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History from the files of The
Wail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and
40 years ago.
)t YEARS AGO
Urg 27, 1947 (Tuesday)
Completion of a tile block
VuiMing at Shady Cove to house
tfial switching equipment is an
aawaced by D. O. Hood, presi
dent of Columbia Utilities com
fgtny. Irom Arthur Perry's Ye
2nuge Pot column: SIGN IN A
YALLXY TAVERN: "Don't
9nr Before Ladies. Let Them
po it First."
$0 TEARS AGO
ffe C7, 1937 (Thursday)
J comprehensive survey of
tfm Rogue river drainage basin
iU fee made by army engineers
S necessary appropriations are
ssssvte by congress, according to
V. . Stanbery, consultant of
Afete planning board.
Clerical positions on the.Med
fc CCC district headquarters
siaff are to be changed from en
yolloe to civilian status, accord
ing Maj. George R. Owens,
Mediord commander.
3S VCARS AGO
Ma- 27, 1927 (Friday)
Captain Dancey, head of
Americanization league of Oak
land, Calif., talks at Chamber of
Comsiasrce forum at Medford
hotel.
Criwg begin work of opening
up Siath st. over the Southern
Pacific tracks and establishing
a fSU crossing there.
40 TZARS AGO
Mar T. 1917 (Sunday)
Junior Thrift organization of
the jublic schools will continue
this cummer, according to Super
intendent Hillis.
Thomas Swem, of New York
city, is visiting his parents, Mr.
nil Mrs. T. M. Swem, here.
Uhafs Your I.Q.?
Nftss er ten correct Is superior;
sevai er eight Is excellent; five or
six
1. The first explorer known
to have circumnavigated the
"British Isles was P s?
2. Was the year 1948 a Leap
Year?
3. Bible: "Holiness of the
Lord" was ordered to be en
graved on which "plate?"
4. What is the name of the na
tives of Guam?
5. Athens is the capital of
what European country?
6. Name the largest and the
strongest bone in the human
body.
7. The Volga river empties
into what Sea?
8. Soviet Russia favored or
opposed the Marshall plan for
European rehabilitation?
9. "Sympathize," in a sentence
shoul b followed by which
particular word?
10. In the proverb: "Better
leara tote than" when?
Wawers: 1. Pytheai. 2. Yes.
3. 'Tlate of the mitre." 4. Cham
orees." 5. Greece. 6 The femur,
ia the upper leg. 7. The Caspian.
8 Opposed. 9. With. 19. "never."
Rnights of Columbus
Reelects State Deputy
The- Dalles P Fred J.
Schwab of Mt. Angel Sunday
V4 reelected state deputy, high
er rffice in the Oregon Knights
o Columbus, at the group's an
nua elate convention.
Mewport was picked as the
1951 convention city.
SEES HE SEA
Bognor Regis. England rtPI
Mrs. Ellen Lingley, who has
lived vithin 70 miles of the sea
for all her 83 years, saw it on
Sunday for the first time.
"It's too beautiful for words,"
she said.
MAIL TRIBUNE
This Is Economy?
For all its high talk of economy, Congress is busy,
as usual, taking away with one hand and giving with
the other. It's all very well for Rep. Clarence Cannon
(D.-Mo.), chairman of the House Appropriations
committee and one of the principal economy engi
neers, to point out as he had on May 7 that the House
had thus far voted 7.6 per cent less than the estimates
for budgetary 1957-1958.
Cannon asked his colleagues for "cooperation and
support in cutting at least 7.6 per cent from the rest
of this budget, if not more." But just a minute.
Congress at the last session carved $257 million
from President Eisenhower's requests for budgetary
1956-57. So the administration came back this spring
with a request for $587 million in deficiency and sup
plemental appropriations.
Not all of this, of course, is going to be approved.
For example, the third supplemental appropriations
bill for 1956-57, as sent to conference by the Senate
just on May 20, 1957, was for $142,342,045, which was
$39,357,275 less than the administration had asked.
