Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 17, 1958, Image 4

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    TOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
MEDFORDtTEIBUIfE
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
- MEDFORD PRINTING CO
33 North Fir St. Ph. SP.2-6141
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
.HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD LATHAM. Business Mgr.
IRIC ALLEN, JR. Managing Editor
IARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
JtlCHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
.OLIVE STARCHER, Society Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford Creeon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail In Advance: Copy 10c.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $15 00
Daily and Sunday 6 mm. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4-25
JSunday Only One year $4.20
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Ashland. Central Point. Eagle
-. T'oint. Jacksonville. Gold Hill,
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2 er. Talent, and on motor routes:
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Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50
t
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash in Advance
jOfflrlal Paper of City of Medford
j Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased Wire
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OF CIRCULATION
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, fices in New York, Chicago, De-
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles,
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Tlighf 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 years ago.
a 10 YEARS AGO
Jan. 17. 1948 (Sunday)
2 : Dr. Elmo Stevenson, presi
dent of Southern Oregon col
.lege, inaugurates graduate
J extension course in pnnoso-
- nhv at Klamath Falls.
- Arthur Perry, reporter and
columnist for the Medford
Mail Tribune, taken to local
hospital.
T 20 YEARS AGO
! Jan. 17. 1938 (Monday)
Rogue River National for-
'st headquarters moves from
federal building to the Liber
' ty building at West Main and
South Grape its.
' Candidates for constable
' for Medford district will be
V
-
r z
'i w a ,t i .m.
I
l: . .11 i
voted upon at the primary
,' election Friday, May 20.
30 YEARS AGO
Jan.' 17. 1928 (Tuesday)
'.: A new motor sled, the in
. vention of E. M. Tucker of
' Tucker's garage, is being per-
- f ected here and will be given
a series of tests.
' First announcement of a
candidate for a political of-
- fice for the county this year
" Is that of A. J. Crose, for
: county clerk.
; 40 YEARS AGO
: Jan. 17. 1918 (Thursday)
" California Oregon Power
company turns on electricity
. for the first time from its new
J. power plant and dam at
copco.
! City Electrician L. E. Hin
man proposes that Medford
have an automatic fire alarm
system.
I What's Your I.Q.?
5 Nine or ten correct is superior;
seven or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
X 1. What does "C. O. D."
signify?
5 2. Bible: Does Paul's abid-
lng "hope" deal with the past,
present, or future?
1 3. If your watch has been
' hypothecated, would it have
been cleaned, stolen, or pledg
' ed as security on a loan?
- 4. Name the legal docu-
ment, used in land transac-
tions, that is spelled the same
; forward and backward?
5. The Roosevelt dime was
: released to the public in 1934,
Z 1940 or 1946?
6. Would a termagant wife
be meek and mild or boister-
ous and quarrelsome?
' ; 7. Manila is the capital of
.; which country?
-. 8. Are State bonuses for
war service exempt from Fed
- eral income tax?
! -9. What was the middle
i name of former Senator Rob
1 ert A. Taft?
10. How many days after
Easter is Ascension Day?
Answers: 1. "Collect on de-
livery. 2. Future. 3. Pledged
f 'as security on a loan. 4. Deed.
5. In 194S. 6. Boisterous and
quarrelsome. 7. The Philip-
pine Republic. 8. Yes. 9. Al-Z-
phonso. 10. Forty days.
EXCHANGE STATE VISITS
Belgrade (IP) President
Tito and Hungarian Premier
Janos Kadar wil exchange
.State visits, reliable sources
Sources said Thursday. They
3aid the exchange was ar
ranged through diplomatic
channels in Budapest and
here, but no' date for the vis
its has been set. , -
Hopeful Signs
Although construction on the Pacific coast
in 1957 was lower than any year since 1954, and
nationwide it fell below previous years, there is
mounting evidence that
This, of course, is
industry, which has a large stake m construction
generally, and a particularly big one in residen
tial construction.
For, despite the encroachment of masonry,
steel, aluminum and glass, wood still furnishes
the bulk of residential materials, and substan
tial quantities also go into the building of con
crete bridges, frameworks and scaffoldings, and
other structures for heavy construction.
