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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1962)
4 A ' E veryo niTt iTSou i the rnOr gon Readi TheMail Tribune" Published Dully except Saturday by MKDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir Jit., Ptr772-8141 ROBERT W RITHL, Editor HERB GREY, Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN. JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Soortt Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered ai second class matter at Medlord, Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1BS7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance, Copy 10c Daily and Sunday 1 year 1V00 Daily and Sunday moi. 8 00 Daily and Sunday 3 moi. 4 25 Sunday Only One year $4 20 Bv Carrier In Advance Medfnrd, Aihland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix, Shady Cove, Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes. Daily and Sunday 1 year $1800 Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealer Copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Piper of Cltv of Medford Official Paper of Jarluon County United Press International Full Leased Wire U P I Telephnto Newspictures "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Renresentative: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES. Offices in New York. Chi. cngo. Detroit. San Francisro, Los Angeles Seattle. Portland, Denver, NEWSPAMt CUBLISHliS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EOITOKIAI ASBOCfoTlSN kjiirii'irrn Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from th files of Tha Mail Tribuna 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO May 24, 1952 (Saturday) Dedication ol the new vet erans administration ceme tery one mile east of Eagle Point will be held Memorial day. Copco's transmission line No. 12 between Prospect and Roscburg carrying 130,000 volts, went out with a tre mendous flash at 2 o'clock this morning. 20 YEARS AGO May 24. 1942 (Sunday) Alterations and repairs are under way on new United Service Organizations (USO) building at Main and Bartlett ts. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pol" column: "Prices of women's dresses have been frozen at the fall prices of 1941. This leaves the garment and the wearer m approxi matcly the same fix," 30 YEARS AGO May 24, 1932 (Tuesday) Cooperative logging plan starts in Butte Falls area; workers to receive 60 per cent of maximum wage scale plus 50 per cent of all pro ceeds above that. Eugene contractors lease 30 acres near inch for mining venture to be operated on royalty basis. 40 YEARS AGO May 24. 1922 (Wednesday) Meriford men over 17 years of age urged to join the Na tional Guard so they can gel "a free vacation" to citizen's training camp at Ft. Lewis, Wash. Bill Kmm, San Francisco third baseman, sold to Chi cago White Sox for $125,000 in "biggest deal in history of organized baseball. " SO YEARS AGO May 24. 19)2 (Thursday) Rogue valley fishermen protest against decision by Oregon attorney general which allows the sale of sal mon caught with rod and reel. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; : seven or eight it excellent; live or lie ii good. 1 Which of the earth's continents has Ihe largest population? 2 More than half of the fresh water of the world is collected in what connecting bodies of water? 3. What river was the scene of a famous military crossing, led by George Washington, during tile Revolutionary War1 4. The 3 1st President of the U S was horn at West Branch, Iowa, in 1874; name him. 5. Who wrote "Thanaiop- 115"? 6. In what war did General Winfield Scott gain fame? 7. Before what council railed in 1.121 was Martin Luther tried for heretical teachings'' 8. What artificial walerway was begun by the French and completed by the U.S.? 9 in what century did Columbus discover America? 10. Who led the first air raid on Japan in World War II? Answers: 1. Alia. 2. Tho U.S. Groat Lakes. 3. Tho Dolo waro. 4. Horborl Hoover. 5. William Cullon Bryant. 6. War with Mexico. 7. Tho Diet ol Worms. 8. Panama Canal. 8. 15th Contury, 10. Jamoi H. Doolilllo. , 3 THURSDAY. MAY 24. 1962 'The Tiger in "Thin chancer assassination book is full of un truths, half truths, out-of-context distortions and oft repeated Republican misrepresrniations." (Sen, Wayne Morse, on the floor of the U.S. Senate ) "The Tig'er in The Senate" is a book written by A. Robert Smith, Washington correspondent for five Oregon newspapers, including this one. It is sub-titled, "A biography of Senator Wayne Morse." What has its author tried to do? In Bob Smith's words: "In this biography, designed neither to please its proud principal nor to delight his bitter detractors, 1 have tried to portray Wayne Morse as he is, and to capture something of the mood and smell of Washing ton's political jungle." To this reviewer, he has succeeded admirably. This is no campaign puff-job aimed at garn erning the Senator votes in the fall election; nor is it "character assassination." It is a carefully documented, meticulously re searched volume which probes