M Thursday, October 14. 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE.
MEDFORDtJvTRIBUNE
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ASSoc5T8N
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
October 16, 1948, (Saturday)
Vice Presidential Aspirant
Gov. Earl Warren and family
appeared before a trackside
crowd yesterday as his train
paused 'briefly.
The Teamsters' month-long
strike against the American
News company has been set
tled with the assistance of the
United States Conciliation
service. ,
20 YEARS AGO
October 16, 1938 (Sunday)
Medford's movie stars in
the local film "Runnin' Wild"
are preparing for the pomp
and circumstance, of a Hollywood-style
premiere.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
campaign is nice and quiet so
far. If any of the candidates
plan to exhibit their aboriginal
cussedness, they will have to
do so between now and Nov.
8."
30 YEARS AGO
October 16, 1928 (Tuesday)
Roosevelt school students
have won the "best posture"
cup for the third time.
The Salem Drum corps and
Portland Drum corps, en
route from winning honors in
a national contest in San An
tonio, stepped off their special
train 'here to go through their
paces.
40 YEARS AGO
October 16. 1918 (Wednesday)
While Jacksonville and
Orants Pass followed Med
ford's example in banning pub
lic meetings because of a po
tential influenza epidemic, the
local health officer said he
knew of only one possibly
genuine case of the disease
here. .
Medford's liberty loan band
drive nears the top.
Vhal's Your I.Q.7
Nina or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five ei
six is good.
1. Was Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow an American, or
an Englishman?
2. Caracas is the name of
the capital of the northern
most country in South Ameri
ca: name it.
3. What is the national an
them of Great Britain?
4. The Speaker of the U. S.
House of Representatives has
no vote except in the case of
a tie; true or false?
5. In what sort of work do
longshoremen engage?
6. What is craniometry?
7! What sort of device is a
snorkel?
8. For what substance does
the symbol Al stand?
9. Was George M. Cohan of
Irish, Jewish, or Scottish an
cestry? 10 An alluvial deposit at
the mouth of a river is called
a d ? . ,
Answers: 1. American. 2.
Venezuela. 3. "God Save the
Queen." 4. False. (He may vote
on any question if he desires to
do so.) 5. Loading and unload
ing vessels at docks. 6. Mea
surement of skulls. 7. To allow
submarines to run its engines
Uile submerged. 8. Alum
num. 9. Irish ancestry. 10.
Delia,
Support Home Rule
It was interesting to note, in last Sunday's
Mail Tribune, the replies given by candidates for
local office to the question of what their position
is on the County Home Rule amendment to the
Constitution.
The proposal will be on the ballot at the Nov.
4 election.
A majority of the candidates said they favor
the amendment. One of them (Earl Miller, Re
publican candidate for county judge) opposes
the amendment, though he qualifies this by say
ing he is in favor of the home rule principle
while opposing the current proposal.
ZITHERS give qualified support. Tor instance,
Scott Hamilton, Democratic candidate for
county commissioner, favors the amendment, but
opposes any form of county manager govern
ment; Mrs. Bereth Hopkins, Republican county
clerk seeking reelection, favors the amendment
but would oppose any change in the existing set
up of elected county offices ; her opponent, Demo
crat Marvin Madden, ducks the question "since
this is not an issue in my campaign," but adds it
would be no "panacea," and he would want to
study any new county charter very closely.
Frank Christian, Democratic candidate for
county judge, disclaims it as an Issue," but says he
is for county reorganization, and Lany Sheehan,
Democratic sheriff candidate, says he wpuld
have to give it further study, but on the basis of
present inf ormation would favor it. .
THE remaining candidates gave the proposal
support, either without qualification, or with
only minor reservations.
As readers of this column well know, the
Mail Tribune is a strong supporter of the amend
ment, and our thinking on the candidates cannot
but be colored somewhat by their positions on
the Home Rule proposal. It IS an issue an im
portant one in the campaign.
