Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, July 21, 1962, Image 1

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    Fair
City
Edition
Sunday
U'catlr RepV Page 9.4
IANE COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER.
95th Year, No. 271
TWO SECTIONS 16 PAGES
Eugene, Oregon, Saturday, July 21, 1962
Second Class PoUg
PUd at Eugene, Oregon
Price, S Cents
cue racmstrt-oai
RADtOMFTE ttftMNCt HORNS
KADJOMfTf
nrnflKATDSt CONTftOt SHttlD i t
SOIA PLASMA
TMWKATUM COWROl tOUVfRS
COMMAND ANTfNNA
HIGH-CAIN ANTENNA
fcsL
1-Day
Delay
Temperatures
Up, Woods
Tinder-Dry
Hot weather, with readings
in the middle 90s, is predicted
for Sunday throughout the Em
erald Empire and forest fire
danger signs are pointing to
"extreme."
Three small fires were re
ported in the Willamette Na
tional Forest Friday and a pi e
diction of lightning storms in
the mountains is keeping fire
watchers wary.N
For the Eugene area, a high
of 93 degrees is forecast for
Sunday. The high Saturday was
expected to be 90.
Friday'i high was 87. It didn't
arrive, surprisingly, until 6 p.m.
two or three hours later than
usual.
For Western Oregon, the fore
cast is for fair weather through
Sunday with some coastal fog.
The Pacific beaches may serve
as a welcome retreat from the
heat the highs there will be
from 65 to 75.
The fire weather forecast re
ceived Saturday morning indi
cated high temperatures, low
humidity and a 70 per cent
chance of lightning.
Remote areas have been dried
out by hot weather during the
past few days.
The three small fires in the
Willamette National Forest Fri
day brought the year's total to
32 that were caused by man.
One of them was caused by
a dropped cigarette on Flat
Creek in the Oakridge district;
another was caused by a truck
trailer wreck on Highway 58
and still another was blamed on
sparks from a railroad locomo
tive along Lookout Point Res
ervoir.
Satellite Launched
VANDENBERG AFB, Calif.
(UPD The Air Force launched a
secret satellite Friday, probably
of the Discoverer series, But re
fused to disclose its identity or
whether it attained orbit. It
was the second satellite
launched in three days.
Driver Not Even Scratched
Crash Sets Off Electrical 'Fireworks'
By JERRY UHRHAMMER .
Ot tha Register-Guard
A car smashing through a
power pole touched off an elec
trical fireworks display early
Saturday morning which bright
end the sky south of Springfield
and knocked out power tosome
25 homes.
It was one of several traffic
mishaps in the area. The oth
ers: Seven persons four of
them passengers on a Eugene
city bus suffered minor in
juries Friday afternoon when a
car struck the bus at west
Eugene intersection.
A Cottage Grove man was
hurt early Saturday morning
near Saginaw when his auto left
the highway, smashed through
two trees, and rolled over sev
eral times.
Car Misses Curve
A truck-trailer overturned
fin Highway 58 east of Oakridge,
resulting in injury to the driver.
The mishap south of Spring
field occurred shortly before
1:30 a.m., daylight, on Jasper
Road, about a half-mile west of
od Strut.
. MAGNfTOMnFR SfNSOR
Of rfCIO V
w
(AP Wirephoto)
A stray radio signal in the booster rocket forced the United States
Saturday to postponed for 24 hours an attempt to launch Mariner I,
an interplanetary spaceship, from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Mariner I
is to race across 224 million miles of interplanetary space to within
10,000 miles of Venus, 140 days after launching. A diagram of the
craft is shown above.
Treaty Approved
For Neutral Laos
GENEVA 0PI The East-West
conference on Laos Saturday
formally approved a treaty
pledging the independence and
neutrality of that Southeast
Asian kingdom amid recrimi
nations and warnings exchanged
between the United States and
Red China.
U.S. Secretary of Stale Dean
Rusk reminded the Comnunists
that the agreement must be
scrupulously observed if it is
to achieve its objective of end
ing civil war and taking Laos
out of the cold war. He stressc 1
that Laos' coalition government
headed by Prince Souvanna
phouma must unite the coun
try's armed factions in a single
army if it is to continue to
exist.
