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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1962)
4 A X ve ryone-! ri u th rn Oregon Beads ThMtl Tribune fublii,hed Daily except Saturday by MEDKOHU PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St., PhJ772-6UJ ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HFRB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN. JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRV CH1PMAN, Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'! Editor PALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. AfTlndependent Newspaper Entered as second class matter at Medtord. Oregon, under Act of. March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance, Copy !0c Dally and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 6 moi. 8 00 ' Daily and Sunday 3 moi. 4.25 Sunday Only One year ti 20 By Carrier In Advance Medtord. Aihland. Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes Dally and Sunday 1 year $18 .00 Dallv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 fnrriei and Dealers Copy 10c All Terms Cash jnAdvance Offlrlsl Paper of City ol MrrJIoro . Olllclal Paper Jrf Jackson County Unitecf Press International Full Leased Wire U P I Telephoto Newsplcturea MEMBFR OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS AdvertiKing Representative: NELSON ROBERTS S, ASSOCI ATES. Olfices in New York, Chi cago Detroit. San Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland, Denver SPAMR PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL dggl Asc6T,2N s'Viiiipm'ifi h Flight o' Time Mcdlord and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June 15, 1952 (Sunday) Dog bites off tip of a 13-year-old boy's nose; boy taken to e hospital where the snipped off piece was sewed back on. A total of 103 entries listed in Rogue Valley Soap, Box derby to be held on the East Main st. hill. 20 YEARS AGO June 15, 1942 (oMnday) Scth M. Btillis Jr. receives recruit award while in train ing at San Diego marine corps base. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Many ot the Older Girls are in the orchards thinning the pears and themselves." 30 YEARS AGO June 15, 1932 (Wednesday) Capl. Carl Y. Tengwald re- oorts Medtord members of National Guard units are "settling Into the routine" of u m m e r training at Camp J Clatsop. Survey shows recent hail storm damage to orchards amounted to about 500 car. loads Instead of 3,500 car loads as first predicted. 40 YEARS AGO June '15, 1922 (Thursday) Magazine for West Coast motorists praises Medford as tourist center; city tourist bureau said "very coopera tive." Andrew Jeldness, veteran southern Oregon prospector, reports local miners have hopes of striking platinu'n in paying quantities. SO YEARS AGO June 15, 1912 (Friday) Medtord police searching for "bold robber" who "broke into the Pacific and Eastern railroad depot here In broad daylight" and took $'21. Cily fire department makes fourth run within a month; "run was made in the face of a hard rain but in excep tionally fast time." What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct Is superior; seven or eight it eiccllcnt; five oi six Is good. 1. In the Bible, who was Solomon's mother? 2. How did Mohandas K. Gandhi, Hindu spiritual lead er, meet his death? 3. If you travel on the sur face of the earth until your watch registers two hours fast, have you been traveling east or west? 4. In inS4 the U.S. Supreme Court barred what in the pub lic schools" 5. What is an intaglio? 6. Is the Continental Divide in ine area oi me KocKv RIoun r nioun-1 tains or the range? 7. In what field of art is I James Melton well known' i 8. How many ounces are in I 8 ,IoyP1mind? , . I hoco to override a Presidential , vein? 10. Arrange in order from west to east; British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Marti 'oba. Answers: 1. Bathiheba. J. Assassinated. 3. Weil. 4, Ra cial segregation. S. An Inset engraving. 6. Rocky Moun tains. 7. Music. 8. Twelve. 9. Two-thirds. 10. Thai Is correct uder. i Km. FRIDAY, JUNE IS, 1962 The Pan-Arab Dream Arab leaders, it is said, never take one another completely into confidence ; neither do they turn their backs on one another completely. S( it comes as no real surprise that Syria is proposing a realignment with the United Arab Republic (Egypt) in the form of a federal union. President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt ap peared at one time to look upon himself as a son of modern Saladin, the 12th century leader who united Arabs against the Crusaders. Clearly Pre mier Bashir Azmeh of Syria has no such vision, When Svrian President Nazem el-Kodsi was returned to office last wanting to join with Arab states "beginning with dear Egypt." But he showed no willingness to shift the rule of Syria from Damascus to Cairo. The dream of a Fertile Crescent stretching from the Mediterranean to the Persian uulf has a strong appeal for many Syrians. But