Our view is this:
County government today is anachronistic,
inefficient and unresponsive. It suffers from an
unrealistic separation of powers not into the
executive, legislative and judicial, but into a
whole passel of little executive offices, with no
one boss, no one person or unit which can be held
responsible. . . . . . . -
, This separation of authority and responsi
bility into an assortment of offices frustrates
progress, delays necessaiy action, encourages
buck-passing, and results in mis-management,
higher-than-necessary costs, and needless confu
sion. D ASSAGE of the Home Rule amendment would
not cure this. "
, But it would be a step in the right direction.
The amendment is permissive. It would allow
the people' of a county to adopt a charter and to
institute a plan of self-government much as
incorporated cities do today.
(We happen to favor the county manager
form of government but that is another issue,
one which could be decided if and when the con
stitutional home rule amendment is approved.
The argument in this election is not a FORM of
government; it is about the authority to do some
realistic thinking and planning about a form of
government, and the possibility of adopting one
if agreement can be reached locally.)
CANDIDATES can talk about efficiency in of-
fice as much as they want. But much of it is
idle talk unless and until the people give them a
govermental structure which suits today's needs.
And the need for flexibility, progressiveness,
and responsiveness in county government is grow
ing, not decreasing, and will continue to grow.
Except in veiy limited ways, the county s
hands are tied in acting to relieve many pressing
situations resulting from
such things as providing sewer and water serv
ices, roads and other needed improvements in
areas outside of incorporated cities, areas which
cannot serve themselves as well as should be
through the multiplicity of "special" districts
which have grown up.
County government today is big business.
And it should have a structure which will attract
top-flight men to it both in the professional
service fields where they are so badly needed,
and in the administrative-executive positions.
a
THE League of Women Voters, which usually
performs exceedingly useful informative func
tions at election time without "taking sides,"
this year has taken one of its rare stands on a
measure this time on the Home Rule amend
ment. It supports it strongly, after exhaustive
study.
As was noted, a majority of the candidates
for office support the proposal. None of them
flatly opposes it without qualification. All of
them are favorable to the general proposition
that county government needs some "working
over." .
This is a chance to make the first step
The measure will NOT change our county
government, but it WILL clear the way so that,
at some future date, the voters of the county CAN
if they so desire, institute some different form of
county government.
(It should be noted, too, that the specifics of
enabling legislation, other than the permissive
amendment, wouid be worked out by the legisla
ture. But the legislature can do nothing without
uie passage ot the amendment.)
The proposal, No. 11
trie yes vote of every
state. E. A.
...
population growth
on the ballot, deserves
responsible voter m the
... . v5
'Then how'soitta pehnv? lUrouirraRAPENNy!
OKAY? JUSTAPENW! WJ...-"
Matter of Fact
MORE FOLKSY
THAN REPUBLICAN
New York - A simple fact
suggests the Republican
plight in the present election.
Nelson Rocke
feller, the Re
publican par
ty's soli t a r y
novice candi
date with real
promise in
any of the 48
states, is run
ning for the
New York
n l.:
Jos!pb Alsop Vjuveriiursmp
as, a Rockefeller buz nardly as
a Republican.
Maybe it sounds odd to say
that he is running as a Rocke
feller, but it is true none the
less. His own and his family's
good works are conspicuous
among his vote-getting assets.
At the working level, his po
litical organization even com
prises a surprising number of
persons who have previously
worked for various Rocke
feller family interests. .
Above all, his untiring
efforts in the hand - shaking,
baby - bussing, blintz - eating
line have only made such a
big impression because he is
who he is. Nobody would be
much excited if a Nelson
Jones or a Wellington . Smith
were so overwhelmingly
folksy. But there is real ex
citement when the extended
hand and the warm grin be
long to NelsonRockefeller.
THE other side of the medal
is Rockpfpllpr's nhvions rp-
luctance to identify himself
with his party's national lead
ership. Of course he has to
make the correct ceremonial
appearances, like his appear
ance with the President at the
Columbus Day celebrations.
