Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 02, 1957, Image 4

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FOtJHMEDf 08D (OREGON)
"Everyon in Southern Oregon
Reads Th Mail Trthnna"
Publuriea DaUy Except Saturday by
xiJLU UKJJ Pii lit TING CO
North Fir 5t Phorw 2-141
. ROBERT W RLTHU Editor
HRB GREY Advertliln Mnr
CtKALD LATHAM Business Manner
tmi. alu. J k Managing editor
ZARL H ADAMS City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Soon Editor
OI.JVE ST ARCHER Society Editor
DALE ER1CKSON Circulation Mgr.
O An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second clam matter at
Mediord Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
July 2 1947 (Wednesday)
Members of the Toastmasters
club Monday signed the safe
driver's pledge for the Medford
Safety council.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Quite a
number of speed idiots have
started imitating the alleged
"flying discs," but staying on the
ground to do it.
20 YEARS AGO
July 2, 1937 (Friday)
Throng of 5,000 persons came
into Medford municipal airport
to witness sky show of the Ore
gon air tour.
Nearly 55,000 persons have
visited Crater Lake National
park so far this year, setting a
new early season attendance re
cord. 30 YEARS AGO
July 2, 1927 (Saturday)
C. E. Hougen, post office in
spector for seven counties with
headquarters in Medford, is pro
moted to the Eugene office.
Kiwanis and Rotary club mem
bers volunteer to help Salvation
Army solicit $3,000 for its heart
campaign fund.
40 YEARS AGO
July 2, 1917 (Monday)
New Chautaqua auditorium at
Ashland will be formally opened
today with a concert by the
Portland police band.
From Local and Personal col
umn: L. K. Brunk and E. W.
Anderson of the Blue Ledge
mining district are visitors in
Medford today. N
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or tn correct 1 tuperlor;
seven or eUnt U exceUent; five or
six Is food.
1. Did Benedict Arnold, the
traitor, ever commit widespread
ravages against the American
patriots while an officer of the
British Army?
2. Where is the United States
Naval Gun Factory located?
3. Bible: In the time of Jesus
women drew water from "Mary's
Well." Is it still in existence?
4. What is moonglade?
5. Do all of the States in the
U.S. require a blood test as a pre
requisite to issuance of a marri
age license?
6. At the time of the first
census in 1790, did New York
or Virginia have the largest pop
ulation? 7. Boulder Dam is located on
which river?
8. Name the author of "Crime
and Punishment."
9. It is proper to use "will" in
a sentence with "hope". Is It
proper to use "will in a clause
with "wish?"
10. 'Without Ceres (bread) and
Liber (wine) Venus will starve."
Terence. Gramatically, is
"will the correct word to use in
the sentence?
Answerst. 1. Yes. 2. Washing
ton, D.C. 3. Yes (Ain Maryan).
4. Reflection of moonlight x on
water. 5. No. 6. Virginia. 7. Colo
rado. 8. Doito BTsky. 9. No.
"Would" should be used. 10. No.
"Would" is correct.
THE UNSEEN PICASSO
Chicago flPi Teen-agers are
swinging from Elvis Presley to
Pablo Picasso with the help of
a jazz musician who carries a
copy of the painter's work
wherever he goes. Anthony
Roma met a group of young
fans on the street here recently
and they asked to see the copy.
He told" them the street was too
public his tattoo wasn't on an
arm or a leg.
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
New York, N.Y., June 29th: Surprised and delighted to find
a charming picture of Alice Bauer on the front page of the Herald
Tribune's sports section this morning, clasping her two-and-one-half
year old daughter and her pet putter to her breast, the cap
tion being, "Smile of Victory.
And that is what it was.
For one of yie Medford Golf club's old-time favorites, the
Bauer sisters are as of now starring in the Women's National Open
over at "Winged Foot," both breaking par with 72's the first day
but Alice smothering her younger sister yesterday with a 73
to 81.
In other words Alice, the elder, is on top. And it is the prayer
of this ex-golfer that she stays there.
For she deserves it.