there is also a strong nationalist pull in Syria. It was Egyptianization of the bynan government ana of the army that precipitated the military coup and the eventual withdrawal of Syria from the United Arab Republic "ARABS," wrote T. swuner on an idea complicated allegiance of obedient servants. If so the idea is not pan-Arabism, it would appear. Association with the West in the World Wars seems instead to have inculcated in Arab nolitical leaders and their followers a fierce na- tionalism. No successful formed since the individual states achieved inde pendence. After losintr Svria last three months pushed the Arab States. Nasser now Saud of Saudi Arabia a "reactionary and with other sheiks. ' Syria's proposal that Premier Abdel Karim Kassem lead Iraq into the federal union seems inconceivable at present. Nasser has long been bickering with Kassem. Moreover, he opposes Iraq's claim to Kuwait. IN GENERAL OUTLINE Arab rivalries are three-fold. There are the age-old strife be tween the valley of the Nile and the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates and the more recent haul-and-pull between have-not Egypt and oil rich Iraq, the country of two rivers. Of less im mediate relevance today but still to be reckoned with is the Hashemite aspirations to lead Araby. More recently Nasser's ambitions have re ceived a further check. Kintr Hassan II of Mo rocco has revived the his state. Tunisia, and an Algeria in the Great iHae basic noJicv of this federation would be to main- i -f a? in. n tain ciose ties witn Europe, especially nance. Perhaps the closest flnv fnrm nf linif.v is in'thfi Arab Leacnifi. which furnishes a vessel for their political thinking. A newer formation also shows promise; it is a child of the League. Five nations on June 6 agreed to create an Arab Economic Community, including a common ------ ..' market. Within 10 years this would foi m a bas tion against other economic groupings, especially the European Common Market. The initial members are the U. A. R., Syria, Jordan, Morocco, and Kuwait. So far as has been disclosed, however, there the Arabs to turn their kind of supranational promised for Western Europe L. K. K. Formosa and Black Markets Are American surplus distributed to needy families on Taiwan finding their way onto the black market in significant amounts? Elmore R. Torn, a member of the Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid, has been dispatched to the Nationalist Chinese stronchold to find out and will report back at a meeting of the group today in Washington. The committee coordinates activities of voluntary relief agencies with the U. S. government s foreign aid program The issue arose on May 10 when it was re- ported from Washington Service, overseas relief arm of the National Conn cil of Churches, planned to reduce food distribu tion to needy Formosan i, iinti iu tei uimaie sucn A BLACK market in relief supplies, made more flourishing by a ration-card system under which lists of recipients are initially furnished by the local government, was said to be the reason. But the director of the Food and Peace pro- ... ,. . sierra Nevada . K'am 111 iaiwan warned mat nimppr ana resont I ment would be widespread if f;imilv fnnd rolipf uithrlvm-ii Wel,W 'i V 1 he l hlU'Cll Ol id Service SHVS its UltcntlOllS were misinterpreted. Nevertheless, the nossibilitv Aversion of relief supplies into black market channels must be clarified. Contrrcss is sensitive of misuse of foreign aid, and the Chiang kai-shek government already has trouble maintaining a favorable public image abroad. Moreover, the neetl for more not less American aid to the peoples of Taiwan will be compelling if, as prom ised, the Nationalist government accepts more refugees from Red China via Hong Kong E. R. R. December he spoke of last September, E. Lawrence, "could be as on a cord : for the un their minds made them federation has been autumn, Nasser within Yemen out of the United is squabbling with King opposition to Egyptian scheme that would unite eventually independent - fireo of .North Africa. A 1 1 . n the Arabs have come to . - p: . is no disposition among common market into the political entity that is food and relief supplies that the Church World families, beginning July activities wunin a year. ...... , . these davs to anv reports "W May Have To Operate To Pull You Through" ... Communications ... Letters io the Editor muil bear the nam and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen nam or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view io 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 is often the case. Eternal Victory To the Editor: Lurid litera ture today offers the prob ability the Soviets have strange secret weapons ena bling them to read our thoughts and thus dominate the Mind of Man. Our scien tific military analysts will soon write their theses on the possibility of such mystic mechanisms; maybe suggest we make