Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 19, 1959, Image 4

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    Monday, Janaary 19, 19S9
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
MEDFORDtWTRIBUNB
"Everyone It Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP 2-6141
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
KERB GREY Advertising Manager
GEHAU) LATMAH, Business nigr
ERIC W ALLEN JR..
Managing Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor
DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
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1
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
Jan. 19. 1949 (Wednesday)
Medford's city council au
thorizes City Superintendent
Vernon Thorpe to call for
bids on a medium-intensity
lighting system for the main
runway at the airport.
Courtesy and good order,
with no signs of the recent
flareup between councilmen
and Mayor Tom Williams,
", mark a city council, meeting
in Ashland. '
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19, 1939 (Thursday)
The Medford school district
applies at city hall for a build
ing permit to construct a
$9,000 shop at the senior high
school.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Re
ports show there will be con
siderable rural building on
the Pacific coast the coming
spring. It is understood,, there
are several service . stations
with no rival straight across
the road."
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19, 1929 (Saturday)
The Rogue river fish war
bobs up again In the state
legislature.
s The mercury here drops to
14 degrees above, the coldest
of the year, with lots more
snow predicted for the moun
tains. 40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19, 1919 (Sunday)
Despite heavy rains this
month, the farmers complain
there still is a lack of water.
The Elks lodge plans to en
tertain returning soldiers at a
smoker.
50 YEARS AGO
Jan. 19, 1909 (Tuesday)
Will G. Steel heads a drive
for a government ' study of
Rogue river, fish life.
' The Medford Big Butte
.Recreation club plans a sum
mer colony on upper Butte
creek "far from the madden-
. ing crowd's ignoble strife."
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven er eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. How many pawns does a
chess set contain?
2. Who discovered the law
,of gravity?
, 3. How many pips are there
"on a face card in a pack of
; playing cards?
' 4. Name the South Pacific
-island that was colonized by
. mutineers from HMS Bounty.
5. Between which two of
!the Great Lakes is Niagara
Falls?
6. What men take the oath
of Hippocrates?
7. Who went to sea in a
. bowl?
8. Is a demoiselle a young
-girl, a bird, a dragonfly, a
'fish, or a tiger shark?
; 9. How many linear feet of
fencing are needed to enclose
. a field 10 feet long, if the
field is twice as long as it
;is wide?
10. What name is given
to the boundary line between
'.Pennsylvania on the one hand
;and Maryland and part of
; West Virginia, on the other?
Answers: 1. Sixteen. 2. Sir
- Isaac Newton. 3. Four. 4. Pit
cairns island. 5. Ontario and
Erie. 6. Physicians. 7. Three
wise men of Gotham.- 8. All
of them. 9. Thirty feet. 10.
Mason-Dixon line.
Massive Resistance Decisions
The Virginia Supreme Court rules today on
a whole package of state "massive resistance"
laws opposing racial integration in publit
schools. Included is one measure which closed
nine schools in Norfolk, Charlottesville, and
Front Royal, putting nearly 13,000 students out
of classes.
Negro schools as well as white schools in
Virginia could be closed, ironically enough, if the
court holds the "massive-resistance" laws un
constitutional, as it is expected to do. The Nor
folk City Council on Jan. 13 voted to cut off all
operating funds for classes beyond the sixth
grade as of Feb. 1.
IT WAS understood that the council resolution
would be vacated in the unlikely event that
both state and federal courts found constitution
al the Virginia package of laws opposing racial
integration. In any event, court action is promis
ed against the Norfolk move. If' allowed to stand,
it would affect 36 white and Negro schools, clos
ing classrooms to 7,173 children, 5,259 of them
Negro.
The council move was the logical outcome of
a Nov. 18 referendum in Norfolk. Citizens voted,
12,658, to 8,781, to advise the council not to peti
tion Gov. J. Lindsay Almond, Jr., to return six
schools to city authorities so they could be re
opened on a racially integrated basis.
