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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1961)
" "Bveryono in Southern Oregon t..i. Th Mail Tribune ' . frubllihed DHy except Saturday by ' 13 North rir 8t Ph. SP 2:6141 KUOB.ni V . xw u.. 5?5? ORJV. Advertising .Manager ! ERIC W. ALLEN JR., MnR. Editor OLIVE 8TARCHER, Wotneni Editor ' DALE EHiuiaj, V'fH?rJjirJL'." ' An inaepenuciiv iwwff Entered at second class matter Med ford. Oregon, under Act of - March 3. 1B07 BUDai-niruun iw-a, By Mail In Advance, Copy 10c . 1.1.7 Cnton 1 vmar I1S M n.lv and Sunday 6 moa. 8.00 Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 4.25 Sunday Only One year $4.20 v Carrier In Advance Med ford 'Athland. Central Point E mult point JackonviUe, Gold Hill, . Pho-nlx, Shady Cove. Rogue Riv. r-,.11.. .-.a-annHav1 VAflf ftlR.OO Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 150 CTier and Taler copy 10c ui Term -n ip fluvww "Official aor of CUv of Medford OlfleUl Paper of Jackson Connty "Unitwi Presa International . fuu ieaaea wire C t nPiTeleDhoNewspicturei -Mn:R nv ATIDW RTIREAU "WFST HOLIDAY CO.. INC. Of- , tnm. nan Francisco, uw rti.nc.sr,, 1 fSeattle. Portland, S Louis, At- ' lanta. Vancouver, pa,, NEWSPAPER kPUttlSHIRS f ASSOCIATION WATIONAi EDITORIAL Fli;ht 0' Time Medford and Jeckson County History from the file of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 vean ago. . . 10 YEARS AGO AprU IS, 1151 (Monday) : . A major change in Med . ford'i city government was . announced today; mayor D. L. Flynn named Robert A. Duff general iuperintendent ; of the city and of the water oommUslon, effective July 1. . A Prospect man hai plead- 1 guilty to the theft of about t iht miles of copper wire ,i i t from telephone poles. . ; IT'TIAaO :il it. 1H1 (Wednesday) The League of Women Vot ihu placed proposal be--e tl.t t tbiord city council -g that city restaurants l -wte4. ' i Perry's "Ye jV ' 'umn: "A con . a r of the mase- 1 . i iri ltitiu.ioualy flahlni and not catching ai many of ' the finny tribe aa anuci ' pated." 10 YEARS AGIO April II, 1131 (Thursday) A 40-cent charge for pear arsenic Inspection has been t Iminatod by the state board i i. horticulture. I. C. (Jerry) Jorome has I en elected "Big Eruption" t the Medford Crater club. M YEARS AOO a prU II. 1121 (Saturday) ' The Crater lake betterment committee has arranged to . raise $20,000 for improve ments at the park in ex- 1 change for an option to pur chase the concessions there tor f80,000. A temperature of 26 de grees here last night brought on the heaviest smudging of ' the season. 0 YEARS AGO April IS. 1911 (Sunday) The 461-acre Suncrest or chards here have been sold tor $265,000. , ; Union carpenters at work on the new Medford hotel here have gone out on strike in protest over the employ ment of non-union labor. Whips Your I.Q.7 Nina er Ha ceirtcf Is superior: levee er leltt Is encellent) five or all Is toed, 1. Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated at Waterloo; was it In France, Belgium, or The Netherlands? , 2. Is an amphibious plane designed to take off from land or from water? ; 3. He was the thirteenth .President of the United States a id bis Initials were M. F.; name him. 4. Is chemically pure saccharine 8, SO, or 650 times sweeter than sugar? 8. If a heavy explosion oc curs outside a building, will the windows be blown out ward or Inward? 0. From what Is casein glue i derived? , 1. In "the Roman numeral iystem, MCMXXX indicates what number? . v S.Albert Einstein Is fa mous for his formulation of the Theory of R ? 9. In what major British sport are the terms "bowler,' "wicket," and "over" used? 10. la "barnyard golf played with golf balls? . Answers! 1 Belgium. 2. Both. S. Millard Fillmore. 4. ISO. 8 Outward 6. Skimmed milk. T. 1930. 6. Relativity. t. Cricket 10. No. (Horse Don't Do It, Friends!! Mf Honestly now. legislative friends ! ! What will it be like go on daylight saving time, Salem stays on regu lar time, Eugene goes DST, and Medford stays standard . That, or something result if you give final asinine bill to permit "local option" m setting the time of day. Holv mackerel it was to get away from this very sort of confusion that the railroads finally got together some 75 or so years ago and set up standard time in the first place. ' rOrf T, friends, be suckered in by a few Port land big-shots who don't give a hang about the rest of the state, just so long as they can go along with Washington and California. Don't forget that the fall turned down a chance for DST throughout the state. . ' ., , Personally, we don't state stays standard or it is, it ought to be all together on it. ' i In short, legislative fools of yourselves just and a tew others. Don t Well Done The other day we said a hearty "well done" to if he would veto SB32, tax-reduction bill. , So "Well done, Governor Hatfield." We don't add the "hearty," because he didn't come right out and veto unless the legislature referred the matter to a vote ot the people. . . ,; - 1XE NOTE that Walter " favorite state senator, referred to the Gov ernor's action as "political blackmail." ' What