them first. This is all very silly. Man, not being an angel, is never immune. But evil may never translate the powers of hell into material form. Evil men have always been able to read the thought of subject souls. During universal con flict Masters - in - evil often prostitute and exploit the very nuance and origin of thought, thus, and then, per verting nature into casualties, catastropliies, crimes and ca- lamaties anywhere man and matter is vulnerable. Our God-fearing reportorl- al research in War Two ex posed the dread truth that strange thought-weapons are never needed. The Nazi, Fas cist and Shintoed may have had evil genius but none were more evil than our Masters at home who were "ahrined" in it. Some were commercial, industrial and lodge leaders, and they op erated in our state mental hospitals, prisons, govern- ment mental units and Vet erans Administration psychi atric hospitals. They did not act physically, but attacked in the spirit. But, alas, not in the Spirit of God. In their eternal defeat, and forced to vie with good, they often caused our military losses on land, sea and air. They have never been publicized by press or pulpit. There Is never another war. We wrought the eternal vic tory of war in ending War Two. We wrought it mentally and morally and spiritually before our physical arms tri umphed in Europe, Africa, Asia and the South Seas. Our erstwhile allies - Russia and China - will gricviously dis cover and to their sorrow for ever that theirs is only a ma terial share in that Allied tri umph. ' The Masters of evil, Includ ing our own, will not seek secret sanctuary in any con- diet tomorrow. There will be no thought weapons. The cul tural and . spiritual conflict preceding anv nuclear world destruction will find them free to ravish the thought of any one - peon or poet, publisher or priest, president or pope. Yet, have no fear, for God gave us eternal victory, won der of all war, out of all con flict, and this blessed burden is ours to keep for all forever. And we must be continually about it, for God will never visit us again until Jesus comes. William T. Cuddy VA Domiciliary White City, Ore. Foel Proof Plan To the Editor: In answer to C. W. Corey in June U MT, may I bark him up 100 per cent? It will be Chinese Red Communist spies masqumd- ing as "starving refugees" who will pour into the United Stales if we pass an emergen cy bill to let in a flood ot these people. The Red dictators of Communist China should be so crazy as to pass up a beau tlful chance like this to get their t r a i n ed agents Into America. When we opened our gates to the Hungarians back in the 1950 s the real Hungarian Freedom Fighters who got out of Hungary were as scarce as hens teeth. But we were flooded by multiplied thou sands of hard core, trained Red agents. And for goodness sake. Mr. Corey, don't feel bad about finaliy waking up about Sen- ator Wayne Morse and Sena tor Neuberger. They are among the 13 worst senators we've got. Thirteen senators scored a mark of 0 per cent in Constitutional voting in 1961. Morse and Neuberger were 2 of the 13. This means they voted 100 per cent of the time against our Constitu tion, which they so faithfully swore to uphold and protect when they took office. It is time that the people of Oregon got their eyes open about these two. I'm not a bit surprised that they are sponsoring a bill to bring Communist Chinese in to the United States. Every extreme leftist liberal in Washington, D.C. seems to be fairly panting with eagerness to do something to bail Mao Tse-tung and his Chinese "Kremlin" out of trouble. Let's feed these hungry peo ple, but let's do it right. Here is my foolproof plan: Give Generalising Chiang Kai-Shek the green light to invade the Mainland of China. Also give him our surplus food and let it be distributed under his watchful, Christian eyes to all the hungry Chinese who will join him and help him run the Reds out of China. This would insure getting the food Into the stomachs of the inno cent, enslaved Chinese people instead of into the stomachs of the Red Army. It would also insure a smashing victory for Nationalist China and anti- communism throughout the entire world. For if Red China collapses the whole Commu nist empire will start crum bling. Tony Galll 1720 SW Bridge st. Grants Pass, Ore. Change Is No Lark To the Editor: Who are these ituvs that golf, must play. wno want more daylight in each day? Can't they remember youthful days When they spent their' evenings other ways? To youth a time change is no lark When they have to be In bed by dark. Paul F. Wilson, 614 Berrjsdale, Medford. Contented To Compromise Io the Editor: Now that JFK has consented to make a compromise on the King-An- nerson Din, u s due time that the following facts should be bourne in mind: First: Any rewriting of the K-A bill will have no sound effect, unless the present so cial security rules are also re written. (Details can be fur nished