MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
Friday, Jan. 15, 1960
"Everyone in Southern Oregon
Keaas xne Mau TriDune"
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33 North Fir St., Ph. SP 2-6141
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March 3. 1897
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EDITORIA1
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15. 1950 (Sunday)
Ashland Jaycees present an
iron lung to the city of Ash
land to kick off 1950 March
of Dimes campaign.
Second heavy snowfall in
week adds four inches to snow
on valley floor; more predicted.
20 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15. 1940 (Monday)
Russians are stepping up
bombing raids on Finnish
cities, over 300 planes took
part in run on Helsinki yester
day.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Ice
froze on mud puddles and
back porch wash basins over
the week end, causing prema
ture spring flowers and robins
to regret their bum guessing
30 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15, 1930 (Wednesday)
Seven persons killed in car
accidents in Jackson county
last year, coroner reports.
A number of horses are re
portedly starving to death in
snow-covered fields between
Medford and Jacksonville.
40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15. 1920 Friday)
League of Nations estab
lished in Paris, regrets are ex
pressed that U.S. was not rep
resented. Sugar shortage hits city,
prices rise to 19 cents per
pound.
50 YEARS AGO
Jan. 15, 1910 (Saturday)
Residents of first judicial
district accuse Governor Ben
son of playing politics in ap
pointing new circuit judge
for that district.
Petitions have been signed
by residents for the paving of
about three miles of city
streets on Genessee st., Riv
erside ave. and Central ave
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
is is good.
1. Osteology is the science
that treats of what?
2. Clara Barton, the found
er of the American Red Cross,
was often called "The Lady
with a Lamp;" true or false?
3. What is the name of the
American naturalist who was
called the "wizard of horti
culture" for his development;
in California?
4. Is West Point's mascot a
mule, a goat, or an eagle?
5. How many degrees are
there in a right angle? .
. 6. How many times did Wil
liam Jennings Bryan run for
the office of President?
7. Is a stereoscope some
thing through which to speak,
see, or hear?
,- 8- Does sound travel faster
at room temperature, or at
freezing temperature?
9. Are chain letters legally
transmissible through the
U. S. mails?
10. Does a carpenter use a
rip saw to cut across the grain,
or with the grain?
Answers; 1. Bones. 2. False.
3. Luther Burbank. 4. Mult.
5 Ninety. 6. Three times. 7.
Sm. 8. Room temperature. 9.
No. 10. Io the direction of the
cjraia. '-:
Financing School Needs
Schools (ranging1 from primary to higher edu
cation) and their problems (ranging from those
of first grade discipline to how to pay for needed
new buildings) are among the most fascinating
1 i il- 1 i -1 2. i "
suDjecis m mis complicated society 01 ours.
In recent days we have mentioned here a
couple of them teacher salaries (they're too low
on the average) and teacher tenure (we're against
it as now practiced).
Another, of which we'll hear much more in
years to come, is how to pay for schools, and
who s to do the paving.
POR, make no mistake, schools are expensive.
" And, as more and more youngsters come along,
they are going to get more so.
W e cannot simply throw up our hands and
say we can't afford it. If we do, we're negating
this nation's entire concept of what is important
and good and necessary.
What we can do is this:
We can insist that for each tax dollar for
schools, we get a dollar's worth of education for
our youngsters.
And we can review our method of paying for
schools, and see if there are inequities. If so, we
can revise them. V
FOR instance, is there anything sacred about
uic ,uilLcpi iiiia.ii p ujjwij baAU ouuuiu vcuxjr
the major burden for schools?
There is not. To the contrary, there is a lot
to be said for shifting a major part of the burden
of school finance from property taxes to other
means 01 taxation. ,
Here are a few specifics:
1. Ownership of property once was a good
indication of ability to pay. It no longer is. Some
three-quarters of all Americans now own (or are
buying) their own homes. In the case of wage
earnersparticularly those who are just getting
started,! high property taxation is an inequity,
piled on top of all other obligations.
