Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 20, 1956, Image 4

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FcWft aaEDTORD OKOOIO
. "tvryona ju QUthern Oraaaci
O Reaia Tr.a Mail Tribuna"
Publiara E:iy rcept Saturday by
G DOP.D f HINTING CO
NortarirSl. Phona 2-H141
tOBBT W RUBU Editor
n O fB Gt AIMrtijini Manager
GBf(Al-D LATMAJ1 Biuinaai Manager'
.ia-AW.E.N J. Maoncini tditca
IMAHL H DMS Crta tditot
STIXSR CfUPMAN T.i.fr.Bh Edltor
t.lCKSOW. Circulation Hp.
Aj? lariapeft'tant Hawapaper
l&'aved ee aacen elaaa mattar a
G
Jieaord Ofioa undar Act W
i- Harcn . 1J7
$u8scfj prion ayi
HVil In lanm Par Copy 19a.
Glw-y n anna On yaar $15.00
aed Sunta-ia anoffitrai 3.00
ODaily ad tau-TlrM m i
inilit "aly 4Jia ar e20
ByCi-r:er la Aaaanoa Madford
0 4nd Central lnt Earfa Point
0 JactanvUl ,naM Hill Phoanlx.
fc-i) Sirni Cov '- aia. Talent
fi'lon anotor rowta:
ry aid inay One yaar SIS 00
end inaa Ox month laO
Carrey and itkalaiv 1S par copy
1- IJ Tarrra Cah la AJyanoa
-XI?1 Pr ' Cttjraf Jleaford
y;"ciai rapgr at aaaaaaa Caaaty
United Pre
full ljaaiiaj Wire
aiEscaiR c auBTt
RITB!ATI
09 CISCULATIQH
AiiyertlAig Eeprasantatlve
WEST-HOLIDAY COMPAKT INC
offU-esMn . fork Chicago da
tro!f , Franciaoa. Ixai Angela.
Seattle Portland- t Loptua Atlanta
Vancouver B C
tttifOH I fOITOIIAl
ASSOCIATION
3 J U
Ffjgfif o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
K5toryfrom the filei of The
MaLTrftmno10. 20 30, 40
10 YEARS GO
Dec. iO, 194 (tiiitf)
Silhior chamber of commerce
t? 2 :
& &x rwspAPER
b VSi-"SSOCIATIOM
O cj "
I U o ' I
represenlStijies re engaged in.
routing culls to Santa Claus at
O thcr (jigwntown headquarters.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Qmttdge PStccolumn;, The Begum
O of Jawaharal,0 potentate of In
dia has demanded 'independence
of IncJfe, Begum.'
10 YEARS AGO
Dec. 20. 193S (Sunday) ,
Registered social security cards
issuedoemployes by Medford
post ff fee are made out coVrect
ly wespite Selie to the contrary,
says Fragk DeSouza, postmaster.
Jlk HuU, Medford's cele-
fcrated0civil war veteran, re
ceives invitation to joint reunion
of federSl and confederate sol
diers Gettysburg, Pa., in 1938.
30 YEARS AGO
Ds. 20. 1918 (MndayJ
preparations made in Dinty'i
J3semet of Medford hotel for
O, annual Chriitmas party of Cra
ter dub.
o - .
Extentive additions to the
q long distance telephone facilities
oin southern Oregon, under. con
struction 11 months, have been
completed.
40 YEARS AGO
Pc. 20. 4916 (Wednesday)
Medford city council, ordains
O initiative petition placing the
QHa.ruion plan for refinancing of
oth,city on the ballot for the Jan.
0 city flection.
? "o
oCounty courtrappoints W. N.
0 Wills superintendent . of the
O county poor fnn for 1917.
O
3 SO YtARal A,GO
20. 1906 (Thursday)
Cj oMedferd and Crater Lake
Jteiiway company, consider a
prejects fcr rehabilitation, and
roeratior of the enterprise.
TW triaV in Washington D.C.
W Binger Hermann of Oregon
is ;et for Fb. 4. .
What's Yur I.Q.?
o
Ntn or correct li superior; sev
en or eight ts excellent; five or
9tX Is fOOl.
1. Whafeare "bird .spiders" of
Brij? - .
Go2- Was Louisa Catherine John
sog0Afams the wife of John
Adaass oT John Qunicy Adams?
