I
4 Th.rsoV, November 20, If 38
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEOFORD. ORE.
"Tveryone la Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
3 Worth Fir St. Ph. SP 3-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL, Editor
KERB GREY, Advertising Manager
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IRIC W ALLEN JR,
Managing Editor
EARL H ADAMS, City Editor
HARRY CHIP MAN, Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editor
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Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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Iassocm
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
Mot. 20, 1948 (Saturday)
The Philharmonic Society
of Southern Oregon has pre
sented its fall concert under
the direction of Richard D.
Werner.
Four Medford fliers receive
civilian pilots licenses.
20 YEARS AGO
Not. 20, 1938 (Sunday)
Medford's city council has
awarded a $118,673.28 con
tract to two Portland firms
for reconstruction of the city's
paved streets.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
youngin's have started looking
for Santa Claus tracks, and
being polite without provoca
tion." 30 YEARS AGO
Not. 20, 1928 (Tuesday)
Home Products week, Med
ford's buy-at-home campaign,
is well under way with the
enthusiastic support of prac
tically all local merchants and
manufacturers.
The scoutmasters' training
school for boy scout leaders
holds its third session tonight.
40 YEARS AGO
Not. 20. 1918 (Wednesday)
Leopold Godowsky, world
famous piano virtuoso, will
give a recital here next week.
Prof. F. C. Reimer,of the
Southern Oregon Experimen
tal station reports on new dis
infectants to fight pear blight.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or tea correct is superior;
seven or eight js excellent; five oi
sis is good.
1. A truffle is a short roll
of drums, a decorative addi
tion to a woman s hat, or an
edible fungus.
2. The Panama Canal is ap
proximately 25, SO, or 75
miles long?
3. Who was king of Israel
when David slew Goliath with
his sling?
4. Every two years, the en
tire membership of the U.S.
House of Representatives is
elected; at the same interval
is one-half, one-fourth or one-
third of the Senate elected?
5. Which noted Union gen
eral during the War between
the States engaged in a fa
mous march to the sea?
o. lianas is a measure
ment for denoting the shoul
der height of horses; what oth
er human anatomical term is
used to denote the number
of horses?
7. Which one of the New
England States is nicknamed
"Bay State"?
8. What is the plural form
of the word criterion?
9. In Greek mythology, a
centaur is half man and half
.--?
10. What type of "grease
denotes prolonged or hard ex
ertion of the arms?
Answers: 1. Edible fungus.
2. 50 miles. 3. Saul. 4. One
third. 5. William Tecumseh
Sherman. 6. Head. 7. Massa
chusetts. 8. Criteria. 9. Half
horse. 10. Elbow grease.
Independence, Mo., home
town of former President
Harry S. Truman, was the
starting point of both the
Santa Fe Trail in 1831 and
the Old Oregon Trail in 1843.
Schools and "Delinquency 99
A pamphlet entitled 'Tour Community
Should Count to 10" came to this desk some time
ago. It was prepared by the advisory council
of judges of the National Probation and Parole
Association. "
Its sub-title was "A Primer on Delinquency
Control," and it listed 10 things each community
should have or do in the fight against juvenile
delinquency that rathar nebulous subject
which has received so much attention in recent
years.
The preface said the booklet "is concerned
primarily with services for children who have
gotten into trouble in one way or another. As in
the health field, early discovery and correct treat
ment are major preventive measurers."
THE ten community needs listed iwere these :
l 1. A special police youth bureau.
2. A full-time juvenile court judge.
3. A good probation staff.
4. Psychiatric and psychological services for
the juvenile court.
5. A detention home n o t a jail for
children. '
6. Shelter care for dependent and neglected
children.
7. Foster homes for delinquent and neglected
children.
8. Family service agencies.
9. Special facilities for mentally defective
and disturbed children.
