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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1962)
4 A JtoFORDWrBIBUNI "Evcrvmw In Southern Oreion Rearta TheSlail Tribune PublihVd Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO S3 North Fir SI.. Ph. 772-8141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY. Advertlilnd Maimer GERALD 1 LATHAM. But. Msr. ERIC W ALLEN. JR . Mn Edllor EARL H ADAMS. City Edllor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teles. Editor RICHARD JEWE1T. Spolla Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women a Editor DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mgr AnTndependent Newapaper Entered aa aecond claaa matter at Medtord. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mall In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year tl.VOn Dally and Sunday B moa. 8 00 Dally and Sunday 3 moa 4.23 Sunday Only One year $4 20 By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. I' Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv. er Talent and on motor route Pallv and Sunday 1 year $1800 Daily and Sunday 1 mo I SO Carrlei and Dealera Copy 10c All Terma Cash lnAdvance "official" Paper of City of'Medfnrd Olflrlal Paper of Jarkion county United Press International O P 1 Tejephoto Newaplcturea ' OfClRCULATIONS Advertising RepresVntallve: NELSON ROBERTS tt ASSOCI ATES. Olflcea In New York. Chi csro Detroit, San Franclaco. Lot Angeles Seattle. Portland. Denver Nf WIPAPiR PUBLUHUS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL (DIT0KIAI Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the Wei ot The Mail Trlbun. 10, 20, 30. 40 and 50 years too. 10 YEARS AGO June 11, 1952 (Wednesday) Frank A. Bcnesh, bii elec trical engineer with the Cal ifornia Oregon Power com pany lor the past six years, has been named Medforri dis trict manager for the firm. A total of 225 students, in grades 1 through 12, have en rolled in summer session here, a school official said. 20 YEARS AGO June 11, 1942 (Thursday) Dr. R. E. Green reelected to Medford city school board; total of 250 persons cast bal lots. From Arthur Terry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Wins ton Churchill premier of Brit ain, holds the Axis ,hould he 'beaten into a stale of com plete impolcncy.' This is not enough. They should be beat em until the Portland ball team can beat them." 30 YEARS AGO June- 11, 1932 (Saturday) ' Ten of 1.1 Oregon delegates to national Republican con vention go on record opposing repeal of prohibition amend ment. Issuance of new orange and black temporary automobile license started at county sher iff's office. 40 YEARS AGO Jun 11, 1322 (Sunday) Medford attorneys sign pe tition condemning Ku Klux Klon thrent against Circuit .Indse F M, Calkins; only two attorneys rehire to sign. Medford Attorney B. F. Lindas starts $25,000 damage suit against Klan for slating lie appl od for membership in the organization. SO YEARS-AGO Junt 11. 1912 (Monday) Medford city council re reives bids for moving Main st. bridge across Bear creek In Jackson St.; low hid is $4, Bfin. Mex H. Lampman, Gold Hill, announces sale of Gold Hill News to his brother, Ben Hur Lampman. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or tan correct la superior, lever, or eight i$ eacallent; live or til li good. 1. What is the oldest eily founded by Europeans In the New World? 2. The names of four of the thirteen original Ameri can colonies begin with the letler N: what are they? :i. Is Hie edible part of a hen s egg composed of one half, two-thirds, or three-quarters water? 4. Are there 24. 2R. 32, or 3fi gills in one gallon? 5 Who wrote the music of "Old Folks at Home"? H What is barnyard golf? ". Name the lust British Liner sunk by German U Boats at Hie start of World War II. 8 Who was the President nf the U S between the two terms served hv Grover Cleve land'1 11 Slate in degrees the sum of the angles nf a triangle. 10, What angel announced In Mary (hat she was In be tile Mother of Jesus'' Answers: 1, San Domingo, 2. New Hampshire. New York, New Jeraey. North Carolina. 3. Three-fourths. 4. Thirty-two. 5. Stephen Fotler. t. Horie ihoet. 7. "Athenia." . Ben lamin Harrison. I. 1(0 de grees. 10. Angel Gabriel. f5 MONDAY, JUNE 11. 