We don't know all the details but according to what we have
heard, Alice has, though the older, always been overshadowed
by her younger, more rugged, and more skillful golfing sister. The
la'ter not only bested her in golf but took away her husband. That
is probably too harsh a term.
divorced the man who is now
believe it or not they are a happy family at least that is the
report in newspaper circles here
on and off the golf course that
And Papa Bauer, the ex-pro
is still on the job, telling his daughters what they do wrong, while
Mother Bauer, according to the same source, is also on hand with
her gentle and patient solicitude for her two most attractive
daughters.
In other words here we have the old favorite theatrical "tri
angle" situation, but no villain
Ex-Mrs. Haggey has her beloved "Heidi" as well as top golfing
honors. Marlene has lost her golfing crown for the moment at
least but has (again according to newspaper reports) "the man
she loves" and is Mrs. Haggey the
Here is some material for Hollywood, but they would mess it
up and refuse to follow the facts
would waste time or money, on a
it would to all the Hollywood
far fatched."
Coming back from Mt. Kisco
125th to save the fetid and poisonous atmosphere of the Grand
Central tunnel. Motoring down Park Avenue we were struck with
another idea for Hollywood to be called "Park Avenue." Here
we have one street in Central Manhattan that is a living drama of
economic and human contrasts.
beautiful and bountiful avenues of social and financial eminence
in the world, to the lowest depths of poverty, congestion, disease
and degradation. Here the NY Central trains roar over an
"elevated" day and night, it is entirely a colored quarter, mostly
Porto Ricans, with stores on the sidewalks and so-called markets
in tin can sheds under the railroad tracks. Skinny chickens hang
ing on hooks, barrels of feathers nearby and while the fly season
has not started for some reason, it soon will and this part of
Upper Park Avenue will be alive with them and other insects,
human, creeping and otherwise.
We are surprised Steinbeclt hasn't discovered this field for one
of his shocking sardine-can epics? Here is a perfect cross-section of
one of the largest, most exciting and most cosmopolitan cities in
America, and one can cover'it on foot in less than an hour. Maybe
Edison Marshall will try it. But if he does we would suggest he
take his notebook and candid camera, rather than his pith helmet
and elephant gun!
(Hi there, Edd-is-son.) -R.W.R.
Vacationland, U.S.A.
Vnn ran talrn it. tYr a truism hv nnw that one thinET
Americans will work hard
with July ushering in the oflicial vacation period, a
lot of industrial plants are making special arrange
ments just to keep open while most of the help is
away.
Some companies, particularly in industries where
summer business traditionally is slacK, as in textiles,
iiir. chut rlnwn fnr a vnontinn nprinrl for evervbodv.
Others insist that employees entitled to three weeks
take one of these in the winter. And winter vacations
are getting increasingly popular.
THE United States is a nation of vacation-takers
Tho A V T. -C. T D rennrtorl in Msv 1 95fi that one-
third of all bargaining
1 1 ii
sizaoie vacauon lmpruveuienus. ine uenu waa iuwam
giving vacations after shorter periods of service,
adding several days to vacation time, granting up to
four weeks after many years of service.
Time was, and not so long ago before the mid
1 Q30.'s whpn vacations were afforded onlv salaried
employees. Now the man
i a j i i. t -a
caugnt up wun ms wmie
U.S. Department of Labor
that. 8? ner cent of office
more vacation after one
t M I
against zi per cent oi piani woraers. rut wait: aiter
five vpnrs 99 ner rent of office workers p-et the two-
weeks-with-pay and so do
ployees.
Three weeks or more go
frIlar onH m nor ppnt. nt hlne-fo ar workers after 111
years of employment; to 84
tively, aner years, rew in eiiner giuup gei iuur
weeks or more 9 per cent of office workers and 4
per cent of shop employees after 20 years ; 28 and 13
per cent, respectively, after 25 years.
mm...
JJNCLE SAM the U.S. Government gives his em
ployees 13 working days of vacation a year for the
first three years of service. After that, the federal
worker gets a generous 20 days actually four seven
day weeks. After 15 years the U.S. job-holder gets
26 days of vacation five weeks and an extra day to
go fishin'.