OO 0 3. Who was the father of
O oAtrialek, whtfc was defeated at
Rrhidim? Bible.
i. Dps Labor Dajr always fall
on e same day of the year:
C3 evenoin Lepf Year?
O
fi. Is the area of $he. Vatican
C- morf, or less than two
juJvgSb miles?
O 6. Was Nellie MelSa a, famous
tjillet dancer, opera singer, or
tJ ajuthgr?
07.Tt.
itf radio, is that sym-
ubob for fluency rgodulation?
O o 9 Is a trapezoid an acrobat,
cour-sided figirre with two
O sideoor a kind f fishing net?
9oIn gie meanings signifed by
Oflowers. what characteristic is
issfitned to tfie violet?
6. "Thou has no swallow in
thy sgpg. No winter in thy
yar." John Logan tl?48-88):
in&i poem "T$ the C o"?
JV.ns'we: 1. Xaantulas. 2.
Jin Qunicy Adams. 3. Esau.
4. Yes. 5. Less. 6. Opera singer.
7. FM. 8. Foui-si figure with
two sides. 9. Modesty. 10. Cuc-
WAIL TRIBUNE
Davis Quits, Al Sarena Doesn't
The resignation of Clarence Davis former solicitor
of U. S. Department of the Interior, and the filing
of 23 mining patents here in Jackson county by the
Al Sarena Mines, Inc., were not exactly what Holly
wood would call "coincidental."
They were not planned and timed to the minute.
But they were as closely related as Siamese ' twins,
the Al Sarena "give away" being the cause and the
Davis resignation the effect.
To keep up appearances both actions were der
layed, so a decent interval between them and the
election could elapse; but when former Secretary
McKay was beaten for the U.S. Senate and Harris
Ellsworth for the House, the stage was all set, the
only question being just when the curtain would be
rung up.
MOW with no point in fighting a sham battle any
V longer or pretending the Al Sarena case was
"nothing but politics," the 'McDonald Brothers can
start cutting timber as soon as the market returns to
normal, and forget about how many hundreds of
thousands of dollars they put into mine development
and only cheap politics prevented them from resum
ing mine operations or selling out same at a handsome
profit.
A LSO Secretary of the Interior Seaton, will no long
er feel it necessary to deny that when he said
nothing like the Al Sarena deal would happen
again, he did not mean what he said. He meant it.
Everyone who knows the type of liberal Republi
can former Senator Seaton is, knows that "mining
for timber" at $5 an acre within the U.S. Forest
Reserve, and contrary to the recommendations xi
both the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land
Management would never again be tolerated.
So the curtain has been rung up, or perhaps
more accurately, it has been rung down.
Little promises to be heard of the "Al Sarena
case at least until the next national election and
before that time comes around it is to be hoped,
that what the Al Sarena company was able to put
over "within the law" and the aid of the Department
of the Interior, will no longer be legally possible.
"THE Ellsworth bill made
tion, but it was a
this measure application for a mining claim on
government timberland, can not be granted until
the end of a five-year period, during which time
the U.S. Forest Service will control the disposition
of the timber.
That "listens well." But the catch is if the neces
sary improvement work, totaling $2500.00 be done
in one year instead of five, then the patent may be
granted.
In other wrords if the "mining for timber" opera
tor has the necessary cash and most of them do
the timber rights can be secured in 12 months, under
the old guise of filing a
old give away is on. .
CITHER a new bill to protect the national forests
from such exploitation should be passed, or the
Ellsworth bill amended so the U.S. Forest Service
would have control over all mining claims within the
reserve as to their legitimacy, and if legitimate their
rights to timber should be confined to the amounts
necessary, not to logging, but to MINING operations.
In other words, as we see it, where Uncle Sam
owns the timber land, timber and mining operations
should be kept separate, it should not be legally possi
ble for anyone to secure timber at a small percentage
of its market value, under the guise of operating a
mine, where the latter is not justified by the mineral
values that exist. R.W.R.
Too
Sorry to hear Attorney General Brownell is going
to continue in his position for four more years.
The last four we had assumed would be enough.
Not that we have any charges to file against the pres
ent occupant, but we think as an Attorney General
he has been a good precinct politician.
