4
MAIL TRIBUNE, MrtforJ, Or.
Monday, Jun 1, 1959
"Everyone U Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Trlbone
Published Dtlly except Saturday by
MJJ3FOR
33 North r'ii St
Ph. SP 3-6141
ROBiBT W RUHL, Editor
HERB GREV Advertising Manager
GEPAJuD LATHAM. Business Mgr
ERIC W ALLEN JB.
Managing fcditor
EARi. H ADAMS. City Editor
BARRY CHIPMAJJ Teleg Editor
RICHARD JEWZTT Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHES Women' Editor
DALE ER1CKSON Circulation Mr
An Independent Newsnaoer
Xntered as second class matter at
Medforrf Oregon under Act of
March 3. 1897
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By M a 1 1 In Advance. Copy 10c.
Dail- and Sunday 1 year $19.00
Dailv and Sunday mos. 8.0C
Dailv and Sunday 3 mos -23
Sunday Only One year $450
stv ParriM In Advance Medford.
. Ashland Central Point, E a g 1
Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill.
Phoenix Shady Cove. Rogue Riv
er Talent and on motor routes.
- Dail7 and Sunday 1 year $18.00
Daily ana sunuay i mo- iju
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City "f Medford
Official Papet ot Jacksua County
United Press International
mil Leased Wire
MEMBER Or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATION
Advertising Representative:
WEST-HOLIDAY CO, INC. Of
fices in New York, Chicago. De
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles.
Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At
lanta. Vancouver B.C.
T NEWSFAMR
.BBBSl
Si
PUBLISHERS
"ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
a
Flight 'o Time
Medford and Jackson County
History , from the files of Th
Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
June 1, 1949 (Wednesday)
Ashland school district vot
ers pass the annual budget
with a small turnout. ,
Patrons of six Jackson coun
ty school districts vote today
on consolidation.
20 YEARS AGO
June 1, 1939 (Thursday)
City Sanitary service offers
free dumping on its Bear
creek dump grounds under an
agreement wit" the Jackson
county court against indis
criminate dumping along
country roads.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Forest
Fire Season slogan: 'Chape
rone your, cigarettes. They
shouldn't go out alone.' "
80 YEARS AGO
June 1, 1929 (Saturday)
Copco buys four acres on
Bear creek for a new substa
tion. .
Motorists to Crescent City
are warned not to pick wild
flowers as a new law goes
into effect.
40 YEARS AGO
June 1. 1919 (Sunday)
A crew of girls thins apples
at the Eddie Carlton orchard
near Table Rock.
Farmers pray for June
rains.
80 YEARS AGO
June 1. 1909 (Tuesday)
Shipments of ties for the
P. and E. railroad begins as
right of way grading gets un
der way near Eagle Point.
A total of 40,000 feet of
pipe remains before Medford
Is linked to Big Butte Springs.
Yhal's Your I.Q.?
Mine or ten correct is superior;
even or eight b excellent; five Of
six is good.
x 1. What poem commences
with the words "This is the
forest Drimeval"?
2. Which Apostle was a pub
lican?
3. What is a femme de
chambre? -
4. Do you identify the
Mayo Brothers as famous
circus performers, baseball
players or physicians?
5. Name the airman who
led the original bombing raid
on Tokyo in worm war II.
It. Correct the following.
"Mumps are a contagious dis
ease."
7. In what State is the
Grand Coulee Dam?
8. Are bulls particularly ex
9. Which have larger seeds,
blueberries or huckleberries?
10. What is a campanile?
Answers: 1. "Evangeline";
2. Matthew; 3. A chamber
maid: 4. Physicians: 5. James
H. DoolirUe: 6. "Mumps is . .":
7. Washington State; 8. No: 9.
Huckleberries; 10. A bell
tower.
MTftT WADS WORTH HIES
Washington ((DPD) - Eliot
Wadsworth, 82, former assist
ant secretary of the treasury,
died at his home Friday.
TDo4rarnrth had been vice
f I BUd - -
president and a director of
the Franklin Savings bank,
the John Hancock Mutual
Life Insurance company ana
several other corporauosa.
Shakespeare
No culture in our West? Well, we try.
Over in the Ashland-Medf ord area, with gen
erous help from other sections of the statethey
try successfully. .
