u
O
ft)
ussians Welcome Erhard as
Bv HENRY SHAPIRO
I'nilcd Press International
Moscow (UPI) A sigh of
relief will come out of the Krem
lin next month when Konrad
Adenauer steps down as West
German chancellor to be re
placed by Dr. Ludwig Erhard
whom the Russians consider
relatively more realistic and
flexible.
Since the organization of the
Federal German Republic, Ade
nauer has been looked upon as
Moscow's "Public Enemy No.
1" on the international scene
a place he sometimes yielded in
Soviet pronouncements only to
the late U.S. Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles and occa
sionally to former West German
War Minister Josef Strauss.
The Soviet vindication of Ade
nauer reached such extremes as
branding him "another Hitler"
Tuflle To Speak
At Club Meeting
Shelby Tuttle of the Fruit
Growers League of Jackson
county will speak at the noon
meeting of the Southern Oregon
Advertising club Oct. 7 at Kim's
restaurant.
Tuttle is executive secretary
of the league, and will speak on
the economic contributions of
the pear industry to the county
and on the labor problems fac
ing the growers each year at
harvest time.
The Ad club meetings have
been changed from Wednesday
to Monday and will be held
regularly at noon on the first
three Mondays of each month
at Kim's. The last meeting of
the month will continue to be a
dinner meeting Thursday nights.
Anyone interested in the field
of edvertising either as an ad
vertising agent or as a business
man is cordially invited to at
tend the meetings.
rVae
Cm
EoUyw
Minister Andrei Gromvko brief
and questioning his sanity.
It has been long felt and said
here that prospects of improve
ment in Soviet-German relations
and East-West relations general
ly were virtually nil during Ade
nauer's tenure of office.
By contrast. Soviet officialdom
j has been extremely cautious
with regard to Chancellor-dcsig-I
nate Erhard. The Russians are
following tnetr customary prac
tice of "watchful waiting" until
tiie new leader takes office and
they can assess his policies and
intentions.
No official ekpression of opin-
The Family Council
Pernor's note: Tlie r'anulr Counril cunslsts of a JudRf. a
phvi hia'rist, three clemvinen. Uirre editors ano a women's editor.
Kii'h article in a sunurary of a family disagreement presented to the
Council The Coiinrl! d?als with problems, nmior and minor,
'to-ounlerd hv guidance counselor and social workers. Edited by
Mrs. Ima Denny. (Copynshi by General Features Corp.)
Neil V I want him to treat
my sister better.
Edwin M. She's trying to
come between me and my fam
ily. Neil V. I was shocked to see
my sister after a year and a
half of marriage to Ed. She's
only 20, but she's chain-smoking,
twitchy and nervous, and looks
middle-aged already. I'd seen
her last as a pink and blooming
teen-ager, happy-go-lucky and
healthy. She tells me Ed makes
her entertain hordes of his rela
tives, including dozens of kids
who mess up their home. She's
running a free hotel.
Edwin M. If Neil doesn't like
the way June looks, let him tell
her to eat and sleep right and
stop smoking. She looks bad
from the fool diets she tries,
not from housework. V? have
a small easy home, and when
there's company I help her,
whether it's her folks or mine.
It just happens I'm the youngest
of a family of eight and we're
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ion on Erhard may be expected
until sometime after he has as
sumed his new responsibilities.
Meantime the Kremlin has
practiced a measure of "quiet
diplomacy," an tried to reach
Erhard's ear indirectly. Only a
day after his return from Yugo
slavia this month Premier Ni-
i kita Khrushchev quickly ar
I ranged to receive Thomas Deh
i ler, visiting German vice presi-
dent of the Free Democratic
I party and vice chairman of the
! Bundestag.
j ' Obviously aware that Dchlrr
- would report to Erhard without
delay, Khrushchev and Foreign
1 very close. I want them to know
i my home is their home, too.
! The Council: While this is
really an inside matter between
Ed and June, this brother plays
i the important role of a mirror.
He shows June how she's
! changed and wakes her from
! an almost two-year reverie in
which she's going through mo
' lions without doing much think
i ing. In this situation, Ed, young
and thoughtless too, is enjoying
! life pretty much, "as usual,"
I marriage notwithstanding. He's
still the "baby" of his family.
He hasn't ready made the leap
as head of this new one. . .
, Now it may require marriage
' counseling to point the way. The
; problem isn't June's haggard
j appearance it's the wrong
' track she and Ed are on. They
must be drawn closer by real
izing that their union takes pri
ority over loyalties to the in
dividual families. "You for me
and me (or you" is the first rule.
o o
O
o
0 &
eded him fully on the current
i Soviet stance on Germany.
Similarly, earlier this sum
j mer Khrushchev rolled out his
I plushest red carpet for West
German industrial states man
Hans Beitz, the so-called ambas-
Crews Trying to
1 Finish Power Line
! ASHLAND Power line con
struction crews of Pacific Pow-
: er and Light company are rush
ing to completion the building
of a $117.0X10 distribution line to
: serve the Mt. Ashland Ski re-
1 sort .
i The crews are scheduled to
complete the line within the
i next (HI days, according to Frank
Benesh, Medford district man
ager, who said early snow could
I upset the schedule.
j The new line will be supplied
from Pacific Power's lower
Siskiyou distribution circuit,
which passes over the Siskiyou
J summit along Highway 66 south
oi Asniana. ine line win cwiw
northwesterly from the summit
to the Mt. Ashland resort area,
a distance of six miles.
"The last one and one-half
miles of the new distribution
circuit will be installed under
ground to reduce hazards to
skiers in the resort area," Be
nesh said.
"Going undergriund also will
help prevent trouble with lines
and pole crossarms exposed to
the damaging effects of the
heavy winter wind, ice and
snowfall experienced at the high
elevation," he added.
If June doesn't want all that
company, Ed must respect her
wishes. The folks get prorated
and wait for invitations. June's
no yo-yo. And if Ed's ego gets
a big lift surrounded by kin,
June won't be stingy with those
invitations. That's love.
Lo-.e-'"
fci- w
More
sador plenipotentiary of the
powerful Krupp interests. Beitz's
visit here resulted in an expand
ed agreement for the construc
tion of Krupp chemical plants in
the Soviet Union and was fol
lowed by the establishment of
the first post-war private West
German commercial office in
Moscow.
While the political Soviet-German
debate has continued un
abated in bitterness, c o m
mercial relations have improved j
steadily of late. As witnessed by j
the conclusion of a $200 million
agreement tor the construction
in Kiel of fishing vessels for the ;
Soviet Union
Although the Russians cling to
the classical Marxist view that '
social and economic realities
rather than personalities deter-
mine the course of history, they
do not entirely disregard the
role ot individuals in shaping
events. They have not tended to
ignore Adenauer's personality
and appear to be pinning some
hope on the prospective new
West German leadership.
Not that they expect reorienta
tion of Bonn's basic policy but
they appear to be thinking in
terms of changes of degree
which may make a substantial
difference in the quality of Soviet-German
relations.
"Erhard is an eminent econo
mist and not a professional and
doctrinaire politician like Ade-
O
Wi'lOTl''iiiiiitir7'lJ" '"'''''''"' f " -"' nii-im '.' w!mi-u'iu'iiii'iiiiiiHii.iin i i i inm..iW!ii mi iij i mi m imimnnmn-iiiinii .i.i.ii..i i
:iSi . , . i
111 - foW$
L i wmk
iiiivv- I I Him
Flexible Leader for Germany
nauer, a Soviet commentator
told this correspondent.
Erhard is reported to have
close ties with the leaders of
German industry who ha.e dis
played interest in expanding
economic relations with the
Communist East.
The Russians are firmly con
vinced that German industrial
ists wield substantial political
power. As an economist who
sometimes did not sec eye to
eye with Adenauer on political
problems, Erhard may prove to
be more practical and more
flexible, in the Soviet view, and
may have somewhat different
ideas on Germany's eastern
policies than the outgoing chan
cellor. Diplomatic sources here have
also expressed the opinion that,
I unlike Adenauer who consitlered
himself his own foreign minis-
ter. Erhard is more likely to
give freer reign to Foreign Min
ister Gerhard Schroedor who
has already displayed more
flexibility than his predecessor,
lleinrich von Brentano.
Atldiaucr Delays
By way of example the
source pointed out that Schroe
der announced his approval of
the nuclear test ban treaty soon
after it was signed in Moscow
but its ratification by Bonn was
delayed when Adenauer raised a
number ot objections and quali
fications. & 0
()
fj & m urn m TTiO w rvr rra mm
. ... ... .... . A .
A
y
It was also apparently Schroe -
der's initiative that led to West ment of the Berlin problem.
Germany's establishment of . Tne Kremlin's apparent hold
,j ... , , ing operation on East-West po -
trade representation in Poland icyh js' kely (0 be coMmuJ jn
which was followed by current . t,e immediate future with re
negotiations for similar repre- S gard to Germany, especially in
sentation in Hungary and Ro-: anticipation of Adenauer's suc
mania. i cession so as not to prejudice
For reasons of their own. 1
probably connected with the
Sino-Soviet conflict, the Kreni-j
lin has ceased recently to push j
with the same old urgency its
(a i--ffj Li
GERM A.N SUCCESSOR When Konrad Adenauer (left) stops
down as West German chancellor he will be replaced by Dr.
Ludwig Erhard whom the Russians consider to be relatively more
realistic and flexible, according to Henry Shapiro. Adenauer and
Erhard are shown here as they posed for a photo early this
year. (UPI)
r ,
25th Anniversary
(
9
1 five-year-old demand for settle
the possibility of better relations
with Erhard. '
The possibility of an eventual :
Khrushchev trip to Bonn is I
discussed in diplo
again bem
0
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O 6)00g
matic circles here. Adenauer
visited Moscow in 1955 and in
vited the Soviet premier to West
Germany but the invitation was
never taken up.
The personal antipathy be-
I tween Khrushchev and Ade
nauer made this impossible.
t mere win oe no sucn oosiacte
now, at least in the early stages
oi trnara s tenure.
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