into the Senator's long and always-controversial public career a real job of objective reporting; and then draws some thoughtful conclusions a real job of in terpretive reporting. IT IS not, strictly speaking, constructed along cm ujiuiuiiai mica, aiLiiuuu it uuuii luuvjn , roughly, the Senator's career from childhood on a Wisconsin fairn, through his university and political battles in Oregon, to his present role as influential but maverick Senator, chairman of two important Senate subcommittees. It employs what, in the movies, would ' be called the "flashback technique," where by a par ticular phase of the Senator's career is described in some detail, and then the past studied in an attempt to seek clues as to his later behavior. Jn less-skilled hands, confusing, but Smith handles the difficult tech nique clearly and with a minimum of distractions. His writing is always brilliant in evocation of . THIS reviewer has had UUbll tilt OUUjV I, Ul lllt KJVl l V t U.'t. V . 1 IVig horseback on his farm near Eugene as a young ster, and recall his own visits to our family living room), with many of the incidents described in the book, and with a number of the men who have figured in the public career of the Senator. based on this, we would conclude that Smith s job of research and writing was both careful and accurate. Smith's conclusions eral they agree with those Senator Wayne Morse has the potentialities of greatness, that he has in large part tragically dis sipated them because of a basic flaw in his char acter arrogance and pride, brooking no opposi tion or criticism but that he still is a valuable influence in the Senate, and that, given a bit more humility, humanity, and ability to cooper-! ate, he would be one of the all-time great Sen-! ators. THERE are a few very minor technical flaws in the book, including a scattering of irritating! typographical errors. An index would have been1 a welcome addition. These flaws do little to detract, however,! from its impact an impact which will be felt, particularly during this election year, and bv1 both parties described release about the book: "To his passionate admirers. Senator Wayne Morse Is the noblest lion in Washington's dense political jungle. To his equally passionate dclraciors, he is a braying jackass." Smith's chronicle depicts both lion and jack ass, giving substance to partisans of both, but concludes that his nickname among other Sen ators, "Tiger," most closely fits. Smith writes: "In the cloakrooms of the Senate he is called 'Tiger.' "The name is used good-naturedly, but it's not without descriptive fitness For Wayne Morse i. a lean, nimble six-fooler with enormous stamina and fighting power in the recesses of his wiry frame. He pads softly into the Senale chamber, gazing with steely aloofness at the other beasts In the Senate jungle the lumbering elephants, the leaping gazelles, the preening peacocks, the aged lions. As he takes up a position of commanding vigilance in the protective tree of high principle, he sils (licking his tail nervously. watching, waiting, set to spring on the first hapless hrast to wander into the broad legislative province in which Tiger ranks himself supreme." DUT Smith also rcfords the well-earned ac collides tn Morse . . . "performine; magnifi cently" . . . "no one could have handled it with greater understanding or greater calm apprecia tion" . . . "legislative statesmanship . . ." I ' "It Is not the purpose nf this final word (Smith adrio to anticipate history's judgment o( Wayne Morse. There is enough, certainly, in his record and Ins makeup . (roin winch lo build a strong ease either (nt or acainst I him, depending on one's philosophical view and riis j position toward the senator Our pui pose from stal l to I finish has been to s. e him as he is And he is contro versial to the end " III a final summing' up, Smith discusses the "new frontier of the spirit and mind' in a world which is increasingly confused and confusing, , beset by tensions and uncertainties. i This frontier is a call to greatness in public men, he declares, ami concludes: "Should Way lie Mtuse vciltiiie lo subdue the tiger ! that lurks within, he challenges ihe touches! adver sary of them all. But in this eternal struggle he would gain the good will of all who advance along the (ton tier of the spirit " o This is no "oul-of-conut half-truth." It is Smith's hope for a man who could attain great ness. It is also ours.- E.Ap 0 . o o o o ft this method could be lucid, and sometimes is mood or situation. . some familiarity with are his own, but in gen of this reviewer that in the publisher's news The Senate Dennis thf Memci ! yiln , ' 011 cV43 ? 