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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. rniDAY, JULY B. 1BB0 4 A 'Everyone In Southern Onion Read! Th Mall Tribune" itoam Ana iwiu uiuuw ?ublTBhed Ditty except Saturday by urnrnon Dnivrih!fl rn 33 North Kir St. Ph 8P3-SU1 HERB GREY Advertlilni Manager GERALD T LATHAM. But. Mir. EWC W. ALLEN JR.. Mns. Editor EAKL If. A1JAMO. UIW ftauor HARRY CH1PMAN, Teleg. Eouor H1C1IARD JEWETT, SporU Wltor OLIVE STARCHER, Women'! Ild-tor . '' T . 1 1 1 M....n.n. Entered ai second class matter at AieaiOTa. vreaon, unaw nut March 3, 18B7 .n.a.DrmmW D1TH ! By Mall In Advance. Copy 1M , Dally and Sunday 1 year 15 .00 . Dally and Sunday 3 mo. M Sunday Only One year S4.J0 By Carrier In Advance Medford Aehlend, Cantral Point Eagle . roini, jacKionviue, iuiu Phoenix, Shady Cove, Rogue Riv. r. Talent and on motor routes. Dally and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1J0 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Termi Cash In Advance "official Paper of city of MedforT Offlrlal PaptrJacliaon Coontr United Press International rull Leaied Win TJP.l. Tclephoto NewipcturM ""StEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: , WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of flcea In New York, Chicago. De. trolt, San Francisco Los Angeles. : ScatUo. Portland. St. Louts. At- lapta. Vancouver, 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 July 8. I9S0 (Saturday) The Jackson county selec tive service board will stay open for 40 hours a week, starting Monday; it had pre viously been open only on Wednesdays. The change was brought about by the Korean conflict, Four members of the Med ford Rogue baseball team will play for toe northern Far West League All-Stars when they meet their southern coun terparts here on Monday. SO YEARS AGO July 8. 1940 (Monday) A long-needed cooperative narkine school to benefit val ley fruit growers will open Aug. 1 in the Pinnacle i-ac ins Mmnanv warehouse. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Sta tistics show there were more accidents in homes, than on the highways, the past six months.-This should be a warning to people who occa sionally go home." 0 YEARS AGO . July 8, 1930 (Tuesday) ' A gasoline price war Is rag ing here and on the rest, of the west coast.' Local growers note with pleasure that Bartletts on the Hew York market opened at a higher price this year than they did last year. 40 YEARS AGO Jul a. 1920 (Thursday) Local Republicans are pre dicting that Cox and Roose vplt Democratic nominees. will' be the "worst beaten Presidential candidates in his tory." The Trlgonia oil well at fern valley is now down 505 leet - but still no oil. SO YEARS AGO , -Tulv a. 1910 (Friday) A 30-year-old Central Point farmer was Kinea ny a warn yesterday as he was crossing the railroad tracks near Rnnwv Rlltte. ... The total number of sub prihprs at iht Medford Libra ry club reached 1,335 during June, and 648 books were cir culated; the library was start ed in January. What's Your I.Q.? IJIm ... la. rn.Ml la sunerleri seven or tight Is excellent) Hve or Is Is good. ' 1. In classical times what body of water was known as the Hellespont? . .. Name the capital of Wye- mine. , 3. Eight months' babies nev er live: true or false? 4. Correct the following: "I drunk a elass of water." 5. Was President Theodore Eoosevelt a lawyer? 6. A triangle with two equal sides is named an triangle? I 7. Napoleon Bonaparte was born in Paris, rFance; true or false? 8. Is the proverb "To kiss the rod, a reference to hu inllity or subservience? 9. Was the "scarlet letter" referred to in Hawthorne's Hovel a 'W,' 'D.' or 'A'7 10. A bottle and cork cost $1.10; the bottle cost $1 more than the cork. How much did the cork cost? ;. Answern The Dardanelles. 9. Cheyenne. 3. False. 4. "I drank a glass of water." 5. Ho, 6. Isosceles. 7. False. (Is land of Corsica.) I. Humility. I. "A." 10. Five cents. vfW PUBLISHERS m )J,soc,ATON ft ATI ON At E0ITORIAI Again- What s News? By the very nature of his occupation, a news paperman is interested in the question, "What is news?" It isn't a question that is ever answered, final ly and definitely. And what answers are provi sionally provided are always subject to change. (For instance, science news today is printed in far greater volume than ever before in history. Political, economic, religious, and other subjects are covered in greater breadtn and depth now than in the past. There was a time when they weren't considered "news" at all.) So. with this background, we were especially intrigued with a recent "UR caller inquired about our policy of printing the names of people who receive traffic cita tions. Briefly, it is this: We at the time of arrest unless there are unusual circumstances connected accident When such a person is convicted