FOUH MEDFORD (OREGON)
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Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the file of The
Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26. 1947 (Tuesday)
An unidentified youth rescues
two others from deep hole in the
Applgate river at M c K e e
bridge.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Sa&udge Pot column: The mer
cury went up, yes, enabling the
cucumbers to be as cool as re
puted.
n e
M YFATW? AfiO
11, OC 1CT7 fTkiM,nt O
City police today investigate
the mysterious departure for
San Francisco of three local
teen-age Jjirls.
Paul lvlenegat, principal of
Medford junior high school, is
released to become principal
of The Dalles high school.
'30 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26, 1927 (Tuesday)
Ten-year-old Billy West, Cen
tral Point, arrived home from
a 10-mile-trip to Canyonville.
Visitors view northern lights
from Crater Lake Lodge.
40 YEARS AGO
Aug. 26. 1917 (Monday)
New Medford irrigation dist-
rick plans on taking water from
Beaver crek.
a U.S. Marine . corps office
closes in Medford after six
months operation.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct Is superior;
even or eight is exceUent; five or
six Is good
1. Earl Long is a political
figure m which State?
2. Did the Twentieth Century
begin Jan. 1. 1900 or 1901?
3. Bible: Which person had a
coat of many colors?
4. Which European explorer
discovered Manhattan Island?
5. Is catgut made from the
Intestines of cats?
6. How many nations are in
cluded in the Pan American Un
ion?
7. What did Mussolini's title
"II Duce" mean?
8. Do skates glide over ice
by melting it?
5. "Bound" is often used to
imply "determined." Is its usage
as such objectable?
10. "See a pin and pick it
up, All the day you'll have good
luck; See a pin and let it lay.
Bad luck you'll have" how
long? '
Answers: 1. Louisiana. 2.
1901. 3. Joseph. 4. Henry Hud
son. 5. No, (from the intestines
of sheep). 6. Twenty-one. 7.
"The Commander" ' or "The
Guide." 8. Yes. 9. No 10 "all
the day."
Wind Catches Balloon
Killing Frenchman
Saint Florent Le Vieil, prance
(IP! Georges Cornier. 23-year-old
dean of French balloon
ists, was fatally injured Sun
day when an errant gust of wind
caught his balloon during his
500th flight.
Cormier was bringing his bal
loon back to earch when a
strong wind seized the balloon
and sent it bouncing across
fiplds and Hedges. When res
cuers finally caught up with theJ
appartus, Cornier was graveiy
injured. He died an hour later.
The phrase "Iron Curtain" was
first used by Winston Churchill
on March 5, 1946. to describe
Russia's barrier around her satellites.
MAIL TRIBUNE
News "Bulletins
Radio, the demise of which was freely predicted
with the advent of TV, has made an amazing come
back. But it has had to change its "format" to do it
The emphasis these days is less and less on big
network shows, and more and more on recorded
music, brief news broadcasts, and special-event
broadcasts.
We do not quarrel with this type of programming
although we do quarrel violently with much of the
alleged "music" which the "deejays" seem to feel is
attractive.
During a recent sojourn among the tall trees, it
seemed impossible to switch on the portable without
hearing the moans, grunts, howls and wails which
pass for songs these days. The rare exceptions, usually
late at night, were doubly appreciated.
.
AS TO the news broadcasts, usually for three or five
minutes each hour, they were sufficient to keep
one informed whether or not the world was going to
come to an end but not a great deal more.
Either the stations available had no more, or they
were missed in the hit-or-miss pattern of listening.
There was no commentary, no explanation, no back
ground to put flesh on the bare bones of the news
bulletins.
Radio, and its latter-day big sister, TV, are in
creasingly media of entertainment some of it excel
lent, no doubt, and laced
perception which the broadcast media can handle
so well but mostly entertainment, nonetheless.
"NLY twice during the
purchase newspapers
the Eureka Humboldt Times.
