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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. FRIDAY. JUNE 24. 19W MCTFORDt'WTRIBUNB Everyone In Southern Oregon Redi The Mail Tribune fbllshed Daily except'Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO S3 North Fir St., Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W RUHL, "Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bur MKT. ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER. Women's Editor DAJERICKSONCirculaUor I Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medford, Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Daily ana sunaay j year iidw Dally and Sunday -6 mas 8 00 Dally and Sunday 3 mos 4.35 Sunday Only One year $4 20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point Eagle Point, Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix. Shady Cove, Rogue Rlv er, Talent and on motor mutes. Dsiiy and Sunday 1 year 818 00 Da'.Iy and Sunday t mo 1 SO Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Termi Cash in Advanco fficiirrpaper of Cltv of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Internationa Full Leased Wire O.P.I. Telephoto Newspictures "Til EMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU- OF CIRCULATIONS Xdverilfilng Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fices in Npw York. Chicago. De. troit. San FranciHeo. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver- BC NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIA1 c6Ti 1 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 June 24. 1950 (Saturday) The Southern Pacific com pany inaugurates new daily chair car schedules In this area to give southern Oregon a direct connection with the Shasta Daylight streamliner at Dunsmuir. The Oregon Association of Letter Carriers will conclude Its 47th annual convention here today with a memorial service. 20 YEARS AGO June 24, 1940 (Monday) Mail Tribune Editor R. W. Ruhl reports from the Repub lican convention at Philadel phia that Wendell Willkie is making a political "blitz krieg" and is on the way to the Republican nomination for Dresident. From Arthur Perry's "Ye fimudae Pot" column: "It is now hot enough for citizens to allege they enjoy the neat, the Older Girls to can fruit, carpenters to pour hot tar on roofs, and stores to hold blanket sales." 30 YEARS AGO June 24. 1930 (Tuesday) A city poison campaign to eliminate earwigs in Medford Is proving successful. The county has started its summer road-building cam paign. 40 YEARS AGO Jun 24. 1920 (Thursday) The Macy-Baird comedians will appear In Medford for the first time Tuesday and will bring their own tent theater. Trlgonia Oil and Gas com pany well No. 1 is down 810 feet at Fern valley and has encountered a lime shale con taining much evidence of oil. What's Your I.Q.? Nina at ten correct is superior: seven or eight is eicellent; five ai III Is good. 1. Do fleas have wings? 2. Was Hong Kong ever oc cupied by the Japanese? 3. Was Pavlova famous for having been the wife of Leon Trotsky? 4. From what plant is linen made? 5. Which actor of the silent film was known as the man with a thousand faces? 6. Why is the flash of a gun fired at a distance seen before the report Is heard? 7, Which mythological king possessed the power to turn whatever he touched Into gold? 8. Do annual plants bloom just one season then die? 9. Why were old-time coun- try school houses ' usually painted red? 10. Complete the following: "Fit as a ." Answers: 1, No. 2, Yes. 9. No. Sh was a dancer. 4. Flax. 5. Lon Chaney. 6. Light tray Is faster than sound. 7. Midas. 8. Yes. 9. Red paint Wis cheapest. 10. Fiddle. EARLY DRAFT Chicago (UPII-Roger I.eclerc played center for Trinity (Conn.) college, a small school which dc-sn t emphasize foot ball, but the Chicago Bears thought so much of him that they drafted him before his senior season. Roger will fry to make good with the BVars this year. Strength and Weakness Arriving at an understanding of someone else's point of view is not an easy thing to do. Sometimes it is easier if we try to put our selves in his position his eyes. . . This, in effect; is what Bryce N. Harlow, dep. utv assistant to President' Eisenhower,' did cently, when speaking (Jonrerence in unanaier, Ariz. . His remarks were quoted in Electric Light and Power magazine for May 15, by P. B. Garret, publisher and editor. HE paraphrasd Mr. Harlow as follows:-. In order to enjoy the glories of the present Soviet system, he said we would have to abandon three-fifths of our steel capacity, two-thirds of our petroleum ca pacity, 95 per cent of our electric motor output, de- '.. stroy two of every three of our hydro-electric plant, -and get along on a tenth of our present volume of na