But unless present plans are
changed, Rockefeller speeches
will be conspicuously absent
from the program on the two
occasions when Vice Presi
dent Nixon is to speak here.
And if the President makes
his tentatively scheduled tele
vision broadcast from New
York, he will share the micro
phone with Republican Senate
candidate Kenneth Keating
but not with Rockefeller.
"I want to keep the cam
paign to state issues," is the
Rockefeller explanation. It is
not convincing. Even when
there were bags-full of state
issues of the most burning sig
nificance, no Governorship
candidate in history has ever
failed to reach for a Presi
dent's coat-tails if he thought
them worth reaching for. In
this campaign, Rockefeller's
own staff complain about the
difficulty of stirring the elec
torate's interest in state issues.
Yet the Eisenhower coat-tails
are not being reached for,
either.
IjWERYONE involved in the
campaign on oth sides
will be offended by the state
ment, but another truth about
this New York election is that,
thus far, neither side has de
veloped an isgue worth men
tioning. It -is not easy to see
how any serious issue is going
to be developed, either, for
the rather simple reason that
the biggest single difference
between the rivals is Averell
Harriman's possession of the
New York Governorship and
Nelson Rockefeller's desire
for it.
Harriman, to be sure, is a
convinced arid fervent - New
Deal Democrat. But in the
first place, this matters less
at Albany than it would in
Washington. And, in the sec
ond place, Rockefeller's social
and economic views are im
measurably more flexible
than the official views of his
party. The Rockefeller high
command was frankly horri
fied by, the announcement of
the recent Republican leaders'
rally at the White House that
the big issue this year was the
Democrats' sinister tendency
towards "socialism." On for
eign and defense policy, too,
Rockefeller is actually far
closer to . Harriman than to
Eisenhower, whose adminis
By .Joseph Alsop
tration he left in fairly open
dissent.
THE things that chiefly mat
ter in this New York elec
tion, therefore, are the per
sonalities of the two leading
contenders, and the extent to
which they are helped or hurt
by their affiliations. Harri
man keeps warning that
Rockefeller is a mere facade
for "Republican r e a c t i o n."
Rockefeller keeps warning
that Harriman is a mere front
man for "Tammany bossism"
Rockefeller wants no part of
the Eisenhower coattails. After
Tammany's Carmine de Sapio
forced the Senate nomination
of New York District Attor
ney Frank Hogan, Harriman
was careful to underline his
indeDendenceof Tammany by
announcing that Hogan's suc
cessor would be an unim
peachable independent and
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
aaper; in fact the contrary Is oftsn the case.
Decrepit Signs . . . ,
To the Editor: In your cur
rent "Make Medford Beauti
ful" camDaien. would you
please mention the decrepit,
worn out, signboards whicn
mark the roads to the airport,
especially the one at the junc
tion' of Table Rock road and
Airport road.
They certainly don't re
flect the semi-modern termin
al building and surroundings
at all.
F. J. Ruch
418 Barnes
Medford
Conservative Bretons
To the Editor: We 1870s
kiddies in the McGuffy Read
er days learned geography
by outlining in countries with
color-crayons. Cuba was an
alligator, Haiti a leaping frog,
Italy a bootleg kicking Sicily,
a football.
France was a teapot, Brit
tany its spout. That Brittany
is one of the world's citadels
of conservatism. Now also of
Conservation. Many there
speak not French, but Breton.
Women wear charming coifs
headgear. Biscay fishing fleet
sardiniers dress in the ancient
red. Writer coming on his
first one in Concarneau
thought' he had the devil.
This citadel of conservatism
can also adopt conservation
concepts from our New
World. This is evident from
data received from an over
seas scientific society of which
undersigned is a member. The
land of Anne de Bretagne
avec les sabots de bois moves
to protect from extinction its
wild life. This, in France, is
more extensive than a Calif
ornian might expect." Writer
came across a wild bear in
the Pyrenees, also a wild boar
in Corsica. Brittany, like the
Britons whose name originat
ed in that teapot-spout, now
are concerned about trends
toward extinction of its seals.