He has been a devoted advocate and defender qf
the Republican party, end when votes were needed
even made a few conspicuous gestures in the direction
of anti-trust proceedings and promotion of social jus
tice and welfare. But taking his administration as a
whole he has been just another disciple of "what is
best for General Motors is best for the country."
a a a
"THE Attorney General is not the only member of the
cabinet with a similar complex in fact as far as
our records show, on a vote it would be unanimous
but at least a change would hold out some hope
of an unorthodox type from a doctrinal standpoint,
slipping in.
Like the Al Sarena case above noted the Brownell
problem represents rather a baffling situation. For
there has as far as known been no misfeasance or mal
feasance no law breaking involved it is just a mat
ter of public policy a question largely of emphasis.
But reduced to its essentials it is something that
might hare a profound effect upon the present and
future course of this democracy. R.W.R.
Woodward Esfafe Set
New York (U.R) Sportsman
William Woodward Jr., fatally
shot by his wife last year in the
belief he was a prowler, left a
gross estate of S12.676.877, it
was revealed Wednesday in sur
rogate's court.
A report by his executors in
dicated that after the estate was
settled and the taxes paid it
Thursday. December 20. I95S
a step in the right direc-
very short one. Under
mining claim, and the same
Much Browndl
at $12,676,877
would amount to about $4 mil
lion.
Woodward left his estate to,
his widow, Ann, and two sons,
William Woodward III, 12 and
James T., 8. They each will be
beneficiaries of trust funds of
about S1.3 million. Mrs. Wood
ward's trust will go to their chil
dren at her death. .
Tito Takes
Buildup as
By CHARLES M. McCANN
United Press Correspondent
President Tito of Yugoslavia
has taken the first step toward
building himself up, as Eastern
Europe s big
i nd e p e ndent
C o m m u n i st
leader.
It has long
been evident
that Tito, fore
seeing the
loos ening of
Russia's grip
on its satel-
Charlts Mrt ann lues, Jiupeu lu
Decome me No. 1 man among
Eastern European Red leaders.
NQttGt Of FdCt By Joe and Stewart Alsop
NIXON TO AUSTRIA . look over the problem on the
Washington The first thing
that any reasonably sharp-mind
ed person will note about Rich
ard M. Nixon's journey to Aus
tria, is the simple fact that it
will do no good at all where it is
most necessary to do good.
Helping the tragic Hungarian
refugees, which is the Vice Pres
ident's avowed object, is of
course a high and proper pur
pose of national policy. If Nixon
cah speed the refugee flow to
this country, it will be a fine
thing.
-On the other hand, the Vice
President's presence in Austria
will do nothing whatever to
help those most in need of help.
It will not assist the even more
tragic, even braver Hungarians,
who have stayed in Hungary
under imminent threat of death
by starvation or Soviet attack, in
order to carry on the fight for
national freedom.
In this country, by the usual
Madison Avenue methods, the
Administration's activity about
the refugee problem has been
made to look like activity about
the Hungarian problem. But in
fact our total activity about the
Hungarian problem has been to
support high sounding but empty
resolutions in the United Na
tions which are voted for with
universal, cynical hypocrisy, in
the clear knowledge that they
will produce no result whatever.
rTHESE somewhat harsh but
- realistic observations are in
order at the moment, because it
is important to place the Nixon
trip to Austria in proper perspec
tive as a political gesture. It is a
most interesting gesture, but
only because of the light it sheds
on the domestic political trend.
The relevant facts are simple
enough. Because of the tangle of
barricades erected by the late
Senator McCarran and the very
far from late Scott McLeod, this
country long ago ceased to keep
the noble promise engraved on
the Statute of Liberty. Even after
the President gave the generous
order "let the Hungarian refu
gees come in" it still proved
far from easy to chop away the
squalid obstacles to the entry
of refugees in large numbers.
At this juncture, the Vice
President suggested to the Pres
ident that it might be a good
idea if he went to Austria to
In The Day's
Vice-President Nixon left
Washington Tuesday for a tour
of Hungarian refugee camps in
Austria. His job is to find out
exactly what is going on. There
have been disturbing reports
that relief supplies have been
badly mishandled, with too little
food and clothing getting
through to those who are in
need of help.
Nixon's mission is to get the
facts and come back and report
on what ought to be done. I
have an idea that we'll all be
interested in his report.
TIE WILL be gone in the gen-H-eral
neighborhood of a
WEEK. He is expected to spend
five days touring the refugee
Camps and getting a look at the
situation including talking to
people who are on the ground
and know what is happening.