utter hogwash I Bv that one comment himself (once again, it should be added) ,to be irresponsible. He knows better or he should. Long years in the state senate and in the state treasurer's office should have given him a little better understanding of the functions of the three branches of government. - . And it is just one more added bit of evidence showing he's firmly in the ness interests of the state who are out tor every buck they can squeeze out of this legislature's actions, and to heck with TTHE governor very properly pointed out that this bill would reduce highway revenues at the verv time thev are being avidlv sought for count- less needed projects: that the people resound ingly defeated a similar ago: and that tests to much big trucks are responsible for high highway construction costs are almost completed. We think he had every good reason to veto the bill. ., ' But his action in refusing to sign it, unless it goes to a vote of the people, is the next best thing. - 1 A quotation from Friday's UPI story from Salem is revealing. It said: ' "Supporters of the bill fear a referral, because de feat would virtually destroy any chance ot passing such a bill In subsequent sessions." Tn nr.ViAr wnvrls! ''TVia npnrtln Via rlftmnpfl! lot.'s get the legislature to do .Unce again, legislative mends, don t do it I ' E.A. (;. Reconsideration Urged After two negative-type . dissertations, let's have one on the positive side. We agree wholeheartedly with the Medford planning commission that the new federal build ing should be located in the area of the long designated "civic center" area around the west side Library Park. ' Way back in the 1930s, the then planners of the city foresaw a time when this could become an attractive, convenient civic center, with lawns and trees in the middle, and most of the public buildings handily adjacent to each other. A DD to that the traffic count figures on River " side and Central, near where the building is now proposed for construction, as well as future planning for arterial streets, it just plain makes sense for the general services administration to reverse its previous decision. It is also reported that because of rising costs, the projected building area will not have as much parking area around it as was originally planned. Thus more congestion. This area isn't bleeding for construction work so badly that we have wiui our eyes ciosea. . : I7VEN if it results in a delay of as much as a year or two, we'd far rather have this planned and coordinated,' with all agencies satisfied, and the public served properly, than to jam it through. Government buildings are not built for a day or a week or a year. They'll be with us for a long time. : We urge this hastily selected site be recon sidered. '" If a planning commission isn't for planning, what is it for? EJL if Portland decides to close to it, will be the passage to that utterly people of Oregon last , . much care whether the goes DST. ant whichever friends, don't make utter to please the Oregonian do ltl Jtf.A. , Governor!! we'd be bound to give Governor Mark Hatfield the inequitable big truck it. But he said he would ' Pearson, who is not our alone, Pearson reveals pocket of the big busi the people. move only a tew years snow conclusively now tine job." to rush into this thing Dennis the 4-gk we Uu.nuorEiixixM.iS ' '''' 'Weather: Bureau? When is Matter of Fact (c) New York Herald COL. THAO'S WAR ; Ben Tre, Kien.Hoa Prov ince, Vietnam Nowadays, when a Western' reporter fisiwmn finds a corner .a!. a of the world $f which, posi- W 1 1 v e 1 y . to yfrrf . spires h. l V'Sthe ,n,p M 'w 1 to lin g impulse g e r all but irresist able. That is the real rea- ' Alsop s son, I sup pose, why I have lingered in in this amiable ; little delta town, as the guest of the; young province-chief of Kien Hoa, Lt. Col. Pham . Ngoc Thao. The cops-and-robbers, good guy s-versus-Communlsts as pect of this visit to Col. Thao has been pretty exciting ;and decidedly pleasing, too, since the good guys have been coming out on top for once. But I confess I have been far more excited by the glimpse of a new kind of political warfare which I have caught through Col. Thao's eyes, in long talks with him in this high, bare old house of a French provincial administra tor, in the calm intervals be tween patrols, To make Col. Thao's war understandable, you have, to understand him a little. He is, then, a slander, wiry, pleas ant-spoken, gentle -seeming man, who has in fact been hardened by nearly 15 years of war, first with the Com munists against the French. and then with President Ngo Olnh Diem against the Com munists. HE still has relations in the north. His father-in-law, In fact, is an important Com munist official who was my polite captor when I blun dered into a Communist-held area in South Vietnam six years ago. Because of his own past and has present connec tions, there was some grum bling when President Diem personally named Col. Thao to his job. here after four previous province chiefs had failed to halt the rapid ad vance towards total takeover in Kien Hoa. At that time. this