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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1962)
MONDAY. iteDFORDS&&TBIBUNK " "Everyone in Southern Oregon Read! The MaU Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MKUFOHD PRINTING CO. S3 North irSt.. Ph. 712-8141 " ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mng. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editor DALE j:RICKSON. Circulation Mgr An-Independent Newspaper En'ered Rf second class matter at Medtord. Oregon, under .'it ol March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance. ... Daily and Sunday 1 yearllSOO Dallv and Sunday 8 moi 10.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moi. 5.00 Sunday Only One year $.1 00 Single Copy (Mailed) 30c By Camel And Motor Route. DbIIv and Sunday 1 year 821.00 DalJv and Sunday 1 mo. 1.75 Sunday Only 1 mo. 50c Carrie! andVendori Copy 10c Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper Jf Jackson County United Press International Full Leaaed Wire U. P I Telepjioto Newiplcturei "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU" OfjriRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES Officea In New York. Chi cago Detroit. San Francisco. Lot Angeles. Seattle, Portland. Denver. NATIONAL EDITORIAL ls8,c6T,i?M kuuiyuwuiijuj Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the tiles ot The Mail Trlbun. 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago- 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 29, 19S2 (Wednesday) Purihpr studv of the dcten. tlon needs of Jackson county was recommended yesterday by the child welfare commit tee of the Jackson County Council for Children and Youth. nnrnll Huson has been ap pointed secretary-treasurer of the Medford Kiwanls ciud u succeed, E. Ron Rice, who takes the office of president In January. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 29. 1942 (Thurtday) Medford theater holds "salvage matinee": piece of scrap metal charged as price of admission. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Gen eral Winter now prevails in Russia. Lieutenant Winter has been noted around here. 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 29. 1932 (Saturday) "Save Southern Oregon Normal School association" formed at Ashland. State highway department completes plans for Medford Central Point highway which would follow railroad tracks. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 29. 1922 (Sunday) Judge F. M. Calkins and 24 Jackson and Josephine county attorneys endorse can didacy of Col. E. E. Kelly for circuit Judge. Scheduled Independent Vot ers league speeches In Jack son county courthouse in Jack sonville town hall when keys to courthouse became lost; Irate league members claim "loss" is not accidental. SO YEARS AGO Oct. 29, 1912 (Tuesday) California firm announces plans to build three to five fruit packing plants In Rogue vallev during coming year. The Rev. Mrs. Edith llill Brooker to speak at Medford Natntortum building at dual preelection women ! suffrage rally. Whal's Your I.Q.7 Nina or ten corrtct Is superior; seven or eight Is excellent; rive or six Is good. 1. Who was known as the "Apostle to the Gentile"? 2. What sportsman calls out "track" when he wishes others to clear the way? 3. What notable naval event ' took place in 1588? 4. What Is another name for Samuel Leghorn Clemens" 5. Is a dendrolite a mythical fairy, meteor, uranium deriv ative or' petrified plMitt'.' 6. In the duel between Alex ander Hamilton and Aaron Burr, who was mortally wounded? 7. What wag the world's most successful musical com edy? 8. Which early American was all of these: philosopher, scientist, statesman. Inventor, publisher, author, printer? 9. What Is an invoice? 10. Robert Preston recently starred in a hit Broadway musical; name It. Answers) 1. Paul. 2. Skitr. 3. Destruction of Spanish Armada. 4. Mark Twain. 5. Petrified plant. 8. Hamilton. 7. "Oklahomal" 8. Benjamin Franklin. 9. A bill for mer chandise or services. 10. "The Music Man." association OCTOBER 29. 1962 What So Rare? "What is so rare as a clay in June?" asked the poet. We anwser: A day in October a day like yesterday, Sun day, when the mists rise slowly from the land, and a white sun breaks low and red of the maple leaves are gradually yielding to the brown bare branches; when the spicy smell of burning leaves blows across the lawns; when the clatter of the wings of a covey of quails is the only sound except for the whir of a lawn mower making a last trip through the damp grass. E.A. For City Offices It has been a long time since so much interest has been shown in Medford's municipal election. Not only are there three candidates for mayor; there are also an unprecedented number of candi dates for the city council three each in wards one, two and four, and two in ward three. This is, to our way of thinking, a