Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 05, 1960, Image 4

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MAIL TRIBUNI, Mtewr, Or.
Tuesday, April S, 10
MEDFORDSKtTRIBOm
' "Everyone In Southern Oregon
Rru Ths Mail Tribune"
VuEniihVd1nlly except Saturday by
83 North Fir St.. PhBPa-qu:
" "ftORERT W. RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Mnniger
GERALD T LATHAM, Bui. Mgr.
KRIC W. ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor
EARL H ADAMS, City Editor
Sahrv phipman Teles. Editor
RICHARD JEWETT. Sport Editor
OLIVE STARCHER. Women'l Editor
PALE ERICKSON. Circulation jrtgr
An Indeoendent Newspaper
Sntered ai second class matter at
meaiora, uregon. unaor aci 01
March 3. 18117
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ASSOCIATION
EDITORIAI
V VJ J
Fliqhl or Time
Medford and Jackion County
History from the filei of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
end 50 years ego.
10 YEARS AGO
April 5, 1950 (Wednesday)
Ashland will join list of
Oregon cities going on day
light saving time April 30,
city council says.
An estibated 2,000 persons
attended the first Hobby fair
at Camp White Sunday.
20 YEARS AGO
April 5, 1940 (Friday)
Flags will be flown and
National Guard will wear uni
forms during tomorrow'!
Army Day celebration hers.
From Arthur Perry's "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "The
pioneer atop the state capltol
at Salem now flaunts a set of
false whiskers, to advertise
that city's centennial celebra
tion next July."
30 YEARS AGO
April 5, 1930 (Sunday)
Whether dogs should be li
censed in Medford or not is
the subject of a controversy
here.
Valley orchards are In full
bloom and sky is being watch
ed for signs of frost.
40 YEARS AGO
April 5, 1920 (Tuesday)
Mass meeting of citizens at
Page theater last night passed
resolution asking for recall of
entire school board.
Operations at Trlgonla oil
well extended to 24 hours a
day instead of eight.
50 YEARS AGO
April 5, 1910 (Tuesday)
Six baseball players are ar
rested after fight between
Butte Falls Home Defenders
and Beverldge's Battling Ball
tossers teams during game yes
terday. Federal government approv
al of Crater Lake road may
nullify Supreme Court decis
ion that road is purely a local
affair.
What's Your I.Q.?
Nine or ten correct it tuperlon
even or eight U eiccllcnt; live or
ill It good.
1. A short ton equals 2000
pounds; how many pounds in
a long ton?
2. Who wrote "A Child's
Garden of Verses"?
3. Was It Washington, Lin
coin or Theodore Roosevelt
who told Congress, "To be
prepared for war is one of the
most effectual means of pre
serving peace 7
4. Was Hawaii a kingdom
or a republic, at the time it
was annexed to the U. S.?
3. Some species of fish can
eurvlve being frozen in tec;
true or false?
6. Docs a storage battery
deliver direct, or alternating
current?
7. Where docs the famous
Gulf Stream originate?
8. Who was the author of
the expression "the Iron Cur
tain"? 9. In what two months of
the year do the equinoxes
come?
10. In what country Is the
city of Antwerp?
Answers! 1. 2240. 2. Robert
Louis Sivinson. 3. Washing
ton. 4. Republic. 5. True. 6.
Direct. 7. Gulf of Mexico. 8.
Winston Churchill. 9. March
and September. 10. Belgium.
Fontana, Calif. -lUPD- The
owner of a nudist camp who
checki the birth certificates of
applicants said today the most
recent members, of the local
colony are Adam and Eve.
NATIONAL
1!A
' I
Agency Competition
The Oregon Journal had a perceptive edi
torial in its issue of last Sunday entitled " 'Quiet
War' Between Federal Agencies."
It put its finger on a point which many people
do not realize that there is a competition, and
sometimes a jealousy, between agencies of the
federal government.
The most-publicized of these, of course, are
the so-called inter-service rivalries, involving the
Army, Navy and Air Force.
But at other levels, too, federal agencies some
times fail to get along, and sometimes are en
gaged in internecine warfare, albeit quietly.