of a "moving violation," that fact is recorded. Those acquitted thus do not get their names in the paper in connection with the arrest. Our caller (who had apparently received a traffic ticket, had entered an innocent plea, and been found innocent) UE PUT it something "You print a guy's but when a guy beats the rap, you don't give him any credit. Isn t that news? Well, now is it.' We have operated on likes to become embroiled with the law, even if innocent, and have thus relegated to obscurity the names of those innocents who have had a brush with the law and And we've never had any kicks until our friend called. Does he have a point? We'd appre ciate opinions. E.A. Why Traffic "News ! While on the subject it might be of some interest to report that hardly a week goes by but what someone who has tangled with the law, to a greater or lesser degree, comes to the office seeking to have his name Kept out of the paper. In probably 99 out of Once in a lone while stances where we are convinced that withholding a name from publication is justified but it is a rare exception. "OME right down to it, why do we print names 7 of people in trouble with the law at all? Again, it goes back to what is "news.". And crime, under almost anyone's definition, is "news." The Mail Tribune does not report criminal news in a "sensational" manner, like some papers. But it does report on that facet of all the others. There are degrees of murder to over-parking. tickets are not. Where to n AS OF now, we have drawn the line, after con- parking violations and That is, a violation when a car is in motion, ing the news. We could be wrong, and our policy is always subject to revision in light of new circumstances or facts. But that is our present practice, and one that will continue until is is shown to be wrong. E.A. The Railroads9 Ox We have, deep down, thy with the nation's railroads in the plight they're now in a plight largely of their own making, by the way. But we find it difficult to be sympathetic in their current endeavor to prevent first class mail from traveling by air. A century ago, mail was being shifted from barge and stage to the new rails, and the rails were happy about it going along with the post office's argument that mail should be moved by the fastest available means. MOW, however, when the post office is attempt ing to increase its use of air transportation for mail first class mail when possible as well as premium-priced air mail the rails are howl ing just as loudly as the barges and stages did In addition to howling, the rails are attempt ing to have legislation passed which will protect their century-old position as the main mail car rier. The bill would require that all mail traveling by air must have air mail stamps. Such a measure, of course, would be a step backward in the post office's somewhat ragged history of using the fastest means available. And it also would deprive the American people, who foot the bill, from having their mail carried the , . . i i i , iasiest ana most convenient way. CO THE railroads, against "government dustry, private enterprise, and so on, now are seeking to hamstring legislatively another seg ment of industry. It's hardlv consistent. And it goes to prove, depends on whose ox is often used in tnese columns. telephone call. do not use their names with it, such as, say, an thought that was wrong. like this : name if he's convicted, the theoiy that no one been cleared of blame, of names in the news, 100 cases, it isn t. there will be circum feel a responsibility to our society, along with crime, from first degree Murder is news. Parking draw the line? "moving" violations. of a traffic regulation, is where we start report a considerable sympa- despite their loud cries interference with in- once again, that it all gored in the phrase bo Dennis the 'rll.MR.WltSOM! Hi.MavVAoe! TAYWgi H,M?......' Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address oi the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication la permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit 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. Police Partiality? To the Editor: I have been reading some letters written by the people in your column. I just want to say that the Medforcl police sure do show partiality, especially in pass- lnff out p irking tickets. As I is walking to the post offi.