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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1962)
4 A- Medford J&Tribun. ""Everyone in Southern Oregon JleadjrheMallTrlbunc'' Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St., Ph, 172-8141 " ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manaer GERALD T LATHAM, Bun. Msr. ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mar An Independent Newspaper Entered ai second class matter at Medford, Oregon, under Act ol March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. ., Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Dally and Sunday 8 mos. 10.00 Dallv and Sunday 3 mos. 3.00 Sunday Only One year 5.00 Single Copy (Mailed! 20c By Camel And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year 2i; Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1-75 Sunday Only 1 mo. 30c Carrlerandyendors Copy 10c OHlclal Piper of City of Medford Of !lclaMPaperJf Jackson County ' United Press International Full Leased Wire V. P. I. Telephoto Newspicturea "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, NATION A I EDITORIAL ASfSOCOA'' NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford ind Jackson County History from th files of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 ind 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 9. 1952 (Thursday) A 44-year-old Medford man apparently took his own life by hanging in city jail some time last night. His body was found about 7:30 o'clock this morning. Medford's fire department answered 60 alarms during September, according to Chief Gordon Barker's monthly re port. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 9. 1942 (Friday) New United Service Or ganizations center at Sixth st. and Riverside ave. visited by more then 700 servicemen during first week of opera tion. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The turkeys are In the stubble fields and the hogs are in the acorns. So far there has been no frost on the pumpkins." 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 9. 1932 (Sunday) Fourth Jackson county sui cide within 19 days reported from vicinity of Rogue River. State police searching Keene creek near Table moun tain for "wild man" who has threatened residents of the area. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 9, 1922 (Monday) County grand jury sched uled to complete Investigation of Ku Klux Klan "night rid ing" cases. Shipments of Rogue valley fruit to the east amounts to 16 carloads of apples and 1,141 carloads of pears. 50 YEARS AGO Oct. 9, 1912 (Wednesday) Annual shoot for the Mail Tribune silver trophy sched uled at Medford Rod and Gun club grounds. Great Interest locally In New York Giants-Boston Red Sox world series contests; Medford residents gather In front of Mail Tribune offices to hear play by play results announced by Judge Wlthing ton "using a huge mega phone." Whafs Your I.Q.? Nine or tan correct It superior; seven or eight Is excellent; five oi tlx it good. 1. Did the Franco-German War terminate with the "Reign of Tears," or the "Reign of Terror"? 2. Name the capital of Brazil. 3. "Thou shall not be afraid of the bugges at night." Docs "bugges" mean terror, dark, or insects? 4. Which state is nicknamed "Granite State"? 5. Does the value of an old coin depend upon Its age? 6. Is hydrophobia a medical term for rabbit fever, rabies, or dropsy? 7. Are earwigs ornaments, Insects, or a type of wig? 8. "Friends, 1 am with you all and love you all," said An thony In "Julius Caesar." By whom was It written? 8. Does the "Creed of Pope Pius IV" (1364) contain 10, 12, or 14 obligations? 10. Which great U.S. ocean liner bore the name U.S.S. West Point as the Navy's larg est transport In World War II? Antwerst 1. Reign of Tears. 2. Brasilia. 3. Terror. 4. Now Hampshire. 5. No, It depends on rarity. 6. Rabies. 7. Insects. 8. William Shakespeare. 9. Twelve. 10. S.S. America. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1962 Morse and Unander Lying on the editorial desk as this is written are two quotations concerning Sen. Wayne L, Morse (D-Ore.). The first is from Sen. one of the great and United btates. He said : "Wayne Morse is one of the most brilliant and most thoughtful men with whom 1 have ever associated. He has a great depth of feeling lor the welfare of the individual man. His heart is right. He has great courage and deter mination. No one works any harder at his Job than he. Men who are such a fine influence in our national life simply have to be kept on the job and this is doubly true of Wayne Morse." The other quotation, accompanied by a "Hu man Events" report, an ultra-conservative publi cation, which blasted the Senator, was from a lo cal friend. It said: "After reading this folder, don't you think it's time to turn Senator Wayne out and try to get a Charley McNary or George Chamberlain for our Senator so Oregon can ob tain some results as well as proper standing in the U, S. Senate?" "THE