1 'Al '1 IMKI 'That's funny. The lights are still on, CHIT iiV ! I nnCrif wnnr . ' COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must bear the although under certain circumstances tor publication is permissible. The edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for oublication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; tn fact the contrary is often the case. Then There Were Nont To the Editor: "Then There Were None." Here is the story of Ten Little Free Workers: Reddy Kilowatt, Doctor Rail- roader. Miner. Stcelworkcr, Farmer. Lawyer, Grocer, Sales Clerk and Reporter. Ten little free workers in this country fine and fair. But if you cherish your freedom-worker have a care! Ten little free workers - Rcd dy was doing fine Until the socialists got him -then there were nine. Nine little free workers laugh ed at Reddy's fate, Along came federal medicine then there were eight Eight little free w o r k e r s thought this country hea ven. But the government took over the railroads; then there were seven. Seven little free workers- till the miners got in a fix Uncle said coal's essential and look over, leaving six Sixp little free workers til the day did arrive The steel mills, too, were fed eralized five. then there were i Five litile free workers hut the farmers are free no more. The farmers have been col lectivized - that leaves only four. Four little free workers 'till the government did decree All must have free legal advice-then there were three. Three little free workers - the numbers getting few But with government grocer- for better sanitation, but let's ies selling food - then there keep our country living, were two. ; If you would like to work Two little tree workers our with us or if we can Kive you story's almost done any additional information, Willi clerks at work in fed- please address your commun era! stores that leaves onlv ieatmns to: one. One little free worker the reporter soivof-a-gun Mustn't criticize government-' so now there are none. Ten little workers but they are no longer free They work when and where ; ordered, and al fixed rales. you see, And it all could have been ' prevented if they'd only seen fit to agree And work together instead of i saying "It never could hap-1 pen to me'" ) l'he above is from an ad- verlisenient of the Northern Virginia Power Co.. in Win- chrslor, Va.. "Eveninc Star 'God dors not promisr a Iroublr frrc life to anyone on lilt nirth. Yet .some people feel the Rovernment can do so." Leila A Morrow , S3! North Bartletl st. , Medford. 1 "I Havt s Secret" To the Editor: "I have n jerret " Speakinp of the Gravhack-I Suuarloaf cutoff road 1 haV driven over it in a '57 Ply mouth with my family. Whrn we first moved tn Medford. and took a trip to the Oregon Caves. I wanted to take a shortcut home. Our, map showed such a road, si we took it, with some second hand information of a looser in the region Without Koing into the har rowinti detail, we came out at Williams, and you should have seen the surprised look on the faces of the folks when we erne r ned I instructed the fain 1 1 v to appear as though we did it rvery dav Rohert l"o UKirt Winchester Medfoid P S Wf now can a re liable map in the car. and an emeiRency kit which should I. ike care of any situation nicelv except an overnight O Kditor s note Mr t'n en closed n map which show ed n?me and address or the writer, the use of a pen name or initial Mail Tribune reserves the right to I I the route mentioned. It CAN e negotiated, provided the I w e a t h e r, automobile and I driver all are in good shape. jjbId To the Editor: We would like to express our apprecia tion to the many people who helped our Committee try to bring the true facts to the peo ple on the annexation ques tion in the past election and make them realize that annex ation was not the answer to our problems. The Anti-Annexation Com mittee is preparing petitions which will be circulated in those areas where a sanitation problem exists for prescnta- I tion to the County Court un dors ORS 451 for assistance in obtaining sewers in the area. Those people who voted "Yes" to put this issue of an nexation over should realize by now that we do not differ as to our problems (which we all realize are acute), but only in our means of finding a so- lution to them. We would ap preciate very much if they would unite with us and work with us to solve our problems (or they are also their prob lems and can be solved best by the effort of all concerned. These petitions require the signature of 61 per cent of the property owners in the affect ed area, not the whole county, and will request the County Court to make a survey of the area and present a plan for sewage disposal before a pub lic hearing as soon as possi ble. UNITE and WORK with us Elmer l.uschen. Chairman of the Anti Annexation Committee, j:i2o Stewart ave., Medford. MAGIC? New York ll'IMi - Among some Orientals, the belief ex- ists that a moonstone can ban- ish (ears and nightmares, the Ameiiian Gem Society re ports. Another stone s.nd to have magic powers the aquamn- rine Some South Americans . ,.. ,..,.., n..,,H .. .n i import courage to the wearer. Th(. sll)np a)so is s,1lri , ,.rc' laziness telleet and quicken the in- Try and By BENNETT CERF- "HAT SICK JOKKS are 1. 