-e one day, I saw an officer stop by a car, a very late model. The expired signal was up. Well, I stopped just to see what he would do. To my surprise, he looked inside that car and then moved on to the next car, which was a few years older than the car he looked in. The older car also had an expired signal. The officer passed up the new er car and then put a ticket on the older car. I guess the new car be longed to some big shot and he was afraid he'd be called on the carpet by his boss. So the little fellow had to pay a fine and the other guy did not. There is your answer to this problem of partiality. About blowing grapes, as the party said, he took the kids in tow until the police came. Then there's that bunch of kids on a drinking party that stopped at a mail box and started to break it up with beer bottles and when the man that owned the box caught up with them, he held them until the police came. What happened? Well they gave the man a ticket for reckless driving. He was only protecting his property from a bunch of drunken kids, and he gets a ticket. Doesn't any one have the right to protect his or her own property with out getting arrested for it???? Is this justice, I ask? I have seen this passing up on traffic tickets more than once, so I know what I'm talk ing about. Also, how come officers get by without paying traffic fees? They get theirs for free, while we have to pay. (Name on file.) Medforr Missed Opportunity To the Editor: In the July 3 Mall Tribune, the Walter Lippmann column was largely devoted to a clarification of the much discussed U-2 flight. The most satisfying part of it to me was his leaving out any reference to it as a 'spy flight'. Very pointedly, he re ferred to it as an inspection flight that President Eisen hower had tried to get the Soviet to go along with. This of course we know they refused to do, as well as any other way to guard against a Pearl Harbor build up. Though Stalin's bloody handed . hatchet-man Khru shchev used the U-2 flight to wreck the Paris summit meet ing, he now advocates some thing like it in his scheming and softening-up visit to Aus tria where he got a most chilly reception, even if po lite. . He planned to do the very same thing to the north Eu ropean countries, including Belgium and Denmark. That was some three or four months before his red-carpet roll-out visit here in the U.S.A. But the people of North Europe seem to have better memories and better evaluation of things tran spired. Though Khrushchev's 'goodwill' visit there had been planned and arranged to the last minute, point and place, such a grass-root born resent ment among the populace against K's carefully laid scheme, it was suddenly and secretly cancelled. No fanfare or press hoop-la attended Eis enhower's cancelled visit to Japan in view of the rioting there that was obviously fi Menace ti.H8.$TelENG MM. nanced and promoted by Khrushchev and his hench men. Still, K is quoted as say ing in a news conference that he could not have born the shame and disgrace that he said was Eisenhower's. Du plicity, or what is the name? But most astonishing is his refusal to claim a first in a head-of-state cancelled visit. The Russians claim a first in everything else. Why pass up a nntion-wide chance like this with its world wide implica tions? Maybe some of his stooges, pinkos, fellow-travelers, defenders of the Russian way, including the double cross mass murder of freedom loving Hungarians, might want to send this letter to the editor to Mister K, that his slipping memory is pass ing him up for a very earth shaking valuable first. F. J. Clifford, Route 2, Box 200F, Central Point, Ore. Near Victory To the Editor: Our com mittee is very grateful for your support of the measure to provide fair salaries for our state legislators. Although the temper of the electorate was to vote "no" on money measures, over 200.000 Orcgonians did agree with us that the low pay of our state legislators is almost a disgrace. I am sure that strong editorial endorsement of the Increase played an Im portant part in securing a near victory. We are hopeful that your continued support and that of the many thousands favor ing this measure will help to educate our fellow OreRon ians so that this long-overdue increase may be voted next time. Again, thank you for your efforts in the interest of good government. Anthony Brandenlhaler Chairman Bi-Partisan Committee for Fair Legislative Salaries Jackson Tower Portland 5, Ore. More Discussion To the Editor: Although I don't agree with Mr. Walter Reece's analysis (communica tion June 23, 1960), I did on iov reading it. I did not defend foreign aid as an institution "to main tain and support every rag tag and bobtail dictatorship in the world. . ." in taci, i ve been one of the leaders In Congress to see that we made our sympathy for democratic leaders far , more apparent than we've been doing. As for Mr. M. J. Olson's letter (communication June 24, 1900), I can't agree with him that "soolalism as it Is known today, must bo con strued as communistic. . .' Many of our NATO allies have a good deal more pub lie ownership and operation than we do and they certain ly are strongly anti-commu-nlstlc. I am glad to have had nn opportunity to take part In this discussion and I look for