TPHE Journal's piece was largely devoted to the
"quiet war" between the U. S. forest service
and the national park service the one dedicated
to "multiple use" of our forest resources; the
other in charge of administering areas where
single-use recreation predominates.
The Journal i3 sympathetic to both, and points
out with p-ood sense that
agency is dedicated to what it considers to be the
primary job, and that the "warfare" emerges
only when the objectives come into conflict.
This occasionally happens, usually when a
proposal is made to take national forest land
convert it into park.
DUT aside from this conflict, there are others.
- The fact that the Army engineers and the
bureau of reclamation are
accord is well-known to
with either agency, or
The soil conservation
agriculture) and the weather bureau (department
of commerce) have clashed over their respective
responsibilities in the field of irrigation water
supply lorecasts.
The bureau of land management has occasion
ally come into conflict
ment agencies, specifically the forest service.
And undoubtedly there are others of which
we are unaware.
ymS conflict, this "competition," is not all to
the bad, either. For, in the democratic tradi
tion, it is through debate and argument that de
cisions are made.
The park service, for
cused of "trying to build an empire" of wilder
ness and other recreational lands. Well, maybe
that's an accurate description. But from what we
know of the park service, it would be more ac
curate to say that they are doing all they can to
follow the directives given to them by congress,
to preserve ana maintain
ana historical resources
In this process they
tion to values other than
and Jiave thus rendered
nation.
THE forest service and the bureau of land man
agement, to cite another example, use differ
ing practices in some of their land and forest
management procedures.
In doing so, they tend to serve as a check
upon each other, and provide data which can be
used to determine which,
bes,t procedures are.
As a result, we do not feel that the sometimes
overlapping, sometimes competing functions of
the various agencies are
damaging.
They may, indeed,
better policies and more
aunumsuauon in me lenerai agencies wnicn are
so important to this part of the country. E.A.
Mind vs.
Man is not ruled entirely bv logic, reasoning,
facts.
If he were, this probably would be a more
orderly world. But it wouldn't be nearly as in
teresting nor as much fun.
One of our readers sent us a clipping from a
women's magazine in which Dorothy Thompson
was writing, and marked a passage from her
article. It said :
"Everything of importance ... to life and policy
arises out of feeling. The education of the feelings is
no less Important than the education of the intellect.
If we are to have science, we must have art, music,
poetry, literature, manners, deportment, instinctual
'good behavior,' or society is a Jungle."
e
MAN is, theoretically, a rational animal. But
"1 he also is an emotional animal. And without
both elements he is not man. Without reason,
he is pure animal; without feeling, he is pure
machine. And man is neither.
How many of our folk-ways, our reactions,
our mores are based on pure "feeling," and how
few on pure rationality.
In our political debates, "feeling" rules more
than the intellect most of the time.
But this isn t all to the bad.
JEN tend to make their assessments of other
1T1 men, including those running for political
office, on the basis of instinctive reaction, just
as much as on the basis of a reasoned position.
Emotion and "feeling" was one of the reasons
why Franklin D. Roosevelt was such a popular
president for so long. The same is true of the way
in which the electorate has responded to Ike.
And sometimes "instinctual" reactions are
just as good as, or better than, decisions based
purely on facts and reason, for often all the facts
aren t available.
So, as Miss Thompson declares, the "educa
ion" of the "instinctual man" is as important as
tlOll
the education of the intellect. E.A.
the personnel in each
not always in complete
those who have worked
both.
service (department of
with other land-manage
instance, has been ac
the nation s major scenic
as best they may.
have called public atten
purely commercial ones,
a real service to the
over the long ran, the
necessarily wasteful or
lead to better practices,
efficient and economical
Heart
Dennis the
"MR.WILSON! LOOK! I'M
IN YOUR YARD!"
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.
Don't Take The Pets
To the Editor: I do not be
lieve that year-round restraint
is beneficial for a dog, and it
certainly defeats the purpose
of keeping one.
A dog is either kept as a
companion for children or as
a policeman, and what can
dog do on the end of a
chain?
I have noticed that If a per
son goes by on the street late
at night the dogs will bark
and you can mark the pro
gress of the individual by the
dog that is barking. They are
especially noisy if the person
has an unnatural gait or is
running.