tural gas. ' ' ' -i - . ' We would have to rip up 14 of every 15 miles of our paved highways and two of every three miles of our mainline railway tracks. We'd sink eight of every nine ocean-going ships, scrap 19 of every 20 cars and trucks, and shrink our civilian air fleet to a shadow , of its present size. We would cut our living standard by three-fourths, .', ' destroy 40 million TV sets, nine of every ten tele phones, and seven of every ten houses; and then we 1 would have to put about 60,000,000 of our people back on the farm. And, Mr. Harlow continued, we would then, really revel in the Soviet scheme of things, have to assume a few military problems. We'd have to accept a heavy bomber gap, a medium bomber gap, a nuclear sub marine gap, a missile submarine gap, an aircraft car rier gap, an overseas bases gap, an allies gap, and a strategic and tactical gap. We'd see hostile troops maneuvering in Canada and Mexico, hostile air bases humming in Canada, Mexico and Puerto Rico, hostile missiles poised in Canada and Mexico, hostile submarines menacingly gliding off New York and Los Angeles, hostile aircraft car riers prowling the Carrlbean-all armed with nuclear explosives of paralyzing power; and we'd have an added discomfort-we'd know that the folks in Florida, Texas and California sullenly wished the rest of us were dead and could hardly wait to prove it. In trying to patch this up, we would have to strug gle with a hundred or so different languages, wonder ing all the while how many of our soldiers would have to garrison the homeland if a serious world crisis arose, and how many of our troops would really perform. THE article also declared that if the Russians are to catch up with us in electric power fa cilities, they must, by 1980, build the equivalent of a brand new Hoover Dam every 21 days. They would have to add 390 million kilowatts within the next 20 years just ' to break even with America. This, if entirely true son to doubt Mr. Harlow s statements, even if overdrawn is a tremendouslv imnressive state ment of the strength of Bv the same token, of weaknesses in the Soviet system. And, as such, it may do much to explain the Russians' reaction to certain international events. : , .',' v fNE man, armed with' a submachine gun, can hold at bay 100 men armed with clubs. One nation, armed with intercontinental bal listic missiles with nuclear warheads, can hold at bay an infinitely stronger nation... You will note that in Mr. Harlow s list of gaps" faced by the Soviets, no "missile gap" nor "nuclear explosives sia picked that one route superiority or at least equivalence. Given this one strong, tage, and given the long some of Russia b outrageous actions begin, per haps, to ,be understandable. ; CO how does the United' States, essentially (despite obvious exceptions) a decent, moral, trustworthy nation, act gangster which is weaker in all but one or two respects, but is armed with a weapon of poten tiallv universal destruction? This is the problem it is no easy one. It calls fov the most ership, able to .balance f ing, conciliation with determination, and power wim restraint,. - Men able to perform under every apple tree. Meaning, The greatest problem communication. 1 - And, as part of that problem, semantics looms large. Semantics is simply the study of the mean ing of words. It is a fact that a word will mean one thing to one person, and something quite different to another. ,, . '' . Almost invariably, such a breakdown in com munication results in misunderstanding. People think they're talking about the same things, but actually they're talking about altogether differ ent things. CREEDOM and Democracy are words which everyone thinks he understands perfectly, but they mean different things to different people. Socialism is another such word. In today's context, it has come to be almost synonymous with Communism in the thinking of some people while consultation with a dictionary will quickly reveal the rather considerable differ ences. Language is a living, growing thing, and the meaning of words changes. This is fine, of course, DUt it makes for a lack of precision in talking and writing, and results in some pretty basic misunderstandings. E. A. look at things through at a Southwest Electric (and we have no rea the United States. it is a startliner estimate gap" is mentioned. Rus and has achieved either even decisive, advan list of other weaknesses, toward an international facing our nation. And tactful, far-sighted lead irmness with understand thus are not to be found h. A. - of Words of today may well be 1 . Dennis the ' llFT UP VOUR HANDS. ' HAVE SHOES ON ALL lll in y s i ' 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 