ward to continuing it with these gentlemen and other constituents when I return home this summer and fall, Charles O. Porter Member of Congress Washington, D.C. SENNETT ACTOR DIES Hollywood -UIPD- Larry Mc Grath, 70, comedy and char acter actor In Mack Scnnett silent films, died of a heart attack Wednesday night while watching television at the Masquers Club, Defection Sign of Castro's Revolutionary By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor The man ol the weeki Jose Miro Cardona, former Cuban ambassador-designate to the United States. The place: Havana. The quote: "The Ideologi cal divergencies between the policies oi the govern ment and my conscience are already Insoluble." Having thus penned his let ter of resignation as Cuba's ambassador to the United states and an 'fyM other resign ing as proics- jw 'UI sor of crlmt f VI nal law at Ha- A 'jl v"n Unlvor if sity. Dr. Jose J Miro Cardona made his way past Cuban nnllrfHnpn mil. ftmKWSOM side the Ar gentine Embassy and at 7:35 a.m. on luesday joined an other distinguished fellow countryman in political exile. The other man was Sergio Rojas Santamnrlna, former Cuban ambassndor to Britain, who on June 28 sought asy lum in the same embassy. Both men had been dedi cated revolutionaries against the Batista dictatorship, but neither now was able to stomach the dictatorship ' of Fidel Castro nor stomach Cu ba's swift passuge Into the Communist orbit. Evidence of Stresses Rojas had called the Cuban government "In 1U present form definitely Communist." Today & Tomorrow By Waller THE CONTAINMENT OF CASTRO More and more, the Castro government has been acting as if it were trying to provoke the United armed Inter- r J veauon. ii 5TTRI has refrained, from jeopard- z Ing Amerl- V -J) ; can lives. But short of this It m ilnlnf Wltir r. . ' " Lirjpm.nn every thing which would In the past have meant a landing of the Ma rines, the seizure of Havana, and the ouster of the Castro government. It Is seizing American prop erty without compensation. It is inciting hatred against us all over the hemisphere. It is making deals carrying politi cal implications with the So viet Union, which Is a non American great power, and It is engaged in Incitement and intrigue In several of tne Caribbean nations. At one time, until before the second world war, Castro's behavior would surely have provoked Intervention by the United States. Yet is has not provoked It, and the reason Is that we have signed a treaty with the other American states which most explicitly prohibits armed intervention. Particularly unilateral Inter vention, In the old manner. The Charter of the Organi zation of American States says In Article 15 that "no state or group of states has the right to Intervene directly or indirectly, FOR ANY REA SON WHATEVER, in the In ternal or external affairs of any other state." This Charter, which is a treaty signed by the President and ratified by the Senate, disarms this coun try in dealing with Castro. What is more, so long as only property and propaganda but not lives are at stake, most of the governments and people of this hemisphere, virtually all of Asia and Af rica, and the greatest part of Europe, would sympathize with Castro If the United States Intervened. For them the Intervention would bo, as people say, a "Hungary In reverse." THERE Is not doubt that Castro Is fully aware of the fact that under the treaty as now established, and in the present climate of American and world opinion, he enjoys a high degree of Immunity in what he does to the United Stales, Britain and other for eign property owners and In what he snys In his propa trnnrln camnaiun, The crllicnl question, It seems to me, Is this, Is Castro uslnii this Immunity to armed Invcrvcntlon in order to focus the revolutionary zeal of the Cuban masses, on the hated foreigners while he is carry ing out the expropriation of foreign and middle-class prop erty In Cuba? Or Is there A more sinister and alien lntcn Hon, which goes far beyond the Cuban revolution Itself? Are there men behind Castro who are trying to provoke the United Slates Into a catas trophic Intervention which of Respected Lawyer These wore not the first among the bearded Castro's former followers to quit his camp, nor would they bo the last. But Miro Cardonn's defec tion probably was the most damaging yet to Castro's prestige, Miro Cardona hud boon the Castro regime's first prime minister, roslgnlng without rancor when ho found he could not effectively fill his offlco whon policies woro be ing changed mlnuto-to-mlnutc by Castro at the television microphone. Miro Cardona was, in addi tion, one of Cuba's most out standing lawyers and had Proposal for 'Honest1 Party Platforms Have Little Chance By LYLE C. WILSON Los Angeles - IVPD - Demo cratic Committeeman Paul Ziffren of California and