We are thinking, of course, of the ' Oregon
Shakespearean Festival, which annually rakes in
thousands of people each summer for the produc
tion of four of William Shakespeare's master
pieces. The summer plays have become a major
attraction not only in Oregon, but also for North
ern California and to some extent, the nation. It
has been pleasant to sit under the stars on a
warm evening and see and hear the classic stories.
-
TTHE Festival was dealt a blow after last season,
however, when its stage was condemned.
Friends of the Festival,
to whom the Festival has become a major econ
omic asset, put their shoulders to the wheel of a
fund raising drive all winter.
Sought was $275,000
classic Shakespearean mold. The stage is almost
complete now but the fund drive is not quite a
success. Approximately $250,000 has been raised,
leaving about $25,000 more to be realized. If the
record so far is an indication, the goal will be
made by the July 28 Festival opening. It certainly
should be, for the Festival is a needed thing.
Moreover, it s fun. The World, Coos Bay.
How to Stop Smut Mail
A postmaster can't
cause it's secret by federal law. But he occasion
ally finds out what some of it contains when irate
patrons bring it in.
One of the latest bits of first class mail was
brought in by an outraged mother. It was pure
smut mailed unsolicited to her eight-year-old son.
The mailed smut racket has become big bus
iness and the Post Office
crack down on it. In
people around the country have been arrested for
such illegal mailings. This is an area where the
department usually can step in without too much
trouble. Most pf the material is so crude and ob
vious as to rule out any claims of art censorship.
A ND the means, of getting the mailing lists are
ingenious. Sometimes high school graduation
lists are used. But frequently an attempt is made
to get at the younger set by devious means. For
example, the department has learned that a youth
can find himself on such a mailing list after writ
ing for an auto parts catalogue. And he can write
for a model airplane catalogue or a packet of
stamps and get back a
The biggest protection these dealers. have is
the sacredness of first class mail. And the only
solution for &e individual is to turn over the
mail to the postmaster.
will be on its way to the
the same day.
i 1 1 1 ii i i -
More Evidence
A word, to the wise,
But it must take more words to convince those
who do not heed the facts. Thus, we call attention
to the experience in Coquille. In the five years
that residents of that city have added fluorides to
their water, tooth decay among children has drop
ped, 20 per cent. National figures show that the
optimum results do not
about 10 years, when the
ies reaches about two-thirds.
We have seen no reports that suggest any
body in Coquille has turned blue, shriveled up,
or died'of a horrible disease because of the addi
tion of fluorides to the water. How long will it
take Eugene and other communities, where super
stition has played such a large role, to recognize
the beneficial experience of towns like Coquille?
- . Eugene Register-Guard
Time and Foreign Aid
Dr. Vannevar Bush,
scientists, has stated that our program of foreign
aid "must continue as long as the Communist
threat endures." An arbitrary cuf-dff date, he
says, would be a "calamity of the first order."
Dr. Bush in making such a statement is prob
ably not thinking of the Communist threat in
terms of a "cold war" or of our aid as a weapon
in that struggle. What he is doing, rather, is to
dramatize the fact that weakness, instability, in
security and fear provide a ground in which the
Communist threat can flourish. ,
; What we need to do is to make persons and
societies strong in their own right. This not only
offsets this Communist "threat" but also lays the
ground for progress in human betterment. ,
TR- BUSH does not set any fixed time limit on
Z the endurance of the threat. But he is not pes
simistic. He holds that the processes of education
and enlightenment, within, the very confines of
the Communist tyranny,
denied. The spark of true
ly touch off the fire that consumes the enemies
of the human mind and the human spirit.
With such an end in
to give the help that will
enemies stronger. This is the analysis of a skilled
scientist with a world-wide outlook. The words
of Dr. Bush can well be heeded at this time.
Can Be Fun
and Ashland merchants
for a new stage in the
open first class mail be
Department is trying to
the past 12 months 293
listing of dirty films.
They have promised it
postal inspector's office
Capital-Journal, balem.
they say, is sufficient.
become apparent . lor
decline in dental cavit
one of our most eminent
cannot be permanently
learning will eventual
view we can well afford
make resistance to those
New York Times
Dennis the
lMN'T THINK ITS AS FAR AS
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
THREAT TO AID
Washington-Amazing is the
word , for the situation of
cross-currents in which the
Eisenhower Administration's
$3,900,000,000
foreign aid
program nas
been placed
partiy by the
itself.