I submit the following of a
law for consideration:
"That nil male and spayed
female dogs be licensed at 10
cents per lb.; unspayed fe
males at 20 cents per lb."
You will find in a year or
two the people will have had
their females spayed to save
money, thus cutting down on
tne dog population.
Those that raise dogs as a
business can afford to pay the
added tax as they sell pups
for profit.
I have noticed a predomin
ance of large dogs on the east
side as Boxers are fashionable
right now.
However many of these
people are not as well off as
they appear to be and in a
year or two with the in
creased tax you would see the
large dogs gradually disap
pear. The law should also Include
a section that empowers the
police to deal with unruly
dogs and their owners.
Let's compromise on this
dog question as a sane, sen
sible people who recognize
the rights of all individuals.
Large dogs cannot be kept
in the house as much as small
dogs, and I know that when
they visit a yard it looks like
a small bulldozer had been
there.
But let's remember they are
just a fad and with a little
assistance the fad can die out
as quickly as it came.
Remember when every one
who was any one owned a
Corker Spaniel?
I enjoy so much seeing a
little boy peddling along on
his bicycle with his dog
proudly trotting along at his
side.
We have taken Fourth of
July away from them; lot
not take their pets too.
L.CUB a. morrow,
531 North Bartlott st.,
Medford.
On Llberalistlc
Lackadaisicnlneis
To the Editor: "Political ob
servers," as used in your edi
torial April 3, is handy all
right. Your usage implies a
large following to your way of
thought, and In this case it
may be true; but perhaps a bit
misleading.
People, to be sure, give such
men as Mr. Cook and Mr.
Fleming little chance of being
elected; but for a different
reason than you would have
us believe. Many people (as
you were), "political observ
ers." look at the platforms of
these men with varying de
grees of anxiety, but fortun
ately few Individuals nurture
any hostility toward these
views; In the same breath
however, we must realize it is
unfortunate those who do nur
ture hostility toward these
views are In a position (news
paper men, radio and TV
commentators, etc.), to Influ
ence a greater part of the elec
torate. People naturally and
immediately realize t h e s c I plaques that we see? If so,
men, such as Cook and Flem- WHY?
ing, are presenting principles It used to be when a dona-
Menace
PUTTlN' A FOOT
that more closely mirror the
ideal.
But then the influence of
that liberallstlc lackadaisical
ness makes Itself felt. "It's no
use voting for men such as
these, because they won't
stand a chance of being elect
ed; and even if they were
elected, they would be too far
outnumbered in the legisla
ture to do any good." To do
any GOOD. . . 1 Here we have
the true feeling of the people.
We of these United States
have been lulled into accept
ing the platforms of all who
profess legislation directly re
lating to security, and pleas
ure, especially security. This
is a natural enough tendency,
because man in his perverted
state succumbs to these temp
tations. But pleasure itself is
a transient thing, and security
epitomizes the phantom of all
phantoms.'
People as a whole tend to
follow, and because of the dis
guise of eloquence, have fol
lowed those political leaders
who possessed a certain ultra
glibness, Into the debtor's dun
geons of paternalistic captiv
ity. Captivity to be sure, for
we have traded our true free
doms for a pseudo-security. A
nations without freedom, is a
nation captive; but our dicta
torship differs from all those
of history. We have fallen
prey to the most obscene ty
rant of all, ourselves.
In this election year we
have the opportunity to cast
out of office .those who con
tinue to malign our constitu
tion, and replace them with
men capable of activating the
people to repair and then
maintain this treasure.
Robert J. Howard,
828B West 14th St.,
Medford.
Put In His "Place"
To the Editor: Refer to Me
teorologist William Rogers'
statements in April 1 Mail
Tribune that, "The people of
the valley who are shouting
the loudest are the back yard
burners and I understand
nothing can be done about
them because they won't stand
for it" and "Year-around trash
burning In one back yard
would be equal to one day of
orchard heating."
Since I am one of the loud
mouth people referred to by
Mr. Rogers, I feel put into my
proper place. Especially since
1 now know that my back yard
burning, each day, is equiva
lent to an orchard heating of
about 15 acres, or more than
310 heaters (open pot type
no doubt).
