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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 14, 1956)
o GO co O c'-' j o - o; Ck OO o o O O wo o O rOTJH MEDFOSD fOMCOlf) Everyone In Southern Oregon 0Rd The Mail Tribune" aJbliane1 Daily Except Saturday by ,-, V-EDFORD PKLNTING CO u rt-2 NorthFirt Phone 2-Ul ROBERT W RUraTiaitor HTRB OBEY Advertising Manager CtRALD LATHAM Buainesa Manager ERIC ALXF JR. Managing Editor ZARU.H .JA.VTS City Editor HARK CHIP.V.AN Telejraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT Snorts Editor OLIVE STARCHi Society Editor dale nr.iCKSO.N. circulation Mgr. O An thdepgndent Newtpaper AnWred u econd claai mttr at Medlord Oregon under Act ol March 3. 13'J7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES' By Mali Id Advance Per Codt 10c Dally and Sunday One year $1500 Daily and Sunday Six month 8 00 O Daily acl Sunday Three moe 4.2 O Surtav -Only One year 14 20 By Charier In Advance Medford. Ah7snd Ontral Point. Eaf!e Point. JarOon!. Gold HIU. Phoenix. QSra-iv Cove Rom River. Talent n on motor route. jT Daily and Sunday- One year SIS 0 Daily and Sunday One month 150 Carrier and DeaJera 10c per copy Ay Tyma Cuh in Advance Gft.-ti Aapc of 'the City of Medford Official laper of Jack eon County United Preaa FulJ ieaw-d Wtre MEMBER OP" AUDIT BUREAU J C CIRCULATION CAdvcrtisins Rprentatlve WX9T-HOLIDAY COMPANY rNC Offices in Nw York Chicago. d O tTolt Sjwi Franci.eo. Loa Anfelee. Seattle Portland St Louts Atlanta a nrnt B C ATIONAI EDITORIAL ASSOcfAILQN U J VNIW$ PAPER 'ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time . Medford and Jackson County listory from tha files; of 'The Mail Tribune 10. 20," 30, 49 o and 50 years- ago. . 10 YEAR$ AGO Dec. 14, 1946 tSunday) Mail TSbune carriers are guests of the paper yesterday noon at the annual pre-Christmas turkey dinner in the Holland hotel Blue Room. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot colurfAn: Amateur Santa Claus' haveoleen warned as usual not to get their cotton batten whiskers too near a lighted candle. 20 YEARS AGO o Dec. 14, 1936 (Tuesday) . Total tax levy for Medford state, county, city and school for the coming year will be 56.5 mills, according to county as sessor. Period for filing employee forms under the federal social security act fftpires tomorrow, accord (in to Postmaster Frank DeSouza. 30 YEARS AGO Dec. 14, 1926 (Wednesday) Work commences on new city Insurance map by the Sanborn May company of San Francisco; WiUfiim H. Schaeffer in charge. o Jackson county merchants as sociation meets at Iedford hotel to idiscuss plans for city park ing, air mil and keeping banks open Saturday evenings o o 40 YEAR AGO Dec. t. 1916 (Friday) O Tha Medjnski plan for the solutioroof Medford's peiving pro gram is 5ented to Medford resiaenis at iNaiatorium. O Sevef?,g hundred qualified Meaford vo?rs are not yet reg istered un$er the city's perman ent (-tfc.stiation ystem, a-tcord- ing to Elmer Fos, city recorder. u 50 YEARS AGO o Dec. 14,o1906 (Saturday) The ew public school build inat Jacksonville destroyed by fire. O o President Boosevelt will sub mit to fcngress soon a message directing the attention" to the necessity of some) solution to the Japanese question. O o o Wfial's Your I.Q.? Nine A ten correct is luperlor: sev en cr ctrht f -excellent; fire or L Incandescent la!Tip filaments re comrr.ianJy termed t n? 2. Was Hannibal either a. Ro man, Angiian, or Italian gen er?4? . 3. In ohe Second Punic War whcie army crossed the Alps? 4. Is Cvprus mentioned as a Qjrovift in the New Testament? 5. Mfjs Ca.itne the3brother of O Fgllus, in Greek mythology? 6. (p. both"a" and "an" (ticlesj O 7- dthere S grammatical er ror in question No. 6? o 8. Whic Allied Army occu q pied the Rtyneland zone of de feated Germany after" World V(r a? 9. Game this dessert: Thinly' s-ed oranges sprinkfed with Cjgiated cocoanut and powdered sugar. 10. Was the expression "folk lore)' c(-.ed,Oor d3 iP evolve? Answer I. Tungsten. 2. No. Carthaginian. 3. Hanniabal's. 4 Yes, 5. Yes. 6. Yes. 7. 'Jfes. "Are" should replace is . B. xremcn., , j- , j 9. Ambrosiep, 10. Coined. Bvaga;nSt I11S 11.111-00. Ambrose Melion. 