healthy thing. We hope that the interest shown by the candidates in putting themselves forward for election to time-consuming, difficult and unpaid jobs is matched by the interest of the citizens and voters, and that the "apathy" of voters this year will prove to be more apparent than real. WE HAVE already stated our preference for James Dunlevy for mayor over his two op ponents, and the reasons therefore. He is, in our considered belief, by far the superior candidate. Bill Singler lacks the experience and seasoning to be chief executive of the city; Fred Robinson, by his absenteeism and irresponsible attitude to ward city affairs, is unqualified. In only two of the four wards are experienced councilmen runnincr for relection. We believe there is always room for new blood on any coun cil, and it will be provided this year from wards one and four. We also believe that a certain minimum of experienced and qualified men should be reelected, to provide both continuity and background for the new council. For this reason we suggest that Donald Han sen be reelected from ward two, and Robert L. Baccus be reelected from ward three. We say nothing against their opponents, but would like to point out that Hansen has grown in stature and maturity durintr his service on the council, and that Baccus has been a man, most especialy in his chairmanship of the city's outstanding Sister City program. IN WARD one we believe that Robert J. Cun ningham would bring a higher degree of rounded background and experience to the coun cil than would either George Joyce or Die Walsh. In ward four, we would favor the election of Richard H. Travis over John H. Lusk and Edgar B. Van Horn. City office is, fortunately and sensibly, non partisan, and these recommendations are made regardless of the party affiliation of the indi viduals. In some cases," indeed, we do not know what that affiliation may be, and care less. We think the city will be well served if Jim my Dunlevy is elected mayor, and if Robert J. Cunningham, Donald Hansen, Robert L. Baccus and Richard H. Travis are elected councilmen. E.A. Remarkable In Many Ways The book. "The Remarkable Kennedys," was nublished in March 19150. was only a United States a very fond eye on the for President. In view of what has what is happening now in Massachusetts it con tains a prediction worth recalling. Indeed, lor lone-ranire accuracy, the predic tion, attributed to a politician in Chicago other wise unidentified by author Joe McCarthy, chal lenges the famous on-the-nose prophecy by James A. Farley in ISKmJ that the Republican candidate for President would carry only Maine and Vermont. The last paragraph in the book goes like this: "When Jack gets in the White House . . . he'll make Bobby Attorney general. Teddy will run for Congress iii Massachusetts and Sargent Shriver will probably become the governor of Illinois. The big question is, what with Peter Lawford ; JACK did got to the White House and he did make Bobby Attorney General. Teddy is run ning for Congress, more specifically for the Sen ate. Sargent Shriver very well could become governor of Illinois; his achievements in running the Peace Corps have lent him an aura of electa bility. On Peter Lawford the crystal ball is a blank. The unnamed Chicago politician didn't tell McCarthy whether Teddy would be elected on Nov. (!, 19(52. But on the eve of the election, re torts from the Bay State lis Republican opponent, 1 he independent, H. Stuart Hughes, grandson j of the late Chief Justice Charles Evan Hughes, I has virtually admitted that he is in the race only! to pick up protest "peace" votes from advocates! of nuclear disarmament. L.K.K. Five mills in the F.ugone area will quit burning mill waste in burners, which long have been a landmark of the lumber industry. All independently owned, they are Installing equipment for debarking and chipping and will jell their wood chips to pulp nulls. Only one mill in the West Eugene area will continue to burn all its waste, though some will continue to burn bark. This is a stop in progress. Not only will the halt In burning reduce air pollution, it will in crease mill revenues by utilizing former waste Oregon Statesman, Salem. through; when the yel most effective council when John F. Kennedy Senator, albeit one with Democratic nomination happened since and are they going to do had him favored over George Cabot Lodge. MEDFORD Other Foreign Newt i:!Kf 'f-ul ta COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must bear the although under certain circumstances for publication Is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the rtght to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters p. Inted in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; In fact the contrary is often the case. Word from Florida To the Editor: Having had the pleasure of being a guest in