'I guess I've lost another ns his p'ass eye s:d down the dram. 2, James McNeill Whistler came home one evening lo find h:s mother sprawled out c: the l:v ini; room floor. "How come, ma?' he ch:ded her. "You off your rock er Rotter lr.; Vieto. Mom, Junior ; ale the i.t:-:: c'.' : Micky brow n p.iprv." 4 "-R.it. CVwa'.d. t isn't 0-: rub .'' Q . j ou fool; it's a hotter Koiirth-.crnoV: .n n, tl,.:r tea. !wr lo veriip. q a . . . .' H-:.' sonre r : .. " tui ti.ri; i vv . . . y i n . . . :c f'.rt : . . . when you rr.iy H ' n of he O MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Spfit in Public Opinion Widens Over South African Racial0, Police Powers0 By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst In Johannesburg, South Af rica, this week, a group of women stood in quiet defi anee holding aloft their "flame o f f r e e d o m." Through s u c - A of jeering youths in bright sweat- I Newsom ers and leath er jackets who pelted them with eggs, tomatoes and water-filled bags and kicked over a placard which read: "Reject the sabotage bill to end all liberty." The women and the jacket ed youths are symbolic of an ever-widening division of pub lic opinion in the Union of In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS At Friday's primary clec - lion, Oregon voters approved a constitutional amendment to allow legislators to set their own salaries. Hitherto in Oregon, legislative salaries had been frozen by the con stitution at S600 a year. Orphan's lepislatni-s alrpadv j nave bc(!un to think about giving themselves a raise. I Legislative counsel Sam I ualcy said he has had in- ! quiries from several persons bill to crease the salaries. He added, however, that no specific amount has been mentioned. QUESTION: How much will Oregon's legislators think they are worth? 'HERE'S a straw In the J- wind that offers a hint as to how much legislators think their services are worth to the people who employ them. Proposition 1 on the ballot at the general election in California this fall proposes to allow legislators to increase their salaries to S11.250 a year half Ihe salary paid to members of the U.S. congress. On the California ballot at the same election will be Proposition 17, which will set a maximum of S10.000 a year that the legislators may vote to themselves. If both should pass, the one getting the most voles will prevail. If both fail, legislative salaries in California will remain at $500 a month, the present figure. QUESTION No. 2: How n. u c h SHOULD stale legislators be paid? PELL, there is an honored rule. Luke (X-7) says: "The laborer is worthy of his hire " If California could nominate and elect legislators who are GOOD ENOUGH, wise enough, tough enough, sound enough, able enough to manage the economy of the biggest state in the Union as ii ought to he managed in order I to insure to every citizen the most perfect government, the I proposed legislative salary of ! SI 1,25(1 a year would be a bargain. j rpilAT brings up something -I else: The attitude of t lie public I toward choosing among canrii j dales (or public office. It's I a little over "n Ihe wrong I side We seem to think of it in ' terms o! GIVING SOME-i BODY A PLUM. I THAT is WRONG. I We SHOULD think of it in terms of HIRING MAN- AGF.KS AND ADMINISTR A- ' TORS TO HANDLE OUR j BUSINESS FOR US. j Not in terms of handing ! out a plum to somebody. Sfop Me the dear hiph school lads and pupi 'v W-.r in 'nm a bi: i . . : : . ft o'TV. r-i.r' Prim i ft ! I'. !' nv ...Vv. -y- i, sighed the profile Ml IV Pill :.ici'." South Africa over Prime Min ister Hcndrick Verwoerd's de termined efforts to maintain white supremacy (apartheid), increasingly o p p r essive to white opposition and black aljke. i A new bill- now on its way through parliament would 1 give Verwoerd's Nationalist cessive nights , government the strongest po they had with- j lice powers ever held in stood a mob! South Africa in peacetime. The women, with their "flame of freedom," were members of the Black Sash Organization, so-called for the marks of mourning for the South Africa's loss of free doms. They and many another South African, believed the police powers bill endangered freedom of the press, acad emic freedom and freedom of religion. The bill, which includes the death penalty, covers a wide field, and, its critics say, places upon the defendant the responsibility for proving his innocence rather than the state proving his guilt. SDecficallv. it defines sab- , otage as any act endangering law and order, safety or pub- blic health, or interfering with the free movement of traffic. It also covers acts in terfering with public services, such as water and electric supplies and health services or trespass on lands or build ings. It does away with pre-trial It does away with pre-trial examination or trial by jury. Apartheid in South Africa had its real beginnings in 1S48 under Premier Daniel F. Ma- lan who was elected by a Nationalist-Afrikaner bloc pri marily representing descend ants of early Dutch settlers. It instituted acts prohibit- Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris Field Enterprises Inc. PERSONAL PREJUDICES Good people are easily de- luded, for they rarely expect to find wickedness in others; i corning relations with