adit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necossarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Socialism vs. Democracy To the Editor: To answer a few of Mr. Porter's questions: Socialism, as it is known today, must be construed as communistic, and within the meaning of, and as used by other forms of government, such as Russia, where every thing is owned and , run by the state, in fact, slave state. Democracy, on the other hand, is freedom-free enter prise without, excessive in terference by government. If one looks back to the 1920's and notes the freedom of the people with the corre sponding restricted activities of government, one can real ize what freedoms and rights, we, the people, have lost to government. Can Mr. Porter honestly de fend the astonding foreign aid waste throughout the world? Take that little mat ter of 23 million dollars giv en to communist Yugoslavia a few weeks ago. How will that "help preserve our very existence as citizens," to quote Mr. Porter? .The first part of this year the 'U.S. Comptroller asked Ike. for the facts and figures oh foreign aid and Ike re-fused-with the statement that he didn't think it would be in the best interests of the American people to divulge this information. Our continental defense ex penditures would be upheld by close to 100 per cent of Americans - but our foreign aid program would be voted down by over 90 per cent of the voters. The less than 10 per cent for foreign aid are the manufacturers and ex porters who are getting rich from the program. Money will not buy friend ship as the billions poured into Japan did not buy Ike a safe visit there last week! As for the statement that maybe I was trying to stir up a controversy with my letter, you are entirely right. I am deeply concerned, in my children's behalf, with our country's swing away from constitutional government and its embracing of socialism. The more people aroused into thinking about the dangers Involved, the better chance we will have to get back on the road to free enterprise and a stronger, more respect ed nation. Mr. Porter, if your vigor and talents are directed into reducing the size and getting the Washington giant off the backs of the American peo ple, your name will go down in history as an American Try and By DENNETT CERF- AWELti-BROKEN-IN husband clucked his tongue over a financial item in his evening paper. "Land's sake!" ho told his wife. "American Tel and Tel made almost a billion dollars In 1959." "Could be," disparaged his wife, "but I wonder if they're REALLY happy!" A gent whose capacity for hard liquor was no where near aa great aa he thought it was tended to grow more boastful with each successive slug. A scornful competitor tagged him aa "the first salesman to become a billionaire by striking bourbon." e A census taker was catl ing on a rather sporty looking housewife when the tnald arrived with a irayfol of double martinis. "Have one," suggested the housewife genially. "In fact, have two or three or six. I usu ally do myself." "Okay," beamed the visitor. "You are about to see girt take leave of her census." CUM, W Beuiett Om DlatithlW a s Mm radfeete - Menace HORSES SOTTA TOP FEET ' Statesman. If not, it will be lost in the limbo of forgotten Congressmen. M. J. Olsen Route 4, Box 325 Medford. Straight and Narrow: To the Editor: It would be Interesting to know how the lady candidate, Mrs. Lucy Mayberry from Sacramento, Calif., would go about turn ing the farms back to the people. I agree it might be a good thing if a lot of other things that the people have let slip out of their possession could be restored where they right fully belong. A few years ago our government was giving farms away to attract people and assist them to establish homes in the country. But now the small trading posts have grown into cities; and our farms have become big business. The used-to-be farm ers have retired to the cities on a pension. Their sons and daughters that were brought up on the farms and got their educa tion in the little old country school house; those days are gone and cannot be recovered, though there are a few of us old people left that think that our present school system is being carried to an extreme and would like to see it set back where it belongs. It is not raising a child in his home under the loving care of his father and mother, and to keep the child In school more months a year. Where and what has become of the father that used to be on the farm? He has been swallowed up. He has a job in the city. Where and what has become of that lovely mother that used to bake those wonderful biscuits and keep our ears and noses clean? Well, she has been ad vanced to a job in some of fice or maybe a checker in some chain store. Anyway, it