Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 07, 1957, Image 4

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FOUJI MEfttTJ&D fOBEGOM) MAIL TRIBUNE
Thursday. March 7, 1937
"Xvarra
r fcautfceni Oregoo
Tbb 9stl Tnhnae"
Pubit.r-.ai teui Kxcept Saturday by
r. .VtLXUBD rRIXTING CO
27-at Korr P'.I t Phene 1-gMI
tOf"trW IICTIU Editor
HERB GMT MvortKUHI Manage!
GFA1D UTIUl Biuuina Manage!
ERIC ALLH JI Managing Ednor
EARL H .Dial CiV? Editor
HARRY CHIPMA.1 Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEETT Soorte Editor
OUVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ER1CKSON Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second clan matter at
Uedford Oregon under Act otf
March 3 1897
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Who Is "The Forgotten Man?"
We have received a marked copy of the editorial
page of the "SATEVEP0ST" with a suggestion that
the Mail Tribune comment thereon.
The editorial i3 captioned "To curb inflation,
squeeze the water out of that budget."
Here is an extract, quote:
Both the President and Secretary Humphrey urged Con
gress to look for "hundreds of items" where cuts in the
estimates could be made. But surely it is the responsibility
of the Budget Bureau and the Executive to point to these
"hundreds of items." If there is no positive lead at the top,
It is unlikely that Congress where pressures are even
more intensively applied can do much to resist the trend.
Nor can labor unions and businessmen, caught in the in
flationary squeeze, be relied upon to hold down wages and
prices.
Perhaps those who order national spending could profit
from perusal of the work of Yale's great sociologist, the late
William Graham Sumner. In What Social Classes Owe to
Each Other, which has been republished by Caxton Printers,
Ltd., Sumner wrote: "The state cannot get a cent for any
man without taking it away from some other man, and this
latter must be a man who has produced and saved it. This
latter is the Forgotten Man."
He certainly seems to have been at least temporarily
overlooked in the Budget for the fiscal year 1958.
"I17HAT does this add up to?
' Just more evidence, we believe, of a fact
often noted in this department that the split within
the GOP between Eisenhower's "Modem Republi
canism" and "Old Deal Republicanism" is steadily
widening.
Considering the time honored conservatism of
the "SEP," and its 100 per cent endorsement for
years of the Republican presidential candidatees,
whoever they may be, this break" with the pres
ent administration can be taken as a rather sig
nificant portend.
"IIHAT the editorial really does, is to indict
" President Eisenhower for lack of i
and effective leadereship.
It follows indeed the line in the congress, taken
by Democratic Senator Byrd of Virginia, that in pre
senting and endorsing such a record-breaking peace
time expenditure of federal funds, there was not only
a sharp turn toward the "welfare state" but in re
questing cuts by members of the congress and
private citizens, there was a direct evasion of execu
tive responsibility, the Virginia senator maintaining
with the "Post" that if "hundreds of items" could
be reduced or eliminated, it was up to the President
and his chief of the Budget Bureau to REDUCE them,
and not try to "pass the buck" to Congress or the
people.
AS FOR the dictum of Yale's great sociologist,
William Graham Sumner, that "the state can't
trpf n fpnt frnm anv man u.-irVinnr talrinrr if -fri-im enmo
bership drive foy veterans or- ,v n. . .
eanization. other man," that, of course, is true.
Buds art now in proper con- .But does that mean that in this country there
should be no financial aid for the aged, or ill or
unemployed, via federal taxes by those who have
more than they need for the benefit of those who
have tragically less?
If so who WOULD THEN be the "Forgotten
Man?" R.W.R.
EWSPA EI
UBLIIHE1S
ASJOCIATIOM
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from th files of The
Mail Tribune It. 10, SO. 40
and 50 years a.
responsible
Nasser May Yet Regret Closing
Suez, as Alternatives Progress
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
President Gamal Abdel Nas
ser of Egypt may be very sorry
some day that he seized control
of the Suez
Canal. There
are strong in
dications that
Suez, long the
world's most
important wa
terway, may
never reg a i n
the importance
it held before
rnaries Mccno Nasser nation
alized it and then blocked it
because of the Israeli-British-French
invasion.
aaasaami aSusj
Nasser's action made it alarm
ingly clear that a great part of
the world's supply of oil, the life
blood of modern industry, was
at the mercy of one man.