Now I know why the neigh
borhod dogs are turned loose
each morning to romp all over
my newly planted garden, I
had no idea that I was pol
luting the air to such an ex
tent. I promise to support and
vote for any reasonable regu
lation of back yard burning
prior to regulation of the or
chard heaters.
William Doernbach,
143 Mace rd.,
Medford.
Monty for Plaques
To the Editor: There have
been quite a number of peo
ple discussing between them
selves and me, "Something
that I do believe should be
made clear to the public." The
public Is led to believe that
the monies donated to the
Medford Crusade was sup
posed to be distributed to the
needy, Red Cross, Salvation
Army, etc. - but a question,
'Do they get it?', the money,
or does a portion go for
'Stop Kennedy' Movement Noted in Last
Minute Wisconsin Campaigning
By LYLE C. WILSON
Milwaukee, Wls.-OTD-Hand-some
Sen. John F. Kennedy
(D-Moss.) doesn't like to admit
it, but there is
a socko "stop
Kennedy" movement
here.
A front run
ner must ex
pect that and
iOtfSr K.enneayis
v)jari I the front run
XjaVJ ner right now
'.jie c. wuson tioaay) ior tne
Democratic presidential nomi
nation. Today is Wisconsin's
presidential preference pri
mary day.
The people are voting. So,
Matter of Fact b
THE MOON-BARKERS
Milwaukee, Wise. - At half
past two in the afternoon, the
Westlawn housing project
not only looks
even more
dreary than
the ave rage
low cost urban
redevel op-
si ment. It also
i V i appears to be
Y $sjr4U more utterly
I Tk I a b a n d oned,
I -Wk $1 j more bare of
human habitation, than Gold
smith's "Deserted Village."
But the voice of Sen. Hu
bert H. Humphrey of Minne
sota re-echoes cheerily from
the blank, grey housefronts
that line the grey and treeless
streets. "Hello, folks, this is
Senator Hubert Humphrey, a
candidate for the Democratic
nomination to the Presidency,
come to visit with you in your
fine housing project . . . Get
out and vote on April 5,
friends, vote for Humphrey
in your great Wisconsin pri
mary . . . Hello tones, tnis
is Senator Hubert Humphrey,
a candidate ..."
With wonderful resiliency,
with every appearance of
genuine enjoyment, with cries
of delight for the occasional
child or other sign of life
in Westlawn, Humphrey con
tinues to salute the void for
close to a half hour. Then he
bursts into a nearby shoeing
center, to greet a straggle of
over-burdened housewives as
though they were life-long
cronies. And thence he plunges
onward to another housing
project, and another shopping
center.
e
OnHIS Interlude of the Hum-
pnrey campaign in Wiscon
sin is not worth recalling be
cause it is typical. Lately,
Humphrey has generally been
drawing good crowds. It is
tion was made the hat was
passed around, and dumped
on the table, no one receiving
a reward for passing the hat.
Plaques do not fill one's
stomach.
Shorty Hlbbard,
1302 Sallng Ave.,
Medford.
He's Encouraged
To the Editor: Information
contained in your editorial
April 3 I find very encourag
ing. It is very pleasing to
know that we the people of
Oregon have such men as Mr.
Cook of Silverton and Mr.
Fleming of Springfield run
ning for office to represent
us in Washington, D.C., who
still believe in our true Amer
ican way of life and govern.
ment as specified by our Con
stitution of the United States
of America.
My own observations have
indicated to me that there are
a great number of people in
our own state that have grown
tired of encroachment of un
limited government into their
private lives, excessive taxa
tion and insane spending by
the bureaucrats in Washing.
ton, so in spite of your at
tempted propaganda to the
contrary, it is my opinion they
do have a good chance of be
ing elected by the voters of
Oregon to the Senate and
Congress of the United States.
It is my assumption from
your editorial that you are
against Constitutional govern
ment as specified by the Con
stitution of these United
States of America, therefore
opposed to the true way of
American life.
E. W. Temple
1750 N.E. "D" st.
Grants Pass, Ore.
Editor's note: We yield to
none In our support of the
Constitution. But it is amply
evident we differ from many
in our interpretation of that
magnificent charter of gov
ernment. 25 Quince .