is a case of ei ther work or starve. She has bills to pay in order to move along with the rest of the bunch and keep up with so ciety. She doesn't have too much time to love and pet her offspring. Well, to be plain about the whole business, It seems to me we have missed the straight and narrow way some place along the way, and it is A ne we all stopped and mapped out a course that would put us back. G. S. Elder 3579 Table Rock Rd. Medford. Stop Me Radio Broadcasters Should Take Hint From Wilson Get Rid of Mob Noise By LYLE C. WILSON Washington - (UPD - If my friends, the radio broadcast ers, would take a hint from me, it would be this: Give the listen ers a break! Get rid of that crowd noise. I was one of those millions who tuned in this week to yi. c Wilson rioya raiier- son's butchery of Ingemar Jo hansson. The blow-by-blow was a pretty thing. The fight caster, whoever he was, had a clear voice, a sharp eye and, to boot, he knew something of the racket. Through rounds one to four, inclusive, we got along fine. Radio fightcasting has Algerian Fighting Proves That Neither Side Can Win By PHILL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor The man of the week: Ferhat Abbas, premier of the rebel Algerian provi sional government. The place: Tunis. The quote: ". . . if a ref erendum is surrounded by all the indispensable guar antees of sincerity, the choice of the Algerian peo ple will be. without doubt, independence." More than five and a half years of dirty fighting in Al geria had proved one thing: 3rs)fW"l N e i t h er the French nor W)V 1 t h e Algerian "SSS ?hI reDels could -A wln' but each ' "3 slcie was so I . c o m m i t ted It j. fi neither could V ja afford to lose. AatkXJ tne rebel 8ov- piiil newsom ernment head ed by ioai reluctant rebel Ferhat Abbas, responded to another appeal from President Charlv.i de Gaulle. In Paris, de Gaulle in a direct appeal to rebel forces, said: 'We await you here to find an honorable end to the com bat that still drags on." Respond Monday On Monday of this week, the rebels responded. De Gaulle, they said, had Washington Report By WILLIAM FORCE INTO SOUTH Washington - Richard M. Nixon's organization is pre paring to send a truly form idable force into the south in his presi dential race this fall - a force to be headed by a speaker nam ed Dwight D. Eisenhower. William s. " white be r e p orted that the President will be asked to make major appeals -indeed probably his main ap peals of the whole campaign -to southern voters in behalf of the Nixon ticket. There is no doubt that the President will agree, though in defence to his position no one wishes to commit him formally at this early stage. He has already said publicly that he would do all he could for his nominated successor. And he had always had a fondness for the erstwhile Democratic "solid south," in which he carried four states in 1952 and five in 1956. And there is no doubt at all that the Nixon people think the Eisenhower pres ence would do them more good In the south than even the vice-president's own pres ence - and more good prob ably than it would do any where else in the country. THE decision within the Nixon camp to send into Dixie what Is widely assumed to be still the biggest of all G.O.P. guns is highly import ant in two ways. First, it sig nals a Republican determina tion to give the South the highest campaign priority in the history of that party. Second, it sharply illus trates the totally different approaches likely to be taken toward the South by the two parties. Nixon has long since aban doned an extreme civil rights position to bring himself into general line with the Presi dent's far more moderate views. The switch was one basically of conviction, as it actually was with several other northern politicians who have never announced their change. For the longer the vice-president watched the all-or-noiiing advanced lib erals - with whom he him self had first been associated come a long way since Gra ham McNamee invented the technique back there in the Coolidge bull market. McNa mee's q u a 1 i f i cations and equipment for the job con sisted exclusively of a tim brous baritone voice. He also had an unerring instinct for recognizing and announcing the entrance into the arena of the program's sponsors. Let the champ and the sponsor come to ringside at the . same moment on fight night, and McNamee would prime his golden lungs with enough hot air to tell to his eager listeners, thus: Mr. Moneybucks "Ah, and here comes Mr. J. Astroloyd Moneybucks with his party to occupy their $150 ringside seats. Hi'yah, Mr. Moneybucks! Hi'yah. (in low "reaffirmed in a more ex plicit manner, the right of the Algerian people to self determination." They an