10. Training schools that really re-educate.
1XHILE these obviously are designed for cities
of metropolitan size, it can be seen that
Medford measures up rather well. It does not
have all the 10 items listed, but it has a number
of them, and as to the others, it has a start, or at
least something approaching the recommenda
tions. We would, however, quarrel with the pam
phlet where it says that "early discovery and cor
rect treatment are . . . preventive measures." Cor
rection is not prevention. When correction be
comes needed, it is too late for prevention. That
must start far earlier. '
It is a matter of upbringing and training; of
spotting antisocial tendencies before they can
become serious, and of preventing their further
development.
THIS Qannot be done in juvenile court, or by
the police, or by a probation staff, or any of
the other 10 things mentioned in the judges'
report.
Where, then, can it be done? -
It begins, of course, in the home, the family,
the early surroundings, environment and training.
If there is no control here, no sense of direction,
no moral training, the youngster has two strikes
against him to start with.
But a "man's home is his castle," and society
cannot, under ordinary circumstances, enter a
home and enforce any
havior or obedience or training. 1
THE churches are equipped, in most cases, to
TirfHrilomnral froi'tiinrr T?nt rievo acruin fhnrfn
or Sunday school attendance is dependent on
family guidance and attitudes. And no church
nor Sunday schoql can change , a child s course
in life if not' supplemented, at the very least, by
home environment.
But isn't there somewhere where "society
can step into the picture?
some place, where it can
ihe training, the guidance necessary to steer po
ential delinquents into better courses?
A citizens committee on juvenile delinquency
in Portland, formed to
vention (in addition to
comes up with an obvious but reluctant answer:
the schools.
A SUMMARY of the
in r.ovf
r AAA U1 Wo
"Some may disagree that the schools should have
this responsibility, but where else in the community
are so many of our children enrolled and observed.
Churches, social agencies, and other groups can assist,
both with program services for many children and
specific treatment for some, but no other social insti
tution sees so nearly all of the children, and sees them
continuously, from the ages of 6 to 17 or 18 as is done
in the school systems. Therefore, the committee con
cluded that a great increase was needed in the social
service program of the schools and that there is need
for recognition by citizens, taxpayers, and educators
that classroom teachers and the school system have a
great role to play in the prevention of delinquency
and maladjusted behavior in children."
Objections immediately come to mind.
Schools are for educating, not for providing so
cial services. Teachers
out being part-time social workers. The schools
are already overburdened with functions only
distantly related to education as such, and should
not be asked to do more.
GRANTING the validity of these objections,
the logic is still inescapable: Where- else
is there?
And good teachers
have constituted themselves as advisors, coun-
senors, and even disciplinarians, m areas outside
their regular classroom assignments. -
Ideally, the schools should not be social-work
agencies. But what else
social institution do we
so ideally to serve as a
were, and at the very
for youngsters who seem
way:
for, n mere is to
begin when prevention
me ponce and courts are called upon for a cor
rective. E. A.
outside sanctions on be
Isn't there some point,
provide the sanctions,
study delinquency pre
correction or treatment),
committee's report states,
have enough to do with
,
already in many cases
is there? What other
have which is situated
"warning system," as it
least as an initial contact
to be going the wrong
be "prevention," it must
is possible not when
Dennis the
Matter of Fact
KHARTOUM FROM AMMAN
Amman, Jordan Thus far,
the outlines of the coup d'etat
in Khartoum are extremely
blurry from this distance. As
these words are written, no
one really knows whose in
terests will be served by the
change in the Sudanese gov
ernment, although the local
bettors are
backing Gam
al Abdel Nas
ser. Although
so much is
still u n clear,
however, cer
tain things
are very clear
indeed. It is
clear, above
4ospb Aisop ail, mat the
troubled Middle East has
again entered a period of
acute crisis. It now seems
clear, too, that the Syrian
Egyptian attempt to kidnap
and-or kill young King Hus
sein of Jordan was the first
act in this crisis-but a first
act that by no means followed
the script written for it.
The reasons behind these
conclusions have nothing to
do with the events in the
Sudan. They have to do, ra
ther, with the same situation
left behind by the coup d'etat
in Baghdad, the landing of
the American and British
troops in Lebanon and Jor
dan, and the compromise set
tlement in the Lebanon.
