4 Mondjy, December 22, 1958
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
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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
Dae. 22, 1948 (Wednesday)
Local "ham" radio opera
tors are busy receiving and
sending Christmas greetings.
The City of Medford has
placed an order for 275 addi
tional parking meters.
20 YEARS AGO
Dec. 22. 1938 (Thursday)
The Ashland city council
approves a $1000 expenditure
for advertising the communi
ty's attractions.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
sad Christmas stories are the
order of the day. They deal
chiefly with children who
have no place to hang their
stockings, but the steering
wheel of the family home."
30 YEARS AGO
Dec. 22, 1928 (Saturday)
Medford's first 'annual
Christmas annual outdoor il
lumination contest is off to
a good start.
According to assays of sev
eral samples the Hunt broth
ers may have struck it rich
in their gold mine on Savage
creek.
40 YEARS AGO
Dec. 22, 1918 (Sunday)
The board of health and
city physicians meet to confer
on the local flu situation.
Nine new cases of flu are
reported over the week end.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five of
sis is good.
l.In what city was the
Army -Navy football game
played this year?
2. Over what ancient coun
try did the dynasty of the
Pharoahs rule?
3. The title Dalai Lama
suggests what central Asian
country? . .
4. Do crows usually fly for
ward in a straight line?
5. Name the longest riVer
system in the United States.
6. For how many years did
Jack Dempsey hold the heavy
weight boxing championship
title?
7. Are there approximately
2,000, 4,000 or 6,000 coffee
beans in a pound?
8. Who was the male star
of the motion picture, "The
Lost Week End?"
9. Does a cat use a front
paw, or a rear paw, to
scratch its head?
10. Is brandy made from
vegetables, grain, or fruit?
Answers: 1. Philadelphia,
Pa. 2. Egypt. 3. Tibet. 4. No.
5. Mississippi-Missouri. 6. Sev
en years. 7. 4.000. 8. Ray Mil
land. 9. A rear paw. 10. Fruit.
White House Staff
To Get Yule Gifts
Washington - (WD - Presi
dent and Mrs. Eisenhower
present their Christmas gifts
to members of the White
House staff today.
The nature of the gift is a
secret. But if past practices
are any indication chances
are that it will be a painting
by the President.
About 600 White House em
ployees are expected to attend
the annual Christmas party
for staff members.
I.G.Y. Wind-Up
The International Geophysical year is closing
out, if not in a blaze, at least a small backflash
oi controversy.
In a preliminary summing up, Dr. Hugh Odi
shaw, executive director of the U. S. National
Committee for the I. G. Y., has called the venture
"the single most significant peaceful activity of
mankind since the Kenaissance and the Coper
nican revolution."
But Rear Adm. John E. Clark, deputy director
of the Advanced Research Projects Agency, said
that while the United States had "lived in a glass
house during the international study of the earth
and its environment, Soviet Russia had played
"coy and superior."
QDISHAW had noted, that for the past 18
months ("year" is a misnomer) 60,000 sci
entists, technicians, and volunteer observers from
66 nations had manned scientific posts from pole
to pole in this common "adventure into the un
known." Among the most remarkable findings
contributing to an "unprecerented storehouse of
facts":
1) The 60,000-square mile Antarctica is not
a solid mass but apparently a complex of island
and mountain chains. 2)
snow area of the world
by about 40 per cent
miles to 4,500,000. 3) Three major counter-currents
have been found and measured in t h e
oceans. 4) A vast mineral-rich region has been
found in the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. 5)
During the past 50 years precipitation in t h e
Arctic has averaged twice that of the Antarctic.
6) Launching of earth satellites has been a
"pioneering and historic event" in itself, usher
ing in "the space age."
But Admiral Clark
fort had meant "great
little return to others in
rest of the world has been told "little or nothing
about Soviet (satellite) launchings, launching
equipment, experimental results and the like.
THE UNITED States has announced that it has
abandoned its promise to hurl into space a
fully instrumented basketball-sized earth satellite
with a Vanguard rocket before the I. G. Y. ended
Dec. 31. But a week later the National Aero
nautices and Space Administration announced
plans for 8 to 12 space probes a year, starting
in 1959.
Dr. Odishaw, like other scientists on both
sides of the Iron Curtain, pleads for continued
international cooperation and discloses that al
ready plans are under way for a program called
International Geophysical Cooperation 1959.
But the U. S. Little America outpost is scheduled
to be closed out next Jan.
The U. S. Senate at
two resolutions calling on
other nations, through the
zation, to meet and discuss the feasibility of an
International Health and Medical Research year,
along the lines of the I. G. Y.
