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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1962)
4 A lftDF0Utf&2kTUBUlB SUNDAY. JUNE 24. 1962 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON "Everyone In Southern Oregon Readi The Mail Tribune" Publithed Dally except Saturday by 33 Nonh X",t!J,lliJ"-8-1l BhRFRT w RUHL. Editor HERB GREY. Advertl.lnf Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bus. Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN. JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor ....,, ntllDU A M T.1.H ITHttAP Difu.nn truiFTT Snarti Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Women'a Editor DALE ERICKSONlrculaUonlgr; a i...nnri.nt NewaDaner Entered aa aecond clasa matter at Meatnra. ureitun. unuc. .. March 3. 18H7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year 115 00 Dally and Sunday 6 moa. 8.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moa. 4.25 Sunday Only One year 14.90 Bv Carrier In Advance Medford, Ashland. Central Point. E a fie Point. Jacksonville. Cold II 111. Phoenix. Shady Cove. Rngue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes Dally and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrlei and Dealera Copy 10c All Terms Cah lnAdvance i "Oitlcial Paper of City of Medford Olllclal Paper jMackson County ' United Press international Full Leased Wire DPI Tejephoto Jevplcturea "MEMBER OE AUDIT BUREAU Of C1KUULA I ivjr-ia . .i-i-.. Danr.ntntive NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES, Offlcci in New York. Chi cago Detroit. San Francisco, Los Ansetci Seattle, PorUand. Denver NEWS FA FIR PUBtlSHiHJ ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL Anti-Communism Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files ot The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June 24, 1952 (Tuesday) Rains do considerable dam age to cherries not already picked; the damage, mostly splitting of ripe cherries, caused a large percentage of the cherries remaining on the trees. State police continue dog ged patrol of a wild, SO-square-mile area in northern Jackson county for George Baker Dunkin, wanted on a warrant charging him with the murder of a state police officer. Dr. Fred C. Schwarz will hold a mass anti Communism rally in New York's Madison Square Garden on Thursday. Like an earlier rally in an other arena, this is in preparation for a Greater New York School of Anti-Communism to be held in August. Dr. Sshwarz might be called the enigma of the new anti-Communist movement in the United States. He has said, "I'm a Christian and an anti Communist and nothing else. I'm not a conserva tive or a right-winger or a left winger. I have no wings." He also has said: "I am a narrow-minded, Bible-believing Baptist. I am not ashamed of it . . . And on that basis we have built our crusade. TTHE crusade is to develop a nation-wide anti- Communist movement with headquarters in Los Angeles the Christian Anti-Communist Crusade, not to be confused with the Rev. Billy James Hargis' Christian Crusade, which works out of Tulsa, Okla. Schwarz himself is a former surgeon and psychiatrist, also a former lay minister of the Bap tist Church in Australia. He has been in this coun try several years. On Feb. 10, while conducting an Anti-Communist School in Honolulu, he said that the Cru sade had raised $1 million. As an example of the way the money was used, he said $48,000 was spent last autumn for a rotary press in Kerala, India, to publish a daily newspaper to fight the strong Communist movement there. a OCHWARZ by his own account is the son of an Austrian Jew who was converted to Christian ity in his youth and an English Methodist mother. The parents were married in Australia, where Schwarz was born. He writes : "I was raised in a Christian home. When I was 17 years old, I made a personal com mitment to Christian doctrine and the Christian manner of life. My first conflicts with Commu nism were not primarily economic or political but were concerned with the being of God and the nature and destiny of man." The Crusade was founded, with schwarz as executive director he is now president in 1953. He gave up his professional practice two years later. "What". It Thi Time Land, Sea Or Air?" THE first real bath of publicity for Schwarz was the result of a rally Hollywood's Answer to Communism in the Hollywood Bowl last Oc tober. He had been conducting rallies and anti-Communist schools in Los Angeles and elsewhere, but this one was remarkable in that it was sponsored over local television and a TV network of 35 smudae Poi" column: "Old stations in six western states bv lechmeolov Sol beamed again yesterday, q ghj k Safety RaZOl" Co., and RlChf leld For the first time this year .. ' ' , Sneakers included Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D- Conn.), Kep. waiter ti. jucia (K-ivunn.;, ana C. D. Jackson, publisher of "Life." "Broadcasting" magazine subsequently was moved to comment: Communism has suddenly emerged as the hottest new program subject in television." MOW Schwarz is preparing for his first Anti- ' Communist School