The essential point to bear
in mind about this situation
is that, on balance, and at
least for the time being,
everybody lost except the
Kremlin.
rpHE Western loss was too
A obvious to need underlin
ing. In Iraq, in the second
most important nation in the
Arab world, a strongly pro
Western government was re
placed by a government dom
inated by the West's enemies.
In the Lebanon, another
strongly pro-Western govern
ment was replaced by a gov
ernment that is carefully neu
tral. Despite the unimpaired
survival of King Hussein's
government here in Jordan,
the net setback to the West
and to the West's Arab friends
was really appallingly heavy.
Gamal Abdel Nasser's loss
was much less obvious than
the West's loss. Yet this loss
by Nasser was perhaps the
most important result of the
long crisis-period. For Nasser,
the post-crisis balance sheet
may be itemized as follows:
First, another attempt by
Nasser's friends in Jordan,
to. convert King Hussein's
government simultaneously
with the coup d etat in Bagh
dad, was sternly stopped be
fore it got started.
Second, Nasser failed to se
cure the installation of the
puppet government in Beirut,
which he had every reason to
expect and count on. In order
to get the American Marines
out without further trouble,
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
THE HOTEL MANAGER told
suspicious looking character
him carefully."
When the house dick re
turned, the manager in
quired, "Find any of our
towels in his suitcase?"
"No," said the detective,
"but I found a chambermaid
in his grip."
In Hollywood, Leo Guild
asked Edward Everett Hor
ton what he thought of pay
TV. "Great!" said Horton.
"I told you some day -we'd
get paid to watch TV'"
A friend of A. Armed boasts
that he's dating a girl who's
the closest thing to Abbe Lane: she looks like Xavier Cugat
Mike Connolly defines debt as "semething you get into If you
Spend as much as you tell your friends you earn."
1 O UttV ay ImsttCsrt CUMbuUd by Kjax Tuturu lyadkaU.
Menace
Bv Joseph Alsop
the American authorities had
positively approved the in
stallation of a Lebanese gov
ernment entirely composed of
Nasserites. But the Christian
Lebanese staged their coun-
terstrike, and thus they upset
this alleged "compromise,"
and forced the selection of
a truly neutral government.
Third, and most significant,
Nasser's apparent victory in
Baghdad turned out to be
thoroughly hollow. When the
Baghdad coup d'etat was stag
ed, there is no doubt at all
that Cairo believed the coup
was a most glittering triumph.
So it looked to the whole
world. But in order to be a
triumph, the Baghdad coup
had to produce a government
entirely pliant to Nasser's or
ders; and this it altogether
failed to do.
SO FAR as one can judge
from this rlistanpp Nas
ser's error resulted from a
miscalculation of the strength
of his agent and underground
net in Iraq. In the outcome,
the leader of the Baghdad
coup d'etat, Brig. Gen. Karim
Kassem, turned out to want
to rule over an independent
Iraq instead of an Iraq made
into an Egyptian province. In
addition, the Communist
agents and underground net
turned out to be at least as
strong as . the Nasserite net,
if not rather stronger. And
the Communists strongly sup
ported Gen. Kassem's inde
pendent policy. ,'
For Nasser, ' Iraq's contin
uing independence under Kas
sem was almost as serious a
loss as the Western loss of
friends in Baghdad. While
King Faisal, the crown prince
of Iraq and the aging Nuri
Pasha still ruled Iraq, these
Western friends made ideal
targets for Nasser's propagan
da. The notion that Nuri
Pasha's Baghdad could act as
another magnetic pole in the
Arab world was sheerly non
sene. Unless Nuri's govern
ment could be replaced by a
true-blue Nasserite regime,
it was better for Nasser to
keep these ideal targets in
power.
In the outcome, however,
the ideal targets were effaced
by an independent, revolu
tionary regime, strongly sup
ported by the Iraqi Commun
ists and quite capable of act
ing as another magnetic pole
for the Arabs. It happened,
furthermore, when Nasser's
rule in Syria .was running
into fairly serious and visible
trouble.
