I
MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforA Or.
Thursday, Feb. 25, 1960
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Flight or Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25, 1950 (Saturday)
Britain's Labor party wins
slim one-seat majority in the
623-seat British parliament in
general elections. . -
General Motors trimmed
workers wages two-cents an
hour yesterday and reduced
price of cars from $10 to $40
apiece depending on the
make.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1940 (Sunday)
The movie version of Mar
garet Mitchell's "Gone With
the Wind" opens at the Cra
. terian theater.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Some
upstate big-bugs had break
fast yesterday with Col. Tou
Velle of Jacksonville, the emi
nent hobnobber."
30 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25, 1930 (Tuesday)
A legislative interim com
mittee recommended yester
day that Oregon adopt the
cabinet form of government
for state administration.
The chairman of the Sen
ate Indian Affairs committee
condemned on the senate floor
the administration of the
Klamath Indian reservation
as being "disgraceful." (
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25, 1920 (Thursday)
Government troops were
sent yesterday to the trial of
I.W.W.'s in Montesano, Wash.,
who are charged with murder
in the Centralia Armistice
JDay parade, to prevent mob
violence.
Flu epidemic closes more
schools in state including Eu
gene's yesterday.
50 YEARS AGO
Feb. 25. 1910 (Friday)
Construction starts on a
railroad from Gold Hill to the
lime deposits four miles west
of there; hopes are to develop
new industry in valley.
Rogue fruitgrowers are
looking for somebody to be
come the first U.S. weather
observer in Medford, a job
which offers no salary.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or ten correct Is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
n is good.
1. Are the Federal Reserve
banks owned by the U.S. gov
ernment? 2. What is a cygnet?
3. The short full skirt worn
by Greek men is called a pan
tanella, fustanella, or skirret?
4. What is the purpose of
the ostrich sticking his head
in the sand?
5. In what New England
state is Plymouth Rock?
6. A document which shows
the transfer of ownership of
real estate from one person
to another is known as what?
7. Under which President
did Henry Wallace serve as
vice president?
. 8. Do various Insects have
varying numbers of legs?
9. In what state are the
famed Carlsbad Caverns?
10. What seal appears on
the back of a One Dollar Sil
ver Certificate?
Answers: 1. No. 2. A young
man. 3. Fustanella. 4. To took
water. . 5. . Massachusetts. ..8.
Deed. 7. F. D. Roosevelt. 8.
No. (All insects have six legs.)
9. New Mexico. 10. Great Seal
4A
. Saving the Wilderness...
Throughout the nation, certain lands in fed
eral ownership are set
areas. .
Some of them are
of them are wildlife refuges. And some of them
are in national forests,
est service's concept of
the greatest number in
Some people argue
of the forest service's
use" of forest properties. But it isn't.
THE "multiple use" concept does not mean
that every acre of national forest shall be
devoted to grazing, lumbering, recreation and
watershed protection, all at once. This isn't pos
sible.
But it does mean that, in the overall picture,
lands should be devoted to their best purposes
some for logging, some for recreation, some
for grazing, and so on.
Thus, multiple use
large area, through single-purpose use in smaller
areas within the large
TTHE "wilderness area" concept receives lip-
service from some segments of the lumber in
dustry.
But these same segments are the ones which
are constantly trying to
derness we now have;
nibble even harder as
rises, and the demand
creases.
Even now this process is under way in the
Olympic peninsula, closer to home in the Three
Sisters Wilderness area,
out the nation.
DEFORE the Congress
a bill which would
areas.
Now note : It does NOT call for the creation
of new wilderness lands; it merely provides stat
utory protection for those in existence.
The idea is that the
to enter and despoil the
successfully resisted if they are designated by
law, than if they are designated by agency regu
lation.
Once gone, the wilderness is gone forever.
Let's hold on to it for
and children s children.
