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FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDP0RDv4TRIBimE
lveryon In Southern Oregon
Beam The Mall Tribune"
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NATIONA. EDITORIAt
ASSOCNAMCN
rui
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20. 30. 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1957 (Tuesday)
CXlo Ewaldsen, vice president
of local Toastmasters, named
best speaker in contest finals.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: History re
ragpted itself for Central Point
last week. In a tournament nine
years ago, they walloped Port
Orford, 70-18.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1937 (Thursday)
Possibility of a three-way tie
between Medford, Ashland and
Grants Pass High school debate
teams for southern Oregon dis
trict championship appear as
MedfdPd wins 2-1 decision over
Grants Pass.
County Agent Bob Fowler an
nounces serial of soil conserva
) tion meetings.
30 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1927 (Friday)
County Agent R. G. Fowler
says southern Oregon poultry
outlook for 1927 is better than
it was last year.
Roy Hockett elected president
of Southern Oregon Banker's as
sociation. 40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1917 (Sunday)
Two inches of precipitation is
Recorded after Saturday's storm.
QAbout 120 tracts, totaling 10,
000 acres of timber land, graz
ing land and irrigable land on
Klamath Indian reservation will
be advertised for sale by Super
intendent William reer.
0 What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior: sev
rja, or eleht is excellent: fiva or
sR Is (
1. A Roosevelt's image is on
a 6c stamp; what is his given
name?
2. 1834: The streets of New i
Orleans wqre lighted for the first j
time with what kind of an il-1
luminator? I
3. Bible: Does the Book of
Rutjj have four, six or seven
chapters?
4. fs1 Rowena or Rebecca the
axon panaess in Scott's "Ivan
hoe?" 5. Was Robert Lansing the
Secretary of State during Roose
vc's administration?
6. Is Salzburg in Germany,
Austria, or Czechslovakia?
7. Can able salt be used suc
cessfully in freezing ice cream?
8. Jlame fhe capital of Ber
muda. 9. Does the delta describe the
land the mouth or source of
a river
10. In the proverb. "The
motgain labored and brought
forta a " what?
Adswers 1. Theodore. 2. Gas.
3. Four. 4. Rowena. 5. No Wil
sons. 6. Austria. 7. No. 8. Hamil
tog 9. Mouth. 10. "Meuse."
State 'h&partment Seeks
Assurances from Poland
Washington (U.R) T h c
State Department has assured
Congress it will grant no aid to
Poland without first getting as
surances the help goes to Polish
people and not Russia, officials
said Saturday.
The pledge is aimed at spiking
congressional criticism of eco
nomic aid talks with Poland
scheduled to begin here Tuesday.
A five-man Polish steam arrived
in the United States Thursday
for tbg discussions.
T" .T'iJlimM.H..
JSfil E W S PA PER
PUBLISHERS
VS-A"SSOCIATION
Taxes and Schools
A quotation from James A. Garfield says:
"Give me a log hut, with only a simple bench, Mark
Hopkins on one end and I on the other, and you may have
all the buildings, apparatus and libraries without him."
Perhaps the citizens and voters of School District
6C had something of this sort in mind when, last Mon
day, they voted down a couple of bond issues for
school improvement at Crater High school.
This is a time of high taxes, and with every indica
tion that they will go higher. When taxpayers vote
down an added tax on themselvese, it can be under
stood. DUT there are at least three fallacies in that Mark
Hopkins quotation when it is applied to the situa
tion in the big school district in the north of the coun
ty fallacies which the 42 students who last week
protested the outcome of the vote know well.
The first is that few teachers, however qualified,
are of the caliber of Mark Hopkins.
The second is that, today, it is hardly sound econ
omy to have one teacher per pupil, as Garfield asked
in his whimsical tribute.
The third is that, lacking one-Hopkins-per-student,
"buildings, apparatus and libraries" are vital and nec
essary to the process of education.