IN SYRIA, the ambitious
( Nasserite program of land
reform had to be put off to
another season. The merchant
and landlord classes are in
creasingly discontented. And
there are signs of disagree
ment between Nasser and Ak-
ram Hourani, the man who
made Syria into a province of
Egypt. Other signs suggest
Stop Me
a house detective, "There's a
Jn Room 716; better check on
H-20
Today
By Walter Lippmann
THIS YEAR'S ELECTIONS
It is rather late to begin
talking about our elections but
it is also a big advantage to
wait and b e
able to read
what others
have written.
Having been
in Russia and
JsvTvl off from all
l H I Jl news of the
campaign dur
ing the clos
ing Deriod. it
has been impressive and re
freshing to come home to read
the acumulated cliDDines. The
fact that there had been an
election at all was curiously
impressive. The fact that it
was freely and fully reported
in the press was refreshing.
Another reason for writinc
about the elections at this late
date is that, almost certainly,
we snail long be talking about
them. For there is not much
doubt that the election returns
announced the passing of one
political generation and the
arrival of another.
For the most part the men
who rose to political power as
the result of the second World
War have been defeated or
they are retiring. The elections
played havoc with the Repub
licans who were elected in
1946, in the first popular re
action to the miseries and the
frustrations of the war. The
class of 1946, Knowland,
Bricker, Jenner, Malone, the
class which included the late
Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wis
consin, has been pushed aside.
Among the Democrats a sim
ilar tning happened in the de
feat of Gov. Harriman in New
York and of Gov. McFarland
in Arizona. By and large the
new men elected have made
their way up since the war
and they are only now ready
for the leading places.
-
POLITICS is a very inexact
' science. But there js a rule
which usually works. It is that
about 15 years after the end of
a big war, there occurs a big
political change marked by
the passing of the war gener
ation and the advent of the
generation which had no re
sponsibility for, even though
it participated in, the war.
Thus 15 years after the first
World War, in 1933, Hitler
came to power in Germany
and Roosevelt in this country.
Two years earlier Japan in
augurated m Manchuria that
series of military aggressions
which marked the end of the
settlement of the first World
War and led up to the second
World War. The 15-year rule
can be seen at work after our
Civil War and after the Na
poleonic wars at the begin
ning of the 19th century.
There is no mystery or mag
ic about the 15-year rule. It is
founded in the fact that about
15 years after a war ends the
leaders and commanders are
no longer in their prime while
the young men who did the
fighting, when they were in
their 20's, have matured.
Tr- IS NOW 13 years since the
end of the second World
War, and in the Presidential
election of 1960 it will be 15
years. It is plain that we are
living in the transition be
tween the political genera
tions. It is plain also that with'
this change of men there is a
change in the political cli
mate. All the analyses I have seen
disagreement between Hour
ani and his former partner in
the Syrian Army, Col. Abdel
Hamid Serraj. And the theo
retically - outlawed Syrian
Communist party led by Ah
alid Baqdash has been mak
ing important progress, in
step with the Communists of
Iraq.
Because of the situation in
Iraq and Syria, the Nasser
bandwagon was slowing down
rather dangerously. Hence,
the attempt to kidnap or kill
King Hussein, which failed
so ignominiously. If it also
turns out that the new lead
ers of the Sudan still want
real independence for their
country, Nasser's prospects
will be very badly imjJaired
-without any comparable im
provement in the West's pros
pects, it must be added.
But, if the Sudanese coup
adds to Egypt the one prov
ince that Egypt wants most,
then the Nasser bandwagon
will again be rolling down the
road at a good clip.
(C) 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
-L
Walter
Unntnanw
TlvfiVLLflqe
DAIRY-SMITH
East Main St.
ORDER YOUR SAVAGE
TURKEY NOW!
CALL SP
I.I I
& Tomorrow
agree that as between the two
partiei there was no outstand
ing and clear-cut national is
sue. But in both parties the
winners were men who gave
the effect of looking forward
into the future, of looking be
yond the era of the World
War and its aftermath, and of
being alert to the needs of the
day which have been put off
and neglected. I suspect that
this is true even of Sen. Gold
water of Arizona, who is not
a conservative but a reaction
ary. He may well be a vigor
ous portent of some of the
things to come.