The referendum was "infoi national" and
not binding on the council, but five of the seven
members had announced in advance of the bal
loting that they would accept the voters' verdict.
The vote to cut off school funds was 6 to 1.
,
QOV. ALMOND observed on Jan. 8 that if the
courts struck down the massive resistance
package, the state would still have some say in
the matter of school integration. If desegregation
in any community was not peaceful, Almond
said, he could invoke the police power "inherent
in the office of governor." v
Moreover, Almond has promised further leg
islative action after the courts have ruled. He in
tends to name a sizeable commission from the
state assembly to draft a program for the con
sideration of a special assembly session. The Vir
ginia legislature ordinarily meets only in even
numbered years. . . .. ....... ....
For all the violence and disorder in Little
Rock, Ark., the Deep South to a large extent
looks to Virginia for intellectual leadership in the
fight against integration and for that matter in
other civil rights issues. Virginia has been de
scribed as "an upper-South state with a Deep
South posture." ;
. ,
"7IRGINIA was the first state to close white
oiiuuis tu wmi;ii ltjuerai juages naa oraerea
admission of Negro students. Virginia, unlike
Arkansas, has had no racial integration in its
schools. And Virginia pupils seem to harbor a
deeper antagonism to integration than do those
of Arkansas. ................ : ,
In only one "hard-core" Virginia community
has an integration deadline been set. In Prince
Edward county, in the southern area with the
largest proportionate Negro population, integra
tion slated to start in 196511 years after the
original Supreme Court order on school desegre
gation, r ' ' : ' r : ; .
For one other reason the states of the Deep
South are watching the battle in Virginia. Most
of their own anti-integration statutes are based
on those devised in the Old Dominion. E.R.R.
Picketing and Mr. Hoffa
"We may have to enact something on picket
ing now because of how Jimmy Hoffa operates,"
some members of the new Congress are reported
as saying. Hoffa's teamsters' union had threaten
ed, in its now cancelled move to unionize New
York City policemen, to picket the various police
headquarters. ,
Hoffa knows only too well that when team
sters picket, they may well deter non-strikers
reluctant to cross any picket line. President Eis
enhower proposed in 1958 a ban on certain types
of organizational picketing. His proposal was
absent from the anti-corruption labor bill passed
by the Senate last year but rejected by the House.
The Norris-La Guardia act of 1932 in effect
legalizes, as far as federal jurisdiction is con
cerned, any and all picketing that's peaceful and
non-fraudulent. The Taft-Hartley act of 1947 left
the 1932 act alone in this respect while specify
ing certain labor practices as unfair.
.
MAJORITY of the
police power, have
that's illegitimate. Some
many pickets may stand
apart, picKets must march in line, whether threats
and epithets constitute "violence," etc.
Federal courts have upset state (and local)
enactments that invade the field covered bv fed
eral labor laws. Even so,
six to mree on dune 4, iy56, upheld a Wiscon
sin injunction against mass picketing, violence
and coercion in the Kohler strike. Said the major-
iiy . j. ne xctcb mai a umun commits a ieaerai un
fair practice (should not) . prevent a state from
taKing steps to stop violence." E.R.R.
states, relvinjr on their
laws aimed nr. nirVptino-
state laws specify how
at an entrance, how far
the Supreme Court by
Dennis the
'look mrntr vewwurs i cm
Matter of Fact
POLITICAL DARWINISM
Washington - By now, a
great many Americans have
seen Anastas Mikoyan in ac
tion and at
close range.
Most have
been deeply
impressed;
but it is a safe
bet that very
few have
given much
t h o u g ht to
what this man
ii j
Jnsepn Alsop reaiiy xa.
The point is not that Miko
yan has blood on his hands,
as the Hungarian refugee
pickets have justifiably
shouted at him. Nowadays, in
the comfortable Western so
cieties, people forget that
quite ! high-minded persons
have frequently shed oceans
of innocent blood, with per
fect confidence that they
were doing the right thing.
Agricola is remembered as
the model Roman pro-consul.