...And
Some may ask, "Why preserve the wilder
ness
If, in all honesty, they
tion, they probably cannot be answered in any
way which would satisfy them.
But those who have ventured into the un
spoiled and uninhabited lands of our great west,
who have watched the wildlife and seen the
scenery, unmarred by roads or buildings or power
lines or billboards these know there are values
here which cannot be measured in dollars and
cents.
TPHEY know that the remaining acres of wilder-
ness land, threatened at every hand by the
pressures of civilization, constitute a national
resource of magnificence and high worth.
The generation now living is the first in the
history of this nation to have any worry about
preserving for future generations, wilderness
areas.
Always before, they've just been there, wait
ing for those hardy enough to take advantage
of them.
But now it has come to a point where it is
correct to say, as one conservationist did not long
ago:
"What we save in the next few years is all
that will ever be saved."
"NE could expand upon the values of the wil-
derness.
About how they are the last remaining areas
where natural ecology can be observed; about
how they are as balm in Gilead to those seeking
refreshment from the pressures of a mechanical
civilization; and about how these values are go
ing to become more, not less, important as popu
lation, mechanization and "progress" continue
their proliferation.
But if anyone needs convincing, he probably
couldn't be convinced.
So it remains for those who believe these
values are important to work to see them pre
served against the encroachments which threaten
them.
X7E'D like to wind up this little "sermon" with
y a couple of quotations. The first is from
David Brower of the Sierra Club. Speaking of
the wilderness, he said :
"Never have so few taken so much from so many
and so fast. The few is us. The many are the un
numbered yet to be born in all the time that may lie
ahead for man, and who may remember us, if at all,
as the generation which, in four short decades, out
exploited all history and entered the fifth decade
unsatlated."
The other is from Samuel Adams, speaking
in 1771:
"If the liberties of America are ever completely
ruined ... it will in all probability be the consequence
of a mistaken notion which leads men to acquiesce in
measures of destructive tendency for the sake of pres
ent ease."
"Present ease" is fine and dandy. But what
of the f uturel E. A.
aside as "wilderness"
.. .'.
in national parks. Some
dedicated under the for
"the greatest good to
the long run."
that this is in violation
dedication to "multiple
means many uses in one
area.
nibble away at the wil
and which will try to
time passes, population
for forest products in
and elsewhere through
at the moment there is
preserve our wilderness
pressures which will arise
wilderness can be more
the use of our children,
E. A.
Why
have to ask that ques
Dennis the
'CAN 1 RUN MAY fFOfA HOME
Today & Tomorrow
By Walter
DISARMAMENT TALKS
Like the weather, "disarma
ment" is a subject about
which we ail talk and do noth
ing. A new
round of talks
is to begin
next month
But there is
not now an
American
plan. There is
no Allied
plan, and in
truth, de
spite Mr. K.'s
speech at the U. N., there is
no Soviet plan.
Apart from a few small spe
cific proposals, Western think
ing is based on a condition
which it is impossible to ful
fill - namely, that there
should be universal and un
limited inspection of all arma
ments. The Soviet proposals rest
on an equally invalid and un
real condition, which is that
all nations should disarm to
tally because they trust one
another completely.
T'HE UNREALITY of the dis-
armament policy arises
from an agreement among the
powers which flies in the face
of the lessons of experience
This is the agreement that
they will try to negotiate dis
armament before they negoti
ate settlements of the issues
which divide them. This can
not be done. The powers will
not and cannot disarm while
they are in conflict on vital
issues, such as the future of
Germany and the future of
Japan.
Since the powers are for va
rious reasons unable and un
willing to negotiate compro
mises on the vital issues, they
have to talk about something
and so they talk about dis
armament. Mr. Khrushchev
talks about it. Dr. Adenauer
talks about it. President Ei
senhower talks about it. But
they merely talk about it. For
they do not mean to disarm
while the vital issues are un
resolved, and for the time be
ing there is no real prospect
that they are ready to nego
tiate seriously about the vital
issues.