TROUBLE with despite the fact it is tains at least one major omission, that ot the man's unpredictable personality. The trouble with the it is not a choice, this Morse and Charles McNary or George Chamber lain it is a choice between benator Morse and Sig Unander. The difficulty in making a choice between the two men for Senator from Oregon is that Wayne Morse is not all black, as the hatchet-job "The Record of Wayne Morse" would have you believe; nor is he all white, as his ardent adherents and admirers of whom there are many would have you believe. Wayne Morse is a complex mixture of hues ranging from white to black, with many of them a cloudy gray. 11E SHALL have nothing to say during this campaign in derogation of Sig Unander, for whom we have considerable respect as a long time acquaintance, honest and industrious public servant, and conscientious citizen. Despite his many good qualities, however, we do not believe that he measures up to the standards desirable in a United States Senator. Our comments shall center on Senator Morse volatile, brilliant, able, energetic, mercurial, personally honest, but; and we hate to say it, wholly undependable in any long-range political sense. His record of making enemies of those who were once friends is astounding, and saddening. His fierce and vicious attacks on those who have dared to disagree with him are shocking. ! IT IS THESE last three characteristics and chapter and verse can be cited to prove them that cause us long and serious pause in this elec tion year, a year when Wayne Morse, with nearly 18 years of service in the U.S. Senate, is seeking another six year term. The charge against him that he never has clone anything for the state of Oregon is wholly without foundation. If the Rogue Basin project is authorized this year (and it may be by the time this sees print) it will have been Wayne Morse as much as any other single individual who can claim the credit. The same is true of the Agate dam and reservoir project. The same can be said for dozens of other federal projects of immense benefit to Oregon. The charge that he is ineffective is only part ly true. In thousands of individual instances he has rendered aid and help to Oregon citizens, often without notoriety or thanks. It was he, al most single handed, who marshalled the Kennedy aid to education bill through the Senate last year, only to see it die in the House. A ND YET, in such instances as his communica "tions satellite tactics, in his bitter attacks against Presidents Kennedy, Eisenhower and Tru man, in his personally abusive references to such honorable and distinguished citizens as J. W. Forrester Jr., editor and publisher of the Pendle ton East Oregonian and member of the state board of higher education in such instances one is appalled by his turn about tactics and his personal vindictiveness. What's the matter with Wayne Morse? Perhaps it is his ego within in the words of wrote the splendid recent gon maverick entitled "The Tiger iivthe Senate." ihe book concludes with this paragraph: "Should Wayne Morse venture to subdue the tiger that lurks within, he challenges the toughest adversary of them all. Hut In this eternal struggle he would gain the good will of all who advance along the frontier of the spirit." CUMMINC up, we have concluded that Wayne Morse, complex enigma that he is, would bet ter serve the state of Oregon in the Senate for the next six years than would honest, pedestrian, con servative Sig Unander. We come to this conclusion with many mis givings and with some honest sadness. It is not, for us, a happy choice to have to make. Wayne Morse, an honest assessment indicates, is right more often than he is wrong, but when he is wrong, he is so terribly wrong. However, in the absence of a Charles McNary or a George Chamberlain, we plan to cast our ballot for Wayne Morse. E.A. v Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill.), authentic liberals of the the first quotation is that, in large part true, it con second quotation is that year, between Senator by Harrison Spangler the "tiger that lurks A. Robert Smith, who biography of the Ore MEDFORD "How'd You Like Your Daughter Marrin One Of Them?" COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must bear the name 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 for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paDer; in fact the contrary is often the case. Mrs. McNary for Sig To the Editor: The voters of Oregon will uphold the sound American principles of Sen. Charles L. McNary principles that brought honor and prosperity to our state if they cast their ballots next month for Sig Unander. As Senator McNary was an American and an Oregonian first, and a Republican second, so is Sig Unander. Democrats as well as Repub Means will rally to his cause if they believe In the cherish ed principles of our Constitu tion, our free enterprise sys tem, and the preservation of our individual