It was Thursday)
Sale of the large Getciiell
home at 1121 Swuth Oakdale ave.
to George M. Roberts, was an
nounced today.
F r o m Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: A tire
shortage now menaces auto rac
ing, a report states. The short
age affects professional racing
on licensed tracks and has noth
ing to do with speedways in the
residential districts.
20 YEARS AGO
July 25. 1936
(It was Saturday)
Recognition for the sales and
merchandising record e s t a b
lislied during Die past five years
has been j;iven the Lewis Super
Service station by the B. F.
Goodrich company, Akron, Ohio.
Amateur hour, after the fash
ion of the Major Bowes program,
will be held at weekly luncheon
meeting of the Kiwanis club.
30 YEARS AGO
July 25, i32B
tit was Sunday)
Since July 1 this year the
Owen-Oregon Lumber company
has been trac e marking all lum
ber shipped lo lumber yards in
Medford.
The premium list for the Jack
son county fair, Sept. 15-18, is
being printed and will be ready
for distribution about Aug. 1.
40 YEARS AGO
July 25. 1916
lit was Tuesday)
The citizens and clubs of Med
ford are preparing entertain
ment for the State Editorial as
sociation annual convention here
the first week of August.
An all-day picnic was attended
by about 75 farmers and ranch
ers of the area, Saturday at
Central Point.
Whafs the Answer?
Can You Get 4 of the 7?
Copr. 1955 Fditonal Research
Rppnrt
1. Which one of these states
has fewest oiectoral votes in el
ecting a president: California. Il
linois, Ohio, Pennsylvania. Tex
as0 2. About 40 per cent. 60 per
cent or 75 per cent of all U. S.
wheat growers voted last year to
atvept acreage controls at lower
price supports?
2. Many more women than
men die every year from over
doses of barbiturate pills, or
many more men than women, or
about the same number of each'
4 G. Bernard Shaw, famous
playwright, was born 100 years
ago: in Northern Ireland, South
ern Ireland. Scotland. England
or Wales?
5. All six New England states
voted for Eisenhower in 1952;
right or wrong?
6. The March of Dimes cam
paign last January raised about
SI. 5 million. S5.0 million, S15
million. $50 million, or S150 mil
lion? 7. The Oath of Hippocrates
binds architects, dentists, doc
tors, government employees or
members of a certain fraternal
order?
The answers: 1. Texas. 2.
About 75 per cent. 3. Many more
women than men. 4. Southern
Ireland. 5. Right. 6. A liltle over
S50 million. 7. Doctors.
USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS
FOR RESULTS
MAIL TRIBUNE
Adjournment
A? leaders and blocs in Congress were compro
mising light and left ( sic in the customary last-minute
stampede to get major legislation enacted, the
outlook was for sine die adjournment before the end
of July. Thereafter only President Eisenhower could
summon the S l.h Congress back into session.
No longer does Congress provide in its adjourn
ment resolution that it may call itself back into session
by decision of its leaders. That was done during the
Truman administration and the latter part of the F. D.
Roosevelt regime.
It was done because Congress didn't trust the
Chief Executive not to exceed his powers and prerog
atives when it was not on hand to check him. In those
years the adjournment was called "conditional" in
stead of '"sine die." Actually, it was a recess, which
might oi' might not extend all the way to the opening
of the next session.
Adjournment on July ol, unless Congress sets
some other date, is prescribed in the legislative reor
ganization act of 19-16. The joint (La Follette-Mon-roney)
committee that framed the measure explained:
"Representative democracy cannot remain truly repre
sentative it elected members are required to remain away
from their constituencies for Ion? periods . . . denied the
interchange of ideas so necessary to our system . . . with
intimate first-hand knowledge of the problems of the places
they represent.''
That adjournment date objective was met. or sub
stantially met, in six of the following ten years, includ
ing l(J4fj and last year. Congress failed to meet it in
four of the ten years. As was to be expected, the ad
journment objective was realized in presidential elec
tion years 194S, 1952 and now 1956. E.R.R.
When G.B.S. Was Born
The city of Chicago in particular will celebrate
Thursday, July 26, as the lOUth anniversary of the
birth of the eminent playwright and pamphleteer
George Bernard Shaw. He was born in Dublin of
sadly impoverished Protestant "gentry". His mother
found it necessary to become a music teacher, and
Shaw explained later that he didn't so much throw
himself into the fight against poverty as throwr her
into it.
When G. B. S. was born Victoria had been on the
British throne for 19 years, and hostilities had just
ended in the Crimean War. In Ireland the great potato
famine of the Forties had turned Irish nationalism
away from the peaceful approach of its former lead
er, Daniel O'Connell, who had died nine years before
Shaw was born.