The federal system was even more generous until
1951, when economy-minded Sen. Paul H. Douglas
(D-Ill.) got Congress to make it uniform. Previous
vacation leave had been 26 days a year for civil
service employees and 15 days annually for postal em
ployees. Douglas also got sick leave cut back from
15 davs a year, cumulative to 90 days, or 13 days a
year, cumulative without limit.
Douglas cited tigures showing maximum vacation
in 1951 in 47.8 per cent of all industries studied to be
two weeks; in 42.9 per cent, to be three weeks. Only 7
pef cent got as much as four weeks, and a little over
1 per cent more man lour
appears now to be in favor of longer periods. Some
industries are even going so far as to give periodic
leaves with pay in the manner of the academic sab
batical. E.R.R.
Tuesday. July 2. 1957
But the record shows that Alice
her kid sister's husband. And yet
and there is plenty of evidence
this is true.
and stern but devoted parent,
visible and no heartbreaks.
second.
no director in his right mind
script in real life; as it stands,
experts be so untrue to life and
yesterday we stopped off at
It goes from one of the most
for is a vacation. Indeed,
settlements provided for
A-- T-1 i J A n.i-n -A
in the shop has practically
n j .r -1 1 1 . a
- cuuaieu ietiuw-wuift.ei. j.
study of 1955-1956 showed
workers tret two weeks or
year of employment as
A 1 T" J- 2. J?J-
96 per cent of shop em
to 34 per cent of white-
and 71 per cent, respec
weeks. t,ven so, the trend
You PSOPLB PJBK seem TBNVDP TOADS & ONE TIMB ? 1
Matter of Fact by Joseph
THE SOVIETOLOGISTS
Oxford This reporter has
just enjoyed an experience which
was not news, quite certainly,
TfftW but still seem
ed to possess
more than
enough signifi
cance to de
serve com-
ment.
It was a con
ference of ex
perts on the So
viet Union
"S o v i et o 1 o-
Joieph Alsop
gists" now they wrily call them
selves held under the auspices
of the Congress for Cultural
Freedom at Saint Antony's Col
lege here in Oxford. The ex
perience was odd in more ways
than one.
More than two score of the
leading students of this grim
new subject which history has
thrust upon the universities of
the West, had assembled here
from England, America and half
of the nations of Europe. The
main business of the conference
was transacted in English (al
though there were also lapses
into the distantly related tongue
now spoken by American soci
ologists, with their strange gab
ble about "societal structuring
and the like.)
A VAST apparatus of learning,
a great wealth of detailed
knowledge of that other-side-of-
the-moon which is the Soviet
Union, were displayed at the
daily sessions. And sometimes
there were less academic and
more moving moments, as when
a refugee who had taken a lead
ing part in the Hungarian rebel
lion quietly analyzed the motiva
tions of those days of human
glory and political tragedy.
Maybe it would have seemed
less odd if the entire experience
had not been enclosed, as it
were, in Oxford's mellow beauty
and unchanging pride. To sharp
en the contrast, the university
conferred a batch of honorary
degrees in mid-conference. So
one went straight from a stern
morning of discussion of the So
viet future to the fantastic Tu
dor splendors of Oxford's aca
demic ceremonial, and then to a
magnificent luncheon for the degree-getters
in the great sun-
flooded library at All Souls.
Altogether, one could not help
reflecting on the opposing val
ues and quite opposite strengths
of the two different kinds of so
ciety the iron Soviet society
which was the topic of the So
vietologists', conference, and the
free Western society of which
Oxford is a ripe fruit. Yet it was
another contrast, of a different
sort, that lent a deeper signifi
cance to this occasion.
.
THE last such Sovietologists'
rallv held two vpars a?o at
Milan, was first convulsed with
controversy and then bitterly
cast down by the famous paper
of the English economist, Peter
Wiles. Wiles then pointed out
that the huge Soviet economy,
paying low wages to labor and
investing an enormous percent
age of each year's national in
come in new capital develop
ments, must be expected to de
velop very great power.