Kennedy may not be the front
runner at all after the ballots
are counted tonight. Front
runners must expect all oth
ers to gang up In a stop-him
movement. If the others fail
to stop the front runner, then
the front man simply gallops
on to win the presidential
nomination at his party's na
tional convention. The others,
thus, must lose the prize.
Morse Enters Picture
Thus It is that Sen. Wayne
Morse (D-Ore.) barged into
this primary campaign over
the week end by telecast from
his Washington, D.C., office.
Morse hammered hard against
Kennedy, warning Wisconsin
labor voters that Kennedy had
Joseph Alsop
worth recalling, rather, be
cause it helps to prove a
rather important rule. The
rule is that in any hard-fought
campaign, both sides tend to
madness, and the side that
is running behind frequently
verges on lunacy.
This obsessivepower of the
campaign to master the cam
paigners has been well illus
trated here in Wisconsin. Sen
ator Humphrey came out here
with the announced, unques
tionably sincere intention of
"campaigning for Humphrey,
not against Kennedy." He ob
served this sensible rule until
the event disproved all his
stragegists' hopeful assump
tions about the existence of
widespread, natural Hum
phrey support In Wisconsin.
At this point the campaign
took over. Humphrey began
to do precisely what he had
sworn he would never do. This
he called "debating the rec
ord.
rriHE "debate" has chiefly
- consisted of presenting very
carefully selected Kennedy
votes, most of them of far
from recent date, to prove
that Kennedy and that devil
for all Democrats, Vice Presi
dent Richard M. Nixon, are
just "Tweedledum and Twee-
dledee." Senator Humphrey
knows perfectly well, of
course, that this is unalloyed
nonsense.
The real Tweedledum and
Tweedledee, in fact, are Ken
nedy and Humphrey himself.
They are in close agreement
on all major issues, including
the farm issue. They did not
always agree so closely, but
Kennedy has moved further
and further into the liberal
camp as he learned his bus!
ness. This was the reason
Humphrey himself gave, to
this reporter among many oth
ers, for his original decision
to speak up only "for Hum
phrey, not against Kennedy."
But when he found he was
running far behind, the cam
paign thundered its remorse
less dictates In his ear; and
le obeyed.
Humphrey's last minute at
tack on Kennedy may help
him to gain a lap, or even
several laps, In this crucial
Wisconsin race. The public
opinion pollers have shown
Kennedy very far ahead. But
the great past errors of the
pollers have always been
caused by the undecided vot
ers. Generally, the undecided
voters can be prorated be
tween the two sides. But
sometimes, at the last min
ute, they all troop into the
same camp, as they did in
the last British election and
in our election in 1948.
SOMETHING like than tan
happen here. The experts
are still finding a consider
able percentage of undecided
voters. Most of the undecided
are also Protestants. The Hum
phrey "debate of the record"
may just possibly give these
people a subconsciously de
sired pretext to vote against
Kennedy. The Wisconsin pri
mary will then produce a
relatively indecisive result, in
stead of the solid win for
Kennedy which still seems
more likely.
Such a result would hurt
Kennedy considerably, while
helping Humphrey hardly at!
all. Outside Wisconsin, mean-1
while, Humphrey has already
been badly hurt by his attack
on Kennedy. Like Wisconsin's
Gov. Gaylord Nelson, the dele- j
gate-owning chieftains in oth-!
er states blame Humphrey for j
starting fratricidal warfare 1
among Democrats.
All of which suggests that
In campaign-time, one should
never be surprised to see a
normally weU balance, astute,
amiable and warm - hearted
politician baying at the moon
with blood-stained tongue.
Copyright 1960, New York
Herald Tribune Inc.
Bob Rucker
Counsellor
OREGON FUNERAL PLAN
The Only
FUNERAL PLAN
Spomertd by Onion Funeral Directors Au'n
. . SP 2-9210
done them In by helping fash-
Ion the 1959 labor reform bill.
Morse is, himself, a candidate
of sorts for the Democratic
presidential nomination. Of
sorts, only, Morse has no
chance. His real choice is Ad-
la 1 E. Stevenson.