The United Stales insisted that
the accords provide for integra
tion of Laos' armed forces, but
UAR Boosts
Four Rockets
CAIRO (if) President Gamal
Abdel Nasser Saturday watched
the Egyptian armed forces test
and fire four single-stage rock
ets from an unnamed base in
the western desert, two of them
capable of reaching Israel.
The rickets are in large-scale
production and are entirely
made in the United Arab Re
public, Nasser told newsmen
half an hour after the fourth
missile had vanished in clouds
thousands of feet above the des
ert. The only military significance
of the rockets is contained in
the range that they reach, said
Nasser, who said two could land
just south of Beirut apparent
ly meaning Israel.
The rockets, named Naked el
Kaher (Conqueror) and El Zafir
(Victorious), were launched two
days before the 10th anniver
sary of Nasser's revolution in
Egypt. Range of the Kaher was
given as about 360 miles and
the smaller Zahir was said to be
capable of flying 222 miles.
"State police said a convertible
driven by Dejinis Harold Al
berts, 22, of Rattlesnake Road,
Dexter, missed a slight curve
and struck i large Pacific Pow
er and Light Co. poer pole
head-on.
"She car broke out an eight-
foot section of th pole, cofltin-1
ued on USough an orchard
1 went aek aioss the road anfi
'into the front yard of the R. B.
Wymer rfcisence, 39 jasper
Road, finally coming.to.a stop
only 13Seet from the bedroom
where the Wymers were sleep
ing, state pohce said.
Power Lines guxned
Alberts wasn't even scratched.
police said, hj)t hot povr lints
befcnd him had fallen into In.
trees, and transformers were"'' '"
.J? . .B. oSeneca Jtd and Rasmnr C
oioing out. ine u,....g o. c
burning incs and the explosion-
like jsounfls wokct up many in
the vicinity, police said. ,
Pacific Northwest Telephone
lines on the power pole were
burned through and fell to the
pavement, blocking traffic
A PPIL spokesman said pow
er was cut off to about 25 cus-
OMNI -ANTENNA
1
PARTKiE ftUX
DETECTOR
V. StCONOAftV
SUN SENSOR
ION CHAMBER
COSMIC DOSt DETECTOR
PRIMARY SUN SfNSOR
lONO RANCE EARTH SFNSOR
in the end this was not spelled
out in the treaty and declara
tions. Rusk said the United States,
by agreeing to sign the accord,
does not imply recognition of
all signers a reference to Red
China and Communist Nor'h
Viet Nam. He departed from his
text to register objection to dis
torting of fact in some of the
Communist speeches, especially
those of Chen Yi, Red China's
foreign minister.
Chen charged that the United
States was perpetuating armed
intervention in South Viet Nam,
and declared the peace in Laos
could not be regarded as con
solidated "as long as the flames
of war are kept alive in South
Vict Ntim."
Soviet Foreign Minister An
drei A. Gromyko used glowing
language to express his satis
faction with the Laos agree
ment. He told the delegates they
had made it possible "to dispel
the 'clouds of war' in yet an
other corner of our planet, to
errest bloodshed in Laos."
The agreements approved Sat
urday were the fruits of 14
months of negotiations.
The delegates included the
foreign ministers of 12 nations.
I
Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Washington ... 010 001 0103 9 2
New York 100 030 OOx 4 8 1
Rudolph, Ostcen 7J 4c Retzer; Ter
ry. Daley (8) & Howard. W Terry
113-81. I. Rudolph 13-4). HR: Wash
ington, Bright (9; New York, Maris
(24).
Chicago 002 OftO 1025 10 6
Boston 0O0 000 0000 2 1
Pizarrn & Can-eon; Conley, Nich
ols (9) Ac Pagllaronl. W Plzarro (9
Si. L Conley (9-9). HR: Chicago,
Cunningham (5).
Baltimore at Minnesota.
Detroit at Kanaa City, night.
Cleveland at Los Angeles, night.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
San Francisco at Pittsburgh.
New York at Cincinnati.
Los Angeles at Chicago.
Milwaukee at Philadelphia, night.
St. Louis at Houston (2l, day-night.
tomers on Filbert Lane for
about five hours before lines
were restored. A telephone com
pany spokesman said service
was knocked out to possibly 50
customers, but was restored
about 10 a.m. cftylight Saturday.
