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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1960)
4 SUNDAY. DECEMBER. 18, I960 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON WEDFORDvWTRIBUNI "Everyone In Southern Oregon D-..H- Th. Mall Trlhitn Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO S3 North Fir St. Ph SPJ-14i ROBERT W RUKC Editor HERB GREY Adveiililne Manafar GERALD T LATHAM Bus Mfr ERIC W ALLEN JR., Mnit Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleu Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERJCJON'Irculntlon Mgr An Tnrlnnrient Newsnaner Entered as second class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act or March 3. 1897 cimcpnipTtnN R ATTS By Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year HJ-OO Dally and Sunday 8 mos Hon Dailv and Sunday 3 mos 4.25 c.inHau Hnlv One year 34.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point Basle Point. Jaokxonvtlle. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove. Roiriie Rlv T.1nt Ml IDOtOr rOtltCB Daily and Sunday 1 vear 118 00 rw.1v anA Snnrinv . 1 HO l.flO Carrier and Dealers copy 10c AJITerma Cash In Advance "Of'iclal Paper of City of Me dfnrd Official Pap.r of iackson County tlnltcd Press International Full Leased Wire TJ.P.I. Tejephoto Newsplctnrea "TrtF.MBER OF AUDIT BUREAU- OF CIRCULATIONS Artvertlsina: Representative: . WEST HOLIDAY CO., INC Of fices In New York Chlcano De. . i c crnn-i. I.na Anaeles, battle Pi,' St. Louis. At lanta. Vane fl. NATIONAL EDITORIAI tmmimiw.ua Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from th. files ot The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 18. 1950 (Monday) The Ashland Daily Tidings, which will celebrate Its dia mond anniversary next year, has been purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Graham M. Dean of Reno, Nev. Two separate auto-train col lisions were reported in down town Medford Saturday, but there were no injuries result ing from either of them. 20 YEARS AGO Dec. 18, 1940 (Wednesday) Sixteen inches of snow ha fallon at Crater Lake during the past 24 hours. From Arthur Perry'i "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The Duke of Windsor announces if offered the ambassadorship to America he would accept. II would also be nice for the Duchess." 30 YEARS AGO -' rw m. 1930 (Thursday) More than 1,500 formerly unemployed persons in JacK son county have been given jobs by the state and county building roads in this area, Ray Tucker has been elect ed president of the Medford Labor council. 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 18, 1920 (Friday) , This morning was the cold est morning in five years with a temperature of only 9 de grees above zero being record ed. One case of scarlet fever was reported in the city this week, and more are feared. 50 YEARS AGO Dec. 18. 1910 (Sunday) The Crater Lake road com- mission, a group organized to raise funds for the proposed Crater Lake highway, will auction off a Flanders "20" automobile Friday. J. A. Perry, who relumed yesterday from managing Romie Valley exhibit at the Chicago Land show, said he was confronted by more than 1,500 persons who expressed a definite interest in moving to the Rogue valley, , What's Your I.Q.? Nina or ten correct It lupttiar; Mvn or light It xcalltnt; five et tin is good. 1. In liquid measure two pints equal one quart; what do two pints equal in dry measure? 2. In avoirdupois weight 16 ounces equal one pound; how many ounces in a pound in troy weight? 3. How many feet In one furlong? 4. A slack of wood eight feet long, four feet wide and four feel high is called what? 5. The abbreviation for the liquid equivalent of two bar rels is "hhd"; what is the full name? 8. What is the standard weight of a bushel ot pota toes? 7. "A pint's a the world around;" supply the missing word. 8. What is the term applied to designate twelve gross? 9. Quire, ream and bale are terms applied to the measure ment of paper, c'o 1 1 o n, or wool? 10. How many pecks are there in one bushel? Answers: 1. On quirt. 2. 12 ounces. 3. 660. 4. A cord. 5. Hogshead. 6. 60 pounds. 7. ". . . pound . . ." 8. Great gross. 9. Paper. '0. Four pecks. Three New Buildings It has been our privilege in recent days to inspect three of the handsomest buildings we have ever seen. We refer to the Rogue Valley Manor, which, rising 10 stories high from the top of Barneburg hill, has become a veritable landmark on the southern Oregon scene; the new home of the Jackson County Federal Savings and Loan asso ciation, which replaces a decrepit old service sta tion at the corner of Main and Front streets, and the new Standard Insurance company building on East Main street. HTHE story of the Rogue Valley Manor has been told many times, but it remains a fascinating story the story of the half-dozen or so men who have been the sparkplugs of the non-profit or ganization building the retirement manor, who have surmounted all problems and difficulties. It will open its doors to members next month the culmination of work and solving seemingly