Wiles suggestion, that the so
viet system had its own special,
ugly but undeniable brand of "ef
ficiency," was at that time al
most revolutionary. But today
the Soviet Union's vast military-industrial-economic
power is
taken for granted, at least by
the experts.
Two years after Milan, the Ox
ford conference's theme was,
not the power of the Soviet econ
omy, but the evolutionary diffi
culties of the Soviet system as a
whole.
By all but one or two. it was
accepted that the monolithic pat
tern of Soviet society was now
being strangely altered by the
effects of the Soviet industrial
revolution and many other inter
acting pressures. The questions
chiefly debated were not wheth
er the Soviet Union wouia
change, but how it would change,
and how fast, and how far.
INHERE was no such smug, olea
ginous false optimism as you
can sometimes hear in Washing
ton, from those who hope that
Alsop
the main problems of the West
will be obligingly solved by a
Soviet collapse. But there was
sober, factual debate about the
changing role and composition
of the ruling Communist party,
the straining organization of in
dustry and agriculture, the per
sistent ferment of the Russian in
tellectuals and students and the
other grave problems that now
confront the Soviet rulers.
It was comforting to hear So
viet problems being debated in
stead of Soviet strengths. The
last two years have revealed, be
yond doubt, that despite its
frowning facade and harsh inner
machinery of tyrannical repres
sion, the Soviet society has as
many problems and just, as real
problems, as the Western socie
ties.
But the comfort was a bit di
luted, if one had just come from
the troubled Middle East, as this
reporter had done. Inconsiderate
questions kept popping Into one's
mind, such as the question about
what wilt happen if the Kremlin
chooses to play the card of all-
out hostility to Israel, thus caus
ing American diplomacy in the
Arab lands to fall apart like a
house of cards. And to these
questions there was only one
answer, that the present world
drama is like an unearthly race
between the developing problems
of the Soviet Union and the West.
(Copyright, 1957,
New York Herald Tribune, Inc.)
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address ot the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial ior publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with
an eye to clarification and conden
sation. Letters submitted tor pub
licaUon must not exceed 400 words
Trust Busting
To the Editor: So-called "trust
busting" by the government,
which is exemplified by the re
cent legal action against the Gen
eral Motors-Du Pont combine,
will receive, probably, the ap
probation of those who have
given the subject superficial at
tention. Ever since the rise of the
trusts in the late nineteenth
century, reformers and liberals
have belabored the theme that
the solution to the problems
raised by these huge economic
concentrations was to break
them up. "Trust-busting" be
came the liberal's favorite oc
cupation. From the very outset the Soc
ialist Labor Party took a thor
oughly Marxist stand on trusts
and trust-busting. The SLP not
ed that the would-be trust-busters
lived in a nostalgic dream
world in which, history having
been turned back, small inde
pendent producers would once
again rule the economy.
The SLP held that such a
world was irretrievably gone
and any attempt to recall it by
interfering with the - evolution
ary' processes of history would
only postpone a real solution to
capitalist monopolist tendencies.
The SLP said the solution was
not to break up the trusts, but
to organize the working class,
politically and industrially, to
take over the trusts (and all
other businesses, too) and operate
them on a socialist basis.
Henry R. Korman,
2640 Garfield St.,
Longview, Wash.
111 y PARKER WOODS'
la 011
jff f 21 North Centra! s
Unrest Said Increasing
Soviet Satellites in Europe
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Reports from Eastern Europe
indicate that unrest is growing
in nearly all ol the Soviet satel
lite countries.
Czech o s 1 o
v a k i a, Bul
garia and Al
bania are
among the
countries af
fected. In Hungary,
pop u 1 a r op
position to the
puppet regime
Charles Mccano of Premier
Janos Kr dar is being kept under
control by ruthless terrorism.
But there is serious dissension
inside the Communist Party and
a purge is under way to rid the
army of disaffected elements.
In East Germany, Red leaders
are drafting students for forced
labor or for army service to
keep them under control.
It is notable that all of the
countries mentioned are being
ruled by "Stalinist" leaders who
accept Russian domination.