In each case, the newspaper lay around camp most
of the day, but was picked
and by the end of the day
comprehensive picture of
No one issue of any newspaper not even the New
York Times gives the complete picture of the day's
news. It is physically impossible to do so. But it is
so vastly more comprehensive and informative than
the sketchy radio bulletins that we were reinlorced in
our belief that newspapers will always be with us,
m one form or another.
Beside, when camping,
with the paper, you can wrap the fish in it ! h.A.
j ; r
ML Mazama's Explosion
In the country between Butte Falls and Prospect,
and in several other sections of the mountains to the
east, one can see charred logs imbedded deep down
in the dirt. They were brought into view when the
road was cut.
These are mementoes of the explosion of Mt.
Mazama some 6,000 years ago ("only yesterday,"
geologically speaking), when the caldera was formed
which later became Crater lake.
The event was vividly described in a recent edi
torial in the Bend Bulletin, penned by Associate Edi
tor Phil Brogan, Oregon's outstanding newspaper-geologist.
JN PART, he said:
The wind was blowing from the west when the initial
blasts of Mazama occurred. Pumice billowed thousands of
feet into the sky, like anchored thundercaps. The prevailing
wind caught the top of the clouds and heaved the mass of
ash to the east, where it fell across Klamath mountain and
even spread into the Chewaucan valley.
Then the wind changed to the southwest, and the mush
rooming clouds tilted northeast toward Mt. Newberry. The
fallout of pumice filled valleys near Mazama, smoothed .
mountain contours and changed the land into a white world.
Gradually as the explosion clouds drifted toward the
Deschutes the heavier material dropped to the earth. But
the finer ash continued north, to cover the present Crescent
country.
At the site of Lava Butte, some 10 miles south of Bend
of the present, the ash blanket was only six inches deep.
But there is evidence that all of central Oregon, and much
of northern Oregon and southeastern Washington, received
some of the volcanic fallout.
On the "morning after," the entire region for more
than 100 miles north of the caldera, above which a giant
mountain had loomed, was a desolated land. It does not
appear that any animal life could have survived.
Near the base of the mountain that was Mazama, ava
lanches of glowing pumice swept through forests. Charcoal
remnants of buried trees are now visible in the upper Rogue
valley, and in the Crescent country.
DROGAN compares this "fall out" with the radio
active fallout so much discussed these days, and
points out that the volcanic explosion was vastly more
destructive than any nuclear explosion so far de
tonated. When Mother Nature really lets loose, she makes
the efforts of men seem puny' indeed, although man
kind seems determined to catch up. One hopes he
doesn't kill himself off in the process. E. A.
A Great Summer
The bulk of the fruit
FFA fair has come and gone. The hot Augus' after
noons give way to cool evenings, and mornings prove
they re almost chilly by the
grass.
Even so soon, an occasional yellowed leaf flutters
to the ground, away from its green brothers. The crab
grass isn't growing as fast, and shows signs of ap
proaching death.
This has been a glorious summer in the Roeue
River valley. It still is. But
weeK away, and schools starting soon thereafter; with
the days gradually getting: shorter: with talk gradu
ally turning to football these things are proof that
summer is fading, slowly, almost imperceptibly, into
fall. E.A. '
Monday, August 26, 1957
if
with the immediacy . arid
week in the woods did we
once the Oregonian, once
up and read sporadically,
we had gleaned a fairly
what was going on.
and when you're through
harvest is in. The 4-H and
amount of dew on the
with Labor day only a
1 tftmff ifltRf
Matter of
Bonn, Germany Lingering
doubts about the value of politi
cal reporting practised at rang
es of several thousand miles, are
the main reason for this report
er's grimly peripatetic life. .It
is a bit embarrassing, therefore,
to be writing
in this smug
little capital of
West Germany
about distant
D a m a s cus,
smiling and
rocking in its
lovely oasis.