lttle town was almost literally besieged; all the main provincial roads -were perennially Impassable; and the Communists ruled virtu ally the entire countryside, Kien Hoa Is certainly no peaceful paradise today. The Communists have a section of 30 to SO regular troops in each of Kien Hoa's eight ad ministrative districts, based in heavily forested areas. Col. Thao still needs to be a very tough, resourceful anti-guer rilla leader, which he is. The war is unceasing, but at least Col. Thao has gained much ground since President Diem sent him here. By the personal orders of the President and his broth er Ngo Dlnh Niu. Col. Thao began his work In Kien Hoa by an action symbolizing his break with the old French way of fighting the Commu nists, which has been too often imitated by the South Vietna mese in the past two years. The provincial jail was bulg ing with a thousand prisoners, most of them held In mere suspicion. He sifted out about three hundred hard core cases and let the rest go free. He also burned the instru ments of torture used by the police in a public ceremony in Ben Tre's main square. ' BUT these bold innovations did not change the fact that the province chief's own house was under rather reg ular fire from the Communist-held villages just across Ben Tre's gently flowing little river. First, Col. Thao tried to bring back these vil lages by putting in strong points and filling them with troops. "It did less than no good," Cel. Xbaa remarked, "aa t Miilir'OriL) KiAiL TrllBUnri, Menace this rain sows to stop?' By Joseph Alsop Tribune Syndicate there was nothing left to do but go there myself." With a small guard he therefore moved, bodily into the village of Phu Nhuan, which Is really a straggling peasant community of a good many thousands of people. For ten days, he talked to the villagers individually and in groups, actually interviewing every family elder. He learned about their griev ances, about the chickens stolen -by ithe army, the tax money misappropriated which should have built a vil lage bridge, and so on. He got them to chose a new coun cil of elders, a new village committee, and a new village chief. And so he iook Phu Nhuan back from the Com munists. I can testify that he did so, because I asked if we could go there, and within IS min utes we were strolling through the cocoanut groves and along the canals of Phu Nhuan and its neighboring village, An Hoi. It was the kind ot Ideal ambush country that gave one a violent itch of localized apprehension in the back of the neck in the old days of the war between the French and the' Communists. But in stead of the snick of a sni per's bullet, , all we heard were cheerful greetings from the people who ran the hor- ren.dous litle fish sauce fac tory, and the many peasant households, and . even the aged lady who had been so crossly pro-Communist be cause the soldiers of the lo cal guard post had liberated all three of her beds." "We cannot win with arms, but we can win by dealing wisely and well with the people " . rpHIS is the colonel's motto, a. and on this' basis, Thao and the junior officers who are his district chiefs have been repeating the' Phu Nhuan experiment over and over again. It has not been smooth sailing by any means. The people, said the colonel, "must be convinced, and at that, it is often easier to con vince the people than to con vince our own cadres, who wish to win with guns." Yet nine villages out of the province's 115 have been re captured by political action In the last two months. They have been strategically cho sen, too. For instance, the rich river mouth villages were among the first on the list. "They cost the Commu nists a couple of million pia stres a year in taxes on the fisheries, and we gained back as much," said the colonel. "The economic war is just as important as' the political war." A kind of encircling ad vance against the two Com munist forest-hidden bases is in fact going on in Kien Hoa. Many, villages not specifically worked on show the effects of the political war. Mean while, a school to train new village elders, chosen from the best of the school teach ers, is In its second month of work. A new administrative headquarters, designed to be squeeze-proof because all the offices are completely open to the public view, is going up in Ben Tre town. The roads are all repaired. The bridges are mended. A kind of quasi-normal life has re turned to Kien Hoa. "In a year," says Col. Thao, "I Ulink we can win this war here." Saying farewell to hint, It was natural to wish him luck. ENLISTS Miss Bonnie J. Tully, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Tully, 420 South Central ave., enlisted in the Women Marines last month for a period of three years. She Is presently undergoing recruit training at Parris Isl and, S. C. Prior to her enlistment. Pri vate Tully attended Medford McDf OAO, OHEGON Drummond Reports ' (Walter Llppmann Is in Europe. Roicoa Drummond reports from Washington In his abince.) WESTERN GAINS Washington Presi dent Kennedy's summit con ferences with Prime Minis ter Macmillan and Chancellor Adenauer are producing more