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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1962)
r """'Everyone In South5?irOreon Reads TheMall Tribune' PubilshedDally excepf Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North FlrjSl.. Ph;77J-6I ROBERT W RUHL, Editor HKRB GREY Advertising. Manager GERALD 1 LATHAM. Bui. Mar. ERIC W ALLEN. JR.. King. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT, Sporti Editor OLIVE S TARCHER. Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered ai aecond clau matter at Mcdtnrd. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance, Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year $13.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. 6.00 Daily and Sunday 3 moi. 4.25 Sunday Only One year 4 20 By Carrier In Advance Medford, AihUnri rentral Point. Elllt Point. Jacksonville, Gold Hill, Phoenix, Shady cove, Rogue HIV er, Talent and on motor routes. Dally and Sunday 1 year $1.00 Dailv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.30 Carriet and Dealers Copy 100 All TermsCash lnAdvance Official' Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U P 1 Telephoto Newspictures ""MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES. Offices In New York, Chi cago Detroit, San Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland, Denver NEWSPAPER PUSllSHEtS ASSOCIATION EDITORIAL Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of Th Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO July 10, 1952 (Thursday) Hunt continues for George Baker Dunkin, wanted for the slaying of state police officer. Jacksonville museum r e- ports a total of 74,608 visitors since it opened in July, iau. 20 YEARS AGO July 10. 1942 (Friday) A new wartime regulation prohibits campflres and bon fires in the Kogue niver jn tional forest after dark be cause of the improbability of picnickers and campers being aware of an air raid. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudce Pot" column: "The older girls deplore the lack nf pedestrian lanes on North Riverside. They say crossing this thoroughfare is too much like going over Niagara Falls in a barrel. 30 YEARS AGO July 10. 1932 (Sunday) Local merchants have a contest to find the woman In southern Oregon with the red dest hair in conjunction with "Red Headed Woman," a film being shown at a local the ater. City Water commission warns local residents to avoid extravagant waste of water during summer months; pen alties established. 40 YEARSAGO July 10. 1922 (Monday) Jackson county fair to fea ture "automobile row" with the "latest model of their favorite machine." Exactly 1,000 Inquiries were received and in all cases "favorably handled'' between May 15 and July 1 at the Oregon Tourist and Informa tion bureau in the chamber of commerce building. 50 YEARSAg6 July 10, 1912 (Wednesday) A team of horses was killed instantly when struck by lightning on the Rogue River rd. north of Eagle Point. Medford Country Club stockholders decide to move the club from the present Rrounds on the Davis proper ty to the Fiero track about 2' i miles north of Medford, near the old Bates orchard. Whal's Your I.Q.7 Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five et six Is good. 1. Rhode Island Is the smallest state In area; what Is the next smallest? 2. What is the square root of one? 3. Who wrote the verses in which this line occurs, "You're a better man that I am, Gunda Din"? 4. Name the Prime Minis ter of Great Britain. 5. Under which two Presi dents did Herbert Hoover serve as Secretary of Com merce? 8. In the War of 1812, who commanded American forces at the Battle of New Orleans? 7. Of which European country Is Berne the capital? 8. Is nicotinic acid a poison found In tobacco, a vitamin, or a stain remover? 9. What Is meant by the expression "a Carthaginian peace"? 10. What was the former name of the Department of the Army? Answers: 1. Delaware. 2. Ont. 3. Rudyard Kipling. 4. Harold Macmillan. 5. Hard ing and Coolidae. t. Andrew Jackson. 7. Swllxerland. I. Vitamin. 9. Ptact by extermi nation. 10. War Departmtnl. NATIONAL sir!: TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1962 Our Money Elsewhere on this page today, Frank Jenkins talks about money, and about some incidents in which large sums are involved. Nowhere, however (because that is a differ ent topic altogether), does he say what money IS. Aside from cartwheels (the fairly rare silver dollars) and other small change, which in total represent only a fraction of the money in circula tion, most of the "hard cash" we think about isn't money at all. It is nothing more than a promise to pay, or, more popularly, credit. TAKE A look at a dollar bill. It isn't really mon- ey, as we think of it. It is a promise to pay the bearer, on demand, one dollar in silver. Larger denominations have similar promises. Five dollar bills are either Federal Reserve Notes ("Will Pay the Bearer on Demand Five Dollars" without specifying