The bus-car collision in Eu-
........ ........ I nL.n.. l.nR
d light fM t w j,'
Avenue and Almaden Street.
Eugene police said a car driven
by Elbert Richard Black, 18, of
1455 Wilson Court, collided with
the left front side til the bus,
nhifi then struck a light pole.
The bus driver, John Henry
Green, 49, of365 E.
.. Thi
ixd Ave
and fou. pseitfcrs Judy Gajli
ivi ukiMiciadii. ul a i m aii.
Broadway"; Barbara "Carol Bra-
! ?er' 2rt 6'Ch he- J
. s,.,-, .... Kf. m-
were token'in anotfcer "bus io
Sacred Heart Ifc.tPtfal for check
n
juries.. "
Drj
ver Cited
B1...U u k.ik... t -,
uu ma wi'ji-ii'Q, kni t j,
15, i psenger in the car, both
received minor injuries, accrSd -
Military
Positions
Shuffled
JFK Easing Out
Ike's Appointees
From Top Posts
WASHINGTON Ml Gen.
Maxwell D. Taylor, who
.'stalked from the Pentagon
m a row over hisenhower
defense policy, is returning
as top military chief. This
time, he has the strongest
White House backing.
President Kennedy announced
Friday that Taylor, his close
personal military adviser, will
replace Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitz
er as chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff this fall.
Lemnitzer will become U.S.
commander in chief in Europe
and probably NATO supreme
commander there after his 2
year term as JCS chairman runs
out Sept. 30.
In effect, Kennedy appeared
to be easing out the Eisenhower-appointed
JCS chairman
who reportedly has been under
a cloud since the Cuban inva
sion disaster 15 months ago.
These were the key moves in
one of the biggest top military
command shuffles in years. The
shift was set in motion by Gen.
Lauris Norstad's decision to re
tire as NATO commander in Eu
rope in November, after six
years of service in that post.
Lemnitzer will take his place
perhaps for only a year.
Overshadowed by those top
level changes was Kennedy's
announcement from his week
end retreat at Hyannis Port,
Mass., that Gen. George II.
Decker will retire Sept. 30 at
the end of his 2-year term as
Army Chief of Staff.
2 Returned
To Newport
Two suspects captured near
Creswcll Friday following a
high speed, bullet-punctuated
police chase have been returned
to Newport in Lincoln County
to face charges of assault and
robbery while armed with a dan
gerous weapon.
Warrants for Joseph Ronald
Haber, 19, of Tampa, Fla., and
Blair Henry Record Jr., 20, of
Seattle both identified as es
capees from the Hillsboro Coun
ty Prison in Florida were is
sued Friday in connection with
the robbery of a service station
at Agate Beach, near Newport.
Two young men and a girl
took $5 in cash and $3 worth
of gasoline. A knife reportedly
was used in the robbery.
The girl captured with the
two men, Jeannette Dale l.osa,
15, of Seattle, was not charged.
Sin. was held for a time at Skip
worth Juvenile Home and then
released to her parents.
The chase occurred after
State Policeman Allen F. Jacobs
spotted their car on Highway
99 Vest, north of Eugene. He
gave chase but lost it. Eugene
policemen spotted the car again
at Franklin Boulevard and Wal
nut Street and chased it south
on Highway 99.
ing to police reports, but there
was no indication of whether
they sought treatment. Black
was cited for failure to yield the
right-of-way.
The one-car mishap near Sagi
naw occurred about 2:30 a.m.
daylight, when a car driven by
Eugene Frank Cutts. 40, of Cot
tage Grove, left Highway 226
(old Highway 99) on a curve,
rolled over several times, and
broke off two trees before com
ing to rest 307 feet from the
highway, state police said.
Cutts was taken to Cottage
Grove Hospital with multiple
laceratigns anri other possible
injuries. He was
reported in
i tan wuuiiivu.
A truck and trgiler rig load
ed uth ginned goods irom sai
em overturn! on Highway 58
and about 10 milts east of Oak-
hun, 7.30ifm. davhchl
.Friday, Jo ry6erling, jl. It
-'al"'-. dryarrof the truck
uhiOi ratried the name ThA-n-
Canninc" 'a- sarramento,
trrat.i St the 0 '-ridge
Clinic J'ririav nichL tu."nt of
QBi,,r,M-iB nyOnffllar.jn hut
i .--jui ii cij-ob .........