nounced that Abbas would be willing to meet de Gaulle to negotiate a cease-fire. It appeared finally that, driven by circumstances, both sides might now be ready to risk all on one great gamble. De Gaulle promised self determination for the Algeri an people in the belief they would choose to remain with France. The rebels appeared equally confident the vote would be for independence. But even could a cease-fire be arranged, serious obstacles remained. Opposing de Gaulle were the French rightist forces in Algeria itself. Recalcitrant "Colons" in Alteria had top pled the fourth French re public and might try to top ple de Gaulle's fifth republic on a campaign of "Keep Al geria French." Want Recognition Another serious obstacle was rebel insistence that de Gaulle deal with the "provi sional government of the Al gerian republic" - an entity which de Gaulle does not even recognize. Like many of his fellows, Abbas has had his share of time in French jails, although he joined the rebel govern- S. WHITE -the more he realized they were hampering rather than promoting civil rights. He concluded that the only pos sible way to achieve any pro gress was the moderate, slow but steady way. But the Nixon switch also was one of realistic politics. For the vice-president's whole strategy has been based on the assumption that Sen. John F. Kennedy would wind up as the Democratic presiden tial nominee. Kennedy, of course, is a Catholic. And the South is, in numbers at any rate, the least Catholic sec tion of the country. The only Catholic heretofore nominat ed for President, Al Smith in 1928, lost the bulk of the South. fpHE basic G.O.P. campaign technique thus seeks to combine Kennedy's presumed political liability as a Catho lic with the clear probability that he will be forced further and further the left on civil rights. An example of such pres sure has just been seen in the visit to Kennedy here of a powerful Michigan Negro group. The visitors wanted what they described as "a lit tle more oomph" in Ken nedy's civil rights stand. They indicated later that they had received this oomph." Ironically, Kennedy him sen has never been an ex tremist. Though genuinely pro-civil rights, he does not hate or even dislike the south. But some of the ex t r e m e Democratic liberals quite simply and undoubtedly do hate the south-all of it, from the Potomac to the Rio Grande; whether ultra - con servative or moderate. It is a glandular thing, rather like that which moved some pro fessional southern rebels in past generations to hate Yan kees just for being Yankees. And these violently articu late civil rights extremists will surely dominate the i sound and fury, the audio and the video, of the Democratic national convention, if not its actual proceedings. The Nixon people are banking on the proposition that Kennedy, if nominated, will emerge as identified with the extremists. Of course, he might yet fool them. (Copyright. 1960. By United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) er key) Guess Mr. Money bucks didn't hear me. "Mrs. Moneybucks Is wear ing a ,uh, Mrs. Moneybucks is wearing uh . (desperate ly) Hey Pegler, what would you call that thing Mrs. Mon eybucks is wearing?" Westbrook Pegler: "Aw, shuddup. Who the hell cares what that broad has on?" McNamee: "Thank you, Mr. Pegler. Mr. Pegler, friends, says Mrs. Moneybucks is wearing a gold lame thing trimmed in mink-Oops! Oops! The fighters are in the ring. There goes the bell. A right. A left, left, right. Whoosh. He's down. He's up. Mr. Mon eybucks is standing at his $150 ringside seat. Mrs. Mon eybucks also is standing. He's down again. Whoosh. Whatta fight. The referee is counting. Hold on folks-nine, ten! He's ment belatedly and at first regarded the Algerian war as an unqualified disaster. In its early stages he sought to act as an intermediary between the rebels and the French. He lost hope and joined the rebels whole-heartedly only after the then-premier of France, Guy Mollet, suffered under a barrage of tomatoes and reinstituted the French hard line in Algeria. As many another Arab, Ab bat is unsure of his birth date, which probably was in Au gust, 1899. He is a graduate pharma cist and would rather be a pharmacist than a rebel. But the things that interest him most are history and sociology. Morse Among Award Winners Listed by Writer Dick West By DICK WEST Washington-fflPB-Earlier this week, the television industry announced the winners of the "Emmy" awards. And now it's time for me to an n o u n c e the winner of the "Gimme" awards. The trouble is, there are so many win ners I don't have the space to list them all. I had planned to present the awards to the members of Congress who did the most this year toward keeping the