liberties. Sig Unander is a fine and dedicated public servant. He will be an excellent Senator and a representative who will truly work for Oregon. If we want action for our State in stead of words and more words, we should look to Sig Unander. As concerned citi zens and custodians of Ihe future of Oregon, I believe we can do no better. Mrs. Charles L. McNary, 001 S.W. King ave., Portland, Ore. Questions? To the Editor: Does might make right? Is it really the will of the people of America to impose their will on the state of Mississippi through the interpretations of the Su preme Court and the might of the President s executive pow er? If this is the will of the people, why don't we do away with all state government and let the federal government run the whole shebang? Force will not settle this issue. Right cannot be overcome with force. Couldn't the whole issue of state's rights be put to a na tional vote and find out what the will of the people is in this mutter? Doesn't the con stitution guarantee a republi can form of government to the states? The federal government represents all the people of the United States, you and I and all the citizens of Oregon as well as the people of other states. Should we, as a group, force our will on the people of other states? Would we like it here in Oregon If the people of all the country should tell us how to run our schools? If what Is being done now in Mississippi Is legal, wo bet ter take a good look at our constitution and at the preme court and see If some changes are not in order. Carroll Powell, Box b'2t, Central Point, Ore. Get Olll To the Editor: Approxi mately 85 per cent of all prop erty taxes go to the support of schools here in Jackson county. Then we (the tax pn.vers) pay for parks, lakes recreation areas, swimming pools, equipment and super visors, free text books and school lunches, and very probably things I haven't heard about. uesines tins we maintain a Juvenile Detention Home. Then there is a Health Clinic, a Child Guidance Clinic and a Mental Health Clinic with a new buiding now under con struction for them. When my children were in school the parents were the real "do-it-yourself guys There were no handouts - but neither was there large scale delinquency or olher prob lems needing all the clinics. Everyone paid their own den tal bills, too. Now our chidren are raised, but our incomes have dwin dled and we are hard pressed to pay all the taxes. When the purity of our God-given mountain spring water is at stake - can't you at least care for your children's teeth - use fluorine, if you like poison - but TI.EASE GET OFF OUR BACKS Mrs. Theresa Ferijejon j 608 Lynn ave. Medford. 1 MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. Would Solve Problems To the Editor: The Veterans Administration is satis f i e d with the size of the waiting lists at their hospitals at Port land and Vancouver. These lists averaged 105 for the past fiscal year and 92 for the previous year. The reason those figures were not mucn higher is that patients were discharged at unjustified speeds because of pressure for their beds. There should not be a wait ing list at any Veterans' hos pital. Instead, more beds should be available. How sick must a man be in order to get admitted promptly? A hospital at White City would solve many problems. David Frisch P.O. Box 292 White City, Ore. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS This is written in Portland on a fantastic news day. All at the same time, American astronaut Walter Schirra was circling the earth in his Sigma 7 spacecraft and San Francis co's Giants and the Los An geles Dodgers were battling it out in L.A. to see who would carry the banner of the National League in the World Series. It was nip and tuck in Chavez Ravine. First one team was on top and then the other. Up to the last minute of play, nobody knew who was going to be IT when the end came. Out in space, it was a dif ferent story. It was clear sail ing for Schirra all the way. He was ahead of the game from beginning to end. There was apparently never a mo ment when he didn't have the situation well In hand. IT WAS DPOOlo. rough on the TV They had to carry two world - shaking news events along at one and the same time. They managed it by dubbing in bulletins on the screen while the play was go ing on. Anyway, a good time seems to have been had by all. The wonder of it is that anybody around these parts got any work done at all. TN A tl THE big baseball game. there was some accurate timing. Big time baseball can't be played successfully with out it. But, for accurate timing, carefully planned and meticu lously carried out, I'd say that Astronaut Walter Schirra holds the all-time world's rec ord. He orbited six times around the earth and then came down within about two or three miles of the spot he was aim- J mmum STATE. CAPITCU I '! i.i 1 1 mfciiiii "Lookl Just tell the governor it's a former general of Ihe army to lend support ... ind there are ten thousand more like me. . .1" OREGON Up-and-Down Relations Between Kremlin And Tito Still Indicate Some Coolness By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst As a Communist, Yugo slavia's Marshal Tito always has made it clear that in case of a war be- t w e e n East and West, he would be on the side of the Soviet Union. But as a Yugo slav he also has insi s t e d that Yugo slavia would Newsom attain the the Communist Utopia by Its own path, Independent of Moscow. It was this bit of independ ence which induced the Unit ed States to extend to Tito over the years aid totalling around a billion dollars. It also led Congress in the most recently passed foreign aid bill to continue President Kennedy's discretionary pow ers to give him more aid In the form of food, medicine and clothing. As for the Kremlin, it ex pelled Tito from the Comin form in 1948 and he remain ed in the deep freeze until the Bulganin-Khrushchev vis it to Belgrade in 1955. In that visit the Kremlin leaders apologized for past treatment and in a joint declaration with Tito said that every nation had the right to develop its own social system and its own from of socialism. Things seemed better for a while, but then came 1956 nd Soviet intervention in the Hungarian revolt. Tito de nounced the action as a "fatal error" and joined the United States in backing 8 resolution in the United Nations de manding immediate evacua tion of Soviet troops from Hungary. Back he went Into the Kremlin freezer. There the situation remain ed until about a year ago when Khrushchev's quarrel with Peiping apparently led him to decide on a new effort to consolidate European Com munist nations in an economic and political bloc. The result was last week s visit to Belgrade of Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev. Advance reports said one of Brezhnev's assign ments would be to line up Yugolsav support for the Kremlin's an nounced plan to sign a sepa rate peace treaty with East Germany. The final communique indi cated failure, not only on this assignment but on others as well. ing at which was the ship that was waiting to pick him up when he came down. That's ACCURACY. TN WAYS other than big A time baseball for the losers, this has been a sad day in the news. It has recorded another death in Oregon in a head-on highway collision. A car, try ing to pass two trucks, collid ed with another truck going in the opposite direction. The driver of the car died three hours later in a nearby hos pital. Again, as so many, many times before, this line in the center of the highway proved to be the line separating life from death. WHAT shall we do about it? " If drivers continue to ig nore the danger involved in passing on a two-lane high way without first making sure that there Is AMPLE room to pass, the time will come when on all two-lane main highways and on all multi-lane high ways when the opposing lines of traffic are not separated by physical barriers or by adequate distance, there will be a FENCE where there is now only a narrow line and passing will be impossible. Already this problem Is re ceiving careful study by high way authorities. sesssseneMeessesi AtL It called for a German peace treaty but made no mention of a separate treaty with East Germany. The communique also call ed for an improvement in United Nations' "activity" but made no mention of Khru shchev's three-headed troika plan to recognize the office of secretary general. If Brezhnev's trip was de signed as another apology to Tito, it does not seem to have been accepted too wholeheartedly. Washington Report By William S. Whit (c) United Feature Syndicate LABOR'S SUICIDE Washington The view from this end of the transcon tinental bridge which is the Atlantic ocean is that the Labor party in England is slowly com mitting sui cide for 1 the o d d e 8 t pos sible reasons. After months of painful mil. lente - suu- dling, Hugh Gaitskell, the party's leader, has at last come down on the side of opposition to Britain's entry into the European Common Market. True, his position is not flat and unqualified. But it amounts to the same thing. He is, perhaps, willing to see Britain go in but under many ifs, ands and buts which are clearly unattainable in any world of reality. THE IMMEDIATE response here among friends of the Common Market which is to say among the friends of expanded free world trade has been that Gaitskell has made much more difficult Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan's hard task of taking Britain in. It has been assumed that the Labor party may be maneuvering to force the con servative Macmillan to go to the people in a referendum on the issue. They may even sup pose they can thus defeat his government. But just how hard they may have made things for him at home is at least debatable. And what is not debatable at all is that they have surely made mat ters much easier for him among the six nations of the European Common