insoluble problems. The buildincr is one of the most striking, both from location and design, on the entire Pacific i . .i .i t.Tt i- i i.u it J coast, ana sianas as a iriDuie to me lutesigm aim determination of its originators. XIHEN it is finally in operation, it is going to make quite an impact on the community. Here will be several hundred people, many of them coming from distances to make their homes here. The economic impact alone will be substan tial, in the form of payrolls, supply purchases, and so on, as well as the local investment and spending of funds. The cultural and intellectual impact likewise will be considerable, for high-caliber people who, despite advancing years, will have much to offer in the way of vigor and activity to the life of the community. THE Jackson County Federal Savings and Loan with every portion designed for a specific func tion, and for the greatest possible efficiency. From the outside greenery (yet to come) to the attractive interior garden, making tasteful use of sculpture by one of Oregon's outstanding ar tists, on to the public and business furniture, and to the strictly utilitarian equipment, the building is an eye-openiitg example of what good plan ning, good design, and artistic care can do. , They show that artistry and efficiency, beau ty and business, are not mutually exclusive, i THE final of the trio of buildings is the new the Jackson County structure, to an only slightly lesser extent) to make use of native materials and locally-produced and sold equipment. The Standard building also puts emphasis on landscapine- and natural beauty .of wood and shrubbery. And its design, mode, blends well with The structure marks a community, and not only because of the building itself. It also marks the opening of a major branch here by the state's leading insurance firm. ' A LL three buildings' are "modern" in more than " design, for they are built around a concept of service geared to the age of the automobile. The three are, perhaps, the most spectacular of current building, but to the fact that many other organizations and firms have also in recent months completed sub stantial additions to the community. All of these speak for of Medford, the Rogue valley, and our two-state area. But more than that, ger community, not only business, but as a good place to live. And in con cept and design they will the community s lite. hi. A. On Citizen-Participation In this space on Friday, we deplored what we called Gov. Mark Hatfield's "grab for power" in asking for reorganization of state government. Our objection was not based on any opposi tion to governmental efficiency or reorganization as such, but on his rejecting the concept of citi zen-participation in the Further study of his make sense of and by even more that this is a HATFIELD himself uuullll ku uc U(JJUCIIIUI1 LU C1U11IC Ul 1118 MUJU- sals, for he asks that they be enacted piecemeal with the merits of each by trie legislature. We have no objection But we hope the legislature will think long and hard before doing away with such agencies as the highway commission, the public welfare commission, the liquor state board of health, board, and many others which have set nationally-recognized standards of excellence. "TO DEMOTE these to the status of "advisory" 1 boards would be to turn our back on the real contributions of hundreds of men and women in the state who have worked so hard for the wel fare of the state, with no pay and small thanks. If this concept can be retained, and at the same time some reorganization of functions be effected for the sake of efficiency and economy, so much to the good. But reorganization for its own sake, thus end ing a long and successful tradition of state serv ice, is a step backward, not forward. E.A. more than five years of the members will be which is in the modern the surroundings. major addition to the this should not blind us optimism in the future they speak for our lar as a good place to do add to both facets of tasks of government. proposals, many of which themselves, convinces us good place to go slow, recognizes that there is being scanned separately to such a study. control commission, the the state water resources Dennis the fj "TWW " .. . :AH' IN CAS6 VA 6ET ANY WORE IDEAS OF XDCIR OWN, THAT'S AU.RIGrlT,TCO; Matter of Fact AS THE SHOUTING DIES Algiers-The furious shout ing of the rioteers has died down in Algiers, but it has left a series of ugly ques tions behind. Above all, it has left the question that e v e'r y one is asking, about the practical ity of Gen. de Gaulle's Al Alsop gerian policy after the recent ugly outburst, This crucial question can not even begin to be answered without an initial clearance of political debris. You can not say which policy will pro duce the most hopeful results until you understand which results are impossible to pro duce at all. The events of these last ten days have shown-what Gen. de Gaulle has clearly known for a long time-that there is no way for France to WIN the war with the Algerian re bels. Nikita S. Khrushchev