1872. f H e mUSl be get MAIL TRIBUNE County Park on Roxy Ann As county governments go, we have a relatively progressive and forward-looking one. There is one area, however, in which we are lagging badly, and it i3 an area where forethought and early decision are imperative if later regret is to be avoided. We refer to county parks. THE county court can hardly be blamed for this . error of omission, for popular demand for out door recreational facilities has, to a large degree, been satisfied by our few state parks, by the forest service's camps, and by the city's parks. Jackson countv has a population estimated at up wards of 66,000 people (making it about the seventh inost-populous in the state), and a total of more than 36,000 motor vehicles or more than one vehicle to each two persons in the county. As population continues to mount, the time is coming, and coming soon, when our growing, motor ized population is no longer going to be satisfied with the present limited facilities. The state can be expected to establish perhaps one or two more state parks in this area, but that's about all. As we see it, it is up to the county to take over from there. AX7"E ARE not alone in that opinion. It has been shown to be a valid expectation in other coun ties some of them ahead of us in population, growth and progress, and some behind us. Lane county has an active parks and recreation commission, which is working hard at selecting favored sites for park use. Douglas county, which outstripped Jackson a few years ago in estimated population, has a parks de i partment, with a budget of $80,470, a department : head, a foreman ana a regular crew of men. It is making strides in developing a county parks system, with particular emphasis on the lower Umpqua. And it was with both noted that Josephine county (which has about half of our population) has a parks commission, a budget of $5,000 this year, and one part-time employee. The Josephine park commission areas dedicated as park oped, others not yet. CTARTING a county park system need not be a large undertaking at first. It could, and perhaps should, start out modestly with the acquisition of suitable sites and by suitable we mean those which would serve their best use as park and recreation areas, not infringing on lands better-suited to fann ing or residential or business purposes. There are plenty of them left, but they will become rarer. Later, as the demand for development grows, the county could do whatever work is necessary to bring the parks up to usable standards. The investment need not be large, and would be smaller if started now than if it were delayed. OUNTY governments are specifically authorized to do just this under Oi'egon law. Jackson county could make its start at any time and the ideal time would be to include at least a token sum for the purpose in the 1957-58 budget, which will be in preparation soon. And to our mind, it would be doing the city of Medford and the people of Jackson county and their thousands cf summer visitors a big favor if they undertook to acquire Prescott park on Roxy Ann butte (turned down as a state park) and operate it as a county recreational property. This paik is valuable for that use only; it logical ly should not be the responsibility of the city, and it would furnish the nucleus of a county park system which would serve the people in their leisure hours for generations to come. E.A. Old Fogey's View At the risk (and a very considerable risk it is, too) of classifying ourselves as an old fogey, we hereby align ourselves with those who find the "Elvis Presley haircut" an abomination. Not, it should be understood, that we consider it to be a threat to the stability of the Republic, nor a sign of decadence, nor even necessarily a symptom of approaching psychosis. It's just that the silly things look well, stupid. TF A MAN (or boy) wants to wear his hair in a way that makes him look stupid, that's his own business, and we have no quan-el with him. It is, perhaps, unfortunate, that the Presley hair-do has tended to make its possessor suspect in the eyes of solid (some would say stolid) citizens, including law enforcement officers. This is wrong, though natural. The type of mind which ' would find a Presley hair-do attractive is capable of worse things: so the line of reasoning goes. It is incorrect. The Presley hair-do is not the cause of bad behavior. It is a fad, serious to some, amusing po others, but it has nothing, of itself, to do with moral turpitude. THE respectable matrons now nudging middle-age who swooned over Crosby or squealed over Sinatra have proved that teenage fads are neither fatal nor deleterious. But we'd like to make one point here, namely: Crosby and Sinatra and the others who were fad heroes in their day did not, as we recall, make vulgar spectacles, of themselves, as does this man Presley. lt is our reaction to his smirking, wiggling, gargling ana struiur.g wnicn nas, getting old. E.A. Friday. December 14. 