Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 13, 1956, Image 4

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TOTJU MEDFORD (OREGON)
Q ?
MedfordvjTribuve
"Everyone m So-jtr,em Oregon
Reads The Maii Tribune"
rAl.r"T Oailv fcxeot SaturrUy by
W.ZtjfOHO PKINTIi-G CO '
27 -Tj North Fir rnone 2-311
ROBERT W REJHU Editor
PwB GREY A4v!injc Manager
CERAlD LATHAM famines Manager
ERIC AL1.EN JR Managing Editor
ZARlo H ADAMS Citr Editor
HARRYnCHlPMAN T;fraDh Editor
RICHA0 JEWETT Soorta Wilt or
CLI VE feTARCHER Sodetv Editor
IILE ERICSSON. Circufaon gr.
q A n Ind e pend e nt New 5 pa per
Entered aj seccori clam matter at
(ledior Oregon under Act of
March 3. IH'tl
w subscription rates
Ey Mail In Advance: Per Copy 10c
Daily i and Sunda One year $15 00
EO jf ar Sunday Six monthi 8 00
Daily ana Sunday Three mc 4.25
O Sund. Only One year $4 20
By Carrier In Advance S Medfdrd
Ashland Central Point Eagl Point.
Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix.
Snadv Cove Rorue River. Tant
f-. (P4 on mot routes:
w O Uaily and Sidav One year
and Sunday One month 1 50
Carrier and Dealers 10c per cony
All Terms Cash In Advance "
Cfflria,! Paper ' f . the Cltyof AlftsTford
Official Ha per cf Jackson County
United" P'AHlLJtVI ?'"iri
MEMBER GT AUDIT BUREAU
O OP CIRCULATION
OAdvlslna Representative:
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NATIONAL
EDITORIAt
!3t
A sTb ct-ATLQ N
22zxnzaamiB
Flight Time
Medford ajd Jackson County
History Qrom the files of The
Mail Tribune 10. 9M, 30. 40
hd 50 yer ago.
Cirt VNEW PAPER
PUBLISHERS
O VcA.AT.ON'
I 0 I
IQEARS AG 0
q8pc. 13. 194S (Friday)
QRSbert Elder, Jackson county
Juvenile officer, asks people of
county for donations of toys for
pendento and neglected ciiil-C-cn
of le-school age.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge fat columns) People can
buy auto licence plates. for
jtos they haven't got, through
cgjigence and fficiency of the
secretary of state.
o
2o 'TEARS AGO
Dec. 13.5936 (Sunday) . ..
Tire need in Medford is for
&nes costing $5,000 of less1, ac
cording to Bruce Bauer, man-
gp'oof the re'ail department of
O Timber Products company.
S)e 2-Vl) annual convention
of the Oregon.)ti(S Horticultural
OSocty will be held here net
December, according to Arch
W&, of thco Medfod exper
o iment station.
O O o 2
30 YEEARS AGO'0 o
Dec. i. 126 (Monday)
qO JdforsJ's nw aerolegical
weather station for coat air
prrfiagoplnnes cSminc through the
citg will be in operation next
Oweek with D? M. Little, form
er! of dthfc N.Y., i$ charge.
High school football team and
the coach, frfhk Callison; are
pft;ts ofiionoffiof t!e Kiwarris
40 YERS AGO
Dec. 13, 1916 (Wednesday)
The neiSng of farmers in
Jhe Jdford vicinity to organ
ize A National Farm Loan as
sociation will be held Saturday.
AOcijzen's rneeting will be
neia to aiscuss tne fliec-nsKi
gapn at th Xatatorium "tonight
under the auSoice of the
O People's Prrressive non-parfisan
O league.
O
50 YEARS AG90 o .
O D. 13. 1906 Thuray) 0
Sreek letter fraternities "at
University of Waejiington agree
not (Jh admit Japanese students
to membership. G
From ftocal and P,fonal col-
umrQ A. E. Kellogg, county
coroner, is in frm Gpjd Kill.
What's Your I.Q.?
Vln or tn correct ! mperior: ie
en or Uht li excellent; five or
slrejvvT
1. What i the appropriate
metal gift cignmonly given at
person thtn wedding anniver
sary
2. Has the Qjstrict of Columbia"
Ptotal ynd area c4 either 46. $t
661 square miles? o
3? was the great-greai-
greridfher of Es$er. was
Mordecai a descenda of Kish?