Revolutionary outbreaks on the Continent in 1847
4S had encouraged violence in Ireland, and the habeas
corpus writ had been suspended there. Archaic land
laws exploited the farmers for the benefit of absentee
landlords, many of them English.
It was to be 14 years after Shaw's birth before the
Parliament in London began to enact remedial Irish
land laws, and most of these failed to go to the root
of the distress. Reform bills of 1867-68 gave a little
more power to English and Scottish voters, but the
Irish "Reform" bill of 1868 benefitted only Irish city
dwellers, keeping Irish farm tenants largely unenfran
chised. George Bernard Shaw as he emerged into afflu
ence from poverty-stricken years in London as a hack
writer was not blind to the ills of his native land. Yet
his zeal for Socialism through "gradualism" took in
every land and every race. At his death in 1950 at
the acre of 94, he left a gross estate of over SI million.
E.R.R.
To Ban Eavesdropping on Juries
"Knowingly and willfully, by any means or device
whatsoever, to record, listen to, or observe proceed
ings of grand or petit juries" is likely to be made a
crime by this Congress. A bill (S 2887) to that effect
was passed by the Senate on March 26 without oppo
sition and received the unanimous approval of the
House Judiciary committee on July IS.
It is true that little time remained after the House
committee action to get the bill to the House floor for
a vote. However, there was little or no opposition to
it. It embodies a proposal of Attorney General Her
bert Brownell, Jr., endorsed by President Eisenhower.
: ""THE BILL was instigated by the secret recording,
; with concealed microphones, of the deliberations
: of federal juries in six civil cases at Wichita, Kans.,
i during May 1954. The jury-tapping was done by a
University of Chicago Law School team in connection
; with a research project, financed by the Ford Founda
j tion. into the administration of justice. The listening
in was agreed to by attorneys for both sides and pre
siding judge Delmas Hill.
; Dean Edward H. Levi of the Law School said that
j jury-tapping had been approved by "many outstand
ing lawyers and judges as usetul . . . m improving
the administration of justice." And federal circuit
judge Orie L. Phillips was quoted as saying it could
show a judge if, how and why his charge to jurors had
puzzled or even misled them.
However, the Justice Department hold that if "jur
ors suspect eavesdropping, "however well intention
ed," it would deter them from freely discussing a case
among themselves. Chairman James O. Eastland of
the Senate Judiciary committee has said that jury-tapping
violates the whole constitutional right to a jury
trial. And the U. S. Supreme Court in 1929 held that
a mere suspicion of ''surveillance" could well prevent
an "average juror" from "calm judgment' and make
jurv service repugnant to citizens "fit for juries."
E.R.R.
Wednesday. July 23, 1356
Before August?
!
toilet's Government May Last
Until Next
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
French Premier Guy Mollet s
government seems pretty certain
to last until next fall at least.
When he took office Febru
ary 1 as head
of France's
23rd post-war
cabinet, it was
predicted that
he would last
only a few
weeks.
His shaky
coalition, based
on his own So-
tharles Mutann CiatlSt party
and the Radical Socialist party,
commanded but 183 out of the
627 seats in the National Assem
bly, the dominant house of Par
liament. Mollet was faced by an explo
sive situation in North Africa
and threatened inflation at
home.
Expect Parliament Adjournment
But in the intervening months
he has survived an endless series
of votes of confidence on all
sorts of issues.
He faces the last of the votes
this week. He is expected to win
them, then to adjourn parlia
ment until some time in October.
1 1 looked over the weekend
as if Mollet's position was threat
ened. He proposed to impose a spe
cial 10 per cent income tax to
raise the S450 million which, it
is estimated, will be the cost of
fighting the rebels in Algeria for
the next two years.
Unexpectedly strong opposi
tion developed. Political experts
believed that Mollet might be
overthrown.
Again Rides Out Storm
But he decided Tuesday to
beat a strategic retreat. Finance
Minister Paul Ramadier agreed
in Mollet's behalf, at a meeting
of the Assembly's Finance Com
mittee, to float a loan sufficient
to finance the Algerian war for
this year.
