Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 19, 1958, Image 4

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    4 Wednesday, Nov. 19, 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MedfordJSTbibuiie
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Read The MaH Tribune"
obIi5hJ Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir SI Ph SP 2-6141
ROBERT W RCJHL. Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mar.
ERIC W ALLEN JR,
Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
OLIVE ST ARCHER. Women'! Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Met ford Oregon under Act of
March 3, 1897
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NATIONAL EDITORIAL
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J 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
Nov. 19. 1948 (Friday)
A total of 3,253 persons
have had chest x-rays spon
sored this week by the Jack
son County Public Health
association.
Skiing conditions at Crater
Lake are expected to be ex
cellent this week end.
20 YEARS AGO
Not. 19, 1938 (Saturday)
Total assessed valuation for
Jackson county shows an in
crease approaching $3 million
over last year.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Re
publicans held a victory din
ner Thurs. eve. All enjoyed
the chance to crow instead of
eating it."
30 YEARS AGO
Nov. 19. 1928 (Monday)
Buy-at-Home week, encour
aging the purchase of goods
made locally, gets under way
here.
An "old-time Tiddlers' con
test" is scheduled at Walker's
hall.
40 YEARS AGO
Nov. 19. 1918 (Tuesday)
Medford and Jackson coun
ty go over the top in the Unit
ed War Work campaign.
Robert Duff, visiting hrme
for two weeks during a shut
down caused by influenza, re
turns to his classes at a mili
tary school at Santa Clara,
Calif.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct it superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five Of
six is good.
1. Who was Carry Nation?
2. In parliamentary law,
to whom does the term "The
Chair" apply?
3. What agency in the U.S.
Government is charged with
the duty of protecting the
life of the President?
4. Name the author of
"Cabbages and Kings."
5. Neither the Senate nor
HcAise may adjourn for more
than how many days, without
consent of the other body?
6. During W.W. II, a not
able conference, attended by
Stalin, Churchill, and Roose
velt, was held at a place in
the Crimea; name the place.
7. "When in the Course of
human events," is the open
ing clause of what famous doc
ument? 8. Who disputed with the
devil about the body of
Moses?
9. Pistons in a gas engine
make a complete stop at the
end of the ascending stroke
beginning the descending
stroke; true or false?
10. Frankie and Johnny
were lovers; he was her man,
but what did she do?
1. Temperance leader. 2.
The presiding officer. 1. U.S.
Secret Service. 4. O.Henry.
5. Three days. 6. Yalta. 7.
Declaration of Independence.
8. The archangel Michael. 9.
True. 10. "She .shot him
down."
Notable Citizenship
Yesterday, Mrs. G. Q. D'Albini watched as
her most recent "class" raised their hands and
took their oaths as citizens of the United States.
We hope Mrs. D'Albini received a thrill from
watching.
We're almost sure she did, for there is some
thing impressive, something touching, something
meaningful in seeing people swear their al
legiance to the United States of America partic
ularly when they are as thoroughly aware of what
it means as are those who have been helped by
Mrs. D'Albini.
TOR the past 32 years this good woman has
been giving classes to aliens who wanted to
become citizens. For 32 years she has been teach
ing them about the U.S. constitution, its laws and
traditions and customs. For 32 years she has
watched and thrilled as the many, many people
who were her friends stood before the judge and
undertook the rights, the privileges, the respon
sibilities and obligations of citizenship.
How many people can say they have done
as much for America as Mrs. D'Albini? .Not very
many. For she has had a real and important part
in preparing for citizenship some of our finest
citizens.
A ND now, after all these years, she feels she
can no longer carry on with this job, which
she has done under, the auspices of the Daughters
of the American Revolution.
She is leaving town to live with relatives, and
someone else will have to be found to carry on
with the important and soul-satisfying job she
has performed so notably well for more than three
decades.
To say "well done" and "thank you" in this
case is not quite enough. We should also say to
her that, through preparing new citizens for their
roles in a free America, she has herself more
than fulfilled a noble and inspiring act of citi
zenship. There are hundreds of Americans who are
humbly grateful. E. A.