: Among the birds they also
hope to save is mentioned
"Breton penguins." This must
be a mistranslation. Penguins
are mostly Antarctic. Any
how, Brittany has some birds
tending toward the fate of
U.S.A.'s only native parrot,
the Carolina parakeet. .
Writer collaborated with a
remarkable Frenchman on his
plans for a Mont Blanc Na
tional Park. As a young man
thrilled with Westerns, he
had bought a ticket to U.g.A.
He expected to tomahawk
peau rouges on New York's
Broadway. Disappointed, he
went West, grew wealthy, de
cided to invest his fortune
in what was to be France's
first National Park. He was
a world war casualty.
C. M. Goethe
Seventh and J. sts.,
Sacramento, 14, Calif.
Russ Diplomatic Initiative Strangely
Inactive Recently; Reasons Pondered
By K. C. THALER
UPI Correspondent
London (UPI) -Something
has been happening in the
Kremlin that has deprived So
viet diplomacy of its custom
ary initiative in recent weeks.
Diplomatic sources have
reached this conclusion after
an appraisal o.- recent Soviet
strategy on the international
scene. i
The Soviet propaganda of
fensive which has been ever
present since Nikita Khrush
chev took power has come to
a virtual standstill.
Soviet diplomacy, ever ac
tive and ever inventive, has
produced no new element
lately and has often been re
sorting to the stale methods
of ousted V. M. Molotov's out
dated techniques.
Both diplomats and Soviet
affairs experts have been
seeking for an explanation of
crime suppressor, Frank
Adams.
Both men, in fact, are as
anxious to be loved for them
selves alone , as they are
anxious to shake every vot
er's hand in sight.
There ' are certain lesser
factors that do not balance
out, however. There is Harri
man's record as Governor, ad
mitted to be good even by
many Republicans (at least
until the campaign started).
There . is the absence of an
Italian from the Republican
ticket, although the people of
Italian descent are the biggest
voting group in the state.
(This was the reason for the
Eisenhower Columbus Day
visit - it was at least thought
to be useful to have the Presi
dent miss his week end to
make a big pro-Italian ges
ture.) , -
But on the basis of the al
leged issues, you can pay your
money and take your choice,
(c) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Really, Rsallv Inconvenient
To the Editor: This summer
I was naintine a house in Med
ford, when two ladies arrived
to insDect the house. I heard
one of them say: "My good
ness! What an inconvenient
bathroom." Now that's what
I'm an exDert at. Inconveni
ent bathrooms. I was born in
Julesburg. Colo., and the first
thing I remember anything
about, was inconvenient bath
rooms. We had two of 'em.
One was a tin tub, back of the
wood stove, in the sod house,
in the sandhills. The other
one was out in the barnyard
of northeastern Colorado.
When it gets' 30 degrees below
zero, you remember those
things.
When I was 8 years old, we
moved to a small mining
town, Placerville, Colo. That's
when I started running into
some really inconvenient
bathrooms. Placerville. was a
small town, one store, one
hotel and one saloon. We lived
over the grocery store. We
had to walk down two flights
of stairs, cross Leopard creek,
walk a mile up the San Mi
guel River on a bridge, walk
to a miner's cabin, light some
candles, walk another 200 feet
through a tunnel of solid rock,
to get to the bathroom. That
was just half the bathroom,
the other half of the bathroom
was harder to get to. One
morning, I caught a freight
train to the bathroom. Now
I'm the only person in the
world who ever rode to their
bathroom in a caboose.
I've seen other bathrooms
in my life, which were more
inconvenient, but they ain't
in Oregon. In France I've been
in towns which ain't got a
bathroom and they ain't never
heard of one. When you ain't
got a bathroom, it's getting
really, really, inconvenient
and. these two ladies were
squawking about having to
open two doors, to get from
the kitchen into the bathroom.
Everett Acklin
yBox 233
Ashland
GRANTS ANNOUNCED
Washington (UPD The U.S.