Ramadier said the government
would demand a 10 per cent in
come tax rise to pay next year's
costs. But Mollet was expected
Matter of Fact by
CLEAN BOMBS AND
DIRTY BOMBS
A few days ago. Atomic Ener
gv Commission Chairman Lewis
Strauss issued a statement about
the recent Pa
cific hydrogen
tests, which
could be of his
toric scientific
and strategic
importance. It
could also be
disingenu
ous, and whol-
.,.,M-pli Aop J.v "
reassuring implications. The
statement was as follows:
"It has been confirmed that
there are many factors, includ
ing operational ones, which do
make it possible to localize to an
extent not heretofore apprecia
ted the fall-out of nuclear ex
plosions." There is little doubt about the
primary purpose of the state
ment. Lt. Gen. James Gavin's re
cently released testimony that a
major hvdrogen attack would
cause ' several millions deaths,"
and that the
death area
would "back
up well into
Western E u -rope"
natural
ly caused a fu
rore in Eu
rope. Strauss'
statement was
clearly intend
ed to reassure
Stewart Alsop
the Europeans.
OUT the real meaning of his
" statement is far less clear. It
could mean that the Atomic
Energy Commission has suc
ceeded in achieving a "clean
bomb" a bomb with little or no
radioactive side effects. It can
be reported authoritatively that
research contracts for a "clean
bomb" have in fact been let. But
it can also be stated authorita
tively that the technological
hurdles which must be over
come to achieve such a bomb are
immense.
Previous efforts to make a
"clean bomb" (which would be a
fusion bomb, rather than a fission-fusion-fission
bomb, like the
"dirty" bombs now in both Amer
ican and Soviet stockpiles) have
met a "technological blank
wall." If the AEC scientists have
in fact overlept the blank wall,
and invented this entirely new
kind of bomb, then a new chap
ter has opened in the nuclear
era. and the strategic situation
has been altered in a significant
way.
But if the AEC has invented a
"clean bomb," why did not
Strauss openly boast to the world
about this humanitarian achieve
ment? And why should he make
his cryptic reference to "opera
tional factors? ' And why was
uranium 237. radioactive by
product of the "dirty bomb,"
found by Japanese scientists
after the pacific tests?
THESE question:
suggest that
''.ww'i'?h''''W'.W
. J
. 4
-1 the real
meaning of the
Fall, mcCann Says
to put off that demand until the
time came.
Thus it appeared, unless the
situation changed suddenly, that
Mollet and his government were
safe at least until the next ses
sion of Parliament in October.
Average Life
That would mean that Mollet
had kept together one of the
weakest governments since the
war for more than eight months,
whatever might happen in the
new session. The average life
of post-war governments has
been about seven months.
Mollet has survived partly by
skillfully angling for the sup-
In The Day's
More on foreign affairs today
including foreign aid:
Egyptian officials are saying
in Cairo that Egypt's man-on-horseback
Premier Nasser will
announce on Thursday of this
week '"decisive steps in answer
to the U.S. and British with
drawal of offers to put up
money" to build a huge dam on
the Nile river.
A Cairo newspaper compares
the British and American action
to a "demand for a pound of
flesh," and asserts that in the
case of the big Aswan dam
Egypt "refused to agree to con
ditions that would bind its in
dependence." TOUGH talk, you say, from a
proposed borrower to a pro
posed lender?
Well, it IS tough talk. But,
under the circumastances in
volved in this Aswan dam deal
the Egyptians are talking
straight facts. After all, what we
have been saying to them, in
substance, is that if they'll be
good and STAY ON OUR SIDE,
we'll dig down in our pockets
and build a dam for 'em.
That may be good striped
pants diplomacy, but it ISN'T
good business and I have the
feeling that in our economic deal
ings with foreign countries we'd
better stick to straight business
principles.
THAT brings up an interesting
little story that failed to get
Joa and Stewart Alsop
Strauss statement is simply that
the AEC has tested a high air
burst of a hydrogen weapon
something the Soviets have al
ready done. If this is so, the
implied reassurance in the
Strauss statement is false.
A high air burst does indeed
"localize the fall-out of nuclear
explosions," and for a simple
reason. Exploded near the sur
face, the three mile fireball of
a "dirty bomb" scoops out vast
quantitis of material, radio-poisons
it, and sucks it into the up
per atmosphere, whence it falls
out in a radioactive rain of death
on living things below. But a
bomb, even a "dirty bomb," ex
ploded two miles or more in the
air, will not have this effect,
simply because the fireball does
not make contact with the earth.
It might be thought that this
fact (which of course has long
been understood by scientists)
would in itself provide reassur
ance to our allies. In case of
global war, why not order the
Strategic Air Command to ex
plode all its bombs at an al
titude of two miles or more?
The answer lies in the nature
of SAC's mission. A high burst
hydrogen bomb would certainly
tear the heart out of a great city.
But tearing the heart out of
cities is only a small part of
SAC's grim job. The great bulk
of SAC's bomb stockpile is cer
tainly assigned in the war plans
to Soviet and satellite air bases.