The chances are that
cooperation will continue,
prolongation of the I. G. Y. The International
Council of Scientific Unions has established spe
cial committees for going on with joint research
on the oceans, space, the sun, and Antarctica.
E. R. R.
Hoffa s Newest Project
A battle over collective bargaining rights for
city, county, and state employees is shaping up,
with James R. Hoffa, president of the Interna
tional Brotherhood of Teamsters,. in the driver's
seat. Hoffa's executive board has voted an un
announced sum of money for a campaign to bring
a potential 10 million local government employ
ees into the union.
Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell on the
following day declared that these workers "de
serve a better fate." With almost understatement
in view of the Teamsters record of corruption
Mitchell explained that union members "have
a right to the kind of union leadership . . . that
is above reproach, and I do not think that Mr.
Hoffa enjoys those virtues."
T'HE FIRST major engagement in Hoffa's new
A battle will be fought in New York City, where
Teamster Local 237 is trying to organize the po
lice force, as well as other municipal employees.
But city police authorities declare that Police
Commissioner Stephen P. Kennedy was standing
firm on his position that unionization of the po
lice "cannot be accepted" because of their
"unique role." Kennedy holds that the police, be
cause of their, "governmental functions" and
quasi-military duties, must be distinguished from
"proprietary" city employees. Kennedy has been
equally aloof to the Police Benevolent Associa
tion, which also has been seeking designation as
collective bargaining agent.
LIOFFA'S drive inevitably will conflict with the
AFL-CIO, whose affiliates already have jur
isdiction over .some public employees.
. The powerful postal unions, for example,
invariably spearhead lobbying activities of fed
eral employees for pay raisees. Under the Taft
Hartley Act federal employees are denied the
right to strike, but union membership is sanc
tioned. The battle is likely to be a furious one; even
before their expulsion from the AFL-CIO last
year, Hoffa's Teamsters had earned the reputa
tion of being the most dynamic and independent
of unions in organizing. E.R.R.
The total known ice and
must be revised upward
from 3,240,000 cubic
said that the Russian ef
benefit" to Russia "with
kind." He asked why the
20.
the 1958 session passed
the President to invite
World Health Organi
international scientific
even without a specific
Dennis the Menace
I COWDtiT fMD A STDCKIH'I'
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter Lippmann
ON SEIZING THE
INITIATIVE
At this point in the NATO
conference in Paris there is a
deadlock between Russia and
the Allies on
all aspects of
the German
question. We
refuse to dis
cuss Berlin
except as part
of a discus
sion of the
two Ger
manys. Only
the two Ger-
Walter
Lippmann
manys, he says, can discuss
the future of Germany. Every
body on both sides is standing
firm. But, as things are now,
the initiative in the next
moves is in Khrushchev's
hands. It is the loss of the in
itiative which we should take
very seriously. '
For having the initiative,
he is able to maneuver, mak
ing all sorts of small but re
sounding moves, none of them
important enough to justify a
forcible reply by the West.
Suppose, for example, that he
begins by ending the Soviet
military occupation . of East
Berlin. It will be impossible
for the West to demand that
the Red Army reoccupy East
Berlin. We cannot be in the
position of insisting that the
Red Army occupy some terri
tory from which it is willing
to withdraw. Suppose Khrush
chev turned over his powers
to the East German govern
ment, and we find that as our
trucks arrive at the check
ponts, there is waiting for us
there, instead of a Soviet of
ficial, an East German official
to look at the documents and
to stamp them so that the
truck can proceed. Just as we
cannot say to the Russians
that they must keep their
army in Berlin, so we cannot
say that we will not aUow our
papers to be stamped by an
East German official, if he is
doing nothing to interfere
with our free access to West
Berlin. '
Because the Russians have
the initiative, they can use
cat-and-mouse tactics at Ber
lin, and, without any overt
act of violence, they can con
fuse and weaken the whole
position of the West.
"THE Adenauer - Dulles pol
icy is purely defensive,
and in a diplomatic struggle
as in warfare itself, a defens
ive strategy without the pros
pect of a break-out, is demor
alizing. What is more, the policy of
standing pat on the German
question - which is in fact the
policy of Dr. Adenauer and
Mrs. Dulles is very danger
ous. For there is the ever
present possibility of disorder
and uprising in East Ger
many, and a high probability
that the West German forces
would then be sucked in,
bringing NATO and the Sov
iet Union to an open clash.