Two intern
al struggles
are going on,
one in Con
gress and one
"Downtown," as to the whole
direction foreign aid ought to
take hereafter. , '
In Congress many of those
most expert in foreign affairs,
in both parties, are trying to
put economic assistance on a
long-term revolving fund
basis. They want to do this
by greatly increasing-in some
cases by doubling-the money
that wiU go into the repay
able loan fund. '
Incidentally they also want
to reduce military aid some
what. Particularly, they
would like to cut it down to
little countries where jet
planes are really not so need
ed, or so useful, as irrigation
systems 'and better roads,
v. .
flTHEIR real and basic rmr-
nose, in a worrl. is tn spt
up a non-handout kinu of
economic aid with a fie-year
authorization. This would
mean that other countries
could plan on construction
schemes in the only way
many can be sensibly planned
upon-over a period of years.
As it stands, assistance is
on a year-to-year . schedule.
It is possible to begin a big
dam in a smaU republic: but
it is not necessarily possible
to finish it. The country con
cerned cannot be absolutely
certain that the aid permit
ting a start in one year will
be forthcoming for the next
year.
But this basic purpose has'
run into complications beyond
ready belief. "The Admini
stration" is described as be
ing opposed to enlarging the
repayable loan fund beyond
the $700,000,000 asked .for it
by the Budget Bureau, and
this is the state of affirs even
though the President himself
two years ago was asking just
such an enlargement-and for
five years.
"nUT though "The Admin
istration" "is taking this
line the facts, underneath, are
these: a very important part
of the "The Administration,"
the State Department, is
quietly for, and not. against,
such an enlargement. Thus it
comes down to this:' "The Ad
ministration" here "really
means the Budget Bureau and
the Treasury Department.
The function of these agencies
is to try to keep the books bal-anced-and
never mind what
they say in Pakistan or Peru.
Where the White House it
self actually stands cannot be
known until the President
speaks up with unmistakable
plainness. He is being asked
to do that by the chief Senate
Democratic foreign policy
spokesman, Senator J. W. Ful
bright of Arkansas. Certain
Senate Republicans are urg
ing Fulbright on-ithough, un
derstandably, they do not care
to take an open lead with
him.
Even this, however, is not
the end of a tale of compli
cations compounded. For even
assuming that Fulbright and
company at last bring the
true "Adminstration," the
President himself, onto their
side, there will be yet more
trouble.
THIS trouble is in-built in
Congress itself. For a
five-year authorization pro
gram would bypass the pow
erful appropriations commit
tees of Congress. Heretofore,
these have had the final word
r7"M
William S.
White
Menace
L Jj. gjly
PEOPLE WNKKVS:
S. WHITE
on money every year. It
might be possible to coax the
Senate appropriations com
mittee to go along. It would
be profoundly difficult, how
ever, to persuade the House
committee to do so. The
House is very jealous of its
constitutional right to initiate
all appropriations.
If foreign aid is to be re
formed in a businesslike way
the President will have to
join his bipartisan foreign
policy backers in Congress to
overcome the Treasury-Budget
alliance downtown and
the appropriations committee
alliance on Capitol Hill.
Lacking some such reform,
foreign aid itself will surely
die within a few years in the
face of growing national and
Congressional boredom and
dissatisfaction with the old
model.
(Copyright, 1959, by United
Feature Syndicate. Inc.)
In the Day's News:
By FRANK JENKINS
One gleans from the dis
patches that the world's most
renowned monkeys space
travelers Able and Baker
wiU appear in Washington.
At least, their notoriety
won't go to their heads and
ruin 'em. That's one advan
tage of being a monkey.
WHY "Able" and "Baker?"
" Ask any GI of reason
ably recent vintage. He'U tell
you.
Basically, it's the same sys
tem used in the naming of
danger-laden hurricanes -Anunie
for the first one of
the season, Bessie for the
second, Clemmie for the third,
and so on down the alphabet.
One thing that has never
been satisfactorily explained
is why they started naming
danger-laden storms for wom
en. I SUPPOSE you've caught
the brightener-upper dis
patch of the shapely blonde
who quit teaching because of
pointed criticism of her sexy
style of dress. She has turned
up in Hollywood as a night
club stripper.
At any rate, she found her
niche in life. She was out of
place as a teacher and if
she hadn't been she would be
out of place in HoUywood.
A RUSSIAN expert speaking
in San Francisco explains
to his hearers that people liv
ings under the Soviet system
don't miss freedom because
the government keeps them
fed, clothed and housed.