upon request.) Second: The original writ ers of the K-A bill are not thoroughly acquainted with Justice. Third: The same writers are not to be condemned for writ ing an unbalanced old age medical assistance plan. Any plan is better than no plan at all. Besides, maybe no one else cares for that sort of thing. Fourth: Old age medical as sistance attached to SS origi nated from a Just and worthy cause. Fifth: The Kerr-Mills bill is as disgraceful to the American way of life as the K-A bill is to the medical profession. My advice to AMA would be to accept the K-A bill only if it is rewritten to the extent the medical profession should be included, along with hos pitals and others on a per centage basis; ad Social Se curity itself would be equal ized to the extent that it would not be a "government give away" to one faction and a robbery to another. Would also like to suggest MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON U.S. Aid Dollars Amount to Awesome Totals, Varying Results in SE Asia By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Saigon, South Viet Nam-In the rich, rice-growing delta country below Saigon a few days ago, a United States agri cultural expert completed his inspection of a U.S. aid proj ect and prepared to go on to the next one. The journey by air would take him six minutes from wheels up to landing. But it was the only way he could go, for the area between was under control of Commu nist Viet Cong guerillas. These are the conditions which led Arthur Z. Gardi ner, director of the United States operation mission to write, in his report for 1961: Future It Bright "With peace, Viet Nam's fu ture is bright, and the work her people have done for themselves can lead to a bet ter life for millions. No one can prophesy when the threats and pressures of the that the AMA write up these issues themselves, correcting each one and present directly to JFK. If the AMA or any member thereof does not know how to correct the present K-A and SS setups this writer will be very glad to help them, for the cost of one postage stamp. And you can be sure that the issues, when corrected, will be sound and self-sustaining pro grams and not government handouts. Warren E. Wood, P.O. Box 102, Shady Cove, Ore. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c Field Enterprises Inc. FIVE STUPID PEOPLE A professor of education at Columbia University's Teach ers College, in explaining some changes in teac h i n g proced u r e s, was quoted re cently as say ing: "If you take five stu pid people and put them on a team, all you have is a Hams team oi live stupid people." If this is what passes for thought at Colum bia's Teachers College, then it is little wonder that our teachers themselves are so ill taught. For exactly the re verse is true. The amazing and gratify ing thing about group action, on a team or elsewhere, is that five stupid people usual ly add up to a great deal more than five stupid people. We can see it all around us. There is a law known as "synergism" in che m i s t r y, which says that when you have a mixture of different agencies, the total effect is greater than the sum of the separate effects taken inde pendently. With synergism, two and two can add up to five, or even six or seven. The same happens to be true in personal and social relations. Five men who might be deemed stupid, if observed separately, can often combine to produce a brilliant result. One of the team may have perseverance. Anoth er may have courage. The third may possess immense vitality. And so on. Even though none of them, sin gly, is intelligent, their separate virtues may com bine to make a superb team for the purpose - whether it Is shooting for baskets, running a bank, or building a skyscraper. We might even go io far at to say that the whole history of human achieve ment is a remarkable ex ample of this kind of locial synergism. If we examine the individuals who were largely responsible tor the creation of churches, gov ernments, and powerful so cial instruments of all sorts, it remains a pussle that, with their limitations, they were able to accomplish to much of permanent value. . When Aristotle reminds us that man is, first of all. a so cial animal, he is doing more than merely underlining the obvious. He is trying to make us aware that the resulls of group activity, in any sphere, are always greatrr than the sum of Individual efforts. It is true that it often takes one great man to initiate some profound change or some vast project - but he does not Communists will cease, and until they do cease Viet Nam's social and economic development will be imperil ed." This correspondent has Just completed a tour which in cluded Thailand, Laos and South Viet Nam. Among the three, U. S. aid dollars mount to awesome totals with vary ing results. In Laos, where the United States took a $300 million gamble on establishment of a strong pro-Western govern ment, the protracted civil war