We Need. . .
"We need . ; . " is one
today. It is heard every
We need more scientists, engineers, techni
cians, schoolteachers, police officers, social work
ers, juvenile officers.
We need more pay for
for more services to the public, 'more money for
roads, for public buildings. .
We need better schools, more driver trainmg
for school youngsters, more school buildings, bet
ter instruction. -
WE NEED a cessation of H-bomb testing (or
-vera noaA mnra TT-VinmK foctc tr norfopt
our defenses).
We need better relatitons with the rest of the
world, more understanding.
We need lower taxes (or more foreign aid).
We need higher (or lower) farm price supports.
We need water development, better natural re
source protection, reforestation, more timber to
cut, better access to forests.
We need more tourists, more industry, bigger
payrolls, more parking space, better sanitary con
trol, more trees in the city, better-looking streets.
X7E NEED better mental institutions and a
higher degree of training for workers in
them. We need a "cure" for cancer, for arthritis,
for heart disease.
We need money .for the United Fund appeal,
of the Shakespearean festival, for the March of
Dimes, for Muscular Dystrophy. '
"We need better support for churches, for city
government, for the PTA, for lodges and clubs
and fraternities.
We need volunteer workers and money, mon
ey, money.
We need shorter, more economical care. We
need filter cigarettes that really filter.
We need . . . We need . . . We need ...
"THE buffeted American citizen sees these
statements or something very much like
them incessantly.
The wonder of it all is that he can keep going
on a steady, even keel, keeping the appeals, the
needs, the urgings pretty well m perspective.
Many of these needs are real and vital. Some
of them are phonies. Sometimes it is difficult to
tell the difference.
But one of the things we like best about this
country is the fart that anyone is free to make
known what he believes are needs. And eveiyone
is free to pick and chose for himself, and to de
cide what is a real need and what is merely a
dressed-up appeal by self-seekers.
EVERYONE makes a mistake once in a while
1-1 in deciding. But in the long run people gen
erally do pretty well in allocating their responses
to the "we needs ..." for funds, for time, for sup
port. This is not to say that all the real and vital
needs will be filled tomorrow, or ever. But it is
to say that the decision-makers in America
the voters, taxpayers, contributors, volunteer
workers, consumers generally do a fair job of
picking out what they want over a period of time.
And we're darn lucky to live in a place where
we CAN make our own decisions about what it
is we really need; where we have freedom of
choice, and the wherewithal to support those
choices.. E. A.
of the most-used phrases
day. For example :
legislators, more taxes
Dennis the Menace
'5uT IVMATAWKES YA
Impressions of Russia Said
Sobering by Oreqon Visitor
(Editor's note: The fol
lowing article was written
by Edward P. McKean
Smilh. an Oregonian who
recently visited briefly in
Russia. McKean-Smith last
June completed graduate
work at the University of
Oregon school of journal
ism, and currently is attend
ing the Sorbonne in Paris.
He tells here his impres
sions of Russia.
By E. P. McKEAN-SMITH
Everybody , and his note
book seems to be going to
Russia these days. A few, no
tably John "Inside Every
Everywhere" Gunther, "Hole
in the Sole" Adlai and Wal
ter Lippman have even been
able to meet the boss. How
ever, one does not have to
visit the top to see what is
going on at the bottom-which
Is where most of us are.
The bottom is seldom hard
to reach. A visa to get there
took two weeks, - or exactly
what the Russians said it
would take. I spent 12 days
in the country: two in Lenin
grad, six in Moscow, two in
Kiev and two in travel be
tween these places and the
frontier.
Instead of talking with the
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
sufrnitted 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 often the ease.
Helping Hand
To the Editor: What is that
saying about the U.S. Post
man that starts like this:
"Neither rain, nor snow .nor
dark of night " Well,
that old saying holds true, at
least for our local postmen.