Yet Agricola's" own son-in-law,
the historian Tacitus,
makes a British rebel chief
describe Agricola's suppres
sion of the second British re
bellion in the terrible words:
"(The Romans) make a soli
tude and call it peace." Queen
Victoria is certainly consider
ered a model British mon
arch only extreme in her
preudery and propriety. But
Queen Victoria positively
howled for blood and then
more blood when her Indian
subjects indulged in mutiny.
QUITE possibly, the masters
of the Kremlin really be
lieved they were massacring
the Hungarians "for their
own good," just as Queen Vic
toria believed that downing
the mutiny in blood was for
India's good. But even if Mi
koyan cherished this ma
cabre but comforting belief,
the real point about this man
is quite different. After the
French revolution someone
asked the . cleric-politician,
the Abbe Sieyes, what he had
done during the terror; and
he replied, "Ah, Monsieur, I
survived." Surviv a I v was,
Sieyes' point, and survival is
Mikoyan's point. But how in
finitely more Mikoyan has
survived! , ," -
The October revolution
revolution and its accompany
ing terror; the civil war that
came after; the confused, im
poverished, risky years be
fore the Five Year Plans; the
Stalin purges that literally
decimated the Soviet Commu
nist Party; the grim war pe
riod, the last years of Stalin's
growing paranoia; the time of
deadly maneuvering . after
Stalin's death; and then
triumphant Nikita Khrush
chev's brisk purge of all his
former colleagues all this
Mikoyan, and Mikoyan alone,
has managed to survive.
" Death by shooting, death by
poison, death by . sheer , ex
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
TV TECHNICIAN sought out the top heart specialist in town
and ordered a complete check-up. "You're in fine shape,"
the specialist assured him at its conclusion but that was be
fore the technician got his
bilL It was for $500. "Cripes,
doc," wailed the technician,
"I'm just a poor working
man. I haven''' got money
like that"
The understanding spe
cialist lowered his bill $50
at a time, but when the pa
tient still protested inability
to pay even $100, the spe
cialist lost his temper. "You
must have known a man in
my position charges high
fees," he observed. "Why
did you seek me out in the
first place?"
"When it's a question of my health," explained the patient
defiantly, "money is absolutely no object."
"Tell me Master Goober," ordered the teacher, "whether the fol
lowing statement is true or false: from the skunk we get fur."
"True," snapped Master Goober. "Aa fur as possible."
C X8S3. by Bennett Cert Distributed by King geatttret Syndicate.
Menace
get oh my simsuarimw
By Joseph Alsop
haustion, or the living death
of exile, have overtaken all
those others who once ran
equal with Mikoyan and
Khrushchev in the great survival-race.
At the end, only
Mikoyan still stands next to
Khrushchev on the pinnacles
of power.
INFINITE prudence, infinite
1 powers of calculation, in
finite ruthlessness, this man
must surely possess. But he
must possess other qualities
as well; Khrushchev himself
has recently explained that
the real reason for getting rid
of the unfortunate Bulganin
was simply his lack of ability.
With tears in his eyes, he has
described how B u 1 g a nin
brought the news of the old
est ; Khrushchev boy's death
in the war. He' has declared
his affection for his fallen
comrade. But, he has said,
Bulganin was not up to his
job; so he had to go.' Com
petent Western observers be
lieve that this is not pure
eyewash, either. 1
Of course, Bulganin's flirta
tion with the "anti-party
group" also had a great deal
to do with his fall from
power. Yet in this curious
story of Khrushchev and Bul
ganin, there is a kernel of
vital truth. Besides the knack
of finding a safe way through
dark repeated nights of the
long knives, a Soviet leader
needs the very greatest ability
in order to survive inde
finitely in the cruel competi
tion of the Kremlin. And
those who have met Mikoyan
judge him to be one of the
ablest and most coldly intel
ligent men one could
imagine.