France. TN this very important Ger but bad people are fooled just M0rtai offense was given to 1 1 man instance, the cause of ch. for they never ex pect to find goodness in oth ers, and cannot cope with it when they do. No natural body odor can be as repellent as the heady aroma exuded by overly perfumed women sitting in a theater; it is absolutely nauseating for a man to be surrounded by women who have drenched themselves in even the most delicate and expensive of scents. A writer in the "Saturday Review" recently observed that he would like to see a book writing whose jacket didn't feature either a type- j en(ry jnt0 Europe on reason. I errands, without much ref wriler or fuzzy, blown - up , ab,c terms crence to what the rest may typewriter type; likewise, ld To do or a of thp5e be doing or thinking, appreciate seeing a book on:,, . , r-.,..ii -n .i ...i. i. bridge whose cover didr, I fea - iv.w.,. v. . and spades or a chessbook without a knight on the cover, for that matter. The paradox of financial success was brilliantly and tersely given a long time ago, by Ludovic Halevy. when he remarked, "In or der to make money, Ihe first thing is to have no need of it." This is psycho logically as true in high fi nance as it is in a poker game, where the desperate iy necessitous player always loses. There are some people so heavily armored against re- alitv that to them anv kind of unoleasant frankness, no matter what the provocation. is "had taste The only failure that has ; any real meaning is the fail ure lo live up lo the best that we know is within us: our achievements must nev- er be measured against Ihe external standards ol the so- ciety we live in. but only against our own potentiali- ties. Evidence that women a re churches, mission houses and studies with a large steel mill more critical of one another schools in countries around in Duesseldorf than men are lies in the fact the world where the Roman From there he was appoint that many women have a Catholic Divine Word mis- ed to the hPilippincs whom great deal of pity for other sionaries serve. he surveyed all mnior con women's husbands, hut few Father Frederick Unzrn-, struction jobs earned nn by men have any pity for other bm h, born in Essen. Germany, I the church. "The dtseoverici men s wives. had an impressive architec- I made were rather distress- Students who rebel tural background before be ing" Father Linzenbach said, ; against the hard regimen of was called to Rome from Ma- i referring to exorbitant cos: studying should keep in mind Margaret Fuller's sen sible observation: "Drudg ery is as necessary to call out the treasures of the mind, as harrowing and planting those of the earth." Oniy where the religion of a country is pleasure w ill you find nlcnty of martyrs The child -'ho replied "My memory is the thing I forget with." was express ing a deeper Freudian truth than most adults are willing lo accept. The ni's! severe purnsh- lllt ill ; calling i iff impossibility of b.uk the pas! and . changing it; and the irreversi- biltty ot time is so final th.it (capt'al punishment srems re- dunoant. as weli a unmoral. ing mi;d marriages and re quiring the South African population to carry idenity cards according to color. It also set up segregated areas specifying where mem bers of each group, white, i black, or mixed, might live i Even more stringent s-egre- gation acts were carried out by Malan's successor, Johan nes Strijdom, and have been pushed still further by Ver - Matter of Fact (el New York Herald THE ROOT OF THE DIFFICULTY Washington - "Blaming foreigners is one of the marks of world power that is losing Its self- confidence . ' This anony mous maxim badly needs to be remember ed in Wash ington at the moment,! where the' Alsnp tr o u b 1 e s in the Western Alliance are be i n g simultaneously under rated and crossly blamed on the wrong-headedness of our allies. Maybe our albes have been wrong-headed. But the bUme . . . , , . dangcred, and we could have forestalled this dangerous wrong-headednoss by our own efforts. Such is the maxim's i meaning. To see how it applies in the present case, you have only to look at the course of events in Germany. Until a very ! through the German Embassy short time ago, unquestioning i nere- n0 doubt with occasional reliance on the partnership ! hostile commentaries. Ambas with the United States wasador Dowling has been get the first maxim of German tins informational copies, policy. On this basis. Chancel- i wnicn Sive nim IiltIe chancn lor Adenauer had rebuilt Ger many from its post-war ruins. From this maxim, it used to seem impossible that Aden auer would ever depart. IN recent months, moreover, ihe value tn this eountrv of the German-American part-;not been cured, as widely ad nership was greatly enhanced ' vertised, by recent patch-up by a decision taken by the i Kennedy administration con- Gen. Charles de Gaulle by; this decision, to refuse him , chanical failure derived from the kind of nuclear coopera-j another kind of failure, of a tion that we gave the English. more general and more