whether in silver, gold, or whatever) ; the $5 U.S. Note, with wording simi lar to that of the Federal Reserve Note, and the $5 Silver Certificate, which promises to pay in silver. Higher denominations of currency have simi lar legends (although when research on the above was under way in the newsroom, $10s and $20s were unavailable for inspection). Xf HEN YOU write a check to pay a bill at the first of the month, no cash or currency or "money" changes hands. What you do is to write a promise to pay, which (if all goes well) is hon ored by your bank, which in turn promised to pay you, or on your behalf, certain sums, when you make a deposit. Does your bank, when making this promise, have on hand the silver and gold bullion to make good on this promise? No, it does not. In the intricate system of credit, what it has are other promises to pay. And these, in turn, do not always (or even usually) equal 100 per cent of the promises to pay the bank has made. Most of the money transfer of a promise to account to another, and ises to pay in any given bank does not fluctuate very greatly from week to week, except under unusual circumstances. DANKS WHICH are a part of the Federal Re- serve System have accounts with the Federal Reserve Bank, and the interlocking system of credit (promises to pay here, too. Very substantial increases in the total supply of money in circulation in the country can be caused by increases in the amount of outstanding credit throughout the country. OERE IS an oversimplified example: 1 Say your credit is lion from a bank which means that they prom ise to pay your promises to pay up to a total of $5 million, in return for your promise to pay them back eventually with interest. Say this loan overextends the bank s legal re serve the amount of "money" it has on hand to back the $5 million loan. Then they go to the Federal Reserve and borrow enough money (promises to pay) to meet their reserve require ment. A total of $5 million out the printing press turning over once, or the mint turning out an extra silver dime. Its real money too. when the transaction is several years, and your back to the bank, and serve, the money supply shrinks by just that much. TIE COMPLEX chore of managing this intri- A ruiti nvrumirl nf mnnoif f ni .tirnmwna tn'ruiv or credit), lies with the Federal Reserve, and with the Treasury. There are various devices they can use (the manipulation of interest rates, for one, or a decision not to make available more reserve funds, or a change in the icserve rate) which can substantially alter the supply of money in circula tion. And what is behind all this money? Is it gold bullion, or silver dollars? No, not except for a very tiny percentage. It is, ultimately, the promise of the govern ment to make good on its promises to pay, and underlying that is the power to tax. THIS IS the principal reason why some econo- mists would view with alarm anv substantial shrinkage of the national debt, for the national debt is simply the government's promise to pay the holders of its bonds and notes. And these bonds and notes, in turn, largely held by the Federal Reserve and other large banks, serve as the basis for the loans they make to smaller financial institutions, which in turn loan money based on the loans they receive from, and holdings they have in larger institutions. Any substantial decrease in the national debt would decrease, and by an amount larger than the actual debt decrease, the potential supply of mon ey in the country. BANKERS and economists know these facts to ii ui, y-t " c in'i't " c v mini relatively correct.) But most people-on-the-street, when thev think of money, think in terms of cur rency. The check book in your pocket, and your ability to borrow from the bank, and the bank's ability to borrow from the "Fed," and finally the government's promise to pay off its debts, eventually, with tax receipts, is the source of most money today. ii s a weirn and wontiernil system, whicn, HKe Topsy, "just growed." But it works. E.A. Tree transactions are simply a pay from one individual's the overall total of prom on demand) operates good. You borrow $5 mil has been "created" with It will buy things. But complete, perhaps after $5 million loan is paid theirs to the federal He- "Oh, We're Not Against ALL Government Spending" 3bu Washington Report By William Ici United Feature Syndicate INTRAPARTY SCRAP Washington The most lively infighting is breaking out all over in the Republi can party two full years ahead of the 1964 presiden tial nominat I n g conven tion. The lead ers p u b 1 icly cry for "uni ty" and tush tush the heat- vrolf ed arguments being thrown by Republican against Republican. But pri vately they rub their hands in satisfaction that Republicans are interested enough to be gin so early what is actually already a sharp contest for the 1964 nomination and for control of the mind of the party. It is the best possible proof that the nomination