Even so, it was $62,501,257 more than' the House had
voted.
'
pONGRESS this year pared $52 million from the
budget figure for the Post Office department. On
the day the measure was approved by the Senate, a
warning was sounded by Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R.
111.) that "additional funds will have to be added . . .
before this Congress leaves Washington." Dirksen
said he was for putting postal expenses "in a package
which the whole world can see" instead of taking
"refuge in a supplemental or deficiency appropriation
when the heat is off."
Between a "deficiency" and a "supplemental" ap
propriations bill there is, according to Rep. Cannon, "a
distinction without a difference." Generally speaking,
however, Cannon pointed out on May 7. a deficiency
arises when the administration, "unavoidably, and
within the exceptions permitted" in law, has spent at
a greater rate than provided for. A supplemental ap
propriations bill is brought in "for various reasons,
such as new program, increased work, and the like."
An Anti-Deficiency Act in 1905 was intended to
stop once and for all the spending of funds not appro
priated by Congress. It provides stiff penalties for de
partment heads who exhaust their appropriations be
fore the end of the fiscal year. But deficiencies con
tinue to occur year after year, and the penalties of the
act have never been applied. Cannon in introducing
this year's supplemental appropriations bill congrat
ulated himself that it contained "no item in contraven
tion" of the 1905 measure, unlike the last deficiency
bill which had earned $41 million thus technically
forbidden. v
A HOUSE Appropriations subcommittee on March
" 21 recommended against an administration
backed recommendation of the Hoover commission
aimed at "restoration of Congressional control of the
purse" at a saving of $4 billion a year. It would have
required Congress each year to approve only actual
government spending in the next fiscal year.
The group said that if Congress wants budgets to
be smaller, members'will have to quit establishing
new federal projects that have to be paid for. While
$275 mililon was being cut from the 1957 budget, the
subcommittee pointed out, Congress was "at the same
time, in other than appropriation bills, increasing the
President's requests for other types of obligating and
spending authority about $1,736,000,000." E.R.R.
Oldest Congressman
Sen. Theodore Francis Green (D.-R.I.) yesterday
became the oldest man ever to serve in Congress. The
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations committee
was 89 years and 259 days old Sunday. Last year he
became, on June 17, the oldest man ever to sit in the
United States Senate.
Yet five other present members of the Senate have
served longer there than Green, who was not first
elected to the Senate (in 1936) until he was 69. The
five, Democrats all, are :
Carl Hayden, Arizona, 79, elected in 1926 when
49.
Richard B. Russell, Georgia, 59, elected in 1932
when 35. "
Harry F. Byrd, Virginia, 69, appointed in 1933
when 45.
James E. Murray, Montana, 81, elected in 1934
when 59. " - '
Dennis Chavez, New' Mexico, 69, appointed in
1935 when 47.
(Hayden and Chavez had previously been members of the House.)
TWO characteristics mark Senator Green's voting
ing record in Congress : he has been on the whole
an organization man and on the whole a "liberal."
Nobody knows whether he usually voted with the
Democratic administrations because he also was a
liberal, or whether he usually voted liberal because
that's what President Roosevelt and Truman were.
Senator Green was one of the Democratic senators
for President Roosevelt's ill-starred Supreme court
plan of 1937, as modified by compromise. Then he
wras one of the minority of Democrats who voted
against shelving the compromise plan when this was
doomed by the sudden death of majority leader Jo
seph T. Robinson (D.-Ark.).
The nonagenarian-soon-to-be was one of the 13
senators voting to sustain the Roosevelt veto of the
tax reduction bill of 1944. He was one of the 10 voting
to uphold a similar Truman veto in 1948. And he was
one of relatively few senators voting against the Taft
Hartley act, the internal security act of 1950 and the
McCarran immigration restriction bill of 1952.