Public Health Service an
nounced today approval of 98
grants, - totaling $13,168,307,
to help .institutions in 33
states build and equip addi
tional health research facili
ties. HELP US!
We Need Clothing, Shoes,
Dishes, Furniture. We Pick Up.
HELP OTHERS!
The
Salvation Army
SPring" 3-7335
this unusual phenomenon in
Soviet behavior.
Might Realise Failures '
Experts believe that
Khrushchev has realized his
propaganda drive has not paid
off in any major field of in
ternational relationship. But
he may also be "preoccupied"
with serious inner-Soviet bloc
problems. ' , ..'
In Sochi on the Black Sea,
where he spent the recent
weeks he may have been lay
ing the groundwork for a new
strategy which th"e West may
soon have to face.
Presently, the military
chiefs ' of the " Warsaw Pact
alignment that includes Rus
sia and the East European sat-
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
THE POSITION OF
STRENGTH
Most probably, Red China
has extended the cease-fire
for another two weeks in or
der t o pro
mote Ameri
can negotia
tion s with
Chiang for a
d i s e n g a ge
ment at Que
rn o y. T h e
statement by
J. 1
Walter . .V "mmunisi
Linnmaoa ' . hews aeencv
does not say this. In fact, it
calls for a direct talk between
the two Chinese governments
the United States excluded
and ignored as an interloper.
But Peiping knows perfectly
wen tnat the concrete ques
tion is whether Chiang will
withdraw his troops from
Quemoy, and that it is Wash
ington, not Peiping, which
alone can persuade him to
do this.
The American policy is to
persuade him to bring his
troops back to Formosa when
there is a cease-fire. The Red
Chinese have for the second
time ordered, "a cease-fire,
manifestly because they now.
expect us to make some
moves to carry out our part
of the bargain. Moreover, the
Red Chinese have accompan
ied the cease-fire with strong
intimations that their mili
tary objective is Quemoy and
the off-shore islands," not For
host, and that they do not
have military plans against
Formosa itself. These intima
tions, which come from many
quarters, are meant to relieve
the President of any commit
ment to preserve , Quemoy,
since it is only in relation to
the defense of Formosa that
he has any right or duty to in
tervene at Quemoy.
rpHE crucial question for us
Ms whether we should take
as the basis of our policy the
proposition that Formosa is
separate from the off-shore
islands. In . saying that : we
should deal with them sep
arately, we do not need to
reply on what Peiping has
been saying to neutral gov
ernments and perhaps in veil
ed language to us. The con
clusive reason for believing
that the Chinese Communists
will not attack Formosa is
that they lack any . military
capacity to attack Formosa.
The Strait of Formosa is a
hundred miles wide, and in
it is the 7th Fleet, the most
formidable instrument of sea-and-air
power in the world.
Peiping has no navy. It has
no comparable air force.
There is not the slightest indi
cation that they are mount
ing a force to conquer For
mosa. As a military problem,
the allied landing in ' Nor
mandy, in the second World
War was easy as' compared
MEET YOUR CANDIDATE!
- Hedrick Junior-High Gym
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17th ,
! at8,P.M.
League of Women Voters -CANDIDATES'
FAIR
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan - Harold Snodgrass, FUNERAL DIRECTORS r,
DAY OR NIGHT PHONE SP 2-8030
ellites are meeting in Warsaw
with Marshal Ivan Koniev,
the military chief of the al
liance, nothing so far has been
disclosed of their decisions.
If these moves are the pre
liminaries to a new diplomatic
offensive of the Communist
camp, its first sparks prob
ably will be flying at the
forthcoming East-West Gene
va conference which is to dis
cuss the issue of suspending
nuclear tests. - ' J.-
The expert analysis of the
lull, or freeze, in Russia's dip
lomatic initiative has pointed-
out that all major points of
Moscow's past diplomatic of
fensive have misfired.
Khrushchev's plans for a
with'what it would take to
knock but the 7th Fleet and
land on-'Formosa. -
THISi as'ifused to be fash
ionable to say, a position of
strength upon ..which Ameri
can policy should be based.
