MATL TWBUWI, M.iforJ, Or.
Tuesday, Dec 1, 1959
T.vTjonm ta Southern Oregon
Rad Tht tflmil Tribune"
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Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30. 40
and 50 years ego.
10 YEARS AGO
Dec 1, 1949 (Thursday)
John W. Taylor will open
drutr store at . historic old
Marble Corner in Jackson
ville.
i San Francisco 49ers, after
nulline first strike in pro-foot
ball history, decide to play
anyway. ...
20 YEARS AGO . ' .
Dec 1. 1939 (Friday) v
District Attorney Thomas E.
Dewey of New York formally
enters campaign for Republi
can presidential nomination.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Couple
of old-fashioned kids learning
to smoke cigarettes, set fire to
the barn instead of smacking
a phone pole with ths family
auto." . ""' ....
30 YEARS AGO
3Dec 1. 1929 (Friday)
Old Dollarhide stage station
in Siskiyous destroyed by fire
Drive re-opened for railroad
to Crescent City.
40 YEARS AGO
Dec 1, 1919 (Monday)
Local dairies adopt . rule
that no milk will be delivered
unless customer leaves empty
bottles on porch.
.Good highway is urged for
Crater Lake to boost tourist
travel.
SO YEARS AGO '
Dec. 1, 1909 (Wednesday)
An average of 75 letters
day are pouring into the Com
mercial club, inquiring about
apple opportunities in Rogue
valley.
Former Medford city re
corder owes city $115.88 for
shortages, council decides.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina av ten ttmd 1 luaerioff
seven or eight it excellent; five r
SIX is good.
1. What are adult male
seals called?
2. What insect is the par
ticular enemy of cotton?
3. Which President of the
United States was nicknamed
"The Great Engineer"?
4. What was the name of
the Scottish economist, author
of "Wealth of Nations"?
5. What three little animals
lost their mittens?
6. "Pelican State" is a nick
name for which State of the
Union?
7. Would you say that Co
lumbus, Akron, or Youngs
town is the industrial center
of the nation's rubber indus
try? 8. Correct the following:
"The aviator saw the lake
while flying."
9. Which disciple baptised
Jesus?
10. Is a mauser a spotted
dog, a magazine rifle, or an
undertaker?
Answers: 1. Built. 2. Boll
weevil. 3. Herbert Hoover. 4.
Adam Smith. 5. Kittens. 6.
Louisiana. 7, Akron. 8. "The
aviator, while flying, saw the
lake." 9. None. (John the Bap
tist was not a disciple.) 10.
Magazine rifle.
DUKE ENDS VISIT
Marham. England-UPD-The
Duke of Edinburgh returned
to England Monday from a
six-day visit to the new Af
rican Republic of Ghana. -
I S2
Medford s Champions
To the athletes under his supervision, a form
er Medford coach stressed this: "There's just a
small difference between a competitor and a
champion Desire!"
That the Medford and St. Mary's High school
football teams possessed this all-important qual
ity was evidenced time and again on the gridiron
through the fall. The trait stands out, also, in
the season's end results. For the Black Tornado
and the Crusader aggregations reaped for this
town and area unnrecedented laurels with Ore
gon diadems in their respective classes, A-l and B.
A SCANNING of Oregon School Activities as
sociation records discloses that not before in
the athletic histoiy of the state have schools from
the same city captured state championships in
the same sport in the same year.
State titles are not new to Medford high but,
after the frustrations in the 15 years since the
last one in football, 1959 is indeed a banner
season. '. .
For St. Mary's this has been its greatest year
in sports. Its grid co-championship and its mantle
last spring in track are its first state honors in
athletics.
'
THE achievement of these two teams has
brought to Medford and the Rogue valley
much fame and recognition. Their success has
come through three long hard months of work.
It takes diligent application in practice to pro
duce the teamwork and finesse which makes a
winner.
For their efforts, for the entertainment they've
provided, and for the distinction they've brought
to Medford, the football athletes of both schools
richly deserve high praise and much congratula
tion now, and strong
R.D.J. .