Vierling stayed ernight in aYi
1 Oakridre moteL O I
0 -
Goldberg Announces Settlement
Iron Strike Over
WASHINGTON i.Ti Secre
tary of Labor Arthur J. Gold
berg announced Saturday settle
ment of the weeks-long iron
workers strike in parts of Ore
gon and Washington.
Goldberg 's announcement
came after four days of nearly
round the clock negotiations
here between contractors, gov
ernment officials and repre
sentatives of tile Iron Workers
Union.
"I am glad to announce on
behalf of myself and the direc
tor of the Federal Mediation
and Conciliation Service, Wil
liam E. Simkin, the settlement
of the six-weeks-old strike of the
Missile Strike
Postponed
For 60 Days
WASHINGTON (tfl The ma
chinist union announced Satur
day a 60-day postponement of a
threatened Monday strike dead
line at U. S. missile plants and
sites, as requested by President
Kennedy.
The announcement was made
here by Vice President Jesse
McGlon of the union, the AFL-
CIO International Assn. of Ma-
chinists, shortly after Kennedy
appealed for a delay to permit
a fact-finding panel to study the
dispute.
The union represents about
120,000 of the 150,000 aerospace
industry workers who had been
scheduled to strike major mis
sile manufacturing plants at
noon Monday.
A spokesman said officials of
the United Auto Workers Un
ion, which represents the re
maining 30,000 men, were meet
ing in Los Angeles to consider
the President's appeal,
McGlon said in a statement
that "the chief difficulty imped
ing a full and direct settlement
of the labor dispute is the path
ological hostility of these com
panies involved in the dispute
toward organized labor."
He added:
"Nonetheless we have acced
ed to the request of the Presi
dent of the United States. We
have extended the negotiating
deadline and directed our mem
bers in the aerospace industry
to work wholeheartedly with
the President's panel and any
other appropriate agency to
bring about a fair and just set
tlement." "Work will continue without
interruption at all plants and
sites covered by the President's
message.
Luzon Battered
MANILA Ml Flood and fire
battered the Philippines' main
island of Luzon Saturday. Many
Manila streets were under wat
er. Large fires broke out in
two Luzon towns and on the
nearby island of Catanduanes.
$1.2-Million Stock Theft
Started as Barroom Joke
NEW YORK (UPD The theft
of $1.2 million in blue chip
stocks started as a joke. With
four men already under arrest,
about the only one with any
thing left to laug1- about Satur
day is a still-missing, mysterious
"Mr. X."
And, authorities say, they
know Mr. X's identity, so ir,y
laughs may be short-lived in 1
fast-breaking case of the securi
ties that disappeared from the
big brokerage house of Bache
tc Co. here.
2 Die, 3 Injured
In Coast Crash
NEWPORT (UPD Two per
sons were killed and three
others injured seriously when
their car left U.S. Highway 101
on Otter Crest Friday night.
Dead are Marianne Isabcllc
Moriet, 54, of Portland and
Rotchlcy Clare Jones, 60, of Ya
chats. Willard Lee Harvey, 48, of
Portland is listed in poor con
dition aL a hospital here, and
Mrs. Ellen Orians, 50, and her
1 seven year-old daughter. Terry
Lf als of Portland are in sc
nous condition at a Portland hos
pital. Tl.Oy were ansferred
irom oc iMcwpori nuspuai Sat
urday morning.
State Police said the car ap
parently via j goiftf at a high
rate ofcsoeed rtihen it left the
I rnari. KhrarpriAntf a rnrtrrpte
, w -
post, went into a wide dfttft and
rolled over
P .
iron workers involving construc
tion activities in the states of
Oregon and Washington." Gold
berg said in a statement.
"All construction workers in
the Pacific Northwest under the
terms of settlement of both the
unions involved and the contrac
tors have agreed to resume work
and operations immediately.
"On the money issues remain
ing in dispute between these
parties they have agreed to the
recommendations of myself and
Mr. Simkin to accept the find
ings of a 4-man team of media
tors headed by Prof. John T.
Dunlop of Harvard University.
"The mediators have been
working with the parties
throughout the negotiations and
are familiar with the particular
problems of the industry and
the region."
"In addition to Professor Dun
lop they are Edwin Scott of the
national staff of the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Serv
ice; Albin L. Petersen, federal
mediator in Seattle, and George
V. Walker, federal mediator in
Portland.
Low City Hair Bid
Tops Budget Figure
By DAN WYANT
ot the Register-Guard
Gale M. Roberts Co. of Eu
gene Friday night submitted
the apparent lowest of three
bids for construction of Eu
gene's new city hall.
Roberts' basic bid is $2,053,
541. The Vik Construction Co.,
also of Eugene, bid $2,085,000.
Alcan Pacific Co., of Bcaverton,
bid $2,088,977.
Four other contractors who
took out plana and specifica
tions for the building did not
submit bids.
Roberts bid Is about $200,000
over the $1,850,000 the city has
budgeted for the job.
Architect James Longwood
said he is confident enough
items can be trimmed from the
project to bring the contract
within the budgeted sum pro
vided a city attorney's ruling
supports negotiating a contract
with the low bidder.
Longwood is a partner in the
architectural firm o Stafford,
Morin and Longwood, designers
of the city hall.
Bids Under Study
More than 50 architects, sup
pliers, subcontractors and
others interested in the project
crowded into the council cham
bers for the bid opening.
City Manager Hugh McKinley
told them that the bids will be
taken under study and a recom
mendation will be presented to
the Eugene City Council when it
meets Monday night.
If there are legal barriers to
The case replete with slock
smuggling under clothing, a
buried treasure in securities,
and an FBI man who posed as
a crooked stock buyer came to
a head fnday with lour arrests
in two states.
Those seized were the alleged
"inside men," the so-called
trusted employe who carried the
stocks from a vault and out of
the office concealed under his
clothing, and the brother of a
delegate to the 1957 Apalachln,
N.Y., gangland convention.
Arrested in New York were
Gor.lon A. Tallman, 30, a stock
record clerk in Bathe's Wall St
office, which disclosed tho mil
lion-plus theft earlier thii
month, and Robert J. Dodge, ?4
an unemployed truck driver.
Both are from New York City.
FBI agents in Newark, N.J.,
arrested Joseph George Marti
nclh, 48, Jersey City, N.J., and
Johr. Lombardozzi, 36, Brook
lyn, brother of Carmine Lom
bardozzi, who attended the
Apalachin gangland convention.
Martinelli and LombardozzP
were seized after supposedly
closing a deal to sell S2(XI.X
in stolen blue chi stocks. The
buyer turned out to be, an FBI
undercover man.
New Yk Dist. Atty. Frank
S. Hian said the $1.2 million
thcte started out as a joke.
Tallman and Dodge, lift dis
trict attorney Slid, got into a
4oklng conversation in a bar
oom about what they could do
if they had all the money rep
resented by stocks which Tail
man bandied every day.
"I expect these mediators to
make their recommendations ex
peditiously. "I want to express my appre
ciation to Mr. Simkin, Asst. Sec
retary James J. Reynolds, Pro
fessor Dunlop, the other medi
ators and the parties for co
operating together diligently to
solve this protracted dispute."
The strike began in the Seat
tle area May 22, spread to Ore
gon and southwest Washington
May 28 and to the Spokane area
June 20. Iron Workers at first
picketed only those projects
where their work was assigned
to members of other unions.
Contractors shut down most
major construction projects in
retaliation, however, and the
situation remained stalemated
until the mediations began in
Washington on Wednesday.
Last week, Oregon Gov. Mark
O. Hatfield issued an invitation
to both sides to meet in his of
fice to settle the dispute, but
union negotiators did not get
there. They said they had not
been nntilied far enough in ad
vance. On July 14, the invitation
negotiating a contract within
the budget, new bids will have
to bo called on the project.
There were a number of al
ternates specified in tho bid
call. By eliminating three of
the alternates, approximately
$50,000 could be cut from the
contract cost. These includo pre
cast trim for planters, a second
elevator unit and an auxiliary
generator,
Longwood, scanning the rows
of figures that make up the
sub-contractors' bids on a proj
ect the size of the city hall,
termed them "extremely good."