Sen. Present! Hush, a Connecticut Rcpubl lean, are t h c lost cause c h a in plons of this pro sidcntlul c o n v e ntlon year. Zlffr a n's lost cause was j i. c Wllion tins: A s u g- gestton that the Democrats -Republicans, too, of course -be honest with the voters about their platforms. lippmann would ruin our reputation In this hemisphere and In the whole uncommitted world of Asia and Africa? In other words, are we faced with a Cuban revolu tion in tho Island of Cuba? Or with a gambit, In which Cuba is only a puwn. In a vast international action? WHERE Is as yet no decisive -a. evidence which annblei un to be sure of the answers to these questions. But, given what we know. It is clear, I think, that we must not allow ourselves to be provoked into armed intervention with the military occupation of Cuba. The loss of property and the annoyance of Castro's propa ganda are small things com pared with the disaster of having to use the Marines and the Army to crush a popular revolution. Nor should we expect much from economic retaliation, such as in the sugar quota. Castro will not fall because of this. For ho can undoubt edly count on the support of the Soviet Union, and we are quite powerless to prevent the Soviet Union from aiding him. We are giving aid to too muny countries on the frontier of the Soviet Union to be able to object If a country on our frontier gets aid from the Soviet Union. THE point to which we can address ourselves Is Cas tro's own Intervention In the Internal affairs of his neigh bors around the Caribbean. We can do virtually nothing on our own. For, except In defense of American lives, we have signed away the right of unilateral action In this hemisphere. But joined with a few other liberal American states, say with Brazil, Mexico, Colom bia, and Venezuela, we could -without intervening In Cuba -work out measures to con tain and to quarantine the Cuban revolution within the Island of Cuba. Ambassador Berlo, who has a rich and deep knowledge of the hemisphere, favors a sys tem for the control of the traf fic In arms. This system of control would be set up, pre ferably by the Organization of American States. This, ho argues, Is in accord with the treaty of Rio do Janeiro, which provides that armed attack against one Amorlcan state Is an attack against all of them. Control of the arms traffic to and from Cuba, which, of course, would not be a general blockade, might do much lo dampen down Castro s adven lures in intervention oiiUido of Cubn. It might do enough to enable the Amorlcan stales to sit out tho Cuban revolu tion by containing it. (c) 1960 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Helpi You Overcom FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No longar na snnoyad or fenl lll-st-snflfl bAciMinn of lormo, wobbly tali tuth. FABTKRTH, sn Improved alka line inon-acld) powder, sprlnklsd on your plates holds them firmer sn thnr reel more comfortsble Avoid embsr rMflmimt caused br loose plates Get FMBTEBTU today at any drug oountaa. EI bi'cn (Iciiii of lliivuna Univer sity's luw school. Ills resignation was one more evidence of llie stresses within the t'lislii) govern ment, and, for l.nllii Ameri can niillons who have viewed Willi detachment If nut with sympathy Castro's uhkmuHs ugiilnst the United Slntes, further prnnf that Castro long ago hnd deserted the Ideals of Iho revolution for which Miro C'unloiiM and others Inul fought. For the quiet, stocky Miro Curdonu the decision that lad to his resignation was a blttor one. Of Castro, he once had said: "T h e Amorlcan people," said Ziffren, "have a right to bo cynical about this whole (convention) dunce." Ziffren urged the Demo crats to restore the people's confidence by spelling out In detail In the'lr platform how they Intend to carry out tho platform promises. Nol much chance of 'lhnl, of course, In either convention. Brass Ring Lost Bush grapped for the lost cause brass ring with this Idea: That both political parties, In writing their platforms, should tell the voters exactly how much It would cost the taxpayers to fulfill each cam paign promise. Fat chunre! "Tills would Inject a re freshing note of truth and honesty Into political cam paigning," Bush sulci In a recent speech. "Candidates love to tell the voter about the 'bold, new Imaginative' programs or services they are proposing to give the voter. ' Hut they sny, as If from a rattlesnake, from saying how much they would in crease the voters' taxes or In crease the national debt. The voters should bo ablo to look at a political platform and decide whothcr the various proposals are worth what they'll have to pay." In the Day's News By FRANK From Havana: Premier Fidel Castro's gov ernment prepares t o sclzo U.S.-owned sugar mills In Cu ba as a likely step In reprisal against U.S. cuts in the Cuban sugar quota. Informed sources In Havana believe that In addition to the U. S.