results than appear on the surface. The communiques have seemed rather empty because these meetings are not nego tiations; they are consulta tions explorations of each other's thinking. The dividends from these meetings are not apparent in the communiques but in future action. - ' ' . - THESE significant dividends already flow from the Kennedy-Macmillan and the Kennedy - Adenauer confer ences: - 1 The two senior Allied leaders have established a re lationship of trust and candor with the new President of the United States. While their personal' relationship does not have the comradely intimacy as prevailed with Elsenhower, it is evident ' that Mr. Ken nedy won his spurs with the elder Allied statesmen and that the three can work to gether easily and cordially. "2 British Prime Minister MacmUlan Is determined to heal the menacing economic rift between the . European Common Market (led by France and Germany) and the Outer Seven (led by Bri tain herself). It now appears probable that Britain's way of ending this trade threat to European unity will be a dra matic and historic turn in British policy an offer to join the Common Market. President Kennedy made it clear that the U.S. would wel come this step as the most valuable contribution Britain could make .to strengthening all of Western Europe. 3 G e r m a n Chancellor Adenauer was profoundly re assured by Mr. Kennedy's word that' the ,U.S. would, If anything, increase military support for NATO and has no intention of withdrawing a single soldier from Europe. In the economic field both Mr. Adenauer and Mr. Macmillan made it clear that their gov ernments will devote to the aid of under-developed coun tries the same amount of their resources as does the U.S. 0 jP THESE three ' develop ments, the most hopeful In the Day's News By FRANK Space travel by-product; Astronauts (including nas- sengers, . when that -time comes) won't be allowed to use tooth paste. WHY NOT? " Tooth paste. If it is to do its job efficiently, requires water. And the sudsy water resulting from brushing your teetn woman t be fit to be REPROCESSED for drinking. Out in space, you know, there's no water. And no air. And space'on space ships will be precious. There will be no room to take along a water barrel. Every drop of water will be indispensable. It will have to be used over and over again. S' Air Force dentists are working to develop antibodies to fight germs that cause tooth decay the idea being that astronauts (and their pas sengers in distant future dec ades) will be so germ-free that Quadros Is By ERIC SEVARIED Brasilia, Brazil - This re porter has seen at least a thousand 1 television perfor mances by a thousand pol iticians, but never any thing like Janlo i Quad ros' bobbing, weaving, shouting and growling ex hortation, his second broad- Savarald cast call to the Brazilian peo ple to hold together under the pains of economic auster ity or see democracy in Latin America's keystone country wrecked on the reef of infla tion. It went on for an hour and a half. The 44-year-old Presi dent, the unknown X factor in hemisphere diplomacy who interests the Soviets very much and worries Washing ton very much, offered his people nothing but sweat, toil and tears. If they will not or cannot accept the bit ter cup, there will be little point in worrying whether Janio is antl- or pro-Ameri can at heart, whether this angry ex-professor is a poten tial dictator or whether he wlU take our steadiest Latin American ally into the neu tralist camp, as some ot his statements and his invitations W XUdbj NasiEX nd, 2iehUi mpaeearaai gain for the West Is the pros pect that Britain will be loin. ing the European Common Market. This is not an easy decision and the British government would be taking a bold and courageous action, Not that ft would be against British in terests, but it will be a rever sal of a long British tradition. Britain has long kept de tached from the continent and, In the main, has played a balance-of-power role be tween France and Germany, lest either get too strong. . But a new British policy is needed to fit new events. It Is now in Britain's interest to help tie West Germany into the European community. The need is to pool and ex pand the strength of Europe as an economic entity and to develop a political federation to match this economic' inte gration. . This is what Britain is now at the point of deciding and there can be no doubt that the Macmlllan-Kennedy talks contributed to that end. 1 PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S meeting with Gen. de Gaulle in Paris will be far more complex . and uncertain. It may not turn out well at all. At a time when Macmillan, Adenauer, and Kennedy are acting to strengthen NATO, President de Gaulle for vari ous reasons withdraws mili tary forces from the NATO command, demands unUateral control of nuclear weapons on French soil. The effect is to force Allied air power from France. His recent blast at the U.N. further lacerates U.S. French relations. Gen. de ' Gaulle is doing much to give France a new sense of unity and purpose and to enlarge her role in world