E.R.R
Monday, Mar 27, 1957
'AiV, HOW THE HECK 010 YA
Matter of Fact By Stewart Alsop
THE PRESIDENT
FIGHTS BACK
Washington--In the past few
days there has been one of those
sudden, perceptible changes in
the Washing
ton p o 1 i t ical
atmosphere, as
u n p redictable
as the Wash
i n g t o n wea
ther. Conside- the
difference be
tween the week
that has just
stewait Aisop passed and the
week that went before. The
week before last, it was the uni
versal view here that the Presi
dent had already lost the battle
of the budget. !
The President's first budget
broadcast, everybody agreed,
was a flop. The day before it was
made, the Democrats kicked Mr.
Modern Republican, Arthur Lar
sen, all over the lot in a Senate
debate, and sliced a huge chunk
off his program, while the ma
jority of Republicans looked be
nignly on. A strange alliance of
Democrats and un-Modern Re
publicans seemed to be firmly in
the saddle on Capitol Hill.
. Then last week the weather
began to change. Thanks to the
President's occasional speech
writer, Emmet Hughes (who had
nothing to do with the first
speech) the second Presidential
broadcast was written with bite
and force. (The President ob
viously ought to keep Hughes in
the White House permanently,
hog-tying him if necessary to
keep him there.) The President
delivered the speech with an
earnestness -tinged with despera
tion, which for the first time
really struck home to the lis
teners. THIS second speech, in con
trast to the first, was fol
lowed by a Presidential press
conference which gave the im
pression that the President really
was determined to fight for his
program. And when Secretary
of State John Foster Dulles went
to the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee to testify on foreign
aid, instead of being kicked
around like the unfortunate Lar
sen, he was showered with Dem
ocratic compliments.
Secretary Dulles had this un
familiar experience less because
his presentation was brilliant
(which it was) than because the
Democrats had begun to have
second thoughts. A lot of Demo
crats were saying privately that
"Lyndon went too far" when the
Senate Majority Leader cut Lar
sen and his program into small
pieces.
In a larger sense, they had be
gun to ask themselves whether
it was really smart to buck a
popular President on the issues
of defense and foreign policy, on
which even an unpopular Presi
dent speaks with more authority
than Congress. Some Republi
cans also began to have second
thoughts, asking themselves
whether it was really smart to
tear down the prestige of the
man who remains their greatest
political asset.
THESE second thoughts would
certainly never have oc
curred to either Democrats or
Republicans if the President had
not signified his intention of
fighting for his program. As
things now stand, the prospect is
that the President's, belated
counter-attack will save him the
guts of his defense and foreign
aid programs.
The best current guess is that
foreign aid will be cut less than
half a billion, as against much
heavier estimates current a cou
ple of weeks ago; and that the
defense cut will be held to
around SI billion, as against the
S2.5 billion cut proposed by the
House Appropriations Commit
tee. In short, the President, who
could have saved the whole loaf
if he had counter-attacked ear
lier, now seems likely to save at
least half a loaf. To be sure, he
could still lose the whole loaf,
if Senate Republican Leader
William Knowland decides to op
pose the" President's very own
atoms-for-peace scheme.
The Senate Democratic lead
ership is committed to atoms-for-
KNQW IT WASAf?0
peace, and so is the small band
of Eisenhower Republicans. But
the international agreement
must be ratified by two thirds
of the Senate, and if the' right
wing Republicans decide to op
pose it, the President will have
the fight of his life on his hands,
since his personal prestige is in
extricably involved in atoms-for-
Lpeace.
SUCH a fight would probably
lead - to an open break be
tween the President and Know
land a break which some of
those close to the President be
lieve is inevitable anyway, and
even desirable. But Knowland
himself is no doubt aware that
an open break with' the Presi
dent would reduce sharply, if
not wholly end, his chances of
getting the' Republican Presi
dential nomination in 1960,
which is one reason the fight
may never occur.
All in all, the President's bat
tle with Congress, is very far
from won indeed, on the do
mestic program, has hardly a
fighting chance. But at least the
battle is not irretrievably lost,
as it seemed to be so recently,
which suggests the power of the
Presidency, even belatedly ap
plied. (Copyright, 1957.