1962 McCarthy Reincarnate If we believed in reincarnation, we'd be will ing to bet that the late Sen. Joe McCarthy is back with us again. And he's up to his same old tricks, under the name of Dan Smoot. We became nearly convinced of that unlikely phenonemon after watching Dapper Dan deliver a half-hour televised speech filled with slander, innuendo and insult before a Los Angeles "free dom club" Wednesday night. Appropriately, the program was sponsored by a dog and cat food company. ' IN THAT brief 30-minute period, the ex-FBI agent turned in a performance that assum ing he is only himself would have turned Mc Carthy absolutely green (never red) with envy. He dropped names customed ease of a Broadway gossip columnist.. But the only two people he had anything good to say for were Senator McCarthy and himself. By the time he was through, he had removed with dramatic 'force whatever unimaginable doubts anyone might have had about where he stood. No one, but no one, is farther to the right on the political spectrum than is Dan Smoot. LIENCE, everyone else, including former Presi dent Eisenhower and his vice president, Rich ard Nixon, are leftists, positions they dangerously occupy, he smoothly implied, either through de sign or ignorance. He wasn't sure which. The names of the people he castigated and ridiculed read like Who's Who of American I statesmanship, for the 1 1 111 1 111 111 Daicny estaousnen me point, mat, muse men weie, bv and larrre. entraged in a giant cooperative conspiracy to turn this country over to the Com munists at the earliest opportunity, or, at the very least, to see the nation crumble and fall apart throurrh clever and maliirn mismanagement. Some random examples may sufficiently il lustrate the point and illuminate his technique. DRESIDENT Roosevelt, Smoot declared in the manner of one who has revealed truth at his fingertips, had full knowledge that the Japanese were going to attack Pearl Harbor, but with a careful exercise of authority and power, saw to it that nothing was done to prevent the assault. Indeed, Smoot said, Roosevelt wanted and all but invited the attack because he needed a good excuse to get this country into the war. Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) he contemptu ously and scornfully set the liberals, and an out Socialist." He betrayed tude, by now typical of those on the lar right, when he said a state university education, such as Senator McCarthy had, wasn't good enough for Fulbright, who, as a go to Oxford, England, Chief Justice Earl preme Court was, as was roundly insulted., smoot intr smirk that when one the Supreme Court these days, the case went clown, not up. The audience, delighted with this sally of rare wit, laughed BUT Smoot is no run - of V.nt3 o minrrram rf Vila - would restore the U.S. to He would immediately the first step toward reducing the national debt, which the far righters think is a matter of con cern only to them, lie consequences of such r one presumes he considers that to be a problem of the rest of the world. Predictably, he would States withdraw from the such an event would instantly cause the collapse of that vital world forum is precisely, one is lead to speculate, what Smoot has in mind. Those who were not fortunate enough to have seen the telecast can well imagine the audience reaction when Smoot enunciated his third point for national recovery repeal the income tax amendment. They cheered him as though he were a Messiah come to lead them unto righteousness. AS PAINFUL as it was to watch, we would "have regretted it if we had missed the pro gram. The audience response clearly indicated that Smoot was speaking for them, was telling them exactly what they wanted hear, was, in short, enunciating in clear terms the position of those on the far right. It is, we sincerely trust, an obvious platform of total and irresponsible anarchy, so patently absurd that it could have apnoal only to that minute segment of our population which, for bettor or worse, has always been with us. In the main they are the same group who were jsticli vocal American rirsters a few decades ago, 'who naively supposed that the best thing this I country could do would be to withdraw from the community of nations and the rest of mankind. THEV arc the same ones who rallied so fana tically around the soiled banner of Senator McCarthy during the middle 50's. For a while follow inp McCarthy's death, they lacked leader ship, hut they were still around.' Now, with the advent of the John Birch So ciety, and the rise of the TV personality Dan Smoot, they are once apiin enjoying the public prominence and national spotlight they have so earnestly souuht all alonj;. Whether this neo-Know Xothinpism is or will become a significant factor in our national poli tics remains to be seen. It poses a responsibility on the pood sense of Americans to pic) a course between thp madness of the extreme left and the lunacy of the extreme right. G.H.B. right and left with the ac last 20 or 30 years. He i. A 1 i, 1 1 u down as "the darling of - and - out international his anti-intellectual atti Rhodes scholar, had to to get his. Warren of the U. S. Su only natural to expect, suggested with a know- annealed a matter, to jyad applauded. I - the - mill nay-sayer. He m trVilVl Viil e 1 1 (TfTOct Q 19th century glory. stop all foreign aid as neglected to explore the precipitious action, but also have the United United Nations. That "Silly KieU! Som Of What They re Dernorutrating About 1 . ' COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must