It has always been that way
in slave economies from An
cient Greece on down. The
slave is about the only per
son who has cradle to the
grave security.
BUT .
Let's get down to serious
business.
The dispatches tell us that
Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
fearful of crippling Cuba's
economy, has decided to post
pone for a year his plan to
carve up large holdings of
sugar land and distribute
them in small parcels among
the people.
Why?,
Well, it may have occurred
to him that redistribution of
Cuba's sugar lands MIGHT
destroy Cuba's big sugar busi
ness, which provides employ
ment for thousands of Cubans,
and result in turning over
Cuba's present sugar markets
to Hawaii, the Philippines and
other large sugar-producing
areas. -
TTNDER Castro's land redis
U tribution project, the big
landowners might lose their
lands and their businesses,
such as huge sugar mills.
'But
The general run of Cubans
might LOSE THEIR JOBS.
That wouldn't be good for
Cuba.
Wilson Decries 'Fat-Headed Complacency'
In United States Over Communist Menace
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington (DPD The
shocking story of Communist
spying in the United States
rambles on. it
arouses less
public interest
than last
year's fashions
in w olm e n's
skirts. "
Why it is
that the Amer
i c a n people
are - so com-
Lyls C. Wilson piacenuy xai
headed about deadly menace
of Communism to the Ameri
can way of life is a baffling
question. The warnings have
been loud and they have been
sounding for a long time.
Back in 1930 one Dimitri
Z. Manuilsky spoke in Mos
cow before the Lenin School
of Political Warfare. Among
other things, Comrade Manuil
sky said:
"War to the hilt between
Communism and capitalism is
Foreign Assignment
Susnicinuslv! Polish
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
From the foreign editor's as
signment book:
Looking For Clues:
Cuba's Caribbean neigh
bors view with considerable
suspicion Prime Minister Fi-
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer,
although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial
for publication is permissible. . The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc
edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do' not necessarily represent the views of the
paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. -
Praise for Mirick
To the Editor: Your recent
editorial regarding two con
certs at separate schools by
the students of vocal music,
and your tribute to Lynn
Sjolund, was much appreciat
ed by all of us who work in
the vineyard of good music.
And your attendance there
was a good thing. However I
did not see you at the orches
tral concert at Hedrick High
last Monday.
There you would have
heard something to really talk
about. - - -
When I came to Medford in
1945 the instrumental pro
gram in the schools had fallen
to such a low standard that
there was no orchestra and
the band'was barely existant.
Into this situation Irv
Mirick came to bring' order
out of -chaos.' There was hard
ly any music, instruments non
existing and in poor condition
and a general lack. By his
own efforts, and against con
siderable opposition, he has
developed and carried for
ward a program of growth
and excellence.
The vocal program has al
ways been here but Mirick
has started from scratch with
practically nothing, and by
his adherance to his ideal and
willingness to. work for it,
has achieved in these 14 years
excellent organization, appar
ently no friction, respect from
those under him and the sin
cere loyalty of the children
besides recognition far afield.
The recent consolidation
will put several strains on him
and his staff, but they will
come through because he
knows what he is doing, why
he is doing it and how to do
it. It will not be well for the
musical program he has insti
tuted if by any chance he is
not listened to and consulted
in this greater opportunity
facing us.
R. D. Werner,
531 Pennsylvania ave.,
Medford.
Will Steel's Memory
" To the Editor The fine
tribute paid to the memory,
of William Gladstone Steel by
the Mail Tribune, comment
ing on the 57th anniversary
of Crater Lake Park. His
many friends remember Will
Steel's devoted and tireless
work in saving that sweep
of wonderland for the esthetic,
the scenic and recreational
enjoyment of people here, and
the increasing numbers who
include it in their itenerary.
A few words of its inception
might be of some value.
Despite the colored lantern
slides of Crater Lake and its
Tiffany-like setting on a
mighty mountain that once
was there,' that he showed to
overflowing audielnces in
churches, school houses, any
place he could find in Wash
ington, D, C, and nearby com
munities, Will Steel told this
writer that he never got a
firm commitment for the
establishment of Crater Lake
Park till late on wintry eve
ning on a street corner in
Washington. He managed to
button-hole Secretary of In
terior Gifford Pinchot. With
a Senator Smathers not there
with his critical, delaying in
nundo, he . was able to - con-,
inevitable. Today (1930), of
course, we are not strong
enough to attack. Our time
will come in 20 or 30 years
(1950 to 1960). To win, we
shaU need the element of sur
prise. The bourgeois (that's
us) wiU have to be put to
sleep.