195S surprise and pleasure we has a half-dozen or more sites, some of them devel we tear, prejudiced us Week's Foreign News Reviewed: Communist Regimes in Trouble By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent The week's good and bad news on the international bal ance sheet: Communist regimes were in trouble throughout Eastern Eu rope this week. Rebellious Hun garian work ers defied the threat of death under a new regime of mar tial law. There were anti-Russian riots in Poland. Dan g e rous unrest was reported Charlei McCann in mnei ouvici satellite countries. The United Nations General Assembly, by a vote of 55 to 8, condemned Russia's intervention in Hungary and called upon the Soviet Un ion to withdraw its troops. The U.N. Security Council vot ed unanimously to admit Japan to the world organization. The General Assembl; was expected to approve its action next Tuesday. Professional Habits Criticized by Babson By ROGER W. BABSON Babson Park, Mass. After re turning from Florida this spring, I felt I would like some new reading glasses and called up an optometrist. I was told that K Z V? I 1 could not g l " 1 an appoint- I I frfT-t 1 ment for a aWSJUf month. After waiting a month for an appoint r KSLt ment, and then Koget W. ttatofon eventually find ing a parking space, I had a half hour with him. Thereupon he gave me a prescription for the glasses, which caused me to go to the next village and hunt again for another parking space. Certainly the time is coming when one call will complete such a transaction. Furthermore, there is no more reason why we should have to make an appointment in advance to have our eyes tested than to get a shampoo. During the summer I had trou- !n the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Reports from Budapest say the SOVIET ARMY has attacked Hungarian workers in a brutal effort to crush the nation-wide strike against the puppet (home town communist) regime in Hun gary. Communist chickens are com ing home to roost. A general strike on the part of the workers was Karl Marx's idea of the finisher-offer that would destroy the capitalist world. Instead, it is beginning to look like general strikes by betrayed and brutally oppressed workers in communist-dominated coun tries may be the weapon that will destroy the foul and stink ing institution of Kremlin com munism. A NOTHER interesting straw in the wind: Walter Ulbricht, communist boss of East Germany (one of the communist satellites) has just published in the official maga zine of the -East German Com munist Youth Organization a threatening letter telling stu dents and young people generally that opposition to communism is futile, and will be shattered, by force, if necessary. He blames the "unrest" among East German youth on Western radio stations, newspapers and what he calls "provocateurs." He urges the students to resist all efforts to make them un happy with communism. His letter is regarded as an other indication that the East German communist regime is worried by an opposition fever that has been developing among students ever since the Hungari an rebellion began. THE communists have relied heavily on INDOCTRINA TION OF YOUTH. They have believed that if they can catch the coming generation young enough and poison their minds completely enough they can make dedicated communists of all of them and thus make the world safe for communist dic tators throughout the indefinite future. Instead, it is already apparent that in Hungary, in Poland and now in East Germany it is the YOUNG PEOPLE who are lead ing the revolt against commu nist oppression. 'THAT is to say: -- The institution of Russian communism is so foul that IN TIME iti must fall of the weight of its own foulness. No amount of kidding of the workers, no amount of indoctrination of the young, can conceal that fact in definitely. The truth is beginning to come out. Iff:; .l; -w r Secretary of State John Foster Dulles startled his fellow mem bers of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, meeting in Paris, by announcing that the United States could not agree to consult its allies in advance if a situation arose which made emergency action necessary. Revolt-Riots-Unrest Hungarian workers called a 48-hour general strike to protest the arrest of labor leaders. The puppet regime of Premier Janos Kadar responded with a decree of martial law. It threatened the death penalty against any who opposed it. The decree serv ed only to extend the strike beyond the 48-hour period. New clashes were reported in Buda pest between patriots and Rus sian and Hungarian puppet forces. Anti-Communists attacked the Soviet consulate in the Polish Baltic port of Stettin and wreck ed furniture. In Poznan, where riots last June touched off the surge of revolt in the satellite