Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 06, 1958, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
I MedfordTeibune
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP.2-6141
' ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr.
IRIC ALLEN, JR. Managing Editor
EARL 11. AUA.M3, icy idiior
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
FICHARD JEWETT, Sports Editor
OTJVE STARCHER, Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Intered as second class matter at
'. Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
fir Mail In -Advance: Copy 10c
Daily and Sunday 1 year 515 00
. Daily ana sunaay mos. o.uu
Dailv and Sunday 3 mos. 4.25
Knndav Onlv Orw year $4.20
iv Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point. Eagle
. Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill.
Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv
! er Talent, and on motor routes
Daily and Sunday 1 year $13.00
I Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50
- Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
! All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City of Medfar
ouiciaj raperoi acHpn oumj
srjnltedPreas Full Leased Wire
TlIEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
' OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC.. Of-
'. fices in New York. Chicago, De-
troit, San rrancisco. Los Angeles,
J Seattle, Portland. St. Louis, At-
lanta. Vancouver. B. C.
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
ft ATI O N A I EDITORIAL
ASSOCfATIN
KJ
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
-eb. 6. 1948 (Friday)
; Friends organize "draft
Pengtson" committee for Re
publican nomination for state
senator.
I Land tracts remaining from
current sale of 15,000 acres
Jo former owners and tenants
t Camp White will be sold
to World War II veterans,
Dregon department an
bounces. 20 YEARS AGO
Feb, 6, 1938 (Sunday)
Highways north and south
jf Medford kept open by
plows working all night.
: From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: "Snow
ihe Older Girls wanted for a
"white Christmas, fell Fri. but
iiot enough to thrill the wood
shed props and the plumbers."
30 YEARS AGO
Feb. 6. 1928 (Monday)
; Southern Oregon Legion
naires to support Medford
Legion Post in conducting
state convention here in
'August.
-. Chamber of Commerce
warns about sailors in Med
ford trying to sell "Oriental
rugs" in door-to-door sales.
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 6, 1918 (Wednesday)
: Directors of Medford Irri
gation district select Beaver
creek project.
From Local and .Personal
column: "Train 14, due here
at 8:02 a.m., was over three
hours late in reaching the city
today, inconveniencing many
north-bound passengers."
; What's Your I.Q.?
Mine or ten correct is superior;
even or eight is excellent; five or
is is good.
1. DAV are the initials of
which veterans' organization?
: 2. Bible: Does Ezra 7:21
contain all the letters in the
alphabet except J, Q or I?
; 3. Are lemons picked before
they are ripe?
: 4. The donkey and ele
phant are symbols of which
two political parties?
I 5. Is a pousse cafe a restau
rant, a mixture of cordials
and brandy or a layer cake?
: 6. Is a "round robin" a pe
tition, discussion, or news
panel?
; 7. Volume for volume, is
flamp air heavier than dry
iir?
8. When angry, can a por
cupine actually shoot any of
its quills?
9. Does the edible portion
Of fresh, white potatoes con
tain about 68, 78, or 8 per
Cent water?
i 10. What, in baseball, does
a "goose egg" denote?
t Answers: 1. Disabled Amer
ican Veterans. 2. "J." 3. Yes.
4. Democratic (donkey); Re
publican (elephant). 5. A mix
ture of cordials and brandy.
6. A petition (signed in a cir
cular form so that no individ
ual's signature need appear
first). 7. No. (At ordinary tem
perature and pressure, 13 cu
bic feel cf dry air weigh about
one pound; under similar con
ditions, damp air will weigh
about. 0.62 pounds). 8. No. 9.
About 78 per cent water. 10.
ero score
Air pollution experts esti
mate that industrial plants
waste up to $800 million
worth of fuel annually be
cause of inefficient burning
methods. N
"Mink Coatism Again
When will officials of government entrusted with
protecting the public interest in a specific field under
stand that they cannot accept favors from the industry
or individuals regulated by these officials? Anyone so
stupid or so insensitive to responsibility should be re
moved summarily from public office.
