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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1961)
WEDNESDAY. MEDFORDtt&fcTRIBUNB "Everyone in Southern Oregon BnaAe Th Moll Tribune" Published Dally except Saturday by 33 North Fir St.. Ph SPjMlM ROBERT W RtJKL. Editor HERB GREY AdvMtUim Manaeer ERIC W ALLEN JR. Mna Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT SporU Ed tor 01.1VE STARCHER Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON Circulation Mgr An inoeornacn """""--r," Entered as jccond claw matter at Medlora. ureK,.n. "''" March 3. 1B97 By Mall - In Advance, Copy 10c Dally -no ounaay i J " Dally and Sunday J mo on Dailv and Sunday 3 mos 4.2! .. Sunday Only One year By Carrier- In Advance Mfd'ord Ashland Central Point Eajl. : Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove, "ofut Wv er Talent and on motor routes Dnily and Sunday 1 vear 118 00 Dai V ann ounapy : Carrier and Dears - copy too All Terma vaan m "o'"clal Paper" of Citv of Medfnra ' Official Papar of Jackson CountT United Press IhfernationaJ full Leased Wire rj p Telenhoto Neyrjcturea :. BWor"AUDtT mmEATT qrracuLATioNS .' SSWfWne nenresintntlve: ' WiST HOLIDAY CO., WO SI' Ices In New York Chlcew De trolt. San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle, Portland St Louis At. to-l.-, Vancouver ni NIWSPAPl PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASyKaTltN aiiniiiiMi'jmim Flight o' Time Medlord and Jackson County H,siory fro.n th. til" ot The Mall Trlbun. 10. 20. 30. 40 and 50 veara ago. 10 YEARS AGO Frank Van Dyke, Medlord attorney and former speaker of the state house of repre sentatives, Tuesday was elect ed new president ui tora imn. of The second presemaviu" . iD Vanpm and M Tne sbuuiiu w-" -: ---. Tu.,io Knnprs and Mln .W...M 1 gliel show will be staged to night at Medford High school. 20 YEARS AGO Another national defense course, this one in avlat'on sheet metal work, will start Wednesday and run Indefi nitely at the Medford High school, A -tun Pui-rv 8 "Ye rrom mvimi - - j tint" rnlurnni ' Paul Rynning, the county engineer is back frbmN.Y.and reports the dogleg In the Pao. Hgwy at Ashland win nave w w" until the country gets caught tip with Its cannons aim u.v ticships." 30 YEARS AGO Feb. 15, 1931 (Sunday) , The State Grange lias come out In favor of a tax on oleo margarine. The Jackson county grand Jury will resume its probe into the death of a man dur ing a sheriff's raid on an Illi cit still in the Reese Creek area last fall. 40 YEARS AGO Feb. IS. 1921 (Tuesday) A child expert told local parents here last night "not to spare the rod, but to use It with discretion." Check artists have horn swoggled local merchants out of some $500 recently, accord ing to the police department. 50 YEARS AGO Feb. 15, 1911 (Wednesday) The Medford city council last night called a special election for March 2, at which time citizens will bo asked to approve a $30,000 bond Issue for improvements to the city's sewer system. Mai's Your I Q.? Nina er ten correct is superior: Sevan or eight Is eaeallanri five ei tlx Is good. 1, The branch of zoology that treats of insects is called e y. 2. What wore the names of the three musketeers in Alex ander Dumas' novel of that name? 3. Which Presidential nom inee in American history used the phrase, "It is not best to swap horses while crossing the river ? 4. For what plant, the leaves of which are used for making a beverage, is Ceylon famous? 5. Which of these does not have wings: bees, flics, fleas, mosquitoes? 6. When are blackberries red? 7, How many electoral votes docs the District of Columbia cast In Presidential elections? 8. Name the American newspaperman, killed in the Pacific theater during W W II, who wrote "Here Is Your War. 9. Was Thomas Jefferson President of the U. S. before or after John Quincy Adams? 10. When it is summer In New York City, what is the season In Buenos Aires, Ar gentina? Answers: 1. Entomology, 2 Aramis, Porlhos and Athoi. 3. Abraham Lincoln. 4. Tea, 5. Fleas. 6. Before ripening, 7. None. 8. Ernie Pyle. 9. Be fore. 10y Winter. 4 FEBRUARY 15. 1961 Dr. Durno s "Four Ways " When Congressman Edwin R. Durno voted against enlarging the House Rules Committee, to by-pass a coalition of conservative Republicans and southern Democrats so that forward-looking measures could be considered by the whole house, he explained his vote, in part, by citing four other means by which this can be done. At the time we said these are, for most pur poses, unusable. But we wrote Congressional Quarterly, the factual, non-partisan Washington agency, for some facts on these four methods. The information they provided follows: "Three principal methods are available to pry legislation out of the Rules Committee: "1. Suspension of the Rulei Any Member recog nized by the Speaker may bring up a bill by asking for suspension of the rules. This requires approval by a two-thirds vote of those voting. (A bill refused a "' rule would ordinarily be too controversial to win a two-thirds vote, however.) . "2. Discharge petition If the Rules Committee does not grant a rule to a bill within seven legislative days of a request for it by the chairman of the legisla tive committee that reported the bill, backers may move to force a rule from the Committee. They do this by introducing their own rule for debate, then filing a petition ... A successful petition needs the signatures of a majority of the House . . . The House) then votes on whether to discharge the rule (not, then, on the bill Itself). "3. Calendar Wedneiday On Wednesdays ... the speaker can call upon the chairman of the legislative ' committees . . . and each may call up for a vote any bill previously reported by his committee. This pro cedure is open to dilatory action and is rarely used. . . " ..' THE fourth method cited py Representative Durno is the "Consent Calendar," when by unanimous consent a bill can be called up for consideration. One obiection can block this the first time it is tried, and members the second time. Triiio uVinn TV' Tliivrin indipar.fls that these four methods are effective ways of getting leg islation onto the floor for debate, he either (1) doesn't know what he's talking about, or (2) is deliberately misleading his constituents. in eitner case, ne cioes nimsen no creaiu Tr urniilrl hova hoon mni'P Vmnesr. if hp'H simnlv lb YtUUlU T J V. V. 1 1 ...u. v . . -J . . ' I" said "I had to go along with the Republican leadershiD." or "I'm aerainst the House debating and voting on bills." Tnrlnv'n minf.P "And fVinf I'ulps fliatio-p -never majority rale in the house I hope they will be held to ator wayne u. morse. Names Old and New One of the interesting things in living in a state wnere tne population is growing rapiuiy is the appearance of new names on the land. For example:' On the UPI wire the other day there was a story saving that the "Territorial highway" was one of those closed by high water or slides. No one in the office had ever heard of the Territorial highway, nor had anyone in the United Press International bureaus in Portland or Salem. . . 4 1 , . S A result, inquiries were made to the High wav Debartment. which identified it as the road which runs south way 99 west), down to Fern Ridge Reservoir, through Elmira and Veneta to Lorane, and then easterly to Cottage Grove. ' We were vaguely aware ot tne lact tnat sucn a road existed, but had no idea that it had been dignified by designation as a highway, let alone ma nl-Vi flm Imnvocciua naiYip (1Tpri'ir.npial " But this led, in turn, to a realization of some thing which had occurred to us brifely before, that there are a lot of names which are relatively new in the state. t ON THE list of incorporated communities in the 1960 census, most of the names are fa miliar, particularly those sized towns, or wnicn nave long Deen arouna. But we must confess that we were not fa miliar with Fairview, or Wood Village, or Pres cott, as examples. Other names, old ones, have increased in prominence considerably in recent years, while others have vanished, or are receding. Garibaldi. Gold Beach, Mill City,- Oceanlake, Winston, Brookings, are all examples of what were mere villages 20 or even 10 years ago, but which are now thriving communities of a thou sand or more people. Hermiston, 803 people in 1940, today has 4.402. But anyone who has dozen years remembers wnen vanport was one of the lartrest communities in the state. Wiped out by a flood on Memorial Day in 1948, it is now just a memory. IN EASTERN Oregon, munities are now gone, or almost gone. Granite, which had a population of 86 in 1940," today has two. Shaniko, once a railhead, a major wheat-shipping center, and a booming prairie town, had shrunk to 55 people in 1940, revived slightly by 1950 to 61 people, and last year dropped to 39. Antelope, population 90 in 1940, dropped to 60, and then to 46 last year. And so it goes. As the trends and tides of population, governed usually by economic tac tors, shift and waver, so do ihe fates of cities. But in Oregon, the long-term trend is up, and will remain so. There will be still more new names on the land. E.A. objections from three E. A. those who voted against forp-et voted aerainst of representatives, and an accounting, sen ; . from Monroe' (on High Cheshire, to the west ot that are now fairly good- been in the state for a some once-thriving com I, Dennis the Menace 'Didn't he evep hear ofws? how com he's always SOfiA STICK 7HE MEDCINE IN MB 7" . . . Communications . . . Letters to the Editor must bear ihe name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mall Tribune reserves the right lo 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 ihe views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often ihe case. View of Cuba To the Editor: E.A. has been doing some wondering about what is going on in Cuba. It has been said that we cannot believe anything that we hear and but half what we see. Regardless of how strange that might sound, there is much truth to the statement. We learn to do by doing' and we learn to believe by learn ing. Believing without learn ing is credulity. Believing by learning is logic, and believ ing from logic is conviction. When a person arrives at the point of conviction, he has established a h a r monious whole or unity of logic. A grounding in psychological ex perience is the basis for social science. A knowledge of social science will enable a person to appraise a social situation by hearing reports from both sides. And like a detective, the social scientist searches for motives for false witness, or reasons for discrepancy, neiween trie various reports. In other" words ther social scientist judges by the evi dence. I have sifted all the evi dence available and have come to the conclusion that Cuba has established a full-fledged social revolution, and judged by other such social up heavals, it has been done with the minimum of slaughter. Castro is in full control and has liquidated all private en terprise of any magnitude in cluding foreign and domestic Institutions. His social order is patterned after the Soviet Union. As it Is essential to have a menace in any drama to hold public Interest, Uncle Sam is "it" because he is the leader of the anti-Communist forces as well as an old time friend of Batista. Even though the U.S. has been undiplo matic in its relations with Cuba the end would have been the same eventually. Lastio has the moral and financial backing of every country in the world, except the United States and its few close dependents. Cuba is being polished and buffed as a Communist show piece to impress the Latin Americans. Cuban world trade has broken all records with 46 ships in the pbrt of Havana at one time. Housing, education and liv ing standards got high prior ity. With unlimited credits from Communist nations, the sky is the limit for Castro. Walter Reece Galiee rd. Merlin, Ore. Exploitation To the Editor: I am firmly convinced that if the United States follbws the Kennedy program, a large part of which really amounts to "spending ourselves into prosperity," it will cause the final collapse of our free enterprise system within a short time. Our taxes have already reached such a high level to pay for the fantastic schemes which our federal bureaucrats are already operating that they are causing the very situ ation which this new plan seeks lo cure. Many small businesses sim ply cannot afford the extra expenses on top of wages, which they have to pay when they hire help, so Instead of growing and creating more jobs they stay small enough to operate without hired help; also there is not much incen tive to progress beyond the point of making a bare living: for if you do take a chance and expand, should you be successful most of your profit j will be taken from you in the form of taxes. For a long time I have tried ; to understand the motives of the "liberals" who to a larRe part have been in control of government, schools, ad la- bor unions for many years and the only way they make any sense is to consider them as an extremely well planned attempt, to destroy from with in the American free enter prise system, despite the fact that this system has made our high standard of living pos sible. . If we wore exploited by the capitalists in the past, as most liberals claim, I found it far less painful than being ex ploited, as we are at present, by the evergrowing bureau cratic system of the Federal government. - Lyle Hartzell Sr. Box 35 Florence, Ore. 'A Handy Man' To the Editor: Some one you've been looking "for And needing mighty bad? Just take a short White City tour, He or It can be hadl Ex-laborer, cook or lawyer, ' Maybe a farmer toot Top loader, clerk of sawyer, Or is it all the same to you? It had better be the same to you, And get him If you can, There won't be much search ing to do, I'm talking about the same old man. Malemute Slim, White City, Ore. Another Compliment To the Editor: My compli ments to the Medford Senior High school on their produc tion of "Finian's Rainbow." I enjoyed every moment of it, and believe professional com panies could take a tip from them on their use of only the piano and organ for the solos and chorus instead of full orchestra. Of the many, many musi cals I have seen, this is the first time I've been able to understand every word sung. Let me add the orchestra couldn't have been better, especially in the overture and dance numbers. Medford is indeed lucky to have a high school with' such a fine music department, and so many talented young peo ple. Mrs. John L. DuBay 2368 Thornoak rd. Medford. Would Shut Water Off To the Editor: I am very certain that the water should be shut off at Emigrant Dam at once, in order to see what will happen to the numerous crevasses one block above the dam. It was noted Monday, Feb. 13, that additional crevasses have opened up to a deptli of appro.ximalcly 125 feet and 10 feet in diameter. This in dicates to me that these crevasses could continue to open up toward the dam and could cause untold damages. It appears that there is a double amount of water in the dnm at this time which should serve the valley suf ficiently this year. This would giva the dam time to settle and make investigations as to the continuing action of these crevasses. I feel certain that the tremendous weight of the dnm alone and the added amount of water would be 8 to 10 times greater than pre viously, which undoubtedly caused the sinking of the mountain walls and now could continue toward the dam. We have been told that this dam is one-half mile wide at the bottom and 35 feet at the top, but in my way of measuring the dam, I find it is approximately one-fourth of this width or less at the bottom. Wc were also told that it would be impossible for (.wa MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Wilson Claims Tax Withholding Greatest 'Pain-Killer' Since Morphine or Ether By LYLE C. WILSON Washington - HIPB - This essay will assert that the with holding tax system of col lecting federal revenue is the greatest pain killer since morphine and ether. But for the with holding system, the citizens would be shooting wiiion iax collectors on sight. That would be the citizens' alternative to getting up in one great bundle the annual tax levy against mm. There might even be a tax rebellion in this country if it were not for the relatively painless withholding system of separating the taxpayer from his money. The citizens have become accustomed to the withholding tax, however, and scarcely are aware of the government's take, although the figures are reported regu- ter to flow over the top of the dam. This all sounds fantastic to me! I would certainly like to see a group of capable engi neers investigate this serious condition at once, and also as I recommended above, that the water be shut off at least until the formation settles. E. M. Tucker Sr. Tucker Sno-Cat Corp. Medford O Editor's note: Emigrant dam was designed to be approxi mately 1,100 feet at the base. A reporting error in the Mail Tribune last week indicated it was thicker. Detailed geo logical surveys before con struction noted the crevasses Mr. Tucker mentioned, check ed them carefully, determined they were due to water ero-sion-on that particular forma tion, and were of no danger to the dam. The section may some day fall into the lake, but poses no threat to the structure. An overflow struc ture some distance from the dam will keep the water level 12 feet below the top of the dam at all times. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS A Moscow dispatch informs us that after a spectacular PIGGY-BACK launching on Sunday, a Soviet space station is hurtling toward a mid-May rendezvous with the planet Venus. I As this is written, there is no indication as to whether the "space station" will HIT Venus, or will scoot right by it and on out into space, or will go into orbit around this planet neighbor of ours that we call both Evening Star and Morning Star. About all we have been told after the first piggy-back load took off the original rocket went into orbit around the earth. MHAT'S a piggy back " laun nching? Well, a multi-stage rocket carried a sputnik into orbit. At a certain point, another rocket was fired from the sputnik. This second rocket then fired off what the Russ kies call "an automatic inter planetary station." The job of this automatic inter-planetary station is either to hit Venus or to go into orbit around it, presumably sending back pic tures and other information from the relatively close range of its orbit. The idea of the piggy-back is to. get more power into action. rjlHIS is for the book: ' -'This complicated jigger was fired off into space on Sunday, Feb. 12. It is ex pected to hit Venus (or start orbiting around Venus) about the MIDDLE OF MAY, when Venus will be only 26 million miles from the earth. That ought to give duck hunters something to talk about. If it works, it will be a new world record in the way of "shooting 'em where they ain't to hit 'em where they is." It will be roughly equivalent to firing a shotgun on a south ern Oregon marsh on the 4th of July at a duck due to take off from the Arctic circle In late September and HITTING THE DUCK! THE purpose of tills piggy back space station is to in vestigate conditions on and around Venus, whose per petual mantle of clouds has made it a mystery to scien tists. Venus, like the earth, has an atmosphere. It was long supposed to lack oxygen, without which human beings can't exist. But a new tele scope about a year ago yo vided Information Indicating larly to each individual. The tax lifted from the citizens' pay envelopes by their employers and paid into the treasury has lost its iden tity as income. The citizen calculates his income now in terms of take - home - pay, which is the sum remaining of his wage after federal, state and, sometimes, municipal governments have taken their cuts. Something for Nothing Tax withholding by the em ployer so dulls the tax bite as to foster the belief among citizens that they are getting something for nothing in the way of services and benefits when the federal government pays the bill. This state of public mind is well known to politicians. The politicians take advantage of it when confronted with a crisis of almost any kind almost anywhere, Colombia Economic, By PHIL NEWSON UPI Foreign News Analyst Cadi, Colombia (UPI) In Co lombia there is a bitter jest that Latin America should im port 50 million Communist s, and then i t would receive the same at tention which the United States now gives to Eu rope and Asia. An educator Newsom lens oi me need to reduce Colombia's greater than 50 per cent illit eracy, and he recalls standing beside a Colombian air force man who watched with pride an American-built Colombian jet fighter streak through the skies. "I thought of the cost," he said. "One million dollars. For that I could have operated the university for one year." A businessman tells how Colombians followed the Unit ed States elections. Faithful Ally "Every radio in Colombia was tuned to the results," he says. He hopes the new U. S. administration will recognize that Colombia in particular has been a faithful U. S. ally, but "last in consideration be hind Europe and non-Communist areas." A coffee grower asks U. S. help in stabilizing coffee prices whose fall has led to a cut in imports of U. S. ma chinery. A sugar grower asks a part in the U. S. quota for Colom bia's growing sugar industry, just now reaching the export level. These are not necessarily conflicting interests. Rather they are representa tive of a Latin American na tion in a hurry. Colombia is attempting to that both free oxygen and water vapor may be present in the atmosphere of Venus. Late observations indicate that Venus has seasons. Venus is closer to the sun than we are. So it's HOT. Current estimates put its daytime tem perature at about 212 degrees (the boiling point of water at sea level.) That's on its sunny side, in the day time. On its dark side, at night, the tem perature is believed to drop to about 10 degrees Fahrenheit. 'l'ENUS circles the sun every 225 days, so its seasons are shorter. It isn't known defi nitely how long it takes Venus to turn on its axis. Some astronomers believe it turns only once on its axis in its 225-day circuit of the sun. Others think it may turn as often as once every three or four weeks. That would mean a LONG day. We carthlings would be bushed long before quitting time. But - on the other hand - think of the binges people so inclined could go on in a night three or four weeks long! There's another drawback. Venus, like the earth, has an atmosphere, but, unlike the earth, its clouds seem to form a complete and perpetual wrapping around its surface. In other words, it's cloudy all the time. TTMMMMMMMMMM. "If it comes to the point of calling for volunteers to found a colony on Venus, I believe they can count me out.j Day time temperatures of 212 de grees. Night time tempera tures of 10 above - with no assurance as to what kind of fuel they have to heat the house at night. And CLOUDY ALL THE TIME! All in all, I prefer our State of Jefferson climate. Palm Springs, Calif. - (UPII Former President Eisenhower is spending a considerable por tion of his time while on vaca tion here answering bundles of letters from well-wishers. A spokesman said Tuesday that Eisenhower has received "thousands" of letters since leaving office last monfh. ,The political cure for trou ble at home or abroad more often than not is simply this appropriate a lot of govern ment money and spend it. If the cure works, all is reason alby well. If it doesn't work, the cure is repeated. The confused idea that the U.S. dollar is a wonder drug, a specific for all ills domestic and foreign, has been a big factor in runaway govern ment spending over the past 30 years. The citizens have become accustomed to a gov ernment which cannot pay its bills and must, therefore, go into debt for the excess of expenditure over revenue. Deficit Financing A by-product of this deficit financing has been a steadily rotting dollar which has lost in the past 20 years or so more than half of its purchas ing power. The alternatives Is Facing Controlled Social Revolution carry out a controlled eco nomic and social revolution, not far to the left as in Cuba, nor under the same political pressures as in Venezuela. But, as in all of Latin Amer ica's undeveloped nations, it is a revolution with problems urgently needing a solution. Economic Problems Discussions with business and educational leaders dis close general agreement on Colombia's problems -a one sided economy based on cof fee, with illiteracy and low health standards. But solutions take time and Today & Tomorrow By Walter HIGH LEVEL DIPLOMACY Secretary Rusk is said to be under considerable pressure to cross the Pacific in order t o attend a m e e t ing of S E A T O in Bangkok. Two Asian mem bers of the South: East Asia Treaty O r ganizatlon, the Philip pines and Thailand, are Lippmann are dissatisfied, it would ap pear, with the unwillingness of Great Britain and France to hot up the Laotian trouble, and they are threatening to withdraw from SEATO. Only Secretary Rusk, they say, can dissuade them, and to do this he must go to Bangkok. No one else can dissuade them. Only the Secretary of State in person. It will be a pity if so early in the day Mr. Rusk allows himself to be lured back into the dreary and unprofitable ways of itinerant summitry. Nobody knows better than he, no one has spoken more co gently about, the weaknesses of this kind of diplomacy. It takes the Secretary of State away from Washington where he cannot be spared. It subjects him to a physical and nervous strain which he should not be asked to bear. It downgrades the authority of the American Ambassadors on the spot, and of the roving Ambassador, Gov. Harriman, who may be needed to repre sent the United States to re gional negotiations. It sets a precedent. If the Secretary must go to SEATO, then in no time at all he will have to go to the centers of all the other pacts-to CENTO, to NATO, to OAS. He must go also to the neighboring states whose prestige will be hurt if he does not visit them. Before he knows it, he will be visit ing Formosa and Japan and so on and so on. lUIIS is as good a time as any to turn over a new leaf and to set new precedents. The Philippines and Thailand have Ambassadors, able Am bassadors, in Washington. Let them be asked to explain to their governments why the Secretary of State cannot leave Washington when a new Administration is just form ing. Let them be told that the A m e r i can Ambassadors in Bangkok and Manila will have instructions backed by the full authority of our gov ernment. Moreover, tel us begin to untangle the error of high policy, which has been to treat pacts of guarantee, like SEATO, as instruments which the United States is trying to sell. The United States guar antee has been tossed around very loosely. To an unneces sary degree we have been pro fligate with our guarantees. We have given the impression to the world that they are to be regarded as something we are seeking rather than as something that, carefully and frugally, we occasionally give. I iKMcflSS m. v.sM to more deficit financing and further rotting of the dollar are few and hard. They ara (1) reduction in government spending, (2) a hike in taxes (3) or both. There are starry-eyed citi zens among us who consider present tax rates and govern ment spending levels to bo outrageously high. These starry-eyed citizens believa this situation could be reme died by amending the Consti. tution to a top limit on in. come tax rates - say 25 per cent. The idea is no good be cause no such amendment can be had. A better plan would be to repeal the withholding tax provisions of the revenue act. That would put the pain back into taxpaying. The citizen taxpayer could take it from there whether he wanted spending and taxes reduced. are not easily come by. Suggestions that the United States help stabilize the cof fee market still make no pro vision for excess production which, as Africa comes mora and more into the market, is likely to increase rather than decrease. Brazilian attempts to aid coffee growers by government purchases simply made Brazil the largest single owner of coffee beans and did nothing toward a world solution. Su gar has been suggested as a second income producer but it also is in a crowded market. lippmann IN OUR relations with the great powers of Western Europe and the Soviet Union, the firmest believer in quiet diplomacy will agree that, fol lowing his meeting with Mr. Macmillan, it would be useful if the President had a ehanca to talk face to face with Gen. de Gaulle, with Dr. Adenauer, and with Mr. Khrushchev. The real importance of face to face meetings with those men is not that It is a sub stitute for quiet negotiation but that it facilitates quiet negotiation. The heads of government need to know what kind ot man their Am bassadors are telling them about. They need to see the man and to hear him, and not only to try to imagine him from photographs and car toons. But this act of getting ac quainted, which is desirable for the new President, must resolutely be kept from be coming inflated into summit ry. One precaution is to have it understood that a format summit meeting is not now in prospect. Another precaution is for the President to avoid travelling abroad at least until he has finished with his legis lative program, including for eign aid and defense. This would mean that at least until next summer face to face meetings would have to take place in Washington or - in New York. jllR. Khrushchev has, it ap pears, had explained to him the reasons why the new Administration needs time to form its policy on the great issues. Time is needed for study and for debate and for decision. Time is needed also for public education. It is not now possible, for example, to have fruitful negotiation about arms control or about new ways of guaranteeing the free dom of the people of West Berlin. In these matters the air is still too full of spooks. If this is understood, it would be an advantage if Mr, Khrushchev could visit this country, let us say in April after Mr. Macmillan has been here. He might come to the U.N. and on to Washington. Mr. Khrushchev and Mr. Ken nedy had better get lo know one another since they will be dealing with one another on such critical questions. This will be a demonstration that diplomatic intercourse has been restored after the rup ture of last May. If this strengthens Mr. Khrushchev at home and among his Com munist allies, we can count that as being to the general advantage. One of the prime lessons of the Eisenhower - Khrushchev dealings is, I believe, that per sonal summitry cannot suc ceed unless in the interval be tween the big meetings there is persistent and imaginative quiet diplomacy. The reason for the disaster in May is to be found, it seems to me. in the seven months of diplomatic d r i f t i n g and inadvertence which took Dlace after Mr. Khrushchev's visit to Wash ington. I (c) 1961 New York Herald I Tribune Inc. I