in New York City, slated for August. It has impressive sponsors, among them Adm. Arleicrh Burke, Charles Edison, former governor of New Jersey, and Gene Tunney. But the Presby tery of New York decried right-wing extremism in a statement, April z, admittedly aimed to "head off" the Schwarz crusade. Even more damaging could be the whole hearted endorsement given Schwarz, Jan. 12, by Robert H. W. Welch Jr., president of the John i Birch Society, in an appearance at San t rancisco. "Many of our people," Welch said, "help to set up Dr. Schwarz s schools along with others and frankly we do our best to take the people who have been stirred up and awakened and alarmed by him to get them together into the John Birch Society as action groups to do something about ,1 ,i T- T" it an. Ei.ii.it. 20 YEARS AGO June 24, 1942 (Wednesday) From Arthur Perry's "Ye nedestrians noted the shade KjO. was always on tne omer sioe of the street and not mucn of it." 30 YEARS AGO June 24, 1932 (Friday) Captain Dobbsie and his Happytimers, well-known ra dio program, to broadcast from Medford theater. Ashland city council votes to cut salaries of all employ ees by 15 per cent; saving to city expected to total about $5,000. 40 YEARS AGO June 24, 1922 (Saturday) Petition for candidacy of Benjamin F. Lindas for mayor to succeed C. E. Gates filed wilh City Recorder Alford. Entrants In West Side Ten nis club handicap tournament include Carter Boggs, Fletch er Stout, Horace Bromley and Rawlcs Moore. -re c sgi a- i- T.it,,ni (jr Today & Tomorrow By Walter Lippmann (c New York Herald Tribune Syndicate EUROPE AND NUCLEAR ARMS Secreary McNamara's speech at the University of Michigan stated the American case against a 24 French nucle ar strl king force if it was "operated in dependently." It was, I un der stand, an expurgated, deel a ssified, version of the Lippmann speech that Mr. McNamara delivered at the NATO meeting in Athens at the beginning of May. The Athens speech, which contained the specific facts nd figures of the nuclear situation of the Soviet Union and the West, made profound Impression on tlie NATO Foreign and De fense Ministers who heard it. It is said to have convinced all the European members of NATO except the French. a THE crux of the American case a e a i n s t r.pn rip 50 YEARS AGO June 24, 1912 (Monday) ! Small Medford girl "almost loses her life" by drinking several samples of patent medicine left at her home by salesman. Two local women escape ininrv when man driving EMF car accidentally knocks the wheels oft their carriage. What's Your I.Q.7 Nine or ten correct is superior) seven oi eight is excellent; five oi sia is good. 1. Would you say a pound of honey represents the life work of 100, 1,000, 10,000 or 100.000 bees? 2. Which is greater: the air line distance from Honolulu to Tokyo, or that from New York to Paris? 3. Pizarro was the Spanish conqueror of which South American counntry? 4. How many pieces of sil ver did Judas receive for be traying Jesus? 5. Was Benjamin Franklin ever a Vice President of the United States? 6. Where were the first oranges grown in America? 7. Of which state Is Little Rock the capital? 8. Complete the title of this book: "A Bell for " 9. Which Is the second largest planet of the solar sys tem? 10. The parallel of latitude that passes through San Fran cisco. California passes through which Atlantic Slate? Answers: 1. 1.000. 2. Hon olulu to Tokyo. 3. Peru. 4. Thirty. 5. No. 6. Si. Aug ustine. Fla. 7. Arkansas. 8. Adano. 9. Saturn. 10. Virginia. Expensive June Brides Gaulle's plan is in the words operated independently." Thus, we do not object to the British nuclear force because, as a matter of fact, it is not and cannot be operated inde pendently. The British force is "integrated" with the United States forces, and it could not b e operated independently either against the Soviet Un ion or in some periphereal conflict in Africa or Asia. What Britain gets in return is not only access to American nuclear know-how but an in tegral commitment on our part that the defense of Brit ain and the defense of the United States are inseparable. Nothing has as yet been said by Gen. de Gaulle that he would be willing to integrate the French nuclear force with in the NATO alliance. He con tinues to talk as if he intended to operate independently as against the Soviet Union or even elsewhere in the world where he felt that French vital interests were at stake. Such independence of opera tion Is inconsistent with the basic facts of the Western Alliance. For since the United Stales, which is spending $15 billion a year on nuclear weapons, alone has the capacity to de ter and prevent nuclear war, we cannot concede to France the right to initiate or to threaten to initiate a nuclear war. For we alone would have to finish such a war. That kind of Independent operation is what Secretary McNamara described as "dan gerous." and we have told the French government very nni plainly that the independent use ol tneir niici force would not be backed up by our nuclear J ; force. made outside of the Alliance and without our consent. IT IS