Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 23, 1960, Image 4

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    A MAIL TRIBUNE, Mtdford, Or.
" A Wednesday, Mar. 23, 1960
MEDFORDtktTRIBUSS
"Everyone In Southern Oregon
Reads The Mail Tribune"
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
33 North Fir St, Ph. SP2-1
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERALD T LATHAM. But. Mgr.
ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor
EARL H. ADAMS, City Editor
HARRY CHIPMAN. Telee. 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 oi
March 3. 1897
STTRSCRrPTION RATES
Bv Mail In Advance. Copy 10c
Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00
Dally and Sunday 6 mo. 8.00
Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.23
Sunday Only One year $450
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. 1.50
Carrier and Dealers copy 10c
All Terms Cash in Advance
Official Paper of City of Medfore"
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press International
Full Leased Wire
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OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative:
WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of
fices in New York. Chicago, De
troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles,
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PUB1ISHERS
ASSOCIATION
NATIONAL EDITORIAI
I S
A&OatATUON
7 W W
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 years ago.
10 YEARS AGO
March 23. 1950 (Thursday)
Proposed soil conservation
district defeated here in elec
tion yesterday when less than
required 30 per cent of eli
gible land-owners turn out to
vote.
The Medford Y board will
Issue $45,000 in bonds to fi
nance completion of new
YMCA building, Tony Manno,
board president, announces.
20 YEARS AGO
March 23, 1940 (Saturday)
The Oregon Airways sus
pended Klamath Falls -Portland
operations for two weeks
pending arrangements for new
equipment, announcement
says.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
city recoived a plaque yester
day for being first in a Safety
Driving contest, and will place
copies of same at both ends of
town, where they can be seen,
but out of range of bum driv
ers." YEARS AGO
Varch 23. 1930 (Sunday)
Blue Ledge directors plan
erection of concentrator and
aerial tramway at mine.
Groceteria will open sec
ond store at Sixth and Grape
st. soon.
41 YEARS AGO
Varch 23, 1920 (Wednesday)
Medford's quota for. Near
atast relief is $3,333.
Diversified farming held
nesd of Rogue River valley.
50 YEARS AGO
March 23. 1910 (Wednesday)
The La Fean bill, which
would have penalized local
apple growers by regulating
apple box sizes, defeated m
Congress.
Two city policemen resign
because of low salaries and
no Sundays off.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine er ten correct is super;
(even or eight is excellent; five e
nx is good.
1. In connection with what
great disaster is the legend of
"Airs. O'Leary's cow" told?
2. In the old fairy tale, who
set out to tell the king the sky
was falling?
3. Does a storage battery de
liver direct, or alternating,
current?
4. In 1940, when F. D
Roosevelt ran for his third
term as President, what Re
publican candidate did he de
feat?
5. What was the name of
the first white child born in
America in colonial days?
6. What is Taipeh the capi
tal of?
7. Did James Watt invent
the sewing machine, steam en
gine, or cotton gin?
8. What is the AAUW?
9. What famous house in
Washington, B.C., is used to
entertain distinguished for
eign guests of the govern
ment? 10. Prairie dogs are ro
dents; true or false?
Answers: 1. Chicago fire. 2.
Henny-Penny. 3. Direct cur
rent. 4. Wendell Wilkie. 5.
i r.
Virginia Dare. 6. Formosa
(Nationalist China). 7. Steam
engine. 8. American Associa
tion of University Women.
9. Blair House. 10. True.
On Men s
There are dozens of motivations for human
behavior.
Love is one. Another is ambition. There are
also cupidity, pride, honor, conscience, dedica
tion, anger, a sense of injustice, a lust for power.
There is also fear.
In most human lives, the motivations are an
indissoluble mixture of more than one of these.
But often to often the dominant one is fear.
Fear of the unknown, fear of poverty, fear
of competition, fear of insecurity.
IHILE these emotions serve as motivations in
" the everyday life
motivate historical events.
If we read history correctly, the American
Revolution was impelled by a combination of
outrage at injustice, honor, pride, conscience and
fear. -
"No taxation without
Step On Me," "Give
death" these are slogans of men outraged at
injustice, proud of their inheritance as free Eng
lishmen, fearful of what might ensue unless a
stand were taken.
