Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 11, 1960, Image 4

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    MAIL TRIBUNE, M4for4, Or.
Monday. " 11, I960
"Tveryone in Southern Oregon
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
S3 North Fir St.. Ph. SP 2-6141
ROBERT W. RXJHL, Editor
HERB GREY. Advertising Manager
GERALD T. LATHAM, Bin. Mgr.
ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor
HARRY CfflPMAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Snorts Editor
OLIVE STARCHER, Women's Editor
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, 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 mos. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.23
Sunday Only On year $4.20
By Carrier In Advance Medford
Ashland. Central Point Eagle
Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill,
Phoenix, Shady Cove. Rogue Riv
er, Talent and on motor routes.
Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00
Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.30
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
AU Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
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T7 J J. Telephoto Newspictureg
" MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
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fices in New York. Chicago. De
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles,
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lanta. Vancouver. B.C.
NEWS PA Pit
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
iScQkTlQn
A
Flight o' Time
Medford nd Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
nd 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
-T.n. it. 1950 (Wednesday)
Madame Chiang Kai-Shek
complains that effective com
munist propaganda preveniea
U.S. from helping Nationalist
Chinese on mainland.
Tuesday night's wind des
troyed a brand-new refinish
ing mill at Camp "White just
hours before it was to go into
production for the first time.
SO YEARS AGO
Jan. 11, 1940 (Thursday)
Roy Gardner, ex - convict,
ittwi suicide in San
Francisco last night. He ap
peared in Medford in 1938 on
a lecture tour and in 1921 hid
fiwm federal aeents near
Easle Point while bullet
mimri in his le healed.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudfe Pot" column: "Ore
gon Wool Grower's associa
tion asks removal of reciprocal
trade treaties and wool pulled
over their eyes by the same
treaties."
SO YEARS AGO
Jan. 11. 1930 (Saturday)
"Prink" Callison, local high
school coach, is leading candi
date for vacant head football
coach position at the Univer
sity of Oregon.
Gov. Norblad protests car
toonists depicting "Old Man
Oregon" with chin whiskers.
"Wants state figure smooth
shaven. 40 YEARS AGO
Jan. 11. 1920 (Monday)
.. Oregon legislature ratifies
women's suffrage.
William Jennings Bryan
urges senate to ratify League
of Nations so U.S. can join.
SO YEARS AGO
Jan. 11, 1910 (Tuesday)
First attempts to fly a mono
plane in U.S., failed today
when plane crashed on take
off at Los Angeles.
Oregon Federation of Labor
passes a resolution calling for
proportional representation,
both legislative and council
manic. What's Your I.Q.?
Nina or tan correct is superior;
even or eight is excellent; five or
six is good.
1. Tungsten is an element;
true or false?
2. What is the name of the
longest wall in the world?
3. What is the bulldog edi
tion of a newspaper?
4. Since 1860, Germany be
gan five wars; can you name
three of them?
5. On what river did the
steamboat "Clermont" make
her trial trip 152 years ago?
6. Was New Hampshire one
of the original thirteen States
of the Union?
7. In what city is the Great
White Way?
8. What branch of the
armed forces has the motto
"Semper Fidelis"?
9. Horseshoes were invent
ed several centuries B.C.;
true or false?
10. What is the smallest
breed of dog?
Answers: 1. True. 2. Great
rii f China. 3. Early edi
tion for distant points. 4. Dan
ish. Ausiro-Prussian,
Prussian, World Wars I and
II. 5. Hudson River. 6. Yes.
7. New York City. 8. Manne
Corps. 9. True. 10. Chihuahua.
1 lo 6 lbs. . - -
Pretty Kettle of Fish
This is addressed to our friends who, in the
Communications column today, take exception
to a piece appearing here last week called "Sui
cide Amendment."
' What Willis Stone SAYS the proposed 23rd
amendment would do doesn't make the slightest
particle of difference.
What the amendment WOULD do is what
we were talking about
Have you read it? Have you thought about it?
IF NOT, here is is:
"Section 1. The Government of the United
states shall not engage in any business, profes
sional, commercial, financial, or industrial enter
prise except as specified in the Constitution.