Construction of gigantic tank
ers, which would carry Middle
Eastern oil around the Cape of
Good Hope at the southern tip
of Africa, instead of through the
canal has been started.
Direct To Sea
But in addition, plans are be
ing worked oud by interested
governments and commercial in
terests to build pipelines which
would take oil direct to the
Mediterranean Sea and thus by
pass Suez.
Matter of Fact
By Joseph Alsop
10 YEARS AGO
March 7, 194T (Friday)
Dale Vincent, artist, author
and naturalist, who wrote "Be
side tha Rogue," has returned
to his home at Gold Hill.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: The return
of 25-year-old stolen auto Is re
ported from the rural regions.
Friends of the ewoer are doing
their best to console him.
20 YEARS A30
March 7, 1937 (Uy)
J. F. Fliegel, commander of
Medford post, American legion,
announces inauguration of mem-
FREEDOM AND UNFREEDOM
Paris The most useful advice
that this reporter received in
Moscow came from the most
brilliant of the
foreign observ
e r s stationed
there.
"For God's
sake," he said,
"remember
that this place
isn't either
'1984' or a ba
nana republic.
Joseph Alsop " isni ioi
because it's a human society,
maybe not a very nice human
society, but still a human soci
ety with its own built-in human
problems. And it isn't a banana
republic because in most ways
this is a strong society, and it
isn't going to be thrown by its
problems at any rate in the
foreseeable future."
In Washington, where the
1984" view of the Soviet Union
used to be too common, the lead
ers of the government now seem
to have swung wildly over to the
banana republic view. So the
above warning needs repeating
before one tries to analyze what
is probably the most profound
Soviet problem.
This problem is currently ex
pressed in the ferment among
Soviet students and intellectuals.
Ever since the 20th Party Con
gress last year, Soviet intellect
uals have been -eaching greed
ily out for a much larger mea
sure of creative freedom in writ
ing, in the theater, in painting,
indeed in all the departments of
art and thought.
dition for spvaing. according to
C. B. Cor! , iceigtant county
St-
90 9tlK
rcl f. iSf (VHlay)
Music titetien of Ashland and
Medford holi informal meeting
at home of Mrs. X. I. Gore, 116
Geneva v., Medford.
Spray meeting sponsored by
the Fruit Growers league and
county agent's office scheduled
at Medford hotel.
40 YEARS AGO
March 7. 1917 (Wednesday)
Report by police judge at city
council meeting shows total of
nine cases during February with
$24 collected from fines.
residents voice complaint to
city street department that wood
dealers are driving their wagons
over the sidewalks and curbs
of the city where no driveway
exists.
What's Yeitr I.Q.?
Nina or ten eorraet Is snpertor: sev
en or eight is excellent; flva mt
six Is food
1. The moon is sometimes
visible from the earth's poles;
true or false?
2. Name the author of the
novel "Main Street".
3. Bible: The "Early Galilean
Ministry" of Jesus extended
from the rejection at Nazareth
to when?
4. Seoul is the capital of which
country?
5. Name the Italian author of
a famous book titled "The
Prince".
6. If a London housewife re
fers to a "pram", what does she
mean?
7. Which ex-boxer is nick
named "Slapsie-Maxie"?
8. Is the process of combus
tion fundamentally the same for
coal, wood, oil and gasoline?
9. Is "o" or "i" the principal
vowel in the word "bodice"?
10. Wrote Byron of Holland:
"That wter-land of Dutchman
and of d s".
Answers: 1. True. 1. Sinclair
Lewis. 3. The Sermon on the
Mount. 4. Republic of Korea.
5. Machiavelli. $. A kafcy car
riage (perambulater). 7. Max
F.osenbloom. 8. Tas. 9.