And, once the die was cast, honor and ded
ication and conscience became driving forces in
the successful revolution.
MOT all human clashes have had motivations
as admirable.
Many wars and skirmishes have been moti
vated by cupidity, avarice, greed pure and
simple.
And many more have been caused by a mix
ture of motives.
Examples of all of these are visible through
out histoiy and still are, today.
Motivations of people, and of peoples, still
clash, still are causing ware and revolutions and
riots.
THE Union of South Africa is trembling on the
A brink of revolution today.
On one side are black natives, outnumbering
the whites 9 or 10 or 11 to 1, and driven by an
outraged sense of injustice.
This was their land, which had been taken
from them by the white settlers. They have been
herded, bossed, ordered around, beaten down,
until they can stand it little more.
On the other side is the white minority, de
scended from English and Dutch settlers of four
and five generations ago, some of whom are fear
ful for their "way of life," for their recial domin
ance, for the "apartheid" which set them above
the natives.
THE racial agitation in the American south to
Aair 10 rmf frionV flnrl vinlpnt. ns nnsairm-
ate. as destructive as that
vitals of South Africa..
But the motivations are much the same.
Here is a ueonle. brought to this county cen
turies ae-o as slaves, which won its freedom in a
great war, brother against brother, and then be-
gan the long, aiiiicult,
to education, civilization, aignity, equality oi
opportunity, equality of rights as citizens.
And, if we are honest, can we not admit that
their motivations are much the same as those
which brought about the American revolution
outrage at injustice, pride,
ambition:
THE cards have been stacked. The dice have
1aan Inoflarl TV) a nrMa worn afrjnViRf. t.ViPm.
Handicapped by ignorance, by superstition,
by prejudice, by discrimination, by ill-health, by
economic and social persecutions, still this people
has climbed upward. Today its leaders, its out
standing men, are honored around the world.
Some of these people are lazy and debased
and depraved as are members of other races
and peoples.
Some are idealistic and hardworking as are
others.
But all are human beings, subject to the same
emotions, the same motivations, the same urges
and drives as everyone else.
IN THE actions and reactions in the Union of
South Africa, in the American south, (even,
in microcosm, in Medford,) one finds all the
human motivations on all sides of the straggle.
Often, too often, the dominant one is fear.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, speaking at the
depth of America's great depression, said ".All
we have to fear is fear itself."
Like all generalities, it was only partly true.
But like all great catch-phrases, it was more true
than untrue.
When men, all men, lose their fear of one
another, the day will . have come when such
phrases as justice and equality and brotherhood
can have a deeper meaning than they do today.
That day is not yet. But it is closer today
than it was yesterday, or 100 years ago. E.A.
Curtis to Speak At SOCTFA Meeting
Jack Curtis, Portland, safe
ty director of Oregon Timber
Transport Operators, wiU
speak at a meeting, of the
Southern Oregon Conserva
tion and Tree Farm associa
tion Friday, March 25, at the
Rogue Valley Country club.
A social hour at 7 pjn. will
precede the dinner.
Curtis, an operator expri
enced in hauling logs in Wash
ington under rate schedules
set by the PUC, will discuss
"the present status of the
unions' initiative referendum
attempt to put House Bill 72
Motivations
of individuals, they also
representation," "Don't
me Liberty or give me
which is tearing at the
sometimes tragic cnmD
iear, nonor, ana simple
onto the statute books as law
in Oregon," according to Dale
C. Prentice, secretary-manager
of SOCTFA.
Another guest is to inform
the association concerning the
progress of similar legislation
in Washington.
Prentice has told members
that "The lumber is highly
competitive. If this referen
dum becomes law, your costs
will Increase. These costs will
be absorbed from the profit
side of the ledger."
Dennis the
GBB I THOUGHT THEVb
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
Mail I ribune 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.
Jigsaw Puzzles
To the Editor: It is always
appropriate to show apprecia
tion of the help one gets from
friends, in our case the mem
bers of the ladies auxiliaries
of veterans organizations in
the state of Oregon.