John C. Doerfer, chairman of the Federal Com
munication Commission, complained bitterly to the
press and on TV that he was being treated worse than
a criminal by a special House subcommittee investigat
ing industry favors to FCC members. But there is only
one question to be answered: Did he accept expense
or other money from the radio-TV industry? In Doer
fer's case, the issue is compounded by the accusation
that he not only collected expense money (or an
"honorarium", as he called it) from private industry,
but that he also colected expense money from the
government for the same trips.
This "mink coatism" in the Eisenhower administra- .
tion is a duplicate of that in the Truman administra
tion. It knows no party, although it seems to get worse
in some periods. On the evidence, which Doerfer has
not satisfactorily refuted, he should be dismissed.
Portland Oregonian
Well said!
And, considering the source, that also is
NEWS. In fact, ever since the famous Richard
Nixon broadcast in 1952, we have been unable
to understand the attitude of the Republican
press and the Republican leaders toward, that
"honorarium" of $18,000 in cash, which while
representing the state of California in the Senate,
Richard Nixon admitted he received, from a
group dominated by big oil and banking inter
ests in that state.
The so-called "Tidelands oil bill" was then a
vital issue in the congress. These special interests
were working night and day to secure the passage
of the measure which would mean over the years
many billions to them. Senator Nixon and his
colleagues were intrusted with protecting, in the
Oregonian s words the public interest m a spe
cific field."
VET when the measure was passed in May of
the following year with Senator Nixon work
ing hard for it, there never was a word as we re
call raised in the Oregonian or any other impor
tant Republican paper, expressing the slightest
doubt, that such a shady transaction had been en
tirely proper, that the California Senator's sob-
story over the air (100
had completely exonerated him, and that the
party would not only be
him as President Eisenhower's running-mate, but
he was the pure and gallant "White Knight" to
keep the colors of the Grand Old Party over the
White House for another
m m m w
AS NOTED this attitude of not only refusing
censure but heaping on the head of. the bene
ficiary in this deal, praise and the highest hon
ors, in their power to give, has always been, and
still is, one of the major mysteries of the post
war political era, as far as this department is
concerned. t '
That radio broadcast was such pure unadul
terated ham and hokum ; such an obvious dodg
ing of the real issue, and hiding behind a smoke
screen of sugary sentimentality and double-talk;
that anyone could have been misled by it, or
failed to have seen- through it, passed and still
passes our understanding.
But, as the record shows many did. Moreover,
judging by the present Republican position they
still do.
IN FACT, we had, in view of what the Republi
cans handed out to the "mink-coat and deep
freeze" malefactors and did NOT. hand out to
Mr. Nixon, or to the Dixon Yates slickers about
decided there was a double-standard of morality
in American politics that guilt depended not
upon behavior but upon the party label.,
We, thererfore, were especially pleased to
note that one of the leading and most highly re
spected Republican dailies on the coast, the Ore
gonian, came out, as the above quotation demon
strates, declaring the "F.C.C." disclosures in the
Eisenhower administration to be morally kin to
the "Mink coatism" of the Truman administra
tion. X7ELL so it goes !
But sufficient unto the day are the good
tiding thereof. And we hope the courageous and
correct stand taken by the Oregonian, even though
members of the Eisenhower administration are
involved, will be followed by the Republican
press in the state and countiy as a whole. As the
Oregonian well says "Mink coatism knows no
party."
QF COURSE it shouldn't. But it did, and still
does, where Richard Nixon is concerned.
For the benefit of those who think there is no
similiarity between the "honorariums" granted
by "special interests" to public officials in the
Truman and the Eisenhower administrations .
(including the Vice President) our advice is to
read the record.
The defendants in the Truman administration
who accepted the mink-coats and deep-freezes,
all admitted they were thus "honored" but they, all
claimed with great vehemence, the honorariums
did not affect their judgement in the slightest.
They were gifts accepted as friendly gestures in
the line of duty and had no significance whatever.
Nevertheless they were kicked out of office and
we believe at least one of them went to jail.