'
A GAINST this background
that of a generation which
is passing and of a political cli
mate that is changing ' one
must, I think, read what the
President said at his press con
ference on the Wednesday
morning after election day.
He made no attempt to hide
the fact that he was a sad and
bewildered man. "The United
States did give me, after all,
a majority of I think well
over 9,000,000 votes. Now
here, only two years later,
there is a complete reversal;
and yet I do not see where
there is anything that these
people consciously want the
Administration to do differ
ently."
The answer, as it appeared
in the election returns, is that
a decisive majority of the peo
ple want the government, not
merely administration, but aU
government, national and
state to come alive and to be
alert and to show vigor, and
not to keep mouthing the
same old slogans, and not to
dawdle along in the same old
ruts. When they are told by
the President himself on the
day after election that the par
amount task before the coun
try is to spend less money,
rather than to master its great
problems, the people know
that the President has lost
touch with them, and with
their problems, and is living
in the past.
17ICE PRESIDENT NIXON is
' in a difficult position. In
age, he belongs to the genera
tion that is rising to power.
But politically, he belongs to
the wrong generation. He is
irretrievably committed to the
politicians who are receding
and are passing out of power.
While he is not a man 'of,
deep and abiding principle
and can shift his position, it is
not easy to see how he can
now remake the public image
of himself. For he would have,
on the one hand, to retain the
devotion of the old guard and,
on the other, he would have
to talk the language of the en
lightened progressives,
(c) 1958 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Drain To Enter
Wagon in Trek
Portland (DPD The town of
Drain in northern Douglas
county has entered a covered
wagon to take part in a trek
next year from Missouri to
Oregon.
The wagon train idea is to
promote the Oregon Centen
nial. The Centennial commission
said Robert Roudebaugh,
Drain logger, had given the
$1650 needed for the wagon.
Roudebaugh, his wife and
their 11-year-old daughter
will ride in the wagon.
Plans call for a covered wa
gon caravan to leave Indepen
dence, Mo., next April 15 and
reach Independence, Ore., 100
days later-following as close
ly as possible the old Orgeon
Trail. Wagons are being built
at Cottage Grove and will be
shipped to Missouri on flat
cars.
SOC Registrar Attends
Pacific Coast Meeting
Ashland - Mrs. Mabel W.
Winston, Southern Oregon
college registrar and dean of
women, attended the annual
conference of the Pacific
Coast . Association of Colle
giate ' Registrars and Admis
sions Officers in Long Beach,
Calif., recently.
High points at the confer
ence were workshops on such
problems as honors programs,
advanced placement, advanc
ed standing, early admissions,
early acceptance and others
of common interest to regis
trars and admissions officers.
-L
f Gsaesise
3-4379
I I I
Little Rock Faces
Continued Closure
Of Public Schools
By JACK V. FOX
UPI Correspondent
Little Rock, Ark. -(DPD- The
temper of this city right now
is such that it will keep its
public high schools shut in
definitely rather than inte
grate white and Negro chil
dren. The label "moderate" is the
kiss of death for a politician
in Arkansas today.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer-
t 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.
Will Try Again
To the Editor: The Oregon
Committee to Repeal the
Death Penalty and the Oregon
Prison Association are grate
ful for the large measure of
public support which the cam
paign against the death penal
ty received. The press, in par
ticular, gave the issue such
full coverage, both in news
and in editorial columns, that
we feel a strong urge to say
"thank you." The fact that
only five newspapers in the
whole state were in favor of
keeping the penalty looms
large in our thinking.
That we lost is naturally dis
appointing. The close margin
encourages us to try again
You may remember the 1912
defeat and the 1914 victory,
We believe that there were
enough confused voters to ac
count for the small majority
against us.