Food-Chemical
In commenting recently about the great cran
berry farce of 1959 we made two points:
1. That the to-do was greatly overdone, and
resulted from a lack of coordination between gov
ernmental agencies charged with responsibility
for the national health,
2. That, despite this,
if more attention were, as
danger to the nation's health from chemicals used
as weeaicides, pesticides, herbicides and food ad'
ditives a field too much neglected.
"UR wish (No. 2) apparently is to be granted.
w A United Press International story from
Washington the other day reported :
. "The agriculture department's research policy com
. mittee has urged immediate expansion of government
research on pesticides.
"The advisory group's recommendation came on the
heels of the nationwide scare involving a chemical resi
due in cranberries ...
"The research policy group , . . made no reference
to the cranberry episode in its report. But it said there
were major problems in the use of fertilizers, pesti
cides, hormones, antibiotics, feed additives, plant
growth regulators, and drugs.
"The committee said modern farming needs these
. chemicals and without them, farmers couldn't supply
. consumers with enough food and fiber to maintain this
country's high standard of living.,
"Agriculture department scientists told the com
. mittee they're already at work on several new ap
. proaches to the problem of fighting animal and plant
pests." .
THIS is good news.
in 111.10 aica, iuuvciii iiao uccji muuniing
over a period of years over the indiscriminate use
of chemicals, which do so much to improve the
quality and quantity of
crops, too, but the effect
either bad, or unknown.
Mankind's success in
life-form on this planet resulted, first, in his abili
ty to adapt to his environment, and second, his
ability to change his environment to suit him.
But let us be sure that
off in the meantime either with, nuclear weap
ons, radioactive fallout, or by poisons in his food
supplies. E.A.
Four More
On November 11 last
columns that the whooping crane population of
29, which had returned to tie Arkansas National
Wildlife Refuge in Texas, left five of the nearly
extinct birds 'unreported.
Now, thanks to the National Wildlife Feder
ation, we can report that
to 33, including two babies.
Ihis means that four
finally made the dangerous flight south in safety,
and that the flock is gradually ever so grad
ually increasing. Only one member is missing
and presumed dead.
THE whooping crane, tallest bird native to the
. North American continent, has been waging
a struggle against extintion for the past two decades.
This fall's news, indicating- the flock is one
(1) larger than it was this
brighter hope that the birds may, indeed, survive.
lhe birds are big, beautiful, slow, vulnerable
o. enemies (including humans with guns) and
slow at reproducing.
Its still touch-and-go
cranes. E.A.
support in the future.
Study Needed
and
it would all be worth it
a result, focused on the
the pear crop, and other
of which on humans is
becoming the dominant
he doesn t kill himself
Cranes
it was reported in these
the count has gone up
of the missing adults
sprine. lends a faintlv
with the whooping
v
Dennis the Menace
r i is mwi rA
AttO HE NOT ONLY REFUSED TO SINS, BUT HE TOLD MS
IF I. WANTED MUSIC. I COULD BUY" A fAffOl' ;
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name ana' address of the writer,
althouqh under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initia'
for publication is permissible. The
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed .400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often
Championship Game
To the Editor: What a won
derful state championship
game! If you couldn't attend
you missed one of the best
games this year. I felt such
pride when our team came
trotting on the field. You
could feel the vitality of our
team like static electricity,
and they played a great game
under difficult circumstances.
The sportsmanship sh'own was
wonderful.
Medford's band, majorettes
and pep group were really
spectacular . with red uni
forms, black belts and White
trim. Everyone watching
could certainly see why they
are invited, to play at the out
of state games. Half time they
displayed real precision in the
different formations, such as
the lighted star, Santa's
sleigh and to me the very
prettiest, the lighted Christ
mas tree with the brass sec
tion forming the top of the
tree. If you could describe the
complete group, from players
to pep groups, in a few words
it would be "Snap-Crackle-Pop."