countries, demonstrators de manded the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary. ble with one of my ears. I again was required to wait a week for an appointment. Although the ear doctor felt that the trouble was perhaps due to low blood pressure, he would not take my blood pressure but sent me in stead to a local doctor. Again 1 had to wait a week for an ap pointment to have my blood pressure taken. I finally was ad vised to buy a hearing aid of some kind. I am able to get a manicure without an appointment, but to have a corn cut I must get an advance appointment, and per haps wait several days! The whole performance seems irra tional to me. Doctors are now setting up offices in the same building, but this will not solve my problem. I want to be able to find all these simple personal services in one building, and some day I will be able to do it And, furthermore, without ad vance appointment! Experience With Dentists For many years I have be lieved in the importance of hav ing one's teeth cleaned every month, but this could not be done without an advance ap pointment. When talking to my associate workers of the im portance of preventing decay by monthly cleaning, I found they were troubled by the same ad vance appointment difficulties. Thereupon, I decided to have a dental nurse in my own building to do this work, unattached to any dentist. To my great sur prise I found this was against the law and I was obliged to go to the Massachusetts Legislature to get a special act to permit it. Yet we are allowed to teach our servants or members of our family to inoculate us with in sulin. Recently I bought a new home through a local real estate agent. Within a few days I had telephone calls from other agents stating that they could get the property for less money. It would seem that in a town the size of Wellesley there could be some central clearing house where all houses for sale could be listed. The difficulty seems to be that people dare not list the house, or even consult two or three agencies, for fear of get ting into a conflict as to who should have the commission. The Legal Graft In the little town of New Boston, N.H., there is no bank or lawyer, but a very intelligent woman has been helping local people in various ways, includ ing forms for very simple wills She has recently been notified by the attorney of the N. H. Lawyers Association that she will be prosecuted if she con tinues this. I personally went to see this attorney to plead for her and he said that the law applies not only to her but also to banks, real estate agents, brokers, and all others. I later found that my own local bank, which adver tises for Trust Funds, . must send you to a lawyer to make the Trust for you to use. As a result of these ex periences, I forecast that simple professional and other special services will some day be ob tainable at one central ground floor "store" under the charge of competent nurses or other trained persons. Certain simple services which we can now get only from doctors, lawyers, op tometrists, opticians, dental technicians, chiropodists, mani curists, and real estate agents we will then be able to secure without making an advance ap pointment, and at fees of less than one dollar. When the nurse or her assistant locates any dan gerous symptom, the "customer" will be urged to visit a doctor, dentist, lawyer, or other pro fessional official at once and will make an appointment there for. In the end, the public and all the professions will benefit from such a procedure. Mounting student unrest alarm ed Red authorities in East Ger many. Moscow dispatches dis closed that a Communist leader in Lithuania, which is a part of the Soviet Union itself, com plained that "reactionaries" had "begun to raise their heads." At Lait The U.N. Security Council vote approving Japan's applica tion for admission came after the signature of a Russian-Japanese peace treaty. Russia had blocked Japan's admission for years. Japan, once the dominant na tion in East Asia now will be fully restored to the family of nations. Dulles Secretary Dulles made his Paris speech in commenting on a move to broaden the scope of NATO so as to include con sultation on foreign policy by its members. Dulles cited the possibility of a Chinese Communist attack on Formosa as an instance in which the United States would have to act alone. Dulles' fellow delegates were surprised by his pronouncement in view of the angry American denunciation of the British French invasion of the Suez Canal Zone in what they hold to have been an emergency. Editorial Comment CALLING RAILWAYS TO ACCOUNT Sen. Richard Neuberger has opened