Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 01, 1960, Image 4

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    J MAILTRIIUNC,M4for4.0r.
4 Monday, Fab. 1, 1960
lfEBFO!ttTBIBUia
"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 T LATHAM. Bus. Mgr.
IRIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor
EARL H. ADAMS. Citv Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor
OLIVE STARCHER, Women's Editor
PALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr
An Indeoendent Newsnaner
Entered as second class matter at
Medford. Oregon, under Act of
March 3. 1897
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C3i
AsgjC0Tl(3)N
iqhf o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
'Bargaining9 on Dunes Park
Senator Neuberger has introduced the Dunes
Park bill recommended by the Hatfield admin
istration. In due course it will be referred to the
Interior department. The department will refer
it to the National Parks Service which in due time
will make its report. Senator Neuberger says he
will let Interior and Governor Hatfield work out
any differences.- He will go along with what they
agree on.
This washes out any possible charge of par
tisan political conniving, since Secretary Seaton
of Interior and Gov. Hatfield are both Republic
ans. It puts the matter squarely where it should
be, in direct negotiation between the state au
thorities and the federal government.
p 0 VERNOR Hatfield says that National Parks
Service people have told him there are no in
surmountable obstacles in the new bill, and
quotes its representatives as crediting the State
Natural Resources Committee with "saving" the
park. It is difficult to believe that the NPS will
not ask for some modifications of the terms of
the state bill, but the negotiations are now where
they belong, between federal and state admin
istrative agencies.
Senator Neuberger,' who is a provocative fig
ure in some eyes, is wise in stepping aside and
letting these parties work out an acceptable com
promise. Oregon Statesman, Salem.
Dennis the Menace
A Month in Jail
10 YEARS AGO
Feb. 1. 1950 (Wednesday)
A defense witness in the
governments anti - trust suit
against Oregon medical so
cieties and associations, testi
fied in Portland today that 40
of 41 Klamath county doctors
grossed $800,000 in 1948.
Snowfall at Crater Lake
during January broke all rec
ords with a total of 313 inches.
20 YEARS AGO
Feb. 1, 1940 (Thursday)
President of Finland re
peats offer to Russia to ne
gotiate an honorable peace.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "Up
state country correspondence
the past week, reveals a de
crease in the number of farm
ers chased by bulls. However,
one held a gasoline tank too
close to a match."
30 YEARS AGO
Feb. 1. 1930 (Saturday)
Hint a special prosecutor
will be appointed for the crim
inal libel suit against the pub
lisher of a local weekly.
Sidewalk mail box is in
stalled at post office and
proves a great convenience to
busy autoists.
40 YEARS AGO
Feb. 1, 1920 (Monday)
Fifty valley orchardists
Join Oregon Growers Co
operative association.
Smallpox cases reported in
Central Point not smallpox,
but one case is valid in the
Willow Springs district.
SO YEARS AGO
Feb. 1. 1910 (Tuesday)
Ashland Mayor is charged
on recall petition with incom
petency, misuse of public
funds and favoritism in appointments.
A syndicate or. sposane
men have purchased the 1,100
acre William Hamilton place
near Eagle Point and plan to
subdivide.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct is superior;
even or eight is excellent; five or
sis is good.
1. Coffee grows in pods;
true or false?
2. Is Reveille a morning, or
an evening, bugle call?
3. Which weighs more, a
gallon of salt water, or a gal
lon of fresh water?
4. In what country is the
Tiber River?
5. What is the capital of
Nevada?
6. A tribunal that exercises
arbitrary powers behind clos
ed doors is sometimes called
a "star V
7. Where are the ruins of
the famous Parthenon of the
Acropolis?
8. What European nation
has maintained its independ
ence for more than six-hundred
and sixty-five years?
9. How many divisions or
"signs" has the Zodiac?
10. What important metal
is obtained from bauxite ore?
Answers: 1. False. 2. Morning.
3. Sal Water. 4. Italy. 5. Car
son City. 6. "Star Chamber."