The powers are in a traffic
jam where they cannot move
forward and they will not
move backward. The jam has
become increasingly snarled
owing to the delay in proceed
ing with the negotiations
which were inaugurated with
such fanfare last summer.
TN HIS address to the Na-
tional Press club last week
Secretary Herter stated that
we have two major goals. The
first is "urgently to try to
create a more stable military
environment." If that can be
done, and only if it can be
done, will we proceed to our
second goal, which is to cut
national armed forces and to
build up international machin
ery to keep the peace.
"A more stable military en
vironment" is a new and in
teresting phrase in the tired
1 a n g u age of disarmament.
What does it mean? It means
to establish safeguards against
surprise attacks. What safe
guards? According to our of
ficial doctrine in the field of
disarmament, the safeguard
would lie in the right and the
capacity to inspect, to watch,
and to investigate the conduct
of the great military estab
lishments.
This is about as easy to
accomplish as it is to estab
lish a colony on the moon.
THERE is, however, another
doctrine, a basic strategic
doctrine, which holds that the
true safeguard against sur
prise attack lies in measures
to make it impossible to
knock out the retaliatory pow
er by surprise attack. If, for
example, we had a fleet of
submarines armed with Po
Walter
Liigpmann
Menace
OVZfZ HERE?
Lippmann
laris missiles, we would have
an invulnerable retaliatory
power. If we had it, there
could be no surprise attack
upon this country.
It is interesting to note that
the military strategic doctrine,
which is generally held by the
Air Force and by the Navy,
is also the Soviet military
strategic doctrine. In his re
cent speech to the 21st Con
gress, Mr. K. discussed at
some length the problem of
surprise attack. His view was
that a surprise attack could
not be successful against a
very big country. For, said
he, there would always be in
reserve retaliatory power
which the surprise attack
could not reach. It is not alto
gether clear whether he
meant only to reassure the
Soviet people that they could
not be attacked by surprise,
or whether he meant also to
warn away some of his own
advocates of preventative or
preemptive war.
TN ANY EVENT, the Soviet
doctrine on surprise attack
is that the true safeguard
against it is to possess an in
vulnerable retaliatory power.
Whatever we may say in our
diplomatic discussion of dis
armament, our working doc
trine is also based on the in
vulnerable deterrent. I have
the feeling that we would get
on better even with M. K. if
we said so.
It is a mistake, it seems to
me, to treat the discussion ot
disarmament as a substitute
for the negotiation of our con
flicts. The best we can hope
for in disarmament is that
we can arrive at relatively
small agreements which mark
a certain accommodation, a
certain reduction of friction
and tension, in the continuing
conflict of our vital interests.
Copyright 1960, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to
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 the case.
Keep Looking Up
To the Editor: I just won
der sometimes what the edi
tor of the Mail Tribune real
ly thinks about the tone of all
these contributions. If every
suggestion put forth in these
columns were carried out,
we'd have some interesting
results, I am sure. Our wom
enfolk would look different
and dress different. Our land
scape would be cleared of bill
boards. Our smog might be
gone. Our channels of com
munication might be cleared
of the objectionable features
now so prominent, and even
Mr. Bulman might stop writ
ing letters.
Speaking of the latter,
we've gotten acquainted, that
is Bulman and myself. While
we may not agree on every
point of view we can still
converse and act as free
thinking Americans.
In fact I drove up and vis
ited the old gentleman the
other day. I happened to have
a new garden tractor on board
the pickup. Bulman question
ed its ability to work virgin,
Lpoison oak-covered ground.
When I got ready to leave our
communications - writing
friend was ready to plant his
early garden. The next day I
found - that his organically
grown poison oak had taken
effect on yours truly.
I'm stUl scratching. Anyone
know of a sure cure? We've
heard of about 101 so far.