Official Visit Postponed
A dispatch from Prague re
ports that Soviet Premier Nik
olai A. Bulganin and Communist
Party leader Nikita S. Khrush
chev have postponed a scheduled
state visit to Czechoslovakia.
There is good reason to be
lieve that the trip was postponed
because of outbreaks of disorder.
The Czechoslovak prosecutor-
general was quoted as saying in
a speech made last month that
Communist leaders were the tar
gets of "ever-increasing" violent
disturbance of public order.
The prosecutor-general com
plained that prosecutors, judges
and attorneys for defendants
were showing alarming tenden
Editorial
Comment
BRICKBATS AT THE COURT
It was to be expected that
cries of fear, outrage and an
guish would arise from certain
quarters following the Supreme
Court's stirring reiteration last
week of its determination to up
hold the liberties of the indi
vidual as guaranteed by the Con
stitution of the United States.
From no quarter do the cries
come more vehemently or less
surprisingly than from Louis
C. Wyman, president of the Na
tional Association of Attorneys
General. It so happened that Mr.
Wyman is also Attorney General
of New Hampshire, whose ques
tioning of a university professor
Paul M. Sw y about alleg
edly subversive political views.
activities and associations was
slapped down by Chief Justice
Warren only last week as "un
questionably an invasion
of liberties in the areas
of academic freedom and politi
cal expression areas in which
Government should be extreme
ly reticent to tread."
It is with this background in
mind that one should read Mr.
Wyman's present strictures
against the Supreme Court,
which he now accuses of "judi
cial undermining of national se
curity as well as of the
very foundation of a free Amer
ica's right to protect itself."
New Hampshire's Attorney Gen
eral wants all sorts of legisla
tion "to undo" the recent decis
ions in this field of civil liberties
and anti-subversive legislation.
He even asks for the states "a
greater voice in confirmation of
appointments to the Supreme
Court" which isn't a reflection
of much confidence in the ability
of the Senate to pass upon Presi
dential nominations.
Mr. Wymann is far off base in
denouncing the recent decisions
as having "set the United States
back twenty-five years" in its
efforts to control communism.
The Supreme Court's scrupulous
affirmation and reaffirmation of
the Bill of Rights is one of our
country's greatest safeguards
against communism, as well as
one of the most striking points
of difference between ours and
a Communist society. New
York Times.
TREADFUL OCCURRENCE
Barton, Wis. (W Eugene
Buhnke, 13, was run over by
a six-ton dump truck Monday
and he's got the. tire marks to
prove it. Doctors said the marks
and minor bruises were his only
injuries.
cies toward "liberalism" and en
couraging offenders by failing
to be tough enough with them.
A dispatch to the London
weekly newspaper Observer re
ported on Sunday that Czecho
slovak Communist leaders "face
a challenge similar to that which
started the upheavals last year
in Poland and Hungary."
It is known that the economic
situation in Czechoslovakia is
bad. The Prague Radio said re
cently that the coal shortage in
Czechoslovakia, the most highly
industrialized satellite, has be
come "catastrophic."
Deportations Reported
Dispatches from Vienna and
Belgrade report that thousands
of Bulgarians regarded as "un
reliable" are being deported to
remote provincial areas. In ad
dition, the authorities are re
cruiting Bulgarian men and
women of from 18 to 30 years
In the Day's News
By FRANK
Western water note:
The 159-million-dollar Frying-pan-Arkansas
project (in Colo
rado) has been passed by the
senate and sent to the house of
representatives for action there.
The dispatches reporting senate
approval add that the bill is
"expected to run into a lot of
opposition in the house."
Senate approval came on a
voice vote after rejection of two
amendments offered by Calif
ornia Sen. Thomas Kuchel. The
brief fight in the senate was led
by Colorado s senators Gor
don Allott, a Republican, and
John Carroll, a Democrat.
Senator Allott said the ECO
NOMIC need for the project
(which twice previously has
been approved by the senate)
"remains unaltered."
LET'S TAKE A brief look at
the economics of this project,
which is designed to furnish a
PARTIAL supply of water to
some 322,000 acres of land and
in addition is expected to pro
duce about 470 million kilowatt
hours of electricity.
Let's look at the reclamation
side of the picture first.
IF THE total estimated cost
of $159,000,000 were to be
applied against the 322,000 acres
to be served with water, ths
cost would be a shade under
$500 per acre assuming that
the final cost turned out to be
no higher than the estimate.
Note,, please, that only a PAR
TIAL supply of water for the
land is contemplated.
That poses a rather interest
ing question:
How would YOU feel about
taking on say a quarter-section
of this land with a cost of $500
an acre chalked up against it to
begin with for only a PARTIAL
supply of water?
REMEMBER, you would be
getting only the bare land
with facilities such as irrigation
and drainage ditches for provid
ing it with a . partial supply of
water. You would have to put
up your own buildings. You
would have to buy your own
machinery and other incident
als.
If you were an experienced
operator, I'm afraid you would
feel that you were Uking on
quite a load.
ALL OF THIS, of course, is
based on the assumption that
all the costs and all the bene
fits of the Fryingpan-Arkansas
project would be applied to
reclamation of the 322,000 acres
of land.
That isn't true. Approximately
half a million kilowatt hours of
electric energy would be produc
ed Presumably income from tlie
sale of this power would be ap
plied to some extent to reduc
tion of the cost of reclamation
of the land.
In that event, you should dra-
Counsel With ...
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
i
Fred Brennan
Or Call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP-2-4940
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
Among
for labor- service in Russia be
cause they are potential trouble
makers.
Even in tiny Albania, on the
Adriatic coast, there is both pop
ular unrest and dissension inside
the Communist Party.
Maj. Gen. Panajot Pljaku, a
veteran Communist, fled to
Yugoslavia in May and sought
asylum because he feared arrest
as one of a group of men who
eppose the "Stalinist" leader
ship. In none of the satellites is
there any indication that a real
revolt is likely. For one thing
both the people at large and dis
sident Communists realize that
Russian troops would intervene
to crush any outbreak as they
did in Hungary.
But it is evident that Commu
nist leaders throughout Eastern
Europe are anxious. Unrest is
likely to increase steadily.
JENKINS
matize yourself as a taxpayer.
for the $159,000,000 will be tak
en out of the taxpayers' pockets.
You may be a dedicated discipla
of the doctrine of federal pow
er. In that event, you will be
happy to contribute your share
of the capital cost of the pro
ject. But we shouldn't lose sight
of the fact that when govern
ment spends millions or billions
for power projects the money
comes out of the taxpayers'
pockets.
Maybe it will be put back
again someday. But for the pres
ent money taken out of the tax
payer's pocket is no longer there
for the taxpayer to spend.
SO FAR, THIS discussion hat
been purely academic.
What ISN'T academic is tna
fact that this Fryingpan-Arkan-sas
water will be taken from
the WEST side of the Continent
ental Divide for use on the EAST
side of the Continental Divide.
Every drop of it that is tunneled
under the Rockie to run down
the Arkansas WON'T run down
the Colorado.
It WON'T be surplus water
for everyone in the West
knows there is NO SURPLUS
water in the Colorado basin.
EVERY DROP of the Colorado's
water will be needed by the
states in the Colorado's basin.
IlrHAT THAT amounts to is
' taking water away from
one region that has it and needs
it and giving it to another re
gion that doesn't have it but
WANTS it. Here in Southern
Oregon and Northern California,
we are strongly opposed to that
practice.
The secret of
vodka enjoyment
Is in
Wolfschmidt's
$410
45 Qt.
Wolfschmidt Ltd., Dundalk, Md.
80 proof. 100 Grain Neutral Spirits
Product of U.SA
This year's centralized fire
works displays eliminates
the danger of fires from
home-fireworks but ther.
ar. many other ways that
your horn, might be ser
iously damaged by fire.
Better take a home inven
tory and determine wheth
er you hav. ample re
placement insurance. We'll
be hoppy to assist you.
Bill Fish