federal Treasury from over flowing. I had in mind getting some sculptor to design a bronze statuette which the lawmak ers could display In their of fices to show they had made a contribution to the federal debt. These symbolic figurines, called "Gimmes," would have depicted a taxpayer over a barrel with his back to the wall. It wouldn't have been hard to find a model. I could have posed for it myself. Gives Unit Citation But so many congressmen did outstanding spendthrift work this year that I have decided to declare it "no con test." I think I'll just give Congress a unit citation and pass along to the special awards in other fields of pub lic service. The first special award goes to Rep. D. R. Billy Mat thews (D-Fla.), who single handedly saved the nation last winter after he was barred from entering a reserved sec tion of the Mayflower Hotel lobby. In a speech on the House floor, Matthews warned that "if statesmen are ever pro hibited from going into the lobbies of hotels, I predict this Dick West New Hope for the "TIRED OUT" Don't Feel and Look ' ... "false old aRe", feel tired out, depressed, or aufTer from sleep lessness, constipation, lack of ap petite, digestive disturbances, lack-lustre hair, your trouble may be caused by iron-poor blood or a system starved for nature's essential vitamins and minerals. If so, you need auffer no more. STOP SUFFERING In just one day Drng-NOT Tab let's high. potency iron, multiple vitamins and blood-building ele ments are in your blood-stream, carrying new atrenirth and energy to all parts of your body. Then VAIIISCOTT'S 322 EAST MAIN STREET out like a lamp. Hey, Pegler, who won?" McNamee, of course, was not that bad. But he wasn'l very good either, as a fight announcer. This week's fight caster was okay. But I had to wait for the morning news papers to learn what hap pened in that fifth round when Patterson plastered Dimples. Nothing But Noise What was broadcast to the listening sodality in round five was the monstrous crowd noise. The fightcaster's words were lost in the screeches of the Polo Grounds paying cus tomers. If the broadcast was intended to convey the excite ment of the evening, it admi. rably succeeded. If it was in tended to inform the listeners how the fight was won, it was a flop. Why could not the crowd noises be screened out of the fight, caster's microphone? If we are to be deprived of TV service on all good fights, why must the climactic mo ments of the alternate radio cast be wasted on the noises of a mob scene. Bad as it was, the Patterson-Johansson fightcast was a big improvement over the first fight in which I had a boiling interest and had to get the story second hand. That was in 1910. With the other village kids in Obar, N.M., I met the late afternoon Roclc Island passenger train. We hollered at a gleaming Pull man reporter: "Who won?" "Johnson," he hollered back, and the train pulled out. We didn't even know in what round. We did know, however, that Jim Jeffries was through. republic is not far from its fall." The hotel Immediately adopted an "open lobby" poli cy for congressmen and the last time I looked the repub lic was still standing. The next award, for the best left-handed compliment, goes to Sen. Hugh Scott ID Pa.). Commenting on charges that Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D. Ark.) was "an overeducated S.O.B.," Scott said "I do not think the senator from Arkan sas is overeducated at all." . Loses Immunity The award in the congres-" sional immunity division goer to Rep. Samuel S. Stratton-(D-N.Y.), who left his car by a parking meter, thinking his congressional license plates would keep police from giv ing him a ticket. When he returned two days later, he discovered the meter was owned by a private park ing lot and that he owed $11.20 in fees. The award for introducing the bill most unlikely to be passed goes to Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.). It would cut the salaries of congressmen to 53 cents an hour. The final award, for long distance interrogation, goes to Rep. Harry R. Sheppard ID Calif.) for asking a general this question: "Assuming that your pres ent proposal is effectuated, is it to be interpreted by the members of this committee) that due to the existing con ditions of the unknown fac tor, internationally speaking, which you,, the military, have very ably expressed for a long period of time, and most recently, you feel that you will have the capability and competency within this con solidated ability to produce your pilot requirements under an extremity as of tomorrow or next week?" ". The general's answer wal "yes, sir." 'Old Before Your Time" Any Longer watch your elimination. 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