is widely seen as realistically worth having. And It is good news rather than bad for the Re publican rank-and-file. As the case is put succinctly and with characteristic candor by young "old pro" Richard Nix on: "We welcome this because we like to see our candidates making the news and taking it away from the Democrats. The worst thing that can hap pen to a party is to be dull." . IT IS perfectly clear that dullness will not be charge able to the GOP from now until election night in No vember of 1964. The extont of the party's recovery from 1960 is suggested best of all by the racket now being rais ed by disputants ranging from the ultra - conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater through the moderate center, occupied by former President Eisenhower and Nixon, leftward to the forces of Gov. Nelson Rocke feller of New York. For the first time since the Democrats returned to power in 1960, this is a genuine, and not merely a sort of keeping-in-practicc, racket. The Gold water people are beginning to break with almost the whole of such Republicanism as re mains from the Eisenhower years and certainly from the new advisory committee ar rangements sponsored by Gen eral Eisenhower to operate outside the Republican na tional cocMnittee. Try and By BENNETT CERF- fPHEY SAY ft burly, lough hombie strode into an Arizona A bar one night and demanded, "A Diamondback With four Rattles." The bartender emptied four bottles of fire water into a huge beaker which the stranger emp tied forthwith. Just then a violent earthquake struck and the whole bar was de molished. From the wreckage came the voice of the stranger. "Say, I ain't got a kick like that out of a drink in years. Mix me another one, boy!" An American in Aber deen called up the police station and reported, "In front of the McTavish National Rank, there aie two Scolsmrr who are violently insane." "What makes you think that?" askec the lieutenant. "They must be." explained the American. "On is throwing; his money away on the stieet und the other is pick ing it up and handing It back to him " "The new baby," observed Grandma pioudly, "lias his pi army s eves and his granny's nose." Then she added. "Rut if his fatuous grandfather doesn't stop leaning over thst cnb. it will have his teeth"' "1 suppose she does bring out the beast in him.'' conceded a choius girl, discussing her roommate a latest romance, "but it a okay; she s not nfrsid of mice.'' O 1M, by Benom Cert. Distributed by Xing Features Syndicate rv r iw i 'i i 1 1 ii ' i 1 1 1 ii S. White They are doing this not only in conviction that such "splinter groups," as Gold water calls them, are of doubt ful Republicanism too lib eral and not reliably partisan. They are motivated also by suspicion that the setting up of nonregular party organiza tions of this kind may be the prelude to a massive effort by the left and center wings of the GOP to isolate and cut down the right wing at the coming convention. THIS, in fact, is very much what it looks like, and the more so since General Eisen hower has repudiated Gold water's criticism and since Nixon has totally sided with the former President. I nspite of such influential support for what Goldwater calls "splinter groups" and General Eisenhower calls in dispensable additions to Re publican strength, however, it would be highly premature to suppose that the Republican rightists had lost the game already. Eager amateur groups of this kind, even given the for midable backing of such lead ers as Eisenhower and Nixon, tend to be stronger before a convention showdown than they do when the convention meets. Whatever their impact in 1962 or even in 1963, it will remain to be seen how much weight they will carry when the smoke begins to curl i.i the smoke-filled rooms in 1964. INTRAPARTY struggling on this point at the moment, therefore, is both inconclusive and meaningful. It is meaning ful because it plainly estab lishes that the GOP elephant, far from being dead, is no longer even sick and tired, but rather stirring powerfully and crossly. So the outlook in the net is that the Republicans face for 1964 an intraparty contest no less severe and no less interest - provoking than when Eisenhower and the late Sen. Robert A. Taft collided for the nomination in 1 9 52 . It may be an even more spirited contest. For this time there could well be not two serious contenders, but as many as five Nixon, Rock efeller. Goldwater, Rep. Wil liam Scranton of Pennsylva nia and George Romney of Michigan. Stop Wle lr 1 s. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGOfr Clash of Rivals for Power in Algeria Threatens By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst In the dusty Casbah and in the tree-lined streets of European Algiers, celebrating Moslem Arabs still were beating out on their automo bile horns the rhythmic beat, "Algeria is free," when the first signs of dissention appeared. The Newiom common goal which for more than seven years of war had held the Arab leadership together had been achieved. Now the in ternal stresses were coming to the surface. On the one side was tough, sullen Mohammed Ben Bella, who has been at war for 22 of his 43 years and in nearly six years of imprisonment by the French had become a sym bol of martyrdom in Algeria's fight for independence. On the other was slight, bespectacled, 42-year-old Ben Youssef Ben Khedda, premier of the provisional government designated to run newly in dependent Algeria until elec tions can be held. While other Algerian lead ers sought to minimize the differences between the two, these differences actually were basic to the future of Algeria. Ben Khedda held that inde pendence permitted "coopera tion not only between France and Algeria, but also between Franch, North Africa, the Arab world, and Africa." The embittered, radical Ben Bella would sever all ties with France. "Economic colonialism must go with political colonialism," he said. To the former rebel forces he said: "The revolution must go on ... Be ready to take over your country with your rifles in your left hand and your picks and shovels in your right hand." Communications Letters la the Editor must near the n.ime and address of the writer although undei cer tain circumstances the use ol a pen name oi initial for publica tion is permissible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all tetters with an eye to clarification and condensation Letters submitted for publica Uon must not exceed 400 words Chained Dogs To the Editor: It is totally incomprehensible that any one owning a dog should want to condemn it to a life of misery and loneliness. To stay well and happy a dog must have exercise and companion ship. When a potential dog own er applies to the Animal Wel fare League in Chicago (one of the two largest shelters in the city) he is asked where the dog will be kept. If told the basement or garage he is told it is not good enough. Though possibly dry and clean these places spell isolation and bit ter loneiiness. The Medford city code chapter 5, paragraph 400, states that no person shall fail to provide an animal or bird in his custody with food, drink and proper shelter - the penalty being 60 days in jail plus S100 fine. The word "proper" as applied to shelter implies warmth, dryness and adequate size, and has been so defined by numer o u s judges before whom these cases have been tried. If all animal lovers will ex amine conditions under which dogs are chained and finding any of these provisions un met, promptly report the mat ter to our capable dog war den, he will know what to do. It is a simple matter to in stall an overhead wire (or even a ground peg) and attach a long wire from it to the dog's collar, or better et erect an inexpensive fence. Unfortunately, in this fine world of ours, if a pup barks because he is hungry, cotd, thirsty or just plain lonely, he is always the culprit, and when I think of what he has to endure - the heat of the summer sun and the pene trating cold of winter, chained and helpless, I find myself hoping that a similar fate could befall its owner. (Name on file! Medford Would Be Boost To the Editor: A hospital at White City for veterans living ! in Oregon and California I would be a tremendous boost for all Rogue River Valley ' communities. ' It behooves such grouajs as veterans orcanizatiiat and auxiliaries, chambers of com- j merce. Elks. Moose. Lions aavl 1 Eagles, to bestir themselves! and got behind the move to i obtain this hospital hich is so sorely needed. A conducted tour of build ings now standing Slid suit able for hospital use can be arranged for interested par ties David Frisch P.O. Box 292 White City, Ore. 111 ssi . a Itsi Stability of North Africa In the background stood Egypt's President Gamal Ab del Nasser who had helped the rebels obtain their Soviet and Red Chinese weapons and who had not abandoned his ambitions to lead the Arab world. In the Day's News By FRANK Let's talk about money to day. It's an interesting sub ject. It always has been an interesting subject. John Bart lett, in his indispensable Fa miliar Quotations, devotes half a page in the index to the subject of money, with citations of what people have said about it down through the ages. One of the fundamental ones is from Arthur Hugh Clough, who causes one of the characters in his Dipsy chus to say: "How pleasant it is to have money." Many controversial statements have been made about money, but nearly everybody will agree with that one. AS THIS is written, there are some weird tales about money in the news: The case of the San Francisco barber, for example, who collapsed and died of a heart attack the other day while watching a movie in a nearby theater. Apparently he had no rela tives, and when the authori ties started prodding around in his dusty, cluttered little shop they found $71,000 in cash tucked away in cubby holes here and there. He wasn't afraid of