your fine city for six weeks this past summer with my two sisters living at 1883 Cunning ham Road, and having made many friends while there in addition to my sister, Mrs, Elizabeth Hawkins and Mrs. Cora M. Doney, it is my feel ing that all of them would like to know what is going on In Florida, in view of the Cuban blockade. Rest assured it has even made a difference this quick security measures have been taken throughout the state both as to the Florida bases of the Air Fields, Naval Bases and Cape Canaveral and such installations as public utility stations etc. We are also being advised to lay in at least two weeks supply of groceries as well as an extra supply of gasoline in cases where the residents own and drive cars. Shelters have already been and still being marked to pro tect as many people as pos sible in the event of attack and all of these locations are distributed in convenient lo cations or in buildings that are well known and easy to reach under the direction of the Civil Defense, etc. The governor, the Hon. Far rls Bryant, has also placed the Florida National Guard on alert in the event of need. Other precautions such as an extra supply of pure water arc being advised, such as spring water provided In five gallon jugs, etc. We are also providing a supply of candles in the event none are on hand, however, most of us have a good sup ply as we all carry such things on hand during the Hurricane season. Orders have gone out that all private planes are to stay out of the Southern Florida area south of a line drawn across the slate from Daytona Beach unless they have special permits to fly into the designated area and are able to keep in contact with the control towers of the main air fields throughout that partic ular area. We are all prepared for what is felt will happen as a part of this whole blockade build up, and that being that it will end up with troops go ing Into Cuba and cleaning up and eliminating the missile bases and getting rid of Fidel Castro and this bunch of brutes, which Is just plain un varnished truth as proven by most of the 147.000 Ctib.ms now in the State of Florida and elsewhere. L. Dean Mather 1321 East Pine st. Orlando. Fla. Ticket To Heaven To the Editor: The other night I dreamed that I died and went to heaven where I was met at the gates by St. Peter, lie asked about my life on earth. I told him I had been a good citizen, paid my bills and managed to stay out of jail. He rmnnifmlrd me on my good record, and then asked what 1 hud under my arm. I explained that 1 had a copy of the Medford Mail Tribune and one of the Port land Orcgonian. After a mo ment's thought St. Peter said: "You may enter and bring with you the Mail Tribune, but you will have to leave that antl Morse newspaper out side." Pavid Frtsch PO. nox 292 White City. Ore For Al Dumas 1o the Editor: I was ex tremely disappointed that you didn't endorse Al Dumas for State Representative in your recent editorial. I have known Al ever since he moved to Medford In 1950 when he assumed the MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. name and address ot the writer, the use of a pen name or Initial ownership of the Dumas Do mestic Laundry. Through his leadership and tremendous hard work his plant has become one of the most successful operations in the Northwest. A disastrous fire in 1960 would have been the undoing of many men. His fine record as a business man indicates that he more than any other candidate is symbolic of a typical hard working, hard driving busi ness man: a man who has the reputation of getting things done. Most certainly this is the kind of representation that Jackson county needs in Sa lem. The people of Jackson coun ty who know of Al Dumas' record as a businessman and his contribution to our area through community and civic activities will, I am certain, cast their vote for Al Dumas on Nov. 6. John Cook 1880 Camp Baker rd. Medford Taxes To the Editor: Since the peo ple out in 40-1 have got their tax statements and some are scratching themselves where they don't itch and cussing the Assessor and Tax collec tor, I wr.uld like to know if there aren't other causes for an 85.3 mill tax, the highest school tax in Jackson county. Could it be there is so much O&C land in this district that used to be on the tax rolls un til the Government quit pay ing the taxes and turned a part of the money from timber sales over to the counties in lieu of taxes? And which I am told Is spread over the entire county to pay state and county taxes and the balance Is squandered around Medford. 