IN AN article elsewhere on this page, Washing
ton Correspondent Richard Spong says that in
the construction industry, "happy tunes have
replaced the blues," with forecasts that a 5 per
cent or more rise in construction over 1957 is
confidently predicted.
He reports that contracts for future construc
tion, in total, are up 14 per cent from a year ago,
with housing contracts up 8 per cent.
And, he adds, a two-year slide in home con
struction one of the big factors in the bad lum
ber market last .year seemed to be checked in
mid-1957, with the results due to show up strongly
early in 1958.
If these figures are correct, and thre is no
reason to doubt them, it is to be expected that
things should Start picking up soon for Oregon's
economy, so much of which is based on logging
and lumber manufacture. E.A.
Winter Sunsets
Glancing through the Venetian blind slats
over the office window the other afternoon at
about 5 o'clock, we were startled to see a sort
of roseate glow touching everything in sight.
It was beautiful, but almost ominous, so dif
ferent was it from the light of day to which we
are accustomed. Others in the office saw it, too,
and one observed it looked sort of like "the end
of the world is coming."
An editorial writer for the New York Times
saw a similar phenomenon at about the same time,
and he described it as that "evening light which
is often so spectacular in January."
H
E ADDED:
"It slants over the western hills and seems to
bathe the whole world in a glow as different from
summer dusk as winter itself is different. This seems
to be a redder light, almost rosy at times, especially
on a snowless landscape . . . This is no warm glow, as
the rose light from the hearth fire is warm; this light
is cold, cold as the sky itself. And it lingers only a
little while, then fades into dusk; the brittle, echoic
dusk of winter."
This weird light, differentbut related to the
strange yellow-light sunsets sometimes seen in
spring and fall when cloud formations are just
right, seems peculiar to'- this part of the year,
when the sunsets are gradually getting later, and
the sunrises staying at about the same time.
Even winter has unsuspected beauties. Hj.A.
Masculine Musings
As a mere male, and one whose worries about
clothing largely end after the fundamentals of
comfort and warmth are
with "fashion" evidenced
times baffles us.
So, too, does their
some of the creations that the arbiters of fashion
ability dictate from the salons of Paris, Rome,
New York and Hollywood.
Our most recent puzzlement along these lines
arises from the so-called sack dress, which one
writer described as looking as though its wearer
were standing in the
dram pipe.
MOW that we have confessed our inability to
understand why women put up with such
things, we also should confess that there always
seems to be a vast difference between the pic
tures which show how the new fashion "should"
look after it is first revealed, and the end product,
as visible on the well-dressed matrons and misses
on the streets of Medford.
For there is a filtering-down process, a cer
tain modification presumably prompted by the
innate good sense and taste of the normal, well-
dressed American woman. Through this the new
fashion undergoes a change, and emerges into
the light of the every-day resembling what the
designers had in mind, but also vaguely and
subtly different.
WOMEN, we are told,
Up to a point, this may be a valid statement.
But beyond that point, we are convinced, women
DO take into consideration the judgments and
desires of their men-folk.
Evidence indicates that men prefer to see a
woman dressed so that
her recognizably a woman are still detectable,
even though half -concealed. And perhaps this is
the reason that the pure horror of the sack dress
is modified, belted, hiked up here and buttoned
down there, before it
streets.
All of which, we aver,
Friday, January 17. 1958
19o8 will improve.
good news for the lumber
satisfied, the concern
by the fair sex some
willingness to climb into
middle of an oversized
,
don't dress to please
the things which make
appears on small-town
is a Good Thing. E.A.
nm Oont close rr. I
Things Looking Up
In Construction,
Reports Indicate
By RICHARD SPONG
Washington, D.C. The
construction industry is one
major segment of the econ
omy, at least, where happy
tunes have replaced the blues
Some gay notes: Govern
ment forecasters are saying
that spending on construction
in 1958 should come to $49.6
billion. That would mean a
rise of about 5 per cent over
the 1957 total of $47.3 billion
as carried in preliminary esti
mates of the Department of
Labor and the Department of
Commerce
And the Eisenhower budget
for the next fiscal year calls
for more federal financing
aid for special housing proj
ects for the elderly. Also, the
President recommends raising
the ceiling on home mort
gages insured by the Federal
Housing Administration to
help in the purchase of "lar
ger and better houses." And
he would add $3 billion a
year for the next five years
to the F.H.A.'s mortgage in
surance authority.