10. Ditches.'
13 House Bills Signed
Governor Mortres
Salem ;U.P Thirteen House
bills, including one to issue up
to S8 million in highway bonds,
were signed yesterday by Gov.
: Rupert D. Holmes.
State Jlighway Engineer W. C.
Williams was on hand when the
governor signed House bill 176
which authorizes the State High
way Commission to issue state
highway bonds for the purpose
of highway and bridge improve
ments in the state.
It Looks Like Peace
Yesterday marked an ironic anniversary for
Israel.
It was just a year ago March 6, 1956, that Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion of Israel assured his
Knesset (parliament) that "this government will not
START a war." Ben-Gurion got an emphatic vote of
confidence on that issue.
Actually, Ben-Gurion was only restating a policy
worked out in seven years of uneasy cold war with
Israel s Arab neighbors. Even after the disclosure
in September 1955 of the Egyptian-Czech ami3 deal,
Ben-Gurion's predecessor, Moshe Sharett, resisted
demands for preventive war by Israeli hotheads, led
by the extremist Herut party. At Geneva a month
later, Sharett, then confernng with foreign minis
ters of the Big Four, declared : "I hope to God Israel
will not be driven to this to what might appear a
short-cut to the solution of our grave problems.
Sharett's declaration was made a year and two
days before Israel actually did launch a military
effort closely akin to preventive war. On Oct. 29,
1956, her forces stabbed deep into Egypt's Sinai
Peninsula, driving toward the Suez Canal. The Israeli
Foreign Ministry described this as taking "security
measures to eliminate the Egyptian fedayeen (com
mando) bases in the Sinai Peninsula." The decision
to strike was made, it said, after persistent declara
tions by Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser
that his country "remains in a state of war with
Israel."
The Foreign Ministry charged that Nasser's hopes
of annihilating Israel had been "crowned a few days
ago by a bynan-Jordan-Egyptian military command
under the Egyptian Commander-in-Chief." The
three-nation command had been established Oct.
24 five days before the Israel attack.
DRITAIN and France responded to the Israel move
against Egypt by issuing a 12-hour ultimatum to
both sides to quit fighting. Egypt was urged to per
mit temporary occupation of the Suez Canal Zone by
British and French forces. Egypt rejected, Israel
ACCEPTED the cease-fire ultimatum conditionally.
The United States called for a meeting of the
United Nations Security Council to consider the
military action against Egypt. Britain and France
on Oct 30 vetoed two resolutions, one proposed by
the U.S. and one by Soviet Russia, urging a cease-
fire. . , ,
Anglo-French air forces bombed Egyptian in
stallations on Oct. 31. A joint paratroop force was
dropped on the Suez Canal Zone on Nov. 5. On
B
Y the same token, the univer
sity students, especially in
the great centers like Moscow,
Leningrad and Kiev, have been
talking very freely among them
selves. From time to time, they
have even given rather sharp
public expression to their new
found, Gomulka-like views by
asking embarrasing questions at
lectures, by holding demonstra
tions, and in other ways that
would have been unthinkable in
the past.
The regime's concern about
the "excesses" of the intellectu
als can be detected in the im
passioned defenses of "Socialist
realism" and the fervid attacks
on its attackers which have been
appearing in the Soviet press
The regime's concern about stu
dents has also been revealed. For
instance, an entire issue of
"Young Commuist" was recently
devoted to warnings against
"young people, members of the
Young Communist League
among them, who give in to the
demagogy of bourgeois propa
ganda" and criminally believe in
"tales about the freedom of in
dividuals" in no n-Communist
countries.
Among students, particularly
disciplinary measures also seem
to have been used. Some stu
dents have almost certainly been
dismissed and this means a lot
in a country where a university
training is the only escape route
from the gray existence of the
great, gray mass at the bottom
of the pyramid. There also seem
to have been a few discreet ar
rests in extreme cases.
From Washington
SUCH are the fairly well estab
lished facts. The question is
what to make of them. If the
wisest Moscow analysts are to be
trusted, the answer is curiously
complex.