1 am wondering if the can didates for county commis sioner would explain what they think of this deal. I asked the county court about this some time ago and Miller and James had no comment, but Wendt explained that if they gave a district all of the money from a big sale they would have too much money, so that it was fair to all to pay the county and state tax. I am under the impression It was meant that the money that came in would pay the same tax In each district as it did before and another little thing if this O&C money don't pay taxes on the land in the districts where it lays why shouldn't it be spread over all of Oregon? In case the candidates for judge and commissioner haven t got time to explain this, perhaps some learned one from Medford would give us an explanation. I live in TP 39-4 west and also pay taxes in 39-5W which is in Josephine County and the taxes are 55 mills. J. R. Hoffman, Applcgate, Ore. For Unander To the Editor: I am writing to encourage the people of Southern Oregon to consider the merits of Sig Unander for United States Senator. A re cent poll in Multnomah coun ty Indicated that the election may be as close as 1.000 votes and can go either way; thus, the people of Oregon finally have an opportunity to return a man of dignity and integrity to Washington. D. C. rather than the source of embarrass ment we have had in the Sen ate for the past eighteen years. Wayne Morse returned to Oregon recently and said, after leading a filibuster in the Senate for nearly three weeks, at a cost to the tax payers of over two million dollars, "Send me back to Washington and I will talk MORE.'' Talk is cheap. If that is ill we wanted from Oregon OREGON Foreign News: Adenauer Supports U.S.; French Rightists May Revive Attempts By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Notes from the foreign news cables: Change Made President Kennedy already has cancelled his November trip to Brazil because of the Cuban crisis and West Ger m a n officials are anticipat ing he may also request cancellat 1 o n of Chancellor Konrad Ade nauer's sched uled White House visit Adenauer will Newsora Nov. 7. If so. fully understand. Whenever In the Day's News By FRANK Let's talk today about Bal lot Measure No. 9 - the legis lative apportionment amend ment that seeks to give more weigni to AKfcA and some what less weight to POPULA TION than the existing (new) law governing apportionment of the membership of the Ore gon legislature. It will be on the ballot at the coming election. Its pur pose is to restore to the more thinly populated areas some portion of the protection they formerly enjoyed. PERSONALLY, this writer - isn't too much afraid that the more populous areas of Oregon will gang up on the less populated areas and do them dirt. Oregon is a pecu liarly homogenous state. It has few sectional rivalries. Its city people don't tend to look down on their country cousins. Oregon country peo ple going to Portland feel quite at home. Portland peo ple coming out into the coun try are warmly welcome. Still- This fact remains: Under the new law. four counties could control the legislature. A situation like that isn't good for the state of Oregon. It invites abuses. Down through the centuries. too much power in too few hands has been a corrupting influence. H ERE are some interesting figures: County Population 522,813 162,890 120,888 113,038 Multnomah Lane Marion Clackamas TOTAL 919,629 These four counties contain 52.3 per cent of Oregon's pop ulation. M ORE county population 68.458 54,955 9,430 29,917 73,962 47,475 figures: Douglas Coos Curry Josephine Jackson Klamath in the Senate, we could send phonograph as our repre sentative in that body. the argument that we can not throw away 18 years' ex perience is phony. The fact that Senator Morse has never held a major committee chair manship in the Senate indi cates that his fellow Senators regard his tantrums and name -calling" with little favor. The fact that Washing ton and California are receiv ing large military and gov ernmental contracts while Or egon Is being left out, the re moval to Seattle of the Re gional Post Office, and the failing lumber industry are but three in-.tanccs showing the ineffectiveness of our present Senator. I would recommend the documented and authenticated book, "The Record of Wayne Morse, by Harrison Spang- ler, for those who may yet be doubt as to the record of the senior senator from Ore gon. My vote will be for Sig Unander on November 6. H. M. Swaney, 1177 Court st., N.E.. Salem, Ore. Unfair Taxes To the Editor: In the Thurs day Mail Tribune a letter was written retarding unfair tax ation in this county. We have appeared before the Board of Equalization re peatedly in the past protesting unfair taxes. They simply laugh in your face and urge one to move out if you don't like it here. They do not pre tend to allow any depreciation on a home, and a worthless piece of ground or rockpilc is their "gravy." We have lived in the Rogue Valley over eight years and are paying more taxes on a home and improvements over 20 years old than some motel owners do in other spots. If the poor property owner is to be taxed to death in a tyrannical