7. Athens, Greece. 8. Switzer
land. 9. Twelve. 10. Alumin
um. Chicago -IIJPD- S. DeWitt
Clough, 80, retired board
chairman of the Abbott Labo
ratories of North Chicago died
Sunday. 1
Dr. Willard Uphaus has been behind bars
in New Hampshire for more than a month. If he
does not give up the guest list tor his summer
camp at Conway, N. H., demanded in State At
torney General Wyman's investigation back in
1954, Dr. Uphaus will stay in jail for 11 months
more.
How much good will that do the State of
New Hampshire, Gov. Powell and Attorney Gen
eral Wyman? They have already had the satisfac
tion, if such it is, of imprisoning a 69-year-old
teacher of religious education because he would
not do what he said was against his conscience
inform on his fellow men. They knew there was
no indictable case against Willard Uphaus under
state or federal law and so they maneuvered him
into a position which placed him m contempt.
THE longer they keep Dr. Uphaus in prison the
more the demand for his release will grow.
It already has assumed amazing proportions. Not
a day passes without more protests reaching the
officials of New Hampshire protests irom news
papers, from citizens over the country, from re
ligious leaders, from church groups, and from
organizations that are belatedly finding out about
the imprisonment ana the narrow a-to-4 decision
of the Supreme Court which upheld the procedure
used to find Dr. Uphaus guilty of contempt.
The Providence Journal, published m the
citv which found Roger Williams an exile for
relgious freedom from colonial Massachusetts,
says that the faets in the Uphaus case "add up to
the persecution of an essentially blameless cit
izen. How much longer are New Hampshire or
ficials going to try to tough it out? St. Louis-
Dispatch.
Brief Encounter
Vice Admiral Hyman Rickover "met the
i ii n 1 j . 1
press sunaay on tne radio ana television pro
gram of the same name, and it appeared that
the press liked him. He was anything out evasive.
Adm. Rickover, a clever hand at building
with atoms, was talking about our schools system.
College students aren t supposd to know much
about "education," being too close to the trees,
so to speak. However, we were able to perceive
that:
TTHE ADMIRAL is a critical sort.
He seems almost conceited over building the
first atomic submarine.
He thinks the schools have too many ex-half
back administrators, and he has a somewhat com
parable attitude toward the armed services and
the Pentagon.
He thinks that children should be educated
according to ability and not on an "average"
basis.
HE ADVOCATES federal standards for educa
tion, and federal money where it is needed to
meet the standards.
He was unpleasant, arrogant and opinionated
about everything.
AND BOY, WAS HE RIGHT ! O r e g o n
Emerald (student daily newspaper at University
of Oregon).
Nixon Sets Tone of Campaign in Speech
In Chicago; 'Do It Yourself is Theme
By LYLE C. WILSON
Washington-fiJPD-The broad
outline of issues on which
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon expects
to campaign
this year for
President
have been laid
out for public
examination.
Nixon did
the job, him
self, at last
w e e k"s C h i-
tyie c. wusoo cago winner
with Ike." The vice president
was the principal speaker and
he conformed to the custom
LftJ
of presidential aspirants, in
eluding the Democrats. The
custom is to campaign on
issues which promise some
thing for everybody or, any
way, almost everybody.
On education, Nixon spoke
of weaknesses such as "inade
quate class rooms, underpaid
teachers, flabby standards."
He repeated his commitment
to civil rights and to equalityJ
of opportunity for all Ameri
cans. On agriculture the vice
president said the objective
must be an overhaul of obso
lete programs under which
farm product prices go down
and costs to the taxpayers
go up.
Effective programs, he said,
must be developed to restore
areas of chronic unemploy
ment to healthy produqtivity.
He proposed more adequate
methods of protecting the
aged, the unemployed and thf
disabled.
There should be, Nixon
said, more effective methods
to deal with labor-management
disputes to protect the
public but without controls.
After this roll call of advances
in areas largely pioneered by
the Roosevelt New Deal, Nix
on raised an obvious question:
Matter of Fact bx Joseph
'Sure i caiu&a Toys! I have fUNWm 'BM'
Washington Report
By WILLIAM S. WHITE
William S. "
White
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
Outer and Inner Appearance
To the Editor: Mr. Bulman's
"Reflections on Complexions"
was cleverly written.