Because of their genuine in
terest in our welfare, we can
boast of having the largest and
best stock of jigsaw puzzles
to be found in any veterans
hospital or domiciliary. A vis
it to our jigsaw puzzle center
will convince anyone of the
truth of this statement.
A letter expressing interest
and appreciation from the de
partment of medicine and sur
gery of the Veterans Adminis
tration in Washington, D. C,
is really a salute to our good
friends, the ladies auxiliaries.
David Frisch
P. O. Box 292
Camp White, Ore.
Demon Alcohol
To the Editor: Did you ever
have anyone misjudge the mo
tives that prompted certain
actions on your part? We all
have, I'm sure. Some may feel
that you truly should keep
still more often and sit down
and let the world go by. True,
I do talk too much. Just ask
my wife.
There are issues that one
cannot honestly keep still
about. If I were to raise the
cry, "rattlesnake!" on a hiking
trip, all hikers within earshot
would immediately be on the
alert. Yet right here in this
beautiful mountain fringed
valley of ours we have on the
loose far more harmful threts
than rattlesnakes.
There is on the loose a vil
lain to be feared even more
than the one who killed that
Ashland woman last week.
I refer to none other than
the demon alcohol. Alcohol
ism is costing up to $30,000,-
000 annually in California,
with the cost spread over po
lice activities, welfare, and
instutionalization. Half of all
Californians arrested in 1958
came into contact with the
law because of the use of al
cohol. And in some cities the
rate is 80 percent.
Nearly one-fifth of all ad
missions to mental hospitals
in Californians are alcoholics.
"The startling increase in
juvenile delinquency is large
ly due to parental failure. The
drinking woman of today
probably deserves more than
her statistical share of the
blame for juvenile delinquen
cy." The foregoing quote is
from J. Edgar Hoover in the
January issue of Listen maga
zine. If you have any doubt as
to the percentage of drunk
and drinking drivers on the
highways at any time, just
count the autos you see park
ed at roadside taverns and
clubs It is fair to assume that
all or nearly aU of the driv
ers, when they drive away,
will be under the influence,
and often to a considerable
degree, potential killers.
The following quote is from
the vice president 'of the
American Veneral Disease As
sociation, Dr. Nicholas Fium
ara. "It appears to us that there
has been a steady and pro
gressive increase in sexual
promiscuity during . the past
five years. Both drinking and
rock and roll are contributant
to this among teenagers. It
is not uncommon for high
school and college students to
come into classes with their
breaths reeking of stale alco
holic beverages after a big
night."
For those who would look
upward and above the seem
ing pleasures this world has
to offer, I would suggest a
Menace
tg SOME LEMONADE.'
publication is permissible. The
text of hope from David as re
corded in Psalms 16:11.
Ask yourself the question:
Do the pleasures, so called,
that I am indulging in bring
true, lasting satisfaction?
Henry Johnson, Jr.
2400 Highway 66
Ashland, Ore.
Love Among Yourselves
To the Editor: This idea of
race discrimination gives me
a feeling of disgust and also
of righteous indignation. We
are told in the Bible that God
is no respector of persons
Then why should We poor
white trash be so choosey that
some colored family are not
treated as human beings?
God created of one blood
all nations to dwell on the
face of this earth, and don't
forget, a Negro's blood is the
same color as all white folks
Man looks on the outward
appearance, but God looks on
the heart. .
When Jesus was here on the
earth He preached and prac
ticed the Golden Rule which
is based on Love. We must be
tolerant with aU people re
gardless of color, and, as
Abraham Lincoln said, with
malice toward none and with
charity for all, with firmness
in the right as God gives us
to see the right; let us strive
on to finish the work we are
in.
Follow the advice of the
Apostle Peter. Above all
things have fervent love
among yourselves.
John A. Dickinson
1231 Iowa st..
Ashland, Ore.
Mutual Respect
To the Editor: A human can
stand just so much and some
thing has to give. The Negro
race are humans who were
actually kidnaped and brought
here against their wishes, but
do the southern whites think
about that? The Negro people
have been treated like dirt
and pushed back by the south
ern whites too long.
My first trip (22 years ago)
to the wonderful south left
quite an impression on me.