Contracts Up
Moreover, F. W. Dodge
Corp., construction news and
marketing agency, reported
on Jan. 13 that contracts for
future construction totaled
$298,327,000 in November
up 14 per cent from a year
ago.
Contracts for the first 11
months of 1957, the agency
reported, showed nonresiden
tial building up 19 per cent;
residential, 8 per cent; heavy
engineering, 19 per cent. Con
tract awards are a reasonably
reliable indicator of future
building activity, inasmuch as
there usually is a long lag in
time between the awarding
of a contract and the actual
cash outlay.
Mid-1957 saw the apparent
checking of a two-year slide
in private residential con
struction. Outlays for private
home building adjusted sea
sonally rose steadily
through the end of the year.
Over the entire year, how
ever, private housing activity
was down about 10 per cent to
Babson Sees Fewer
Jobs for Graduates
By ROGER W. BABSON
Babson Park, Mass. The
big-paying, easy-to-get first job
out of college is something
we shall see
less of this
year. Company
recruitment of
ficers are say
ing that "this
year for the
first time in a
long while we
shall find
Dlenty of June
Roger W. Babson graduates
around at prices we want 'to
pay."
Babson studies of busmess
activity have for some months
now revealed a mild softening
in both employment and pay
rolls. The cause of this slow
down in the cycle can be at
tributed to a number of
things; among these are ris
ing productivity through tech
nological advances, automa
tion, and declines in govern
ment spending.
The reason I am writing
this article now instead of in
the spring is to try to make
both young people and their
parents aware of this changed
condition. If a college educa
tion teaches nothing else, it
should make individuals
aware that survival of the
fittest is a law of nature not
likely to be repealed in a
hurry by any congress, soviet,
or college placement officer.
Unemployed College
Graduates
You may be surprised to
know that there are a number
of last June's graduates who
have not yet been able to find j
lK men air '
$12.2 billion, about the same
relative decrease as occurred
in 1956. The falling-off was
attributed to a shortage of
mortgage funds. The situa
tion was relieved somewhat
in August, when the Housing
and Home Finance Adminis
tration raised the maximum
interest rate on F.H.A.-in-sured
loans and lowered down
payment requirements as au
thorized by the 1957 Housing
Act.
Then early in December,
Norman P. Mason, F.H.A.
Commissioner, quietly noti
fied field offices to go easier
in applying their standards as
to how large an income a fam
ily must have to qualify for
a loan. Charles K. Rieger,
vice president of General
Electric, called this action
"the best news I've heard in
a long time, good for build
ers, good for home-buyers,
and very good for us manu
facturers." More recently, on Jan. 8,
Mason announced two fur
ther steps designed to stimu
late the revival in home
building. Home-buyers will
no longer be required to fur
nish their own cash to cover
the closing costs on purchase
of a house. And discount rates
on F.H.A .-insured mortgages
were adjusted regionally to
encourage lending.
Housing Steadies
Private housing starts, ac
cording to "Construction Re
view" edged down in October
to 87,000 but even this figure
represented a seasonally ad
justed annual rate of 1 mil
lion private dwelling starts,
about the same as for each of
the previous five months.
Value of work on new pri
vate units in November re
mained above $1 billion con
tinuing the better-than-sea-sonal
' strength evident since
mid-1957. Meantime, Novem
ber data show continuing in
creases in spending for high
ways, public utilities, office
buildings, private hospitals,
public schools, and conserva
tion and development
projects.
full-time employment of the
kind they want. I learned
from one large eastern uni
versity recently that better
than 26 per cent of its last
June graduates had failed to
find employment to their lik
ing by Labor Day. Some are
still working at part-time
jobs; some have' gone back to
college for graduate work.