left results at near zero. Until it was cut off to Laos in February, U. S. aid amounted to about $3 million per month. Resumption of the payments was announced to In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS From New York: The nation spent a total of $6.7 billion on highway con struction during 1961, but the cost of traffic accidents was even higher. The economic loss from mo tor vehicle accidents amount ed to $8.8 billion, according to a survey by C.I.T. Corpora tion, a major industrial and highway financing firm. The survey defined accident costs as loss of wages for those killed and injured, re duced earning power because of disabilities, medical and hospital expenses, property damage and insurance. THE TRAGEDY of it is that most of these highway ac cidents could have been avoid ed if more people had paid as much attention to their driving as they should have paid. Careless driving, on the part of somebody, is respon sible for the bulk of the na tion's staggering total of high way death and injury. THAT brings up the subject of head - on collisions - which are responsible for the GRIMMEST of our highway accidents. In head-on colli sions at high speed, somebody is practically certain to be killed. Far too often, EVERY BODY in both cars is killed. Head-on collisions occur when somebody crosses the center line at a time when the cen ter line shouldn't have been crossed. What to do about it? Highway authorities are giving increased attention to the idea of a BARRIER at the center line - perhaps a care fully designed fence that would prevent line-crossing except at designated points where the hazard would be least. That, of course, would make passing possible only at these designated points. It would be a nuisance, but it could save a lot of lives. FOLLOWING the tax reduc- tion talk that has been go ing the rounds in Washington recently, Sen. Vance Hartke, chairman of the Democratic senatorial campaign commit tee, came up the other day with a suggestion for a 2 per cent across-the-board cut in in come taxes - including, pre sumably, corporation income taxes. H" mmmmmmm. Senator Hartke's propos al, if embodied into law, would at least reduce the fed eral government to the posi tion of an EQUAL partner in corporate business in the U.S.A. The federal government is now a MAJORITY partner in corporate business. It gets 52 per cent of the net profit. Pri vate owners (the stockholders in American corporations) get only 48 per cent of the net profit. rTHE FEDERAL government - is really MORE than a 52 per cent owner in U.S. corpo rate business. It levies a 53 per cent tax on the corpora tion's net profit and then TAXES THE STOCKHOLD ER ON HIS DIVIDENDS. In addition, the federal gov ernment is now proposing to withhold from the stockhold er a portion of his dividends until such a time as the gov ernment can find out whether or not the stockholder is hold ing out on it and failing to report some of his dividend in come , have to be a particularly in telligent man. Five ordinary men. indeed, with interlock ing virtues, can accomplish more than five highly intelli gent men who cannot coop erate. There is no evidence that any of the twelve dis ciples were extraordinary in anything except Uieir devo tion to the cause. day by U. S. Ambassador Winthrop Brown in view of the new coalition govern ment. In South Viet Nam, U. S. aid will amount to about $175 million this year, with the ef fort frankly devoted less to social reforms in the Ngo Dienh Diem government than to winning the war against the Viet Cong. Areet of Efiori Nonetheless, U. S. interests continue in the development of a better breed of livestock, in the increase in production of rice, in the development of land and water resources, in vocational training, in irriga tion and better means of com munication. Altogether in South Viet Washington Report By William (c United Feature Syndicate GREAT IMMEDIATE DANGER Washington - In the war years there was a slogan which read: "Loose talk sinks ships." Loose talk can sink economies, too - and it can also sink the cause of truo c o nservatism in this coun try, for this year and per haps for a wbit good many years to come. The great immediate dan ger in the current debate over economic policy and business conditions is that we may be talked into a genuine reces sion by two sets of romanti cists who live in the nineteen sixties but still think in the nineteen-thirties. One set is made up of ultra conservatives among the busi ness and political communi ties who wish to renew an im possible and long-finished bat tle with the ghost of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The other set are academic-minded ultra liberals who are, consciously or not, really hostile to busi ness and who yearn to return to the dead years of the thir ties, complete with alphabeti cal agencies and excessive government controls. EITHER group, in fact, ' represents any great num ber of