It will take him about a- day
to go and a day to come back.
That's the fabulous modern
world for you.
Is anyone in these parts old
enough to remember when Jules
Verne's Around the World in
Eighty Days was generally re
garded as a reckless and utterly
improbable flight of imagination?
The world moves.
TN LONDON a far right wing
member of parliament, who
couldn't take what happened
at Suez and resigned his seat,
says: .
"The perfidy of Dulles over
Suez has made Machiavelli look
like a saint. The Suez expedition
failed (because of American
failure to support it.) A united
Britain would have resisted the
cirticisms of the oil politicians
in Washington, ignored the
Stewart Alsop
First Step Toward
East European Leader
Now he has taken the first
active step in that direction by
sending a mission to Warsaw
to visit Wladyslaw Gomulka,
who has won independent Com
munist status for Poland.
Dispatches report the Yugo
slav delegates will advise Go
mulka to seek economic aid
from the United States.
Tito's Move Unwelcome
Tito's move can hardly be
welcomed by the Soviet govern
ment. Russia has troubles enough at
the moment without any chisel
ing in by Tito. '
It may not be entirely a coin
cidence that just when the
spot. The President gladly as
sented, and so the expedition
was announced with the usual
fanfare.
a a a
THIS pattern might be less
strikintr if it wpro nnt fnr turn
O ' - - -" - V..W
obviously connected facts. In the
first place, an adroit and intelli
gent man wishing to build him
self up to the stature of a future
Presidential candidate could
hardly ask for a better chance
than Dick Nixon has now se
cured for himself.
In the second place, this is the
second repeat of the same pat
tern. Once before the Adminis
tration was troubled by an even
greater problem the problem
of the strains on the Western Al
liance imposed by the Suez
crisis. Once before the Vice
President had the idea that he
might do something to help.
Once before, he put this idea up
to the President. The result was
his extremely good and very
helpful speech to the Automobile
association, which he not only
proposed but drafted personally.
The fact that the speech was
genuinely helpful, the fact that
the Vice President in Austria
will also do his genuine best to
help the refugees, cannot quite
conceal another striking fact.
The Vice President is also help
ing himself by stepping forward
in these conspicuous and respon
sible roles.
The question is being asked.
therefore, whether President
Eisenhower has already decided
that "he's my boy," as he once
said about Nixon, to the point of
consciously planning a Nixon
nomination in 1960. The answer,
thus far, is almost certainly in
the negative.
a a a
THE truth is that this is now a
-t physically tired administra
tion. The Cabinet is elderly. The
President himself, despite his
magnificent recovery , must
watch his health carefully. It is
now known that the fatigue of
the Suez crisis caused his doctors
almost to order him to Georgia.
In a tired administration,
what could be more natural than
the assumption of a more and
more prominent role by a young
immensely vigorous, outstand
ingly intelligent and dynamic
man like Nixon? This second
question answers itself.
The Nixon buildiup is most
probably unplanned by anyone
but Nixon. Yet if the buildup
continues as it has started
the Republican choice of the
President's successor four years
from now is likely to become
just about as "free and open"
as the choice of the Vice Pres
idential nominee at San Fran
cisco. (C) 1958 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
News byf
rank Jenkins
threats of our enemies in the
Kremlin and proceeded to oc
cupy the entire length of the
canal."
He's living back in the good
old days when all that was
necessary to fix everything up
when there was trouble any
where in the world was to send
the British fleet.
HPHOSE days are past.
The British expedition to
Suez, which cost somewhere
around 150 million dollars, came
so near bankrupting Britain
that she had to come hat in
hand to us and plead with us
to forego this years' interest
payment on the debt she owes
us.
If $150,000,000 which is
mere pocket change in the busi
ness of waging war brings
Britain to the edge of bank
ruptcy, how would she go about
financing a REAL war as this
disgruntled . Britisher proposes?
The world has changed.
T ETS not gloat over the
change. It would be wonder
ful if Britain was still big and
strong and able to handle all
the dangerous situations that
arise in the world.
We could then settle back
and RUN OUR AFFAIRS
which would be splendid.
A AND let's not get peeved
when hard-boiled Britons
like this one get their dander
up and tell us off.
There were generations when
twisting the tail of the British
lion was our favorite pasiime.