While this figure may be
somewhat atypical, it does,
nevertheless, point up a trend.
Did you know, too, that a
fair sprinkling of last June's
graduates who did get jobs
have already been "excessed"
by their employers? This
word "excess" is a lovely new
personnel word which means
"you are a nice enough indi
vidual; you have done well on
the job; we would like to
have you around, but we just
don't need you any more." In
short, he has been fired.
Start Job Hunting Now
One well-known college
placement officer has stated
that he expects the number of
campus visits by companies
this year to be cut by 50 per
cent. I cannot agree with this;
but, I do say there will be
some shrinkage. .
If, therefore, you expect to
graduate from school or col
lege this year, and want a job,
start hunting now. Include
these things in your prepara
tion: (1) Make an appraisal of
yourself.- Know your voca
tional interests, strengths, and
weaknesses. (2) Find out what
kinds of jobs can best use
your abilities, education, and
experience: working with peo
ple, with numbers, or with
Communications
Letters to the Editor must
bear the name and address of
the writer although under cer
tain circumstances the use of a
pen name or initial for publica
tion is permissible. The Mail
Tribune reserves the right to
edit all letters with an eye to
clarification and condensation.
Letters submitted for publica
tion must not exceed 400 words.
T.V. Weather Reports False
To the Editor: At 2 p.m. to
day (Thursday) our KBES
television station on "News
of the Hour," in announcing
the Medford and Klamath
Falls weather, stated "the
Medford weather was foggy
and cloudy no temperature
given."
As at that time the sun had
been shining brightly for sev
eral hours on Medford, I im
mediately went outside. Out
side the sun was shining
brightly enough to cast a dark
shadow back of me, and a
slight breeze was swaying the
small branches of an ever
green tree. So there was no
fog. It is true that there was a
light film of clouds, but here
and there overhead blue sky
was discernible. Also in the
foothills and mountains sur
rounding the valley, a haze
was to be seen.
From such a poor report of
our weather at that time, a
prospective trader living in
say a 10, 20 or 30-mile radius
of Medford would say to him
or herself "Why go to Med
ford this afternoon to trade,
for it is foggy and cloudy
there."
In the interest of civic
pride and business welfare,
we all hope and trust in the
future that station KBES-TV
covering southern Oregon and
northern California, will be
more accurate in their hourly
"News of the Hour" weather
reports. Otherwise, for the
sake of Medford merchants,
they should do away with
them entirely.
Subscriber,
(Name on File).
Ra, Sol, Sun
To the Editor: As to enjoy
ing winter sunshine: Ra was
the Sun God of the early
Egyptians. Without the smile
of this supreme God, grain
did not grow. Without it, man
shivered. (Writer can testify
his greatest suffering from
cold was, not in Iceland nor
in Alaska. Neither was it on
the Siberian border of Man
churia. It was on a North
African desert. He once felt
a drop there from 120 degrees
at 3 p.m. to 20 degrees next
3 a.m.!).
Shamash similarly was ven
erated as Sun God by the
Assyrians. Merodach was hail
ed by the Chaldean shepherds.
Up in Persia, original home
of what we today call the
"Sunworshippers" or Parsees
of Bombay, the Sun ancient
ly was venerated as Ormudz.
The Greeks, who were care
ful not to offend any deity,
adopted Ra of the Nile as
their Helios. Of him Apollo
was a manifestation. The Ro
mans, always ready to bor
row from Egypt via Athens,
called their fiery God Sol. (We
materials and things? (3) In
vestigate your college library
to find out what companies
offer what kinds of jobs. (4)
Go to a good financial source
book and check specific com
panies for growth potential
and product diversification.
Study Companies
(5) Have a general knowl
edge, before you go into the
interview, of each company
as well as of the industry it
represents. (6) Be able to tell
a prospective employer in a
general way why you are in
terested in his particular in
dustry and his company. (7)
Set up a contact schedule for
yourself, and send a resume
a day to companies you think
you would like to work for,
asking for the privilege of an
interview. (8) When interview
time "comes, be able to talk
intelligently about yourself,
indicating again, in a general
way, the kinds of things you
think you might be able to do
on the job. (9) Send a follow-
up letter after the interview.