-owned sugar mills ALL OTHER AMERICAN PROP ERTY will be seized. Q UESTION: Shall we go to war over that? It Is Improbable. 'In gen eral, when American citizens or American business corpor ations go Into business in a foreign country, they take their chances. We seek by dip lomatic procedures to give as much protection as we can to Americans doing business abroad, but in principle we don't GO TO WAR to back them up. To do that would be to adopt a policy of Imperial istic expansion backed up by military force. WHAT shall we do? It all depends. Suppose RUSSIA moves In to Cuba - first buslncsswlso (such as providing markets for the sugar Cuba can no longer sell to the United States) - then, lator, military wise (such as taking steps to strengthen Castro's military forces with Russian arms or troops)? WELL In that event -The Monroe Doctrine would take over. It would lako over because such a move on Rus sia's part would, amount to taking Cuba over as a Soviet satellite (colony). The meaning of the Monroe Nervous,Tired,Awake Nights? Don't Feel And Look "Old Before Your lime" Any longer II VI "full ou are wonring that look of M Old asro". Too tlriMl out. dnproHsod, or suffnr from nlonp leHnMe, constipation, lack of np. noi.iro, uirosmvs (llnuirlinnnw, lack-lustra hair, your trouhlo may be caused by iron-poor blood or a syntain starvod for nature's fwenUitl vitamins and minerals. If so, yoo nood suffer no more. STOP SUFFERING In Juat one day Drag-NOT Tab. let's high-potency Iron, multiple vitamins and blood-building clo. rnonts are In your hiood-atrnnm, enrrying now ntronglh and onnrgy to all ports of your body. 1'lion WAINSCOTT'S 322 East Main Straet One More Twisting Ho Is an udvoenle of the doctrine of Joao Murtl (Ctiliiiu unot killed while loading a revolt nuiilnsl Spain). That Is the doctrine of democracy, freedom, love of fellow mini, I, it.. ....i WIMIIIIU HI IIIV ruVIU Mllll Cohan nationalism. Ho will never become a dictator." Not many months lutor, lie found his differences with Castro "Insoluble." And Jose Miro Curdonu was Imi'k where ho had been in 11)51). Then ha was a fugitive from the government of Presi dent migencia ouusia, nrsi In Mexleo and then In Miami. Today he Is a fugitive from -Castro. No convention, Republican or Democratic. Is likely to turn that honest. "We tux and tax, spend and spend, elect and elect," Is the way the Into Harry L. Hop kins win alleged to have des cribed the political strategy of FDR's New Deal, Hopkins dented saying that and per haps he didn't say It. But us a political strategy It works prulty well. Slralghtacket Parly Bolters The combined Ziffren and Bush proposals could put a stralghtjuiket on party bolt ers, compel them to support the platform, and keep the spenders' hands out of the taxpayers' pockets. No such Is likely to rnme about be cause political platforms are In some part phoney, written us voter-bult without much possibility of nuiklng good on the promises they contain. That goes, also, for cam paign speeches. The lute Wen dell L. Wlllkle was questioned by a Semite commltteo after his unsuccessful presidential campaign agulnst FDlt In 11)40. Wlllkle repudiated then soma policies he had endorsed In speeches during the cam paign. A senator challenged him on that ground. "Oh. those speeches," Wlll kle replied. "They were Just campaign oratory." JENKINS Doctrine when It was promul gated in 1823 by President Monroe, In his epochal mes sage tn the U. S. Congress, was that the United Stales would not allow new colonics to be created ANYWHERE In the Americas, nor permit ex isting colonies to extend their boundaries. rill IE origin of the Monroe A Doctrine Is Interesting. It grew out of conditions In Europe, as well as In America. The three leading absolute monarchies of Eur ope In 1 B23 were Russia, Aus tria and Prussia. They hud pledged themselves to "put an end to the system of repre sentative govern m e n t, In whatever country It may ex ist In Europe." The United States feared that these three absolute monarchy powers might also try tn suppress rep resentative government In the New World. IMfAT was In 1B23. This Is 1080. In I0B0, the ABSOLUTE DESPOTISMS of the Old World are Russia and Chins. They, too, arc pledged to de stroy free government. So, under the Monroe Doc trine, we arc pledged to say to these absolute despotisms: STAY OUT OF THE NEW WORLD. Thai's about the situation. AIDS CITIZENS COUNCIL Jackson, Miss, - IUPD - The stale of Mississippi has do nated $20,000 In state funds to the prlvnloly-owned Whlto Citizens Council Forum to publicize racial segregation views throughout the nation, Director Albort Jones of the State Sovorolgnty Commis sion announced Thursday. wnlch your elimination. 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