bear the ntme and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted tor publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary it often the case. Keep 'Em Out To the Editor: I have al ways worshiped Senator Morse as one of the greatest statesmen of our times, but I cannot comprehend he and Senator Neuberger sponsoring a bill to bring Communist Chinese to the U. S. When millions of our own people are out of work, do they not realize that every thousand let in now will mul tiply ten fold in less than ten years? It does seem the Voters will weigh this carefully next elec tion. Do not call them refugees as the bamboo curtain is too tight to let anyone through except what Red China wants to let through, namely spies. If the Chinks are starving, O.K., send them our surplus food but keep them out of our country. I may be all wrong. Let's hear from some of the read ers. C. W. Corey Phoenix, Ore. Counting Sheep To the Editor: Last night I started counting sheep when I had gone to bed, , For 1 had worries large and small which drove sleep from my head. The sheep had . many little Iambi and these I counted too, Thus through the flock I went until the Shepherd cams in view. And then I thought, "Why spend the time in simply counting sheep When I can walk with Him and pray for folk who can not sleep?" '. walked with Him awhile and then he smiled and said to me: 'Look back, where are your worries now?" but not one could I see! Mildred Jeffery 21 Mayette st. Medford. An Extra Pint To the Editor; Do you have an extra pint? Of blood, that is! I hear the bloodmobile will be in Medford and the sur rounding communities this next week. If you have time Try and By BENNETT CERF- IOR A QUARTER century or more, the late George S. Kaufman was known as "Mr. Theatre" by show folks the man everybody sought to patch up shows that were in obvious trouble during their pie-Broadway trial runs in New Haven or Boston. Kaufman was sitting disconsolately in the rear row at a disastrous try out of his own one even ing a limpid musical railed "Park Avenue." Producer Nunnally John son was keeping him company. "What are you going to do about this'.'" asked Johnson sympa thetically. "There's only one thing we can do," re plied Kaufman bitterly. ' Kaufman!" We'll .hw Bishop. p,'t forming at a Is VfKs rlwr. w is ann.nft bv a patron who instated on Rrttins m on his a, t. 'AVouM yv.i niin,1 not singing aleng with m?" ehutpit Hiahnp. "Po I look like I have a brant" Whrn lite pation ImiI Ir-fl in n huff pie amniihly to er-k out a nioie a, onimod.it inc Mit, j Miller Hi.hop confute! to lu audienee, "1 bet that tujuKie livoa an f;ir away from town that ttie mailm-in h.n to ni.nl him lus mail." Ixtrri Max or Bii.v, of IVhtin. I" revixinc '"K xxhi.h xxa told hfi-e fiftv yean ato by Kin.ey Tfler Punnc I? imcn the Ititiemitn who told his neighbor. "My daughter's fian.- hxn t murh money, but at least he s sn Irishman." ' O'i. i.-x!v." nodd"t the neighbor absent-mindedly. "No," correvtol tne Hibernian. O'Reilly." O IH). by Seaattt Cert Duuibuted by Kini features indicate Them Don't Even Know you could donate some blood in the name of Winnie A. Brown or Lester McFall, in their memory, or else in my name as I had to use some one'e blood too. I guess I lost more than I should have. My progress is unbelievable but God has had his hands on me. If you (jo have time, would appreciate a blood donation in any nf our three names as we all used blood. Thank you and God bless you all. Laura A. McFall Room 206 Sacred Heart Hospital Medford. Legislative Heads Hold Conference Albany. N.Y. -IUPIU More than 230 legislative dele gates, representing 85 states, will meet in Seattle, Wash., this week for the fourth an nual session of the National Conference of Slate Legisla tive Leaders, It was announc ed here Saturday. New York State Senate Ma jority Leader Walter J. Ma honey, of Buffalo, is chair man of the Conference Execu tive Committee. His offices in Albany said seven major lop Icr will highlight the four-day meeting' which gets under way Thursday. Will Report Legislative problems and procedures will be discussed at morning and afternoon sessions on Friday. Actress Jane Russell, president and founder of VVA' ', an interna tional organization for home less children, will report on proposed uniform state adop tion laws on Saturday. Educational financing, a key problem confronting le gislators in virtually all states, will also be discussed at the Saturday session. Delegates are to report on civil defense and uniform mo tor vehicle laws studies. AMBASSADOR DIES Madrid - tUPB - The ambas sador of the Dominican Re public In Spain, Dr. Gustavo Adolfo Mejia Ricart, 79, died Sunday of pulmonary edema. Stop Me have to send for George S. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON Foreign News: De Gaulle-Adenauer Meet Has Significance for By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Notes from the foreign news cables: Da Gaulle-Adenauer Watch the meeting between French President Charles de Gaulle and West German 2 nance Uor Konrad Aden auer, which may have an i m p o r t a nt bearing on fu ture F r e n ch lwiy- 1 policy toward I V-fl I the United LA laaaai States. De uaulle Is Nawaoaa seeking to win over Adenauer to the idea of Europe as a third force, a move that could wreck the present Western alliance. Adenauer is not likely, des pite his present irritation with American policies, to risk los- in the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS From Moscow: Soviet leaders ended their economic strategy conference abruptly after only two days of talks on their "nagging agricultural problems" at home and the challenge of the West European Common Mar ket abroad. The brevity of the meeting indicated that the Red satel lite leaders were summoned to Moscow only to ratify what ever plans the Kremlin had already formulated. WHAT cooks? Well, the Moscow dis patch adds that the plans the Kremlin has formulated are believed to include "measures to integrate more closely the economies of the Soviet Un ion and its European satellites and to create a Red counter part to the flourishing West European Economic Union." Which is to say: If you can't lick 'em, JOIN 'EM. lfORE from Moscow: ill "Presumably the Red leaders adopted measures de signed to SPUR AGRICUL TURAL EXPANSION, since food production is lagging in most of the East European countries (communist satel lites) and in the Soviet Union itself." WHAT to do about it? Here's some advice to Old Kroosh: If you're troubled about your agricultural situation, and what's wrong with It, you'd better read a little his tory AMERICAN history. You will fund it rather il luminating. Start with the Jamestown colonists in America. They first tried out the system you are using now the system of putting everything in one pot and doling it out equally. It didn't work. The Jamestown colonists were starving. So they changed their system. They gave everybody his own little piece of land and let him KEEP FOR HIMSELF what he produced. That saved the day. Under the new system, ihere was soon food enough for every body. The Piymoulh colony had more or .less the same experience. SOME more advice: Give your peasants their own land. Let 'em KEEP WHAT THEY PRODUCE. Then take another step. Let your peasants sell to your city dwellers their surplus pro duction, at prices determined by supply and demand. Under that system which is the time-tested Western system -- your FARMERS (whom you call peasants) will soon have your now starving country abundantly supplied with food. TMIE advice is free, sir. Take it or leave it. But - From where we sit over here, your communist system is beginning to look like a flop. You'd better DO SOME THING ABOUT IT. I Oregon Professor .Gels Ersted Award I Eugene - The University of Orrcon has given its highest award for teaching excellence to Dr. David A. Baerncopf. as sistant professor of business statistics in the school of bus iness administration. ! The $1,000 Ersted Award for Teaching Excellence was announced Sunday at the uni i versny's 85th commencement exercises Hie axxard derives from a trust fund established by A. I J. Ersted of Atherton. Calif., , "to encourace and rew ard di : tinsuishrd and inspired trach ! ing" by members of the uni j xersity faculty. The truiM is ! administered by the unixer- sitvs development fund Ers i ted has established similar awards at other universities I in California and Washington. ing American friendship. Sec retary nf State Dean Rusk who will be in Paris and Bonn later this month, prob ably will get the first indica tion of how things have gone between the two. Washington Report By William (ci United Featura Syndics ta SPLINTER POLITICS I Washington A vengeful and essentially Balkan or French type of splinter-group r-SWth politics is of- ferine . pros pective perils to the respon sible electoral system In sig nificant areas of this coun try. The emer gence in No vember's elec tions of a pol comoromise and no forgiveness, of rule or ruin by a bitter minority, is now a clear possibility in Califor nia, in Texas, and in Utah. Extremism on the ReDubli- can far right already menaces Richard Nixon's candidacy for Governor of California and may well menace Wallace Bennett's candidacy in Utah for reelection to the United States Senate. Extremism on the Democratic far left threat ens the candidacy of John E. Connally for governor of Tex as. But much more than the fortunes of these three men are involved. Involved, too, is an assault, intentional or not, on the very institution of the two-party system and on the whole concept of ma jority rule. a IfOR the Minority Extrem- ists in California and Tex as are suggesting, in effect, that though they lost in open contest in their own parties' primaries they may reject