could have won this war, and he would have won it, precise ly as he won his victory in the blood-stained streets of Budapest. But no Western nation any longer has the will, or the appetite, or the cruelty (call It what you will) to follow the only rule for winning wars between dominant and sub- ect peoples. This rule is to be found in Tacitus's biog raphy of the great pro-consul Agricola. The historian puts his rule in the mouth of a British rebel against Rome, who says of the Legionary ar mies: "They make a desert and they call it peace." FOR A LONG time, It was not clear that this cruel rulp necessarily applied in Algeria, if only because the struggle there was most inefficiently carried on during the pre-de Gaulle period. The French army, in this reporter's opin ion, has long been the best land force in the West. But in the era of the Fourth Re public, the same praise could not be given to the army s pol itics-ridden high command. The reform of the high command is one of Gen. de Gaulle's many great achieve ments. The conduct of the struggle in Algeria was im proved beyond recognition by de Gaulle's two successive appointees to the command here, Gen Challe and Gen. Crepln, What would have seemed to be impossible mir acles only two and a half years ago, in the era of Gen. Salan, have been quietly wrought by these two able commanders. As result, the bands of rebels inside Algeria have been almost wholly cut off from the F. L. N. forces In Tunisia and Morocco. Except for occasional acts of terror ism, all offensive action has virtually ceased. A surface tranquility had been restored to almost the whole of Al geria, including the most re mote and formerly danger ous areas of the countryside, before the recent tragic events disturbed the peace. VET THERE WAS a fatal A flaw in this seemingly hopeful scene. As Gen. Crc pin, a brutally honest man, has himself admitted, this surface tranquility only masked the facts that the peo ple In the villages and the Muslim quarters of the towns continued to fear the F. L. N., to pay the taxes demanded by the F. L. N., and' to provide new recruits for the F. L. N. fighting bands. The second rule for win ning wars between dominant and subject peoples is that the subject people must fear the government more than it fears the rebels of its own race. That js the reason for the first rule. And the French Menace Joseph Alsop army, while making extraor dinary progress both in ap peasement and in reconstruc tion, could not fulfill this sec ond rule of fear. The result was the situation which has now been revealed by the recent tragic events. One must underline the word "revealed," for it is certain that this situation always ex isted although it was tempo rarily concealed from many eyes by the surface tranqual- ity. The nature of this situation is simple. The Muslin popu lation has not ceased to wish for an independent, predomi nantly Muslim Algeria. Khru shchev could change the minds of the Algerian Mus lims quickly enough. But the lims quickly enough. But the French army, being French, cannot do so. That leaves only two alternatives: indefinite prolongation of the deceptive surface tranquility by mdclinite, costly prolonga tion of the war in its present form; or the voluntary crea tion of the best kind of Mus lim Algeria which circum stances will permit. - POR REASONS both under standable and agonizing, the great majority of the French people in Algeria and a good many army officers would prefer the first of these two alternatives. They would rather carry on the war in definitely, than take the necessarily enormous gamble of making peace. But the people of metropolitan France have begun to be impatient for peace, and Gen. de Gaulle, with one ear cocked, as al ways, for the impersonal voice of history, has decided that the gamble is unavoidable. What, then, is the nature of this gamble? There are two things that now need to be said about it. First of all, the chances of a good outcome, or at least of a decent outcome, have been much increased by the progress made in the last two and a half years. The F. L. N., though not defeated, has been weakened. The flags in the Algerian Cas- bah have not altered this key ract. Second, the great recent progress in reconstruction and tranqualization has also it would seem, changed the mood, though not the aspira tions, of the Algerian Mus lims. There were no flags, there was not a whisper in the Muslim quarters of Algiers when the paratroopers ruled the city at bayonet point. But in that era, one may be cer tain, hatred endlessly boiled beneath the surface. Yet the reporters who entered the Casbah and other Muslim quarters before security forces, a few days ago, found remarkably little hatred, a surprising degree of modera tion, and many marks of re spect for France and even of attachment for France. QUCH ARE THE circum stances. They rule out a fake-Independent Algeria per manently held in ill-concealed tutelage, which was the result many people wrongly sup posed Gen. de Gaulle was seeking. They do not by any means rule out a