New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
'Grass Roots' GOP
Members Will Discuss
Eisenhower Policies
By LYLE C. WILSON -United
Press Correspondent
Washington (W The next
march on Washington will beby
grass roots Republicans who are
somewhat un
happy with the
Eisenhower ad
ministration. Advance no
tices suggest
they may be un
happy enough
to tell Presi
dent Eisenhow-
Lyie c. wusob er all about it.
Whether the assembly gives the
administration a piece of its
mind o rthe incident ends hap
pily in the warmth of the Eisen
hower smile remains to be seen;
However that may be, the
grass rooters are due here next
week, some hundreds of them
representing representing the
48 states. The White House spon-J
sors the meeting, in a way. It
grew out of a conference be
tween Eisenhower and Chair
man Meade Alcorn of the Re
publican National Committee.
Handpicked For Job
Alcorn was handpicked for
that job by Eisenhower and was
elected Jan. 22 as a modern Re
publican committee administra
tor. There followed meetings be
tween Alcorn and congressional
Republicans in which the new
chairman was told that the Ei
senhower administration was in
serious trouble with the voters.
The chairman hustled, to the
White House to talk it over. He
subsequently received from Ei
senhower a letter which, the
United Press was informed,
stated bluntly that the people
should have the greatest and
most effective voice in deter
mining policy.
There followed regional meet
ings in five cities: Omaha, Neb.;
Salt Lake City, Utah; Louisville,
Ky.; Cincinnati, Ohio; and Tren
ton, N.J.
SHE WED SEVEN MEN
GEO. N. TAYLOR
"The oldest brother wed her and died.
Then, one by one, the other six wed her
and died. So, out in eternity, whose wife
will she be?" This was put up to Jesus by
those who scoffed at life after death. Christ
answered that after death, men and women
do not wed, but live together as do the
angels. God is not the God of the dead but
of the living. After this life, they live who
have received Christ as dying for their
sins. With their sins blotted out. God gives -them
eternal life. Mt 22:23-33.
G.N.T. 2385 87th Ave., SW
Ore.
Chiang May Be Loser
On Formosa; Disarmament Eyed
United Press correspond
ents around the world look
ahead at the news that will
make the headlines.
Portent
Those riots in Formosa may
fortell bad news for Generalis
simo Chiang Kai-shek. Friday's,
outbreak in Taipeh, the capital,
was anti-American. But to many
Formosans, the hundreds of
thousands of Chinese National
ists who took refuge in their
island when the Communists
overran the mainland are as un
welcome as the Americans. The
next riots, if any, could be anti
Nationalist. First Step
The next few days may tell
whether hope for a first step to
w a r d disarmament is well
founded. Like America's Harold
Stassen, Soviet chief delegate
Valerian A. Zorin went home
for new instructions during an
11-day recess in the London dis
armament conference. The talks
reopen today. London advices
predict that Zorin's attitude, on
the basis of his instructions, will
show fairly soon whether Rus
sia is really ready to talk busi
ness at last.
Income Tax
Don't count on Congress re
ducing your income taxes next
year, retroactive to next Jan. 1.
The official Democratic line
voiced by House Speaker Sam
Rayburn is that the cut will be
voted. But some Democratic tax
writers say privately they don't
expect any cut.
Airing
New Delhi says that the re
ported romance between Rober
to Rossellini, husband of Ingrid
Bergman, and his pretty script
writer Sonali das Gupta may be
aired in the Indian parliament.
Indian officials are upset about
the whole situation. Unless So
nali's family - which is very
prominent in Indian politics
says no, it may be brought up
for a debate.
Rackets
The Senate Rackets commit
tee will take stock this week
and decide which case to investi
gate next, and when. Best guess
is that hearings will start about
June 4. The committee has sev
eral cases nearly ready. Its No.