Mr. Bulman talked with me
on the phone and asked that
I write no retaliation to his
letter, and I had no intention
to at the time. Women are
known to change their minds.
Mr. Bulman, this is no dis
credit to you or your views,
but I feel I'm entitled to mine
also.
God says in his word, and
I quote: I Sam. 16:7 "For man
looketh on the outward ap
pearance, but the Lord look
eth on the heart."
It's usually appearance that
attracts people to each other.
Then as time goes by and
you become acquainted, then
you learn in part, what's in
that persons heart.
Make-up, like anything, can
be used to extremes.
But just a touch is much
like a picture in black and
white and then you see it in
color. If you had your choice,
you would choose the one in
color.
We even paint buildings to-
De GAULLE ALONE
wasnington i or tne sec
ond time in his long career
Charles de Gaulle of France
is a figure of heroic resistance
in a Western
world that
i already owes
him much
And that
world is now
r e f u sing to
give him one
fifth of the
support he
deserves.
Half a gen
eration ago, this man of great
haughtiness-but of great hon
or-staked his life and his coun
try on a seemingly hopeless
fight against the Nazi occupa
tion of France. Raising the
Cross of Lorraine as his ban
ner, he reclaimed France's in
tegrity and her will to resist
and live.
At last, after bitter years,
he was able to sit, ramrod
stiff, in the Cathedral of
Notre Dame at a mass said on
a memorable summer day in
thanksgiving for the liberation
of Paris.
THIS correspondent remem-
bers that day, for he was
present in the cathedral. And
he recalls, too, the cold, total
unapproachability of the re
mote figures in the uniform of
a General of the French Arm-ies-the
personality which was
than, as now, making it hu
manly difficult for many to
pay him his due.
Perhaps Charles de Gaulle
is too right, to consciously, to
be liked too much.
But today, de Gaulle
still standing strongly (and all
but alone, too, this time,
among statesmen of the West)
against the common enemy of
the free society. This enemy
has many faces, for different
times. Some of them, like the
Nazi face, are more evil than
others, and so openly evil as
to leave no room for argu
ment. But all of them are de
structive faces. And all of
them can be spelled with the
single word "extremism."
Alone among the free
world's leaders, de Gaulle has
fully understood the true
challenge of this century. Ev
erywhere the contest at bot
tom is between those who wish
to find imperfect but work
able solutions and those who
violently and on "principle"
reject all solutions except
the one that is quite impossi
ble to obtain. This is the solu
tion of absolute perfection-
in their eyes.
.
THE tragedy of Algeria lies
in this. De Gaulle has
worked with, devotion to find
a middle way. He has on the
one side the Arab Algerian
independence extremists who
demand everything all at once.
And he has the French settler
improve their appearance. If
you had a choice of going to
two churches of your denomi
nation, standing side by side,
one painted, well kept yard,
and the other unpainted, un
tidy yard, I believe you would
choose the painted, tidy one.
I agree with you that make
up and men wouldn't belong
together.
But who wants a woman to
look like a man, or vice versa?
I will keep my appearance
for people's eyes as attractive
as possible and for God s eyes,
with his help, I will do what
it says in Proverbs 4:23,
"Keep thy heart with all dili
gence; for out of it are the
issues of life."
Mrs. Delbert Casey
; Route 1, Box 358
Central Point, Ore.
extremists who really would
refuse to give a single inch to
the independence movement.
He is the head of a country
that is an irreplaceable ally
of the United States and Great
Britain. But when all the ifs
and ands and buts and maybes
are stripped away, it comes to
this: We and the British have
hemmed and hawed with him
Why? Because we dared not
to be called "colonialists,"
even where the epihet would
have been nonsense. .
President Eisenhower, for
example, long since publicly
endorsed the moderate de
Gaulle formula for Algeria
But in a subsequent show
down in the United Nations
on an extremist motion call'
ing for support for the Alger
ian rebels instead, the United
States said neither yea nor
nay. We "abstained."
.
rpHIS sort of thing has made
it far more difficult for
de Gaulle to vindicate his
middle course. He desperately
needed our all-out backing,
for the man in the middle is
always the special target of
the crackpots on both ex
tremes of an issue.