IN CASE of global war, the
Soviet airfields 300 in Eu
rope alone, according to Gen
eral Gruenther, and many more
in Soviet territory must be
destroyed at all costs, if the
Western allies are to survive
physically. The Soviet air bases
can only be surely knocked out
with ground bursts.
A house in a city, which can
take only two pounds of blast
pressure, might be knocked
down by an air burst hydrogen
bomb at a range of fifteen miles.
But reinforced underground
structures, such as the Soviets
are building on their more
important bases, can withstand
upwards of a hundred pounds
of blast pressure, and thick con
crete runways far more than
that. Thus SAC simply cannot
depend on the blast from high
air bursts to knock out the Sov
iet air bases. Ground bursts are
needed to wipe the bases, run
ways and all, off the face of the
earth.
Thus the fact that the AEC
has exploded a hydrogen bomb
at high altitude which is al
most certainly the real meaning
of the Strauss statement has
little strategic significance, and
provides no cause for reassur
ance among our allies. For this
reason, and other reasons which
will be examined in another
report on this unhappy subject,
it is time, and past time, to re
think the comfortable theory
that American security can be
based exclusively on the deter
rent effect of the American
stockpile of "dirty bombs."
1956. New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
port of nominally opposing Na-
tional Assembly groups, includ
ing the Communists, on various
specific issues.
But he was survived partly
also because none of the opposi
tion parties wanted to take the
responsibility for throwing him
out.
The measures Mollet has put
through Parliament have been
highly unpopular with parties
strong enough to defeat him.
They include the calling up of
more than 200,000 reservists to
fight in Algeria, and price-freezing
and other decrees to prevent
inflation.
News by
Frank Jenkins
much play in the news. Rutgers
University recently conducted
what it termed an international
summer banking school. One of
the bankers present was Vladmir
Geraschenko, first assistant
chairman of the U.S.S.R. (Soviet)
state bank. In the course of the
sessions, he made this interest
ing statement:
"Other countries won't stop
development of Russia's economy
by banning Russian imports.
Such countries will only hurt
themselves."
fpHAT is a challenging state---
ment. But I think he is right.
Let's put it this way:
Russia's greatest present need
is food. She hasn't been able to
produce enough of it to go
around, and as a result vast
masses of her people are hungry.
History tells that hungry people
are apt to cause trouble.
Our greatest present need is
to SELL food. We have vast sur
pluses of it stored up in bulging
warehouses. We have been giv
ing some of it away in boondog
gling deals, but we can't seem
to reduce the surplus much. The
value of our stored-up surpluses
still holds around eight billion
dollars and we're just at the
beginning of a new harvest.
What we need is to sell our
agricultural surpluses to people
who will CONSUME them.
TUT, someone will say, that
J- would STRENGTHEN RUS
SIA and we mustn't do any
thing that would strengthen an
enemy.
Here's the other side:
If the Russians import their
food from us instead of growing
it themselves, they will ultimate
ly WEAKEN their economy.
They will weaken it in this way:
By buying their food abroad,
they will neglect the develop
ment of their agricultural in
dustry by failing to build it up.
In the event of war, we would
immediately cut off our food
imports to the Russians and be
cause they had neglected to build
up their own agricultural econ
omy they would then be left in
a tight spot.
The British have been in that
same tight spot in two wars.
I CAN'T help feeling that this
Russian banker was talking
plain common sense. Russia
needs to buy food. We need to
sell food. Buying and selling
create TRADE. When trade is
carried in soundly, in accordence
with fundamental business prin
ciples, it is a great builder of
friendship. The seller values his
customers, and dosen't want to
lose them in a foolish quarrel
(nearly all wars are foolish). The
buyer values his honest suppliers
and wants to stay on good terms
with them.
JAZZ FOR ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires (U.R) Dizzy
Gillespie and his band, the first
big-time American jazz group to
play here in more than a decade,
will open a six-night stand Sat
urday, it was announced Tuesday.
m m m
KV0
W MEN'S BOYS'
Ladies' Skirts Dress Slacks Stretch Socks
Values to 6.9S Re?. 6.95 to 18.95
199 299 1 r9.. 1495 I now 39
HUNDREDS OF OTHER WONDERFUL BUYS!
CRATER DEPT. STORE
CENTRAL POINT, OREGON
Stassen's Stop-Nixon
Campaign
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington U.R) There
wasn't much left of Harold E.
Stassen s stop-Nixon campaign
today except
the mystery of
who said what
to whom last
Friday at the
White House.