ALL THIS provides what
Sen. ; Vandenberg used to
call "a vivid contemplation,"
if only because the. leaders of
the free societies are not re
auired to pass such terrible
tests. The free leaders can
reach and remain on the pin
nacles of power, without be
ing cold, hard, calculating,
ruthless, and sometimes with
out possessing conspicious
ability and intellectual capa
city. ; ' :- -:v '
Without mentioning Amer
icans, Stanley Baldwin and
Neville Chamberlain are
proof enough that the free
societies' system of choosing
their leaders can sometimes
be very risky indeed. The
counterweight is the free peo
ples themselves, whose cour
age and common sense will
eventually rebel against weak
leadership, as the British peo
ple finally rebelled against
Chamberlain. Or rather, this
used to be the counterweight,
before a vast system of gov
ernmental secrecies began to
conceal from the free peoples
the ugly facts that might
justify rebellion.
(c) 1959 New York
Herald Tribunte Inc.
Stop Me
FBI Chief Not Overjoyed at Proposal
To Use Agency For Anti-Bombing Work
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington-OJPD-FBI Direc
tor J. Edgar Hoover will not
be overjoyed by a proposal
now awaiting
Senate com
mittee consid
eration. This bill is
No. S. 73 in
troduced 81 Mk? I jointly Dy id
I Senators rep
resenting both
parties. Its
- i a
.yle C. Wilson prime O D J e c-
tive is to loose the FBI against
the bombers of schools and
places of worship and against
other bomb tossers motivated
by race hate and the intimi
dation of minorities.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of
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.
Our Responsibility
To the Editor:, I have been
reading with interest letters
written to you in regard to
the county dog pound. I feel
that I must add something.
During the warm weather we
had in September, I drove
out to the pound looking for
a puppy for my. little boy.
The place was a mess-hot,
dirty, smelly, crowded. The
water containers had been
tipped over, hence there was
no water to drink. Really, it
was pitiful.
I agree that the job the
Dog Control Board does is a
big one and thankless, but
since we have domesticated
dogs, w e should not treat
them in this manner. We have
a responsibility to our ani
mals as well as to mankind.
Evelyn Kreisman,
111 Bush st., Ashland
"Sharp Politics"
To the Editor: As state
chairman of the Democratic
party, I should like to make
the observation that Gover
nor Hatfield's inaugural ad
dress urged the legislature
both to reduce taxes and to
provide funds for new spend
ing programs such as a voca
tional institution in Pftrtland
and emergency agriculture re
lief. He also would make ap
pointive by him. virtually all
state offices presently oc
cupied by elected Democrats.
The Governor urged no
fewer than three specific tax
reforms, all of which would
cost the state or local govern
ments substantial '? revenues.
Then he would offer tempt
ing programs that will cost a
good deal of revenue to put
into effect. At the same time,
he stressed economy, gov
ernment - without specifying
where the economies should
take place.
Nearly all ' state revenues
go for four major purposes
(1) basic school support (2)
higher education (3) welfare
and old-age assistance (4)
state institutions such as Fair
view and prisons. If eco
nomies are to amount to any
thing except lip-service, they
must occur in these areas or
merely be trivial. Yet Hat
field actually , has criticized
ex-Governor Bob Holmes for
reducing the higher educa
tional budget. If Governor
Hatfield wants to advocate
more spending, he at least
ought to tell us where the
money will come from. In
stead he actually proposes re
ducing state revenue.
Governor Hatfield's in
augural address was an ex
tension of his successful cam
paign for office - less state
revenue and more state pro
grams calling for spending.
No politician in history has
yet devised a way to collect
less taxes and spend more
money. Governor Hatfield
evidently wants to shift to
the Democratic legislature the
responsibility for keeping our
state on an even keel, while
he tells the voters he sought
to reduce their taxes and in
crease their benefits from
state government.
It's sharp politics - if he
can get away with it. But it
isn't statesmanship.
Dave Epps
State Chairman,
Democratic Party
of Oregon
429 Governor Bldg.
Portland 4, Ore.