fire on the railroads in an attack which will have a good deal of sympathetic sup port from Astoria and other Ore gon communities which have been deprived of railroad pass enger service in recent years. The Oregon senator has issu ed a statement appealing for a new formula in computing rail road passenger costs to replace the 42-year old interstate com merce commission formula on which abandonment of service here and elsewhere in Oregon was based. Says Neuberger: "The fallacy of this formula is that it charges to passenger trains many expenses which would continue even if not a single passenger coach or Pull man operated anywhere in the nation for example bridges, switching yards, block signal maintenance and rails. Can these things be abandoned if the rail roads turn exclusively to freight? Of course they can't. Thus, pres ent passenger losses are not com puted realistically." Neuberger mentioned cessa tion of passenger service to Coos Bay, Medford, Roseburg, As toria and Grants Pass, declaring this abandonment was "short sighted and behind the times" and calling upon the state public utilities commissioner to apply "modern bookkeeping methods" in reopening the case. Neuberger makes the cogent points that basic costs go on as long as a railroad is in operation hauling freight and that passeng er revenues are therefore vel vet, and that railroads as public service institutions have an obli gation to the public to provide at least minimum passenger service. This community will wish suc cess to the senator in his cam paign, and we feel sure will give him any help within its power. Astorian Budget. Congressional Quiz 'Copyright, 195 Congressional Quarterly) Q True or false: U. S. Presi dents always have been inaugu rated in Washington, D. C. A False. The first inaugu ration was held in New York City, 1789, the next two in Philadelphia in 1793 and 1797. Thomas Jefferson, in 1801, be came the first President in augurated in Washington. The practice of delivering the in augural address from the Capitol portico originated with James Monroe in 1817. Pre viously they were delivered in the Senate chamber. Q The Constitution provides that the President's term shall begin Jan. 20 at noon. But Con gress in 1956 approved a resolu tion setting Jan. 21 as this year's date for the traditional inaugur ation ceremonies. Why? A Jan. 20, 1957, falls on Sunday. The last time Inaugu ration Day fell on Sunday was in 1917. Even though he was beginning his second term. President Wilson was sworn in without ceremony on Sunday and repeated the oath publicly tha next day. In 1849, how ever, Zachary Taylor chose not to take an oath on Sun day, and the nation technical ly had no President for 24 hours. President Eisenhower has indicated he will follow Wilson's course. Q W h i c h President was sworn in, not by the Chief Jus tice of the Supreme Court, but by a justice of the peace, his father? A Calvin Coolidge, Hard ing's Vice President, was sworn in by his father the night President Harding died Aug. 2, 1923. 0 C o " 0 0 O O o Communications Letters to the Editor must Bear the name r0 adcss ot the writer, although under certain circumsrances the use of a pen name or (Initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensationo Letters submitted for plication must not exceed 400 words. They Were Fine "Embalmeri" To the Editor: Let me 0 tell you something. Did you yer hear, of Algol, Aldebaran, Altair? Did you ever hear of astronomy? Of Algebra? Who do you think invented algebra? The illiterate Arabs who were mathematicians, .scientists, as tronomers, physicians, wfien Eu ropeans were living in the Dark Ages, the civilization of the an cients forgotten. Who once ruled Spain wisely and well? Who built the wonderful and beau- f tiful Alhambra? Who reignod in Granada and wrote some of the world's best literature? Who composed the Arabian Nights? The Arabs so' take off your hat to the Arabs, Johnny-Come-Eae- ly- Nasser is no more a vijlain iur trying to duiiq up nis own country Egypt than Geoige Washington was for tryjng to build the United States and Nehru is trying to btJild up India. More power to them. And evSry time they try to accomplish 1 something Americans villif- them. Nasser isn't trying to con quer the world like the English and the, French and the Span iards before them did. Why chase out an Arab to make room for a Jew7 Each neeis a home. And as for the Panama Canal, we fomented a revolution to build if. Th English and French seem to believe in freedom for the English and the French and nobody else. Neither coun try ever had any business in Egypt, Indonesia,. Morroco, Tu nisia, Cyprus, India