"Section 2. The Constitution or laws of any
State, or the laws of the United States, shall not
be subject to the terms of any foreign or domestic
agreement which would abrogate this amend
ment. "Section 3. The activities of the U. S. Gov
ernment which violate the intent and purposes
of this amendment shall, within a period of three
years from the ratification of this amendment,
be liquidated and the properties and facilities
affected shall be sold.
"Section 4. Three years after the ratification
of this amendment the sixteenth article of amend
ments to the Constitution of the United States
shall stand repealed and thereafter Congress
shall not levy taxes on
andor gifts.
M
OW
1 If that bit of absurdity became part of the
constitution, it would do
would do. We suggest our mends read the pro
posed amendment carefully, then go back and
read the "Suicide Amendment" piece again.
The constitution (Read it lately? We have.)
specifies the nation may collect taxes (we'd keep
the internal revenue service), may provide for
armed forces (we'd keep the Army, Navy and
Air Force), shall conduct a census (we'd keep
the bureau of the census), and establish a post
office and post roads (we'd retain the post office
and, perhaps, the bureau of public roads). And,
possibly, the department
Everything else would
just a few, the forest service, bureau of land
management, bureau of reclamation, social se
curity administration, public health service, na-
, i i. ii :i
uonai aeronautics ana space aamimstrauon, son
conservation service, extension service, experi
mental stations, federal
poration, and a host of
And that would be
E.A.
Don 't Take It Off
The best thing that's happened to the auto
business since the hydraulic brake, in our opinion,
is the Automobile Information Disclosure Act
which went into effect a year ago.
This is the federal law
to post the itemized price on each car and the
dealer to keep the price slip there until the buyer
assumes possession. It s
found on a rear side window.
And we're pleased to
likely to stay there even
worn off the law.
THEY will if there are
ax uuiiu liAv taic viit J. ii kjciii i iauwow vyuu
this week fined a San Francisco dealer the max
imum $2,000 for removing slips
The law came into
ness failed to police itself. Buying an auto still
can be a pretty slippery undertaking for the aver
age person and it's a relief to have one solid bit
of information to grasp.
Actually, a dealer has to be a pretty shaggy
sort to want to take the tag off. Dealers we've
talked to say the law has proved to be a help,
not a hinderance, to their business. They say it
increases buyer confidence and saves a lot of
talking time. Capital Journal, Salem.
A Good American Voice
The Ohio American Legion brass should have
known better than to tackle Sen. Stephen M.
Young, whose Milquetoast appearance hides a
very tough character indeed.
But' not having known better, the Legion
naires presented Senator Young with a golden
opportunity to get a load off his mind. The Legion
big-wigs met in Cincinnati and adopted a resolu
tion call on Mr. Young to cancel a speech he was
to make to the Emergency Civil Liberties Com
mittee in New York. They said the group was a
Communist-front organization, though it is not
so listed by the Attorney General.
IN REPLY, Senator Young wrote to the Legion
Americanism chairman:
"I repudiate your resolution, Buster, and your
pompous, self-righteous, holier-than-thou title of
Americanism chairman' ... Do you self-appointed
vigilantes demand that I submit a list of speaking en
gagements for clearance by your outfit before I, as a
Senator of the United States, may open my mouth in
public? . . . Many of you loud-mouthed, publicity
seeking, professional veterans were chairborne in the
Pentagon or elsewhere while millions of us were over
seas in combat . . . You demand that I cancel a
speaking engagement. Til make that speech in New
York."
This is a good American voice speaking and
if the Ohio Legionnaries have not heard it before
they have not been listening. St Louis Post
Dispatch.' . t
personal incomes, estates,
everything we said it
of justice.
be prohibited, lo name
deposit insurance cor
others.
a pretty Kettle ot lish.
that requires a factory
that white slip usually
note that the tags are
after the newness has
many federal judges
being because the busi
Dennis the
Wfc don't vwnt anything, wis JUST CAMS
IN TO MAKE OURSELVES DIZZY.
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 to
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.