2. Property taxes are levied on capital al
though they are paid out of income.
3. Because of varying local situations, the
levy on property for schools may be dispropor
tionately high in one area, and disproportionately
low in another. In each case, justice and equity
is lacking.
IN ADDITION, property taxes are all based on
occoccmonfc A rA rlocnif o tint hocf of f nrfe fif
good assessors and appraisers, there cannot al-
i ji ; mi i
ways De assurance inai mere win De equality in
these procedures.
v Probably it is inevitable that capital expen
ditures for schools for a long time to come will
have to be financed through bond issues, and
thus be based on property.
But this represents a far smaller proportion
of school funds than the operating and mainte
nance budgets. And it can be said that school
construction is of benefit to property in the area,
thus making it a proper charge against property.
IF PROPERTY taxes are eliminated as a major
means of supporting school operations, what
then? . ....... ..
The only answer is some, other form of taxa
tion and this leads us inevitably to increased
income taxes, or a new form of taxation, pre
sumably a sales tax.
This, in turn, creates another choice : Income
andpr sales tax on a local, school district level,
or such tax or taxes on a state level. ,
It would seem logical that thev be levied by
the state. There are three principal reasons :
First, and most important, the state has an
obligation under the constitution to support equal
educational opportunities throughout the state.
Second, its taxation machinery is more effici
ent than would be that of a school district, or
even a county collecting for school districts.
Third, citizens of the entire state would pay
for education equally, without poorer districts
being penalized by the fact of their poverty.
I
IT WILL be argued that state financing means
state control. Up to a point this is true. But
it is also true that there can be no effective substi
tute for local school districts in day-by-day ad
ministration, as long as state standards are met.
And it would make sense for the state to
leave the maior administrative decisions to local
school boards. The state sets school' standards
now; it has a constitutional obligation to do so.
But there is no reason for it to attempt to run
the districts. And we don't think it would.
WE COME out of this with four conclusions:
1. Property taxation (except for building
bond issues) is not -the fairest nor even the most
efficient means of supporting schools.
2. This financial burden should be shifted to
other types of taxes, preferably at the state level.
3. The state would then be better able to ful
fill its obligation to insure "a uniform and gen
eral system of common schools"in the words of
the constitution. . '
4. Administration should remain local.
We have a hunch the voters of the state would
go along with such a program if it were presented
clearly to them. E.A. '
Oregon school administrators prefer more
state aid for education rather than federal aid.
This puts the issue squarely up to the state, With
federal aid the "or else . . ."Oregon Statesman,
Salem. .
Dennis the Menace
-s- 1
HE HAD A BATH, SOT DRESSED. WENT OUTDOORS AND WA3
8ACr IN THE B4THTU3 IN FIFTEEN MINUTES FLAT'
Washington Report
By WILLIAM S. WHITE
OLD MAN LEAVING
Washington""- The old, old
man is going at last from the
Senate.
In the 93rd year of his, life,
Sen. Theodore Francis Green
of Rhode
Island has an
n o u n ced he
will not seek
re-election to
his fifth term
because h e
does not "feel
well enough."
He is not, of
William S.
white pensable. And
a man can work only so long
as strength remains. Too, his
state will have no trouble in
finding a replacement.
All the same, when Theo
dore Francis Green leaves,
the Senate will be the poorer,
in the strictly human sense
anyhow, for his departure.
For, oddly, in this correspond
ent's time it has been mainly
the very old men there who
have given a special quality to
the place.
There, more often than not,
it is the very old who will
take the greatest risks. Who
are the least influenced by
today's universal urge for per
sonal "security." Who are the
most ready to run forward
to meet the possibility menac
ing tomorrow. They are, again
more often than not, the best
of the individual men, the
free and fighting spirits who
make the youngsters look
rather like conscientious ob
jectors. -
rpo BE sure, "the problems
of the aged" - which is a
nice-Nelly phrase admitting
that society tends to throw
the aged upon the ash heap
- exist in the Senate, too.