What is the objective of our
policy? In the last analysis
it is " to preserve Formosa's
independence from the main
land, to preserve it as an in
dependent center of non-Communist
Chinese culture and to
keep it militarily neutralized.
Now, the fact is that both
Chinas, Mao's China and
Chiang's China, are in princi
ple opposed to such a two-
China settlement. Neither
will now agree to it. But that
does not mean that it is not
the best solution and that it
will not in the course of time
be accepted. Even if it is not
formally agreed to, the Unit-
led States, has the power to
maintain a two-t-nma policy
de facto. For Mao cannot in
vade Formosa and Chiang
cannot invade the mainland,
In terms of the power politics
which underlie the -whole
problem, a separate Formosa,
iinentangled on the mainland
and its offshore islands, is for
the time being as feasible as
it is desirable.
'
WHAT is far from clear is
whether Formosa, which
cannot be conquered from
the mainland, will by an in
ternal revolution decide to
join the mainland. This is
what the Red Chinese are
proposing, and all their hopes
of absorbing Formosa rest on
this idea.
There are some wheb,aye
been in Formosa and believe
the after a bad start the
Chiang regime is doing rather
well, and that it " may sur
vive Chiang himself.' They
may be right. For myself, I
do not know though I have
always supposed that pur en
tanglement with Chiang and
his' excessively entusiastic
friends here at home would
end in. disaster. In this dis
aster, brought on by some
kind of foolishness like that
at Quemoy, there would be a
deal, . by Chinese politicians
who have more to gain from
Peiping than from Washing
ton. -'
If this is not to happen, it
can best be "avoided by in
sisting that Chiang concen
trate on the development of
Formosa, renouncing his illu
sions about the mainland,
ceasing to waste his resources
in places like Quemoy, and
then reducing his army to a
size 'suitable for the internal
security of Formosa itself. If
that were to happen, there
might be a fair chance that
Formosa will maintain inde
pendence, (c) 1958 New York. Herald
Tribune Inc.
deal" with the United Statei
the backbone of his policy
after his takeover has failed.
So has his plan for a summit
conference Khrushchev - style
as a platform for Moscow's
propaganda. His call for an
East-West non-aggression pact
has been ignored and mistrust
in the West of Russian policy
aims has grown.
At the same time, the Sino
Russian relationship has un
dergone its greatest change
over, with Red China emerg
ing fast as a giant power at
Russia's backdoor where the
Soviet empty spaces are high
ly vulnerable to the pressures
of the fast growing Chinese
population.-- j
Peiping has put an end to
Moscow's patronage over Red
China and is calling the tur.e
in the Far East to which Rus
sia has had to bow.
Some experts believe the
happenings in the Sino-Soviet
axis have more than any other
single event in effect caused
the present paralysis in Mos
cow s diplomacy. ,
There also is one other pos
sible element: Internal prob
lems in Russia involving a
new phase in the struggle for
power and preparations in the
economic field for the new
party conference in January.
But past experience has shown
that economists hav'e rarely
mwrierred with Moscow s
diplomatic dynamism.
Editorial Comment
LITTERBUG MENACE
Do those students who
throw lunch sacks and other
litter along Oakdale and "J"
streets realize they are costing
the student body money and
bringing restrictions down on
everyone?
Boys have to be hired to
pick up the trash thrown on
the lawns and are paid with
the money we put out for our
student body cards. .j
Soon restrictions prevent
ing off-campus eating may be
passed unless we can prova
ourselves responsible' enough
to care for other people's
property. - Hi-Times, Medford
High school, ' v' '.' . .
ELECT
GORDON
HUDSON
, DEMOCRAT
for
State Senator
A young businessman deter
mined to further economic "
. development in
Jackson County
Vote for Your Future
VOTE FOR HUDSON
Paid Pol, Adv. Hudson for Sena
tor Committee. Joan 1. Redden,
2246 Aloha sr., Secretary. :' .
I M