TXE HOPE that the members of the "Jackson Coun-
ty Tax Payers League" (whatever that rather
mysterious organization may be) will accept the invi
tation of the Crater High school students to visit the
plant, the school rooms, the laboratories and the halls
of that school.
We hope they DO conduct an "extensive survey"
of the school to find out whether or not their tax dol
lars are being well spent on the young people of the
community. School patrons, we are informed, are al
ways, and always will be, welcome to inspect the
schools.
The students at the school included in their letter
what we consider to be a powerful indictment of too
many of us:
". . . We would like to make a plea a plea to our par
ents and friends to please look up the facts and to be care
ful of the propaganda that comes their way before putting
a mark on the ballot sheet of any election . . ."
m
THE bond election in 6C last week, similar diff icul-
ties in other school districts elsewhere in the state,
and other symptoms, indicate that people are feeling
their property taxes, which are piled on top of state
and federal income taxes, and a host of others, some
disguised and some not.
Property taxes are high, there's no disputing it.
Yet, measured in "real" dollars, not the inflated, 48
cent dollars of today, we doubt they are a great deal
.higher than they were in
dollar.
THERE'S one more thing, too. If school populations
continue to rise (and they will), additions to
schools are going to continue to be necessary. By post
poning the "evil day," the cost is going to be no less,
and, if the trend of inflation continues, will be consid
erably more.
Voting down necessary additions to "save money"
will make the ultimate cost higher. It's a little like cut
ting off one's nose to spite one's face.
Personally, there are few things in which we'd
rather invest than the future of the nation, through our
youngsters and the schools which train them. And, as
the Crater High kids said, "You will give your chil
dren more money than that, (the proposed tax in
crease) over 20 years for less important things than
an education !" E. A.
Boredom and Idleness
The Devil, according to the old axiom, finds work
for idle hands.
Like so many of the old maxims with which we are
all familiar, it is based on observation of human na
ture, and generally has more truth in it than it does
falsehood.
Qne can see it operating in a dozen fields. Bright
youngsters who don't have enough to do to keep busy
are apt to get into trouble. Bored matrons, freed from
much housework by modem appliances, too often de
vote their lives to little more than the bridge table or
the cocktail bar. Older people, "freed" from work
through retirement, sometimes go all to pieces.
THIS is the reason that the development of recrea
tional facilities is so important. This is why hob
bies have come to- be such big business. This is why
participation spoils have grown so rapidly recently.
It is all complicated by the fact that the average
working week has dropped from 50 or 60 or 70 hours
down to little more than 40, and with the prospect
that it will decrease further.
People, in short, do not appear to be constructed
so that they can spend their time in simple, harmless
idleness for very long. They've got to DO something.
And the choice is between something constructive on
one hand, and "the Devil's work" on the other.
DECENT experiments tend to support this thesis on
a scientific basis. Researchers tested human sub
jects in complete isolation, cutting off most noise,
vision and tactile sensations. (
The reactions started with reminiscence, reviews
of recent studies, and so on, but soon degenerated into
irritability. Then came hallucinations. They "saw"
dots of light, lines, geometrical f orms. Later the vis
ions became more complex, colorful and vivid.
Afterwards they were dazed and confused, their
thinking ability was impaired, there were childish
emotional responses.
As Carlyle said, "Blessed is he who has found his
work; let him ask no other blessedness." E.A.
Monday, February 25, 1957
the day of the 100-cent
Victory for Nehru in Election
In India Appears To Be Certain
By CHARLES H. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Indian Prime Minister Jaw
aharlal Nehru apparently is
about to win a thumping elec
tion victory.
The first of
about 200 mil
lion Indian vo
ters have start
ed to the polls
to elect a new
"house of the
people," the
lower house of
p a r 1 i a ment
which like the
British House
Charles McCsnn
of Commons is the legislative
authority.
The voting iwll continue until
March 14. When the final re
sults are announced, about Mar.
31, there seems to be no doubt
that they will show a triumph
for Nehru.
Since India attained its inde
pendence in 1947, Nehru has
been unchallenged in his posi
tion as his country's head man.