The British have given de
Gaulle even less help. And so
now the thing in Algeria
seems really to have got out
of hand, whereas firm Allied
support for the de Gaulle plan
would surely have given some
pause to both s ets of
extremists.
We and the British were
afraid of this and of that-
most of all that we might
offend the world's emotional
ists' who demand total "inde
pendence" for everybody, ev
erywhere, by tomorrow morn
ing. Maybe this tender regard
for them is fine, in theory.
But a terrible fact remains.
It is Franch, it is de Gaulle,
who is our ally. It is not the
emotional extremists, or even
"the Afro-Asian bloc." And if
de Gaulle falls now, France
falls with him into a chaotic
vacuum which will never be
filled in our interests by all
the "Afro-Asian blocs" and all
the "independence" extrem
ists in all the world.
(Copyright. I960, by United
Feature Syndicate. Inc.)
Out Der Vindow
To the Editor: The stock
market bane acting up, and
aye tank the 1960 surplus yust
vent out der vindow.
Everett Acklin
Ashland, Ore. .
License Fees Due
For House Trailers
Salem - Oregon house trail
er owners who have not yet
paid registration and license
fees were reminded that fees
are delinquent after today.
Beginning March 2 a 10 per
cent penalty fee will be added.
Fees are to be paid to the
department of motor vehicles.
Under the law, .which went
into effect on Jan. 1, a $6
registration fee for all house
trailers replaces the former
$15-$25 fee.
The new license fee is two
per cent of the trailer's pres
ent market value.
This system of collecting
license fees' on house trailers
replaces the property tax
formerly collected by all
counties on trailers. The de
oartment of motor vehicles
will distribute fees collected
to the county of registration.
For additional information,
house trailer owners snoum
contact local branch offices of
the department or the office
in baiem. . j
THE MISSILE GAP:
THE KING'S CLOTHES
(The following article is
the last in a series of six.)
Washington - With any
other president in the White
House, the missile gap and
the way it has
been neglect
ed and mis
repre sented
by the Admin
istration would by now
constitute a
huge, emotion
charged na
tional s c a n -
JOSEPH AI.SOP Udl.
But Dwight D. Eisenhower
not only has the curious,
often useful political knack
of acting as a kind of super
tranquilizer, a whole nation's
Milltown. He is also, and with
justice, remembered as the
General who led our men to
victory in the last war. Be
cause he is a military hero,
the country tells itself, "Ike
knows best," while the Eisen
hower Defense Department
plays its macabre game of
Russian roulette with the
country's future.
In this way, Eisenhower
the man is a key part of the
problem of the missile gap.
For this reason, no study of
the problem can be complete
without an attempt to answer
the question, whether Ike
really does know best.
TT IS A truism, of course,
-1- that military heroes cannot
always and forever be trusted
to know best. Indeed, the
fields of history are whitened
by the bones of armies that
were prepared for the next
war by generals who won the
last war. But truisms need
not be universally applicable;
so one must look at Eisenhow
er's individual record in or
der to form a judgment.
In that record, the most
significant single episode is
surely the part President EU
senhower played in our most
disatrous post-war defense
budget. This was the budget
prepared when President Tru
man was having his own bout
of budget-mania, under the
Defense Department leader
ship of the egregious Louis
Alsop
Johnson. This was the budget
that invited the Korean ag
gression. As some predicted,
its invitation was quickly ac
cepted. By Louis Johnson's request,
Eisenhower came back to
Washington that year, to
work with the Joint Chiefs
of Staff while the budget was
being prepared. Without con
tradiction from Eisenhower,
the budget was then present
ed to Congress by Johnson as
an "Eisenhower budget." Nor
was Eisenhower the only
great American military fig
ure with a major share of re
sponsibility for this budget
that invited disaster.
A WHOLLY different bud
get had been prepared,
with infinite toil, by the great
James V. Forrestal; and Pres
ident Truman had made Gen.