It think it likely that the
fear of such a crisis in Ger
many is the main, not the on
ly', reason why Khrushchev
has posed the Berlin problem
at this time, that is to say be
fore all the problems of West
German rearmament have
been definitely settled. . It is
true, as so many say, that
West Berlin presents an an
noying contrast to East Ber
lin. It is also true that this
contrast might help to pro
voke the kind of uprising in
East Germany which might
be uncontrollable. .
WE in the West have an in
terest in maintaining nnr
presence in West Berlin. On
the ground of our honorable
commitments, on the ground
of our political interests, on
the ground of general Euro
pean security, we have to
maintain our presence in Ber
lin in order to make sure that
Berlin becomes again the cap
ital of a reunited Germany.
But we have an interest, also,
in getting a settlement of the
whole German question be
fore there is in East Germany
a popular outbreak which
could lead to a great war.
To protect these interests
we need to regain the initia"
tive, and instead of reacting
to Khrushchev's actions we
need to compel him to react to
ours. There is a way to do
this. But it involves, as any
bold forward strategy does,
risks. The initiative can be re
gained by challenging Khrush
chev to show that he wiU in
fact permit the two German
governments to negotiate a
plan of German reunification,
He is always saying that this
is what he wants. But is he
prepared to go through with
it, if, instead of rejecting his
offer, we took him up on it?
WHAT are the risks of such
a move? Perhaps the
greatest risk, which may for
the time being be too great a
risk, is that it would damage
severely Dr. Adenauer's pres
tige in Germany. He has been
ardent in opposition to the
idea of a negotiation by the
two Germanys. But just under
the surface, the idea has wide
support in West Germany, ev
en in his own party, even in
his own government. Yet he is
almost certain to resist the
idea to the end, and the Unit
ed States is too deeply com
mitted to force such a change
of policy on the grand old
man.
Nevertheless, if there is any
other way of dealing with the
German question, which in
cludes Berlin, I wish some
body in authority would say
what it is. Everybody knows
that the two Germanys can
not now be integrated by the
old formula of free elections,
not only because the Kremlin
will not permit it but also be
cause neither of the two Ger
manys is willing to accept the
troubles which integration
would now cause.
'
THERE is reason to doubt
whether Russia, if it were
put up to her, would in fact
agree. If Russia does not
agree, we would at least have
the initiative and the prepon
derant moral influence in
Central Europe. If she did
agree, there is no reason to
suppose that the West Ger
mans, with their greater num
bers and greater wealth and
power, are incapable of nego
tiating successfully with the
East Germans.
Copyright 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Communications
Against Sales Tax
To the Editor: I can't help
but write to second the well
expressed opinions of Mr.
Glyndon Loomer of Rogue
River about sales taxes.
The sales tax is the most
unfair chastisement that can
be received by the working
man. The wage earner pays
the great majority of taxes
via the "pass on" method, and
the sales tax would be an
additional burden of no par
ticular value.
. What guarantee have we
that the sales tax would not
be in addition to, rather than
in place of, the income tax
or property taxes?
We have lived in the Port
land area for many years and
have seen the ' Washington
sales tax in action. I can say
very definitely that I don't
like it.
As for eliminating personal
property taxes. Why? For
what purpose? It seems to me
that owning property carries
with it the obligation to carry-
part of the load of local gov
ernment. Some of the tax load can
be reduced by eliminating the
"pork barrel" in government.
Matter of Fact
AN AIRLIFT WON'T WORK
Paris - An airlift, the ex
pensive but relatively easy
way out mat
saved Berlin
last time, will
surely not de
feat a renew
ed Berlin
blockade. .
That single
fact means
that the real,
the crycial,
ai,, xne truiy ser
ious decision about Berlin
was not taken by the grand
rally of Foreign Ministers of
the Western allies here in
Paris. It means that their
"decision" to defend Berlin
were, in reality, no more than
indications ot a lenaency to
take the right decision later
on. Nikita Khrushchev will
surely notice this important
distinction, even if nobody
else does.
The stark fact that there
is no easy way out of the Ber
lin crisis is what distinguishes
this round in the cold war
from all its predecessors, ex
cept Korea and Quemoy.
Even Quemoy, even Korea did
not demand the kind of ulti
mate and painful test of will
that the Berlin crisis seems
likely to demand. Radar jam
ming is the development that
blocks the escape-by-airlift
from the Berlin impasse. In
1948 the Soviet electronic in
dustry had not yet reached
the stage of producing effect
ive radar jamming devices.
Night and bad weather land
ings by the planes flying the
airlift were therefore entire
ly possible. By using the
ground control approach sys
tem, cargoes continued to be
landed in Berlin every three
or four minutes, even when
ceiling and visibility were
both close to ero:
IN the last 10 years, how
ever, the Soviet electronic
industry has entirely caught
up with the comparable West
ern industry, at any rate in
aU military requirements.