MOW F.C.C. chairman, John C. Doerfer, and
his 2 associates all admit they received gifts,
cash, transportation and expenses from TV com
panies under their jurisdiction. But this too they
claim was all in the line of duty, whereupon they
Thursday, February 6, 1958
if
irrelevant to the issue)
.highly honored to have
four years ! ,
60, DO YOU EVER USB Pg8FUM
Matter of Fact by joSePh a,soP
SAC's END IN SIGHT
Paris The Soviet Union is
now building a new air de
fense system that is expected
rssxmf?r to neutralize
i the present
x American nu
clear deter
rent, the Stra
tegic Air Com-
w n e n xne
new system is
completed, ef
f e c t i v e de-
joseDh aisod fense against
attack by SAC aircraft will
be provided by a novel com
bination of importantly im
proved radars and anti-aircraft
missiles with nuclear
warheads.
The American government
is the ultimate source of this
news, which is an ironic com
mentary on official Washing
ton's boastful exultation over
the American Sputnik.
According to an American
inteligence estimate present
ed to NATO, the new Soviet
air defense system will be
fully . Installed within five
years, which means that five
years is the life term of SAC
as now constituted. Further
more, the NATO forecasters,
with the British in the lead,
are convinced that the West
ought to be prepared for com
pletion of the new Soviet
air defense system at a much
earlier date, within two to
three years.
TN THIS connection, it is
1
worth noting that there is
no case on record of any
American joint intelligence
estimate of any form of So
viet weapons development
which was not decidely over
optimistic. From the atomic
bomb onwards, the minimum
error in forecasting the mo
ments when the Soviets would
have new weapons has always
been two years, and often the
error has been much greater.
If a two-year error is assumed
in the American estimate, the
NATO-British estimate of So
viet air -defense progress is
approximately confirmed.
The difference is of desper
ate importance, because of its
bearing on what the experts
call the "missile gap." This
is the period when the So
viets will be able to attack
the United States with inter
continental ballistic missiles,
whereas the United States
will only be able to retaliate
with aircraft.
If the American time esti
mate given is fortunately cor
rect, then the missile gap will
have been bridged before the
Soviet air defense system is
completed. In other words,
the U. S. will have the mew
retaliatory power of its own
intercontinental ballistic mis
siles before the aircraft of
SAC lose their usefulness.
TUT if the NATO-British
time estimate is correct,
the new Soviet air defense
challenged their accusers to show "a scintilla of
evidence of improper influence affecting the
honesty or independence of their judgements."
Senator Nixon's defense was almost exactly
the same. He did not deny he had received $18,
000 from special oil, real estate and banking in
terests in the Los Angeles area but it was used by
him, he said, solely to benefit the tax payers. Not
one cent he added for his personal use, nor did the
gifts affect his political judgement in any, way. -
" "
TTHE Oregonian declares "on the evidence which
Chairman Doerfer has not refuted HE should
be dismissed," adding:
Anyone so stupid or so insensitive to responsibility
should be removed summarily from public office.
MO ONE can accuse Vice President Nixon of
being stupid. But would1 not our highly re
garded contemporary agree, that a U.S. senator
elected to represent ALL the people of California,
showed a high degree of "INsensitivity" when
he accepted an $18,000 "gift" from a small group
of wealthy men keenly interested in the tide lands
oil "give away" when the tide lands oil bill was
under consideration? R.W.R.
system will be completed long
before the U. S. can hope to
have operational ICBMs. Thus
there will be a period when
SAC's aircraft will not con
stitute a serious threat to the
Soviets, while the Soviet
ICBMs will constitute a most
serious threat to the United
States.
The dangers of this period
will not be enormously les
sened, either, by the emplace
ment cf Intermediate range
ballistic missiles on this side
of the Atlantic, on the ter
ritory of our NATO allies.
The U. S., the necessary lead
er of the West, will have no
retaliatory power of its own.
The whole burden of defend
ing the U. S. will thus be
placed upon the other West
ern allies. The mere political
and diplomatic consequences
of such an anomalous situa
tion hardly bear think about.