Influences on Children
To the Editor: Many per
sons are becoming alarmed
over the increase in crime
and seeming lack of parental
restraint. Wanton disregard
of human rights is at every
hand.
The blame is placed here
and there. One preacher even
went so far as to say "Televi
sion is the Devil's sewer line."
Personally, I am convinced
TV as it is beintr used, for a
large part, is just one result
or sum of the aee in which
we live. I shudder for the
youth who have been penned
up almost like animals in our
cities, and are being brain
washed by this modern me
dium of communication. We
talk about the brain-washing
tactics of other countries.
I ask, what are we subject
ing our precious children to?
Are we going to sit placidly
by and continue to let money-
greedy interests rob our chil
dren of a future prosperous
life? Before youngsters are
hardly able to talk, they are
now lisping some brewers
ditty or finding which cigar
ette has the least tars and
nicotine.
How surprising to live in
an age when pretenders of hu
man good and outright liars
are given more attention than
those who stand by the right.
I am thankful that we have
access to a source of informa
tion that speaks out far
stronger than any words I
could convey.
No longer is the Book of
Books kept from the common
people. Like a well spring of
life, its counsels and precepts
are available to all. Like
weary mountain climbers,
with parched tongues, coming
upon a bubbling spring, so
are the precious, wisdom
filled pages of Holy Writ to
humans. We've tried almost
everything else. Why not go
to the true Spring of Life?
Instead of attiring our
babes in dime store cowboy
outfits, with a gun at each
hip, why don't we place the
real things of life before
them? All the gold we may
have acquired will avail us
nothing in that day when fi
nal accounts will be made.
Our children need us and we
need our children.
Henry Johnson Jr.
2400 Highway 66
Ashland, Ore.
He's For Private Enterprise
To the Editor: You finally
aroused me sufficiently in
Thursday's editorial, "Suicide
Amendment," to break out
pen and paper in retaliation.
I believe you should recon
sider, "It would reduce the
U. S. to a fifth rate power al
most overnight, alone and
without friends in the world,
bankrupt, destitute."
First, is it possible to buy
friends in the true sense of
the word? I say NO, not now
or ever. Stop all foreign aid?
Our true friends would still
be with us. Bankrupt the
U.S.? Nonsense. By passing
the 23rd amendment we
would be immensely stronger
and much closer to a bal
anced budget.
By selling the 700 odd gov
ernment owned corporations,
the value of which is esti
mated at from 50 to 100 bil
lion dollars, that amount of
money could be applied to the
national debt and the same
corporations would go on
American tax rolls, and inci
dently eliminate an annual
loss of 38 billion dollars which
is the amount of personal in
come tax paid. Then, in the
good years after private enter
prise has taken over, these
corporations will be paying
the federal government 8V2
billion dollars a year which
could be used to reduce the
Menace
staggering national debt. All
of this added up and we
should be debt free in 25
years. Bankrupt! Destitute!
Bosh!!
Example of present trend
in Federal Government: Non
defense spending has in
creased from 2.6 billions in
1930 to 28.1 billions in 1959,
an increase of about 1000 per
cent.
I like this thought of Wood-
row Wilson in 1912. "The his
tory of liberty is a history of
limitations of Governmental
powers, not in the increase of
it. Therefore, when we resist
the concentrations of power
we are resisting the processes
of death, because concentra
tion of power is what always
preceeds the destruction of
human liberties."
- Ed Olsen,
190 Clover Lane,
Medford.
Spank the Writer
To the Editor: I have just
finished reading your tirade
against the speech Mr. Willis
Stone gave at the Medford
High school on the evening of
Jan. 6. I have come to the
conclusion that you did not
have your information and
facts in very good order and
that your publisher would be
highly commended by the
citizenry of our town if he
took you out to the woodshed
and spanked you as a parent
would any guilty youngster,
You were guilty of insulting
the intelligence of your own
readers as well as the other
citizens, because you failed to
present the facts and figures
correctly on the proposed
23rd amendment. As a mat
ter of fact, you completely
and thoroughly warped the
intent and purpose of the en
tire theme, and I would sug
gest that in the future you
prepare your material on a
more orderly and factual ba
sis before sounding off.