Last year, with the help of
a very few volunteers, they
went out on one of the foggi
est nights and knocked on
doors to ask for help from
their patrons in aiding- the
local Muscular Dystrophy As
sociation. This year they are going
out again to march on Wed
nesday night, Nov. 19, with
the help of the local National
Guard. Please open your
doors and your hearts and
contribute as much as you
can.
As a mother of a local mus
cular dystrophy patient, I
hope you will feel generous
and hold out a helping hand.
' Mrs. Albert C. Gould,
409 South Peach St.,
Medford.
Anti-Court Meeting
To the Editor: Some months
ago I sent you a letter which
you printed. It dealt with the
Supreme Court of the U.S.
and President of the same.
On December 16 we shall
hold a meeting at the county
court house for the purpose
of considering the Constitu
tion of the U.S. and how it is
being flouted by the above
mentioned court.
The meeting will be strict
ly non-partisan and voters are
invited and urged to attend.
There will be no charge,
and no contributions will be
taken.
All lawyers, regardless of
their locations, are specially
urged to be there. Also, all
judges now on the benches of
justice.
I can definitely promise
that you will be interested,
and, maybe, sufficently so to
be prepared to endorse our
cause to join with us.
We shall charge that the
said court is fast forcing its
way into business which is
emphatically laid upon the
shoulders of all the Congress
men who are duly elected. In
other words, ignoring the
acts" of Congress and substi
THINK 010 IT?
"man in the street" I became
one. I walked alone - very
much alone-through miles of
these cities, used the famous
subways of Moscow and Len
ingrad and buses in all three.
I was never molested. I was
never followed. I was never
stared at. In spite of the lan
guage barrier the contacts I
had with people in the course
of trying to find my way
around were most pleasant.
Invariably, I was asked my
nationality. The reply "Amer
ica" never brought a hostile
reaction but rather one of
friendly interest. Where in
America? I had to answer
"near California" because no
one understood the word Ore
gon. Why does one go to Rus
sia? The "decadent" capitalis
tic West has a much higher
standard of living and a much
greater of variety pleasures.
No. You do not go to Russia
for the fun of it. You should
go to observe as far as possi
ble and to learn. Even in a
few days you can do both to
a small but nevertheless im
portant degree.
Symbols Seen
From the time you arrive
until the time you leave you
tuting its "orders" for such
neglected actions of the Con
gress. The court has even issued
"orders? making it impossible
to convict communist enemies
of our country in the courts
of law.
Let anyone and everyone
come to this meeting and
learn "what it is all about."
Come out and see what is
done and, maybe, help do it.
Remember the date and be
there.
' AndyUnger
634 Pennsylvania ave;
Medford
Moonshine
' To the Editor: We have now
launched 15 rockets aimed at
the moon. One never got out
of Florida, one dropped in the
Atlantic and one went clean
to Africa, but that ain't any
closer to the moon than Flor
ida. One of the rockets went
completely berserk and hit
the Republicans. Th ey got
caught trying to outspend the
Democrats. They said it
couldn't be done, but the Re
publicans did it. Now that's
harder to do than trying to
put three Army blankets, a
pillow, a canteen of water
and your pants all in a ham
mock at the same time, with
you in them. This can be done,
but did you ever try it when
you were seasick, from the
top of a stepladder, atop the
coal pile, in the basement of
a plunging ocean liner, with
the lights opt? I tried it many
times, but I never got there.
I slept in an Army bean ket
tle. I'm the guy who couldn't
hit a plastic dummy on the
rifle range, with my chin rest
ing on a brick wall.
I am complainin' about the
Army because they can't hit
the moon, but they'll do it
some day. When we get a lot
of rockets on the moon, we'll
have to send someone up
there, to shoot them back.
Well have a new game, called
interplanetary ping-pong. It
will be expensive, $2 million
a ping. It might be cheaper to
blow hell out of the moon.
The moon shines only part of
the time anyhow.
Everett Acklin,
Ashland.