truly inde pendent Algeria, under a mod crate government, friendly to France, closely linked to France, and depending, In deed, on France for further national progress. No one of course can guar antee that such an indepen dent Algeria, once created, will not turn hideously sour. That is why Gen. de Gaulle's policy is a majestic gamble. But before the gamble is con demned because of its inher ent risks, the only possible alternative policies had best be considered with bleak and truthful realism. (Copyright 1960 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Today & Tomorrow By Walter WHAT CONFRONTS US Mr. Rusk is taking office at a time of critical and per plexing change in our foreign relations, and he will need the kind of understanding support which comes, not from dogma tic, but from open and in quiring minds. We can have every confi Lippmann dence in him provided the country will understand how greatly the American position in the world has changed in the past ten years. The Kennedy administra tion will not inherit a well established and settled for eign policy. It will inherit the necessity of augmenting our over-all national power and of revising many of our post-war commitments. This will be a painful and perhaps an unpopular business. I DO NOT THINK that this sober view is unduly som ber. It is essentially the view which constituted the central theme of Senator Kennedy's campaign. When he talked of our loss of prestige and of the deterioration of our pow er and position, it was not merely the conventional cam paign orator's viewing with alarm. The RELATIVE po sition of the United States in the world wide balance of forces has declined markedly. In one place after another, not only in Cuba, in the Con go, in Algeria, in Laos, in the management of our alliances, our diplomacy has become in creasingly ineffectual, often .embarrassingly so. This basic situation, which Mr. Kennedy is inheriting, cannot be corrected by ring ing statements of our inten tions and of our ideals deliv ered from the White House and the State Department. It cannot be corrected by appro priating two or three billion dollars more for the Defense Department. It can be corrected only by bringing once more into bal ance that most important of all our balance sheets-that of our national power and of our national commitments. IT WOULD be not only un fair to the Eisenhower ad ministration but also mislead ing to suppose that the great changes in our power and po sition are due solely to what has not been done in the past eight years. The relative po sition of the United States at the end of World War II was abnormally great-owing to the prostration of our enemies and of our allies. We had more military power, what with our monopoly of nuclear weapons, we had more gold and more productive capacity, we were more invulnerable than any other power, indeed than all the other powers combined. This could not en dure. Since the end of the for ties, when the Soviets explod ed their first nuclear device and we organized the Mar shall Plan, the imbalance which was once in our favor has been changing. Since the Korean war it has been changing greatly, and by 1957 or thereabouts, our RELATIVE military and economic power in the world were declining dramatically. In the campaign Mr. Eisen hower indignantly denied this. But the fact is indis putable. Through vast re gions of Asia, Africa, and si Can Stevenson Do the Impossible at UN? By ERIC SEVAREID By his act in asking Adlai Stevenson to speak for Amer ica at the United Nations, John fSSF'S Kennedy has Jrl done the cotin- W j try, the UN Jt I and himself a 1 tavor, but he has done n 0 favor to Gov ernor Steven son. The Demo crat twice fat- '" ed to carry his party's weight in hopeless races against a national hero is now askqed to perform an other near-miracle, the most immediately critical task any American statesman could face. He is asked to help re start the machinery and drive of the United Nations, now sputtering closer to complete paralysis than at any time in its 15 years. In the first year of the Ken nedy regime the world will find out with finality if the UN really is to be a powerful instrument for world order, or if another dream of peaceable men is to fade into the mists like the League of Nations. Its treasury is virtually bankrupt, largely because of . st lippmann Latin America our military power is to a very great de gree neutralized. And in the non-Communist world our ca pacity to finance our foreign policy is seriously, let us hope only temporarily, undermined by the condition of our bal ance of payments. In addition, and not least of all, our prestige in the world has diminished. We have ceased to look like a vigorous and confident nation. We have alienated great masses of people, by no means only peasants, workers, and young students, by the reactionary temper and tone of so much of our diplomacy. Above all, we have aroused great doubis of our capacity to lead our al liances by such gross inepti tudes as the U-2 affair and the recent pilgrimage to Bonn. ' THE