4 . WereQIohann and Richard
Strauss, composers, related?
5. Is the middle initial of Pres
ident Eisenhower the same as
the initial of his first name?
6. During what season iere
the Dionne quintuplets born?
7. Can the falcon hover mid
air without app.it motion of
its wings?
8. In Eugene Fields poem:
Wynken, Blynken, and-Oname
the other character.
9. "Git" is 0colloguialism of
"to fit'' as well as 'feat": true
or false?Q
10. "Unen I got b Memphis,
I got a cab. but went leefoPe
I got it. Bgd I got such acold.
that I shall nt soon (etcfid fit.",
AreQthe much-belabored "goes''
all verbs?
nsBrs: 1. Tin. 2. No. 61
square miles. 3. e. Grandson.
4. No. S. ,fts. 6. Spring. May.:
7. Yes. 8. Nod. 9. True. GeaU a
foundry teftn. 1$. Yes.
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MAIL TRIBUNE
Sowing Dragon s Teeth
We may be overly optimistic today.
But, as we see it, "the bear that walks like a man"
is going the way of the dinosaur.
As has often been remarked the dinosaur was
broad of beam and a super-tank in strength, but it
lacked brains and that lack brought its downfall.
There were no animals in the jungle who could out
slug "Dino" but nearly all of them could out-think
him. So he went "the way of all flesh" and finally
disappeared.
MOT that we expect Russia to disappear. But we
do expect so long as Russia remains under its pres
ent leadership and ideology and persists in its belief
that it can shoot loyalty to communism into its satel
lites, via superior strength in tanks and machine guns,
it is riding to a fall, and sooner or later, a fatal one.
HTHE Kremlin can no more conquer .the world by
force, than Hitler did or Napoleon tried to do, and
if its brain power matched its firing power it would
long ago have realized this.
But instead of doing so, Russia has blindly fol
lowed the time-honored tradition of violence since the
days of Rurik and the early Czars, considering sub
mission through fear preferable to devotion through
be'lief and proceeding to secure the former by butch
ery and brute force.
TT can't be done, particularly in this modem world.
And if the" present Kremlin leaders had the brain
power to devote to a study of human nature, they have
to devote to a study of Karl Marx and. Lenin they
would know this. ,
But apparently they haven't, as their inhuman
treatment of Hungary indicates.
That they will eventually win a temporary sub-
. mission is almost certain, for unfortunately there is
no force available to combat force. But the dragon's
teeth of hatred they are sowing will be planted deep
and wide and eventually, we predict, yield a harvest
that will give this tiny but fearless state, the freedom
and liberty so many of its citizens 'have been willing
to fight and die for.
Also unless the Russian bear changes its head and
heart in the meanwhiler -it will at long last retreat
within its borders licking its wounds and be forced
to admit that God no longer follows the heaviest bat
talions, and that the moral condemnation of the civil
ized world, can't be disarmed or shot down and si
lenced as can the defenseless women and children
in the streets of Buda Pest.
"Though the mills of God grind slowly, yet they
grind exceeding small." R.W.R.
Old Man Ox Again
The Mail Tribune opposed the constitutional
amendment that confined a President of the United
States to two terms. . .
It was at the time a product of G.O.P. hatred for
F.D.R. and hia "New Deal"
time, it was up to the people of the country to decide
at the polls whether or not they wanted a certain per
son for President, regardless of how many terms he
may have served or any other consideration.
But the spite amendment was put over and there
it' stands. Now it is amusing to note that some of the
distinguished gentlemen who were so hot and both
ered about the establishment of a permanent (Roose
velt) dynasty in this country, have no such fears re
garding President Eisenhower and a third term.
So thay want the amendment repealed, so if Presi
dent Eisenhower continues to improve physically
and according to all reports from Atlanta that is the
case there will be no legal obstacle, at least, to his
carrying the Grand Old Party to a stupendous victory
again.
AS so often remarked in this column it "always
makes such a difference whose ox is gored."
When a Democrat was the "menace" the countiy
had to be saved, but when his place was taken by
"the most popular Republican since Teddy Roose
velt," no menace exists.
"VELL, as far as that goes, this paper is all for such
a repeal. The fear that gave the amendment
birth was really the fear of a basic principle of democ
racy, that the people of the country ARE qualified
to rule, that this IS a government of the people, by the
people and for the people in fact as well as theory.