Even there, men can grow too
old to go on any more but
happily it takes an awfully
long time to grow that old in
the Senate.
Green at a mere 70 carried
not simply a full load but a
great load, as a personality
aristocratic and privileged
man who went all the way
with the Roosevelt New Deal.
Green at a ripe 80 was tough
enough and strong enough to
take on one of the hardest and
most thankless jobs the Sen
ate had handed out in this
century.
This was to serve on the
first committee that investi
gated Senator Joseph R. Mc
Carthy's charges of "commu
nism" in the State Depart
ment. Nobody could hope to
win in that mare's nest - no
body but, in the short run,
McCarthy himself. For fear
and suspicion were loose in a
country that had suffered
great and undeniable setbacks
from imperialist communism.
The nation was ready for a
devil-hunt; it was all there
to be exploited.
BUT
of
UT old Green, unlike some
his committee col
leagues, faced the unalterable
facts with that special candor
and realism of the Senate's
aged men. He knew McCarthy
and his associates were mak
ing a bitter brew that at length
would spill over on the Re
publicans as well as it did
when the Eisenhower Admin
istration came to power. But
he knew that, first of all, Mc
Carthy was reaching for the
throat not simply of Truman
and Acheson but of the Demo
cratic party which Green
loved.
So, full of the self-honesty
of the old Senate types, T. F.
Green, from the first mo
ment, made no pretense to an
"objectivity" that could not
exist here. From the first mo
ment he hit McCarthy with
everything to which he .could
lay hand.
He was a true liberal, as
distinguished from a knee
jerk liberal. And he was a
loyal liberal, instead of a cut-and-run
liberal.
He stayed with Truman in
the good times, and also in
the bad times. In the times,
indeed, when some of the
knee-jerk liberals were self
righteously rushing into print
(to coin a sparkling phrase) to
run out on a liberal Presi
dent who had represented the
views which they had always
said were also their own. But
this was a President who also
now had the bad luck to get
into trouble. So though they
were just terribly, terribly
"liberal," they also managed
to be terribly, terribly safe.
TT WAS only the true lib-
erals like old Green, plus
some non-liberals who be
lieved in most but not all of
what he was doing, who stood
with Truman when the heavy
firing about "corruption and
cronyism" broke out.
Truman has never hated,
or even much disliked, all
those who had fought him
from conviction, the Republi
cans and the ultra-conserva
tive Democrats. But he has
an unforgettable contempt for
those who really agreed with
his policies but prudently left
the firing line when it became
evident that his troops were
going to be overborne.
Old Green may have been
intellectually wrong in stay
ing in the line to the end.
But he was a combat soldier,
and not a talking soldier. He
had guts. You knew where
he stood; not just some of the
time, but all of the time.
(Copyright, 1960, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Firing of Pinay Reveals Conflict High
In French Government; He May Return
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
The man-of-ihe-week: An-
toine Piny, fired as finance
minister of France.
The place: Paris.
The quote: "Do you think
I'm going to keep Jacquinot
company?"
It was the bitter remark of
a man at another turn in the
road of a political life which
has had many
turns. It was
Pinay's exit
line from the
government of
President
Charles de
Gaulle's Fifth
Republic
whose success
in resto ring
Phil Newsom trie t rench
economy in just over a year's
time largely has been at
tributed to Pinay.
This reference was to Louis
Jacquinot, a member of Pi
nay's own Independent Con
servative Party, who holds a
post of minister of state- but
with little or no power.
" In effect, it was a summa
tion of Pinay's own attitude.
Pinay, a "hard money" man,
was saying that either he
would rule French financial
policy, or he would be fired.
He would not resign.
To be sure, there was one
more line. It came 24 hours
later, after a final conference
between Pinay and de Gaulle
at which Pinay reportedly re
fused to accept a post which
represented a step down.
"I am quitting the govern
ment and I am retiring from
all political life," he said, "at
least momentarily."