CORRECTION of our military and economic weakness is the crucial busi ness of the Kennedy adminis tration. It will involve not only the DeDartments of De fense and of the Treasury, but also the Department of Labor ard Commerce. For there is a critical task to be done with big business and big labor in order to increase our competitive capacity in the world, which is central to the problem of our balance of payments. The Department of State cannot do much to augment our over-all national power. But it can play a mighty part in the revision, long since over-due, of policies and com mitments which have had their historical origin in the radically different situation of the immediate post-war years. It will not be easy to work out the terms of this re vision. But it can be done by Mr. Rusk, by men such as Mr. Stevenson and Mr. . Bowles, and by the younger men who, one must suppose, will be put in the key staff positions of the State Department and the Treasury. Their task is inheritently difficult in that it involves fresh estimates of the power and of the intentions of our adversaries. It will be an im possible task if in Congress and among the public the dog mas and the doctrines of yes terday remain frozen and in flexible. (Copyright 1960 New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Try, and Stop Me -By BENNETT CERF r AVERY SAD EVENT was recorded at one of the town's ritziest, snootiest restaurants the other day. A nouveau richewas taken there for dinner on Monday evening by an authentic socialite and, anxious to impress one and all, the nouveau gent laid down a bin of the rarest vintage wines. The tab came to about $800 and the management seemed very pleased. The next evening the nouveau brought his most important customer to show off his new man-about-town stature and they wouldn't let him in! MRS. GROUCH: Why do ...... I always get such miserable service in this store? Aren't there smarter clerks available to serve me ? FLOORWALKER: No, Madam. The smarter clerks see you coming. . J. Mitchum's definition of a typical husband: a character who buys his professional football season ticket in June and his wife's Christmas present on December 24. C 19M, by Beanatt Cerf. Distributed by Klni Futures SndlwU Communist bloc refusals to honor their debts. The Secur ity Council may cease to func tion for months because of the quarrel over its composition. The Secretariat still labors under the Russian black".'-1: threat to ruin its effectiveness by boycott. And the whole prestige of the UN, so recently booming by reason of its bold start in the Congo, is now on the verge of collapse by rea son of its inability to finish the Congo operation. ... Two powerful forces, one coldly organized, the other passionate and spasmodic, are whipsawing the United Na tions with cruel effect. The first is the Communist world movement which seeks, not order, but disorder every where beyond its own walls and uses the UN with utter cynicism to that end. (In the eighteen thousand dreary, arrogant words of the mani festo for world Communism short of major war, just issued by the Moscow conference. there is not one mention of the United Nations!) The second is the jealous drive for national prestige in the small, new countries-as witness the self-centered be havior of Nkrumah and Nas POTLUCEt (By M-T Staff and Contributors) ' -', One of life's minor and (sadly) rare frustrations is not being able to thank someone for a favor because you don't know who the kind someone is. A woman called the Mail Tribune the other day to ex press just this sense of frus tration. She had been Christmas shopping downtown, and had accumulated quite a collection of packages, so many, in tact, that she set them down near a parking meter while she paused to catch her breath. About then a youngster, a bov she euessed was about 10, and his mother, came by. The boy offered to carry her pacK-ages-which he did, all the way to her car some four blocks away. In calling the Mail Tribune to tell the story, she said she was "so grateful to the boy and I wanted to tell someone about it." - The proprietors of a local orchard are suing a sawmill for dirtying their property with srfot and ashes, and one of our acquaintances, in noting the fact, and think ing that the smudging sea son isn't too many months away, stalked off muttering' something about the pot calling the kettle black. Some people claim that the classified advertising section of any newspaper makes for the best reading of any of it. Once in a while, this may be true. For instance, what visions are "conjured up by an ad (which appeared some time ago in our favorite newspa per) which offered for sale two rifles, a sewing machine, a dinette set, and two choice spaces in a local cemetery. "If you think .this is the space age," comments a mo torist we know, "just try finding a parking space downtown these days." One of our contributors tells us about how strictly logical, and yet upsetting, a child reasoning can sometimes be. She came home recently to find her 9-year-old daughter in