Taf t Supporters Find Comfort
To Politics of Early Eisenhower
By LYLE C. WILSON
(TTD Correspondent
Washington -IIPD- There is
a dark pattern of defeat and
disaster in the political ex-
p e r ience of
the Republic
an politicos
who manned
the guns
which six
years ago shot
down the
ambitions
of Sen. Rob-
I .via r. Wiknn CTC A. IdLU
Some of Taft's long-time as
sociates cite the record as
evidence of a political curse
come true. Some others pon
der the thought that the strat
egy which stopped Taft and
obtained the 1952 nomination
of Dwight D. Eisenhower may
now focus on a new target.
The new target would be
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon whose most formidable
adversary for the 1960 Repub
lican presidential nomination
will be constantly aware of
Lenin, the star and the ham
mer and sickle emblems.
Lenin's name, picture and sta
tue are everywhere. So is his
philosophy. You will see
thousands and thousands of
people on foot.
Cars are being built but the
real traffic is composed of
trucks and buses. You will see
that these thousand of people
are rather drably clothed-but
everybody is clothed. The mil
itary look sharp and the chil
dren look best dressed of all.
People look like what they
are constantly told they are,1
workers - and everybody is
working. You will be unfair
if you say that the faces of
these people reflect fear and
oppression.
You will learn that the
Russians have been able to
produce about everything we
can produce, much of it not as
good, some of it better. In
most cases there is not as
much. You will learn that
housing and transportation
are two serious problems but
you will see enormous con
struction projects aimed at
solving these problems.
You will learn that this
communist country is in real
ity a highly organized capital
investment country. People
receive low wages, pay high
taxes and high prices for
most things. The government
makes the profit. The people
believe the myth that they
own the government. You
will learn that bureaucracy is
prodigious.
You will leave Russia high
ly impressed and probably
distressed. You will admit
that the progress made in 40
years is almost fantastic and
has been accomplished in the
face of great odds. You may
accept the fact that the system
which accomplished this is
here to stay. You will be so
bered by the thought that this
system or ideology has won
over more converts, willing or
otherwise, in a few years than
other ideologies have won in
many centuries. But you will
not be one of them.
Newspaper Guild
Asks Protection Law
Portland-(UPD-The Portland
Newspaper Guild voted Tues
day night to ask the Legisla
ture for a law protecting
newspapermen from having to
disclose the source of confi
dential information for news
stories.
The proposed law would ap
ply to newspaper reporters,
press association personnel,
radio and television newsmen
and employees of other news
publications.
The Guild said 12 states al
ready have laws declaring re
porters may not be compelled
to reveal sources of confiden
tial information.
EDITOR'S NOTE
Chicago -ICPD- The Encyclo
pedia Britannica reports that
the admission of Alaska as the
49th state means that 104 of
its articles must be revised to
conform with this latest development.
DIDN'T COUGH ALL NIGHT
Special Formula Creomul
sion Cough Syrup for Chil
dren relieves coughs due
to colds right now, with
out narcotics or antihista
mines, stops tickle pro
motes sleep tastes good
too. Get
FLAVORED
CREOMULSION
FOR CHILDREN
is likely to be a political ua
known as General Eisenhower
was a political unknown in
1952. That adversary is, of
course, Gov.-elect Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York. .
If the Rockefeller-for-presi-dent
managers - the stop-Nixon
manipulators believe in
curses, haunts and the politi
cal voodoo, they should exam
ine the record of what has
happened to some of the Eis-enhower-for-president
men,
the stop-Taft strategists of
1952. It has been plenty. :.
The Passing Parade
There was Sherman Adams
who master-minded the strat
egy by which Taft actually
was defeated at the 1952 Re
publican National convention.
Adams is gone.
Republican Gov. Alfred E.
Driscoll of New Jersey dealt
the Taft pre-convention -campaign
its most deadly blow in
his states' presidential pri
mary. Driscoll's Republican
state machine was disrupted
two years later by Robert B.