Longwood said the current
iron workers' strike undoubted
ly affected the number of bids
submitted on the project.
Plans Returned
He said several prospective
bidders returned their sets of
plans and specifications without
bidding because of the labor tie
up.
Federal Court Order
Negro Protest
March Banned
ALBANY, Ga. ID Mayor Asa D. Kelley Jr., disclosed
Saturday.that a federal judge has enjoined Negroes from
staging mass demonstrations, marching or boycotting in
this racially-troubled southwest Georgia city.
' The sweeping court order came only hours before
Negroes headed by Martin Luther King Jr. planned a
march on city hall in protest of segregation practices.
The temporary injunction was issued by Judge J.
Robert Elliott of the U.S. District Court at Columbus
after a conference late Fri
day night with Kelley and
Uty Atty. Grady Rawls.
Elliott's order barred any of
the Negro organizations or
other persons from "continuing
to sponsor, finance or encourage
unlawful picketing, from engag
ing in or practicing any unlaw
ful congregating or marching,
or boycotting in restraint of
trade."
Elliott held that protest ac
tivities by the Negroes "threat
en mob violence and tend to
deny other citizens of the city
equal protection of the laws."
Ironically, the order was bas
ed in part on the 14th Amend
ment to the U. S. Constitution
which Negroes have used re
peatedly in their desegregation
fight.
In releasing copies of tho in
junction, Kelley said the city
had decided to act again "out
side agitators and othci unde
sirable elements creating dis
turbances and the possibility of
mass violence." .
The ayor emphasized that
assistance was not being sought
from federal marshals except
or the serving of t, court or
der on the defendants.
There was no Immediate re
action from King or the other
leaders of e Negro organiza
tions. Elliollsct hearing for July
in i All . V. l. . 1 ,u J
ou III muaiiy uii wueiiicr uio ill
junction should be made perma
nent. With white officialdom refus
ing to negotiate, the Negroes
had planned a late afternoon
ynarch on City HalL
to meet in Washington came
from Simkin's office and both
sides promptly accepted.
The dispute has shut down
such projects as the Hilton Ho
tel and Standard Insurance
Plaza in Portland, the John Day
Lock and Dam on the Columbia
River, and various highway
and school building projects
throughout the Northwest.
Approximately 1,500 ironwork
ers in the Seattle area, 650 in
the Spokane area and 700 in the
Portland area were involved in
the strike. Other thousands of
workers were affected by the
contractors' shutdown of the
projects.
Meetings began here on Wed
nesday in a strong effort at set
tlement of the issues, which in
cluded wages, pensions, work
shifts, hiring clauses and work
conditions.
It was learned Friday that '
the differences had simmered
down mainly to the wage is
sues. Friday's meeting extended
into this morning, folding final
ly at 4:30 a.m. Earlier sessions
were almost as lengthy.
Backlogs of work piling up
because of tho extended labor
shutdown and uncertainty over'
labor costs in iron and steel
phases of tho project were fac
tors which limited the number'
of bidders, he said.
However, Longwood noted
that the basic bids of the three,
contractors were all extremely
close.
"Whenever you've got bids
figured that close, you know
you've got good ones," he said..
If Gale Roberts wins a con-'
tract on his low bid, he'll be
well on his way toward making
a clean sweep of construction
on the major projects of Eu
gene's civic center. He was the
successful bidder on tho Lane
County Courthouse, the court
house parking facility, and the
new stale office building. He
also built the new U.S. National
Bank bldg. at Eighth and Wil
lamette, adjacent to the civic
center area.
Bohemia Days
Continue Tonight
COTTAGE GROVE Panning
for gold &nd touring Bohemia
area mines climax the four-day
Bohemia Days celebration her
Sunday.
Buses for the tour will depart
from the Boots and Sandals
barn on 10th Street two blocks
south of Main Street. Tours be
gin every hour on the hour from
7 a.m. through 1 p.m. standard,
8 a.m. through 2 p.m. daylight.
Tonight will be the final per
formance of the musical "Bo
hemia" in the high school audi
torium, a square dance at the
Boots and Sandals barn, and a
dance at the rodeo grounds one
mile southaof here on Highway
99. All events begin at 8 p.m.
standard, 9 daylight.
INSIDE TODAY
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Editorials ... 4A
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