Yet it is clear that Soviet
progress with their new air
defense system was a major
factor in the American de
cision to press so hard for
acceptance of intermediate
range ballistic missiles by the
other NATO nations. In fact
the American intelligence esti
mate actually presented to
NATO in the context of the
IRBM debate. The purpose,
plainly, was to show that the
West's nuclear " . retaliatory
power needed to be strength
ened by every available ex
pedient. rpO MAKE matters worse,
even the relatively opti
mistic American estimate im
plies that the Soviets have
stolen a march on the United
States in two further, highly
important fields of weapons
development, radars and rock
et fuels.
The radars the Soviets are
now producing for their new
air defense system are admit
tedly superior to the Ameri
can radars now in use in our
Canadian DEW-line, being
particularly capable of scan
ning efficiently at higher alti
tudes. The United States has
a still better radar coming
along but (one is tempted to
say as usual) the date of ac
tual production is still rather
remote.
As for the killing compon
ent of the Soviet air defense
system, both the Soviet Un
ion and the United States long
ago ran nuclear weapons tests
at very high altitudes. These
were quite certainly tests of
nuclear warheads for anti
aircraft weapons. Nuclear
warheads, with their power
to kill by blast at distances
of many hundreds of yards,
remove the need for direct
hits on attacking aircraft. This
gives the possibility, in turn,
of something close to a 100
per cent kill rate. Nothing less
will make the Soviet air de
fense fully effective, even
against aircraft loaded with
H bombs, only a few of which
-i i
Communications
Letter! to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
"Laxident"
To the Editor: With all the
"loose" and "I don't care"- at
titude driving upon the high
ways these days I suggest the
(coined?) word Laxident to
replace the word accident.
Being lax I think fully de
scribes mishaps. The lax driv
er lacks this, he lacks that,
he dents this he dents that,
including himself, the car or
cars involved and worse yet
the family budget.
So let's set a pace and not
a race. Keep Oregon high
ways clean.
D. L.,
(Name on file,)
Jacksonville.
Tight Money
To the Editor: It is some
times amusing how some of
the Republican candidates for
state and national offices get
into sort of a family quarrel
as to state or federal offices.
They should have some well-thought-out
plans to benefit
the people of the state of Ore
gon one way or another in
this tight money policy, or
they won't be able to gather
enough votes to garner an
election, because they have a
few higher-up bosses that are
in favor of a tight, high
money policy and that hasn't
proved so successful for Ore
gon. They must remember it
didn't prove too successful in
the last election. Tight money
may be all right for monied
folks, but not for us common
working folks who create
spending money, and labor
aplenty starts what we call
prosperity dollars.
A Subscriber,
(Name on file)
Medford.
Veterans benefits
To the Editor: Are you a
needy veteran or veteran's
family?
The following cuts in vet
erans benefits are in the mak
ing soon:
(a) Virtually eliminate vet
erans pensions by lowering in
come limitations;
(b) Reduce pensions -still
available by deducting social
security benefits from them;
(c) Scrap the veterans' hous
ing program;
(d) Make small lump settle
ments of future claims to vet
erans with war wounds not
currently severe; r
(e) Freeze number of avail
able VA hospital beds.
In a speech one man stated
that some savings may still
be squeezed out by the wring
er method.
' To cut $813 million from
the budget to help finance
our present battle with the
Soviets on outer space to me
seems just a little stupid. How
could you save any money,
if you already have it spent
before you get it, for some
thing else? Of this cut $292
million would come from vet
erans' benefits, not from try-
wreak such terrible devasta
tion.
fN THE other hand, even a
" nuclear warhead that
could kill by blastt at the
ranee of a mile wnnld he
wholly useless for air defense.
if married to the kind of
missiles we have been testing
at Cape Canaveral. The long
nrocess of fuelling and count
ing down would hardly be
started before the attacking
aircraft reached their targets.
For air defense, no missile
that is not always ready for
instanteneous use is prac
tically acceptable.
Hence the American Intel
ligence estimate either implies
that the Soviets have develop
ed a novel liquid fuel stable
enoueh to be left permanently
in its rocket which is high
Iv imDrobable or this esti
mate implies the belief that
the Soviets have mastered the
intricate problems involved
in building solid-fuelled rock
ets of very considerable cali
bers. There is no escaping one
of these conclusions.