Some time ago,' powerful So
viet radar jamming mechan
isms were installed at four
sites surrounding Berlin. The
intention is obvious. Even if
the Soviet's East German pup
pets do not carry out their
blustering promises to send
up fighters against Western
aircraft flying to Berlin, the
landings will be radar-jammed.
There is no way to stop
or overcome the jamming,
either, except with well
placed A-bombs. ,
If an airlift is jammed, it
cannot really sustain Berlin,
unless very important new
technological breakthroughs
of a quiet unforeseen char
acter are achieved in the in
terim. The city has only three
airports, Templehof, Gatow,
and Tegel. Space is so limited
that even these three airports
cannot be used to the utter
most, because of the conges
tion of flight paths. Even in
summer, Berlin weather is
bad. In winter, the city, be
ing far to the north, has only
a few hours of daylight each
day. For these reasons an air
lift depending on landing car
goes only in daylight and
good weather cannot do the
job. And this is true despite
the fact that our new trans
port aircraft are very much
larger than the C-54s which
were the work horses of the
old airlift.
BERLIN has huge stocks - a
year's supply of coal and
six months or more of other
essential categories. A day
time, fair-weather airlift can
indeed extend the period be
fore Berlin's stocks' will be
finally exhausted. But 15
months from the beginning of
a strict siege is the current
maximum estimate, of the
period during . which Berlin
can be sustained by airlift if
the landings are jammed.
All this is so horribly im
portant ("horribly" is the
right word), precisely because
by no means all the Western
allies have faced the hard
facts of Berlin's changed situ
ation. After talking airlift in
a way that must have vastly
encouraged Khrushchev and
company, the American
policy-makers have now be-
With all the waste and dupli
cation in our government
agencies, how can we have
any but high taxes?
Let us all do a little clear
thinking. Clear thinking will
show that the sales tax is
not for the people of Oregon.
The voters of Oregon have
been turning down the sales
tax for as long as I can re
member. Let's keep at it.
Lauren Seymour,
311 No. Howard St.,
- Medford "
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By Joseph' Alsep
gun to admit that it will be
fatal to surrender any of Ber
lin's supply routes, on the
ground or in the air. They are
in fact talking about armed
convoys.
Yet the British are talking
airlift to this day. If the ob
vious objections are mention
ed, the British answer comes
straight from Mister Micaw
ber. It is said that something
will turn up in the technolo
gical domain or something
will turn up in negotiations
with the' Soviets, and so Ber
lin may stUl be saved before
the 15 months come to an end
and Berlin is starved into sub
jection. .
rpHE truth is, however, that
if the Western allies go
on talking airlift, Khrushchev
will press on with his block
ade scheme; and if the West
ern allies then take refuge
in an airlift, Khrushchev will
fold his hands across his belly
and smilingly wait for his
eventual victory. He knows
the operational factors as well
as anyone. He will conclude,
with reason, that the Western
allies will not make an H
bomb war when their airlift
fails, after they themselves
have failed the great initial
test of will at the beginning
of the blockade.
In truth, this expedient
which looks like an easy way
out is only a slow road to
eventual surrender. A very
wise leader in the councils of
the West has put the true sit
uation in a nutshell: "There is
no way to keep our commit
ment to the people of Berlin
except to be fully ready to
fight a general war for Ber
lin. But if the Soviets clearly
understand that we really are
ready to fight a general war
for Berlin, then we shall not
have to do so."
Once the easy way out is
seen to be no way out at all,
and the above-stated - prin
ciples are also accepted, real
istic discussion can begin
about details of tactics, both
political and military. Tactics
matter very much less than
the essential decision to meet
the first challenge at Berlin
without shiftiness, without
self-delusion, without the
smallest retreat." The Paris
meeting just concluded at
least gives grounds for hope
that this essential decision
will be taken in due course,
even if it has not been taken
here. One can only wait and
pray.
(Copyright 1958 New York
Herald Tribune Inc.)
Editorial Comment
INTERIM COMMITTEE
'DUCKS' ISSUE
To spur state action for pro
tection of roadside beauty
from being marred by bill
boards Sen. Neuberger intro
duced and Congress passed a
provision by which states
which conform to certain
standards respecting outdoor
signs along interstate high
ways will get one-half per
cent more of federal aid. The
Oregon legislative interim
committee when urged to
recommend appropriate ac
tion in the next Assembly
ducked the issue thus:
"Is is the opinion of the
committee that there is not
yet sufficient information
available upon which a proper
decision concerning legisla
tion in this regard could be
made. ' The committee feels
that present legislation is ade
quate, but should further
legislation be desired, it
recommends that a future in
terim committee study the
impact and cost of such re
quest." This committee not only
dodges the issue but seeks to
bury it for another two years.