people. The ultra-conservatives no more speak for business and Republican con servatism generally than do such outfits as the John Birch society. The ultra-liberals no more speak for rational and moderate Democratic liberal ism than does, say, Americans for Democratic Action. As is the way of all ex tremist movements, however, they make a shocking lot of noise. Their capacity to mis chief is infinitely higher than their numbers would indicate. Together they can manage to bring on a self-induced reces sion by creating what is not yet really present: a true lack of public confidence in ' the American economy. Such a true lack of confi dence can be engineered from the ultra-conservative side by a continuation of wildly exag gerated claims that there is an economic "crisis," no mat ter how obvious it is that this is simply not so. pREE speech, as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said, does not extend to the right to cry "fire" in s crowded theater - particular ly when there is no fire, anyhow. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF RUDY VALLEE tells about a drunk who entered a saloon and announced, "I just cut off my finger," "Go on," jeered the bartender, "that's no finger you're holding up there. That's a half burned cigar." Obvious ly confused, the drunk threw away the cigar butt and reckoned, "I must have smoked my finger." A distinguished novelist was complaining at the Coffee House the other evening that his wife had been driving him batty for ten years and more. "Why don't you give her the air?" asked a sympathizer. "I ran t," mourned the novel ist. "She's the only typist I know who can read my damn hand writing." A new patient of Psychoanalyst Schnlckelfritz knew without being told the original source of his insecurity. "It all began when I was a Boy Scout," he told the good Dr. S., as he stretched out on the couch. ' The little old lady 1 was helping across the street got run over by a truck." Satchel Pace. ajRcU the secret of his ability to pitch big league caliber baseball at the age of fifty-five tat least) ex plains. "When I works, I works easy. When I Bits, I sits loose. And when I wornea I sleeps!" C 1962, bj Bennett Cert. Distributed bjr Kuuj rutures Salic4te Nam, the United States has poured about $2.5 billion, much, much more than the entire national income. Thailand, never a colonial country and generally peace ful despite Communist threats, has shown the best re sults. Exclusive of military help, U. S. economic aid to Thai land by the end of this year will have amounted to about $311 million. Thomas E. Naughton, aid director in Thailand, is en thusiastic about the efforts the people of Thailand have made for themselves. He pre dicts that in four to five years Thailand will be ready to go it alone economically. S. White And such a true lack of confidence can be fabricated by frantic demands from the ultra-liberals for some wholly unnecessary but destructive series of massive governmen tal interferences with the or dinary operations of business. This can be done even though there is no prospect for such a degree of government inter ference. It needs only to ba shouted long enough, however baselessly, that such interfer ence is on the way for enough people to accept the notion. Worse yet - and this is tha central point of this column - extremism from right and left can so inflame and en venom the politics of this country as to drive sensible conservatism right out of the ball game. No conservative should ever forget that if tha contest, in this fall's congres sional elections and beyond, is to be twisted into some emotion-dripping test of dema goguery between the alleged "haves" and the alleged "have . nots," the alleged "have-nots" will cast more votes every time. SO, WHAT should be done? It is no good talking about calming the ultra-liberals; no force has ever been able to do this. They must be left to their worn-out, uneasy dreams. What remains is for responsible conservatism-and explicitly for the vast major ity of responsible business men to take steps to make certain that the handful of ultra-conservatives in busi ness and politics is never al lowed to seem to speak for either "business" or "conserv atism." The way to do this Is for responsible business never to permit itself, whatever its sense of frustration here and there, to forget that what is at issue here is not the fact that the president is a Demo crat named Kennedy. The real issue is solely a thing called the economy of the United States of America, which is still the strongest and greatest economy in the world. Senate Passes TV Equipment Measure Washington - ICPD - The Sen ate Thursday passed a bill that would require manufacturers to equip all television sets to receive 82 channels. The bill, which would fores addition of the 70 ultra high, frequency channels to the reg ular 12 very high frequency ones, goes back to the House for action on minor Senate changes.