All the same,
most of the
Joseph Alsop participants in
the left-wing coup d'etat in Syr
ia are old friends, as it were. Not
having a word to say about the
great change in their fortunes in
these last days, which one saw
in the making on the spot only
a few months ago, would be like
omitting the customary letter to
a newly married or promoted
college classmate. Even from
this distance, too, it is abundant
ly clear that what has happened
in Syria is very important in
deed. Some kind of a coup d'etat in
Damascus of course became in
evitable as soon as the take-over
of neighboring Jordan by the
Egyptians and the Communists!
was so brilliantly defeated by
young King Hussein. What hap
pened in Jordan encouraged the
Syrian conservatives and mode'
rates, and frightened the Syrian
leftists and pro-Egyptians. Nei-
ther side was willing, any long
er, to tolerate the uneasy bal
ance, with Left in control but
not in absolute control, that had
previously prevailed.
TTnhappily,. as this reporter
J wrote from Damascus in
May, the Syrian moderates and
conservatives enjoyed the ap
proximate degree of animation
of dead fish on a slab. Like dead
fish prepared by the fishmonger,
they also lacked guts. Hence, the
betting, even then, was all for a
leftist success in the coup d'etat
that one could so clearly see
ahead.
The really interesting point
about the new Syrian coup
d'etat, therefore, is not the fact
of a leftist victory. The really
interesting point is the indica
tion of a deep change in the lost
balance of power between the
Syrian leftist parties. The Com
munists elearlv seem to have
made important gains at the ex
pense of the extreme left-wing,
pro-Egyptian but non-Commu
nists who were formerly in the
saddle.
As late as last spring, the two
real rulers of Syria were both
non-Communists of the extreme
left - wing and pro - Egyptian
brand. The civil ruler was the
able and dynamic ruler of the
Ba'ath Party, Ahram Hourani.
The military ruler was the head
of Army Intelligence, Col. Abdel
Hamid Serraj.
At that time Syria's Communist
phipftnin Khalirl Baadash.
appeared to be very much Ah
ram Hourani's junior partner.
Furthermore, it was authorita
tively said that there were no
Communists in the Army at all,
with the single exception of Col.
Afif Bizry. Col. Bizry and Col.
Amin Nufouri enjoyed great no
toriety as the judges who had
pronounced death sentences in a
Moscow-style "treason" trial of
Syrian right-wingers during the
winter. Col. Nufouri was further
celebrated as the special enemy
and rival of Col. Abdel Hamid
Serraj.
The main result of the Syrian
coup d'etat so far has been the
transformation of Col. Bizry, the
Army's sole reputed Communist,
into Ma j. -Gen. Bizry, Chief of
Staff of the Syrian armed forc
es, and the further transforma
tion of Col. Nufouri, Col. Ser
raj's enemy, into Brig.-Gen. Nu
fouri, Deputy Chief of Staff un
der Gen. Bizry. In Arab politics
there are usually meanings with
in meanings. But surely the most
important meaning of these sud
den promotions of Bizry and Nu
fouri is plain "enough.
In brief, there has been a
sharp change in what you might
call the stock ownership of Syr
ia. For a long time now, Syria
'Boy. mtsAiymoofA noose1
Fact By
Joseph Alsop
has been a- complete Egyptian
satellite. Gamal Abdel Nasser
has held something like .95 per
cent of the stock in the company
through his two Syrian represen
tatives, Col. Serraj and Ahram
Hourani. ,'
"Dut now, as -the immense in
crease of Afif Bizry's au
thority indicates, t h e Soviets
have bought into the company in
a very big way indeed. Fifty
fifty seems a reasonable estimate
of the present split in Syrian vot
ing shares between Nasser and
the Kremlin. F o r propaganda
purposes in the Middle East, Nas
ser will no doubt stay on as the
company's front man. Outward
ly, Syrian policy will continue
to be Egyptian policy. But inside
Syria, it is a fair guess that Com
munist Party Leader , Baqdash
and Army Chief of Staff Bizry
now have just a bit more
strength than Ba'ath Party Lead
er Hourani and his military ally,
Serraj.