Sure, this is a lot of work,
and it takes a good deal of
time.. But the, person who
fails to take minimal steps of
this sort is mentally lazy.
Time spent now in getting
ready for interviews is far
better employed than time
wasted in interviews from
which you will obviously be
"washed out" because of your
lack of preparation. It is also
far better than time spent
later on a job for which you
have neither the interest nor
the aptitudes. Job hunting is
serious business, more so this
year than at any time since
the war.
DAIRY -
East Main St.
Our eggs are so fresh the hen's
haven't missed them yet.
I I I.
Eisenhower's Reply
Tops Week's Foreign News
By CHARLES McCANN
United Press Correspondent
Good and bad news of the
week in balance:
President Eisenhower laid
before Soviet Russia this
week a detailed plan aimed
a t reducing
world tension.
As part of
his nlan. the
President of
fered to at
tend a "sum
mit" con fer
ence on cold
war issues pro
vided that
Soviet leaders
could convince him they were
ready to negotiate in good
faith.
Eisenhower made his pro
posals in reply to a letter
which Soviet Premier Nikolai
A. Bulganin had sent him last
Dec. 10.
He called on Russia to help
restore confidence by carry
ing out the promise it made
at the last "summit" meeting,
in July, 1955, that Germany
should be reunified through
free elections.
As regards the new "sum
mit" meeting which Russia
still have helio-graphs and sol
ariums, have we not?).
In our own Western Hem
isphere the Aztecs honored
the Sun God as Tezcatlipoca.
Down in Peru, the Inca him
self wasa direct descendant
of the Mighty Sun God. Our
own Nordic forebears bowed
down before Sunna. We still
call the first day of our week
"SUN"-day and the next one
MON"-day, after his wife the
Moon. Old English wrote
"sun" as "sonne," as it still is
lettered in German.
"Die Sonne strait am ersten
hier" is one boastful line of
the Swiss folksong, "The
Mountain Boy."
C. M. Goethe
Seventh and J sts.
Sacramento 14, Calif.
Way To Heaven is Simple
To the Editor: Since the
Jacksonville reader d i dn't
sign her or his name in Fri
day's Mail Tribune, I shall
ask to use this column to'
state my views.
In order to bring deliver
ance to mankind, or to save
the souls of condemned sin
ners, we have to teach and
preach the Gospel. It is not
enough to state as a fact that
Jesus is the Son of God, nor
that He became our Brother
when He was born in Beth
lehem; neither is it enough to
say, the crucified Lord is the
gap between God and us.
I like to think of it this
way, "Christ, born, crucified,
and risen." I believe the Lord
Jesus Christ is true God be
cause He was conceived by
the Holy Ghost, He- was true
man because He was born of
the virgin Mary. He was pun
ished, suffered, was nailed to
a cross, died, and was buried,
in my place for my sins, not
for mine only, but also for
yours and for the sins of the
whole world. The third day
He rose victoriously from the
dead and thereafter ascended
visibly into heaven, to pre
pare a place for us, "That
where He is we may be also,"
if we will but acknowledge
our sinfulness and believe He
has paid the ransom for us.
The way to heaven is that
simple; now let us, Go and
tell," all of it, because you
cannot separate the star of
Bethlehem, the cross of Cal
vary, and the empty tomb.
Mrs. Arthur JannKe
' P. O. Box 94
Central Point, Ore.
A Plug for Dempster's
To the Editor: I want to use
your column to publicly thank
the Dempster Furniture peo
ple for their enjoyable win
dow displays during the
holiday eason.
It's the first time in all our
years in tnis area mat any
store has bothered to dress
their windows to delight the
eyes of the children and to
remind us all that Christmas
IS a sacred time of year. .
We'll keep this in mind
when the time comes for us
to reinvest in household fur
nishings. Mrs. J. W. Stevens,
P.O. Box 966
Central Point, Ore.