Only one thing dampened
our spirits and we still don't
understand how it could hap
pen, especially in a high
school game, but the referees
seemed definitely biased to us
and a great majority of the
spectators. Several people who
were impartial and only com'
ing to see a great game re
marked on this and left with
a great respect for our Med
ford boys, who displayed such
sportsmanship in spite of this.
For details ask any person
who attended the game.
Also the reserve tickets in
Medford were sold out before
we could obtain ours so we
took our chances on buying
ours at the game. At 6:15 pjn,
we bought them at the stadi
um and they were excellent
seats, halfway -up and right
on the 50 yard line, numbers
1-2-3 in from the end. The
same thing happened to the
people behind us. I heard peo
ple passing by to go far to the
side and almost to the top re
mark about the rickets sent to
Medford being very inferior.
Is this possible, or were they
only disgruntled remarks?
I'd like some comment from
others who attended the game.
Just for the record I lived
in Portland and went to grade
school and high school there,
so I'm not trying to cast
shadows on Portland, only for
future games played there I'd
like to know the facts.
Mrs. W. W. Brawn
507 Kenwood
Medford
Not Just Noise -
To the Editor: Thank you,
Mr. McCabe, for bringing up
the subject of radio music.
For a long time I've been de
bating whether or not to write
the local stations a mad letter
for apparently considering all
housewives capable of enjoy
ing onlv the lowest type of
music. At least I presume the
daytime programs are direct
ed mostly to housewives, and
rock n' roll with other cheap
forms of popular music are
about all I can find.
However, I hit on an idea
which announcers seem to ap
preciate. They played some
thing I liked the other day, so
I called the station and told
them how much I enjoyed it.
It may get us nowhere, as E.A.
says, but at least it s the posi
tive approach.
As for taste, I agree with
Mr. Editor that no one can dic
tate for all. Personally, I could
enjoy some -of Mr. McCabe's
country music, and a lot of
semi-classical. However, when
it comes to rock 'n' roll and
much of the popular music, I
find it impossible to be toler
ant of others' tastes and just
switch off the radio. I, too,
Maii Tribune reserves the right tc
inu cae.
would like to see the results of
a poll.
This is why I'd like to hear
the main sound of radio
changed: Why grieve as a na
tion over the divorce rate, and
then teach our young people
to sing about illicit love?
Teenagers have a tough
enough time finding the right
road out of the modern maze
without feeding their minds
with more confusion.
Ask their teachers who
struggle daily to develop in
them habits of right thinking
carefulness, punctuality, and
diligence, if let-loose-and-do-
what-you-feel-like music is
helping them in their uphill
job. Music is for relaxation
and recreation, yes, but lets'
make it re-creation and not
WRECKreation. Let's make
the voice of our nation (the
predominance of what we put
out on radio and TV) say and
sing what we really believe
and not just be the noise of
our frustrations.
- Louise Rea -1340
Ross Lane
Medford.
Physical Limitations
. To the Editor: In the
"Strange As It Seems" depart
ment of Sunday's "Tribune" I
noticed the item concerning
tests conducted by the depart
ment of space medicine,
wherein cats subjected to a
condition of weightlessness
lose their postural righting re
flex.
As can be readily determin
ed by simple analysis of the
properties of all flesh, we find
it to be composed of the same
elements that are found in the
earth, which nourish, repair
and sustain it.
In practice we also find the
forces of gravity, radiation,
extremes of atmospheric pres
sure, heat and cold also affect
the animal body, and though
limits of these to which the
body can adjust are not clear
ly defined, each individual
body has its limit of tolerance
The record states that the
Creator formed man "Of the
dust of the ground," and again,
that he should "Have domin
ion over the fish of the sea,
and over the fowl of the air,
and over every living thing
that moves upon the earth."
These are positive statements
concerning man's physical
composition and dominion.
Man's dominion is clearly
defined; his ambitions are not.
Perhaps the most striking ex
ample of man's ambition, and
how his Creator dealt with i.t,
can be found in the first nine
verses of chapter 11 of the
Book of Genesis, to quote in
part: "Let us build us a city
and a tower, whose top may
reach unto heaven ..."