manner something should be done to even things up. Perhaps a sales tax In Oregon would make everyone pay and enrich the state be sides. Mrs R. A. Pfeifer, Shady Cove, Ore. he does go, Adenauer will tell the President personally that he approves of the U.S. stand on Cuba. His message will be: Now that the Western posi tion is clear there must be no concessions. Favored Nation The West German govern ment is confident that it has not passed unnoticed in the United States that West Ger many was one NATO nation where there was no anti bloc k a d e demonstrations against the U.S. embassy or consulates. West Germany complied quickly with the U.S. request not to carry goods to Cuba and has given down-the-line support to the Cuban quarantine. JENKINS Lake 7,158 TOTAL 291,355 These seven counties com prise the area that is normal ly referred to as Southern Oregon. They contain only 16.6 per cent of Oregon's pop ulation. T ET'S take a look now at Li the wide open spaces east of the mountains. Grant Harney Hood River Jefferson Klamath Lake Malheur Morrow Sherman Umatilla Union Wallowa Wasco Baker Crook Deschutes Gilliam TOTAL 7,726 6,744 13,305 7,130 47,475 7,158 22,764 4,871 2.446 44,352 18,180 7,102 20,205 17,295 9,430 23,100 3,069 265,074 Eastern Oregon These 18 counties contain only 15.1 per cent of Oregon's population. Looking at these regional figures, it seems to me it be hooves the people of South ern and Eastern Oregon to make it a point to go to the polls on election day and vote YES on Initiative Measure No. 9. SOMETHING to think about: J Under the existing appor tionment law, four Oregon counties - which might be termed metropolitan counties -could control the Oregon leg islature. Being metropolitan counties, they might become intrigued with a tax law that would favor the bigger cities at the expense of the rural areas. With control of the legisla ture residing in these four metropolitan counties, such a law could be enacted. Strictly Personal By Sydney (Q Field Enterprise!, Inc. BLACK BEAST Everybody has, I suppose, his own special bete noire his "black beast, as the French rail n Pj.'if,Vl" pet aversion. My own black beast is a lit tle one in the i vast scheme of the world's injustices but it irritates me to the point Of ex- J Harris plosion at least once a year. I refer to the flagrant over charges, even of a few pen nies, that are made by so many shops and counters in such places as hotels and air port waiting-rooms. It is no accident that most places of this kind are concessions, who pay the owners a heavy rental for the right to gouge the customers. The other evening, on my way back from Detroit to Chicago, I stopped at the De troit airport restaurant for a piece of cake and a cup of cof fee. My bill came to 62 cents 45 for a slice of mediocre cheese cake. 15 for coffee, plus two cents tax. This is a wholly unjus tifiable charge; but where else it there to go st an air port? Likewise, the toy eon cession is outrageously over-priced simply be cause busy lathers hers no where else to go to pick up a gift for the children on the way home. What is doubly exasper ating about such airports it that they are publicly owned. It it the city or county itself which leases concessions to the operat ors, and condones these grasping practices. The ad ministration itself is. In ef fect, a silent partner in the gouge. Hotel cigar stands (also run on a concession basis) have the same shabby hab its. Customarily, they charge 10 cents for a nickel pack el cleansing tissue which represents a 100 per Delayed Action The anti-Gaullist "National Resistance Council" and the remnants of the former Secret Army Organization now hid ing in France only called off assassination attempts against President DeGaulle until the Oct. 28 presidential referen dum. Renewal of their activi ty after that date is a foregone conclusion. Former Premier Georges Bidault and anti Gaullist Jacques Soustelle have no intention of dropping efforts to place a right-wing regime into power in France. Drawn-Out Church leaders attending the Ecumenical Council in Rome are beginning to get the feeling that it may go on for ever. There have been a num ber of complaints that work is moving at a snail's pace. Richard James Cardinal Cushing, archbishop of Bos ton, told newsmen that "at the rate this council is going I Washington Report By William (ci United Featura Syndicate THE CRISIS CLUB Washington - The fate of this country and possibly of the world is held now in the tired but de- t e r m i n e d hands of eight men - strong ly supported by a few others who are of, but not In, the Crisis Club. This is the Executive C o m m ittee, lvnue the working group, which President Kennedy has form ed as the kernel within the kernel of today's American government. The President is the chairman. At his ear and at his side, formally every day at 10 o'clock in the morn ing but informally practical ly all the time, are these: Vice President Lyndon Johnson, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Secretary of De fense Robert McNamara, Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon, Attorney General Robert Kennedy, John McCone of the Central Intelligence Agency, and General Maxwell Taylor, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. w ORKING closely with ordinate advisers shorter on title but long on influence. Among them are McGeorge Bundy, the President's For eign policy assistant, and The odore Sorensen, his special counsel. Sorensen is in fact the closest of all men to the J. Harris cent profit beyond the usual profit. And they always charge two or three centt more for a pack of cigarela than elsewhere. w e The pennies themselves don't bother me (on most out-of-town trips my expenses are paid for, anyway), but the insolent, arrogant, take-it-or-lcave-it attitude of such places arouses my anger and con tehipt. The public is treated like so many sheep to be sheared, because the conces sionaire has no sense of real responsibility to his custom ers, as other truly competitive merchants have. Whatever is run by a muni cipality such as an airport should protect the public, not exploit it: especially since public money has gone into the buildings, the facilities and the expressways leading to the airports. Permitting greedy concessionaires to milk the captive customers is a monstrous piece of political malfeasance. rIEXFRCISE.. RluHT- ill It . . GET OUT. I 1 IJ 1 THE VOTE 7 I LlL 1 tvrovnui'c JiW !: r i k-fcniwi.t (a s. tfc V BUSINESS- I. SL ' Perhaps we should try 'reverse psychology Amer icent being the way they art. let's urge Ihem 'not to gel out and vote' I" think we'll be here 'another 100 years." Although the council has been under way for more than two weeks they are still debating the first part of the first of 70 subjects that might be taken up. "Understanding" Japan has gone no further than to express "understand ing" of the U.S. blockade ot Cuba, but this has been enough to afford "gratifica tion" to American diplomats. There is more to Japan's lim ited response that its deep rooted abhorrence of nuclear warfare. Japan's world posi tion hinges on trade, not power-bloc politics. Her closest geographical neighbor is Rus sia. As Kazushige Hirasawa, editor of the Japan Times puts it: "Japan is in the difficult position of a 'medium power that can neither assume the idealism of small nations nor the realism of the big pow ers." S. White President but for his brother, Robert. Bundy and Sorensen, tha one an old-line Boston Yan kee and the other a Nebras kan, are both leg men and brain men. Junior to the ac tual members of the execu tive committee, they ara nevertheless heard with re spect and have no hesitation about putting in an oar when they think an added oar may be needed. No more diverse group could readily be assembled, from the adult male popula tion of the United States. Tha East and Ivy League ara strong in the club - the Pres ident, Robert Kenn dy and, Dillon. But, accidental or not, every section of the country has a delegate in the lodge. niLLON is a Wall Street " New Yorker. McNamara is a Michigander and an off-and-on Republican. As the former President of the Ford. Motor Company, he speaks the clipped language of a reconverted industrialist. Johnson, a Texan, talks tha salty tongue of the Southwest, not free at times of wort's that could not be printed in the, family newspaper. lit Rusk, a Georgian long re moved from his place of birth, a soft, quiet voice per sists. McCone is a Californian, but of the laconic, non-expansive sort. General Taylor, like many career officers, is a simple United States type of man with no regional cast of mind or accent. Bundy, the former Dean of Harvard College, talks exact ly like that presumably mi nority part of Harvard which is basically Republican rather than Democratic, but, ex professor though he is, what he has to say is far from professorial in meaning. Ho is. on the word of persons who have attended the chill ing seminars of the Crisis Club, the oddest of all men; he is a seven-minute-boiled egghead. He left his academic gown back al Harvard. The most compelling proof of this is that 100-proof conserva live senators, who happen to know the score within tha Crisis Club, now privately proclaim themselves "pro Bundy men." piNALLY, if this piece A seems more about Bundy than the others, it is deliber ately so. The completely un hidden motive is this: to re assure the many who are in clined to fear "professors in government." As to Bundy, anyhow, fear not. Some might call this group eight men and two boy? But, if so, the boys - Sorensen and Bundy - have had their long pants on a good while now and the pants don't seem a bit too big for them. VOTE FOR TMsUHOt BUT t