- Byron Palmer
Route 2, Box 25
Jacksonville, Ore.
P.S. Please feel free to use
this letter in your column. It
might just create a little read
er interest. You started the
ball rolling, inadvertently, I'll
admit, so keep it going.
Editor's note: We didn't
start it. Willis Stone did.
Highway Surfaces
To the Editor: A couple of
weeks ago I wrote a letter
about the unnecessarily slip
pery roads here in Oregon.
Last week I read where five
people were killed on "99,"
four north of Eugene and one
south of Medford. These
deaths were blamed on "icy
roads" but ice was only a con
tributing factor. The bulk of
the blame lies with the sur
face of the road. True enough
we need better driver habits
and attitudes, but with the
best of drivers we also need
the safest possible roads,
which we are not getting.
When a surface that is al
ready as smooth as glass be
comes wet or frosty, or
acquires a very thin coat of
ice, all normal control is gone.
Such was the case at Eugene
and south of Medford; at Eu
gene fog freezing on the road
killed four people; at Medford
a thin layer of ice killed an
other, or so it says.
I suppose I will be called a
crank by some, and a crack
pot by others but I know that
these accidents would not be
nearly so numerous if the
proper type of surface were
applied to all of our highways.
A good example of this type of
surface can be found between
Glendale Junction and Aza
lea, Oregon. On that stretch
Foreign Notebook: Anti-Semitism; French
Split; Suez Memoirs; Japanese Trade
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
Notes from the foreign
editor's notebook:
New Angle
West Berlin expects the
Soviet Union to seize upon
the recent
anti - Semitic
outbreaks in
West Ger
many as a rea
son to issue a
stern new
warning to
the Western
Allies and
West Ger
Phi Newsom
many against
Nazi activities
a revival of
in the Federal Republic. The
Washington Report
By WILLIAM
NAZI MEMORIES
Washington-The most dan
gerous problem now before
the Western allies is not their
rZTr differences
over how to
negotiate at
the summit
with the Rus
sians. And it
is never offi
cially admit
ted to be a
problem at
all.
W " S" . Responsible
people here and abroad have
understandably played down
this situation, for already it
serves Soviet interests as few
things could. All the same, its
of road, under the same con
ditions, reasonable caution as
sures you of safe control of
your car, while almost all of
our new, four lane freeways
are surfaced with a smooth
slippery material. Why? We
have the material, we have
the methods and we are pay
ing plenty; why are we get
ting more and more miles of
the same slick, dangerous
roads? Why is the highway
department s p en d i n g thou
sands to burn off excess oil
and still building more of the
same?
I drive between Medford
and Portland over 200 times
a year and there are many
more like me who will agree
when I say that a large part
of our winter accidents are
directly and solely the fault
of. our highways. Let those
who decide what type of sur
face shall be applied to our
roads re-examine their reasons
and see if they are really
worth the price.
The next time you drive,
look at the surface of the road
you are on, compare the dif
ferent types of material used,
and judge for yourself. Should
it be raining or frosty, drive
as if your life depended on it.
It does.
E. B. Van Horn,
505 Franquette st.
Medford.
"Such Journalism"
To the Editor: I read your
editorial in the Dec. 7 (sic)
sue. Having met you on oue
or two occasions, I judged you
as being an intelligent, well
educated man.
The statements you made
were very misleading and an
insult to the audience and the
cattle people of this county
who sponsored this meeting.
I am sure had you attended
the meeting or conversed with
Mr. Stone as you were re
quested to do, being only 20
feet away from the man at
the time, or if you had made
any intelligent attempt to as
certain the facts you would
not have succumbed to such
journalism.
Armin Richter
1015 North Central ave.
Medford
Trusts Big Business
To the Editor: The writer
is one among many regular
readers of the Mail Tribune
who do take seriously a favor
able attitude towards the pro
posed 23rd amendment to the
U. S. constitution. We are
gratified to believe that your
estimate, that we are neither
sensible nor informed, does
not necessarily describe our
intellectual status; we accept
your opinion as amusingly
condescending.