the majority verdicts of their own parties and apply Intellectual blackmail to the party associ ates who beat them fair and square. Joseph Shell, defeated about 2 to 1 by Nixon in the Calif ornia Republican primary, is withholding the loser's tradi tional endorsement to the moderately conservative Nix on. In substance he is demand ing that Nixon now accept some of those very right-wing views of Shell which Shell's own fellow partisans in the GOP have just signally repu diated. The primary candidate of the ultra-liberal Democrata in Texas had been Don Yarbor ough, but Yarborough was defeated by Connally as a moderately liberal Democrat by Texas standards. I- r'3. Whit itics of no Internship Program for Teachers Is Scheduled Corvallis - Elementary and secondary teacher internship programs will be started at Oregon Slate university this summer in cooperation with the Coos Bay and Corvallis school districts and the state department of education. Twenty-four openings will be available in the Coos Bay elementary teacher internship program and four in the Cor vallis secondary program, ac cording to Dr. Franklin R. Zeran, dean of education and director of summer school. The program holds great promise for college graduates who did not work for teacher certificates but who would now like to qualify to teach, Dean Zeran said.. Attend Summer School Under the internship pro gram, teachers will attend summer school this summer and next at OSU and during the '962-63 school year will be elementary intern teach ers in Coos Bay and intern teachers in American Prob lems at Corvallis high school. As intern teachers they will leach half a day, take college courses in the two cities the other half day, and will re reive one-half of a beginning teacher's salary. . The internship program was made possible by the Ford Foundation grant of $3,500. 000 to the stale department of education for improvement of elementary and secondary I education In Oregon. Coos Bay and Corvallis were se lected as two of the school districts to be included in the study for improvement of teacher training and improve ment in instruction. Teachers Fully Qualified "The Internsiiip is to be re garded as one aspect of .1 teacher trainee's professional education in which the train ee xxorks in the field for a pe riod of time in order to de- X'elop his capacity to carry on professional responsihil- ! ities," Dean Zeran explain ed I At the end of the Intern I period -tht fall of 1963 -the Western Alliance Sources in Seoul say former Lt. Gen. Chang Do Young, former Korean army chief of staff, may be sent to the Uni ted States for study. Chang formerly headed the military junta that ran the country. S. White Now the ultra-liberals are privately threatening Connal ly with desertions in Novem ber to the deeply conserva tive Republican candidate, Jack Cox. CENATOR Bennett's situa- tion in Utah is less clear cut: but the principle is no different. He may have to do battle not only with his prob able Democratic opponent, representative David King, but also with a kind of hail- in, half-out challenge from the excessively right-wing former Republican Governor of Utah, J. Bracken Lee. If Lee dares an open test with Bennett, in the fair tra ditions of the two-party pri mary system, he very likely will be no problem. If, how ever, he manages to avoid the open way and run as some sort of "independent," it is obvious he can split off some of the traditional Republican vote from Bennett and so help King as Shell's people could help the Democratic Governor Edmund Brown in California. " (One would have thought Senator Bennett to be conser vative enough for most every body. But to J. Bracken Lee, according to what is heard among the Bennett people, the senator is practically "a soci alist.") Thus in three states the ex tremists of right or left are, presently or prospectively, in the position of saying to their parties: "Since you would not take us, though our attitudes are demonstrably t.ie alti titudes of only a l.:ud and an gry minority, we will do our best to see to it that you are destroyed. The game will be played our way, under new rules which only we have written, or the game will be thrown away to the opposi tion." There is no law forbidding such irresponsibility. But this kind of thing, carried to its ultimate logic, would eventu ally mean handing over this country to the mercies of a disorderly form of multiparty coalition politics in which no responsible majority could rule except with the consent of one or another two-bit splinter faction able to hold a pistol to the majority's head at the right time. teachers will be fully quali fied and ready for full-lime teaching jobs, Dean Zeran said. The intern experience is expected to provide espe cially valuable preparation for teaching, he added. "Inherent in the entire plan of internship is the concept that the local school system, OSU, and the stale depart ment of education are all vi tally interested and concern ed with the preparation of elementary and high school teachers." Zeran said. The internship program will be continued In future years. Migratory Labor Official To Speak I Salem John Walsh, cxecu-tix-e director of the President's Committee on Migratory La bor xvill address the Oregon ! Interagency Migratory Labor I committee meeting in Room 202. Labor and Industries I building. Salem, Tuesday at ! 