The issue of billboard regu
lation has been threshed out
so often in the Oregon Legisla
ture that the subject is "old
hat" save to newer members.
The present legislation is
grossly inadequate: witness
the signboards along Baldock
freeway. As for "cost" the
Neuberger provision means
revenue to offset any cost for
expunging o f advertising
rights. When the new route
south to Albany was being
located, the property owners
themselves proposed to yield
such rights in the interest of
conserving the beauty of the
roadside.
The Oregon Roadside Coun
cil should not be daunted by
this rebuff. It should press the
issue anew, with the Neuber
ger provision as a lever. The
Statesman isn't unfriendly to
outdoor advertising; but
doesn't want it obscuring the
scenery, especially along our
major highways. - Oregon
Statesman, Salem.
Washington Report
By William
MIDDLE-ROADERS
London - Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan's ruling
Conservative party, which
continues to look stronger
than its Labor
opposition, is
depending on
a strictly mid
dle - road ap
proach to
maintain its
power.
This is made
plain in con
v e r s a t i ons
with top peo
ple in the government.
Indeed, there is a curiously
strong and unexampled par
allel between the political
views and techniques of the
Conservatives here and of the
controlling "moderate" Demo
crats at home. .
The next national election
here, under law, must be held
no later than the spring of
1959. It is in the power of the
majority party, however, to
call an earlier election ' at
whatever time it chooses.
Thus, the general view here
is that actually the Conserva
tives will order an election
this spring if Macmillan's ap
peal still seems on the up
curve.
IF The Conservatives win
again, the two great coun
tries of the West will be in
control of centrist and highly
professional politicians. For
in Washington it is fair to say
that the real operating power
in our government has largely
passed from the Eisenhower
White Nouse to the middling
Democrats who will run the
new Congress.
On various specific issues,
of course, there are differ
ences between these middle
road Democrats and the Mac
millan Conservatives here.
But even on specific issues
there is much in common.
Both sets of dominant poli
ticians, here and at home,
basically believe that a freer
and ever - enlarging world
trade is perhaps the best guar
antee for the future of the
West. .
Neither set is at all pre
pared to submit to Russian
clamors for a kind of atomic
disarmament that would leave
the West militarily weaker in
the net than the Soviet Union.
But both sets believe most
of all that the way to operate
politics is not to try to force
any absolutely clear division
among, the people on issues.
Rather they seek the favor
of what in both countries has
become the decisive middle
section of the voters.
. .
THE Macmillan government
is no more willing than
are the controlling Democrats
at home to make of politics a
William S.
White
Call at PERL'S - riOV .. .
I PI y"
'& I Christmas
KIM ' ART ,
Calendar '
FREE ' 1959
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone) .
it , '
Y'r 1
r s
FRIENDLY,
itffyfyP fal?
T4 7 ' ' &
' ' ';
t'JtZ
m
'Cifi V) t.
tirtriWiMtiftiiiliB li mt 1 m i
F:an.k g!
Perl akKi
S. Whit
straight-out contest between
"good" and "evil" - the guys
in the white hats against the
guys in the black hats, so to
speak. ' s .'.
Instead, this first truly en
trenched British Conservative
government since Winston
Churchill's retirement prefers
to make effective and toler
able policies rather' than
speeches of fighting ideology.
The government is carefully
cutting away into some of the
heretofore pro-Labor vote by
keeping just far enough to the
left in public welfare pro
grams not to become out of
date in public thinking.- It js
not interested in maintaining
old Tory ideas absolutely in
tact - as the Republicans dis
astrously tried to do in out
recent Congressional . elec
tions. '
On the other hand, this gov
ernment will not allow de
mands for more welfarism to
push it so far to the left as to
leave it trying to out-Labor
the Labor party.
WHAT is very odd about it
all is this: for some rea
son successful politics has
come to mean about the same
thing on both sides of the At
lantic. This is a practice' of
performing more or less in
the interests of a majority of
the people and of forgetting
all about the demands of the
extremes on left and right.v
Harold Macmillan in a way
symbolizes the declining aris
tocratic tradition in England.
All the same, this rather hand
some, quiet and extremely
savvy politician understands
the ruling force today in Brit
ish as well as in American
politics. This is not to sigh
for a past utterly gone and
also not to rush too heedless
ly to meet the opening fu
ture. (Copyright, 1958, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
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