The more you examine it, in
short, the uglier this news
looks.
looks. And the more you ex
amine it, the more it seems
today that even the post-bput-nik
levels of American de
fense effort and urgency are
ridiculously, tragically, even
criminally inadequate.
(Copyright 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
Income Tax
Service
Ask for DAWN
Phone NO 4-1948
Win. A. Sfandridge
Real Estate Agency
222 Pine Central Point
Britain Seeking Compromise
Solution in Cyprus Dispute
By UNITED PRESS
Great Britain, caught in the
middle of rival Greek and
Turkish claims and demands
in Cyprus, is working to find
a compromise solution.
Following one of the worst
riots in the island bastion's
history last week, British
leaders worked in the shadow
of reports that Greek and
Turkish Cypriotes are ready
ing new attacks.
Britain was reported to be
formally putting her modi
fied plan to Turkey and
Greece, offering self-rule to
Cyprus with eventual self-determination
in 10 years under
special safeguards for the
Turkish minority of the is
land. Approval Seen Slim
The British plan calls also
for a NATO base in Cyprus
in which Turkey, as a mem
ber of the North Atlantic Al
liance may be given special
duties.
But the chances for accep
tance of the British plan
approved by the cabinet on
Tuesday 'appeared slim.
A hardening in Turkey's
position reflected growing in
sistence of the Ankara gov
ernment for partition of the
Mediterranean island. Greece
opposes partition. Britain
does not favor it either.
The Turkish view was giv
en by the Turkish leaders per
sonally to British Foreign
Secretary Selwyn Lloyd dur
ing the Baghdad Pact confer
ence in Ankara last week.
This line has since been re
affirmed by the Turkish-Cypriote
leader in Nicosia, Dr.
Kutchuk. He said that parti
tion was the only solution,
since Greeks and Turks
could no longer live together.
Wants Partition Now
Kutchuk urged partition
now, before an election in
Britain. Turkey apparently
fears that in the event of a
Labor victory in a general
election British policy might
favor independence of Cy
prus. Kutchuk hinted at a "pas
sive resistance movement" of
the Turkish minority to press
their claims.
This move coincided with
fresh threats from Greek-Cy
priote underground leader
Col. George Grivas.
British efforts for a solu
tion for Cyprus thus depend
entirely on whether or not
some compromise can be
found between conflicting
Greek and Turkish claims.
Attempts to win United
States assistance seem to have
ing to buy friends, with- for
eign aid, rather from the vet
eran who is paying taxes to
keep up foreign aid and los
ing his neck at the same time.
In the face of all of this,
we, the veterans and non-veterans
of Jackson county, are
trying. to get a Veterans Ad
ministration Hospital here in
our area to serve thousands
of veterans who really need
to be in hospitals. The Port
land and Vancouver hospital
have waiting lists, the likes
of which you could not im
agine. One thing that might help
get this hospital here and
save some of our benefits is
for all veterans to join a vet
erans' organization in this
part of the state and to sup
port this drive that we have
the good will of all the peo
ple. If not, I believe the fight j
will be an uphill fight to save
part of what we already have
as benefits and just hope for
the best.
Joe R. Hosick,
845 Palm st.,
Medford.
Portland (IP) Portland re
corded its third traffic fatal
Itv of 1958 Tuesday when
John Swartz, 70, died from
injuries suffered in a two-car
collision.
SUPPORT THE .
MARCH OF DIMES
Inasmuch as Ye Have Done It Unto One of the Least of
These My Brethren, Ye Have Done It Unto Me."
Matthew 25:40
DAY OR NIGHT -PHONE SP 2-8030
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
failed so far; the United
States prefers to keep out of
this explosive issue for as
long as possible, diplomatic
sources said.
The rising tension may
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
EXPLORER AND SPUTNIK
The American satellite Ex
plorer has made us all feel
better, having given tangible
proof that the
c i e n c e of
ocketry is
known in this
country and
that our ex
p e r t s possess
the art of mak
ing and guid
ing rockets.