We had a stop over in Little
Rock, Ark. It was during the
rainy season and it was mud
dy, to say the least. As we
strolled along we met a group
of Negroes. While the four of
us got single file on the walk
to let the Negroes pass, they
got off in the mud to pass be
cause they were not allowed
on the same sidewalk with
white folks. It is time for the
southern whites to walk in the
mud until they can treat the
Negroes as human beings. You
are reaping just what you
have sowed. "Do unto others
as you would have them do
unto you."
We do not have to marry or
mix with them to treat them
with due respect. I feel sure
that they will in turn treat
us with the same respect.
M.J.
(Name on file)
Ashland, Ore.
Bushwa!
To the Editor: After read
ing a letter by Mr. Potter in
The Oregon Journal March
20, I think he comes under
one of three classifications, a
doctor, an insurance sales
man, or one whose head is
buried up to the neck in the
sands of slave days. The For
and Bill does not "give" a
Social Security recipient
"complete" medical coverage.
The copy Rep. Forand sent
me does not contain, any word
ing that can, even by the wid
est stretch of imagination, be
so construed. It allows up to
60 days free hospitalization
with some medical benefits,
similar to the legislation now
Modi
Opposition to Sen. Kennedy's Candidacy
By LYLE C. WILSON -
Washington (DPD Mrs.
Eleanor Roosevelt has been
strangely silent of late on the
subject of Sen.
John F. Ken
nedy's plunge
for the Demo
cratic p r e s i
dential nomi
nation. Now up pops
word from
Wisconsin that
Franklin D.
Roosevelt Jr.
yle C. Wilson
is an operator in the Kennedy
presidential primary cam
paign. W. H. Lawrence re
ported to the New York Times
from Milwaukee that Junior
was "striving , for a political
comeback on the coattails of
U.S. Beginning to Recognize
Changes in Latin America
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
On March 1 of this year,
anti-U.S. demonstrators
stoned the headquarters of
the United
States Infor
mation Serv
ice in Panama
City..
Near the
U.S. - controll
ed Canal Zone
some signs ap
peared saying
saying "Yan
"nil Newsoro
kee go home."
The occasion was Panama's
gomen jumiee carnival pa
rade, providing an eauallv
golden opportunity for nation
alist or Communist agitators
to stir up in the manner of Fi
del Castro latent antagonism
toward the United States into
being sponsored by Senator
Morse and Rep. Porter.
Government employees are
allowed a certain number of
days per year called sick
leave, with pay, so why not
the retirees? At one time
had 270 days of accumulated
sick leave which I never used
Even if I had, it wouldn't
have cost the taxpayers more
than a billion, and Mr. Pot
ters share wouldn't have
broke him, I hope. He should
team up with Ike, who wants
an unlimited number of emi
grants admitted to the U. S.,
with several million still un
employed and the oldsters
trying to exist on less than
$100.47 per month. The com
bination would ' really be
something. If the gentleman
is so desirous of getting rid
of the old people, stop trying
to starve them; . just knock
them on the head and haul
them out into the brush for
coyote feed.
Socialized Medicine Bush
wa!
Claude M. Hall
2860 Hartley Lane
Grants Pass, Ore.
Praise for Department
To the Editor: Jacksonville
can certainly be proud of the
volunteer fire department it
has. You never really know
just how good they are until
you have to put them to some
use.
We recently had a flue fire
in our house, and we have
the firemen to thank for not
losing our home.
It was only a very few min
utes after. the siren started
that they were here in the
fire trucks. Not only that but
usually you have as much
water damage as what was
caused by the fire. But not
this time.
They used very little water
and what they got on the
floor of the kitchen they
brought in mops and mopped
up. . .
Besides all this, despite it
being both cold and early in
the morning, they stayed to
make sure it was good and
out.
So small wonder we have
nothing but praise for the
Jacksonville Fire Department
and we feel it only right we
take a few minutes to give
them our thanks.
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Standridge
404 East California st.
Jacksonville, Ore.
Sgt. York Seeks
Social Security
Pall Mall, Tenn. -(DPD- Sgt.
Alvin York, the World War I
hero who killed 25 German
soldiers and captured 100 in
one day, said today he has
applied for social security
benefits to augment his mod
est pension.
