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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1962)
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1962 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Medford2&&Tribunk "'FiTvone in Southern Oregon RediThe MallTrtbune" Published bally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North lrSt.. PhJ73-8Ml ROBERT W HUHL. Editor JIKHH CREY Advi-rUslna Maner GERALD T LATHAM. Bui Mr. ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn. Editor EARL H ADAMS, City tailor iiAunv rHIPMAN. Telea Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporli Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women ! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation MJT AiTlndependenf Newspaper Entered ai hecond claa matter at Medlord. urenon. unncr n March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES a .. Kisil In Advance. Daily and Sunday 1 year18 00 Daily and Sunday mos 10 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 moa. 5.00 Sunday Only One year $5-00 Sinsle Copy (Malledl soc n.. s-.....-... Anil Mntnr Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year Ml -JO Dttilv and Sunday i mo. i.ij c..nHuu nnlv 1 mn. M)C Carrier andj'endora Copy 10c Official Taper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackkon County United Preaa International Full Leaied Wire U. P I Telcphoto Newaplcturea "MEMBER OF AUDIT RUREAU" OFCIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOC!- AXES Offlcea in New York. Chi. cato Detroit. San Francisco, Los Anseles. Seattle. Portland. EDITORIAL Denver. NATION A I A5pCTIOyN a" NEWSPAPER fK PUBLISH! S Vi ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the tiles ot The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Election Footnotes 10 YEARS AGO Nov. 12. 1952 (Wednesday) Rain and snow have ended the forest lire season in Ore gon, and have made mountain driving hazardous. The search for 78-year-old Medford man, missing since going hutting alone Cut. 10 in the Lake creek region, has been reopened hy a "new lead." 20 YEARS AGO Nov. 12. 1942 (Thursday) Fifteen Medford women re ported working as welders In Portland and Vancouver, Wash., shipyards. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Governor-elect Earl Sncll is op posed to holding an inaugutal bull this year because of war conditions. Willamette valley and Salem social leaders sus pect they have up and elected a chief executive who can't dance." 30 YEARS AGO Nov. 12, 1932 (Saturday) Hood River High school of ficials reverse previous state ment and agree to sanction game between Hood River and Medford high schools for mythical slate football cham pionship. Stale highway commission adopts route along railroad tracks for new Mcdford-Ccn-tral Point highway. 40 YEARS AGO Nov. 12. 1922 (Sunday) Medford Mayor-elect E. C. Caddis welcomed at railroad stntion by crowd of friends alter return from north; driv en mound town in fire truck. "The Prisoner of Zenda," starring Lewis Stone and Alice Terry, appears at Page (heater In Medford. SO YEARS AGO Nov. 12. 1912 (Tuesday) Sewing done by girls in Mcdlord high school classes wins one first, two second, and one third, prizes in state competition. Now SI 1.00(1 Hutte Falls water works completed; in cludes concrete reservoir with capacity of 40,000 gallons. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is ctcellent; tlve ol sit is good. 1. In which city is the Uni versity of Pennsylvania? 2. Which is the only U. S. cabinet post that is for a defi nite term? 3. Who was the la.-l of llie prophets? 4. A ladovegctai inn would Include which beverage in his diet? 5. Is the magpie a fish, bird, or butterfly? 6. Which is the hardest o all Jewels? 7. Who wrote "The Little Minister "? 8. Who was culled "The Man of Sorrow "? 0. Is trudgen the name for a fish, an oystcrman's tongs, a swimming stroke, or a slow pare In walking? 10. Manet and Monet were two famous French ? Answers) 1. Philadelphia. 2. Postmaster General. 3. Mala Chi. 4. Milk. 5. Bird, 6. Dia mond. 7. llamas Barrie. 8. Christ. 9. Swimming ftroke. 