Britain then was big and we
were little. The situation is re
versed now .... .
Yugoslav delegation started for
Warsaw, the Moscow press and
radio opened a new attack on
Tito.
The Russians based their at
tack on a speech made on Dec.
7 by Yugoslav Vice President
Edvard Kardelj. Kardelj criti
cized Russia's intervention in
the Hungarian rebellion and
called for "liberalization" of the
Hungarian puppet government
of Premier Janos Kadar.
Yugoslavia's attitude, as ex
pressed by Kardelj, goes against
the basic principles of Marxist
and Leninist Communism, it was
complained, and constitutes in
terference in Hungarian affairs.
Recent Aiiacki Restrained
But it is notable that recent
Russian attacks on Tito have
been remarkably restrained
compared to those of past years.
When Nikita S. Khrushchev
and Nikolai A. Bulganin made
their pilgrimage to Tito in May,
1955, they failed to get him back
in the Moscow camp.
But since then, the Russians
seem to have been afraid to
carry any antagonism to Tito
too far. He is a tough man to
tangle with, as Josef Stalin
found out.
It seems certain that, after
the Polish and Hungarian re
volts, Tito will steadily increase
his influence among satellite
leaders. Some of them still stick
to the "Stalinist" line. But there
is nothing else they can do un
less they want to give way to
"Titoists."
Criminal Bureau
Of Identification
Urged (or Oregon
Portland U.P.) Formation
of a state bureau of criminal
identification topped reconv
mendations ' of the Legislative
Interim Committee on Sex
Crime Prevention today.
The committee urged that the
Legislature "give most earnest
consideration to establishment of
an Oregon bureau of criminal
identification7 and investigation
under the governor's jurisdiction
but otherwise patterned after
California's and separate from
existing law enforcement
agencies."
The report suggested that the
bureau, if created, receive fin
gerprints of suspects in felonies
and all sex crimes. These would
be in addition to the filing of
reports on all sex crimes sus
pects to the agency.
Suggests Duplicate Copy
The committee recommended
that all magistrates and judges
in Oregon forward to the pro
posed agency a duplicate copy
of any judgment of conviction
rendered.
The proposed agency would
supply all law enforcement
agencies in the state with forms
covering crime reports, aid to
needy children reports, crim
inal and personal identification
cards and additional arrest and
disposition reports.
The group cautioned in its re
port, that "extreme care should
be taken to avoid the passage
of sex crime laws unless they
are needed, are correlated with
existing laws in the same field
and can be implemented with a
reasonable degree of effective
ness." Many Germans Still
Missing Since War II
Bonn, Germany U.P.) More
than 5 million Germans still are
missing since World War II,
most of them behind the Iron
Curtain, the West German gov
ernment reported today.
They include 1,245,000 former
Wehrmacht soldiers listed as
missing on the Eastern Front
and 100,000 known to have
entered war prisoner camps in
Russia and later disappeared, a
report said.
Be with
Si
4
y.-y T at
Vj.j i I,-
Today and Tomdrrow
M o o o
By Walter
All the evidence available
here seems to agree with the re-(
port that there i sharp conflict
inside tne
Kremlin. What
we do not
know as yetis
how far the
issues of this
c o n f 1 i-c t in
volve the re
gime within
the Soviet
U n i o h itself.
waiver Uhulm But we can be
'
sure they do involve directly
and immediately the basis of the
foreign policy of the Soviet
Union.
First Poland and then Hun
gary have demonstrated beyond
all possible doubt that in East
ern Europe there may be satel
lite governments but there are
no satellite nations. More- than
that, the Soviet Union is now
faced with the fact that the East
European armies, far from being
a military asset, are grave lia
bilities. As a result, the .whole
strategic position in Eastern Eu
rope is undermined, and by way
of being turned over. The lands
lying between the line of the
Iron Curtain on the West and
the Soviet frontier in the East,
between the Baltic on the north
and the Balkans on the south,
have been looked upon as vital:
parts of the Soviet military sys
tem. They are no longer that. They
are danger spots within that
system. This is a strategic up
set of the first order which is
bound to have profound effects
on the foreign policy of the
Soviet Union. '.
o
I I IS very lmpurtami umi wc
- should realize tor ourselves
the problems which the strategic
upset present to the Kremlin.