1 choice is an investigation of
Teamster "paper local" unions
in New York.
First Aid
If Egypt and Syria don't come
It is the grass roots partici
pants in those meetings who are
to come here next week. A di
gest of their gripes and cheers
and opinions is being prepared,
the United Press was informed,
for presentation to Eisenhower.
The presentation will be made
by Alcorn, escorted by Sen. An
drew F. Schoeppel (R-Kan.) and
Rep. Richard M. Simpson (R
Pa.). . ,
Before TV Speeches
The regional meetings were
held, for the most part, before
Eisenhower's two recent TV
speeches defending his big spend
ing budget. One thing the big
White House powow may show
is whether those speeches have
had ' any effect oh the place it
really counts the grass roots,
and particularly the Republican
grass roots.
The five regional meetings
were closed to the press. Partic
ipants talked frankly, sometimes
angrily, of Eisenhower adminis
tration politics and policies.. The
Alcorn - Schoeppel - Simpson re
port will challenge Eisenhower
on federal aid to schools if the
regional trend of thinking is
properly reflected. The United
Press was told federal school aid
was the sorest spot of all.
There was .a solid but not uni
versal beef against foreign aid.
The loudest laments at the re
gional meetings were said to in
volve patronage and the way the
White House handles it.
Mayflower II Making
Steady Four Knots .
London (W The May
flower II headed toward the
United States at a steady f our
knots today and reported all's
well."
Australian Capt. Alan Villiers
radioed that the ship was steer
ing west in mid-Atlantic. He
said she had covered 80 miles in
the past 24 hours and was with
in 840 miles of the West Indies.
Portland 1,
Adv.
through with their promised
payments to Jordan, the United
States and Saudi Arabia can ex
pect an urgent appeal for im
mediate help from Jordan's
young King Hussein. Egypt,
Syria and Saudi Arabia prom
ised Hussein 24 million dollars
a year to replace the British
subsidy which Jordan sacri
ficed when- it threw out the
British commander of its Arab
legion. Saudi Arabia has paid J
Demos Eye
As 'Hole in
For Hells Canyon Bid
Washington (CQ) Senate
Democrats believe they have
found a hole in the Republican
dike holding back Federal de
velopment of Hells Canyon.
The hole is the fast tax write
off the Office of Defense Mo
bilization recently authorized on
the Idaho Power Co.'s two dams
in the Hells Canyon reach of the
Snake river. The Snake winds
along the Idaho-Oregon border.
The writeoff enables the pri
vate utility to save $30.5 million
in taxes over a five-year peroid.
Democrats have sent up a shout
of "fraud, interest free loan and
theft from the taxpayers'
pockets" that will keep getting
louder until the upcoming vote
on Hells Canyon is taken in the
Senate.
Hearings Open
Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.)
has cpened committee .hearings
on tax writeoffs generally. But
public power leaders, with Ke
fauver's blessing, are using the
hearings to enlarge the hole in
the dike in hopes of washing
away all that has been done so
far on private development of
Hells Canyon and substituting
public development.
The Hells Canyon public vs.
private development argument
dates back to 1947 when surveys
of the area were started. In
1955 the Federal Power Com
mission licensed Idaho Power
Co. to build three dams in the
Hells Canyon reach of the
Snake Brownlee, Oxbow and
lower Hells Canyon. The com
pany already has started con
struction of Brownlee. Public
power leaders had fought for a
single, high Federal dam on
grounds it would yield more
kilowatts and cheaper electricity
for the Pacific Northwest.
Conflicting Claims
Democratic fighting for public
development claim the high dam
would cost $308 million and pro
duce 924,000 kilowatts of power
while the three private dams
would cost $175 million and
produce only 505,000 kilowatts.
Republicans claim the Federal
dam would, cost $400 million.
They say the private dams would
cost $133: million and turn out
675,000 kilowatts, while not re
quiring Federal funds.