We are among many who
are well informed about the
U.S. constitution and its intent
to protect our freedom of
thought and action and enter
prise. We are most jealous of
the heritage it gives us, and
strenuously rebellious against
the abridgements of that con
stitution which are robbing
us of our property and per
sonal freedoms.
We are conscious that one
in each eight income-earning
individuals in our land is get
ting his income from our tax
pockets, but we don't have to
like it. In fact, we have much,
much more confidence, in big
business, with all its short
comings, than we have in big
government.
Paul Hornbeck
321 East Pine st.
Central Point, Ore.
Soviet warning would tie in
with demands for a "free de
militarized" West Berlin and
would provide Soviet Khru
shchev with additional am
munition for his summit meet
ing with Western leaders next
May. .
In Bonn, the West German
government is believed ready
ing get-tough measures for
anti-Semites but to be waiting
for the story to drift out of
the headlines. Informed
sources say Chancellor Kon
rad Adenauer's government
believes that, in the present
atmosphere, critics would ac
cept nothing but extreme mea
sures which only would drive
right-wingers underground.
S. WHITE
gravity is becoming compell
ing and it needs to be men
tioned out loud.
The plain fact is this: there
is a steadily rising antagon
ism toward West Germany
within the free world. This is
especially, and critically, true
in Britain which is now the
actual Western leader in poli
cy - making for the coming
summit conference with
Premier Nikita Khrushchev
of the Soviet Union.
A close association with
West Germany has been at
the very heart of Western pol
icy since the cold war began
about 1947. What is now go
ing on is seriously straining
these vitally necessary ties.
THE immediately obvious
toward the Germans is a ser
- -.wov
ies of crude anti-Jewish acts
in West Germany. Chancel
lor Konrad Adenauer is mov
ing fast and sincerely to pun
ish this sort of thing and to
see that it does not continue.
The West Germans suggest
that Communist agents in
East Germany have framed
these incidents to attempt to
show that a new Naziism is
at work and so to hurt West
Germany with her allies
With this estimate, some in
formed officials m Washing
ton entirely agree.
The real and basic difficul
ties, however, run far deep
er. And they will not alto
gether be ended even if Aden
auer is able both to halt the
outrages and to prove their
Communist inspiration. For
the simple truth is this, with
full respect for the countless
thousands of American fami
lies who lost men in the war
we never as a whole nation
had more than the faintest
awareness of the measureless
evil and cruelties of the Nazi
Germans.
Many other nations and
peoples knew all too well.
And, being human, they do
not forget - the Jews every
where, the Poles everywhere,
the British, and many of the
French and Belgians, among
others.
THUS, the nearer we ap
proach that day when West
Germany is to demand an lm
portant role in summit nego
tiations the more difficult it
is for many to accept these
German claims to place and
Dower. True, the Adenauer
government is not responsible
for the unspeakable brutali
ties of the old Hitler Ger
mans. True, Adenauer Ger
many is making every hon
orable effort to repay society.
But say all this and you still
have not said quite enough
for many -including a great
majority in the British Isles.
The civilians there remem
ber the long, savage, murder
ous air assaults upon London,
the months and months of
death and destruction and de
privation - and despair when
England stood alone. The ex
soldiers (and plenty of our
own, too) remember this and
more. They remember Ger
man actions -not only in the
death camps but on the bat
tlefield - against helpless men
that will stain memory itself
so long as life shall last.
This correspondent knows
for a fact that these recollec
tions are most widely held.
For he, too - if a personal
reference may be excused to
support a point - remembers
all this; . sometimes in night-
mares, lor ne wnnessea suf
ferings of others, that have
persisted for a decade and a
half and still come again and
again.
Yes. the one course of wis
dom is to forget, and to draw
up against the undoubted
common peril, the Soviet Un
ion. But let us not be too im
patient with those who have
so much reason to find for
getfulness so hard.
(Copyright, 1960, by United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
do FALSE TEETH
Reck. Slide or Slip?
FAS-TEETH, an Improved oowder e
be sprinkled on upper or lower plates,
holds false teeth more firmly in place.
Do not slide, slip or rock, no gummy
gooey, pasty taste or feeling. FAS.