George C. Marshall the judge
between Forrestal and him
self. For the specific reason
that the national economy
could not support the Forrest
al budget (which totalled $18,
000.000.000!) General Mar
shall told Truman to go ahead
and cut Forrestal's handi
work to the bone. Gen. Omar
C. Bradley also testified that
if we spent a dollar more for
defense than the Eisenhower
Johnson budget (which to
tailed $13,000,000,000!) the
national economy, would
promptly collapse under the
strain.
Here we see not just Eisen
hower alone, but three of our
greatest soldiers of the last
war, all making the same ap
palling mistake for the same
reason. It is the very reason
that Eisenhower now puts for
ward, once again, to justify
skimping the national defense
in the current budget. Our
generals apparently, are
taught to regard the economy
of the richest nation in his
tory as a sort of sensitive
plant, likely to fall into de
cline at the merest touch. In
Eisenhower, of course, this
viewpoint has more recently
been vastly strengthened by
the powerful influence of
men like George M. Humphrey.
Foreign Notebook:
Soviet Blunder;
Tunisia Problem
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
From the foreign editor's
notebook.
Soviet Blunder
Russia may have tripped
into one of its greatest diplo
matic blunders in its postwar
relations with
Japan. It has
threatened to
keep two Jap
anese islands,
which it got
Ci in world War
II, unless Ja
pan tears up
its new secu
rity treaty
with the Unit-
Such is the nation
al indignation in Japan at this
interference that it has served
to counter the highly vocal
opposition to the treaty among
Japanese leftists. The back
fire may bring the Russians
up sharply in their dealings
with other Asians.
4
PL 1
Ph'l Newsom
ed States
Battle for Bizerle
When France gave Tunisia
its independence four years
ago, it kept the huge strategic
naval base of Bizert. Now the
Tunisians want that too and
are starting to turn the psy
chological screws. Starting
next Monday Tunisians prob
ably will begin a series of
protest strikes, demonstra
tions and diplomatic pressures
gauged at further making life
miserable for France in North
Africa.
Ike's Latin Trip
The U. S. Secret Service
will, as usual, accompany
President Eisenhower on his
Latin American trip. Not the
least of its worries will come
when he hits Chile. This na
tion is plagued by one of the
most active Communist
groups in South America. The
Communists and other left
ists have seized every occa
sion to blame Chile's econom
ic plight on the United Statea.
This, in part, will be an im
pression Eisenhower will tny
to correct.
TF YOU believe, with Hum-
phrey, that paying the full
bill for national defense is a
quick road to national sui
cide, it is of course tempting
to avert the eyes from all the
reasons why not paying the
defense bill may be suicidal.
There is evidence, too, that
the President has done just
this. If Eisenhower were a
less transparently honest
man, such Eisenhower de
fense speeches as the one af
ter the first Sputnik would
have had to be called some
thing far uglier than grossly
misleading. The facts were
wrong, and they were wrong
ly presented as well.
The chief fault lay, per
haps, in the White House
staffs constant, sedulous ef
irt to protect their chief
)m anything too disturbing
or too disagreeable. One
thinks of the former Secre
tary of the National Security
Council, Robert Cutler, the
greatest of all the President
protectors, viciously ridicul
ing the awe-inspiring, wholly
accurate warnings of the
Gaither Report.
One things, too, of the Pen
tagon warning to Gen. An
drew Goodpaster that the
resident had better not
claim our Vanguard satellite
would soon match the Soviet
Ssputnik, because the Van
guard project was in a mess
The warning, overly calculat
ed to upset the President, was
never transmitted. The claim
that we would match the
Sputnik was duly made. And
for many months on end, the
United States looked silly
among its unsuccessful satellites.
fFHIS IS NO attempt to den
A igrate the President. It is
an effort rather to show why.
in this crucial cause, a very
virtuous king may be claim
ing to wear all sorts of clothes
he has not got on. But per
haps it would have been bet
ter to assert, at the outset.
that it is always wrong for
any nation to trust any lead
er, instead of trusting the
hard facts.