The event has
waiter uppmann confirmed the
testimony of those who have
been saying that the Russians
have a considerable lead but
that we are in the race.
Explorer is, therefore, a
good popular antidote to the
panicky view that we are in
mortal danger. But it does not
wash out the main portent of
Sputnik which is not that
the Russians launched a satel
lite first, and that their satel
lite is very much bigger and
heavier than Explorer. The
main portent is that, starting
at the end of World War II
with their country devastated,
their technology far more pri
mitive than our own, the Rus
sians have achieved a rate of
scientific and technological
developemnt which is faster
than our own. What they did
with the Sputnik shows not
merely that they have mas
tered a particular specialty
but that they have generated
a tremendous momentum in
the physical sciences, and
their application.
Though Explorer is in the
sky, there is no reason to
think that the comparative
rate of development is now
back in balance, much less
that it is in our favor. We are
still the bigger and the
stronger. But they are still
moving forward the faster.
rriHERE is, therefore, much
for us to do, and as I see
it we must move forward si
multaneously along three
broad paths, The first is that
we have to find out how to
make the government much
better able than it is now to
make and to carry out long
range decisions. There is little
doubt that American progress
in missiles has been retarded
by bureaucratic confusion,
presided over by political ap
pointees who did not under
stand the issues they were
supposed to decide.
Undoubtedly, this requires
a reorganization in the Penta
gon. But the trouble will not
be cured in the Pentagon
alone. The White House and
the relevant committees of
Congress have at least an
equal responsibility.
rprUS second path we must
take is even broader. It is
the transformation of Ameri
can education which on the
average and by and large is
declining in quality as the
quantity of those to be edu-l
Special
Evangelistic Services,
February 1st thru 7th-7:45 p.m.
Brigadier W. Dewsbury
of New York dry. New York
THE SALVATION ARMY
4th & Barrlert Street
m
necessitate a renewed tight
ening of security measures in
Cyprus instead of a loosening
up which the island's Gov.
Sir Hugh Foot had earlier
hoped to initiate this month.
cated grows larger and larger.
Our schools and colleges are
overwhelmed by the growth
of the population they are
supposed to educate, and they
are under enormous pressure
for the most part irresist
ible to lower their intellect
ual standards. There is an
ominous tendency in Ameri
can education to teach more
and more students less and
less of the great , disciplinei
which form an educat man.
It is in this, more than in
the ups and downs in the mili
tary balance of power, that
there lies the deepest danger
to pur American society. We
can most surely defend our
selves against conquest or
domination. What we have to
worry about is that with the
declining level of education,
with the vulgarization of the
cultural standards in our
mass society, we shall become
a big but second-rate people,
fat, Philistine, and a elf-
indulgent.
THE third path on which we
must travel is to learn to
adjust our minds to the hard
facts of life particularly to
the fact that our Western so
ciety, of which we are the
strongest member, is no long
er paramount, is now only an
equal, among the great socie
ties of the globe.
Britain and France have
had to learn in this genera
tion what Sweden and Spain
learned in earlier days that
they are no longer the main
centers of power and influ
ence for all mankind. At the
end of World War II for a few
short years the United States
was the paramount center of
power and influence in the
world. Our conception of our
role, as we have formed it in
the post-war years, has had as
its fundamental premise the
paramountcy of the Western
society led by the United
States. This was a fact. But it
was transitory.
THE post-war era Is ending
and the great reality to
which we have now to adjust
our thinking is that we are an
equal but not a paramount
power. This is the reality with
which Mr. Dulles has not yet
come to terms. Because of
that, American and Western
policy is, though tough on the
outside in the language it
uses, unrealistic and wishful
indeed wistful on the in
side. But time is passing, and
time will teU, and the reali
ties of the structure of power
in the world are forcing Mr.
Dulles to go where he does
not want to go, to meetings
which he does not want on
questions to which our obso
lescent policies provide us
with no safe and satisfactory
answers.
(Copyright 1958, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
-Medford