Market it self. For his Labor opposition has now dramatically proved for Macmillan precisely what he himself had not been en tirely able to prove to the Common Market people. This is that his problems of lead ing the British into this enter prise are real, not fanciful. , ALMOST certainly, there fore, the Common Market nations, notably France and West Germany, will now be more generously disposed than before to those excep tions and concessions for which Macmillan has long been pleading as the necessary pre-conditions to British entry. The Labor party thus may find itself in the position of having won a small tactical battle, by embarrassing Mac millan, on the way to losing a great war. For British vot ers will not long reward a demonstrably irresponsible political party; and this the Labor party has become. This it has become because there Is simply no rational alterna tive for England. She asso ciates with the Common Mar ket, and so prospectively pros pers. Or she goes it alone, and jinks into a fundamental trade and political isolation that would submerge her national identity far more surely than any association with the Com mon Market. It is strange to see the British Labor party, a part of the international Socialist movement, now becoming far more nationalist than the de spised "Tories'1 the Con servatives. WHY. THEN, has Hugh Gait ' skell, ordinarily so able and so responsible, taken this extraordinary step? Maybe it is because this man has had to fight almost alone so many valiant battles against the endless crackpotism of ban-the-bomb leftists in his party whose whole lives symbolize irresponsible extremism. Per haps he simply cannot fight again. If so, he will not be the first sensible politician to go nown at last under the re peated hammer blows of his own lunatic fringe. It is sourly and sadly fitting that in t h e Labor party con vention just concluded in England, the final note of all was a savage attack from the leftists on the United States for daring to resume nuclear testing after the Russians had already done so. Coupled with this, of course, was an equally savage attack upon a man named Hugh Gaitskell who tries to be a friend of tjhe JUxtfti States, I Matter of Fact ey Joseph auop (el New York Herald Tribune Syndicate IF THE PRISONERS ARE RANSOMED Washington Before much time has passed, the wide spread demand to "do some thing a D o u i Cuba" may welt be satis fied in an un expected fash ion. Fidel Cas tro's haul of prisoners from the Bay of Pigs may well be ran- Aisnp somed. The men whom Castro caught have been rotting and starving in his jails for a great many months. For most of them, it is beginning to be a case of now or never. None theless, if President Kennedy moves to ransom them at this juncture, it will prove that he has a much stronger con science than most Republicans appear to think. No doubt the President will seek to safeguard himself on the political front before any ransom agreement is an nounced. No doubt it will not be called a ransom agreement. But no amount of contriving will make the act of paying ransom to Castro either palat able or popular. 0NPI THE other hand, the President's choice is clear Either he can pay the ransom, and bring the prisoners home Or he can leave them to rot until they die in Castro's jails: and thus he can have their deaths forever on his con science and his country's con science for it was Kennedy, acting as President of the United States, who authorized the unhappy landing in the Bay of Pigs. Or he can use military force to make Castro yield these men up which he is not ready to do, at any rate at this time. If the world situation for bids the third alternative, and if the prickings of con science outlaw the second alternative, then the first al ternative is the only one open. For these reasons, the first alternative, of liberating the prisoners by paying ran som to Castro, has apparently been chosen. Even the tempta tion to wait until after the November election which must have been a very great temptation will apparently be resisted. mere is a scotch saying that a man must "dree his own weird," which means, very roughly, that a man must have the guts to pay for his own follies and stand up to his own fate without undue complaint. Kennedy seems to be obeying this grim injunc tion in the present instance, and in a way that is not common among politicians, especially in an election year. w rpHE simple fact that this -- essentially moral choice must now be discussed in election-year terms both illus trates and emphasizes a new phenomenon of great sig nificance. Partly because of the mood of the country, and partly because a good many Republicans would have it so, foreign policy is becoming a primary factor in domestic party politics. Unpublished national polls show an immense majority of the country favoring a naval blockade of Cuba, for in stance. It is pretty clear, therefore, that President Kennedy could stir the coun try to its depths, and lift it partly from the doldrums, by the simple act of ordering a blockade. Since the end of the last war, nothing quite like this situation has ever been pro duced by all the chops and changes of the long contest between the U. S. and the So viet Union. There was no pub lic pressure on President Tru man to intervene in Korea, or on President Eisenhower to stand off the Chinese Com munists at yuemoy, or on President Kennedy to adopt a bold, firm course in South Viet Nam. But now there is public pressure, not only with re spect to Cuba, but, also, less damatically but no less in sistently, with respect to Ber lin. Futhermore. although few people realize it, Berlin ties the President's hands in the Cuban situation, at least for the present. rTHE point is that the Berlin a crisis at last appears to be nearing a climax. If fighting is avoided during this climax, it will be very surprising. Fighting need not, and prob ably will not. lead to an H- bomb war. Yet the oncoming climax in the Berlin crisis is plainly going to be a horribly risky and breathless business. As the President himself told the Congressional lead ers at a briefing a few days ago, the delicate and danger us task of meeting the ex pected challenge at Berlin must be complicated by the Cuban problem. That the Ber lin corner must be rounded, in short, before the final choice is made, to tackle or not to tackle the Cuban prob lem. In the present mood of the country, if the President fails to meet the challenge of Ber lin, he may as well send his resignation to the Senate. If he meets the challenge, and if there is an H-bomb war, Cuba will not matter very greatly. But if Kennedy meets a Berlin challenge with suc cess, and without an H-bomb war, the whole world situa tion will be incalculaby but favorably altered, and the mood of the country will also be transformed. These are the basic, realistic calculations that now govern the Administration's actions. But since the country is so particularly Cuba-conscious, it will be a bold act, to take time off from preparing for the Berlin climax, in order to rescue the men at the Bay of Pigs from Castro's cruel grip. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c- Field Enterprises Inc. DIFFERING SKILLS After my talk, when some sweet little old lady comes up to me (as so often happens) h n 1 rl i n rt a sheaf nf nanpi- in her hand, I usually know just what to i to expect. She has a niece away at college, or a nephew stationed Harris abroad, and they write the most charm ing and delightful letters. Would I be good enough to take a look and see if I don't agree that the niece (or the nephew) should be encouraged to become a professional writer? It is curious how deeply this legend persists in the lay mind that a person who writes interesting letters has the makings of a professional writer. Nothing could be fur ther from the truth; the talent for letter-writing has no rela tionship to writing of any other kind. '' Most great writers have been wretched correspond ents; when we find an ex ception, like Byron, it is because his letters were really written with the pub lic (and posterity) in mind from the first. They may be written in letter form but they are carefully calculat ed works of art. Writing good letters is a knack, like being able to play the piano with your toes, or adding up a long column of figures in your mind. The personal corres pondence of most conse quential writers is drab, curt and factual; they save their talent for their working-hours. I have never written a letter in my life that would do credit to a high school English major; yet I have friends of absolutely no lit erary talent who can pen the most amusing letters, spun out of the smallest pos sible store of small talk. If they expect me to reply in kind, I am embarrassed at my pathetic lack of skill, and don't answer at all. In many areas of this kind, the public tends to confuse a special knack with real tal ent. The arithmetical freaks, for instance, who can do amaz ing computations in their heads, usually are capable of making no contribution to mathematics; while an Ein stein, with a mind of profound originality, could scarcely add up a grocery bill correctly. Likewise, the chess masters who could play a dozen games simultaneously blindfold were not necessarily first-rank play ers; Capablanca, perhaps the finest natural player of our time, was extremely deficient in blindfold play. Yet none of the blindfold masters could beat him in tournaments. Real professionals, strange ly enough, do not exercise their professional skills in their personal lives: I know engineers who can't change a light bulb in their own house, psychiatrists who treat their children as if Freud had never existed, accountants whose do mestic budgets are always out of balance. In a letter-writing contest. Shakespeare woul'd pwtyrj.ty few Veut.ex to a foae. zle b-. -W- Wis ejjj. JajJa)' niece af a;"1Kffi. 1 'fV-N .A