The latter phrase meant
that Pinay believed there
would be another swing of the
pendulum as there has been
many times for him in the
last 25 years and that once
again, sometime, he would re
turn to the "bear pit" of
French politics.
It was obvious that De
Gaulle let Pinay go with re
luctance. There was the possibility
Pinay would lead his fellow
Conservatives in the French
Assembly in revolt against De
Gaulle, in which De Gaulle
might have to abandon all
pretense of democratic pro
cedures and rule as a virtual
dictator.
There also was the risk to
the French economy, of which
Pinay was, regarded as the
bulwark. '
De Gaulle offset the latter
by appointment of the gov
ernor of the Bank of France,
Wilfrid Baumgartner, to take
Pinay's place as minister of
finance. On finances, Pinay
and Baumgartner think muchj
Army's Food Irradiation Plan
Strikes Snag, Committee Finds
By DICK WEST ibeef steaks in the cupboard
Washington-(UPD-That bright seems to be fading into the
tomorrow when we can throw distance,
away our freezers and keep This is disturbing to mem-
Communications
Neglect of Children
To the Editor: One minis
ter said TV is the sewer for
delinquency.
I cannot , imagine any man
of God would or could make
such statements and expect
people to have much faith in
the Bible or the church. I
have seen ..some TV which
does not impress me, but I
only have to turn it off. I
have seen other programs
such as Oral Roberts and
"This Is the Life" that I have
never seen or heard of in the
churches. Rev. Roberts,
through Jesus Christ, actually
heals children, men and wom
en, through his great faith
in Christ. .
I know because I'have been
helped 50 per cent already
and expect, if it is God's wish,
I will be practically well
again, maybe never to work
manually, but can in some
way help God.
I think the delinquent child
is" less to blame for having
delinquent parents. It seems
that to some the child cannot
be managed because he does
not have any one who cares
enough to try to understand
his or her needs.
We should have more
homes, less houses; more
mothers, less baby sitters; and
fathers who demand that their
homes and families come first,
not golf or bowling or card
games. Family fun with kids
wife, dog, fishing or hunting
or just a good old picnic with
all the ants and the trimmings.
We are too busy, to make
a place for the family, and
when company does come,
either the children disappear
or they are in bed. We either
show them off or we hide
them so the adults can have
their fun. We have lost our
trust in humans and we deny
or over indulge and never
take time out to find the
truth.
Children are not natural
born "-liars, and they do want
to be loved and to share the
family happiness and sorrow.
Treat them according to their
age and when a question is
asked be sure you know the
answer so the child will not
have to go elsewhere and may
get the wrong answers.
Never put off doing a worth
while thing. And what is
more worthwhile than your
Johnson is Seen as
Only Real Candidate
For 'Compromise'
yle C. Wilson
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington - (WD - Sen.
Stuart Symington of Missouri
is most mentioned among pos-
fTJI M2TVri sible candi
dates if next
July's Demo
cratic Nation
al Convention
fails on an
early ballot to
n o m i nate a
presiden t i a 1
candidate.
A d 1 a i E.
Stevenson is
another who figures in com
promise speculation. That is
to say this: If neither Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey nor Sen.
John F. Kennedy is able to
win very quickly, the conven
tion is likely to turn to Sym
ington or to Stevenson.
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of
Texas does not much figure
in talk of a compromise nomi
nation. This is strange be
cause, of them all, Johnson's
record seems most nearly to
fit the pattern of compromise
A .simple definition of com
promise is: A settlement
reached by mutual conces
sions.
As illuminated by that defi
nition, neither Stevenson's
nor Symington's record seems
to identify them as properly
compromise choices if both
Humphrey and Kennedy
strike out. More properly,
Stevenson and Symington
would appear to be alternate
choices.
Symington Record
Alternates they surely
would seem to be on the basis
of Symington's recent voting
record and Stevenson's record
of policy statements so far as
the left wing of the Democrat
ic party is concerned. Ameri
cans for Democratic Action
(ADA) speaks for the most
effective element of the Demo
cratic left wing. Mrs. Eleanor
Roosevelt is ADA national
honorary chairman. National
own flesh and blood?