Nehru is the leader of the In
dian National Congress, as his
party is called. Against him are
the Communists, the Socialist
and the small right wing Jan
Sangh party.
No Real Issues
In the last election in 1952,
Matter of Fact
KHRUSHCHEV'S PRICE
Washington : The report by
this reporter's partner of his in
terview with the Soviet Union's
number one,
Nikita S.
KhrU shchev
has of course
been conned
over word for
word by the
g o vernment's
Soviet ex
perts. The
most import-
stewa.it aisod ant woras,
they agree, were those in which
Khrushchev spelled out the So
viet price for withdrawing the
Red Army from the statellites.
Khrushchev was more speci
fic in this respect than any So
viet spokesman has ever been
before. In return for withdraw
ing the Red Army, he said,
Western European countries
would also withdraw their
troops stationed in the territor
ies of other Western European
countries. The United States
would also withdraw its troops
to American territory from Eu
rope and Asia, and along with
that would go the liquidation of
all foreign bases."
Thus Khrushchev demanded
the liquidation of NATO and
of course it has always been as
sumed that this would be part
of the price. But Khrushchev al
so demanded, in effect, the total
liquidation of the American pow
er position, not only in Europe,
but Asia. He demanded the with
drawal of ' American forces
everywhere, from Greenland to
Okinawa.
Editorial
Comment
OUGHT TO BE A LAW
Marjorie, how about taking a
letter, a vigorous, mad letter,
and please make seven copies
one for each of our senators and
representatives. If I don't make
this tough, enough, add some
words of your own. Start it out,
the Hon. So-and-So and say:
"You guys sit around up there
in the nice dry Capitol Bldg.,
which is fine for you. But you
probably don't realize what is
happening on the streets out
side assuming, of course, that
Salem is having the kind of
weather we're having.
. "At last look you had before
you upwards of a thousand bills,
memorials, resolutions, joint res
olutions and personal gripes.
Many of them were trivial. Why
don't you do something import
ant? "You and your predecessors in
that great deliberative body
have taken care of the drunken
driver, the coyote, the careless
hunter and the footpad. But not
a one of you has given any con
sideration to the lady with the
umbrella.
"Why don't you amend ORS
whatever-the-number-is to pro
vide banishment to the Sahara
for any female person over the
age of three who does knowing
ly, willfully, maliciously, and
with intent to do great bodily
harm carry, poke, jab or thrust
an umbrella, parasol or similar
device into the eyes, ears, scalp,
neck, hat, throat or Adam's ap
ple of any male person over the
age of three while he is peace
fully going about his business
on any public street, highway,
sauare. scramble-amble cross
walk or other thoroughfare?
"And then since you're spend
ing so much money anyhow
why don't you appropriate a
little sum, say maybe $50,000,
for the advertising, promotion
and encouragement of the old-
fashioned sou'wester rain hat,
that lovely garment that never
poked out an eye in more than
three centuries of glorious Am
erican history? '
Sign that "indignant consti
tuent." Thanks. Eugene Regis
ter-Guard.
it' . - "
Nehru's men got only 45 per
cent of the votes. But they won
362 of the 489 seats contested.
The Communists won 23, Inde
pendents 41. The rest went to
small parties.
There is every ' reason to be
lieve that this proportion will
not be changed substantially In
the present election.
There are no real campaign
issues. The Indian Communists,
like those in other countries, are
still suffering from the effects
of the big wrangle over Josef
Stalin's demotion from political
sainthood. As Nehru's own do
mestic policies are socialistic,
the Socialists have little to of
fer. Hence the vote will be largely
for or against Nehru, and he re
mains as he has been, the idol
of his people.
May Meet Setbacks
He may meet some setbacks
in scattered areas where the
Communists and Socialists have
ganged up against Congress
party men.
But the election as a whole is
pertain to constitute a vote of
confidence for Nehru's some
what odd way of looking at
things.
Nehru v might be called the
world's most benevolent dicta
tor. He isn't a dictator in the
By Stewart Alsop
Another part of his price was
that the Western powers
should recognize the Communist
regimes as permanent "to ac
cept this, as a believer would
say, as something given by God."
The clear implication here is
that, even after the Red Army
withdrew, the Soviets would
claim the right to use force to
prevent the over-throwing of the
"God-given" Communist regim
es. '
Khrushchev's statement has
thus greatly strengthened the
negative side in a vitally signifi
cant subterranean debate which
has been going on within the
American government. The de
bate has centered around these
questions:
Is it worth while to attempt
seriously to negotiate with the
Soviets on their terms for with
drawing the Red Army to their
borders? If so, what price might
the United States and the West
be prepared to pay for such a
withdra-.val?
The debate' has been subter
ranean because the subject of
debate is as internationally sen
sitive as it is possible to be. Yet
it has been a most serious debate
all the same. Indeed, the subject
has been discussed repeatedly
by the President and the mem
bers of the National Security
Council.
-
The immidate impetus of the
debate was provided by the
Hungarian uprising. Hungary
seemingly proved three things.
First, the Red Army, and only
the Red Army, held the Soviet
satellite empire together. Sec
ond, the only hope for the satel
lites therefore lay in the with
drawal of the Red Army. Third,
failing such a withdrawal, fur
ther uprisings in the sateUite
were probable, and such upris
ings especially in East Germ
any involved the clear risk of
a world war.
Soviet Premier Bulganin's let
ter of Nov. 20 to President Eis
enhower, when the Hungarian
revolt was at its height, further
stimulated the secret debate. For
the Bulganin letter proposed, at
least by implication, a mutual
500-mile withdrawal from a de
militarized zone in Central
Germany.
Such a withdrawal would take
American forces out of Germ
any, and thus1 for all practical
purposes off the contient. But it
would also take the Red Army
out of most of the satellite area.
A minority within the govern
ment chiefly Harold Stassen
and State Department policy
planner Robert Bowie con
tended that this at least suggest
ed that the Soviets might be in
a mood to negotiate seriously
about mutual withdrawal.
Outside the government, ex-ambassador
to the Soviet Union
George Kennan, who still has
enormous influence with the for
eign service professionals, also
argued that the time had come
to "study the various possibilities
. withdrawal of both Soviet
and American forces from Cen
tral and Eastern Europe." The
President was impressed by
such arguments. The Pentagon
especially was violently opposed.
Ultimately it was decided to hold
the whole matter in abeyance
But Khrushchev's statement
seems to nave written finis to
the debate, perhaps once and for
all. For Khrushchev's price was
not a withdrawal of American
forces from contiental Europe,
but a withdrawal of all Ameri
can .forces, in Asia as well as
Europe, back to the continental
United States. This is not a seri
ous basis for negotiation, and, in
the view of the best judges, it
was not intended to be. In short,
if there ever was a time when a
new approach looking towards
world settlement was possible,
that time appears to have passed.
1957 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
traditional sense. His leadership
is unchallenged because the peo
ple like him.
They follow his stand on Com
munism. He likes Russian and
Chinese Communists but not his
own. He faces the world as . a
friend of man. He is for self de
termination. Everywhere that is,
except where he is concerned.
He has defied the UN in his at
tempt to grab the disputed state
of Kashmir, and his army is
fighting the Naga tribesmen who
demand self determination for
themselves. His attitude, on mat
ters of that sort, is like the phys
ician's injunction to his patients:
Do as I say, not as I do.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
The Big Question:
What shall we do with obstre
perous Little Israel?
Shall we take her out in the
woodshed and spank her for
going on the warpath last faU
meanwhile telling her it hurts
us worse than it hurts her, but
we're doing it for her own good?
Or shall we pat her on the
back and tell her we think she
did the right thing?
IT'S quite a problem.
Among other things, the
problem of what to do with her
is complicated by emotion. All
fair-minded persons must feel
sympathy for the Israelis. With
the help of their people all over
the world, they are trying to
build themselves a home in the
land of their fathers out of what
was a hopeless desert when they
started in.
All in all, they have done a
rather wonderful job of it.
BUT
There are practical com
plications.' One of them is the fact
amply demonstrated in the fight
ing last fall that if turned loose
and given a reasonable amount
of sympathetic backing they
could lick the socks off all the
Arab countries in short order.
One reason for that is that if
they should go to all-out war
they would know they were
fighting for their homes and
their lives. The strength of men
who know they are fighting for
their lives and their homes is
as the strength of ten.
All history has proved that
fact.
TJUSSIA knows that if turned
loose and given a free field
Israel could wipe up the ineffi
cient Arab nations and become
the DOMINANT factor in the
Middle Eeast.
Russia knows also that Israel's
leanings are aU toward the West.
So
ft is highly probable that in
the event of an all-out Israel-
Arab war Russia would back up
the Arabs with limitless "volun
teers" and munitions of war.
That could lead to World War
III.
It is the PRACTICAL compli
cation in the situation.
It is what Ike is trying to
avoid.
QOMETHING to keep in mind
& Ike can't disclose his hand
any more than- a poker player
can. But it is inconceivable that
he is out to destroy Israel.
He certainly must be trying to
find a way whereby the Jews
and the Arabs can live together
more or less peacefully in the
troubled Middle East.
Communications
Letters to the Editor mutt bear
the name and address of the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use of a pen name or
initial for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
Mine Tax Opposed
To the Editor: A rather un
popular bill now in preliminary
stages of the Oregon state tax
committee at Salem would place j
a tax on all raw minerals newly i
mined including stone, gravel,
minerals from water, Sand, pre
cious, semi-precious gemstones
and rare earth elements. :
The enactment of a kindred !
law would in our belief be more j
of a hindrance to the legitimate j
prospector or mine operator of
Oregon than a boost to the min
ing industry. With more mineral
production needed instead of
less, mining would quite natural
ly increase Oregon's potential
wealth. Average small operator
to be successful must be able to
buy equipment that is required
before any minerals can be pro
cessed. , -
To levy a production tax may
have a tendency to discourage
all future mining for Oregon.
We disapprove of the contem
plated tax plan.
Bert Kissinger,
520 Boardman,
Medford, Ore.
COMPETITION "
East Hartford, Conn. (UJ3
The local Chamber of Commerce
ordered an advertising agency
to remove signs from utility
poles which pointed the way to
a huge shopping center in ad
joining Manchester.
Anniversary of Law
Guild Reminds Wilson
Of Problems of 30s
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington U.R) The Na
tional Lawyers guild concluded
in New York over the week end
a 20th anniversary convention
which is a re
minder that
back there in
February,
1937, FDR's
New Deal both
came of age
and began to
wither.
That was
the month and
year in which
brash Congress
of Industrial Organization (CIO)
put an armlock for keeps on big
industry in the United States.
The first week of February,
1937. saw Mr. Roosevelt's plan
for reorganization of the Su
preme court presented to Con
gress. The National Lawyers guild
was born in the Washington ho
tel here after four days of labor
pains ending Feb. 22, 1937.
GOP Prostrate
Mr. Roosevelt's Supreme
court plan broke the fighting
front of the New Deal coalition
in the least expected of sectors
that held by the Democratic
party itself.
, All of this came in a matter
of months after the 1936 New
Deal political sweep which gave
FDR every state but Maine and
Vermont. The Republican party
was prostrate, its congressional
membership reduced to a hand-
full.
Lyl C. Wilson
John L. Lewis'
U.P. Correspondents
Forecast Future News
United Press carrasnanHsnti
around the world look ahead
at the news thai will make
the headlines.
Atom Battle
Cut-throat competition is
building up between the United
States and Britain over "atoms
for peace." Both are trying to
capture the free world's atomic
power market. The British are
striving to sell other countries
copies of their Calder Hall
power reactor. America's West
inghouse Electric Corp: is push
ing another kind a bigger, im
proved version of the highly suc
cessful Nautilus submarine pro
pulsion plant and the nearly
complete nuclear power station
at Shippingport, Pa. The British
have one advantage their Cal
der Hall plant, the world's first
big atomic power facility, is al
ready operating.