tears, and a cookie sheet all covered with a gooey mass in her hands. The youngster had decided to bake cookies, and everything had gone well ser in the joint Coneo ODera tion. A Strona llnilnH Nntinnc is immensely important to this coiic?n-'T 01 new sovereign tics oecause it is the only n- -..;:is by which their whole can become greater than the sum of their parts; yet by im maturity they are paralyzing the UN as surely as are the Communists by calculation. One might add a third, though passing force-the dam aging influence of President de Gaulle's disbelief in any supra-sovereign institutions of any kind. Stevenson can help; if he cannot, no American alive can help. He can bespeak the America that thoughtful men everywhere long to hear once more, the American accents not heard at the UN since the ambassadorship of Warren Austin our fundamental peaceableness, our straight forwardness, our creative sym pathy for the dispossessed of this world. It should not be the purpose of the American spokesman to score quick de bating points against the Zorins and the Gromykos for the afternoon headlines. To do that is to reduce thp TTniinH States to the propagandistic level 01 the Communist bloc; until she took the first panful out of the oven. The doush had spread all over the pan, into a burnt-lace design. The mother checked and're checked to see what had gone wrong. Had she put in the flour? The baking powder' Egg? Too much shorteninc' But apparently all had gone as the directions indicated;' As a last resort, the mother asked the little girl to SHOW her how she had mixed (ho dough. . .. , The recipe called for 2'i cups of flour. And the yoiing. ster carefully measured out two quarter-cups of flour , a total of a half clip. "Now I ask you." savs lh mother, "was she REALLY wrong?" . i.f And she reported that it-all ended hajDpily. The tears were dried, more dough mixed, ahtl a sizeable batch of cookies re sulted a sizeable batch, that is, before the "sampling" was finished. : . Suburban living is where the houses are further apart and the payments closer to gether. ' 1 A man we know who visits the Jackson county courthouse quite frequently , found a fist of definitions in a was'tebaskpt in one of the offices there,. and has just passed it along to 'us. Here are samples: , Consulting, public opinion (A few of the boys are putting uu a nuie pressure and We have to calm them down). Will benefit the communily (Real estate prices are going up and we're helping them) Most qualified man (This fellow has a lot of friends who really have us in the od politi cal squeeze). - Strictly impartial (This ap. pointment isn't too important so nobody's put any pressure on). ' Giving it a lot of thought (We still have a few people to ask before we decide) emu selection oi appoint ments (We haven't had a chance to make our usual two or three phone calls yet). ; The faults of men are many. Women have only two!' .r,.. Everything they say is on; The other, all they da. . ;. i. A member of the armed forces, serving overseas, re ceived a letter from his fiance, with which she enclosed a pic ture of two loving couples snuggling on a beach, and of her, all by herself, off to one side. Her letter explained how much she missed him, and how she was fretting until she could see him again. '. He was mightily .pleased about the whole thing, until the middle of the night wfcen he suddenly sat up with. ,3 horrible question: "WHO tooft that darned picture?'1 , ' " - -. Mr. Potluck: . .' . ' Do you know that pussy willow buds are beginning to pop? Yep, out on Daiy..: creek they are. Isn't it wonderful thai through all this tinsel aiicfc bauble, nature carries on?"' Spring Harbinger J ... Strong hands to weak, old hands to young, around th Christmas board, touch hand. The false forget,, the foe forgive, for every guest wtjf go and every fire burn low and cabin empty stand, Forget, forgive, for wha may say that Christmas da may ever come to host at guest again ... ' -W.H.H. Murray:" it is to tarnish our name, i Stevenson is more than a intellect in operation; he is a kind of presence, on any sta'-ej. He will be' persona more grata upon this stage than any pef former we could send. In til? very special meeting of the UN the personal tone an bearing of the performer is oj substantive imp 0 r t a n c e. Io this realm, manner often be comes matter. Prime Minister Macmillan demonstrated thisj' in September. . . . :': i ..India's 'Khrishna Menon fir speaking didactic nonsense therefore, in stating that ncV ther Stevenson nor any other' American will be any belter. at the UN than the policy in structions from Washington.! No more pertinent exampleC in the rPVPrcfl ennct, DVUtc tr disprove Menon's logic thafli KTn t . . . Kiciiuu. incessantly nas wei ru's light from New Delhr been refracted, diffused and: discolored through the prisnt of the Menon personality. Thorp ic a ,,lt,, nf ,i,a: heart as well as that of the; head. KtPVPncnn Iknl. r nA r. at home and at ease in botli. luiitributed 1960 by The Hall Syndicate. Inc.) (All Right"? Reserved.) . J