TEETH Is alkaline (non-acid) Does
not sour. Checks "plate odor" (den
ture breath). Get FASTEETH at ear
(rug count.
However, once the story has
died down, the government is
expected to move for legisla
tion shackling them more ef
fectively. Politics, French Style
France, under President
Charles de Gaulle may be
moving toward an even more
authoritarian govern ment
than it has now. De Gaulle's
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Dee,
Union
in his State of the
message to the con-
gress:
1960 can be our most pros
perous year.
FWILL be if we make it so.
Prrvrwi-it-ir wnn't -incf fall
into our laps-in 1960 or any
other year.
CUBA offers to give back to
American tourists one-half
of their round trip fares in
order to attract them to the
luxurious-and now mostly vacant-Havana
vacation hotels.
The 50 per cent was pio
neered on flights from Florida
to Cuba and has been extend
ed to flights from New York.
The Cuban tourism commis
sion calls it "Operation
Friendship."
WHAT does it mean?
At least, it means that
American money is highly
esteemed in Cuba even if
Americans aren't.
WINSTON CHURCHILL,
" now vartat.i oniric nn thp
Riviera, is living in the lap
of luxury, a London news
paper tells us.
His penthouse apartment
at Monte Carlo's Hotel de
Paris has three bathrooms
done in pink, gray ivory and
marble, the story adds, and
on his arrival Sir Winston
spent an hour in a bath and
then dined on oysters, fish
soup, roast duck, apple sauce
and fruit.
There was champagne, the
story adds, to go along.
WHERE does he get the
" wherewithal to pay for it?
Mr. Churchill Isn't heredi
tarily a rich man, as riches
go in these days. But he has
written a lot of books that
people have bought and paid
for, have read with much in
terest and much improvement
of their store of knowledge
and in the , final accounting
have felt that the books were
worth every cent they cost.
I thinly most of us will agree
that he has earned his lux
uries. TN WASHINGTON the other
day a reporter toured the
Capitol building and described
what he saw. One thing that
intrigued and puzzled him
was the rite of REFILLING
THE SNUFF BOXES in the
senate chamber.
He wrote in his story:
"Since no senator I know,
or know of, now sniffs snuff,
I can't figure out why the
boxes become empty. I even
find myself wondering why
they are there at all.
HMMMMMM. I think maybe
T can enliehten him.
When the Capitol building
was built and furnished, snuff
boxes were as essential as
ash trays are now. So the gov
ernment appropriated the
money to provide them and to
keep them filled.
When .the federal govern
ment starts spending money
for anything, it. NEVER
QUITS. An appropriation,
once "made, goes rolling on
down through the ages. That
helps to explain why the fed
eral payroll keeps on grow
ing and taxes keep on rising.
cabinet now is badly split
over the economic program of
Finance Minister Antoine
Pinay who is determined to
hold to his austerity Una
against other powerful Gaul
lists who demand a greater
say in industry both for the
government and the workers,
including Communists. But
the powers granted De Gaulle
under the new Fifth Republic
place him in an unassailable
position, and should his pres
ent cabinet dissolve, it prob
ably would be replaced by an
even more iron-fisted one.
Suez Wounds Reopened
Wounds left by Britain's
disastrous invasion of Suez in
1956 still are far from healed,
and a new political rumpus
is expected in the wake of
this week's publication of for
mer Prime Minister Sir An
thony Eden's Suez memoirs.
Previous "inside stories" have
caused brief flareups but these
are expected to be as nothing
compared to Eden's own ver
sion of one of the most con
troversial incidents in Brit
ish history.
Red Ties
Look for the Japanese gov
ernment to come under in
creasing pressure to restore
economic and cultural rela
tions with Communist China.
The Reds broke off contact
with Japan last year in a huff
when Japan refused to com
bine trade with diplomatic re
lations. At least two high-
ranking politicians-with their
eye on the presidency of the
ruling Liberal Democratic
party and the automatic pre
miership are advocating
economic and cultural rela
tions with the Peiping regime.
It's a popular issue and likely
to be the only major one after
the U. S.-Japan security treaty
is signed.
H
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