Little Lady
Insiders in London now con
fide that it was Lady Eden not
his doctors or his political ad
visers who finally persuaded
Sir Anthony Eden to step out
from the prime ministry of Brit
ain last month. Eden is genuine
ly sick. Some people believe he
never will recover from his
present bout of recurrent fevers
after his gall bladder illness.
Protection I
Then Senate Labor Rackets
Investigating Committee is issu
inug subpoenas for all likely
witnesses for their own protec
tion. Anyone who tampers with
a scubpoenaed witness is liable
to prosecution for contempt. A
carpenters union official who
was questioned by investigators
but not subpoenaed was threat
ened with bodily harm. The com
mittee could do nothing about
it. Hence, the decision to sub
poena all witnesses from now
on, as a warning.
C-Bomb Hint
Allied intelligence agents in
Europe are trying to find out
whether Russia could have de
veloped a cobalt bomb; more de
structive even than the H-bomb.
The Moscow newspaper Red
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Mr. Roosevelt's court plan
was denounced as a program of
court packing. The bitter debate
became more bitter as it prog
ressed in a matter of six months
to a smashing Senate repudia
tion of the President's court
plan.
Emboldened by FDR's sortie
against the Supreme court, a
group of New Deal lawyers de
cided to attack an almost equal
ly strong point of tradition and
political conservatism the
American Bar association. These
New Dealers set up their own
association and called it the
National Lawyers guild.
A Communist Front
On the evidence available,
the Guild from its inception, as
was the New Deal, became in
filtrated with Communists and
fellow travelers.
.But the Guild remained in
business, often busily propagan
dizing left-wing projects and
from time to time feuding with
Director J. Edgar Hoover and
the FBI.
The House Committee on Un
American Activities soon tagged
the Guild ,as a "Communist
operated front organization, pri
marily intended to serve the in
terests of the Communist party
in the United States."
Years elapsed, however, be
fore an attorney general acted
on committee charges officially
to add the Guild to the Justice
department's list of subversive
organizations. Atty. Gen. Her
bert Brownell Jr. did that in
1953, and the Guild at once
sought judicial relief in proceed
ings still pending.
Star, the Russian Army organ,
said last week that if a world
war broke out atomic, hydrogen
"or even more powerful bombs"
might fall on the North Ameri
can continent. Allied authorities
figure it might just be loose talk
and might not.
Nix On Nike
It hasn't been In print yet, but
the United States Army in Ger
many is running into strong lo
cal resistace in planning its first
big Europea base for its surface-to-air
"Nike" missile. The base
for Nike, like those which guard
New York, Washington and oth
er big American cities, is plan
ned on a sand flat near Darm
stadt in southwestern Germany.
Local German official got jvind
of it and are objecting strenu
ously. What Army officials
would like to know is how the
Germans found out about the
highly-secret plan.
Skiing in New Hampshire
goes back to 1872. In that year
the Berlin Mills Ski, later
known as the Nansen Ski and
Outing club, was organized
One Wife A Witch-Doctor
Geo. N. Taylor
His witch-doctor wife, could
not help him get well and too
late, he was taken to the Mis
sion Hospital.
Now the ambu
lance was carry
ing him back' to
lie in his own hut
in the jungle.
The .graduate Al
rican nurses,
blacks also, were
looking after the
man and telling
him what the
Lord was to
them. Almost in sight of his
own hut, the man broke out to
say that right then, he had also
taken Christ as his own Lord
and Saviour and the way to
glory was his. SUM IT UP
Have Christ; have life; else
have God's wrath John 3:36
Bible. This message sponsored
by a Scappoose family- Adv. O
PERL'S every family
may make funeral ar
rangements which are m
keeping with Its meant. A
selection of services In
every price range Is of
fered to satisfy individual
preferences a n d to meet
all financial circumstances.
Convenient Terms?
Certainly 1
o