Loretta Young Play Praised
To the Editor: Hats off to
KBES-TV and the sponsors of
the Loretta Young show for
the excellent play presented
Jan. 12, 1958. As usual Miss
Young gave society a jab
where it might do the most
SMITH
at Genessea
Ill
Charles M.
McCann
has long sought, the Presi
dent said it would be useful
only if careful preparation
gave promise of its success
First, he said, there must
be exchanges through diplo
matic channels. Then negotia
good. Her punch line, "Re
form, like charity, begins at
home," should shock a few
viewers from the apathy and
indifference that grips so
many of us.
If the "message expressed
by Miss Young's portrayal
arouses parents, PTA work
ers, church workers, youth
directors and civic leaders to
the seriousness of the prob
lem confronting our town and
every town in America it
will have been worthwhile.
(Mrs.) Ruth B. Simmons
Secretary, Jackson
County Council for
Children and Youth.
Copco Worker Explains
To the Editor: In answer to
H. E. Braunig of Talent, how
about electricity , appearing
Jan. 4? There were two cases
of trouble. This company has
equipment, as good as any
private or public utility in the
U.S. The trouble was caused
by ice on wires.
I have worked quite some
time for the California Ore
gon Power company, and
there was no time wasted in
restoring service to this 12,-000-volt
Gistribution line.
There are certain safety fac
tors in restoring service. The
safety rules were made by
the employees, the company
and the state of Oregon, and
are applied to all work on
hot lines.
Ray Linn
(District lineman)
60 Fifth st.
Ashland, Ore.
Try and
-By BENNETT CERF-
ACCORDING TO BILLY GRAY, chickens out San Fernando
valley way have perfected a thrilling new game. Th
line up along the state highway and wait for a car to come
, tearing along. Then they
dart across the road, prac
tically under the wheels of
the car. Any chicken who
loses its nerve at the last
moment is called a high
school student!
Some candidates for a Ju
venile delinquency (home were
tearing down a road in a
dickety hot-rod at about 90
miles an hour. A goon In the
the rear seat noticed the door
on his side wasn't well closed.
Hastily he opened and slammed
it shut. The driver, without
turning his head, snarled, "WHO just got in?"
There's a line in the ocean where, by merely crossing same, yon
can lose a whole day. There's one on most every highway, however, I
where you can do even better. , - '
1958, by Bennett Cert Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Leon's TOTS -to -TEENS
Continues . .
Terrific Values! GOATS
Sizes 3 to 6x
$00
V UP
IS
DRESSES
$2 $3 $5
JACKETS
Including Car Coats
$Q00 lin
v up
is
BLOUSES
sbo
Many Other Wonderful Values!
Leon's TOTS -to -TEENS
105 E. MAIN
to Russia
tions could be taken to the
level of the foreign ministers
of the countries concerned.
Finally, if these negotiations
proved fruitful, there would
be the "summit" meeting.
To strengthen the position
of the United States either as
a cold war opponent of Russia
or in negotiations with it, Ei
senhower submitted to Con
gress a budget of $73,900,000,
000 for the fiscal year begin
ning July.l. Of this, $39,779,
000,000 was earmarked for
defense. Defense estimates
called for big increases in
spending in the nuclear mis
siles field and for reductions
in troop strength and conven
tional weapons.
French Premier Felix Gail
lard, who took office last Nov.
5 as his country's 24th post
war premier, faced a series
of votes of confidence in the
National Assembly, the con
trolling house of parliament,
at its new session.
The 1958 budget, a. plan
for home rule for Algeria and
a proposal for constitutional
reform which would make it
harder for the Assembly to
overthrow a government were
the chief issues. A defeat on
any of them could force Gail-
lard s resignation.
A government report issued
in Washington estimated that
countries of the Soviet bloc
had promised loans and grants
to free countries totalling $1,
900,000,000 in the last 2Vt
years.
The aid program, part of
the Communist attempt to in
filtrate free countries, was ex
tended to 11 countries Af
ghanistan, Burma, Cambodia,
Ceylon, India, Indonesia, Ne
pal, Egypt, Syria, Iceland and
Yugoslavia.
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