'We ShaU Smash Them'
"So, we shaU begin by
launching the most spectacu
lar peace movement on record.
There will be electrifying
overtures and unheard of con
cessions. The capitalistic coun
tries, stupid and decadent,
will rejoice to cooperate in
their own destruction. They
wiU leap at another chance
to be friends. As soon as their
guard is down, we shall smash
them with our clenched fists."
The House Committee on
Un-American Activities cited
that speech in a report and re
marked: "The Soviet Union's protes
tations of peaceful intent and
a desire for true friendship
with the United States are an
del Castro's recent disavowal
of any intent to meddle in the
internal affairs of other na
tions. They believe it was dic
tated by more practical poli
tics than by convicition and
that Castro, realized he would
have to secure his revolution
vince Pinchot of the many
values of Crater Lake for pub
lic need and enjoyment. "That
raw bitterly cold night," Will
told me, "really helped. I was
well protected in my "battle
dress (as he called his Innver-
ness cape, oldsters will re
member) but I held the shiver
ing Secretary there till I got
a firm promise for his help
in the establishment of Crater
Lake park."
That was the memorable
time when, with1 three sand
wiches to sustain him from
the capitol back to Portland,
and with one hoarded nickle
for the street car ride home,
best of all he would say, "I
had fifty thousand dollars to
start the good work."
With the south and west
entrances open for some time,
and the north one just opened,
the usual Hegira there on
June 15 opening day and lec
tures starting the 17th, there's
assurance that William Glad
stone Steel will be increasing
ly mentioned in them.
F. J. Clifford,
Route 2, Box 200F,
Central Point.
Seeks Dog Control
To the Editor: Thank you
for your editorial of May 28
regarding leash laws for dogs
in the Medford area.
We feel that those who have
dogs and feel a responsibility
in their care and protection
will also understand our con
cern with regard to our chil
dren and dogs on the school
playgrounds.
We of the Jefferson Parent
Teachers Association have
adopted a resolution stating
that we will try to find some
means of controlling this situ
ation, be it by city ordinance
or perhaps school authority.
I'm sure that all of us recog
nize this danger insofar as in
juries are concerned, but
there is also a monetary ques
tion to be raised, with torn
clothing and lost lunches to
be considered.
We would appreciate hear
ing from people in this area
on this question if they can
help us with suggestions and
we also welcome their criti
cisms. Mrs. Herbert L. Roberts,
Publicity Chairman,
Jefferson Parent-Teachers
Assn.,
. 1006 South Oakdale;
Medford.
A Moderate Voice
To the Editor: A further
word on the topic discussed
by Mr. Sweeny in the Mail
Tribune on May 26, and the
answer by Mrs. Woods on
May 29.
Protestantism and Catholic
ism have grown together, in
this country, for over 200
years, because of a climate of
relative peace. Today, how-
More Comfort Wearing
FALSE TEETH
Here is a pleasant way to overcome
loose plate discomfort. FASTEETH,
an Improved powder, sprinkled on
tipper and lower plates holds them
firmer so that they feel more com
fortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty
taste or feeling. It's alkaline (non
acid). Does not sour Checks plate
odor" (denture breath). Get PAS
TEETH today at any drug counts.
utter sliam. This is one fact
that stands out sharply as a
result of this committee's in
vestigation and study of cur
rent Communist espionage op
erations in this country."
Communism's peace move
ment has been under way
now for some time. Sham and
phony though it be, Commu
nist propaganda for peace and
coexistence is firmly imbed
ded in the Free World's head
lines. Nikita Khrushchev oc
casionally blurts something
off key such as his crack, "We
wiU bury you," or his promise
that the current crop of U.S.
grandchildren will become
sociaL'sts.
Red Spies Are Busy
Despite peaceful talk, Com
munist activities, espionage,
infiltration of U. S. institu
tions is booming today as rare
ly before.
Director J. Edgar Hoover
of the FBI regularly warns his
fellow citizens of their danger,
but there is little evidence
that they heed his words.
Book: Castro Eyed
Premier L.aavinri?
at home before exporting it
to Haiti, Nicaragua or .Guate
mala. They believe his decis
ion also was prompted by the
quick action of the Organiza
tion of American States in
curbing the attempted inva
sion of Panama from Cuba.