dam Standing alone. General de ; aging kind. This is the failure Gaulle has almost no power! in the basic organization of to frustrate American policy He is a giant figure, but in lonely isolation he cannot mold the future development of Europe according to his views. Alone, he cannot in sist upon the hardest and ug liest bargain in the European' American trade negotiations that will follow passaae of Ihe Kennedy trade bill. Alone, h rannnl " n hn,.i, Rriiain' , n(,cds (he ac(h,c partncrship ,, ,1 ,-.,,,,-,,,.4 r Fnandc iUa "'" "'. wi-i incus, in wuit i wuiuj, ii , sioerauon oi uic enccis nn the Germans could be count-: the German-American rcla ed on to consider President tionship or on the broader Kennedy's wishes ahead of European pattern. Thus the General de Gaulle's wishes, j decision to tell General da the present trouble in the i Gaulle to go to the devil was Western Alliance would be , also taken in isolation from limited to France alone. other decisions. Thus the do- Unhappily, however, whilelcision about Laos seems about enhancing the value of the German - American partner ship with one hand, the Wash ington policy-makers chose to in China. This is t lie root of assure the deterioration of the difficulty, and until it it this partnership with the overcome tile Kennedy ad other hand. This resulted ministration is bound to co on oom uic way ine Benin proo- leiu was manas;ca. Architecfr - Designs Buildings Rome - lTi - A 57. year-old : architect-priest who once de- si-,ied a juke box factory j th(, philipnin rils an un ; ,. ' ....,... u u u i B uun.au zenoaen moved back lo Cer ! which draws up plans for many for special cnuincerintf nila in August. I960 to direct and poor quality of work a new bureau set up to plan His survey, forwarded tn I construction of all building ' the Vatican, led to Father I projects financed by the So- Linzenbach's appointment an .cioty of the Divine Word. .executive secretary of a "De Today the "Building partment of Construction." Bureau." operating from head-1 whose work was welcomed hv quarters at Xcmt. near Rome, has proiects under way in Ireland. Portugal, Spain, Bra- ' zil. Paraguay. Japan and the ! Philippines. thcr Linzenbach left behind i Father Linzenbach. ordain- ' in the Philippines wa a uk( ed a prie.-t in Austria in 1931. box factory which lie wai developed an early interest in asked to design bv an Amen architecttue and. during his can businessman lir-t as-ignnicnt in prc-rom- Father Limrnhaeh said niuinst China, built six small churches His superiors were impress- ed. ann arranged that Father Linzenbach study architecture t at the Catholic University ef woerd. His police have mow ed down native dcnnstratori and he himself nearly wa.i killed by a shot fired by a dissident farmer of English descent in 1960. Demonstrations by women, of the Black Sash are unlike ly to change either Ver woerd's mind or policies hut they are manifestations of a growingly impossible posi- 1 tion. By Joseph Alsop Tribune Svndlcate THHE German interest in ths JL Berlin problem is obvious. The need for German as sumption of joint responsi bility for any solution of the Berlin problem is also ob vious. Equally obvious is thfl need to do business with tho government of Konrad Adan aucr on a personal basis, through a rcprcsentitive in Bonn who can command tho Chancellor's respect, who can remove his occaisional mis understandings, who can also thread his way through thn labyrinth of other personali ties and agencies in Bonn. The able U. S. Ambassador in Bonn, Walter Dowlina. 1,1 just such a representative. R.,1 ll.a mnnnnmnnf nt 1 1. a jcrucial Bcrljn ,cm ha. wholly centered Washington . . the vast, churning Berlin task force in the State Department, and in the related ambassadorial working groups. Chancellor Adenauer has . been kept informed impcrson- a"y. by messages transmitted to prepare, or to explain, or to persuade. Warnings o( trouble ahead from the Bonn Embassy have been scornful- j ly dismissed in Washington as mere symptoms of "localitis and now the trouble has come, and it has certainly 1 measures. the trouble was largely me- the State Department. Seen from abroad, the Ken nedy State Department does not as yet appear as a unified coherent, purposeful instru ment of American policy. It appears, rather, as a whole. congeries of groups, and sub- groups, and committees, and , personages, all relentlessly traveling in their own dircc- ! lions, on their own individual on ,ne Bcrlin probIcm 1 t, 1 . , 1. t : , , 1 ."". ""' to be taken with little con sideration for the effecls in Vietnam, or for tho situation j running into bad Iroublo overseas. Priesf America, in Washinelnn. DC, starting in May, 1!)44 After ' completing the course and 5ummcr work at N'"'re Dame, South Bend. Ind . Father t.in- many religious orders uhi lacked trained architectural personnel. One of the construction' Fa- favors the American school of architecture because it i fur.c tional - "because it first ask itself what function a build- ing mut serve, what will ha happcsPng inside of it." G O o