As long as we have elections that are free, and a
ballot that is really secret, we have no fear of the
voters marking their ballots
ant,
And a candidate they
they should have regardless
i tical matter of course it is
i his age General Eisenhower will ever agree to be a
candidate for a 3rd term. But if he should, then there
should be no constitutional prohibition against the
Republican party nominating him, and the people of
the country deciding whether they wish his adminis
tration for four more years or don't.
They have this right and there should be nothing
in the constitution or elsewhere to prevent it.
R.W.R.
Earthquake Recorded
Not Far From San Diego
San Diego .R1 An earth
quake strong enough to be felt
but not strong enough to cause
damage was recorded here at
5:17 a.iru Fred Robinson, ama
teur seismologist reported.
Robinson said the quake last
ed 14 minutes and appeared to
be centered "not too far from
San Diego" in an undetermined
directien.
Thursday. December 13, 195B
and as we stated at the
for some one they DON'T
DO want is the candidate
of his tenure. As a prac
extremely doubtful that at
Morse and Wife Start
Journey To Washington
Portland U.R) Sen. and
Mrs. Wayne Morse departed
here yesterday" en route to
Washington where the senior
Oregon senator will begin his
third term in the Senate in Janu
ary. Traveling by station wagon,
they plan to stop in Wisconsin
to visit friends en route to the
nation's capitoL
West Germany, Turkey Showing
Concern Over Russian Position
By CHARLES M. MeCANK
United Press Correspondent
West Germany and Turkey
have put their Allies on the
spot in the North Atlantic Treaty
O r g a nization
talks in Paris.
West Ger
many wants to
know what
NATO would
do if a revolt
broke out in
East Germany
and Russia
threw its
Charie Mccann armed xorces
Against the rebels as it did in
Hungary.
Turkey wants NATO to build
up its strength in the Eastern
Mediterranean including a
fleet of atom bomber planes
in view of Russia's belligerent
attitude in the Middle East.
West Germany and Turkey
have good reasons to be con
cerned over the position of their
countries at the moment.
Norway Unlikely War Theater
Alone among the 15 members
of the .Atlantic Alliance, West
Germany and Turkey face the
Russian Red army along their
frontier. Norway has a narrow
frontier facing Russia, but it is
far above the Arctic Circle and
is an unlikely war theater.
Both West Germany and Tur
key are convinced that the
Today and
By Walter
A STITCH IN TIME
Everything is being said in
fact everything has been said
by everybody, about the import
ance of repair
ing the NATO
alliance. "It is
our firm pur
pose," said Mr.
Dulles on his
arrival in
Paris, "to bury
past discords
in a future of
peaceful and
fruitful coop
could scarcely
Ualier LuDnuoD
eration." There
be any better purpose to be firm
about, and the question is how
to achieve that purpose.
This will not really be done
by helping with oil and money
necessary though they are to
soften the consequences of the
Egyptian disaster. The discord
arose because the British and
French governments came to the
desperate conclusion that they
had vital interests in the Middle
East which tneir ally, the United
States, was not effectively de
termined to protect and to pro
mote. The American view was
that although these interests
were genuine and legitimate,
they could not lawfully be pro
tected and promoted by military
intervention. The American op
position to the British and
French intervention was what
clinched the verdict of the Unit
ed Nations, compelled Britain
and France to break off their
military action, and to agree to
the withdrawel of their forces.
The discord will stay buried
insofar as the United Nations,
with determined United States
leadership, addresses itself to
the Middle Eastern problems
out of which the discord arose.
Britain and France have been
forbidden to solve the problems
by their own military action,
and they have been compelled
to desist. But unless the prob
lems themselves are taken ser
iously in hand, we may be sure
that the discard will burst forth
again.
THE biggest business which
the NATO allies have ahead
of them is to work out a com
mon policy on the Europe which
lies east of the dividing line. At
bottom, NATO has been based
on the fact that Germany and
Europe are divided between the
Soviet orbit and the Atlantic al
liance. To be sure, the division
has never been accepted in prin
ciple. The allies have never
ceased to advocate the reunion
of the two Germanies, and they
have hoped for the liberation
of the captive countries; Never
theless, in the planning and org
anization of NATO, the division
of Europe has been accepted as
a fact, and NATO has never
yet had a policy for the unifica
tion of Europe.