In brief, the right way to see
the ferment among the students
and intellectuals is not as a cen
tral Soviet problem at the pres
ent time, but as the by-product
of still another problem. This is
the problem the Soviet leaders
are trying to solve by their truly
staggering planned shakeup of
the whole Soviet industrial econ
omy. In fact it is the problem of
running a high technical society.
As has been suggested before
in this series of reports, you can
build a high technical society
with the knout. Josef Stalin did
just that. But you cannot develop
and expand and amplify a high
technical society with the
knout. As a certain stage, all the
key persons, industrial manag
ers, scientists, technicians, engin
eers of all sorts, need a sense of
being free to make decisions and
communicate among themselves
and assume responsibilities with
out danger of reprisal. That is
the only way to go on building
toward still higher goals.
In some sense at least, this
need for more freedom has been
recognized and met by the So
viet leadership. There is more
freedom today in the Soviet
Union. And precisely because
there is more freedom in gen
eral, the intellectuals and stu
dents, the two specially lrre
pressible groups throughout
modern Russian history, have
been thereby emboldened.
TN effect, they were given an
inch. They took an ell. And
now they are being pushed back
to two inches, by exhortation
and by disciplinary measures
which have thus far been rela
tively mild if they are judged by
the grim standards of the Soviet
past. That is where the matter
rests for the present.
One has to say "for the pres
ent," however, because of the
very nature of this problem of
freedom versus unfreedom. On
the one hand, the regime would
have to restore Stalin-style disci
pline in order to restore the
chilly, universal silence of the
Stalin era. Eut as long as think
ing Soviet citizens go on freely
talking among themselves, as
they still do, the boredom and
discontent with the endless, gov-
ernnessy Communist uplift, the
prevailing Puritanism and the of
ficially sponsored dreariness,
will continue and increase.
But on the other hand, Stalin-
style discipline cannot be easily
restored, partly because there is
no Stalin, but also because Sta
linism's restoration would freeze
Soviet society, preventing the
great further growth of wealth
and power and productivity that
the ieaders want. There is the
dilemma. It is a long range di
lemma. It docs not endanger the
regime. But it quite probably
one is tempted to say almost cer
tainly means that in fits and
starts, with many retreats as
well as advances, this strange So
viet society will go on evolving
as it has been evolving in the last
four years.
(Copyright New York Herald
Tribune Inc.)
A new development Is that
France has intensified explora
tion of what appear to be enor
mously valuable oil fields in the
Sahara Desert region of Algeria,
at the western end of the Medi
terranean.
American, British and Dutch
interests also are exploring big
oil deposits in Libya, which ad
joins Algeria on the east.
Egypt has been hit hard by
Nasser's seizure and closure of
the canal.
Of course, Egypt's fellow Arab
nations, Saudi Arabia and Iraq,
also have been hurt painfully
by the curtailment of their oil
shipments.
The most important pipeline
project now under consideration
is one that would take Iraqi oil
to the Turkish port of Isken
derun on the Mediterranean.
Iraq's oil flow was cut be
cause Syrian guerrillas cut the
pipeline which carried its out
put to the Mediterranean.
The possibility of sending
Iranian oil through an exten
sion of this pipeline also is un
der consideration.
A pipeline, smaller but never
theless potentially important, is
planned to run through Israel
from the port of Elath, on an
arm of the Red Sea, to the Mediterranean.
Nasser has good reason now
to ask himself whether he really
was so smart in taking his dra
matic action.
the same day, the Russian government announced
its full determination to crush aggressors and re
store peace in the Middle East." A note to France
mentioned modem and terrible weapons.
As a result the British and French governments
ordered their forces to cease firing at midnight
Nov. 6 in accordance with a U.N. General Assembly
resolution. Israel complied as well; her forces had
attained their objectives the day before.
ISRAEL claimed to have captured $50 million worth
of Egyptian equipment, mainly received from
Communist countries, and 30,000 Egyptian soldiers,
On Nov. 8, in response to a cablegram from President
Eisenhower, Israel announced that it would with
draw from the Sinai Peninsula when "satisfactory
arrangements were made with the special U.N
Emergency Force.