10. Painters. Bob Duncan, who ran a see-saw cliff-hanger vote count race most of election night, finally wound up by winning with a comfortable 11,000 vote majority over his Kepublican Inencl ana op ponent, Carl Fisher of Eugene. Duncan carried every county but one, Jose phine. He carried Fisher s home county, Lane, by a sum lay votes out ot more man i4,uuu counted. His strongest support came along the coast, where he carried Coos county almost 2 to 1 (11,311 to 5,962) and Curry by almost the same margin (2,324 to 1,398). He carried Jackson county by a relatively slim 2,425 votes (14,214 to 11,789). FORMER Congressman Charles 0. Porter this . year was a candidate for director of the Eugene Water and Electric Board. He cam paigned vigorously, but was finally defeated by a substantial margin by the incumbent. One of our less-kindly staff members sug gested that maybe Porter ought to go into law partnership with Richard M. Nixon. This would hardly work out, however, for Porter has been a long-time antagonist to Nixon, and led a demonstration against him when he was in Eugene during the 1958 election, just be fore the famous Checkers broadcast. "NCE again the people of the Coos Bay area were given an opportunity to consolidate into one larger city, and once again it was turned down by North Bend voters. Voters in Coos Bay, Empire, Eastsicle and in the unincorporated area involved, voted for con solidation, this time by a four to one margin. But it had to be approved in all areas to be successful, and in North Bend the proposal lost by 98 votes. Last May, when the same proposal was on the ballot, North Bend was the only hold out against consolidation, that time by only 16 votes. Some day it will pass, however. IF NORTH Benders like things the way they are, so do the people of Cave Junction. They defeated, once again, a proposal to change the name of their little city to Cave City. Voters in Plattsburg, Mo., reelected Albert R. Alexander to his fourth term as magistrate. Mr. Alexander is 102 years of age. Voters in Medford, Ashland, Stayton, La Grande and Portland defeated fluoridation of municipal water. Voters in Molalla approved it (by four votes) as did those m Vancouver Wash., just across the river from Portland. It's silly. E.A. A Nation of Veterans (Today is observed as a federal holiday inasmuch as Veterans Day this year falls on Sunday.) A bitter solace of world-wide wars is that mankind shares a unifying experience. The liter ature of war recognizes no frontiers. The profile ot the American veteran is virtually a profile of the nation. For example, about 40 per cent of the popula tion belongs to a veteran family. There are 22 million veterans of all wars living in the United States today. Eight out of every ten are married and head families. From the Revolution throuch Korea about 30 million persons served in the U.S. armed forces. Over half of these served in World War II. Since World War I the total number of livinir veterans has never fallen below 4.2 million. There were more veterans in 195S (22.7 million) than at any other time. Since the Civil War the veteran pop ulation has remained above 1 million except for the years between 1910 ami World War I. There are 416,000 women veterans. a "THE universal participation in armed service in the past half century without at any time a true universal military service law has made the nation peculiarly aware of veterans' wants and needs. The U.S. Veterans Administration op erates the largest hospital and clinic system in the nation. On any one day, some 1 12,000 individuals are cared for in its 170 hospitals. Nearly 600,000 persons are treated yearly; 1.5 million receive outpatient care. The Veterans Administration conducts more than 7000 medical research projects investigating cancel', heart, and blood diseases, geriatric ail ments, mental illness, and various disabilities. The third largest ordinary life insurance en terprise in the nation is conducted by VA. More than 6 million policies provide more than $12 billion in protection. "Now, Do You Want To Go For Double?" '. th fc,nfT rmrrm. -vWi;''-:. eeX.f Foreign News: New Berlin Crisis Doubted; Rhee May Return; Philippine Pace Slow By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Up the hill and down Western diplomats in Paris do not believe Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev will stage a major crisis over Berlin in the near fu ture. They argue that his retreat from Cuba indicates he is not ready for a t h e r m o- nuclear show- Newsora down with the United States and that there would be no sense in his go ing to the brink and having to retreat again. Tiger Back to hit Den Reliable sources in Tokyo say American diplomatic of ficials have convinced South Korea military rulers that it would be a good idea for them to permit the return of former President Syngman Rhee. They have pointed out that ... Communications ... Letters to the Editor must bear the nam and