Yes, my letters have gotten
mt into aome ioterciting ex
New Era of Common Market and Economic
Independence Dawning in Latin America
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
" Out of the history of revo
lutions and rampant, one
sided nationalism, a new era
is dawning in
Latin Amer
ica. - Latin Amer-
i icans have
their eyes
fixed on a
United States
of Latin Amer
ica. For the
Phi Newiom
American bus-
inessman operating in South
America it means a funda
mental change, forerunner of
...
West Visits Headquarters
For Morse, Tells Impressions
By DICK WEST
Washington (DPD The
"Morse-for-President Club"
has set up shop here in a
former dis
count house
next door to a
rubber stamp
store.
I chan hard
ly imagine a
more incon
grouous loca
tion. Not even
his worst en-
' - 1-1 i
Dick West ny is iiKeiy
to discount Sen. Wayne Morse,
or accuse him of being any
body's rubber stamp.
I had the pleasure of visit
ing the Morse club on the day
of its formal opening. This
was a new experience in the
tour that I have been making
of presidential campaign of
fices. The other headquarters
I have visited already were
going concerns.
Wind Hampers
A brisk wind was whipping
across the sidewalk when I
arrived at 923 11th street.
This made things difficult for
three Morse men who were
trying to hang a strip of bunt
ing across the front of the
building.
On the inside, a window
washer also was having some
trouble completing his chores
in time for the ceremony. Peo
ple kept going in and out of
the glass door he was working
on, leaving finger marks.
One of the bunting-hangers
was sporting a lush growth of
jet black whiskers. I won
dered if this means that Morse
had the support of the local
beatniks, but he said he grew
the beard to dramatize a cam
paign to win "statehood" for
the District of Columbia.
While these preparations
were going on, a florist's truck
drove up and delivered a big,
horseshoe-shaped wreath with
a gold ribbon which spelled
out the words "Good Luck
Senator,
This led to some discussion
as to whether a horseshoe
which pointed downward, as
was the case with the wreath,
wasn't a symbol of bad luck.
Opinion on this point was di
vided. There also was some jocu
lar - speculation that the
wreath was sent over by Sen.
John F. Kennedy or some
other presidential candidate
name and address of the writer,
periences. The wife is tired
of it and of about anyone else
who writes. Some of the rela
tives don't like it and so on.
In spite of it all, we've made
a host of new friends. At least
they are friendly to my face.
(I did hear of one gentleman
a while back who told an
other friend that Johnson's
letters were . . .?! etc., etc. To
my face he told me how much
he enjoyed them.)
There are a lot of things
I don't like either. At this
point we follow about the
same procedure outlined by
your editor sometime ago. He
has found a knob which turns
off certain programs. When
we note a saturation of beer
ads on Foster and Kleiser's
billboards as one approaches
Ashland, we take the advice
of one of them. It says, "It's
the water." So we drink the
water, as it implies.
Yes, one needs to use some
common horse sense in his
journey through life. Let's
not get all tied up in knots
jumping at individuals. Let's
set our sights upward and
above the sordid and debas
ing things of earth. God still
rules above it all.
Henry Johnson Jr.,
2400 Highway 66,
Ashland, Ore.
Operators Praised
To the Editor: I would like
to take this means of express
ing my appreciation for the
Quick and prompt tervict by
which was last week's seven-
nation agreement in Monte
video, Uruguay, looking to
ward formation of a common
market in South America.
William L. F. Horsey, UPI
chief correspondent in Buenos
Aires, reports that the day is
gone when any kind of man
ufactured product can be
shipped to Latin American
countries and find an immed
iate and ready market. Most
lines now are manufactured in
the countries themselves.
Cites Expansion
An example is the current
expansion of a DuPont affil
iate's production capacity for
nylon yarn and cellophane.
with a card reading "Rest In
Peace."
I learned, however, that the
floral tribute was ordered by
Al Foreman, a Portland, Ore.,
theater owner and long-time
Morse supporter who happen
ed to be in here on business.
The Oregon senator, as you
know, is noted for his forensic
ability. One of the Senate's
most frequent and enduring
speakers, he holds the current
record for long-distance debate.
Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop
THE EISENHOWER
PUZZLE
Washington - This city is
full, these days, of stories il
lustrating the markedly in
creased touchiness of Presi-
d e n t Eisen
hower's temp
er. One of the
Presiden's ab
lest and most
loyal support
ers on Capitol
Hill, Sen.
Styles Bridges
of New Hamp-
iOSEPH ALSOP Shlre tries t0
tell him that the country is
worried by the weaknesses of
the national defense program.
The President turns crimson,
then white, with fury, and
launches into a volcanic tirade
against the presumptuous per
sons who have dared to sug
gest that such weaknesses ex
ist. And the same subject
triggers the same reflexes
again, at subsequent Presi
dential meetings with Con
gressional leaders and others
Or at the White House pre
sentation of the request for
foreign aid funds. Speaker of
the House Sam Rayburn ven
tures to suggest the country
cannot understand skimping
our own public works and
our own defenses, while we
are so generous in our assist
ance to the public works and
defenses of other nations
Once more the President
shows the same successive re-
actions-the quick, hot flash,
then the whiteness along the
jaw, and then the spate of
angry words. Or these same
reactions might be caused by
a quite ordinary question at
a press conference. It has hap
pened twice, indeed, in the
last month.
ri A MAN no longer young,
who is the obiect of the
Byzantine adulation of the
Eisenhower White House,
there is nothing abnormal or
the telephone operator on
the morning of Jan. 3, when
I fell and broke my leg.
I live alone and had to
crawl to the telephone. I
reached up to the stand but
was unable to see the dial
numbers so just dialed for
the operator. She answered
immediately and I asked her
to call my doctor for me.
She not only called him
promptly and had him on his
way, she also called a neign
bor and had them come to
stay with me until the doctor
arrived.
I am now resting in a nurs
ing home. I can say our oper
ators are not only efficient
and courteous, but are prov
ing they are on the job and
not sitting around drinking
coffee as some previous let
ters have indicated.
Mrs. Ada Dunham
16 Misletoe st.
Medford
Living Foods Again
To the Editor: When we
sent in our letters last week,
describing our standards for
living foods, it was our in
tention to advertise these pro
ducers in the Tribune as a
community service. This ad
will appear in the Tribune for
Friday, Feb. 26.
Anyone interested should
cut out this ad and file it
for reference. We realize
there must be others who also
produce foods that meet our
standards but we could not
include you this time because
we do not know who you are.
This we regret so very much
Anna M. S treed
36 North Peach st.
Medford
i
The new machinery was built
entirely in Argentina and on
a staff of 4,000 only five are
North Americans.
In 1937, there were 50 U.S.
foremen and technicians and
400 workers.
Heavy machinery, inven
tions, patent rights and gen
eral know-how are now the
greatest commodities that U.S.
businessmen now have to sell
to their South American coun
terparts. Lack of faith in Latin
American stability - both po
litical and economic-has been
a factor up to now in prevent
ing many firms from invest
ing in the area.
Fortunately for those of us
who enjoy a good stump per
formance, the candidate him
self showed up for the head
quarters opening and treated
us to a 30-minute sample of
his oratory. For Morse, this
wasn't even a good warm-up.
As I was leaving, I noticed
there was a church across the
street. On its bulletin board
was the following announce
ment: "Quiet hour here every
Wednesday."
surprising in this quick testi
ness, this angry response to
any hint of doubt or dissent.
But it demands notice, be
cause it is also a significant
fact of our current political
life. It helps to explain, for
instance, why the President's
farewell speech before his
South American journey con
tained at least one flat mis
statement of fact.
Speaking of our nuclear de
terrent, the President assert
ed, with great emphasis and
with no qualification what
ever, that this "force (was)
not subject to elimination by
any sudden attack." Made
without qualification, that
statement is wholly mislead
ing if not plainly untrue. '
If the National Intelligence
Estimates correctly depict So
viet power, to be sure, the
statement is precariously true
But if the estimates are just
a little bit wrong, as they
have invariably been in the
past, the statement is quite
false. In the latter case,
surprise immeasurably more
terrible than the surprise of
Pearl Harbor may well be
possible, perhaps already and
more probably in a year or so
f)N THIS point, the facts
"speak for themselves. The
brilliant man the President
has put in charge of the Amer
ican deterrent, the U. S. Stra
tegic Air Commander, Gen.
Thomas Power, has stated un
der oath that the entire de
terrent can be "virtually wip
ed out" by surprise attack, if
the Soviets merely possess
150 operational ICBMs. If the
National Estimates are only
wrong by a margin of 150
ICBMs, by no means a large
number of these weapons,
then the error is far from
unprecedented. It is also not
beyond the limits of normal
error in any nation's intelli
gence estimates.
No one can suppose that
Dwight D. Eisenhower would
knowingly make a statement
to the nation without quali
' knm turn
RANK MOtGAN - HMOLD
DAY Ot NfSHT
k -
'ft 4
x-'y :
fit
South Americans say these
conditions rapidly are disap
pearing, and they cite exam
ples. For instance:
With U. S. help, Chile, Ar
gentina, Uruguay. Paraguay,
Peru and other Latin Ameri
can nations have halted gal
loping inflation and started
the painful road back to fi
nancial stability. Trade and
private enterprise both have
been given a freer hand to
develop.
The Wilson Meat Packing
Co. in Buenos Aires has been
able to streamline its opera
tion and rid itself of needless
intervention under the old
dictatorship of Juan Peron.
American mining compa
nies long have nad confidence
in South American business.
The common market wid
ens the field for American
businessmen and their associ
ates. Kaiser automobiles went
into Brazil and Argentina
with local interests. The Bra
zilian plant already is export
ing to Paraguay and Chile,
and the Argentina plant can
not keep up with local de
mand.
fication, while he also knew
the statements truth depended
on such vitally important
qualifications.
Yet the most honorable man
can unknowingly make an un
true statement. He is too like
ly to do so, in fact, if he is
a President who has never
enjoyed digging into the de
tails of problems, who is serv
ed and secluded by his staff
as though he were an icon,
who grows frighteningly an
gry, too, when his settled
opinions are challenged. Thus
the President's irritability,
which has always existed but
has grown noticeably greater,
is seen to be a key part of
a major puzzle.
rpHERE are other part of
-- the same puzzle. There is
the deep displeasure that the
President has always visited
on overly independent, in
conveniently outspoken mili
tary leaders. There is the curi
ous contrast, so suggestive oi
character differences, be
tween the subsequent career
of the military leaders who
have left the service under
a cloud with Eisenhower and
their comrades who have de
parted in high favor. AU
members of the former group
are now earning their civilian
livings with distinguished pro
priety. Too many of the lat
ter are in profitable, flagrant
practice as lobbyists.
There is the further fact
that the President never seri
ously consults, face to face,
the men who have direct re
sponsibility for our deterrent.
for our missile programs, and
for the other most important
parts of the defense machine.
There is the still further fact
that the judgments of these
men with direct responsibility
have always weighed less
heavily, with all Eisenhower-
era Secretaries of .Defense,
than the carefully compro
mised, politically conscious
judgment of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff-that body both warp
ed by inter-service rivalries
and too full of men respon
sive to the higher pressures
'not to stick your neck out."
Look, for a moment, at
these parts of the puzzle. You
can then see why the coun
try ought to look, not at the
President on a television,
screen, but at the hard reali
ties of the national situation.
Copyright I960, New York '.
Herald Tribune Inc.
tha Cmnmm.
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