TODAY
In Oregon History
(A Centennial Feature)
JANUARY 19 1892
The January 19, 1892
edition of the Oregonian
rolled off a new double
supplement stereotype per
fecting press, in the base
ment of its not yet finish
ed fireproof nine - story
building at the corner of
Alder and Sixth, in Portland.
The bill is so drafted, how
ever, that it would apply
equally against bomb throw
ing in labor disputes-persuasion
by bombing as it some
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
HARD LINE SOFTENS
Washington - The hard line
so long maintained toward
the Soviet Union over Ger
many is being
i m m e n sely
soft ened be
fore the very
eyes of all
who care to
look at the
plain, if not
overly adver
tised facts.
" Before this.
WWniSS- - of course, we
have seen tentative attitudes
of U.S. concession toward
Moscow abruptly arrested by
the protests of old Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer of West
Germany. And this conceiv
ably could happen again.
If, however, Adenauer, is
not able again to turn our
(-course back to the old tougn
position-and he is not likely
to be able to-this may be
said: we are entering a great
turning in the 12th year of
the cold war. This is one of
those one-man's-meat-is-anoth-
er-man's-poison things. What
in one perfectly honorable
view is a valid approach to a
solution to a dangerous area
of tension is in another per
fectly honorable view simply
appeasement.
THIS correspondent does not
pretend to be wise enough
to know which view is cor
rect here. This whole business
is one of the most wretched
and enigmatic dilemmas in re
corded history. But it is upon
one or another of these things
-at best a fateful relaxation
of a firm policy, at worst the
first step toward soft surrender-that
we are embarking..
This is the meaning of Sec
retary of State Dulles' decla
ration that free elections are
not the "only method" for a
reunification of Communist
East Germany and free West
Germany, Repeatedly hereto
fore we had proclaimed that
free elections lay at the heart
of any plan of reunification.
So settled was this theme that
only three, days before Mr.
Dulles' change of front our
British allies had described
free elections as an "indis
pensable prerequisite." (The
embarrassed British have now
dropped this language.)
Why has the United States
shifted ground so much? (And
that this shift has occurred is
quite certain, even though
from time to time there are
official indications to the con
trary and some tactical zig
ging and zagging.)
rpHE Eisenhower Adminis-
- tration will not concede
that the obvious propaganda
success of Soviet Deputy
Prime Minister Anastas Mi
koyan's tour of . this country
has been a factor. The Ad
ministration certainly would
never agree that budget-balancing
policies limiting our
military preparations have
been a factor. Nevertheless,
both probably have been.
At any rate, here are some
other considerations that are
authoritatively conceded to be
involved in our official rea
soning: 1, From the viewpoint of
our highest aim for Germany
- a - truly reunited country
bound up in the modern com
plex of Western Europe - a
reunification by any valid
means would be good enough.
This might be accomplished,
it is suggested, simply by
Man Cfed Fofowng
Collision in City
Dewey Alfred Penrod,
route 1, box 411, Talent, was
cited by Medford police fol
lowing an accident Friday for
failure to yield the right of
way and not having an oper
ator's license on his person.
His pickup truck and a car
driven by Miss Marilou N.
Garner, 619 East Main st.,
Medford, collided at the inter
section of 8th and Fir sts., Fri
day afternoon. No injuries
were reported. Miss Garner,
county 4-H agent, was driving
a state car at the time of the
accident.
How To Held
FALSE TEETH
More Firmly in Place
Do your false teeth annoy and em
barrass by slipping, dropping or wob
bling when you eat. laugh or talk?
Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on
your plates. This alkaline (non-acid)
powder holds false teeth more firmly
and more comfortably. No gummy,
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Does not
sour. Checks "plate odor"' (denture
breath) . Get FASTEETH today M
any drug counter.
times is called. Some leaders
of organized labor will like
this bill even less than will
Hoover. Those who especially
will not like it are the leaders
S. WHITE
agreements (with no popular
voting at all) between the
East and West German re
gimes. These would be back
ed up by some exchange of
Russian and American or Al
lied guarantees.