Meyner, a Democrat, who got
himself elected as governor
and handed the Republican
organization another licking
in this year's general election.
Gov. John S. Fine, and es
pecially, Sen. James H. Duff
of Pennsylvania were big Ike
men in 1952. They have van
ished from the political scene
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Sad tale in the news:
A gang of ten youthful
toughs raided a 'Hillsborough
party the other night (Hills
borough is a fashionable sub
urb of San Francisco) and as
saulted nine of the guests with
auto chains, black jacks, tire
irons and any other weapon
that came readily to hand.
The raid .was triggered
when three members of the
gang undertook to crash a
party given by a Hillsborough
family for their 18-year-old
twin sons. It lasted only ten
mmutes, but i n that short
space of time the hoodlums
wrecked much of the home
ana DroKe most of the win
dows of automobiles parked
outside by the guests.
une or tne guests was
thrown bodily through a pie
ture window. He and four oth
er guests who had been man
handled violently were sent
to nearby hospitals. Four oth
er guests were rather badly
injured, but declined hospi
tal aid.
pOLICE, aided by license
numoers or tne cars in
which they drove off, which
had been noted by guests at
the party, picked up all ten
of the toughs before the night
was over.
What will be done with
them remains to be seen. . .
W
HY is that a sad tale?
It's a sad state of af
fairs when things like that
can happen in an American
community.
IIHAT caused these
young
" tc
toughs to do it?
I wouldn't know. I doubt
if anybody would KNOW. But
case histories would be in
teresting. Case histories might
shed some light on what caus
ed ten young Americans to
BECOME TOUGHS.
I'd be willing to hazard
a personal guess that accurate
case histories would reveal
that of the ten FEW have held
steady jobs or had applied
themselves at school to the
acquisition of an education
that would prepare them for
holding good jobs and getting
ahead in the world.
One might go a little far
ther and guess that when they
have thought of jobs they
have thought of them in terms
of SOFT SNAPS. That, per
haps, they have thought of
GETTING AHEAD in terms
of winning a big prize in a
quiz show and living spectac
ularly on the proceeds.
It would be a fairly, safe
bet that few of them have
thought of success in life in
terms of hard work arid intel
ligent application to the job
of getting somewhere worth
while. '
(mremjsv
and Pennsylvania elected an
other Democratic governor
this month. .
Events caught up with for
mer Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge
Jr. (R-Mass.)t in the election
immediately following the
1952 Republican convention.
Lodge lost to Sen. John F.
Kennedy who may go on to
take the 1960 Democratic
presidential nomination. Bro
ther John Davis Lodge, anoth
er Ikeman, lost Connecticut's
governorship in 1954.
By the Wayside
Others of the 1952 Ike-for-president
men who had to
stop Taft, or else, have since
been mowed down at the
polls: Dan Thornton of Col
orado, Douglas McKay of Ore
gon, 'Arthur B. Langlie of
Washington.
Former Gov. Walter J.
Kohler Jr. of Wisconsin, ran
proudly as an Ikeman in 1957
for the late Joseph R. McCar
Central High Idle
As Students Attend
Private Institution
Editor's Note: Jack V.
Fox, UPI roving reporter,
was sent to Little Rock to
report latest developments
on integration. The follow
ing dispatch contrasts what
is happening at the closed
Central High with the ac
tivity at the private, all
while high school.
By JACK V. FOX
UPI Correspondent
Little Rock, Ark.-TOPfl-This
morning, as on every week
day, the teachers park their
cars and walk into the fine
building that was Central
High School.
They hold a brief staff
meeting and then go to their
separate classrooms. The
desks are polished, the rooms
spotless. The chemistry and
physics labs and the biology
room are ready for experi
ments. On the row after row
of lockers are the familiar
combination locks put there
early this fall in anticipation
of school opening.
There is everything except
pupils.
The teachers sit at their
desks in the empty rooms.
They try to make the day
useful by devising improve
ments in their courses. Then
they write letters, practice
typing, read, look out the
window.