address- of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen na.ue or initial for publication it permissible The Mail Tribune reserve! the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters tubmitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent lh views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the case. Lost In the Maze To the Editor: "Who Cares?" (MT 119 '62) has the solution to his own problem in the letter he has written, if he would read back to the line, "and yourself has quit caring a long time ago. If we maintain a defeatist attitude toward ourselves. how can we expect people's respect or love? Consistency has its own re ward. Many people in this world set their eyes on so many goals, they get lost in the maze. It may be well to reach for the stars but the aeon may be for your neighbors. Mrs. Delbcrt Casey Route 1, Box 358 Central Point, Ore. FLYING'S SAFER Auburn. Maine - mm - Wil liam Turgoon, who retired recently after 40 years arci-dent-free as a bush pilot, doesn't like it on the ground. He broke a toe when he stub bed it i', a kitchen chair. Natural Inequalities To the Editor: For the life of me, it's impossible to un derstand the reasoning of ob viously intelligent people who declare for equality of birth. For at time of birth when we are most equal, the un equality is there for anyone to see or the blind to feel. For some babies are born rol-ly-poly fat, destined to be that way all through life by na ture's immutable law of her edity, barring environment in fluences. Other babies born thin and angular, to be much that way through life, Abra ham Lincoln a notable ex ample. With hair varying, with all shades from black to red, including skin color, there is as little chance of any two babies born alike as there is of their finger-prints to be alike, the one depend able used by police. There are also babies born with aptlture for money-getting as they gain toward adulthood. An aptitude for seeing profit equal to all op portunities that brings cash award to them as surely as moisture gravitates to salt. Why such aptitude should be denied to so many of us is one of the imponderables of life. Then there is that unfor tunate bom, anti-social. A yellowing news-clipping from my 1040 files tells the death of a noted philanthropic club man Alsphen J. deer. 7H. who continued the rehabilitation of criminal work founded by his wealthy father, George Jarvis Geer. who, when founding the 1 ) 1 (1 Marshal Stillman plan, declared; "self-denial, sclf-dis-cipliue and common sense will stop more crime than all the armies of law and order." Some 30 years later, his son Alsphen sadly admitted; "Ninety-eight per cent of the underworld and its criminal element is Immune to self-discipline, self-denial and com mon sense. The $1.1100.000 my father and 1 have spent on them and rehabilitation of criminals is wasted," Add to this the naturalist-minded wriler who delved inlo the early life of the murderous MeGahuey who recently end ed his life of crime in (lie gas chamber, lie was found to ex- K.l.i, ........... ..I J bdlion. Every fifth home started since the end of jhen barely 'past the tod World War II was financed bv a 151 loan. joier stage, immune to emi- VA supplied the financial assistance for the'r"n,m'n,al '"'hiem-es that or- largest program of mass adult education ihcl'Z uZ world has ever seen. The veterans alumni irroui) !dcr. Hut there is a natural law that the wishful-thinking psy chiatrists trom the (ierni:m, Krnnz Rons, down to Hcrsoko vits, Klineberg. Montagu and others cannot and in no way bridge; musical talent If von are born a musician, then you Double Loss To the Editor: Sir, first I read the letter by L. C. Pow ell in the Nov. 7 "Communi cations" column; then later I heard over the radio the news of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt's death. The comparison rather speaks for itself, doesn't it? A great mind seeking truth, no matter its result, and the many small minds rationaliz ing to explain their bigotry. It's sad both the loss of Mrs. Roosevelt's great mind, and the loss of the many small minds through bigotry. Miss Dayle Ann Stratton 804 Bennett ave. Medford. 