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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1962)
o mn ..-,.... "nnumLBSDAT 1 14-month-old Greek boy wai New York - (CPU - The 10,-delivered to Mr. and Mr. Gus rPhan1br'6ht to thislKarey of Oklahoma City, country by the International Okla., who already have a rW,UCe, Asen,7 sinee 1954 ar- tour-year-old adopted daugh nved here Wednesday, The 1 ter of Greek origin. I ... a i MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON i i YOU re invited to MEET. WITH Congressman -A- EDWIN R. DURNO at an OPEN FORUM Tomorrow night (Friday) 8 p.m. at the AMERICAN LEGION HALL Walnut Street (Left off Riverside Ave. at Pulver'i Motel) ALSO SEE REP. 4:30 P.M. Friday 6:55 P.M. Friday ... 10:00 P.M. Saturday A Your Congressman Rep. Durno is here to answer your questions concern- ' ing domestic and foreign affairs. At Your U.S. Senate Ourno is here to clarify his position on im portant issues of the day. DURNO ON TELEVISION KMED-TV, Channel 10 KMED-TV, Channel 10 KBES-TV, Channel 5 KOTI-TV, Channel 2 Pd. Pol. Adv. Durno for Senator Com., G. L. Boshears, 33)5 Hollywood, Med., Ore. THURSDAY, MAY 10. 1962 Matter of Fact a Joseph Alsop (ct New York Herald Tribune Syndicate NOT MAKING MUCH SENSE Paris In the whole his tory of the Western Alliance, there has been nothing quite like the present remarkably relation- between DIVORCED - Actress Dinah Shore is shown in Santa Mon ica, Calif., Superior Court as she received a divorce from actor George Montgomery. (UPI) KEEPING BUSY Iowa City, Iowa -flJPD- Uni versity of Iowa researchers re ported Wednesday that farm wives spend more time primp ing than city women. But they also said that farm wives get more sleep, spend more time in the kitchen and have less time for things they want to do. w m 1 ugly , ship States. Hard feelings have arisen often enough. Di vergences of policy have appeared from time to time. But in the present case, Gen. de Gaulle and President Ken- All'.p PP&L Hearing Set In Medford June 12 Salem-WPU-The Oregon pub lic utility commissioner's of fice said today six hearings have been scheduled on the application of Pacific Power and Light Co. for exclusive rights to most of the areas in Oregon which It now serves. The application was filed under a new law allowing this. A number of other groups, mostly PUDS, al ready have asked for and been granted exclusive serv ice territories of their own. Hearings are scheduled June 4 in Astoria, June 5 in Delake, June 6 in Coos Bay, June 12 in Medford, June 13 in Bend and June 14 in Pendleton. ncdy are not merely pursuing rather directly contradictory policies. The two governments also appear to be doing their best to inflame the situation still further, by all sorts of calculate 1 mutual slights and France and'Pet'y persecutions. the United . The French eamhits ran from refusing entry into France' of American frozen poultry to a new and very hurtful practice of giving preference to Soviet coal, in stead of importing the Amer ican Coal that the U. S. badly needs to sell. A typical Ameri can gambit was the recent re fusal to sell the French tanker aircraft, on the ground that the tankers might just con ceivably be used to air-refuel French attack-planes which might later, just conceivably, be used to carry French nu clear weapons. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF rjtHE original aggressor in - this lunatic contest of nas tincss was clearly Gen. de Gaulle. Men primarily ob sessed with grandeur and with rank, as de Gaulle is ob sessed, rather often display a strange combination of pet tiness and greatness. The plate turned over at the dinner party, because the seating of fends their ideas of protocol. a gesture understood and approved by such men. In Gen. de Gaulle's mind. the American refusal to en courage France's nuclear as pirations, the summary rejec tion of his plan for an Anglo-Franco-American directory of the West, were shocking of fenses against protocol, in fact insults to the proper rank of France, on the big gest scale. A TRAFFIC COP flagged a lady doing eighty-five on a crowded throughway and dodging from lane to lane. He examined her license and returned it with this quizzical observation. "Your li cense seems, to be valid, madam. Now would you mind telling me how the heck you got it?" Mr. Homblower," apply ing for credit' In a new res taurant, was requested to give references. "I have charge accounts," wrote Mr. Homblower, "with Bergdorf, Tiffany's, Van Cleef a, Dior, and every other store, furrier, and jeweler my wife has ever heard of." Two attractive teen-age girls were flouncing along the Board walk at Atlantic City. "Do you ever get that funny feeling. Sylvia," pouted one, "that you're not being followed?" O tm by Bennett Cert Distributed by Kim Features Syndicate a Modern, Hew and Beautiful! 'lW.aaXsSWaXMHlHSlSsJL.i-J . OP NI if Tonight Friday & Saturday MAY 10, 11 and 12 Town House Chuck Wagon 3- BIG DAYS The plate therefore had to just about every surviving pro-American official in the French government. There were many such, who also criticized such features of the de Gaulle policy as his osten tatious withdrawal from the Berlin soundings with the So viets. Now these men are all but silenced. TUIEY are silenced, in turn, because of a fundamental American miscalculation. This was implied by the reported remark of the Slate Depart ment's Dr. Robert Bowie, to the French ambassador of all people, that when Providence removed Gen. de Gaulle the nuclear aspirations of France would also vanish. These as pirations will not vanish. They are a fact of Western life, which the American policy - makers had better face. There are other facts that need to be faced as well. To begin with, the kind of Europe Gen. de Gaulle wants to construct, without the British, is almost the flat op posite of the kind of Europe President Kennedy has been plugging for, with the Brit ish as Europeans. De Gaulle wants his Eu rope not just to be able to defend itself against the So viets, but also to be able to defy the United States; and this second objective seems be turned over at the dinner party. Thus members of for mer Prime Minister Michel Debre's personal staff were actually given the specific as signment of finding things France could do to damage American interests, like the transfer of coal purchases, as well as locating potential points of non-cooperation of a less damaging but lesson teaching character. SINCE protocol protective plate-turning is not wide ly understood in homespun Washington, the plate-turning was counter productive for Gen. de Gaulle. Except in the State Department, almost every strong member of the Kennedy administration, not ably including the President and Secretary of Defense Mc Namara, entered office with strong Gaullist sympathies. But the pettiness and un friend liness systematically displayed by Paris gave strong arguments to the rath er weak faction of Washing ton anti-Gaullists. The result, which might have been quite different in another climate, was the Ken nedy administration's lately re-affirmed decision to oppose and obstruct France's nuclear ambitions. The immediate effect has been to damage and isolate to him nearly as important as the first. Furthermore, it is far from clear that the pas sage of the Kennedy trade bill will lead on to happy, fruit ful economic negotiations be tween the U. S. and a Europe dominated by de Gaulle. The stories of the coal and frozen pltry are highly indicative in this connection. EMNALLY, de Gaulle's Eu- rope is far from being such a mad conception as many Washington policymak ers now suppose. If the Brit ish pay the entry-fee the Euro peans are asking, de Gaulle will be momentarily check mated. But what if the Brit ish balk? Chancellor Adenauer, the one German leader whose pol icy is irrevocably founded on the American connection, is finally coming very near to the end of his time. Already, in his Machiavellian way, de Gaulle is using the U. S.-So-viet talks about Berlin to im plant among the Germans the belief that they are being sold down the river by the Americans. All this is most unpleasant and unpalatable. But yet an other fact that must be faced is the simple fact that Gen de Gaulle will not change and will not soon be eliminated from the scene. Thus the American policy makers have only two choices They can either change their minds about refusing to do business with de Gaulle; or they must shape their actions to make sure he is thorough ly hedged in, at Bonn, in Rome, and In qjher centers where Ameican errors can give him the support he needs. : 'AAA BLiuraal (Republican) DavidS. ' BLAIR fer Jackisn County Commissioner Experience, background and determination to do a first clan job! Pol. Adv. paid for by David S. Blair. P.O. Box 306, Roguo River, Ore. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS In Atlantic Citv President Kennedy tells labor (he was speaking to the United Auto Workers convention) that "un justified wage damands which require price increases are as much against the national in terest as unjustified profit de- manas which require price , increases." He added: "We have no intention of I intervening in every labor dispute. We are neither able nor willing to substitute our judgment for the judgment of those who sit at everv bargaining table in the coun try. "The administration will not undertake to fix prices and wages in a peacetime economy, but it must define goals and point out the na tional interest. We possess and we seek NO POWERS OF COMPULSION. The gov ernment must rely mainly on the VOLUNTARY efforts of labor and business to make certain the national interest is preserved." Each 10th Lady Will Be Guest of the House Offering a Large Selection of Fine Salads and Meat Dishes Lunch $1.00, Children (lo 8) 6Gc 11 a.m. lo 2 p.m. Dinners $1.50, Children (to 8) 85c 5 p.m. lo 8:30 p.m. 0 In Downtown Medford Next to Medford Beauty Salon PRIVATE Rtftt FOR PARTIES 129 Snth Central Ave. Eniotfthe Best! . : CSWW Wit r Q v'A&ii-....Vi TIE CONCLUDED: "I speak with a single voice to the men on both sides of the bargaining table when I say that your SENSE j OF RESPONSIBILITY - the responsibility of both labor and management to the gen eral public - is the founda tion on which our hopes must build for the survival and success of the free enterprise system. A week ago, he told the United States Chamber of Commerce, which is the na tional spokesman for business and industry: "We do not want the added burden of de termining individual prices for individual products." But he indicated then that "guide lines" would be laid down for the conduct of business in j relation to price increases. I That, in effect, is what he was saying to labor. HIS objectives, of course, is to STOP INFLATION. I think we can all agree that inflation must be stopped. If we don't stop inflation, this is what will happen: Our prices will continue to rise until in time we will price ourselves out of our own domestic markets by get ting our prices so high that foreign producers can (and will) UNDERSELL US IN OUR OWN MARKETS. At the same time, we will price ourselves out of foreign mar kets. If we price ourselves out of both our foreign and domestic markets, we will face a calamitous situation. rPHERE is, to be sure, an I alternative. We can raise our tariff walls so high that foreign producers can not climb ever them. 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