true, of course, that the dependence of Western Europe upon the American nuclear power cannot be per manent, and that our virtual monopoly and decisive pre ponderance is bound to pass away. There will come a day, we must hope, when there will be an order in the world within which Europe can as sure its own defense. But the problem is how to get there from where we are now. The getting there may well take a generation. Our position is that in this long transition there may be a better way of defending Europe than by our virtual monopoly, but that we do not know what that better way is. Nevertheless, there is a standing invitation by the United Slates to its European allies to work out a plan of a NATO power. Nobody has ever devised such a plan. We have not devised one ourselves. Per haps someone, say Mr. Couve de Murville, can devise a plan which gives Europe a sense of participation and owner ship and takes into account the specific and ultimate re sponsibility of the united States. Matter of Fact y i,tPh uoP lei New York Herald Tribune Syndicate THE EUROPEAN DETERRENT Washington President Kennedy had the misfortune to take office at the close of the era of American mo nopoly of nu clear striking power, virtu al monopoly of industrial and financial power, result ing monopoly of W e s tern leadership, Alsnp This country's monopoly position, of course, extended only to the borders of the Western Alliance. But in the West at least, the American policymakers could be sure of getting their own way in the end, as long as the mo- nnnnlv nnsition endured. One result was to make most American policymakers as sume that setting their own way in the end was their per manent prerogative. The adjustment to the loss of this monopoly position is therefore Droving exception allv difficult. One symptom of the difficulty is the fester i mm with Gen. de Gaulle, which has taken Secretary of State Dean Rusk to Paris, am the discussion of a European deterrent among the Kennedy nnllrvmakers is a clear sign that the difficult adjustment is beginning to be maae, GIVING credit where credit is due. Gen. de Gaulle's Intransigence is the obvious source of this new line of i,ov,t Tf he had not so nhstlnately insisted on build- ini? French nuclear power. there would be no discussion of a European deterrent. He drove home the point that our allies, being able to stand their own feet again, would never be content to rely ex clusively on the United States for their nuclear defense. This fact has now been gen erally, albeit somewhat glum ly, faced by the members of the Kennedy policymaking group. One resulting alterna tive which was aiding de Gaulle's nuclear program as we have aided the British Mias been rejected. That left no other alternatives to con sider, except the policy of the European deterrent or me nolicv urged by King Canute. whose courtiers suggesica mat. he forbid the sea s advancing waves to wet his glorious feet. now coming into being. Hence one cross-current tends to ward giving our allies some measure of reciprocal con trol over the employment of the American deterrent. An opposing and perhaps stronger cross-current begins with the recognition that you cannot accept a kind of com mittee management of the American deterrent, which will always remain the main defense of the West even if a Eurpean deterrent is also created. Hence this cross-current tends, instead, toward the closest integration of the American and the proposed European deterrent, but with out any power of final, mu tual veto. IF THIS . concept prevails, the two weapons systems will be designed to work to gether, on the assumption that, if used at all. both will be used at once. Joint plan ning, ioint targeting, ioint de velopment will strengthen the integration. But in the unlike ly event of a crunch dividing the Western allies, the Euro peans will still control their deterrent, and the American President will still control the American deterrent. If the President decides to offer the Europeans American help in the creation of this kind of deterrent, that will not be the end of the story, by any means. The Europeans themselves will have to de cide how best to oreanize a nuclear force that will be un avoidably multi-h a 1 1 o n a 1. Right here, beyond much doubt, is the highest hurdle that has to be got over. If this hurdle is surmount ed, a whole series of new per soectives will rapidly open. Gen. de Gaulle, for instance, thinks that the Europeans must eventually take respon sibility for the defense of Western EuroDe the chief but not the sole resnonsibility now carried by NATO. If the problem of the deterrent is solved, there will be no good reason to oppose de Gaulle on In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Sad tale in the news: A Portland motorist picks up a hitch-hiker near Pendle ton. Near The Dalles the hitch-hiker pulls a gun, forces his benefactor to stop the car and get out, ties him to a tree, steals his billfold and drives off in his car. The car owner soon freed himself and notified the au thorities, giving them a good description of the rogue, and