S t a s s e n's
proposal that
the Republi
cans drop Vice
President Rich-
Lvie t i1miii ard M. Nixon
ana nominate Massachusetts'
Gov. Christian A. Herter for his
job was a two-day wonder while
it lasted.
It lasted until 5 o'clock Tues
day night. Republican National
Committee Chairman Leonard
W. Hall then announced that
Herter would nominate Nixon
for vice 'president at next
month's national convention.
The Friday Huddle
That collapsed the Stassen
trial balloon in flames. It en
abled Nixon's closest associates
to smile again for the first time
since Monday when Stassen an
nounced a national campaign to
bounce Nixon. It enabled them
Congressional
Quiz
(Copyripht. 1956
Congressional Quarterly)
Q. Four of the following five
proposals were part of Presi
dent Eisenhower's 1956 legisla
tive program; he was opposed
to one of them. Which one was
the President against: (a) higher
postal rates; (b) federal aid for
school construction; (c) statehood
for Hawaii; (d) 90 per cent price
supports for farm commodities;
(e) an expanded highway pro
gram? A (d) 90 per cent price sup
ports for farm commodities.
A bill including Ihis provision
was vetoed by the President
April 16. He favored instead
flexible or sliding scale price
supports for crops.
Q In a recent Presidential
campaign a candidate made an
issue of the record of Congress,
calling it a "good-for-nothing"
and a "do-nothing" Congress.
Can you name: (a) the candidate;
lb) the year of the campaign; (c)
the Congress to which he re
ferred? A (a) Former President
Harry S. Truman; (b) 1948;
(c) the 80th Congress.
Q The Taft-Hartley labor law
was passed by Congress in 1947
over the Veto of President Tru
man, who subsequently urged
the law's repeal. President Eis
enhower also has taken a posi
tion on the controversial labor
law. Does he want it: (a) repeal
ed; (b) left as it is; (c) amended?
A (c) Amended. President
Eisenhower has said the Taft
Hartley act was "sound legis
lation" but should be amended
to "correct a number of de
fects." Q A bill to provide federal
aid for school construction failed
in the House by 30 votes July 5.
Advocates of federal aid said
the bill was doomed when the
House adopted an amendment by
Rep. Adam C. Powell Jr. (D
N.Y.). The Powell amendment
would have: (a) apportioned fed
eral funds among the states on
the basis of need; (b) denied
funds to states operating segre
gated schools; (c) required state
as well as federal grants for
school construction.
A (b) Denied fundi to
states operating segregated
schools.
Use Tribune Want Ads
Jim Savei Ymi Slill
p Villi VUJtfl I w M Villi
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STOREWIDE
CLEARANCE
ALL PRICES SLASHED!
Here Are Just A Few Examples Of
Hits Snag
also to give attention to a ques
tion which occasionally baffles
Republican party professionals.
It goes like this: "Why does Ike
do some of the things he does?"
There is, for example, that
Friday White House huddle be
tween the President and Stassen
at which Stassen told Mr. Eisen
hower in advance of his stop
Nixon drive. Who said what to
whom? What were the circum
stances under which Stassen im
mediately thereafter decided he
had a go-ahead to start a cam
paign to keep Mr. Eisenhower's
young friend off the 1956 Re
publican ticket?
The President did not pull his
party rank on Stassen. Instead,
he permitted his cabinet subordi
nate and disarmament adviser to
pot-shot Nixon where it hurt.
Stassen called on Nixon to with
draw and on the President to
think the situation over and
take a firm public position on
the issue raised.
Siassen's Statement
"It is for each of them to
make their views known at an
appropriate future time," was
the way Stassen put it, which is
about as bluntly as a subordin-
ate could tell his boss what io
do. Stassen hurried his statement,.
to the public just in time to take
the publicity shine off the Presi
dent's return from the Panama
conference.
Hall said Herter telephoned
him Tuesday morning saying he
would "consider it a privilege"
to nominate Nixon. Herter and
Nixon also discussed the matter.
Nixon Eputhorized Hall to say he
was "very pleased" by Hertcr's
action. Herter told Hall he would
have a further statement today
in Boston.
Some of Nixon's friends sus
pected a White House plot
against the vice president. Others
could not believe such could be.
They found comfort in Mr. Ei
senhower's warm greeting of
Nixon Tuesday at the airport on
returning from Panama, and
from White House Press Secre
tary James C. Hagerty's firm
stand that Nixon is the man.
They were vastly disturbed,
however, by the mystery of that
huddle. The haunting question,
was and is why did Mr.' Ei
senhower let Stassen pot-shot
Nixon if he really wants him
again as a running mate?
The answer may come next
week if there is a White House
news conference. This week's
has been cancelled.
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