The good things that have
been happening in Poland,- the
horrors that have been happen
ing in Hungary, should both be
taken by NATO as full notice
that its basic assumption is be
coming invalid the assumption
of a Europe divided into two
military and political systems.
There is in this development
great promise and there is aw
ful danger.
At its best, the countries of
Eastern Europe will evolve
peaceably as in Poland. At the
and repression will spread to
Eastern Germany, and if it does,
NATO will be faced with the
most sinister choices.
TT WILL be a case of inex
cusablye neglect if the NATO
governments do not prepare
themselves for what might at
threat of Russian aggression has
been .ncreased if anything, not
diminished, by the surge of re
volt in the Soviet satellite coun
tries. West German Foreign Minis
ter Heinrich Von Brentano told
the NATO Council of Foreign
Ministers Wednesday that Hungarian-style
rebellion in Eastern
Germany could bring Europe to
the brink of World War III.
Turkey Alarmed
Turkey was quite naturally
alarmed over the bellicose posi
tion Russia took after the British-French
invasion of the Suez
Canal Zone. It also is alarmed
over the situation in Syria, on
its southern border, where a pro
Russian faction dominates the
government.
It happens, unfortunately, that
the anxiety of West Germany
and Turkey over the threat of
Russian aggression comes at a
time when the jVATO alliance
has been weakened.
The Paris talks are concerned
in great part with an attempt
to restore relations between the
United States and Britain and
France, strained by the Suez
invasion.
Talk Of Arms Reduction
But the United States and
Britain also are talking about
reducing the strength of their
forces in Germany after getting
West Germany to enter NATO
Tomorrow
Lippmann
anly time in the next months
explode into a European crisis
of the1 first magnitude. The way
to prepare for this crisis is to
anticipate it, and to avert it
with negotiable proposals which
are directed towards the uni
fication of Europe. The Hun
garian horror cannot really be
ended, something like it else
where cannot surely be prevent
ed, unless the NATO powers
can work out with the Soviet
Union an all-European security
system.
Merely to go on passing res
olutions do not gather force and
effectiveness good enough. These
resolutions do not gather force
and effectiveness by being re
peated. They do not liberate
anyone. Nor do they reduce the
threat of a European explosion
which lies under the surface.
A EUROPEAN policy is urgent
Iy needed to provide a frame
work of guarantees within which
the occupied European countries
can be made safe against their
neighbors and safe for their
neighbors. It is impossible to
imagine the end of the military
occupation, which remains from
the World War, except within
a European system of security.
What is only too easy to imag
ine is the disorder and danger
that may break out in Europe
if the NATO governments just
drift along, repeating their old
stale shibboleths about Germany
and the satellite countries.
Copyright 1956 New York
Tribune Inc.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address at the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
iniUal for publication is permis
sible. The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters with an
eye to clarification and condensa
tion. Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
From a Presley Fan
To the Editor: Would you
please put this in the Com
munications? Mr. Noel E. Kooken, I think
you are down right unfair with
what you say about Vic. I know
Vic very well and he did not
steal your old gun. As him hav
ing a "Elvis Presley" hair cut
to show how much trouble they
can get into and not be caught,
well that i9 a lot of phooy. May
be you can't remember far back
enough to when you were a teen
ager, but I am sure that you
had a singer that you worshiped
as we worship "Elvis Presley."
Yes, they have hair like that to
show they are a "Presley" fan.
I suspose you want all the girls
to git a pig-shave too, because
their hair is too long. I am a
"Presley" fan and I am very
proud that I am. The only reason
you don't like "Elvis" is be
cause you are jealous of him, and
that you can't be like him. Oh,
by the way since when did the
D. A. start telling the kids how
to wear their hair? You don't
see him telling some adult how
to wear his hair. But he sure
can tell us how to wear it, jus,(
because we are teenagers.
I thank you very much.
Sandy Boles
1260 Sunset ave.
Medford, Oregon
(McLoughlin Junior High.)
BUSY AS BEAVERS
Potsdam, N. Y. (U.R) Bea
vers confiscated a weeping wil
low tree on the Arthur McRobbie
grounds to build a dam across a
pond, also on the property. The
artificial pond is fed from a
small stream. McRobbie hadn't
noticed the beavers at work until
he discovered the 12-foot high
trap was missing.
and to embark on a big rearma-
ment program. France already
has sent most of its NATO
troops to Algeria.
And Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles, in his speech at
the NATO council Tuesday,
talked about using "moral pres
sure" equally with military
strength as a defense against
Russian aggression. He also em
phasized the "high ideals" of
the United Nations.
But West Germany and Tur
key seem to feel that while
moral pressure and high ideals
may be very nice, they would
not be of much value in oppos
ing Russia's Red army.
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Hungary is in the grip of what
seems to be an almost complete
general strike. For the first time
since the rebellion began, there
is no electricity in Budapest.
Postal service is paralyzed. Rail
roads are at a standstill. A giant
iron and steel plant in the edge
of Budapest is closed down and
tough-minded Hungarian pickets
warn the Russians there will be
a fight if the4Soviets try to move
in.
The strike is engineered by
Hungarian patriots who believe
that is the only way to oppose
Russia's overwhelming military
might.
AS THIS is written, martial
law is scheduled to go into
effect in a few hours. That may
be the biginning of the crisis
point. Russians and Hungarian
communist puppet police have
been conducting an intensive
search for arms during the past
24 hours.
As soon as martial law takes
effect, anyone caught with a
weapon will be given a military
trial ENDING WITH A FIRING
SQUAD BEFORE A BLANK
WALL. -
In the present inflamed state
of public opinion throughout the
world no one can tell what
wholesale butchery of that sort
might touch off. :
THERE is a new straw in the
wind.
Polish students clashed with
police and army units in a mass
anti-Soviet demonstration last
night in the Polish city of Stet
tin. The Warsaw radio (communist-dominated)
first said the
riot was touched off by "hoo
gans." Later it admitted that
the street brawl turned into a
march on the Russian consulate,
where hundreds of demonstrators
smashed windows and tried to
break in.
Poland comes next after Hung
ary in hatred of the Russian op
pressors and over the centuries
the Poles have often demonstrat
ed their willingness to die fight
ing oppression.
COMPETENT observers offer
the opinion that what is hap
pening in Hungary and to a les
ser extent so far in Poland marks
the beginning of the break-up of
the Russian communist empire.
Does that mean that the danger
of world war is diminishing?
Not necessarily.
We must remember the posi
tion of the Kremlin despots
Kruschev & Company. They
must be badly frightened men.
All this has happened under
THEIR leadership. THEY will
be held responsible. All despots
have their enemies. In this case
the enemies of Kruschev & Co.
MIGHT UPSET THEM.
SUCH an upset wouldn't mean
mere loss of power and poli
tical disgrace as is the case in
less brutal and savage regimes.
In their case, it would probably
mean getting stood up before a
firing squad.
They might start a world war
as the lesser of two evils. Corner
ed despots have done that before.
'T'HESE are grave days.
Cool heads and steady
hands are needed if another
world war is to be avoided.
When You Need Extra Chfalrs . . . 0
We have 25 folding chairs We will be'glad to jctjn for
any occasion. 0
There is no charge, and wa.akoonly that you pick
them up and return them.
DAY
o
Chapel Mortuary
Across from the Courthouse
Frank Morgan Harold Snodgrss
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Matter of Fact
NIXON'S FRIENDS AND
ALLIES
Washington A" re-shuffling
of the top- administration posts
is now in prospect, as always
after an elec
tion. And when
the game of mu
sical chairs is
over, Vice-President
Ricna.d
Jf. aMixon, who
was no throttle-
l".".r- ifri first Eisen-
nottom in ine
t.t2'A hower adminis-
aoieun AiioB t r a t i o n, may
emerge as the second Eisenhower
administration second most
powerful man.
Within the n e x I several
months, there may be sixQnew
faces in the Cabinet in the
State, Defense. Justice, Post Of
fice, Commerce
and Treasury
places. And of
the six new
faces, the Vice
President Wfll
in all likeli
hood recognize
in threS0 and
perhaps four
either a close
personal friend
Stewart Alsop
or a powerful political ally.
Secretary of State John Fostgr
Dulles is expected to 4e among
the first to depart,, Until recently,
Dulles had wanted to stay on
until his 70th birthday, in Febru
ary, 1958. Bui in the nature of
things. Secretaries oof State are
expendable. Dulles' personal re
lationship with the leadigg for
eign figures with whom he must
deal is now strained, to say the
least.