banks, as a bankbook was found showing deposits of $40,000. Apparent ly, he just like to hide money away. " THEN there is the Los An geles woman who tried to donate cash to a "Black Mus lim" cult to be used, she said, "to kill the white peo ple." The donation was re fused and she wandered into a nearby house, claiming that someone was trying to kill her. Police were called, and when they searched her they found in her purse $11,427 in large and small bills. Strang er still, they found sewed into the hem of her dress 649 shares of blue chip stocks valued at current market prices at $30,040. She wore three wedding rings, two engagement rings and two diamond - studded watches. IF ONE were minded to make a cynical crack, this might be appropriate: Helix Man Quits Legislature Post Salcm-tliPII-The resignation of Raphael Raymond Sr., Helix, aa state representative from Umatilla county has been filed here, according to Secretary of State Howell Appling Jr. The seat held by Raymond, a Republican, became vacant July 1 when he accepted an appointment by Gov. Mark Hatfield to the Oregon Wheat Commission, Appling said. Raymond, a farmer, had served in the legislature since 1959. Under reapportionment, has Umatilla county seat be came part of a new house district composed of five eastern Oregon counties. Raymond did not seek re election this year. Appling said that under the law, Raymond's seat will remain vacant until a succes sor is elected in November unless a special session of the legislature is called between now and then, which is un likely. If a special session were to be called, a Republi can committee in Raymond's area would name a tempor ary successor. South Vietnamese Battalion Defeated Saigon. Viet Nam -WPP- The South Viet Nam government reported Monday that a Viet namese army regular battal ion has been defeated with heavy losses in a major battle against Communist guerrillas in the central highlands. The mauling of the battal ion by Communist Viet Cong guerrillas was described as one of the severest defeats j suffered by government troops J in recent months. j The commifnique said the i battle occurred July 3 follow ing a night attack by Commu nist forces on two posts south of Quang Ngai. It reported that 24 government soldiers were killed, including two officers. Nine other govern ment troops were reported wounded, and 10 soldiers were i listed as missing. Unofficial sources, howev er, said the casualty figures ran higher. To him in Cairo Ben Bella pledged that Algeria would become a Socialist state dedi cated to the same revolution ary reforms as advocated by Nasser. On Ben Khedda's side was possession of Algiers, the cap- JENKINS The New Frontier's habit of carelessness with money seems to be catching. WEIRDEST of all is t h e story of the workmen who were renovating 24 old one-car garages in Jersey City, N. J. They came across an old car. They couldn't resist look ing into its trunk. In the trunk they found an old metal toolbox and two leather bags. The toolbox and the bags con tained TWO MILLION, FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS in currency, most of it in large bills. Two days later, in a board-ed-up garage only a block away from the one where the $2.4 million had been discov ered, detectives found $168, 675.52 in cash. The cash was crammed into two old shop ping bags. The authorities, buttressed by some evidence found along with the cash, came to the conclusion that the money is the property of a big-time gambler by the name of Mo riarty who is serving a two-to-three year sentence in the New Jersey state prison. FANTASTIC? Wait a minute. You haven't heard it all. THE Internal Revenue Serv ice promptly filed tax liens totaling $3.4 MILLION against Moriarty on the basis of the $2.4 million found in the toolbox and the old bags in the trunk of the old car in the first garage. Which means that if Mori arty lays claim to the money, or can be proved to be the owner of it, he can wind up losing the $2.4 million and IN ADDITION owing the gov ernment ANOTHER MIL LION DOLLARS! WHAT of the $168,675.52 found in the second cache? Well the New Jersey county of Hudson taking no chances that the federal government might claim it as collateral for the million dollars it says Moriarty still owes over and above the $2.4 million found in the first cache has IM POUNDED it on the theory that.maybe Moriarty owes the county some tax money. Investment in Price Supported Commodities Dips Washington -HIPP- The gov ernment s investment in price supported commodities totaled $6,959,190,237 as of May 31, according to the Agriculture department. This was more than $224 million below the investment a month earlier. The investment was made up of $4,615,016,249 in com modities owned outright by the Commodity Credit Corp. and $2,344,173,988 in out standing loans on farm prod ucts still held by producers. The investment as of May 31 compared with an invest ment of $7,283,846,009 on the same date a year ago. Loss Estimated The department said the es timate of the loss which will be realized upon ultimate dis position of price-support in ventories amounted to $1,305, 335,000. This was comprised of an estimated loss of $122, 106,000 on commodities under loan and an estimated loss of $1,183,229,000 on inventories. Wheat was the too itpm in the investment. The govern ment owned outright 1.16 bil lion bushels valued at about $2.3 billion and held Inane nn 66 million bushels valued at about $118 million. Corn in inventory totaled "46 million bushels worth S844 million. Loans on 918 million bushels were valued at $1.03 billion. Independent Study Secretary of Agriculture Or- ville L. Freeman has set up an annual independent study to assure that Agriculture De partment policies and pro grams work most effectively for the preservation and im provement of the family farm. The studv will he mart, hv a subcommittee of the Public Advisory Committee on rural areas development. Freeman directed Clarence McCormick, Vincennes, Ind., chairman tf the advisory com mittee, to make "an inde pendent study of the impacts and effects of the depart ment's policies and programs on tC CJie preservation and improvement of the family farm pattern of American ag riculture." j ital, and the apparent loyalty of the Algerian forces in the Algiers military prefecture. But in four of Algeria's six military zones, sympathy seemed to be swinging to Ben Bella. Ben Bella's devotion to Al gerian independence scarcely could be as doubtful as were the benefits he offered: close association with Egypt in an Arab world dominated by Nasser and an economy based on the barter system of Rus sia. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris lc Field Enterprises Inc. DREAM WORLD One of the reasons that psy chology makes so little head way among the mass of peo ple is that its) ,',' '1 docDest truths seem to vio- Jj late what ' cherish we a a common - It gives us otiense to Da told that cer tain of our ac tions and be Harls havior are the exact opposite of what we think they are: what gambler, for instance, could be convinced that he is really trying to lose, not win? Yet everything we know, on the deeper psychological level, about the addiction to gambling points to a strong desire to lose. The patho logical gambler dies broke be cause he cannot rest until ha has lost everything. In much the same way, the Don Juan would be af fronted lo be told lhat his "attraction" lo women is really a dislike of them: lhat his compulsive sexual activity comes from fear and resentment of the woman, and not from affec tion; or, most shattering of all, that his promiscuous ness may be a way of de fending himself against his homosexual yearnings. Perhaps we can begin lo understand this topsy-turvy-world of the unconscious by a simple and common illustration: the various fears and phobias that af flict people - lhe most com mon of all being a fear of heights. Actually, the person who nervously draws away from a high window or the edge of a cliff is protecting him self from the wish lo jump. What he fears is not the height itself but his own destructive impulse - and he draws away to remove lhe temptation. Almost all phobias of this kind are wishes in reverse: we fear what we are at tracted to. The phobia is the exact reverse of the underlying desire. Unless we understand and accept this, we cannot compre hend how a person, at a certain time in his life, will commit some act (suicide, arson, embezzlement) that seems so much against the grain of his character. The tVDical pmhP7W tnf instance, is a classic type: quiet, industrious, methodical, no known bad habits, a long reputation for trust worthi ness. Suddenly t h e dam bursts, and everyone is nuit amazed. The "worrier" is annthpr prime example: say, t h e mother who is always fret ting about her children's safe ty. Who hovers nvpr (Itnm who is forever tormented bv thoughts of accidents and catastrophies. She would be appalled and indignant to learn that this phobia of hers really represents a deep-seated wish. The way she guards against her unconscious feel ings of rage and hostility to ward her "loved ones" is by over-protecting them. These are all unpalatable truths about ourselves; they go against the current of "common sense." But until we recognize their validity, we are living in a dream world, strangers to ourselves and to others. Poll Voters Defeat AH Daylight Time Listeners of radio station KBOY voted three to one against having uniform dav. light savings time in an in formal 15-minute telephone poll taken by the station Fri day. General manager Win Marks stated that of the 147 calls received. 110 were op posed to the proposed meas ure and 37 were in favor of it. The question was worded in an explanatory manner, stat ing that a yes vote was in favor of uniform daylight time throughout the state, while i no vote was in favor or the present confused time system.