he was soon taken into cus tody. He offered this excuse: "I did it because I was run ning out of money. I wouldn't have hurt the man." THERE was a time in our country when no decent motorist with room for an other passenger would pass up a walker on a long road. Those days are gone-as this incident up along the Colum bia indicates. It s no longer safe to pick up hitch-hikers. It's a pity- ANEW YORK stockbroker savs that because the market crash "is now the prime topic in every news publication the public hai been gripped by a psychology which approaches panic pro portions." But He adds "An encouraging factor in the situation is the LARGE AMOUNT OF SHORT SELL ING which is being reported from the exchange floor. A large short position always supplies a cushion under the market, as these stocks must be bought back." is a WHAT, you may ask, " "short" position? It happens when a trader sells BORROWED stock in hopes of buying it back AT A LOWER PRICE, and thus making a quick profit. the 0l UR specific and ultimate responsibility is to pro vide the nuclear force which makes it useless to threaten nuclear war as a diplomatic instrument, and to prevent the resort to nuclear war against the West. Unless all our information is wrong, un less all the information we get from our allies is wrong, we have that power. It must be said at once that it is not an unlimited power While we cannot be threatened or defeated in a nuclear war, we cannot on our part threat en the Soviet Union or its allies and impose our will upon them. The Soviet Union would not surrender to an ultimatum, and if it were at tacked, it has ample power to inflict irreparable damage upon the Western allies. Thus, while the balance of power is favorable to the Western purpose of preventing war, it is only a balance of power which must be nursed by a wise and prudent diplomacy. The conduct of diplomacy ANOTHER sad tale 1 - news: It concerns the fellow who got himself a credit card and lived high up on the hog UNTIL THE BILLS BEGAN TO COME IN. Now he's in bad trouble. PAGE our old Uncle. He ought to know about things like that. He too is living it up and putting his bills on the cuff. If he doesn't mend his ways, he too will get into bad trouble. this point. And NATO can then become the higher ve hicle of the Atlantic Alliance, as well as the defense-instrument of the NATO nations outside the European group ing. As yet, however, the more distant perspectives are hard ly worth exploring, since the primary American decisions have not been reached in de tail and with finality. Try and Stop By BENNETT CERF BUT this policy of promot ing a European deterrent is still in the formative stage. The tendency of Administra tion opinion is clear, but with in the broad tendency there are many cross-currents. Fur thermore, the tendency itself has yet to receive the Presi dent's final approval. In particular, there are cross-currents on the crucial question of control. There is a natural hankering to retain ultimate American c o ntrol over European nuclear power, when and if created with our cooperation. But even those who feel this hankering most strongly also recognize that some degree of reciprocity is unavoidable -in dealing with the new and stronger Europe in such a balance of power is a supreme responsibility be cause what is at stake is not only peace in the old sense of the word but the survival of the great centers of West ern civilization. And so, when every use has been made of consultation, of c o n t i n ual communication, of common planning, the final power to push the fatal button must remain where there is the final responsibility. THE LAST TIME I visited Detroit, I was shown a letter that an Athletic Club member sent home from a fish ing trip in Mazatlan, Mexico. It read, "Anyone who boards a fishing boat in this area is issued an oar- not to be used for pro pulsion but to protect the tourist against the at tacks of fish that have grown weary of maladroit attempts to catch them, and jump into the boat. "Then there is Julius. Julius is a boaconstrictor about 14 feet long and a great household pet. He earns his keep by hold ing the rodent population down to a reasonable level. When not hunting rats, he has been trained to sit neatly coiled up in a rock ing chair facing away from the main lobby entrance. Thus he provides newcomers with an element o surprise. One newcomer made the U.S. border some 500 miles in four hours flat, on foot, after getting a look at Julius. Another arrived in the lobby with a small dog on a leash. Julius, being somewhat nearsighted, mistook the dog for a rat. At least the newcomer has the leash kit." Christopher, age 5, attended a birthday party in a brand new suit. When he came home, ragged holes had been cut into it with a pair of scissors. Gasped his horrified mother, "What did you do to your beautiful new suit?" "We decided to play store," explained Christopher cheerfully. "I was a piece of Swiss cheese." An upstate farmer was galled to testify in a Congressional In vestigation and had difficulty with a microphone at the witness stand. "This mike," he told his attorney In a stage whisper, "is Just Ilka the cuspidor in the Mansion House lobby. You've got to hit it dead center or you might aa well forgot it." 1963, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed bv Klna- FmImi-m flvnitlrate THIS might be a good time to remark that the eco nomic purpose of stock ex changes is not the making of quick bucks. It is finding the capital with which to finance industrial expansion. Communications Lettera to the Editor must bear the ndme and address ot the writer although undei cer tain circumstances the use ot a Een name oi initial fot publica on is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all lettera with an eye to clarification and condensation Lettera submittea for publtca Uon must not exceed 4O0 worda "Watered" Meat To the Editor: Yesterday I purchased, in a certain store in the Rogue valley, 11 pounds of "hamburger." It is obvious, after careful ex amination, that from three to five pounds of water had been added to the "hamburger" since, when it was unwrapped, there were, after a few min utes standing time, puddles of water on the plastic coated pa per. This would NOT be the case if there were not a con siderable amount of water added to the meat. It sure indicates that water can be sold at a high price. Golly, maybe I'd better get on the "Gravy Train." The Billie Sol Estes case in Texas is not an isolated one. One can get that kind of deal right here in the Rogue valley in nearly every meat market, even though each instance may be of relatively minor value. The amount of gain in a year reaches astronomical proportions. It is really nice, isn't it, to get from 30 to 60 cents per pound for "water." Of course, Mr. Allen, I real ize you wouldn't want to pub lish the name of the market referred to above. I think it would come in the category of a "public serv ice." I'd enjoy a good pow wow with these merchants. Floyd R. McCabe, Butte Falls, Ore. the First Lady, the Kennedy administration has been try- K ... ,, IT FOLLOWS that the issue between Gen. do Gaulle I and this country is nut wheth er France should or should ' not nitve iiui-ii-ur ariiiiiiiit-ius, i TTk I i"l,0h,dl ear striking Ip !: -tj J that both the necessarily ! II New Deal and ,,..i..r i-. .i II,., r,,i v-t oin notno. ' i and what Ad- f i lai Stevenson I t was preaching' ?. f about Fathers of 200,000 June brides will bear rue ful witness to the fact that marriage has become big business. The usual wetlding costs $1,500. With average of 1,"00,000 marriages annually over the past decade, "Business Week" notes that it is costing $2.2 billion a year just to get the bride and groom out of the church. Start adding on the costs of setting up house keeping furniture, apartments, new homes and one can understand why financial writer J. A. Livingston says "Hear markets can't com pete with doting fathers of the bride." A PROFILE of this season's newly marrieds would differ but little from that shown by statistics for 1!HH). Then, the median age for bride grooms was 22.8, for brides 20.o years. More men were being married at 21 than at any other age and more women at IS. The continuimr trend toward early marriage 1 a , it mill! nwii has nrovoketl mucn social commentary, most oi .trv McNamara's uei. which it Critical 110t Olllv of high separation and divorce ! is fundamental In the nuclear , thoughts produced by the .it, 'wsoci iteil 'with ireeocioiw unions but also and whi,t Mr- 5lHlvr dl' ,r',sl1,c, of a dien "''"- Idles dSSOtldUll llll J HUKimis unions uui ,1!J" , Mlll vill,,f the French Foreign is that concern with our ma- 01 tneir SUIIlung Cliecl oil lliu ,Uuii) iicwiue , Minister, involved, I5ut the business community can be excused for taking a more optimistic view of marriage early or late and of .lime, the traditional marry ing month that gets its name from the Roman goddess Juno, special protectress of marriages. E.R.R. Put Pressure On To the Editor: "Note" veter ans, your letters to your sen ators do get consideration. Put the pressure on for a hospital at Camp White. Also join Mercy Flights. They have) saved my life three times in just three years. Clarence W. Corey, P. O. Box 144, Phoenix, Ore. Mr. Corey: This will acknowledge your good letter of June 4 which relates to your personal ex perience in observing the overcrowding conditions and waiting requirements aome. uy lhic dAvahlij on tne Horizon of the cultural j allow the Central Park pro- promptly asked Miller to de- times in emergency cases at With graceful assists from new frontier. duction of "The Merchant of ; icte certain lines nn the both the Portland and Van. No ! grounds that they reflected on 'couver Veterans Administra- Kennedys Try to Increase Quality of Life A hard effort is being made Venice" to be televised. thickly paved than the road of good intentions, and with this apprehension about Shakespeare's character Shy lock, in this concern to com bat prejudice, art itself is prejudiced along with the of art. The by the high-minded August llcckscher and others to build a governmental, tax-supported footing under part of the