York, now 72 and bedridden
from a 1954 stroke, is in trou
ble with the Bureau of In
ternal Revenue which claims
he owes $85,442 in income
taxes for money he received
from the movie "Sergeant
York." York says he used it
all for medical expenses.
York draws about $60 a
month in disability pensions
and $10 a month as a Medal
of Honor winner.
ns Seen
Kennedy's presidential can
didacy .".
If it can be assumed that
Mrs. Roosevelt approves of
this political activity by her
third son, there is a second
assumption which must follow
in logical order. This second
assumption is that Mrs. Roose
velt has withdrawn her firm
and dangerous opposition to
the nomination of Kennedy
for President of the United
States.
If so, Kennedy should be
thankful for that. Mrs. R is a
smartly resourceful politician,
perhaps the ablest in the
Democratic party. Her opposi
tion could be deadly. Neither
rumor nor gossip has estab
lished Mrs. R's attitude to
ward the young senator.
The Saturday Evening Post
destructive mob action.
One particular act went far
toward robbing the agitators
of any great success.
It was the U.S. decision to
permit Panamanian flags to
fly side by side with the Stars
and Stripes in the Canal Zone.
Tear Down Flag
Last November, Panama
City mobs tore down the flag
in front of the U.S. Embassy,
stoned U.S. agencies and
burned automobiles. U.S.
troops with bayonets and ma
chine guns turned back a mob
attempt to plant a large Pana
mania flag in the zone as a
symbol of sovereignty.
Key U.S. defense installa
tions for the Caribbean area
extend on a 1,300-mile arc
from Panama, through Cuba
to Puerto Rico.
In Cuba, the bitterly anti
U.S. Castro government aims
its propaganda guns against
the big U.S. naval base at
Guantanamo.
In Puerto Rico, a vocal mi
nority group demands for
Puerto Rico an independence
which would have its effect
on Ramey Air base and the
naval air base at Roosevelt
Roads. In Panama, the nation
alists' target is the Canal.
During President Eisenhow
er's recent South American
tour he sought to erase an
image of the United States in
Latin American minds which
both Latin American Commu
nists and nationalists have
Publication Informs
Would-Be Tourists
Of Space
By DICK WEST
Washington-(DPD-Every now
and then." science inhales a
few whiffs of publicity and
begins racing
wildly ahead
of reality.
The latest
exam pie to
come to my
attention is a
booklet "pub
lished in the
interest of
bet ter inter-
Dick west pianeiary re
lations" by the Avion division
of ACF Industries, Inc.
Avion is mixed up in some
way with the U.S. missile pro
gram and the booklet is en
titled "What Every Space
Traveler Should Know."
From what I hear about
the missile program, the book
let would appear to be a trifle
premature. But since imagina
tion is the stuff that made this
country great, I'm glad to see
we still have some way-out
thinkers.
As far as I know, no Rus
sian 1 has been thinking in
terms of tourist travel in
space. If one did, he probably
would be arrested.
Vacation Tips
The Avion booklet is
crammed with all sorts of tips
that vacationing astronauts
will find useful in planning
visits to other planets.
For instance if Mars is your
destination, it advises that you
pack two wash-and-wear
space suits, one winterweight
and the other summerweight.
Temperatures there range
from 770 above zero on the
sunny side and 350 degrees
below in the shade.
"Be sure," the booklet cau
tions, "to turn off the stove
when you leave the house be
cause, should you be travel
ing faster than precise escape
SUPERIOR-GENERAL DIES
Terrytown, N.Y,-(DPD - The
Very Rev. Mother Marie Ger
ald Phelan, 88, superior gen
eral of the institute of the
Religious of the Sacred Heart
of Mary, died Tuesday.
DEAN OF MEN DIES
New York-TOPfi - The Rev.
John W. Tynan, 64, dean of
men at St. Peter's College in
Jersey City, N.J., died Tuesday.
in Mrs. Roosevelt's
of March 8, 1958 contained an
article under her signature
headlined like this:
"Of Stevenson, Truman
and Kennedy"
The subhead said: "Mrs.
Roosevelt tells about her dis
agreement with the former
President, and about the un
heeded advice she gave Adlai
Stevenson. As for the current
front runner, young Senator
Kennedy, she taxes a dim
view of him."