'iTHE Veterans Administration stands behind ii.,rl i: .:n:.,.. I l i, .... ....I,, c-.t mtuiY ii iiiiinwii iiuiuc iiium: wuiiii iii-din 0,1,1 Anything Wrong With That? To the Editor: I have been interested in the "color prob lem" ever since my young manhood, which was some time ago. This problem has existed and persisted until now it absorbs the attention of every thinking person in the land. In fact, it has fo cuscd the interest of the in. telligentsia of the world on the United States. Everybody wants to see how we will solve it. Many Americans have warped conception of the Ne gro, as they carry in their minds the caricature of the uncouth ignoramus that has been drawn by people who want to keep him down in his place, so to speak. The poor whites in the deep South are as ignorant as the repressed Negroes. Is it the purpose of the better educat ed citizens to keep these two groups permanently "dispos sessed"? Why do educated Negroes want to live in good white neighborhoods? It is my be lief that they do not wish so much to live among white people as just to be in more desirable neighborhoods, so that they might rear their children in attnospheres.of de cency, cleanliness and refine ment. Anything wrong with that desire? David Frisch White City, Ore. ing that by so doing they were throwing it out the win dow. I want to get some inter est generated and a petition initiated to get that measure back on the ballot in the spring of 1964. If the majority of the voters chose to retain that law, then I must say "Nikita, you're ov erdue." Floyd R. McCabe, Mt. Pitt Star route, Butte Falls, Ore. it would be a good public re lations move so fast as Ameri can public opinion is con cerned, because Rhee still is remembered by many Ameri cans more for his strong anti Communist stand rather than for his misrule. They have pointed out also that Rhee is so feeble he scarcely could cause any trouble. Stuck In The Mud The slow pace of Philippines President Diosdado Macapa gal's five-year economic pro gram is threatening to take the bloom off his personal popularity, which still remains high as he rounds out his lirsi year in office. The program is much needed but the adminis tration has seemed slow to Washington Report By William S. White (ci United Feature Syndicate NEW LANDSCAPE Washington The Ameri can political landscape has been altered to a depth rarely ! stwmk r; seen in an off- ,year by the ,: congression a 1 ' and guberna- tonal elec- lions, never in memory has an elec- t i o n offered such seeming ly contradic- wnita lory results and effects. The voters of the country generally have given to the Democrats the most notable congressional victory since the early days of Frank lin D. Roosevelt. The head of that party, President Ken nedy, clearly shares in and obviously helped produce that victory But the voters of four of the most decisive states in presidential, as distinguished from congressional, politics have thrown up a clear warn ing to that same President that 1964 may be a far tough er reelection year for him than had seemed likely be rFHE extraordinary nature of a- the Democratic triumph in Congress cannot be denied. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS In these days - as was also the case back in 1898 - Cuba is the hottest spot in the news so far as the U.S.A. is con cerned. So- Perhaps- II might be a good idea to lake a look at how Cuba got started. WHEN Columbus landed on the island of San Salva dor 470 years ago, he thought he had reached an outpost of the fabulous Indies. So he called the simple Caribbean natives who came out to meet him Indians. Instead, he had stubbed his toe on an outpost of the Western Hemisphere. He stayed only a week or so at San Salvador and then started on to find the main land, and his search led him to Cuba - which he believed to be the mainland of China. He started inland to find the city of Peking so that he could deliver to the Emperor of China a letter from Ferdi nand and Isabella of Spain. He didn't find Peking and the Chinese Emperor, but he did quite a little exploring and when lie got home he described what he had seen as "the loveliest land that human eyes have ever beheld." The Cubans adopted their con stitution in 1901 - and as a part of their constitution they included a lease on a naval base at Guantanamo bay to run for 99 years. This is the lease that Castro says we've got to give up. There is the story. It is a long story. It is a sad story. For upwards of four centuries Cuba was one of the tragic spots of this earth. Its best years were the years in which we were playing the role of big brother, seeking to teach the Cuban people how to govern themselves. Now Fidel Castro, as evil tyrant as Cuba has ever known, says we must get out. Clear out, abandoning even the naval base that we occupy under a clear legal title, thus turning Cuba over to undis puted communist rule. