La Grande observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1959-1968, September 19, 1959, Page 6, Image 6

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    List Women's Textile
In Union County Fair
H-re Is another list of winners
as tabulated by the recent I'nion
County Fair Board and furnished
this newspaper fol'owing comple
tion of the judging event.
Women's textiles: Bedroom
linens and quilts, bedspreads,
crochet, fine thread Mrs. C. C.
Owen, La Grande, 1st: bedspread,
coarse thread Mrs. Harvey Car
ter, La Grande, 1st; bedspread.
Wet crochet Mrs. Eduir Hall.
La Grande, 1st: bedspread em
broidered Mrs. Delbert Houston,
La Grande, 1st: sheet, pillow case
set Elvanae Outha, La Grande.
1st; pillow cases, embroidered,
white Leona Worthington, La
Grande, 1st; pillow cases, embroid
ed, colored llal'ie Clement, La
Grande, 1st, Mrs. Grac? Asia.
La Grande, 2nd; pillow cases,
crochet Elvanae Outha, La
Grande, 1st ; knit pillowcases, Mrs.
L: Bates, Rt. 2. La Grande, 1st,
and Mrs. Zadia Lassley. La
Grande, 2nd; pillow cases, ap
pliqued Merle Sherman, La
Grande, '1st, and Loma Carlson.
Elgin, 2nd; pillow cas-s. outwork
Hallie Clement, La Grande. 1st.
and Zadia Lassley, 2nd: pllow
cases, cross stitch Erma Nelson,
Elgin, 1st, and Hallie Clement,
2nd; pillow cases, textile paint
Vivian Dot son, La Grande, 1st,
and Elsie Clark. Rt. 1, La Grande.
2nd: dressr scarf, embroidered
Hallie Clement, 1st. and Cletus
Zickafoose, La Grande, 2nd: dress
er scarf, cut-work Ha'lie Clement.
1st, and Mrs. J. Cooper, La
Grande, 2nd.
Also Vanity, S-piece crochet.
Mrle Sherman, La Grande. 1st:
quilt, patchwork Dora Elmer,
Aliccl, 1st, and Mrs. Jimmie
Wade, La Grande, 2nd; quilt, ap
pliqued Shirley Drummond, La
Grande. 1st; quilt, best quilting
Dora Elmer, 1st; quilt top, an
pliqued Mary Hermann, La
Grande, 1st; quilt top. pieced
Mrs. Lillian Simms, La Grande,
1st: dining room linens, table
cloth, crochet Hallie Clement.
1st, and Mrs. W E. Baker. La
Grande, 2nd; table cloth, crass
stitch Leona Worthington. 1st;
table cloth, filet crochet Mrs. Ed
Hall, 2nd no 1st place winner
listed l; table cloth, shuttle work
Carrie Randall, La Grande, 1st;
)uncheon cloth, crochet Mrs.
Stanley Arnoldus. La Grande, 1st,
and Mrs. Lester Johns, La Grande.
2nd; luncheon cloth, embroidered
Hallie Clement, 1st and Shirley
Drummond, 2nd; luncheon cloth,
textile paint Elsie Clark. Rt.. 1
La Grande, 1st; table mat tset o'
41, AUa McCory, La Grande, 1st
and Hallie Clement, 2nd.
Living room lin"ns, chair back
get Verna Lampkins, Rt. 1, La
Grande, 1st; center piece, cm
broidTed Loma Carlson, 1st;
center piece, crochet Eva Vander
mulen. La Grande, 1st, and Grace
Evans, La Grande. 2nd; center
piece, tatted Hallie Clem-nt. 1st;
NORTH POWDER BRIEFS
Bill Pearson
In Hospital
NORTH POWDER (Special)
Bill Pearson was rushed to the
Grande Ronde Hospital Tuesday!
due to a heart attack. Mrs. Pear
son is there with him now.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Shaw
spent the weekend in Portland
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Troxel of
Ashland, visited her mother, Mrs
Bill Nice, Wednesday and Thurs.
day, while on their way to Idaho
for a vacation.
.. J'.ssie Burdette and Mrs. Mor
ten Smith visited friends in
Cove Monday.
Mrs. Sue Gulick went to New
Bridge, Wednesday, after peaches
She was accompanied by Mrs.
Guy Smith and Mrs. Arthur Gor-
ham.
The Cemetery Board held a re
gulr husiness meeting Wednes
day evening tn the City Library,
Mrs. Everett Tibbs and dauglv
tcr Mary of Muddy Creek, visited
at the Earl O Bryant home, Wed
liesday.
Mrs. Bernice McCanse took care
of the Bernard Monaghan child
ren while Mr. and Mrs Monaghan
attended the luneral of his fath
r, Bill Monaghan at Spokane.
Cove Freshman
Class Observes
Initiation Event
COVE (Special) The Fresh
man class initiation was held on
Wednesday. At 7:30 that evening
a party was held. The sophomore
class had charge of everything.
Those being initiated were: John
Barnctt, Dwight Bloom, Linda
Bowman, Marie Carter, Jim Cash,
Loren demons, Jim Doramus,
Patty Jo Fruits, Marjorie Hoff
man, Vickl James, Kalhy Miller,
Sharon Morris, Sharon Millman,
Beverly Moulton, Jack Saunders,
Tom Simmons, Alice Smith, and
Martin Thimmej. ,
Robert Stewart, Vernon Lowry,
and Charles Haggerty attended
the Tu-Valley league meeting
held at Elgin. A dinner meeting,
lollowed by 1 business meeting.
was held. The principal business
of the League was taken care 01
lor the year.
The Cove Leopards traveled to
Arlington Friday for another
football game.
center piece, knit Hallie Clemoni
1st; enter piece display 13
pieces'. Gertie N. Hibberl, Rt. 2,
La Grande, 1st, and Eva Vander
mulen, 2nd; doilie. crocheted Eva
Vandermulen, 1st, and Elva Outha.
2nd; doilie, knitted Laura Bates.
1st; Aighan, crocheted Vivian
Dotson, La Grande, 1st; Afghan,
piee'd Zadia Lassley, 1st; wall
hanging, embroidered, wool Mrs.
Delbert Houston, La Grande, 1st.
Kitchen, guest towel Mrs. Stan
ley Arno!dus, 1st, and Elsie Clark.
2nd; tea towels 'set of 6 em
hroid'redl. Cletus Zickafoose. 1st
and Laura Taylor, La Grande,
2nd; tea toweis, cross-stnen
Cletus Zickafoose, 1st; tea towels
1 set of 6, textile painted), Elsie
Clark, 1st; pot holders, crochet
or knit Ruth llcrzingcr. La
Grande, 1st, and ?W"s. Lster
lohns. 2nd: Dot holder disolav
Ruth Herzineer. 1st. and Elwanae
Outha, 2nd; hot dish mats Zadia
Lassley. 1st; apron 'utility), Mrs.
Clara Johns, La Grande, 1st, and
Elsie t.larK, 2nd; apron pariy),
Elsie C'ark, 1st, and Mrs. Don
Gaily, La Grande, 2nd.
Rugs, hooked cotton or bag-
Mrs. Jimmie Wade, 1st; braided
wool Mrs. Jessie Perry, La
Grande, 1st, and Mrs. Ethel Ellis.
La Grande, 2nd; crocheted cotton
Mrs. Cooper, 1st. and Mrs. Ilur-
New York
Took 'K'
In Stride
NEW YORK CITD New York
did not see much of the Nikita
Khrushchev. But it will not soon
forget that they were here for two
extraordinary days in September
Of 1959.
A close-up on television was the
closest most Americans came to
the Soviet premier and his fam
ily. New Yorkers going about their
business in town gathered that
Khrushchev was on the roll to one
of his many appointments when
ever they heard the roar of his
75-motorcycle escort in the dis
tance or when traffic came to a
standstill for several blocks, usu
ally by coincidence at the rush
hour.
Those who had hoed to see Ni
kita and hs wife Nina Petrovna
were invariubly disappointed.
'" A glimpse of the Khrushchev
profile, the blurred image of a
bald head was about the only re
ward for minutes and even hours
of sidewalk waiting.
If Washington gave its attention
mostly to Khrushcev, It was Mrs.
Khrushchev's turn to triumph in
New York.
The luckiest New Yorkers of all
were some 1,400 theater-goers who
got a good long look at the pre
mier's wife just because they hap
pened to hold tickets for the ".Mu
sic Man'' on the same night as
she.
, What kind of impact did New
York make on the Khrushehevs
This was the M-rublo question to
day as the Khrushehevs flew 0,7
to Los Angeles.
Mrs. Khrushchev called it a
"noisy" city.
Nikita, from the top of the Em
pire State, said it was a "fine"
city, but that Moscow was the best
city of all. Every man has a spe
cial feeling for his home town, he
explained.
The feeling they probably took
with them as they flew is that it
Would be nice, very nice, to come
back to New York some day.
QUOTES FROM
THE NEWS
Unitd Press International
SAN EKANCISCO-Srcrttary 0(
Labor James P. Mitchell, telling
the AEL-CIO's national convent inn
lie is against involking the Taft-
Hartley Act In the steel strike:
' "I'm not kidding myself that
this is on answer to the problem
because I don't think it is."
DES MOINES. Iowa-Gov. Her-
Jtchel C. Loveless, on ordering
4i0i(s of the National Guard to
help protect Nikita Khrushchev in
Iowa at the State Department's
request :
"I think the traffic problem and
the potential crowds possible in
the Coon Rapids area caused them
to ask for troops."
School of Tap Dancing
REGISTER NOW
, Niles Navarre Studio
SACAJAWEA HOTEL
WO 3 2104
Winners
Judging
old Shaw. La Grande, 2nd; novelty
rug .Mrs urace - r-vans. ist:
nuisery quilt .Mrs. Lester Johns,
1st; chi'd's garment (crochet),
Mrs. Lester Johns, 1st.
Misc llaneous, crocheted lac
U yard1, Lsura Taylor, 1st, and
Zadia I.asl"y. 2nd, knitted lace
1 yard'. Laura Bates. Is', and
t,,n;i Worthington. 2nd: woven
bag Mrs. Ed Lovely, La Grande,
1st: knit gloves Lcwa Ager, La
Grande, 1st; dressed doll Mrs.
Jessie Perry, La Grand", 1st. and
Loma CaJson, 2nd; novelties
Cletus Zicka'oose, 1st; textile ar
ticles, unlisted Vivian Dotson.
Ist. and Lowell Cade, La Grande,
2nd; stole, crochet Eva Vander -
mul-n. Is!; sweater (adult) knit,
(ine varn Mrs. Ruth A. Cleaver.
La Grande, 1st, and Mrs. K. W.
Temerasen. La Grande. 2nd;
sweater ' adult ) knit, coarse
Elsie Clark, 1st. and Mary Her
mann, fit. 2, La Grande, 2nd; bag,
crochet Mrs. Lowell Cade, 1st;
nillow too Vivian Dotson, 1st.
and Mrs. Ed Lovely, 2nd: man's
ti Lewa Ager, 1st; bath set
Elsie Clark, 1st; hand woven gar
ment Lewa Acer, 1st; slippers.
TV Eva Vandi rmulon, 1st, and
Va'iris Hovin, La Grande, 2nd.
Adult clothing dress, cotton
Bernice Masterson, Rt. 2. La
Grande, 1st, and Linda Rasmussen,
Rt. 1, La Grande, 2nd; bettr
dress, silk or rayon Bernice Mas
terson, 1st, and Linda Rasmussen.
2nd.
Children's clothing, dress
'child's) . Mrs. Frank Goshorn. Rt.
1. La Grande. 1st, and Mrs. Ruth
Cleaver, 2nd; coat (child's),
Clarice Johnson, La Grande, 1st;
jumper dress 'child's), Mrs. Alice
Wait?, Rt. 2. La Grande, 1st; other
clothing (child's), Linda Rassmus
sen, 1st, and Rosemary Teuscher,
La Grande, 2nd: child's garments
made from used articles Rose
mary Teuscher, 1st.
Children's textile department,
dress 'cotton), Janice Lee Gipson,
Union, 1st: better dress (other
fabric), Janice Pipes, La Grande.
1st, and Janie Gipson, 2nd; suit
(two-piece), Janice Gipson, 1st;
blouse (cotton), Janice Gipson,
1st, and Ann Morgan, 2nd; skirt
Janice Gipson, 1st; houseco;it
Shirley Millve Elgin, 1st; child's
clothing Linda Elan", Alicel, 1st,
and Nancy Hicks, Elgin, 2nd; suit,
tailored Bernice Masterson, 1st,
and Dolores Johns, 2nd: coat,
tailored Mrs. Rundell, La Grande,
1st; blouse, cotton Linda Rasmus
sen, 1st; blouse, other fabric.
Linda Rasmussen, 1st, and Judy
Clark, La Grande, 2nd: shirt,
man's Gwenn Johnson, La
Giande, 1st, and Rosemary
Teuscher, 2nd; skirt Linda Ras
mussen, 1st, and Judy Clark, 2nd;
jacket (ladies) wool Mrs. Clara
.Inhns. 1st: sDorts coat Clarice
Johnson, 1st; man's wool jacket-
Nell Burch, La Grande, 1st, and
Mrs. Clara Johns, 2nd.
Ilomocralt, homemade soap
Mrs. Jimmy Mills, Cove. 1st. and
Mrs John Coooer. 2nd: horn? ren
dered lard Bonnie Arnoldus, 1st.
and Loma Carlson, 2nd; ranch
butter, molded Mrs. Hugh Htilse.
La Grande, 1st; cottage cheese
Bernice Masterson, 1st. and Mrs.
Hugh Hulse, 2nd; homemadu vine
car Mrs. Jimmy Mills, 1st; comb
honey Martha Bergeron, La
Grande, 1st; extracted honey
M.irlha Bergeron. 1st: dried fruit
Mrs. Leona Worthington. 1st.
Bill Monaghan,
Father Of North
Powder Man, Dies
mouth POWDER (Special
Word has been received here ol
the recent death of Hill Monagnnn
after an extended illness in So-
kane. Wash.
Funeral services were held in
Siwkane and interment followed in
Couor D'Alene. Idaho. Mr. Mona
ghan was KC years of age.
Survivors include the widow,
Mr Irene Monaghan: two daugh
ters. Mrs. Gene MeCnll. Lewis! on.
Idaho, and Mrs. Helen Shockley.
Coiier D'Alene: three sons. Ber
nard Monaghan. North Powder,
Keith Monaghan, Conor D'Alene.
and Rodney Monaghan, Kellogg,
Idaho.
it nnDcmii
(IB pdBto
AUDITIONS FOR
ALL AGE GROUPS
10:00 :m.
Saturday, S.pt. 12th
KXLY-TV Studio
W. 311 Sris, Spokane
Atiltlf itM ovtry
SstsrWay at 10 a.a.
Watck tka iff
Observer, La Grande, Ore., Sat., Sep. 19, 1959
K.v'., 'f ---csw
f V " 'is f 'in '
CAUGHT IN ACT Unknowinclv James Cecil Rocers.
18, of Anderson, Ind., snapped his own photo as he
broke into a cigarette vending machine, giving Indiana
State Police evidence which ended a long series of
break-ins. Rogers was taken into custody minutes after
the film was developed and is now serving a 2-5 year
sentence.
DREW PEARSON SAYS:
Halleck Of Indiana Pushed
GOP Bills Through For Ike
WASHINGTON Shortly be
fore Congress adjourned, Charlie
Halleck, , Republican of Indiana,
was lying raw and naked on a
rundown table in the Ruining
Tree Club where Ike golfs. On
the next table lay Sen. Tom Hen
nings. Democrat of MissomL
Tom, when are we Boing to
get out of here?" asked Halleck
from under a wet towel.
"I'm afraid to talk to you,"
drawled the senator from Mis
souri. "I've been heading about
you being a tough, relentless,
gut-fighter, the Presidents lead
er in Congress. It didn't sound
like the old Charlie Halleck 1
used to know in the House."
When are we going to get
out of here?' repealed Halleck.
undaunlcd by Hennings' kidding.
"Well, we're all tired of each
other, and the counlry's lird of
us," replied the Missouri Demo
crat. "We ought to give the
country a rest and come back
in the winter, 1 but you're the
President's leader, you're the
tough gut-fiybter. Why don't
you do something about adjourn
ing Congress?"
Reviewing Congress
Senator Hennings was not far
jff. His old friend Charlie Hal
'eek had more to do with up
holding the Residents hand on
a long string of vetoes and run
ning circles around good old
77-year-old Sam Rayburn than
anyone else in Washington. And
now that Congress has adjiurn
ed it might be well to take a
brief moment from speculating
over Nikita Khrushchev to figure
how Charlie did it.
He did it by the simple expe
dient of promising 33 key south
ein congressmen everything they
wanted in the way of slapping
down the Negro, if they in turn
would slap down housing, aid
to education, rural electrification,
a moderate labor bill, and any
thing else Eisenhower wanted
defeated.
In return, the civil rights bill
was blocked for weeks in the
House Judiciary Committee. Hal
leck had the votes to bring it
out at any time. The U Repub
licans on that committee have
been almost completely loyal to
him. Hut the congressmen from
the party of Abraham Lincoln
threw their weight with south
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Page
6
em congressmen to water down
the bill and hold it up for
months. Even GOP Congressman
Arch Moore, who represents a
strong Negro district in North
ern West Virginia, went along
with Halleck Ihough it may de
feat him.
As a result, even the loser bill
to try to prevent the dynamiting
of schools and places of worship
at lost in committee. A south
ern congressman, Carl Loser of
Tennessee, introduced the anti
dynamiting bill, but failed to gel
northern support.
When Halleck faced a battery
of newspaper questions on "Meet
the Press," Sarah McClendon of
the El Paso Times was the only
one to goad Charlie on Ihe tick
lish question cf the GOP-South-
em alliance. It's supposed to be
the privilege of a diplomat and
a politician to lie. Charlie smil
ingly and effectively exercised
that privilege.
As he did so, his own party
whips and the COP policy com
mittee members were having
regular meetings with a careful
ly selecled group of soulhern
congressmen in order to streng
then the coalition, which Charlie
swore did not exist.
The key southerners they pick
ed were: Frank Boykin of Ala
bama, E. C. Gathings and Qren
Harris of Arkansas, Syd Herlong
of Florida, John Pilcher, E. L.
Forrester, James Davis and Iris
Hliich of Georgia, Otlo Passman
if Louisiana, John Williams and
William Colmer of Mississippi.
Graham Garden and Carl Duf-
ham of Norlh Caroline, Mendel
Rivers, John Riley, W. J. Dorn
and John McMillan of Soulh Car
olina. O. C. Fisher of Texas, and
Howard Smith, Vaughanr Gary,
Walkins AbbilL William Tuck
snd Burr Harrison of Virginia.
Olher congressmen joined Ihe
coalition at times. But this was
the little group of regulars that
Halleck could not count on. This
was why when the margin, of
votes was slipping against him
during the first veto fight over
the public works bill, Halleck
vas able to get Herlong of Flor
ida, a Democrat, to switch his
vote in order to uphold the Pres
ident. Halleck Risks
Despite Charlie Halleck's effec
I.QIZ1
Pua
10 Extra Discount to
Accident-Free Drivers 1
(f Mere ere no unmmrritj
elnVen undtr IS yn.)
1011 ADAMS AVENUE
(Across Slraat From Pott Office)
WO 3-3711
Ivan Gets
Reception
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Staff Writ.r
The man-of-the week: Ivan,
Russia's nian-in the street.
The place: Moscow.
The quote: "At last it's come
true."
Moscow took on a holiday air
this week, and the usually stand
offish Russians were extending
the hand of friendship to Ameri
cans in a way unprecedented
since the end of World War II.
tiveness, he took some risks.
Chief risk is that northern Ne
gro voters will wake up. Negro
voters read the newspapers less
than some other groups, but
once they wake up they don't for
get. And Halleck runs the grave
risk of having the big bloc of
Negro voters in northern cities
who were beginning to lean Re
publican suddenly wake up to the
fact that they were the goats of
the 86th Congress.
They didn't know it at the
time, but they were responsible
for upholding the President's
hand. And each time it was up
held, they were sold down the
river.
For in addition to Negro inter
est in civil rights, Negroes need
public housing perhaps more
than any other group. They al
so need better schools. But each
time these questions came up,
Ike's leader in the- house, Charlie
Halleck, rallied Republican votes
with the Dixiecrats to block or
defeat legislation.
Another risk Halleck took is
industrial repercussions in the
north. Some Republicans, as Sil
vio Conle (Mass.), William Cahill
iN.J.), and John Lindsay (N.Y.),
began openly bucking the Halleck
leadership. Others didn't buck
openly but worried privately.
Many come from strong labor
districts. Even more come from
industrial districts which will
suffer from the migration of in
dustry to the non-union south.
And the Landrum-Griffin bill
which Halleck pushed through
Congress is likely to start the
biggest migration of northern
industry southward that this
country has ever seen. Halleck's
home state, Indiana, lost six
Democratic congressmen last No
vember, and he himself squeak
ed through by only 6,000 votes.
So if more industry moves out of
Indiana as a result of Halleck's
"relentless, restless gut-fighting,"
some of his GOP friends wonder
how many more congressional
seats their party will lose in the
industrial north, including Indi
ana. 'APPLE"
'AUTUMN'
'LARKSPUR"
"DESERT ROSE"
ONLY!
ALSO "DUETT," "STARBURST," "IVY"
MELVILLES
1431 Adams
'Build Up'
Received In
The quote above was uttered
with a contented smile by a Rus
sian neighbor of UPI correspond
ent Aline Mosby in a Moscow
apartment house. He had invited
her in to listen to a radio report
of Soviet Premier Nikita Khru
shchev's arrival in Washington.
The air of unreality in Moscow
Iceland
Seeks U.S.
General
WASHINGTON UPI Union
lawyers today studied Labor Sec
retary James P. Mitchell's de
mand under the new labor reform
law that the Teamsters oust all
officials who are ex-convicts.
The implied demand was con
tained in a telegram sent by
Mitchell to Teamsters President
James R. Hoffa Friday.
Hoffa, who was in Detroit, re
fused to comment on the move
but said the telegram would be
studied carefully by the union's
legal advisers.
Mitchell asked Hoffa to advise
him "what action your organiza
tion is taking" against certain
types of ex-convicts barred from
holding union office under the new
labor law passed by Congress ear
lier this month.
He also asked Hoffa to give him
within 10 days a list of any teams
ter officials who have been con
victed of robbery, bribery, extor
tion and other felonies.
Mitchell's action signaled the
government's first action against
unions under the act.
The labor secretary, attending
the AFL-CIO convention in San
Francisco, said he also had asked
the Justice Department to begin
an immediate investigation of oth
er unions which had ex-convicts
or known Communists as officials.
Mitchell did not identify the un
ions but said they too would be
required to send him a list of
officials who might be violating
the law.
Women's Club Of
Elgin Sets Meet
ELGIN (Special) The Elgin
Women's Club will hold its first
fall meeting in the Methodist Cen
ter Thursday, Sept. 24 at 2 p.m.
Reports on Girl's State will be
given by Janet Osburn and Jean
Gorden.
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4 cups and 4 saucers. y in
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FOR 2 WEEKS
On Nikita
America
was enhanced further by the total
unreality of the repo'ting of So
viet news correspondents in their
reports back to Moscow.
Wrote a reporter for - Izvestia,
the Soviet government newspaper:
, 'The streets of Washington are
packed with people ... a solid
line of people lines the sidewalks
. , . people are in windows of
houses, on fences and roofs. The
applause grows into ovation . . .
all along the way they warmly
greet Khrushchev . . . you hear
friendly shouts at Khrushchev."
In Moscow, there was no one to
tell Ivan that it wasn't quite that
way. '
There had been bigger throngs
in Washington and certainly more
demonstrative ones.
Crowd Was Restrained
Wrote UPI correspondent Jack
V. Fox: "(Khrushchev I drove
through crowd-packed streets
amid polite applause but scarcely
a cheer of welcome."
This was a wait-and-see crowd.
Undoubtedly, a large part of its
makeup was curiosity the first
leader of Soviet Russia to come
to the United States, a man who
could reel off a homely parable,
who could talk of peace and free
dom even as he snarled to West
ern diplomats, "We will bury
you."
But this crowd also contained
an awareness that it would tak)
more than a toothy smile or a
gesture to sweep away barriers,
many of which were of his or of
world Communism's own making.
The Eisenhower meeting was
one long-sought by Khrushchev
and he lost no time in springing
his own particular type of propa
ganda. Olive Branch Contains Rocket
"Cur countries are much too
strong and we cannot quarrel with
each other," he said.
It was an olive branch entwined
about a rocket.
But of the sober reflections in
Washington and elsewhere in the
United States, Ivan was told
nothing.
For him, it was the prelude to
the end of the cold war and the
restraints were falling away.
Ivan will do as the state tells
him. If he is disappointed at the
outcome of the current meetings,
the state will tell him how to re
act. But the effects of the reports
going back to Moscow are global
and, are intended to be that way.
It is high-pressure propaganda de
signed to force Western conces
sions or face the wrath of peoples
Whfise hopes have . been falsely
raised.
Tnciscan
reg. 16.95
J