However, they say it is a
breathing spell only and that
the Caribbean will continue
to be a powder keg so long
as the crusade-minded Cuban
ever, , there exists in each
camp a minority, often out
spoken and influential. By
unjust bickering between
themselves, they consciously,
or unconsciously, are under
mining both Protestantism
and Catholicism, on their
only common ground; supply
ing people with the necessary
means to their Ultimate End.
Destroy, this common
ground, and you destroy both
forms of Christianity. Such a
condition can only further the
already frustratingly chaotic
procedure of mankind.
Lest we digress further
from the real issue, would not
Messrs. Sweeny and Woods re
concile themselves to the fact
they perhaps have, have al
lied themselves with a harm
ful minority, and further, by
avoiding these groups in the
future, may with the Grace
of God help Protestantism and
Catholicism, and therefore
themselves toward their Eter
nal End!x
Robert J. Howard,
828 B, West 14th st.,
Medford.
Kwaxy, Man
To the Editor: I wonder
what them kwazy monkeys
thinks of us kwazy peoples
today?
Everett Acklin,
Box 233,
Ashland
WITNESSES SILENCED
Memphis, Tenn.-ffJPD - City
Court Judge Beverly Bushe
refused to let a dog take the
witness stand Friday. Carl
Elam, in court on charges
that his Pekingese dogs were
disturbing neighbors, ' offered
to let one of them bark in
court to prove the bark wasn't
loud enough to disturb any
one. The judge said no, but
dismissed a charge of violating
the city's antinoise ordinance.
Reasonable Funerals
(Priced for Everyone)
Frank mi "tflfV
Perl ff eSrjWJ
FRIENDLY,
Hoover's warning this month
was that the Communists
were stepping up their efforts
to recruit young people and
workers in vital industries.
He said: ,
"The Communist aim is; of
course, to eat into our eco?
nomic life and freedom." -
In April, Hoover warned
that U. S. Communist leaders
were going into "full scale
action" here under new orders
from Moscow. A Justice De
partment official estimates
that in a rather recent 18
month period the FBI refer
red 481 espionage cases to
the department. That is near
an average rate of one a day.
American citizens seem not
to be aware of or td care little
about Communism's determ
ined plans for a bright, new
Red world. In a letter , some
months ago discussing this fat
headed complacency, Presi
dent Eisenhower wrote: "I am
often astonished ... at the
apparent apathy of so many
Americans." .
government offers haven to
revolutionaries.
Shakeup? -r
; . Poland's Premier Josef Cy
rankiewicz is the subject of
this popular story: "Poland
would have been sure of a
gold medal in the last Olym
pics if we had entered Cyran
kiewicz for the water events.
He can swim in any waters."
Nonetheless, reports persist in
Warsaw that Cyrankiwiez is
on his way out and that he
probably will be succeeded by
Foreign Minister Adam Ra
packi. London, diplomats return
ing from Warsaw say that
while the Polish press speaks
less frequently these days of
a separate Polish road to so
cialism, there is no sign that
Wladislaw Gomulka, first
secretary of the Communist
party, is returning four-square
to the Moscow line.
A hitherto unpublished
story about Gomulka if of a
clash reported to have taken
place last year between Go
mulka and East German Com
munist leader Walter Ulbrieht
during the latter's visit to
Moscow. Ulbrieht planned a
fire-breathing speech attack
ing the United States. Gomul
ka asked him to tone it down,
and when Ulbrieht refused,
the speech was cancelled de
spite the fact radio and TV
time had been cleared and
a crowd of 2,500 waited.
Now that Nationalist China
has been expelled from the
International Olympics com
mittee, Red China is expected
to make a bid to compete in
the games. The Reds are pur
suing a state sports program
that rivals the Soviet Union's
for developing Olympic cali
ber athletes. Radio r Peiping
said last week that 70,000
Chinese primary and high
school students are attending
700 "spare - time sports
schools." The youngsters get
training in football, basket
ball, track and field, gymnas
tics, swimming, skating and
table tennis.
We Give 4ttf
GREEN STAMPS
CENTRAL REXALl DRUG
Main and Central
Hear your fav
orite hymns on
KMED every
Sonday, 10:35
a.m., sung by
'Tennessee
Ernie" Ford
PERL
Funeral
Home
Phone SP 2-6675
LADY ATTENDANT
HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE