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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1962)
SUNDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1962 MtutunU MAiLt iniouiib. inbuiwuy. otiuuwt MedforjvWribune ' "Everyone in Southern Oregon"" niThe Mil Tribune" Publnhed Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North rirjl.. Ph. 772-8141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor KFRB CREV Advertisinf Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr. ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporlt Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'i Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Independent Newipaper Entered as aecond data matter at Medford, Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance. Daily and Sunday 1 year $18 00 Daily and Sunday 8 moi. 10.00 Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 5.00 Sunday Only One year $5.00 Single Copy (Mailed! 20c By Camel And Motor Route. Daily and Sunday 1 year 821.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.75 Sunday Only 1 mo. 50c Carrier and Vendora Copy 10c - Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackton County United Presa International Full Leated Wire 13. P I Telephoto Newplcturea MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU" Of CIRCULATIONS in NELSON ROBERTS i ASSOCI ATES Offlcca In New York. Chi cago Detroit. San Francisco. Lot A ngelei. Seattle, Portland. Denver. NATIONAL fOITOHIAl iniiiiiiii.ii.ini UBUSHESJ ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medfoid and Jackson County History from the files of Tha Mall Tribun. 10, 20. 30, 40 and 50 yean too- 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 28, 1952 (Tuesday) Medtord'8 Greater Chest drive reached 32 per cent of lis drive today with $18,512 turned In as pledges or con tributions. . Hope for a new, clear and definite law spelling out the philosophy of reclamation In unmistakable words was voiced last night by Oregon Senator Guy Cordon In a talk at a banquet of delegates at tending the 40th annual con vention of the Oregon Recla mation Congress here. 20 'YEARS AGO Oct. 28, 1942 (Wednesday) Crater Lake Park Ranger W. T. Frost rescues snow stranded motorist in north of park; snows close east, north entrances. Clyde C, Fltchncr, ex-traffic policeman, enlists In navy. 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 28, 1932 (Friday) Eugene Thorndlke elected chairman of Medford school board. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The nearer the election, the hard er it Is to differentiate (there's a word for you) between a mad Democrat aud a frenzied Republican, and neither one will ever see the White House Lawn. Mixed with the other two Is the wild candidate, who thinks he Is abused every time another candidate is mentioned." 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 28. 1932 (Saturday) Martial law proclaimed In Italy as fascists begin march against Rome. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Honk ing geese and autns are now wending southward, which Is where the comparison ends." SO YEARS AGO Oct. 28. 1912 (Monday) Ground broken for two J30.000 structures, a theater on East Main st. and a ware house on South Front st Jewelry valued at $300 stolen from Miss Alice Hart ley. Whafs Your I.Q.7 Nlnt or ten cornel li tusariai; seven or tight it tscalltnt) flvt tr tix is good. 1. Name the largest present-day land animal. of 2. How many hams may he obtained Irom a single hog. souNiieor RMneXer Z longest in the world 4 Who served as President of the Confederate States of America? 5. If a pen and Ink cost sixty cents, and the pen cost fifty cents more than the Ink what did the ink cost 6 if a President fails to; sign a Bill within 10 days while Congress Is in session. It does not become law: true or false? 7. How often is a census of population taken In the Unlt-.-i -. Km rg sii-i . aiopcn won in u ur loss in iWp, hair, or weight? 10 Which king, during the time of Jesus, "Ruled like a wild beast"? Antwart: I. Elephant. 2. Two. 3. Nilt. 4. Jelltnon Davit. 5. Firs canlt. 8. Fall 7. Every tan yaart. 9. Buf falo. 9. Lots ef balr. 10. Herod. s. what is the popular ;ine materials in snoes te uienuiied. name (or the American bison ! Now in a world preoccupied with naval block 9 if you suffered fromJa(cs an( United Nations debates, such an order Skill and Courage Needed Three of the columnists who appear regularly on this page (Alsop, Lippmann and Jenkins) plus several writers of Communications today ponder the Cuban situation. Their concern is justified, for the Cuban crisis is the most hair-raising one we have gone through since the Korean War. Their views vary, just as the views of ordi nary Americans everywhere vary. They run the gamut from the placard-toting "No War Over Cuba" picketers, to the "It's about time" reaction of many who have been advocating intervention for months. $ IF THERE can be said to be a national consen- sus, however, one would have to say that it is in support of the President. This support, again, stems from a variety of reasons. Our own support is predicated on two facts, the first that the President and only the Presi dent has available all the facts on which to base a decision plus the responsibility of making that decision ; the second that there is a sharp distinc tion, in this nuclear-missile age, between weapons of defense and weapons of offense. This distinction has been explained over and over, but its significance has eluded many. For a wealthy nation of more than 180 millions, most powerful militarily in the world, to crush little Cuba on the basis of tanks, trucks, short-range missiles and technicians, who by no stretch of the imagination could threaten us,' would have been the height of folly, and would have held us up to contempt throughout the world. HOWEVER, when incontrovertible evidence is ni'oconlnrl In sjhnuf (hut U'nunnllS filliwhlp of hemisphere-wide destruction are being emplaced, that's something else again, and justifies us in taking the action we have. Risky? Of course it's risky. It's a risky world. And the fact that missiles can be tipped with nuclear bombs makes the risk of an entirely dif feren order of magnitude than it was prior to 1945. Yet, to us, it seems the situation left us no alternative, and that if we are to observe "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind" we must act as courageously and forthrightly as wc know how, and publish before the world what we are doing and why. IN THEORY, we strongly support disarmament, suspension of nuclear testing, a world ruled by law rather than brute strength. That day may yet come. But because we have found it impossible to trust our adversaries, the day is yet to come when we can make any real progress toward those desirable ends. Meanwhile the balance of terror the deadly checker game with the future of mankind at stake continues. Let us play it as courageously and skillfully as we know how. E.A. One Mans Victory The other day we received in the mail an envelope containing a little pamphlet entitled "Federal Trade Commission Guides for Shoe Content Labeling and Advertising, adopted Oc tober 2, 19(52." On the front of it a note was written in long hand. It said "Victory after 5 years. (Signed) Wilbur." Thus Wilbur (Jai'dner proudly but quietly signaled the completion of a long battle, one which led him to voluminous correspondence with Senators and Congressmen and government officials, with moguls of the shoe manufacturing industry, with shoe repairmen throughout the world, and to international honors for his long and ultimately successful struggle. IT WAS five years ago that Wilbur Gardner; became irritated beyond bearing at the use, without notice or warning, of sub-standard ma terials in the shoes brought to him to be repaired in his little shop on East Main street. He decided to do something about it, personally. Letter after letter, petition after petition flowed from his typewriter. Gradually he gath ered support, some of it from powerful organi zations. But he met strong opposition, too, from many shoe manufacturers who did not want to be put to the bother of telling people what mater ials they were using in making shoes, and who feared economic loss if forced to do so. Undeterred, Wilbur Gardner continued his one-man campaign, although by this time he had hundreds, perhaps land adherents. I THE NEW Guides were published in the Fed-J eral Register on Oct. 12, and become opera- j tive 90 days thereafter. In general, thev provide that manufacturers' ami iviaiiers cannot use (such as claiming a shoe is made of leather, when only part of it is; or using words which j suggest that leather is used when it is not); re- quirements that "simulated or imitation leather"; be called what it is; and further requiring that; I., for the protection of consumers and Wilbur Gard ner's customers may not seem of earth-shaking importance. Rut it is comforting to know that one man, if possessed with sufficient determination and a good cause, can achieve a desirable end, even in the huge and slow-moving structure of the Federal government. E.A. thousands, of supporters misleading advertising .,..,. "I May Still Have To Rely On Recklest Inaction" Matter of Fact (e) New York Herald THE TR AP THAT WAS LAID Washington - As more and more information seeps out about the President's grim, c o u r a gcous d e c I s ion on Cuba, the cri sis that he confronted ap pears more and more ter- 1 mi. f- j y j tutu, i ui 6- ,4 Vj-fc cnt politi c a 1 tl reasons for the J' SJ President's ie- Aimp iisiun nuvir al ready been summarized in this space; but it now appears that these were not, after all, the dominant reasons. In Cuba, Nikita S. Khrushchev had in fact laid a vicious mili tary trap for President Ken nedy. All other considerations were dominated by the need to spring this trap while it was still relatively harmless. To understand the trap's nature, it is necessary to un derstand the existing balance of nuclear striking power - the delicate balance of terror that preserves freedom. For the Soviet trap was designed to upset this balance deci sively. . IN BRIEF, the Soviets do not now have what some of the experts call "free first, strike capability," because they do not have enough long range missiles to cover the essential targets in this hemisphere. They would have had this kind of capability if they had gone all out to build lCBMs at the lime when a missile gap was very sensibly feared. But at that lime, three or four years ago, they sought to economize by limiting their quantity production of mis siles to MRBMs and IRBMs -ballistic missiles of 1,100 and 2,000 miles range, respective ly, in the current models. Thus they could threaten all European targets, but could not seriously threaten the U.S. Contrary to Soviet expecta tions, this MRBM-1RBM threat to Western Europe failed to procure a surrender at Berlin. Quantity production of Soviet lCBMs was thereupon order ed. But almost simultaneously, after the election of President Kennedy, the U.S. long range missile program was greatly stepped up. IN LONOI range missiles, the current balance is therefore almost even; and within 18 months, the II S. will have no less than WHO operational K'BMs in hardened launching pads. Tit is me.ins that in IH mouths the U.S. will have a close - to - invulnerable deter rent, al least until another great change in the griz.ly missile art again alters all the equations. One can hardly doubt that the prospect of tins immense increase in U S. nuclear sink ing power Importantly influ enced the Soviets to begin pushing the Berlin crisis to towards a final climax. But wiiile the Soviets still lacked "free first strike capability. " the risks of pushing too hard and too fast were unavoidably very terrible. "Free first strike capabil ity" iwhirh the U.S. long en joyed but never used) mav be defined as the power to take out enough of your op ponent's nuclear strength with your own first strike, so that his counter-strike will be re duced to a point considered acceptable. 'IM1E Soviets were in fact seeking to gam this kind of freedom to strike first by in stalling large numbers of MllllMi and IRBMs in Cuba The President's action has halted them m good time; li.it if they had not been hailed, the upset in the nuclear bal ance would have been drastic indeed. To he specific, the weight of the unavoidable American retaliatory slitke might have been reduced from many hun dreds of II bombs to some where In the neighborhood of By Joseph Alsop Tribune Syndicate 50 bombs. In any exchange. this many H-bombs could still have been launched from Po laris submarines and the lew SAC bombers that would have escaped a Soviet first strike But the Soviets could also hope that the U.S. might give way rather than risk a nuclear exchange, after the great up set in the balance which they hoped to achieve in Cuba. The prize, in short, was very great. The plan gaining this great prize may properly be described as a trap for three reasons. First, the work of missile emplacement was begun at the last possible mo ment, under cover of Hum cane Ella (and long after Sen ator Keating said offensive missiles were being emplaced, when nothing of the sort was happening). Second, when once begun, the work was car ried forward with a speed both impressive and alarm ing, with the obvious aim of creating an accomplished fact as soon as possible. rpiIIRD, every effort was -- meanwhile made to con fuse, delude, and falsely reas sure the American govern ment, by Ambassador Dobry nin's oily promises that long range missiles would never be sited in Cuba, by Foreign Minister Gromyko's outright lies to President Kennedy, and by the phony-jolly pro fessions of peaceful intent with which Khrushchev him self welcomed Ambassador Kohler to Moscow. This was, in truth, a darkly Machiavellian scheme. If the U.S. had waited until faced with the accomplished fact of the important Soviet nuclear striking power in Cuba, one can easily imagine the sequel. Khrushchev m i g h t well have come to the U.S. next month, as he has been saying he would, but with what new trumps in his hands! And when Khrushchev delicately referred to his new "first free strike capability," and angrily demanded surrender at Ber lin, President Kennedy would then have no alternative ex cept to offer his submission or order an American first strike on the spot. But that cannot happen now, because the U.S. sprang the Soviet trap while it was still relatively harmless. Campaign By ERIC SEVAREID Los Angeles - California is not a state of mind, as alleged; it is at least three slates of mind. It is a p e r s o nality split t h roe ways like a rapidly rising i uvea tment, which it also is. There is the California o t t h e pleasure seeker, the the love god Srvarriil sun-worshiper. desses of Muscle Beach, the hot rodders and the strolling blonde with sun glasses and manicured poodle, pretending that Hollywood still exists. There is the California of the pure intellect, working at the highest growing points of modern thought, trying to master the Age of Overkill and represented by the best laboratories in the world, the world's greatest concentration of Nohel Prize winners, and by Mime of the most effective continuing seminars in the humanitarian studies this country knows. And there is the California of the retired Iowa farmer and small town banker with his half-rim eyeglasses and string tie. of the white Baptist church, the mission society, of front parlor anti-communism, anti-viviscctionism. anti alcoholism, and anti godle.-.--ne.v. This third California frowns with extreme distaste! tiff Today & Tomorrow By Walter Lippmann (O Ntw York Herald THbiina Syndicate BLOCKADE PROCLAIMED It is Wednesday morning as I am writing this article, and the President's proclamation of a selective blockade has just gone into effect. We are now waiting for the other shoe to drop. There are a number of So viet and Com munist bloc Lippmann ships on thei One in particu way to Cuba. lar is presumed to be carry ing contraband. There has as yet been no contact between these ships and our forces and wc do not know what orders Moscow has given to the ship captains. For the present, all depends upon these orders. As of the present moment we do not know whether the orders are to turn away from Cuba, to proceed and submit to search, or to proceed and to refuse to submit to search. I TNT1L we do know, we can only speculate as to wheth er the Soviets will engage themselves at sea on the way to Cuba, will submit to the blockade and retaliate else where, or will limit them selves to violent statements without violent action. There are those, for whose judgment I have profound respect, who think that it is now too late for this country to influence the decisions of the Soviet Union and that the President is now irretrievably committed to a course which can end only with a tot.il blockade or an invasion of Cuba. They may be right. But I have lived through two world wars, and in both of them, once we were engaged, we made the same tragic mistake. We suspended diplomacy when the guns began to shoot. In both wars, as the result, we achieved a great victoiy but we could not make peace. There is a mood in this coun try today which could easily cause us to make the same mistake again. We must in nonor attempt to avoid it. T SEE danger of this mistake in the fact that when the President saw Mr. Gromyko on Thursday, and had the evi dence of the missile build-up in Cuba, he refrained from confronting Mr. Gromyko with this evidence. This was to suspend diplomacy. If it had not been suspended, the President would have shown Mr. Gromyko the pictures, and told him privately about the policy which in a few days he intended to announce publicly. This would have made it more likely that Mos cow would order the ships not to push on to Cuba. But if such diplomatic ac tion did not change the orders, if Mr. Khrushchev persisted in spite of it, the President's public speech would have been stronger. For it would not have been subject to the criticism that a great power had issued an ultimatum t another great power without first attempting to negotiate the Issue. By confronting Mr. Gro myko privately, the President would have given Mr. Khru shchev what all wise states Shows California's 3 upon the California of the first part, and looks witn wonder and fear at the Cali fornia of the second part, ..o busy taking apart the compli cated universe which God put together in exactly six days oi twenty-four hours each. This third California also regards standard California politics, witth its Nixons and its Browns, as hooelesslv hn- pure, and so it has put for- ward a third candidate for governor, a tall young man the rest of the country has NOT heard about, but a young man who just might decide this election and subsequent national events by pulling in enough extreme right Rcpub - luan votes to guarantee the slightly shy and soulful gaze : tuition, now ridiculously low I 0(jT ancl to sivc us depend defeat of Richard M. Nixon. of the reformer who has seen 1 by most standards. He lias an ablc Proof "'at he has done so. Thirty-five year old Robert , the light, and the old-fashion-! idea much of the state bu-! And that if he doesn't take L. Wyckoff. who practices cd courtliness of his manner j reaucracy dealing with wel-! tncm "!- WE WILL, medicine and law and now ; was a positive refreshment in fare couid be eliminated by a, By FORCE, if necessary, oratory could win a quarter' this era and region of sloppy. : private unemployment insur-' " "1p missiles arc left in million votes, and in a condi- cocky youth. You can't hcip -ance plan wherebv one dav's Cuba- Castro will use them to lion where Democratic regis-1 but like him and you can't pay is withheld each of the ! oackmaii the Western Hemis tration is far higher than Re- help but admire his total in-) first twenty weeks of a prr-phcre' publican registration, that just tcgrity. slightly suffocating as son's employment, to be hand-1 might put period to the car- it is. ; cd over when and if he loses THESE past few davs have eer of Mr. Nixon, now in his seventh crisis. It is pretty hard to make fun : of an earnest, unworldly man Trailing a ton of electronic who believes that only morali cliitter for the purposes of a ty and applied Christianity CBS Report, we di stended on will save this state, nation and the candidate of the Prohibi- lion i-Hiiy mow unnei going a name change to the American Tarty because it will settle for state liquor stores and charging the beverage indus- try witli the cost of treating alcoholics, which sounds like a fair idea) in one of those curving canyon streets of end men give their adversaries -the chance to save face. THERE is, I know, no use crying over spilt milk. But I am making the point because there is still so much mil that can be spilt. We have, we must note, made two separate demands. One is that no more "of fensive weapons" shall be brough: into Cuba. On tlvs demand, we shall soon have a showdown. Considering t h s unanimity of the other Ameri can stales, considering the strategic weakness of the So viet Union in this hemisphere, there is reason to hope that the quarantine of Cuba will work, though we must expert retaliation elsewhere. But the President has laid down a second demand, which is that the missile installations already in Cuba be dismantled and removed. How this is to be done is a very great ques tion, even supposing that there is no shooting conflict at sea. And it is here, I be lieve, that diplomacy must not abdicate. There are three ways to get rid of the missiles already in Cuba. One is to invade and occupy Cuba. The second way is to institute a total blockade, particularly of oil shipments, which would in a few months ruin the Cuban economy. The third way is to try, I repeat to try, to negotiate a face-saving agreement. T HASTEN to say at once 1 that I am not talking about and do not believe in a "Cuba Berlin" horse trade. Cuba and Berlin ure wholly different cases. Berlin Is not an Ameri can missile base, it is not a base for any kind of offensive action, as Cuba is by way of becoming. The only place that is truly comparable with Cuba is Tur key. This is the only place where there are strategic weapons right on the frontier of the Soviet Union. There are none in Norway, there are none in Iran, there are none in Pakistan. There are some in Italy. But Italy is not on the frontier of the Soviet Union. There is another important similarity between Cuba and Turkey. The Soviet missile base in Cuba, like the U.S. NATO base in Turkey, is of little military value. The So viet military base in Cuba is defenseless, and the base in Turkey is all but obsolete. The two bases could be dis mantled without altering the world balance of power. IF, as the first concrete step in the disarmament we've talked so much about, there could be an agreement to re move offensive weapons from fringe countries, it would rut mean, of course, that Turkey would cease to be under the protection of NATO. Norway docs not have stra tegic weapons on her soil and she is still an allied nation. Great Britain, which is a pit lar of NATO, is actually liqui dating U.S. missile and bom ber bases on her own soil in accordance with Western stra tegic doctrine. For all these reasons I say that an agreement of this sort may be doable and that there may exist a way out of the tyranny of automatic and ur. controllable events. i less, modest ranch style hous - cs with their built-in garages, built-in kitchens and Inial built-in uniformity. It was no surprise to find ! it was the wiseacre who was ! ur Dl'c'ns, Department that Mr. Wyckoff U not a very j tonguc-whipped by hundreds tlTnT'r-0'' lhat u has UN"DE smart man; but there is a ' of indignant phone calls. The 1 'N1ABLE mlclhgence (mean- i difference between smartness : and intelligence and it WAS j a surprise to find him a very 'intelligent man. He i current. ly pursuing a doctorate in ; medical law at Yale, between I dosing uaticnts and trotting j around to the neighborhood schools and church meetings j with his "campaign manager." He must have been born grave i of mien and mind; he looks at one with the steady, but world - who s to say him nay i ne nigm neiore mv visit one of the scornful wisecrackers ! who command large audiences as "commentators" in thr Dis- neyland of Los Angeles tele- vision had marie merciless public fun of Dr Wyckoff in! an interview "Oh dear, but j , it was humiliating." said the) "Actually, there's not much we as individuals can do you can try praying, if you'd like ... 1" Try and -By BENNETT CERF- TpDITH HEAD, famous Hollywood dress designer, bemoan the fact that the glamour girls on the screen in 1962 don't seem to care much about style. "In the good old days," recalls Miss fieaa, our big stars had enough sense to have a trade mark. Jean Harlow and her white satin dresses. Dietrich and her tailored slacks. Garbo and her slouch hats and trench coats. Colbert and her Peter Pan collars. Craw ford and her tailored suits. Nowadays? Bah! They all buy the same dress and wear it at the same party and no one even gets angry!" Mrs. Thompson had a dim opinion of the way her neighbor kept house. 'Til tell you what a mess her place is in," reported1 Mrs. Thompson to her husband. "While I was having a cup of coffee with her yesterday afternoon, her telephone rang and aha couldn't find it!" Howard Lindsay tells ot a chum who saw a cat In the top most branches of a tree, and climbed aloft to rescue the pool1 thing. It turned out to be a wildcat. Recalled the rescuer later, "I never got ao tired of one cat in all my life." Erasmus High School boasts an intrfguingly built sophomore who's constantly mimicking Miss Bardot. Classmates have af fectionately dubbed her the "Brooklyn Brigitte." O 196J. by Bennett Cerf. retributed by King Features Syndicate. In the Day's News By FRANK The week's BIG news: KROOSH chickened. That should tell us every thing we need to know. WHAT of the future? Let's speak softly of course. But Let's CARRY A BIG STICK, and leave no doubt in anybody's mind that we will USE IT if anybody tries to bluff us. That's the lesson of the past few critical days. Let's heed it. THOUGHT for the future: Let's bring the Monroe Doctrine back to life. Let's make it the NUMBER ONE credo of our foreign policy. If it is true that the - Way Split 1 candidate. "1 just crept out of there like a whipped dog." Bl" Californians. like other Americans, quicklv sense the nresenrn nf a mr, ,) i rating of the commentator must have gone down, that of the candidate, up. Dr. Wycoff wrung his hands 1 over the" clutter of papers on ' built ct Dnmlcrs (capable of the table in his dining nook. dropplns miclcar bombs on I "I have to rin all mv own reJll5) stl" remain in Cuba. j search," he said, "and it's so j terribly time consuming." He i has an idea that taxes could j be controlled or reduced by a S,iu per semester increase in I university and junior college his job. and state aid given to I been ROUGH days. But him only when that fund is they have brought some pleas exhausted. Offhand. I couldn't ing developments. During" see what was so terribly these days of trial and tribti wrong with either idea. jlation. it has been made quite ' ! clear to us that w hen all the I asked if he thought he would win the election He hesitated, blushed and said. "I don't want to mislead you. but they tell me a candidate must appear confident at all times. So yes. I will win " (Distributed 1962, by The Hall Syndicate, lnc.l) (Alt Rights Referred) Stop Me JENKINS Monroe Doctrine has been get ting somewhat out of date, let's bring out a new model, tailored to the needs of our world of today. Let s make it plain that it any foreign nation, or any combination of foreign na lions, or ANY FOREIGM IDEOLOGY tries by force, or by guile, or by fraud, to im pose its system upon the West ern Hemisphere, wp will FIGHT at the drop of a hat, if need be. 'piIEN - Having made that plain Let's be decent and reason able. Having made it clear that the Western Hemisphere is our part of the world and thai we have pledged our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor to the task o keeping the Western Hemis phere the kind of world wa want to live in, let's perhaps be a little less brash in our ideas of how the rest of the world ought to be run. ' S , , 0Ur fuU're Joh , Another job faces us NOW. , ln,ormation) that morn nan (capable of bc,ns "scd offensively against ! "tissian- 'HAT shall we do about , " that? The answer is plain: ! Tell Castro to TAKE "EM cards are down, when it is a choice between the American way of life and the communist way of life, our neighbors of the Western Hemisphere would rather have Ol'R wav of life than the COMMUNIST itsv of life, j That s something worth (knowing.