The hard facts say that a
very small number of Soviet
ICBMs can wipe out the
American nuclear deterrent
The hard facts say there is
a good chance of error in the
intelligence estimates which
deny the Soviets this small
number of ICBMs. The hard
facts say, therefore, that the
remedies must be urgently ap
plied that are needed to put
an end to the Russian roulette
gamei
(c) I960 New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
. "I am sure," he ssaid, "that
a question which may have
occurred to you is this: Aren't
all Americans for these ob
jectives, including our op
ponents? The answer is ves,
of course. What is the differ
ence, then?"
To his own question, Nixon
responded in a couple of para
graphs which probably will
come to represent the key
stone of his campaign for the
presidency. His answer was:
"We Republicans have un
shakable faith that the way
to achieve these goals is by
the free choice of millions of
individual consumers, by the
productive efforts of free
management and labor, and
by local and state action
wherever possible - supple
mented when necessary but
not supplanted by the federal
government.
Opponents' Philosophy
"The philosophy of most of
our opponents is just the op
posite. They claim that the
road to progress has to be pav
ed with bigger government.
more spending and higher tax
bills for the people to pay."
Nixon's campaign slogan
might be: "Don't do it in
Washington. Do it yourself!"
His Chicago speech was solid
evidence that the vice presi
dent will attempt to make
that the key 1960 issue. His
program was an all-out de
fense and endorsement of the
Eisenhower administration, as
it must be if he is to have
any chance of election.
The hottest fire is playing
right now on Eisenhower de
fense policies and spending.
The fire is being fed by civil
ian and Pentagon experts, and
the public is alarmed. U.S.
Strategic A i r Commander
Gen. Thomas Power was say
ing the other day that with
300 ballistic missiles, the So
viets in 30 minutes virtually
could wipe out the U.S. nu
clear strike ability.
In Chicago, Nixon said:
"Let's get these facts straight
here and now. No aggressor
today can knock out the de
terrent striking power of the
United States and its allies.
"It is time to quit selling
America short. We are not
a second-rate country with
second-rate military strength
and a second-rate economy."
cissy?
Stop Heart Gas 3 Times Faster
Certified liboratory tats prow BEIL-ANS tak
let! neutralize timcsK much stomach acidity
Hi one minute as many leadina digestive tablets.
Get BELL-ANS todry for the fastest knows
relief. 3St at drugoists. Send postal to BELL.
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Helps Yon Overcome
FALSE TEETH
Looseness and Worry
No longer be annoyed or feel tll-et-eaae
because of loose, wobbly false
teeth. F AST EETH. an Improved alka
line (non-acid) powder, sprinkled on
your plates holds them firmer so they
feel more comfortable Avoid embar
?.s"2n!L5u"ed by loose plates Get
FAS TEETH today at any drug count.
BREAK SMUGGLING RING
Mahwah, N. J. - !UPD - The
FBI announced that federal
agents who had posed as work
ers at the Ford Motor Co. as
sembly plant here arrested
six employees during the
week end on charges of
smuggling at least $30,000
worth of auto parts out of the
plant.
REMOVE
WARTS!
Amazing Compound
Dissolves Common
Warts Away
Without
Cutting or Burning
Doctors warn picking or scratching
at warts may cause bleeding, infec
tion, spreading. Now, science has
developed an amazing compound
that penetrates into warts, destroys
their cells, actually melts warts away
without cutting or burning.
Its name is Compound If. Pain
less, colorless Compound W must
remove common warts safely, with,
out ugly scarring, or money back.
Black Gold
The search for oil in the
Sahara and other regions of
the world appears to have as
an exciting future as it has
a past. Present prospectst are
that west Europe, in 15 jears,
will double its demand for
energy and U. S. needs will
increase by 60 per cent This
is to say nothing of the. needs
which will grow in Africa and
Asia. Atomic energy may take
up some of the slack; but it
still will be a baby by 1975.
PIONEER AVIATOR DIES
Paris - (UPD - Aviation pio
neer Paul Godos, 63, who had
set records for a closed cir
cuit around the world flight
and for a straight line distance
flight, died here Saturday. Co
dos, a retired inspector gen
eral for Air France, held the
honorary rank of commander
in the French Legion of Hon
or. .
IBILCIDX
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When your world is
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SPACIOUS PARKING LOT