To take only one example,
Dulles and British Prime Minis
ter Eden are each firmly and
mutually convinced that he was
tricked by the ot!er irf the Suez
crisis. (One recalls the little coup
let in George Orwell's "lg84":
"Underneath the Greenwoad
tree, I sold you anr you soldJ
me.") Even so, Duiles might have
stayed on if it had not been for
his serious illness? Now, although
he has recovered with his usual
astonishing vitality, the v?ord is
being passed that Dulles will bow
out in six months or less.
HIS heir apparent is, of coursP.
Gov. Christian Herter of
Massachusetts, who is to replace
Herbert Hoover Jr. as Under
Secretary. As Under-Secrojary,
Herter will serve a sort of p
bationary period. But he is a
most capable man, witb a deep
knowledge qf foreign affai,
and he will almost certainly pass
the test with lying. coiprs, and
become -Secretary of State.
Herter is ve'ry close to the
Vice President. They became in
timate wHen they sefved to
gether in the House, and trav
eled abroad together, and their
friendship survived and was
strengthened by Harold0StassrPs
abortive putsch to replace Nxon
with Herter in the Vice Presi
dency. It is significant that when
Herter decided he did not want
to run for Governor again, he
turned to Nixon, and asked him
to intervene with the President,
to beg the President, hot to 'put
pressure on Herter to run again,
and to indicate that Herter would
be interested ina foreign policy
post after his term ran out.
fN the domestic front, Nixon
is. likely to ind an even
closer friend i a key Cabinet
spot. The present Attorney Ge
erel, Herbert Brownell, is ex
pected to return to, New York
before too long, to men his per
sonalfortunes. Hif deputy, Wil
liam "Rogers, wilf almost cer
tainly replace him. Rogers is
Damon to Nixon's Pythias it
was to Rogers tfeat Nixon in
stantly turned the night he learn
ed of the President's heart at
tack, j
The ailing Arthur Summer
field is also expected to bow out
as Postmaster General, and Re
publican Chairman Len Hall (if
he doe not run for Governor of
New York) is a leading candi
date to replace him. HU and
OR NIGHT PHONE 2
rjt
o o
O
By jo. swon Map"
rixon are not particularly close
persnJly, but Hall did as much
as any other marp to assure
Nixon's renomirflltii. AndOthe
asfiite Hall is an ally well worth
having. 0 q
Secretary of Defense Charles
E. Wilsco's departu9e is also ex
poerSd, perhaps in the late
spring. His farmer Under-Secretary,
General (jilotorsiman Roger
Keyes, has aiyeady Tjeen tenta
tively sounSed out to replace
him. But Keyes likes making
money ana prefers Detroit to
Washington. Aside Rom Keyes,
ThorSns E. Dewey is the Thost
probable choice among several
possibility for the Defense post.
oQ
A GAIN, Dew? is not an inti-
mate of Nixon's in the sense
that Herter and Rogers are. But
he placed a sizeable political bet
orcNixon when he supported him
all outPfor renomination during
the anti-Nixon putsch. And like
HaHi Deweji is a useful ally to
haveo around, in or out of the
PCabinet.
Add that Nixon may become
Chairman of the Operations Co
ordinating Sard, a little known
but extremely powerful body,
with its fingers in every gov
ernmental pie. Aud that Nixon
is not only ambitious but highly
intelligent hlS rqg?nt impres
sive foreign policy speech was
vritten entirely o)y himself, on
lined yellow paper, in his own
peculigfcsr5brthad. Add that the
PreSdent i8tjids tg use Nixon
as a substitute President es:en
more tharr he (ld in his first
term.
It is then clear wh(g)ixr will
almost surely corae far and
avPay the most jibwerful Vice
President in history. And it is
als clear why the Vice Presi
dent, ey$n thtjar advance,
Jflokg) like f) hard man to beat
for the Republican nomition
in 1960.
(Copyright, 1956,
New York herald Tribune Inc.)
Q
ClareSooth Luce To
Leave omeJ)ec. 27
tome (U.R) U. S. Ambassa-
he win leave Rome Deg 27 r
28 and will pay a ief visit to
cWashington to meet her succes
sor, James D. gellerbach. J
She Jold . gneftsmen the
highlights of hee 3 tears as am
bassador to Italy was settlement
oX the thorey Trieste tispvts
and Italy's firmcj!artnershJ'' in
the North Atlantic TfftitjF Or
ganization. igi-
ONLY P O
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