Ope wonders immediately
what this means in terms of Ga
mal Abdel Nasser's own rela
tions with the Kremlin. To this
reporter, it seems another fair
guess that the developments in
Syria imply a new decision by
Nasser to throw in his lot rather
completely and finally with the
world bloc headed by the Soviet
Union.
(c) 1957
New York Herald Tribune Inc.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Modern furniture-note:
A new "relaxer" chair (put
out by one of the nation's big
gest manufacturers) not only
stretches you out comfortably
with you feet in the 'air but
MASSAGES YOU as well.
With the turn of a dial a jig
ger called a cycloid goes to
work and massages your whole
body. The action is described
as an aid in soothing muscles
and nerves that have become
"tight" during the day's activi
ties. JJu
m-m-m-m
I have a cynical notion that
mowing the lawn might have
the same effect.
And for less money.
0f
course, I'm old-fashioned.
But
Money is old fashioned. What
we call coined money was in
vented back about 700 B.C. by
either the Lydians or the Ioians.
At any rate, it was in what we
now call Asia Minor. This mony
was a rough piece of metal made
of gold and silver. It was rough
ly stamped to indicate its value,
The Chinese were also early
makers of coins. They shaped
each coin to show what could
be bought with it. Some of their
coins were shaped like the hu
man body and were called
"dress money." These were used
to buy clothing.
The Chinese were very early
eaters of pork as you will re
call . from your reading of
Charles Lamb's whimsical Es
say on Roast Pig. Presumably
the money intended to pay for a
pork chop was shaped lik a pig.
A 11 this talk about money spot-
flights, a little story that has
just come off the wire. A group
of 'young mothers in Milwood,
Mich., is running a money-printing
outfit just like the treas
ury department.
It is quite legal, and is de
signed to solve their baby-sitting
problems. This "currency"
come in two denomination a
half hour and a full hour. When
mother needs a baby-sitter,
she calls another mother and
when the sitting job is finished
she pays her off with the prop
er amount of baby-sitting bills.
The bills are negotiable and the
second mother can ,use them
when SHE needs a baby sitter.
And so on.
Use of this baby-sitting cur
rency keeps everything straight
so that no mother gets gypped
in the transaction.' That's what
money is for. That is why it is
Special Wisconsin Senatorial
Election Tuesday Seen
By RAYMOND LAHR
United Press Staff
Correspondent
Washington (in Wiscon
sin's special Senate election
Tuesday gives national pilitical
parties their first chance to test
nolitical wind directions since
the Eisenhow
e r landslide
1 0 mon ths
ago.
The prize is
the vacant
Senate seat of
the late Sen.
Joseph R. Mc
Carthy, the
c o n trovers-
Raymond Lahr ial figure who
held it for almost 11 years.
The Republicans expect to
win but seem a little nervous.
The Democrats are. hopeful but
recognize that they are under
dogs in normally Republican
Wisconsin. 1
Although the state GOP or
ganization tends to be conserva
tive, the Republican nominee is
an Eisenhower Republican, for
mer Gov. Walter J. Kohler. The
Democratic candidate is William
Proxmire from the liberal wing
Federal Atomic Power
Plant Still Doubtful
Despite Demo Victory
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Mail Tribune Correspondent
. Washington When President
Eisenhower signed the atomic
energy authorization bill into
law last week,
he made it pos
sible to com
plete plans for
a big dual-purpose
reactor at
Hanf ord but
at the same
time he made
clear his ad-
ministra t i o n
a. eobt smith will resist 10
the end the construction of that
reactor as a federal project.