There is no point in moral
izing; even if . there were I
would not be qualified. But let
us reason on these things and
not be unduly disappointed
when our most sftnbitious ef
fort to date (namely space
travel) fails, simply by reason
of our physical limitations.
Howard O. Work
Star Route,
Selma, Ore.
'Payola' Counsel
Sets Conference
New' York-IUPD-Robert W.
Lishman. ehief counsel of the
House subcommittee investi
gating "payola," planned to
confer here today with staff
investigators.
A subcommittee spokesman
said Lishman probably would
return to Washington tonight-.
The subcommittee staff and
the New York district at
tonorney's office both are in
vestieatinff "Davola " the tprm
used to describe direct or in
direct payments to disc jock
eys and others who plug cer
tain songs and records.
Matter of Fact
By Joseph AIsop
ABOVE THE
CLOUDS-DWELLERS
Washington-In ancient Ja
pan, the Emperor and his
courtiers were sometimes call
ed the "Above
the clouds
dwellers", to
d e note their
high remote
ness from the
. coarse r e ali
i ties of every
n..
flk Pnrase nicely
U ' Jr.. XJ describes the
Joi.ph Aisop well-meaning,
intelligent and often quite
highly placed persons who ad
vocate a new American ap
proach to Communist fchina
at this time.
This much, at least, needs,
to be said as a kind of final
footnote to the long bout of
inquiry across the Pacific
.which this reporter has just
completed. It needs to be said,
particularly, because of the
signs that some leading Demo
crats, such as Adlai Stevenson
and even the chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Senator William
Fulbright of Arkansas, are
tending towards open advo
cacy of a new approach to
Communist China.
At the b'ehest of Senator
Fulbright for instance, a San
Francisco public relations
firm, Conlon Associates, was
somewhat oddly assigned to
review our Asian policy. The
just-published Conlon Associ
ates report does not go the
Whole hog. There is no call
for recognition of the Chinese
Communists and their admis
sion to the United Nations,
but the report proposes a
policy of "exploration and
negotiation" as the next best
ON THE SPOT, meanwhile,
the best opinion is now
just about unanimous that the
circumstances could not be
less favorable for any change
at all in the American policy
towards the Chinese Com
munists. "Among the very
large group of extremely able
Englishmen and Americans
who study Communist China
from the. vantage point of
Hong Kong, there are many
who disapproved of .the Amer
ican China policy when it was
adopted. Among the English
business leaders in Hong
Kong, several even played a
leading role in persuading
London to recognize -the
Peking government without
waiting for Washington.
Bv no means all these men
who disapproved of our China
policy when it was adopted
have been converted to the
view that it . was the right
Dolicv in the first instance
Quite a number still feel that
it would have been better for
the United States to extend de
facto recognition to Peking
10 years ago. But all of these
men, or at least au oi mem
known to this reporter be
lieve that nothing will be
gained, and a great deal will
he lost, bv anv softening of
the American attitude towards
the Chinese Communists at
this- time.
fTHE REASON for this opin-
A ion is quite simple. The
Chinese Communists have
now entered a phase of build
ine ferocious Stalinism, all
their energies are now con
centrated on building mui
tarv - industrial power on a
foundation of their peoples
misery while this grim experi
ment wholly preoccupies
them, there is nothing to be
done with them. In particular,
there is no -way at all to ne
gotiate with them, about the
problem of the Formosa Strait
or any other outstanding prob
lem. '
In their . present mood, at
once neurotically suspicious
and paranoiacally arrogant,
the mastesr of Peking would
at once greet the smallest
feeler from Washington as. a
sign of weakness and admis
sion of defeat. The risks that
the advocates of a new ap
proach desire to minimize
would in fact be increased.
For if they thought they de-
teciea signs oi wwiuirai m
h e American government,
Mae Tse-tung and his col
leagues would only be em
boldened to commit further
aggressive acts.
The idea that these ruthless
men. in their present mood,
can be molified or tamed by
'exploration and negotiation,
or by American recognition,
or by an invitation to join
the U.N., is on a par with a
scheme for taming a hungry
tiger by putting a baby in the
case with it. By the same
token, this kind of misguided
ttemDt to tame or mollify
the masters of Peking win not
merelv do positive harm in
Peking. It will also convey
an impression of American
weakness and retreat to all
the millions of Asians who
now fear the Chinese Com
munists, including even the
Indians who go on prating in
th
ie opposite sense.
w
HILE CHINA'S agony con
tinues, in short, no new
How Much Longer NATO Can
Be Held Together is Questioned
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
How much longer can NATO
be held together?
Tt's a real Question, and one
that President
Eisen h o w e r
must ponder
in the coming
d a y s aS he
moves along
the route of
of his 11-na-tion
good will
tour toward a
western s u m-
Phii Kewsom mit meeting
in Paris on Dec. 19.
The North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, put together in
the Spring of 1949 as the
backbone of Western defenses
against Communist expan
sion, is getting tattered.
Last week, a powerful
newspaper voice in Britain,
Lord Beaverbrook's Daily
Express, said editorially
"Britain would be well ad
vised to move out of NATO
altogether."
On a different note, but
pointing up current NATO
difficulties in fulfilling its
assigned task, . was a state
ment by French Air Force
Gen. Jean Valluy, NATO
commander in central Eur
ope. In event of Soviet attack,
he said, NATO would find its
Belgian and Dutch troops
"unusable" and its French
forces all in Algeria.
Drummond
(Walter Lippmin is again
reports from Washington in his
Washington - The anxious
question in the minds of
many Republican leaders' to
day is whether Vice President
Nixon and Gov. Rockefeller
can escape getting into a devi
sive, lacerating, mutually be
littling, personal battle.
Part of the answer and it
is reassuring - is that neither
of the two principals, if I am
correctly informed, wish or
intend to get into a disparag
ing, name-calling campaign
designed to undercut each
other's stature.
The other part of the an
swer - and it is far from re
assuring - is that already
some of the active supporters
of each are trying to foment
a feud between Nixon and
Rockefeller and to goad them
into hitting the other below
the belt.
. There are two good reasbns
why the Vice President and
the Governor themselves
draw away from any such
tactics. One is that on the ba
sis of their intimate associa
tion during the first Eisen
hower term, they developed
a high regard and esteem for
each other. RockefeUer was
often a "minority" adviser in
the Whie House staff but he
found Nixon on his side more
often than any other member
of the Cabinet. But apart
from considerable admiration
for each other, they also real
ize that if they try to cut
each other down to size, they
are likely to end up convinc
ing too many voters that both
are undersize for the Presi
dency. If there is to be a real
Nixon-Rockefeller contest,
what each wants is to use it
to help make the Republican
nomination worth having,
that, is, to improve the pros
pects of election.
ROCKEFELLER has twice
shown that he is not dis
posed to be pressured into
disparagement of Nixon.
When a purposeful reporter
asked him to comment on the
"facts," as the reporter put
it, that Nixon had said Rocke
feller would not have advo
cated resuming nuclear tests
if he knew what he was talk
ing about, the Governor cor
rected the reporter's state
ment, pointed out that Nixon
had suggesed that Rockefeller
did not have all the facts and
agreed that, as a Governor,
he might not have had all
the facts. Rockefeller could
easily have been goaded into
a feud on that one, but
wasn't.
He has also strongly dis
avowed any "Nixon can't
wan" operation. He called
such a tactic "immoral," and
not borne out by the polls.
But quite a few Republi
cans, who think they can
departure can usefully b e
made, except perhaps by Ni-
kita S. Khrushchev. No ex
ternal influence, except per
haps Soviet influence, can af
fect the outcome of the gigan
tic, cruel and awe-inspiring
experiment that is now being
made in China.
In these circumstances, the
only prudent course for the
American policymakers is to
be patient and watchful until
the situation inside China is
changed either by the experi
ment's failure or by its final
success. Doing nothing is sel- I
dom preferable to doing some
thing, but it is certainly pre
ferable in this case.
(c) 1959, New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
ne said NATO's first line
of defense is manned entirely
by the Germans and there
"would have to be some delay
before the arrival of British
and American troop rein
forcements." Valluy went on lo condemn
"the moral disengagement"
of certain NATO nations
"apart, perhaps from the
United States and Canada."
NATO's founding corner
stone was fear of Communist
aggression. And the unity of
NATO members has ebbed
and flowed with the ebb and
flow of th,e .cold war. Now
that fear once more has re
ceded, NATO's weaknesses
become the more apparent.
The London Daily Express
was expressing common Brit
ish resentment at "all the
blocking tactics of diploma
cy" used by France and West
Germany to delay a summit
meeting with Russia.
Condemns Retreat Praciices
Valluy condemned the
practices which have forced
a steady retreat from the 50
division goal first set up for
NATO, the skeletonizing of
divisions which are left, and
the internal quibbling where
by nations refuse to contrib
ute either the money or man
power which NATO com
manders believe are a mini
mum for European defense.
West Germany will fall
150,000 men short of original
target figures.
Reports
Traveling abroad.
Roscoe Drumond
absenca.)
thereby curry favor with
Rockefeller, constantly drop
suggestions that the public
"hates Nixon," they . pass
along banter about the' 1952
"Nixon Fund," and in the
Rockefeller entourage on his
trek to the Pacific coast you
more than once heard dark
implications about that "bad
actor from Califorrvia."
In Oregoa one Knckefeller
backer tried to su-t an
"ABCD Club" which he glee
fully said meant "any body
'cept Dick." A Rockefeller
supporter in California im
plied to reporters that Nixon
was anti-Semitic, anti-Negro,
anti-minority.
rpHIS kind cf thing is not
all one-sided by any
means. There are Nixon devo
tees who both imply and
sometimes say- openly that
Rockefeller is not quite
bright, that everything about
him is "synthetic." ' That
word crops up often among
pro-Nixon people
There are also dark whis
pers easily heard across the
room - that Rockefeller is
plotting to "buy" the nomina-J
tion, that Rockefeller is not
really a Republican at all,
that the "Rockefeller inter
ests" are putting people on
payrolls like mad for later
use in the campaign.
What I am reporting is
that the short-sighted, ill-ad
vised, over-zealous Nixon and
Rockefeller supporters are do
ing their best to get the two
Republican leaders at each
other's throat.
There are some mixed mo
tivations in both camps
Rockefeller has got some al
lies who are more anti-Nixon
than they are pro-Rockefeller
and some of Nixon's boosters
are more anti-Rockefeller
than they are pro-Nixon.
These allies can do more
harm than good.
Nixon and Rockefeller will
need to restrain themselves
and their supporters if they
are to avoid a kind of humili
ating battle which could end
up making the next Republi
can nominee no more than
titular leader of the party,
(c) '1959 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
Counsel With . .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
-41 ' F
I:
I
Fred Brennan
or call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP 3-7343
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOLLY ST.
French President Charles
de Gaulle has served notice
that his land, sea and ail
forces are not answerable to
NATO in case of emergency.
Coupled with the "moral
disengagement" of NATO na
tions has been mounting dis
agreement in the changing
concepts of. missile warfare,
and the rising hope that in
any such war it would be the
Unite States and Russia blast
ing away at each other with
others escaping if they are
cautious and lucky.
- NATO commanders say It
won't be 'that way.
A taste of excitement.;;;
smooth as silk-right to
the end...never a rough
edge -price always low.
m SMOOTH AS SILK
Kessler
4L
45 QT.
270
PINT
lUllDS KISSLQ) CO., UWKNCtBUliC, WD. BUNDO
WHISKEY- IE PROOF-724 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS.
GREAT
FOR GROCERIES,
BUT . . .
Self service .nsurance does not
always supply the answers you
need . . . our most valued;
possessions deserve protection
tailored to your individual
needs. Our obligation-free coun-.
seling is REAL INSURANCE
SERVICE.
Bill Fish