structure of art in America, as governments in Europe have done for generations, most notably for their nation al theaters. I am persuaded 1 rights of lovers that the attempt should be several macic dui 1 am also persuaded years ago -I that whoever manages a na- srtaretd mat is. lo ract-, iionai tneaier in tins country We cannot, of course, prevent icany increase the quality, not j win live wiinin a political France from making nm lear merely the quantity of Ameri-1 concrete mixer. Any network weapons Uut. as long as there ,',ln is an Atlantic Alliance In The remarkable Kennedys which we wield the ultimate have made court favorites of and decisive force, we have artists, writers, musicians, sci to be heard on the question i enlists and scholars In gen- of whether the French strik- eral with the same assiduous ness President Eisenhower showed with business leaders. They have tried to elevate the practice and appreciation of the arts in America; and one of the most disturbing! road to censorship is morejtnc Icgal lrad(; am) broke down respect for law and or dor. Miller replied that when he wrote "Death of a Sales man'' organizations of sales men had professed collective pain. He thought that perhaps the only way for art to exist within this new rnnrpnt 1 j city (to its shame. I'm temDt- -.,m k , .,i,. ,. ' ?"u "s " P. 1 a ed to say. since municipal-; pie with no occupation what ities must by now have ac- - ever-except, of course, that quired the nerve cells where-; (,en the denizens of cafe so in conscience resides) buckled cietv would feel nut i.nn tion hospitals. These observa tions have led you to conclude that more complete facilities at Camp White are urgently needed, and you ask my sup port. Such conditions as you des cribed cannot be overlooked, m bring ing your views to the atten tion of the Veterans Admin istration. I am requesting that they furnish me wilh a com- official will say "Amen'' to j that and broadcasting is pri vately owned in this country. and restricted the telecast. In its fundaments is this case different from the case of a definitely non immortal all its risks are privately bit of theatrics called ' Mid- Ing force shall be available for use independently of the Alliance. Thus, there is no necessnry i contradiction between Secre- inay nave meant when he talked about a new equilibrium" of nuclear forces within the Alliance. We have no special claim to I mon opoly of nuclear weapons, and we do not claim a monopoly. What we do claim is that a decision to go to war with the Soviet Union shall not be tenal quantities will again exclusively absorb official en ergies . The last label this President could want for his regime would be The Re-Deal. borne and its program respon sibility to the citizen in his role as taxpayer and to the publicum as monitor is ten uous, at best. The Lord give strength to the overseers of legislated tax paid institutions of the arts, for Americans now dwell in the epoch of racial, group, conxirate and geographical insultability. All our institu tionalized personalities arc Summer"? That play depicted a pestilential chambermaid who gave free advice to the guests about their personal lives. The Hotel and Club Em ployes Union, Local Six. promptly picketed the theater and claimed the maid in the play was a slander on the chambcrmaiding trade and all therein. We would warn the future facilities at tals, together with their com ments and recommendations in this matter. You may be sure that 33 soon as I hear from the VA. I shall get in touch with you promptly. In the meantime. I send kindest regards and thanks for bringing this matter to my attention. , Wayne Morse, United States Senate, Washington, p c. Is the protest over Shake speare really different from endowed with nerve ends, and both pleasure and pain are the protest over Arthur Mil collective. ; ler's play. "The Crucible." which depicted the Salem j So the New York Board of ; witch trials of long ago and Hut what prompts this long j Rabbis formerly asked the : the ignorant judges who had vit w-w itli alarm is a sharper city government, which puts the women burned'' The snapshot nf a smaller cloud I up part of the money, not to I American Bar Association i trustees of any national thea ter that a piece of geography Is also insultable. reminding them that when "Giant" was published at least one Senator denounced It as a slur on the great state of Texas, and that when an Oklahoma school girl was accused of plagiarism in a national essay contest the whole Congressional dele gation claimed a foul against the great state of Oklahoma. If it indeed be so that the individual in America has died, it is cle.ir that he has been reincarnated in plural form, his old joys and pains and hopes and fears now transferred to the By-laws and Articles of Incorporation. (Distributed 1962, by the Hall Syndicate, Inc.) (All Righls Reserved) Kai's Pajamas To the Editor C(,ngres5 is going to eliminate the 10 per cent tax on all pas.-ens.-r tram tickets. Now ai-tit that the kat's pajamas and we ajn t even got a passenger train. Everett Acklm. Ashland. Ore o