Leo A. Rifenbark,
1121 Pinecroft ave.,
Medford
Save the Bridge
To the Editor: My writing
may not be so good. I am 8
years old. I am in the third
grade. I go to Griffin Creek
school.
I had an idea that the cov
ered bridee on Laurelhurst
road might be a museum, and
as I heard, it was going to be
destroyed.
Thank you.
Tungsten Tucker
Route 4, Box 372-B
Medford
chairman is Robert Nathan,
one-time CIO economist.
Humphrey is vice chairman.
Executive committee members
include Leon H. Keyserling,
chief economist of the Tru
man administration; former
Sen. Herbert H. Lehman of
New York, and Walter P.
Reuther, No. 2 man in the
AFL-CIO.
ADA annually rates mem
bers of Congress on their vot
ing record, selecting key
issues which ADA feels clear
ly made an issue between lib
eral and conservative view
points. The most recently ratr
ed were voting records in the
first session of the 86th Con
gress which met in 1959.
On 13 such liberal-conservative
Senate showdowns last
year, Humphrey and Syming
ton were tied, each with a
perfect score of never having
once failed to support the
ADA point of view. Kennedy
voted the ADA way on 12 is
sues, but was absent on one
occasion. ADA rated Johnson
with seven ADA votes and
five against.
ADA Record
- On the record, so far as
ADA is concerned with Senate
votes, all but Johnson would
seem to qualify as eligible for
the Democratic presidential
nomination. There would be
little need or room for mutual
concessions. To nominate
Johnson, all concerned would
have to concede.
Johnson compares some
what more favorably from;
the ADA standpoint in the
1955 rundown on votes in the
first session of the 84th Con
gress. On the basis of 10 se
lected liberal-conservative is
sues, ADA scored Humphrey
100 per cent in 1955. Syming
ton voted 80 per cent the ADA
way. Johnson and Kennedy
were tied, 66.7 per cent, each.
Humphrey is consistent, al
ways well to the left of center.
He is the only long-haul New
Deal-Fair Deal Democrat of
the lot. ADA likes to honor its
own. On Jan. 28, Humphrey
will be guest speaker at New
York's 12th annual National
Roosevelt Day dinner. Hum
phrey keynoted last winter's
annual ADA convention.
Choice spots such as those
are pure gold for a Democratic
politician. ,
alike.
The immediate crisis lead
ing to Pinay's ouster sprang
from a quarrel with Premier
Michel Debre and the advance
guard of the De Gaulle cab
inet whom Pinay accused of
wishing to "Sovietize" large
sections of French industry
by nationalization.
However, there was more.
It stemmed from Pinay's dis
satisfaction with De Gaulle's
lukewarm attitude toward the
North Atlantic Treaty Alli
ance and Pinay's opposition
to a soft line toward the re
volt in Algeria.
De Gaulle has blocked inte
gration of French forces into
NATO, the West European de
fensive concept for which Pi
nay has fought since he first
was premier in 1952.
His announcement that he
was "retiring" from political
life indicated he neither
would lead nor participate in
a revolt against De Gaulle
now. But, significantly,
left the door open.
he
bers of the joint Congression
al Atomic Energy Committee,
who had high hopes that nu
clear radiation could soon be
used to sterilize and preserve
foods.
So onto the maroon and
blue carpet in. the capitol's
old Supreme Court room the
committee called Richard S.
Morse, director of research
and development for the
Army.
What it wanted was an ex
planation of why the Army
recently cancelled plans to
build a seven mill in dollar
plant at Stockton, Calif., to
test irradiated groceries.
I'm sure you've heard about
the experiments being con
ducted along this line. The
idea is to bombard a pork 1
chop or some other delicacy
with gamma rays to kill bac
teria. ! .
Prevents Spoiling
This keeps the chop from
spoiling and makes refrigera
tion or canning unnecessary.