The first contingent of the U.N. police force landed
in Egypt on Nov. 15, and Israel announced the de
parture of some of its troops 10 days later. By Jan,
22, all Israeli forces had been withdrawn except for
those in the Gaza Strip and the southern outpost
of Sharm el Sheikh on the Gulf of Aqaba. They are
now being evacuated trom both of these areas and
even Nasser is showing signs of some restraint.
It is too early to stage a celebration, but it does
for the first time this year, look like peace in the
Mideast. .
By Roscoe Drummond
THE UN-PARTY VOTERS
Washington A report on
the attitudes and votes of a nation-wide
sample of 2,000 adults,
prepared by the University of
Michigan Research Center,
yields some fresh political in
sight.
Much of the evidence which
comes from this poll begins to
call into question one of the
most common interpretations of
the 1956 election. That interpre
tation was that if the Republi
cans couldn't win Congress then
the country was giving more
than a 9,000,000 majority to
President Eisenhower, they
haven't a pinball gambler's
chance of regaining Congress
next year when Mr. Eisenhower
will not be on the ticket.
This is the familiar post-1956
thesis; it is an obvious and easy
one and I do not lightly put it
aside particularly when you
bear in mind that in 1958 there
will be only 11 Democratic Sen
ate seats at slake compared with
21 Republican Senate seats and
a higher percentage of Republi
can seats will be in doubtful ter
TUT this Michigan University
study adds new insight into
the behavior of the voters last
fall. It underlines these facts:
That the trend is steadily away
from bloc voting.
That the electorate in every
part of the country is more mal-
I leable than it has been in many
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although
under certain circumstances the use of a 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 400 words.
out across the hills to the people
but to see the children on Sun
day morning, from the largest
to the smallest, waiting their
turn to ring the bell, their eyes
as large as dinner plates.
If you happen to be the one
passing by and you hear the
bell weak and irregular we want
you to know some little child'
hand is pulling the rope.
Maybe the pastor is holding
him up or maybe he's standing
on- tip-toe, feeling he s accom
plishing something really great
making that big bell away up
in the tower ring.
Then some day when bells are
only to be found in museums,
he can tell his grandchildren
about the bell he once helped
to ring.
Mrs. Delbert Casey,
Route 1, Box 358,
Central Point, Ore.
No Annexation
To the Editor: Do you and the
citizens of Medford know that
according to your planning com
mission, a health hazard exists
on the border of your city lim
its? Your City Council does. I
am referring to the Berrydale
area which is an area just north
of the Big Y market. The chair
man of your City Planning Com
mission is in possession of the
findings of a county sanitation
survey which states that a large
per cent of the dwellings have
sewage seeping to the top of the
ground from septic tanks in a
soil that will not carry it away.
This area has formed a sani
tation district and petitioned
your council to allow them to
dump their sewage into the main
sewage line from Medford to the
disposal plant on Rogue River
at Camp White. Your City Coun
cil has denied them this privil
ege, even though it would mean
more revenue for the city and
the disposal unit (which the city
got for $1.00) can handle twice
the amount being ' dumped at
present.
They seem to be interested
only in annexation, yet accord
ing to their own reports this
area would be a detriment to the
city.
I suggest that you contact your
councilman and find out the
facts in the Berrydale annexa
tion problem.
James R. Tungate,
49 Mace Rd.
Medford, Ore.
Story of the Bell
To the Editor: This is what
you might call the story of the
bell. A church bell, that is. This
church bell is in the tower of
a little country church on Black
well Hill named "The Church in
the Pines" as the present pastor
built it in the midst of 21 very
tall pine trees.
The bell was purchased almost
eight years ago from a then well
known resident of Central Point,
since deceased. He brought the
bell with him from Philadelphia
when a young man and used the
bell to call the hired help in
from the pear orchards for
lunch. After much prayer and
persuasion he finally parted with
the bell for $50.