2. We will, at all events,
demand "real" reunification,
with the restoration of Berlin
as a genuine national capital.
It is said that we would not,
for illustration, accept any
part of a Russian notion for a
"reunification" that actually
would leave East Germany as
East Germany and West Ger
many as West Germany with
some thin, alleged link of
"federation" running be
tween them. .
3. We are prepared to ac
knowledge that the Russians-
and others, too-have a real
basis for their military fear of
a revived Germany. Thus, we
would be willing to go pretty
far toward guaranteeing -and
pressuring Germany to
guarantee as one of the prices
of reunification - . that the
new Germany would not de
velop aggressive mil itary
forces This might be a tall or
der to enforce, remembering
the past - but there it is.
.
TF GERMANY did become
reunited she would have to
be left free to join "either our
Western alliance, the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization,
or the Soviet bloc alliance,
the Warsaw Pact It is our
deep assumption, of course,
that the Germans would go
our way. If they did not, the
result would be unimaginable
disaster to all the West-but
we feel certain, on the point.
The official argument for a
new emerging policy, ' in
short, is that it would: (a) Re
lieve legitimate Russian fears
of a militarily restored-Ger
many, (b) Put the- country
back together again in cir
cumstances assuring that the
Germans would not then turn
against us. (c) File away the
sharpest area of friction be
tween Russia and the West
d) Thus liquidate the crisis
over Berlin, from which the
Russians are attempting "to
drive our troops.
What happens, in all this to
the old democratic concept of
free elections? It would be an
obvious casualty-about which
we would not care to talk
much.
(Copyright, 1959. by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Hear Your
FAVORITE HYMNS
on
KM ED
Every Sunday, 10:35 a.m.
Sung by
"Tennessee Ernie" Ford
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
Frank
Perl taffi
... ....
and mayhem to recruit union
members.
Hoover certainly is no front
man tor bombers. If he is
summoned to testify before a
Senate committee, however,
he is likely to express doubts
about the proposed - legisla
tion. Hoover is chary of the
FBI becoming a national po
lice force, of the FBI assum
ing responsibilities which
properly belong to local law
enforcement and of the FBI
ever being put in the position
of supervising or checking on
local law enforcement agen
cies. Hoover's doubts, if ex
pressed, may be sufficient to
defeat this bill. Organized la
bor more likely than not will
go all out against it even
though all unions do not arm
their organizers with fire
bombs and explosives. A great
many members of the new
Congress were elected with
substantial labor support, al
most all of them Democrats.
If organized labor puts the
pressure on them to keep the
FBI off the necks of labor
goons, these Democratic con
gressmen with obligations to
labor union treasuries are
more likely to explain a vote
against the bill in terms of
Hoover's judgment than in
terms of any obligation to
vote the labor party line.
Would Define Crime
The bill would reach labor
violence by bombing by its
definition of a federal crime.
This new federal felony
would be a transport across
state lines or to possess any
explosive with "the intent or
knowledge that it will be used
to . damage or destroy any
building . or other personal
property for the purpose of
interfering with its use for
educational, religious, chari
table, residential, business or
civic objectives or of intimi
dating any person pursuing
such objectives."
The, key language with re
spect to labor violence is "res
idential, business, or civic ob
jectives or of intimidating any
person pursuing such objec
tives." The penalties , pro
posed are severe.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R.
N.Y.) one of the sponsors, told
United Press International
that the bill clearly could be
used against labor hoodlums.
Now will come the pressure
of organized labor to get that
language out of the bill fol
lowed by the contortions of
1 a b o r-oriented congressmen
to vote it out without appear
ing to cast a vote in favor of
bomb tossing as a union tech
nique. The McClellan committee
has substantial evidence of
bomb tossing by labor goons
to spread unionism among the
unorganized."
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oi unions wnicn utilize vio
lence such as bombings, arson
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