We are, in fact, quite will-
ing to predict that the 1959
legislature will lay the issue
before the people again and
that two years from now cap
ital punishment will be abol
ished in Oregon. With your
help the prediction can be
come reality.
Brock Dixon,
Chairman, Oregon Com
mittee to Repeal the
Death Penalty.
Claire A. Argow,
Executive Director of
Oregon Prison Assn.
Oregon Publicity
To the Editor: As the say
ing goes, ' trying to be '. "the
firstest with the mostest,"
would explain how I exposed
my ignorance about . news
papers. I wrote the end of
October such a long descrip
tion of Oregon s scenery and
aDout ine Medford area in
particular in conjunction with
the Oregon Centennial News
to my home town newspaper
(the Walsh County Record at
Grafton, N.D.) The editor, Mr,
W. E. Balkee, said I spoke
like a Chamber of Commerce
and if he put all I said about
the beauty of Medford in the
paper he'd have to charge ad
vertising rates.
However, he was very gen
erous in what he did publish.
and wound up saying it sound
ed so good, they had about
decided to vacation in Oregon
next summer.
And here is where my igno
rance was bliss. Several have
written me from back there
saying coming to Oregon was
their plan for next summer.
One couple from St Paul,
Minn., plan on staying all
summer in Oregon. They love
to fish and have a new trailer.
They plan on seeiiig .the
Rogue River Valley. I truly
Acreu from
HANK MORGAN . HAROID
DAY OR NIGHT
. " ' ;
.
V J
' " V'j ;
Gov. Orval Faubus was
never riding higher. He un
questionably has the support
of a vast majority in defying
the courts and the federal gov
ernment. Little Rock has the
sense that it is fighting the
segregation battle for the en-
tire South.
And there is a definite fear
on the part of those who do
not agree with Faubus to
speak their mind.
These are the main impres
sions an outsider gets In Lit
tle Rock today.
The fmal mark of the dom
inance of those who will not
accept the Supreme Court
ruling as . the "law of the
land came just last week
when the Little Rock School
Board resigned.
The board and Superintend
ent of Schools Virgil T. Blos
som had been caught In the
middle of stern federal orders
to let Negroes in the high
schools and Faubus' equally
firm refusal.
The board had thought that
the shutdown of this city's
high schools would bring a
groundswell of public demand
that some way be found to
open them. No such swell ever
came and board chairman
Wayne Upton said he and his
colleagues faced "utter hope
lessness, helplessness and frus
tration." There is rather faint but
growing resistance now on
the part of a group calling it-
sell the Woman s Emergency
Committee to Open The
Schools, which has increased
its membership from 200 to
750 in the last week.
One of its organizers is Mrs.
Byron House Jr., a woman in
her early 30's with four small
children. It has no answer to
the integration dilemma but
just wants the schools re
opened. "Dozens of women are
afraid to join though they
want to," she ' says. . "Some
gave me their dollar member
ship fee but refused to be list
ed as a member, go to meet
ings or get pamphlets through
the mail.
"They are mainly afraid of
jeopardizing their husband's
job or business."
believe the city of Medford
should send Mr. Balkee a
prize box of pears, and force
him to mention his Thanks
giving pears from Medford,
Ore. How about it? He de
serves them, and it would
look good in the N.D. news
paper. Emma Lou Carpenter,
811 Sherman st
Medford. -
Education Questions
. To the Editor: Is it not time
for the United States of Am
eric? to stop living1 in a dream
world and start a program to
educate her youth to the full
est extent possible? . -Why
are veterans allowed
only three years after -discharge
to initiate their train
ing? Why are students with
ability not encouraged to at
tend our institutions of high
er learning, or do they exist
only for those who can af
ford them? Are we to sit idly
by and watch the Soviet Un
ion educate, yes, actually pay
her students to attend col
lege, while we do nothing?
Some one is going to say
that I'm a socialist, but now
is the time for the people to
act if we are to survive.
Stanley Snook
3286 Snowy Butte rd.
Medford
tlx Courthouse
SNOOGRASS, FUNERAL DttfCOtS
PHONE SP 2-0M