What a pleasure the bell has
proven to be. Not only to ring
years. (The Republicans have
been - gaining steadily among
skilled, semi-skilled and un
skilled working families, while
the Democrats picked up
strength last year among farm
ers and upper-income groups.)
xhat, while voters identifying
themselves as Democrats con
tinue to outnumber Republicans
by more than 3-to-2, a 2-to-l ma
jority feels that the Republican
party more closely reflects their
lews on foreign policy.
This last point seems to me
particularly significant. If the
nation favors the Republican
party 2-to-f on foreign policy
and if foreign policy is the domi
nant issue at the time of next
year's Congressional elections.
as seems probable, the possibil
ity of the Republicans regaining
Congress must be considered
within reach.
The prospect of this happen
ing would be furthered if the
majority of the Republicans in
the House and Senate establish
themselves as strong supporters
of the President while the Demo
crats, especially in the Senate,
drift into pretty regular opposi
tion.
This is what is happening thus
far on the Middle East resolu
tion. It was passed by an over
whelming bi-partisan vote in the
House. But on the first critical
test in the Senate, namely, the
effort of Sen. Richard Russell
(D-Ga.) to strike ithe economic
aid clause from the Eisenhower
Doctrine, 28 Democrats went
into opposition to the President
while he lost the support of only
5 Republicans.
If the Michigan University re
search center is right in report
ing a 2-to-l majority for the
President5s foreign policy and
these polls are more scientific in
measuring attitudes than in pre
dicting how people will vote
then this solid Republican Sena
torial backing of the Eisenhower
Doctrine may help put the party
in an advantageous position for
the Congressional elections next
11.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Hopeful note in the news:
The Institute of Life Insurance
says Americans will save 24 bil
lion dollars this year as against
a little less than 21 billions
last year.
11HY is that so hopeful?
' Well, if people will SAVE
UP ENOUGH OF IT, there wiU
be money enough available to
build more houses, build more
factories, build more roads
and provide all the useful and
necessary things that can be pro
vided with SAVED-UP CAPI
TAL. These things can be had, of
course, with printing press
money but when we get them
that way they are followed by
economic headaches. When they
come normally and naturally out
of the savings of the people,
they can be had without headaches.
BESIDES
We'll all be better off person
ally if every week, every month
and every year we save up a lit
tle money and park it away in
some sound investment.
SOME people get ahead in the
world.
Others don't.
Why?
THE Michigan poll shows how
hoth nartips broke through
bloc voting habits. Adlai Steven
son got 13 per cent more ot me
professional, business and mana
gerial eroups than President
Truman did in 1948. He gained
moderately among white collar
workers. In all other labor
groups President Eisenhower's
strength continued to go up as
did his popularity among voters
with high school and grade
school education with whom the
Democrats used to be top choice.
What impresses me most of '
all is the malleability of the
electorate. Take Hudson County
(New Jersey). Nobody can re
member when 'it last elected a
Republican Congressman. It
elected a Republican Congress
man last fall and came within 24
votes of- electing two. On the
other hand Maine gave the Dem
ocrats a Congressman and came
within an arm's length of giving
them two.
There are about 900,000-more
registered Democrats than regis
tered Republicans in California,
but they are so unimpressed by
party labels that again last year
thev elected only on statewide
Democratic office-holder, the At
torney General.
Neither party can take the
voter for granted.
(Copyright
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.)
THERE are many reasons.
Some people are .gifted with
gumption. Others aren't. It has
been noted by thoughtful people
all down through the centuries
that those who put a little aside j
regularly, SO THAT WHEN
OPPORTUNITIES COME
ALONG THEY CAN BE TAKEN
ADVANTAGE OF, are the ones
who get ahead in the world.
The ones who don't get ahead
are those who spend it as fast
as it comes in and so never have
any ready capital with which to
take advantage of opportunities
that present themselves.
Savings DO come in handy.
INSURANCE Can Be Expensive...
ASSURANCE Costs Very Little!
If you and each member of your family have not had chest X-rays
recently, call the Sacred Heart Hospital and make an appointment soon!
It is insurance that costs very little . . . but is assurance that it
invaluable.
DAY OR NIGHT PHONE 2-8030
Chapel Mortuary
' Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
'funeral directors