The problem is at bottom wheth
er the military occupation of
Eastern Europe can he relaxed,
and eventually terminated, with
out a popular explosion not onlj'
against Stalinism, not only
against Communism, but against
Russia as well.
The Kremlin is faced with the
question whether Eastern Eu
rope, which Stalin incorporated
into his empire, can be prevent
ed from becoming implacably
hostile. It must be evident to the
contending factions in -the Krem
lin that in this regi&n of Europe
the nations are opposed to the
Soviet presence, and that the
military occupation is bound to"
run into increasing-popular re
sistance. There is an old Stalin,
ist faction which has been dom-,
inant in the Hungarian crisis.
It must be arguing, we may
suppose, that the Soviet position
in Europe will be lost without
a stern totalitarian use o, mili
tary force.
T1HERE must be also, we must
-- suppose, a younger and more
moderate faction who argue, that
Stalinism will not work. They
must be arguing that the -vital
interests of Soviet security can
now best be protected by mak
ing settlements on the principle
of national freedom. ' ,
There are now several inter
esting and important precedents
for settlements of this kind.
There is the example of Aus
tria, which is a neutralized na
tional state. There is the .ex
ample of Finland, which is a
free country within the Soviet
military system. There. is Yugo
slavia, which is an independent
national state, but 'avowedly
Communist. There is Poland..
which has achieved a large mea
sure of national freedom but
FOR. BLIND CHILDREN
Somerville, Mass. (U.R) Jo"hn
Silk, a Lions Club member and
operator of an automobile wash
ing business, let colleagues take
over operation of his equipment
on a Saturday and all receipts
for the day were turned oVer
to the club which helps to
finance the education of one
blind child each year.
May the Peace which come's ofo Faith,
The Courage that's bom of Hope,
And the Joy which dw'efls "in Love,
you now, and- through
Across from tfce Courthouse
Fran Morgan Harold Snodgrass
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Chapel ;.... iW
Mortuary. -. u! ' ;
Lippmnn
within its militaalliance ! &th
tne Soviet Union,. The common
principle in alio these case is O
that tfcese coum$iej; are aiicpi0
them self-governing and that
.their internal affairs are &fto 0
ruled rom MsScow. O
Th moderate faction in
Kremlin, which canobe assumed
to exist, must be awaft thatoif $
the principle of Rational See
dom is not extended to Hun- 0
gary, to East Germany, to Czech- O
a. . i a j cS-!;.
oOiei ronseni ana unuer ouvitri
auspice. the fires which are
still smoldering j IWi3ry ajill
burst into I flame ad will
spread. o
7 .0 O :
IT is the American giterest, andO
it is the interest of the ft'est
em world," that te liberation o
of, Eastern Eurgpe o sKtfuld
achieved nq by an explosion, q
but 6y "negotiated settlement, o
This is the considered viev of
the Admiaiatratiqc. Jt isrhe con- ,
sidered 0vie Qof 'Die NATO
p'owers? a o O
The gfeat question is whether
it -is not n8w too late for aora
tional aid orderly, solutipn of
the East Sipetn problem.
Much0 blood 0 his been slled.O u
Fierce hatreds h a v been
aroused. It would b har to O
make sach.etilemeift bow Cif
the Kremlin w$re decided to
makej.themo Tb Krettolin ep- O
pears to b divid nd unde-O o
cided- o e n Q
3 There art two tfei ngf vhich0
we can do0whih my dielp.9D
is to kep mfilring it cleafhat oo
we hore for rieaceablG ico-
tiated settlements betweOn the
O
Soviet Union cncl zip i East
European neighbor. Th other q
lS to kT alive ans m tnaj HJcl
ofj, open public di:ussiono 11 O
over th world tfi idt0'
Eenerat settlement ia hic5hi
NATO wefefa egter t ttJ-
meniuDajea on lie reunujeauun
of Germany and the eaithdnjflgl
of foreign troops otlfroufhout
some kind of brotdonutrf(liejt(l o
security0 bel& ejitendinj ftoni
'Scandiavia to the glkns.0
At this stagthereCjnetipQ
to dot aU the i' and to cro
all the t's. Tfta sn be dojte
i. later when the timg is more
favorable man it is just aow
for acfual negoationss What
needs doing nefcv is to 'Opg? up
vistas of hopl in the darkening
seene. 0
Copyright 195 New YoAP
o Herald Tribune Inc.
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