For the 3,700 students of
Central and Little Rock's
three other high schools have
scattered from coast to coast,
enrolled in makeshift private
schools, started taking cor
respondence courses, or given
up their education tempo
rarily. Use Old Building
A few blocks away is an
old building which bears the
only resemblance to a high
school in Little Rock today. It
is a former orphanage, later
used by the University of
Arkansas Graduate Division.
It is the site of the Little
Rock private high school, run
on donations and staffed by
34 teachers who came out of
retirement or are just begin
ning teachers. There are 217
seniors and 288 juniors here
plus 312 sophomores in a new
Sunday school building of the
Highland Methodist Churcn
nearby.
Thursday the students hold
an election for president of
the student body and other
offices. The campaign posters
are stuck on the walls with
endorsements.
Nowhere here is there any
mention that these children's
education has been crippled.
Proud of Makeshift Schools
W. C. Breshears, a former
elementary school principal
and a superintendent of
schools in Texas, is the super
intendent of . the private
schools. He is justifiably
proud of having made avail
able education in Little Rock,
and he points out what a tre
mendous job it has been.
PUBLIC
SERVICE
C M. Litwiller
Mrs. Litwiller has served as lady assistant, organist and vocal
ist for many years without added cost to our patrons. A
substantial saving on every service and is appreciated by the
many who call us. .
LITWILLER
Funeral
Home
Mountain View Chape'
- Hwy, 66 at Normal
Office 88 N. Main
ASHLAND
We Never Close
in Loss
Men
thy's Senate scat. Wisconsin
elected its first Democratic
senator since the Republican
calamity of 1932.
Sen. William F. Knowland
of California withheld sup
port from Taft at the critical
moment in the 1952 Republi
can convention and look what
happened to Knowland this
month in California. Postmas
ter General Arthur E. Sum
merfield has survived, person
ally, in the cabinet but the
Republican organization Sum
merfield helped create in Mi
chigan has been obliterated
since he helped turn Taft
back six years ago.
Sen. Edward J. Thye of
Minnesota cast the deciding
convention votes in 1952
which rejected Taft and nom
inated Eisenhower. Minneso
ta voters this month turned
Thye out of the Senate.
Quite a list! In it the old
Taft-men find some comfort.
"It was as if Little Rock
had suffered a major -disaster,"
he said, "and that not
only the buildings and labora
tories and libraries all had
been destroyed, but the entire
teaching staff wiped out." -'
For the 175 regular teach
ers are under federal injunc
tion not to teach in a private
school. The desks, the chairs.
the test tubes and bunsen
burners, even the books, can
not be made available to the
children.
Editorial Comment
HAIL THE CHRISTMAS
SEASON
The Christmas buying sea
son is here, beating th
Thanksgiving turkey to the
wire.
At one time we might have
resented the overlapping of
the two holidays, but not any
more. Christmas has become
such a busy time that we've
forgotten how to enjoy it.
So many activities are con
nected with Christmas nowa
days that it is futile to try to
cram them into one or two
weeks. Churches have a spe
cial choir concert and perhaps
a pageant. The children ex
pect to see the beaming faces
of their parents at the school
Christmas show. Special lodge
and club meetings herald the
holiday, to say nothing of
private social events.
Pile on top of this the an
nual Christmas card ritual
and the family reunions. The
season begins to look more
like a challenge than a festive
occasion.
The buying of presents and
the preparation of Christmas
cards are two things that can
be done early to relieve the
pressure.
So it just makes good sense
to get the Christmas shopping
done early. Not only does the
customer have a wider selec
tion of merchandise but the
salespeople have more time to
offer service than they do in
the frantic, final days.
If we get our Christmas
buying and mailing done
early, we will have more time
to think of "Peace on Earth,
Good Will to Men" - the true
holiday spirit-when the great
day is upon us.
We're Teady, Santa, any
time you are.-Oregon States
man. Salem.
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Mrs. Litwiller
'It is better to know us and not need us
than to need us and not know us."
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