Thus, also, some of the
Symington-for-president peo
ple in Wisconsin got into the
act. They announced for what
it was worth, which wasn't
much, that they would support
in today s primary Sen. Hu
bert H. Humphrey (D-Minn.),
Kennedy's opponent. In Wash
ington, a representative of
Sen, Stuart Symington was
not a party to this Wisconsin
maneuver.
More important in the stop
Kennedy movement Is the un
mistakable trend to Humphrey
of Wisconsin voters who in
1952-50 were for Stevenson.
The strategy of all concerned
Is obvious.
If Kennedy moves out of
Wisconsin Wednesday with a
big primary victory he will
be jet-propelled toward the
Democratic presidential nomi
Time Running Out
On Disarmament
Pact Possiblity
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Editor
Two events of the last few
days provide grim support for
a United States warning that
time is run
n 1 n g out on
the world
disarmament
conference at
Geneva.
And for all
his bluster
and his re-
renewal
WfeJf threats
VON SeWSOtn asanui ut I-
lin, they must have given So
viet Premier Niklta Khru
shchev food for thought on
his return to Moscow from
his visit to France.
One of these events was the
successful launching of the
United States' weather satel
lite which on signal from is
ground control sends back pic
tures of the earth's surface
covering an area ranging from
30 to 800 miles, with amaz
ing detail.
The other was the explo
sion, even as Khrushchev was
concluding his talks with
French President Charles de
Gaulle, of France's second
atomic device in the Sahara
Desert.
Both have far-reaching Im
plications in man's stumbling
search for survlvial in an
atomic age.
Military campaigns In the
past have succeeded or failed
Flood Control
System Praised
Omaha, Neb. -0JPD The gi
ant Missouri River flood con
trol system has passed its first
big test with flying colors, the
Army Corps of Engineers said
today.
Five dams along the upper
course of the Missouri gave
engineers almost push button
control over the river during
the thaw triggered floods
which swept the prairie states
last week.
The floods were caused by
downstream tributaries of the
Missouri river in Nebraska
and Iowa. But they would
have been much worse If it
were not for the Pick-Sloan
flood control system.
Through some tricky ma
nipulation by the engineers,
the reservoirs had greatly re
duced the amount of flood wa
ter which passed downstream
from Omaha.
TO
Counsel With .
Mr. Insurance Fred Brennan
i
Fred Brennan
or call
Mr. Friendly
Bill Fish
Phone SP 3-7343
MEDFORD
INSURANCE
AGENCY
27 NORTH HOUY ST.
to-.. '
L - J
nation next July In Los An
geles. If nothing intervened
to stop him between here and
Los Angeles, Kennedy would
be nominated on an early bal
lot. There would be no pro
longed and agonizing ballot
ing, no huddles in smoke fill
ed rooms. In short, there
would be no deadlock.
Stevenson's admirers, Sy
mington and his followers,
even Sen, Lyndon B. Johnson
(D-Tex.) and his southwestern
buckaroos, all want and need
a deadlocked national conven
tion in which Kennedy has
been stopped cold. At that
polnt-if it ever is reaehed
the Democratic nomination
must fall among those three
or be tossed up for grabs
among them.
Stevenson says he Is not a
candidate. Hie worshipping ad
mirers hope, however, to draft
him again. Stevenson has not
said "no" to that. He has said,
however, that it could not
happen-that a man could not
be drafted twice. A draft blew
Stevenson into the 1952 nomi
nation. because of weather.
And as science progresses
In its ability to make its sa
tellites perform upon com
mand, that much closer comes
the ultimate weapon the sa
tellite with the nuclear war
head. It was this ultimate weapon
that Fredrick Eaton, chief
U.S. delegate to the Geneva
Conference, had in mind when
he proposed international
agreement outlawing weapons
In outer space and the proper
controls to see that the agree
ment was carried out.
The Communists rejected
Eaton's argument that time
was running out.
But just as France by its
independent effort brought
the membership in the atomic
club to four, so, unless lnter
nationad agreement can be
reached, eventually there
must be a fifth member and a
sixth.
And as the deadliest wea
pons that mankind has ever
known come into more and
more hands, the temptation to
use them must be increased
accordingly.
Eaton was right. Time li
running out.
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