In that article, Mrs. Roose
velt charged Kennedy with
dodging the issue which she
defined as "McCarthyism." In
fairness, she noted that Ken
nedy was ill and hospitalized
in December, 1954, when the
Senate voted on the McCarthy
censure issue. She complain
ed, however, that Kennedy
sought ardently to perpetuate.
It is that the U.S. supports
dictators and profits at the
expense of its weaker neigh
bors. Use Universities
Particular weapon of the
extremists in stirring anti-
U.S. violence have been the
universities. Castro has used
them to advantage. Student
hotheads have been promi
nent in anti-U.S. demonstra
tions in Panama.
On the theory that these are
the citizens with whom the
United States must deal in the
future, it was to them espe
cially that Eisenhower direct
ed himself in Chile.
The United States obvious
ly will not stand by and see
the Panama Canal pass into
unfriendly hands.
But the United Slates has
been slow to recognize the
changing times.
The question of flying the
Panamanian flag alongside
that of the United States' in
the Canal Zone is a case in
point. The U.S. doe$ not
claim sovereignty over the
Canal so permission to fly
the flag could have been per
mitted years ago.
A few years ago, the U.S.
belatedly raised its annual
payment to Panama for use
of the Canal Zone. Just as be
latedly it undertook to pro
vide equal pay and working
conditions for Panamanians
working in the Zone.
Hazards
velocity at an orbital point
above the earth, you will con
tinue on out into infinity."
If you plan to stay for a
year on Mars, you are remind
ed that a year there lasts for
686 days. This could create
quite a laundry problem.
Mail Poses Problem
Spaceship passengers will
have to pack carefully to
avoid paying extra for over
weight luggage. A suitcase
that weighs 70 pounds at
home will push the scales on
Jupiter up to 185 pounds. A
46-pound souvenir picked up
on Mars will weigh 120
pounds when you return.
Mail also will pose a prob
lem. The delivery time for a
"wish you were here" post
card will be approximately 58
days from Mars, 1,242 days
from Saturn, 2,681 days from
Uranus and 4,447 days from
Pluto.
The booklet suggest several
points of interest that space
tourists won't want to miss
the rings around Saturn, the
volcanos on Mercury, the
canals of Mars. For honey
mooners, it recommends a
stopover at Jupiter, which has
12 moons.
Or, if they only have time
for a short wedding trip, what
could be more romantic than
a stroll on the moon under a
full earth?
We Are Proud ...
Of our new funeral home.
"There is none finer anywhere
in Southern Oregon." This com
ment is not ours. It comes from
outsiders who should know. We
hear it constantly. v
LITWILLER
FUNERAL HOME
Highway 66 at Normal Ave.
hland Dial MU 5-4541
Only local member of Oregon &
thereafter failed to take a
stand.
Some months later, on
ABC's TV College News Con
ference, Mrs. Roosevelt let
Kennedy have the other bar
rel. She said she would do all
she could to persuade the
Democrats to nominate some
other person.
"It has seemed to me," she
said, "that what you wanted
in your next President was
someone whose couras in
taking stands was unques
tioned. And I don't think I
need to repeat here what I
have said about Sen. Kennedy
a great many times, but I feel
that I would hestitate to face
the difficult decisions that
have to be taken by the next
President of the United States
with someone who under
stands what courage is, and
admires it, but has not quite
the independence to havx it."
Mrs. Roosevelt also tosed
in some remarks about the
Kennedy family wealth and
its use in the pre-conventkm
campaign. Kennedy promptl
challenged her to produce ub
stantiating facts, which Mrs.
R. did not have. By now, her
opposition to Kennedy
well established.
This opposition seeme t(f
have faded, however, since
publication of Kennedy's re
view of Richard H. Rovrre's
book, "Senator Joe McCt
thy." Mrs. Roosevelt scarcely
could have found fault witfc
either the book or with Ka
nedy's review of it. Good!
break for Kennedy.
Footnote to al lof this: Sup
pose Kennedy is nominatt-j
and elected, ' would he namfli
FDR Jr. to be assistant secrfv
tary of the Navy?
If it worked out that way,
some old mossback would be
bound to say: "Hold tight,
boys, here we go again."
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