The effect of this statement by
the president was to throw down
the gauntlet once more to Con
gress, wnicn naa just gone
through another battle over the
government's atomic power pol
icy. This year the Democrats
who favor federally built reac
tors, won decisively over Repub
licans who support the admin
istration's preference for private
industrial development of atomic
power reactors,
The Hanford reactor is bound
now to be another major issue in
this . continuing policy dispute
during the congressional session
next spring, for by April 1 the
Atomic Energy Commission must
have completed engineering de
signs and construction plans for
the dual-purpose reactor. They
are obliged to do this much with
$2,000,000 appropriated for the
planning.
Cost $100 Million
Eisenhower said he had no ob
jection to federal planning, as
long as the construction were
turned over to private enter
prise. A dual-purpose reactor
would cost around $100,000,000.
The prospect of it being handled
privately seems remote.
Two questions must be answer
ed before such a reactor can be
built: First, will Congress au
thorize expenditure of $100,000,-
defined as "a medium of ex
change. It keeps exchange of
commodities which is what
business amount to on an
even keel.
VIThat we call money is the re
"sult of a long, long process
of development and improve
ment. There was - a time .in
ancient Rome when CATTLE
were used as money.
You are aware of the word
'pecuniary" which means re
lating to money. It comes from
the Latin "pecus," which means
cattle. The Latin word for mon
ey is "pecunia."
The use of cattle for money
was inconvenient. Picture your
self as an early Roman going
to town to lay in your supplies.
It was highly inconvenient to
lug a" dozen or so cows along
with maybe a few calves for
change. So the Romans looked
around for a more convenient
substitute. For a while, .they
used LEATHER for money.
M
oney is very. VERY old.
But, from the very beginning,
this rule has held good.. If you
spend more money than you
take in, you go broke.
Everybody understands that
EXCEPT GOVERNMENTS.
How To Hold
FALSE TEETH
;More Firmly in Place
Do your false teetb annoy and em
barrass by slipping, dropping or wob
bling when you eat, laugh or talk?
Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on
your plates. This alkaline (non-acid)
powder holds false teeth more firmly
and more comfortably. No gummy,
gooey pasty taste or feeling. Does not
sour Checks "plate odor" (denture
breath). Get FASTEETH today at
any drug counter.
of his party a thrice-defeated
nominee for governor who once
lost to Kohler by a margin of
35,000 votes.
Politicians Will Sniff
Whatever the result, the
trend-hunters in both parties
will go to work with slide rules.
In Wisconsin last year. Sen.
Alexander Wiley, another Ei
senhower Republican, was re
elected with 58 per cent of a
total vote of 1,523,356 while
President Eisenhower was also
sweeping the state.
Forecasts reaching the party
managers here estimate a much
smaller vote Tuesday in the
neighborhood of 600,000. Even
that turnout would be higher
than was expected a few weeks
ago.
One source of Republican
worry is the independent can
didacy of Howard H. Boyle Jr.,
a conservative Republican, who
figures to subtract from Kohl
er's vote. GOP leaders are con
ceding him about 20,000.
Republicans are also nervous
about the farm vote in the
north-western part of the state,
which will be watched closely
by the Democrats, too. In that
000 for the reactor; and second,
will the administration reluc
tantly build it if Congress does
approve it?
Congress has appropriated
funds to start four new dams as
federal projects in the past sev
eral years over administration
opposition, and in each case the
dams were put under construc
tion or, in the case of John Day
dam, will soon be. In no case did
the executive branch of the gov
ernment exercise its power to
veto such federal projects simp
ly by failing t6 spend the appro
priated funds.
i
The atomic projects may be
quite another matter, for the ad
ministration is strenuously try
ing to prevent the beginning of
a program of federal atomic
power plants and, with the
stubborness of AEC Chairman
Lewis Strauss to give the admin
istration's stand some muscle, it
is not inconceivable that even if
Congress puts up funds to start
the big Hanford undertaking, it
might be shelved.
Jackson Confident
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, Demo
crat, Washington, who piloted
the Hanford project through the
congressional rapids, says he is
confident "when the president
understands what this is all
about, I don't think he will
freeze the funds." Jackson point
ed out that the military have
asked for, greater plutonium pro
duction, which they could
achieve with a dual-purpose re
actor: but they were turned
down( by the budget bureau for
economy reasons.
General Electric Corp.. which
operates Hanford, is ready to go
on a dual-purpose reactor, said
Jackson, and believes it is "a
sound economic approach." It
just is common sense, he added,
to generate power along with
producing plutonium, so "this
has nothing to do with public
vs. private power."
The administration doesn't see
it that way, nor do Republicans
on Capitol Hill. That was the
reason for the major hassle over
the bill the president just signed
into law. As Harry R. Stringer,
editor of the Washington Atomic
Energy Report, put it, the bill
finally passed by Congress "was
a product of political fusion."
t looks now like there will
have to be a good deal more po
litical fusion the. next six to
eight months if that Hanaford re
actor is ever to get off the draw
ing boards.
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as Test
area four years ago, the Demo
crats broke the Republican hold
on the 9th Congressional seat
and elected Rep. Lester R. John
son, who has twice been reelect
ed.. Issues At Stake
Democrats also will be wond
ering whether there is any po
litical payoff in their efforts to
develop an issue from inflation
and the rising cost of living.
They have doubts, however, that
the issue was exploited in Wis
consin t the extent that it will
be tried in some states in the
1958 congressional elections.
The result Tuesday can have
much impact on the Senate
where there are now 49 Demo
crats, 46 Republicans and one
vacancy.
A Proxmire victory would
provide some insurance ainst
the Democrats losing control be
fore the 1958 elections. A Kohl
er victory would put the GOP
in position to take control if a
Democratic senator should die
in a state with a Republican
governor who could fill the
vacancy by appointment.
Republicans have the tie
breaking vote of Vice President
Richard M. Nixon to organize
the Senate should their member
ship rise to 48. '
Editorial
Comment
CANADIANS ON
McKAY'S JOB
I- When Douglas McKay was
appointed by President Eisen
hower to be U.S. chairman of
the International Joint Com
mission the U. S.-Canadian
commission charged with coop
eration over uses of the mighty
Columbia public power pro
ponents howled at this new
"roadblock" to development of
the Pacific Northwest.
Private power proponents, in
cluding many Oregon news
papers of a Republican . vein,
saluted the appointment and
ridiculed the protests, "Good
deal," they said in effect.
"Doug's just the man."
What did the Canadians
think? Well, one of them, a top
writer on a . top newspaper,
didn't think much of it. Here's
what Bill Ryan, business editor
of the Vancouver Province a
conservative newspaper had to
say in his column:
"Canada-United States talks
on Columbia Hiver power, de
velopment have likely hit anoth
er roadblock rather than stim
ulant in the appoinment of
former United States Interior
Secretary Douglas McKay as
United States chairman of the
International Joint Commission.
"McKay, say Washington ob
servers, is a private power ex
ponent, and probably lukewarm
to any expansion of public pow
er in the Pacific Northwest.
What's more, his appointment
apparently does nothing to solve
the continuing private-versus-public
power squabble in the
United States, with which Can
ada's Columbia River hopes
seem inextricably bound.
"It is a bleak picture for Brit
ish Columbia, one virtually with
out visible solution unless
Canada goes it alone on upper
Columbia development. And
such a course has its drawbacks
since it might provide the Unit
ed States Pacific Northwest with
substantial downstream benefits
free of charge."
' So much for Mr. Ryan.
There is much talk lately from
industry bigshots about the
whys and wherefores of Oregon
being unable to entice new in
dustry into the state. But every
one seems to overlook the pri
mary reason: The Pacific North
west is rapidly running out of
its great fuel cheap hydroelec
tric power and nothing is
being done, to rectify the situa
tion. The appointment of Douglas
McKay was just another step
away from solutions. Coos Bay
Times.
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