or any other country but their oWfi. Egypt ians came lrtto igypt as cave men. "Why take it from them? They became gusat engineers, fasmers, artists when our "an cestors ran around in blue paint and smelly skins, both animal and human. The Egyptians wove fine linens, had seeing eye dogs, were fine embalmers, had think ers and philosophers thousands of years ago. 0 The Arabs' oil and the Suez are theirs to do with as they please just as our oil was ours to give to the states instead of keeping our off shore oil for the good of the whole country, and as Patiama is ours, since we've got it after busting up a South American country to get it (Duild it). o How is it that the heads of countries get the little people involved in all sorts of wars andi messes and the$i run off and take vacations themselves? If I had had rr.y way Sir Anthony Eden would have had to syim to Jamaica and we would have considerably less golf playing and round-the-world flights at tax payers' epens ij ours. Seems to me if we could shut Dulles up it would be lofc cheap er than running around the world making enemies. And if American radios hd been silent there might be a lot of Hun garians alive today who mistook our hot air for t!2 real thing and are now dfead. Peace1 on earth good will to men! 0 Edith Y. Ingle, 338 Cessie St., Medford, Ore. People of the Deer To the Editor: A frlen brought me a book recently say ing: "I think you'll like to jead this." It's a scientist-explorer's account of a land as distant and forbidding, cold and barren as the Poles, almost; of peoples an cient as creation, primitive s the Pharoahs; yet as present as today. The author reveals some secrets. They're so much lik history of U.S.A., only a child in years, that a few facts are given. They are enormous, vio lent, tragic, pitiful yat so un- 8 ONIY Shopping Days Til Christmas! What A Problem! More friends than Funds! Don't worry you can get ready . Cash for Christmas from I a DfRsoH or 9 acme i I PACIFIC INDUSTRIAL Dick Hans, Manager 16 S. Central Ph. 3-5308 d necessary. It's of thousands (XJ Bnalmiut Eskimos, People of the Eteer, and Padliemint cousins, in the great Barren Plains north west of Kudson Bay strong, happy peeple, struggling, stnsg g&ng forheir lifls, under Km Nature' unyielding . require ments; ye? meetiogQar becom ing a part qrhem, they life in harmony with the elements, themselves: other pescle. with out destroying theifc God-given means" of existence. T'yej Chipe wayan Indians, Idthen TJtfeli, a?so Eaters of Dei, 2,S in J 860, followed the caribou on their long migrations, traveling f,OC0 miles eaeigyear gjrough the Barrens, the home of the inaisgiui. o 0 Then came the destrayer, the "villain," the white trader. He 1 - - Q . feersuadef the Hue to hunt ' , Ihe people repeater rifles, vast quantities of ammunition, White flour at $75 a sack, bawrig pow der, sugrg, etc., at great profig; urgOd them to kill thefjeer just for their tongues.o50,000 a sea son were slaughtered more th;gi all now if? tha whole Rein deer lake regio. Caribou waf food, clothing, shelter, dog har ness, boats-everythingOfor the Ihalmiut. White fOur, sugar, etc., were poisons, ghe People soon weakened, sickenedV rap idly died. Wheijprofits declined traders moved out, fcanfcrfed the People. The ajovernme9t is sue other HceQEesQ and the gaiOe repeated. I you see any similaAies in these activities (j nd treatment of ful American Indians Do you note resenO.lances be tween Ihalmiu, stealing and dsjstroying their Ver. and the Georgia Indians dfTv'e to Okla- hon; Potawatqjnis from their Michigan hunting and fishing paradise to the dry Kansas plars; Wealing of the0Yakimas' Celilo Falls, and other abuses? The Ihalmiuts needed no dol lars, white flour, sugar. They needed der. The American In dians need no millions of dol lars. They need and want fish and honest treatment. White man's greed, dishones ty, difregard for promises, have) brought men and nations to de struction. John E. Gribble, 139 Kenwood ave., Medford, Ore. DURLINg ON VACATION V. Durling, whose col umn "On the Side" appears regularly in the Mail Trib is.e, is on vacation. It will be resumed on Dec. 17. THE BIGGEST PICTURE 111 TELEVISION NOW, . . SECOND SETS NEEDN'T JBf SECOND RATE First rote eflbnt picturg TV t? that other room in yourousel You can't buy a 4gerscreen at ane price . .0 ond0the price of The Broadview above makes itO the outstanding budget buy in television today. Qualy? De-pendabilifyT-of course-as ory Magnavoj can offer you. Enjo .clearest, sharpest optimally -1 tered, bigger-thon-ltfe 24(diag-' offg measuremgnt) pictures. 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