The Army got interested ' in
the program as a possible
means of supplying front-line
troops with fresh meat.
A GI theoretically could
keep a sirloin steak in his
haversack and cook it right
in the foxhole. Having fre
quently dined on K-rations
during World War II, I can
see the advantages this would
offer.
But, according to Morse,
the program isn't shaping up
too well as yet, despite the
$13 million the Army has
spent on research. He said
something about getting the
bugs out
This was more than the
committee chairman, Sen,
Clinton P. Anderson (D-N.M.),
could swallow. He asked
Morse to please refer to the
troubles as "difficulties" in
stead of "bugs."
Changes Taste
One difficulty is determin
ing the amount of radiation
that will sterilize food with
out making it radioactive. We
wouldn't want to have to keep
a geiger counter on the dining
room table
' Another problem is how to
keep from changing the taste
of the food. Morse said irra
diated chicken and pork turn
ed out pretty good but beef
was less palatable
He told the committee the
need for more research was
a good enough reason for
dropping the pilot plant after
$1,654,000 already had been
spent on plans and equipment.
But the committee members
didn't seem to agree.
They peppered Morse with
so many questions he hardly
had time to light his pipe.
I have a hunch we will
be hearing a lot more about1
In the Days News
By FRANK JENKINS
Sen. Styles Bridges of New
Hampshire, a GOP stalwart
and a Nixon supporter, says
the Republican national con
vention could be "pepped up"
with a WIDE OPEN fight for
the vice presidential nomina
tion. He lists eight possible
participants in his proposed
free-for-all, no - holds - barred
Donnybrook. They are:
New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, Interior Secre
tary Fred Seaton, Treasury
Secretary Robert B. Ander
son, Attorney General Wil
liam P. Rogers, Labor Secre
tary James P. Mitchell, Sen.
Everett Dirkson of Illinois.
Representative Charles Hal-
leck of Indiana, Oregon Gov.
Hatfield and United Nations
Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.
HE MIGHT have something
In a good, stiff fight, one
can often judge by the way
they handle themselves in the
ruckus the caliber of those
doing the fighting.
TTIS suggestion is interest
ing for another reason.
The men he names are able
men, men of STATURE.
There was a time in our
history when JUST ABOUT
ANYBODY was good enough
to be , nominated for vice-
president if he looked like
a vote-catcher. Days-or even
weeks-might be spent in pick
ing the party candidate for
President, but as like as not
the candidate for vice-president
would be chosen by the
weary delegates in a matter
of minutes-or, at most, hours.
The question then was not
HOW GOOD IS HE?
It was IS HE HARMLESS?
In these days, the big
thing to think about in choos
ing a candidate for vice-president
is HOW GOOD A PRESI
DENT WOULD HE MAKE?
this and I wouldn't be sur
prised if plans for the plant
are revived. Some of those
lawmakers sure seemed to
have a hankering for irradi
ated steak.
jwam i
" ' ''for you
vte ... your guests
your family
HAWTHORNE MARKET
534 Easf Main Street
Medford
Life on the Run
To the Editor:
. Mr. Acklin's
Ancient cars
Could form a line
From here to Mars.
Cardboard body,
Hard rubber tires,
Taxi driver
With crossed wires
Could have ridden
A Jersey cow
But no matter,
It's too late now.
Oh! to go back
When life was slow.
Life today is
All go, go, go!
Today we're all
Upon the run.
Our life is lived
When half begun.
Mrs. Delbert Casey
Route 1, Box 385
. Central Point, Ore.
EfemodeSSng?
If you are planning to Remodel your home
or if you are now in the process of remodel
ing, be sure to stop at BRUCE BAUER Lumber
Company and discuss your plans or problems.
You'll find the men at BAUER are experts
in this field. Their thoughts and suggestions
can save you money and time. You'll also
find BAUER LUMBER completely equipped to
meet your material needs. For the finest in
service and quality visit
BRUCE BAUER LUMBER CO.
THE BUILDITORIUM
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Phone SP 2-621 1
South Riverside
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