affairs. This is a boon to France and to her partners. We have every reason to hope that-his wise and bold effort will resolve the Alge rian war. But NATO cannot be made to. contribute more to France than France contributes to NATO. It is in these circum stances that Mr. Kennedy faces his severest test in per sonal diplomacy when he goes to Paris next month. (c) 1961 New York Herald. v - , . Tribune Inc. JENKINS they Won't need to brush their teeth to head off decay. . They are reported to be lieve they may be able to de velop an' inoculation serum that will protect space travelers-from harl tonfh ...n. with other diseases. ; It will mean ONE MORE SHOT to be taken before leav ing for a week-end on Mars or Venus or Betelgeuse! QTUDYING chewing habits, J these dental researchers are mounting tiny transistor radios In the dentures of their assistants. First findings from these instruments show that the number of times a person clicks his teeth together in the course of a dav varies from 500 to 15,000. Am t science wonderful? THESE dental researchers are overlooking no bets. Realizing that it may be impossible to develop a serum that will keep teeth perpetu- Best Hope for Brazil's Future suggest he. may; On paper Brazil is bank rupt. She already owes for eign creditors nearly two and a half billion dollars,' more than half of it to the United States. During the three au tumn months the roaring presses printed 30 billion cru zeiros. Shortly, at this rate, the cost of printing a 10 cru zeiro note will exceed the value of the note.-The small denomination bronze coins disappeared long ago; the more recent aluminum coins, issued in replacement, have virtually " disappeared. The current government budget of $2 billion will be at least 50 "per cent in the red. Sev enty per cent of the $1 bil lion in foreign trade will be on the deficit side. . Only in very minor degree is all this the fault of the United States, In spite of the familiar spread of anti-yan-keeism here. Not from any promptings of guilt feelings must we help, but because we are the only country that CAN help; and because, if 65 million Brazilians founder into economic and social an archy, the tragedy of com munism in Cuba will seem, in comparison, as sounding brass signifying nothing, in the wreck of our over-aU Latin American policy. We have to support Janlo Quadioit therefore, whether POTLUCK (By M-T Staff ' Sex rears Its ugly head in the most unexpected places. One is prepared for it in a copy of Playboy, say, or even in . publications more staid. But we'll confess we never expected to find sex in a press release from the American Forest Products Industries. But, there it was. The re lease began: "This is the time of year when the trees are mating." And lt went on to give aU the intimate details of the sex life of the Douglas fir tree. Is NOTHING , sacred any more? Questions we've never learned the answer toi Why does a flag fly in front on a standard in the sidewalk in front of Crater Lake Mo tors just about every busi ness day? We like it, what ever the reason. ' We have been taken mildly to task for calling a skunk a civet cat. The latter designa tion was used in a story re cently, telling - about how such a beast became involved in the air conditioning mech anism at Rogue Valley Manor. The note we received in structing us on the matter went into further detail, and since it came from a man who should know, we pass it along, aj follows: . , "...Either your zoology got mixed up a bit, or you were too squeamish about giving the critter its real name.'The varmint warn't no civet (and 'civet-cat' is obsolete anyway) but a plan, ornery skunk more potent in both odor and delivery! And that durned beastle was wanted for a 'pet by one of our loveliest young waitresses, not by the house man who got it for her and was 'got' in turn. And the young lady adores her new pet presumably thoroughly deodorized and rendered safe by now ... "The efficient ventilating system of the Manor has long since sweetened the atmos phere, but the event continues to be a lively topic of conver sation and, no doubt, of cor respondence, in a variety of versions. "P.S.-NOW I'm told the beastle has escaped to its na tural haunts,". - A man who read a series of travelogues which ap peared on this page recent- ally In perfect condition with out tooth paste, these docs are working currently with a couple of guinea pig men who are sealed in a space cabin that reproduces the conditions that would prevail on a trip out' into space. Their experiments on these volunteers are designed to find out what effect brushing teeth with ONLY PLAIN WA TER will have over an ex tended period of time. The plain water, you understand, could be REPROCESSED over and over so that it wouldn't be wasted. ONE effect, if It turned out that brushing teeth with plain water would be fully effective in heading off cavi ties and such, would be to cut down the market for tooth hygiene preparations. Grim thought in this busi ness: It would CUT DOWN AD VERTISING, too. It's a par lous world we're living in these days. we like him or not. And he must . remain on speaking terms with Washington, whether he like us or not. This is why his emissary, Salles, finds a friendly cli mate in Washington, as of this writing, in his negotiations for a half billion dollar addi tional credit; and it is why Janlo, In spite of his gesture toward welcoming UN debate on admitting Red China, his recognition of Bulcaria. Rn. mania and Hungary, has also pointedly told his people that Brazil belongs to Western culture and has never at any time since his election made a public attack on the United States. Domestically, the temptation to attack us must be great - he does not control his congress, and this is a period when the extreme left wlnsr and the pvirm. rioht wing nationalists find com mon ground in antl-yankee-ism . Brasilia under Janlo Is cur iously like Paris under de Gaulle. No one pretends to know what he is really think ing, who he will see, what he will do next; no one dares make any commitment in his name. Foreign Journalists, so far, find him equally impos sible to Interview. Like de Gaulle for France, he dreams great dreams of grandeur for Brazil. And, just as there is little point in worrying over and Contributors) ly dropped by with a sug gestion! If you want to lose weight, swear to yourself to eat only eecargots for one week. He says the idea of eating snails three times a day would be a lot more effective than Metxecal. There was, a UPI story in the usually reliable M-T last week, describing President Kennedy's rocking chair, and saying that he had done more for the rocking chair indus try "than anyone since Whist ler's mother." This gave us pause, for if our recollection was correct, the painting known as "Whist ler's Mother" (the real name of which is "Arrangement in Black and Gray," with the alternate designation of ''Por trait of the Artist's Mother") showed the dignified lady sit ting sedately in a straight chair. A check with a reference book showed our memory was,. Indeed, correct, and we quickly dispatched a nasty letter ("What did Whistler's mother do for the rocking chair?") to UPI. We await a further expla nation with interest. News from England la to the effect that women work ers at a London shampoo factory went on strike the other day because the com pany tried to (top them from snitching one of the ingredients of the shampoo at tea-time. The ingredient? Beer. The company had to give in and dispeni free beer in the employee's can teen, v There's a beer-trouble story out of Cuba, too, where Senor Castro's brave new world has resulted in an acute shortage of the beverage. Cubans, who ordinarily down'some 700,000 bottles of beer each day, found that every bar, restaurant, grocery store and recreation ' center was completely out. Ob, there was plenty of beer in the country all right. But the nation had run out of bottle-caps. A Medford man, the head of a one-car family, has an ar rangement with his wife whereby the sole set of car keys (save for an emergency set which he keeps in his wallet) are traded back and forth,' depending on who needs the car when. The other day he had to go to Los Angeles, and was picked, up early in the morn ing, before anyone else in the household arose, by a friend with whom he went to the airport. On arriving at the L.A. air port, he was standing waiting for a taxi, and idle jingling the coins and keys in his pocket. KEYS? Yes, keys. And he had that sudden sink ing feeling when he realized his car was safely in the ga rage at home, and completely unusable by his wife. He cringed all through the day whenever he thought of the greeting which awaited him on his return. Oddly, however, there were no recriminations, which, he thinks, speaks highly of his wife. Actually, he learned that her first reaction on dis covering her husband's lapse was one of concern., "Oh, dear, he'll be so upset when he discovers he has them," she said. We predict a long and happy marriage for this couple. de Gaulle's interferences with NATO, his cynicism toward the United Nations or his tam pering with the Common Market - until the massive Algerian crisis is settled and an effective France exists -so there is little point in wor rying over Janio's "neutral ism" or his brusqueness with American envoys or his at titude toward Castro (which is by no means enthusiastic) until this terrifying crisis of Inflation is settled and an ef fective Brazil exists. . Nothing else really mat ters here. And no one else besides Janio Quadros really matters, the little man with the wide mustache and the blazing eyes who whanged his desk with both fists be fore the TV camera and shouted at his countrymen the scornful challenge to work at least six or seven hours a day since he puts in 12 or 13 himself. The next morning, not long after daybreak, he was in his office, standing over the telex machines as his daily stream of orders and inquiries buzzed out to government offices all over the country - Janio's daily injection of adrenalin into the semi-torpid body of this wakening giant called Brazil. (Distributed 1961, by The Hall Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights Reserved) I 4V