9:30 a.m. j Chairman of the Oregon committee. James F. Short, in j making the announcement, ! said that Walsh will talk on j national policies and pro I grams affected migratory la bor. Short urged all interest ed parlies to attend the meet ing and hear Walsh speak. Moslovoy Promoled By Forest Service Yreka C A Yates, forest supervisor. Klamath National forent, has announced the pro motion of Henry S Mostoxoy to the position of assistant fire control officer. Happy Camp district. Moslovoy has transferred from the Callahan district to accept his new posi tion at Happy Camn Mostoxoy has served in various fire control positions on the Shasta-Tnnitv Nation al forest and on the Yreka and Callahan districts of the Kla math National forest But he was toppled by the real powers and accused nt plotting the ouster of some of the present junta leaders, ,1a was tried, condemned to death, and then freed by strongman Gen. Park Chung Hee. Kennedy-De Gaulle Reports of an early meet ing between Presidents Ken nedy and De Gaulle can bs discounted. Nothing of t h sort is cooking. It is not yet even sure that De Gaulle will meet with Rusk. Pakistan Withdrawal Diplomatic sources in To kyo say Pakistan is seriously considering withdrawal from the Southeast Asia Treaty Or ganization and pursuing a "re luctant neutralist ' policy. The Pakistan government is miff ed because its fellow SEATO members have not supported its stand in the dispute with India over Kashmir. Algerian Flight French officials are alarm ed by the massive flight ot refugees from Algeria, now running at a rate of 130,000 monthly. Originally, the gov ernment had planned for a total of about 400.000 spread over at least a year. It looks now that it will run much higher. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c. Field Enterprises Inc. ANTICS WITH SEMANTICSi I am nonchalant; you am devil-may-care; he is wildly irresponsible. My remark was wiltyi your remark was pointed) his remark was cruel. I am flexible; you are pli able: he is a piece of putty. When a person defends an uncalled-for act on his part by saying, "Well, at least I didn't hurt anybody, by it," we may be sur that he hurt himself by it. I drink to relax tensions; you drink to escape; he drinks to get drunk. For most of us. what we call "ethics" is a sort of spiritual dress-suit that we take out for formal occa sions - banquets, conven tions, and the like - and then hang back in the closet for our workaday lives. When a man says, "Lei's look at the facts," it is rea sonable to assume that hfl has arranged the evidence so that only those things ha wants to believe are desig nated as "facts." My daughter's engage ment was broken "by mu tual consent"; yours was jilted) his was betrayed. I am interested in the arts; you are a dilettante; he is a cultural snob. My industry follows til lead of its dominant pro ducer; your industry ad ministers prices; his indus- : try is guilty of "price-fixing." I take a sober viexv of af fairs; you are a touch melan choly: he is depressed. My young child is "going through a normal stage") your child is a "bit upset") his child is "emotionally disturbed." Whether we are "defying" the legally constituted author ities," or "striking a bloxv for freedom," depends wholly upon our subjective defini tions - we are for "order" xvhen it protects our self-interest, and for "liberty" when our self-interest is seriously threatened. The people who are call ed "frivolous" in society are really the most serious of alii for nobody else ia grimmer and more concen trated in the pursuit of amusements than "frivo lous" people. I firmly believe that "God helps those xxho help them selves" - until 1 am no longef able to help myself. I am down-to-earth; you are somewhat pedestrian) he is utterly devoid of imagination. Those who conduct their lives by the maxim that "you only live once." are often found, in late middle - age, yearning hopelessly for a sec ond chance. Science Consultant To Attend Workshop Salem - George Katagirl, science consultant in the Ore gon state department of cdu" cation, will go to Boston, Mass.. Jun 25 to participate1 in an eight-xveek workshop devoted to redirecting sciencn instruction at the elementary level. According to Dr. Leon 1". Minear. tate superintendent of public instruction, th" I workshop is the first major effort on the national level to reconstruct the science pro I grams in the elementary I grades.