Last year, the Senate refused
by a 41-51 vote to authorize a
Federal dam and in effect re
voke the FPC's licensing of the
Idaho Power Co. On April 1
this year the Supreme Court re
fused to review a lower court
decision upholding the FPC's
action. Eight Democratic Sen
ators joined with 43 Republi
cans in 1956 to defeat the meas
ure. Two Republicans William
Langer (N.D.) and Alexander
Wiley (Wis.) sided with, 39
Democrats. .
Since that " vote, three pro-high-dam
Democrats have re
placed Republican Senators who
opposed the high Federal dam.
Also Sen. Ralph Yarborough
(D-Texas), another high-dam
proponent, has replaced Price
Daniel (D-Texas) who was
against it. But four Republicans
have replaced Democrats who
voted for the Federal dam. So
even Federal dam proponents
admit that the election switches,
plus such other changes as the
death of Sen. Joseph R. Mc
Carthy (R-Wis.), and the defeat
of Republican ' governors in
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in
its share. Egypt and Syria have
failed to come through, and
Hussein's treasury is about
empty.
Unification
Despite talks about increased
unification of the armed forces,
as an economy measure, Wash
ington reports that early action
is most unlikely. Congress dis
likes the idea of a single mili
tary force under an all-powerful
chief of staff. .
Write-Off
the Dike1
Washington and Oregon, all of
whom opposed the Federal dam,
are not enough to change the
1956 vote result by themselves.
The only real vote changer
available to public forces is the
tax writeoff issue. Lobbyists for
such pro-Federal dam groups as
the AFL-CIO and National
Rural Electric Cooperative
Assn. freely admit that they are
trying to find another Adolphe
Wenzell for Kefauver to expose
in his hearings. Wenzell was ac
cused of representing both the
Government and the Dixon-
Yates utility combine seeking a
Government contract to supply
power in the Tennessee Valley.
His activities, disclosed by Ke
fauver, led to cancellation of the
Dixon-Yates contract.
5 Instead of 50 Years
The tax writeoff issued Idaho
Power Co. authorizes it to de
preciate 65 per cent of the cost
of the Brownlee Dam and 60
per cent of its Oxbow Dam over
a five-year period instead of the
usual 50 years for dams.
The issuance upset Virginia's
Democratic Senators, Harry
Flood Byrd and A. Willis Rob
ertson, who voted against Fed
eral development of Hells can
yon in 1956. They contend fast
writeoffs were meant for de
fense plants, not a private utility
with a guaranteed Income.
Public power advocates are
trying to fan the anger of Byrd
and Robertson enough to change
their vote on the issue. They
also are working hard on the
other . Democrats who either
voted, paired or announced
against the bill in 1956 and are
still in the Senate; J. Allen
Frear Jr. (Del.), George A.
Smathers Fla.), Spessard L.
Holland (Fla.), Richard B. Rus
sell (Ga.), Russell B. Long (La.),
James O. Eastland (Miss.), and
Sam J. Ervin Jr. N.C.).
But Senate passage a long
shot at best would still not
guarantee Federal development
of Hells Canyon. Ahead would
be the House and President Ei- ;
senhower whose opposition to :
Federal development could re
sult in a veto of the legislation.
(Copyright 1957
Congressional Quarterly)
Britain To Get U.S.
Atomic Sub Secrets
Washington (Uv-The United
States will give Britain the se
crets of America's atomic pow
ered submarines in London talks
beginning today, the atomic
energy commission has announc
ed. Three U.S. experts on nuclear
propulsion Rear Adm. H. G.
Rickover, Read Adm. A. M. Mor
gan, and I. H. Mandil of the AEC
will hold "discussions" with
the British Admiralty and the
United Kingdom atomic energy
authority through May 29.
- The disclosures of secret Amer
ican information are authorized
by the Bilateral Atomic energy
agreement between the United
States and United Kingdom.
The talks will deal with "clas
sified (secret) and unclassified
data on the development and use
of reactors for submarine propul
sion," the AEC announcment
said.
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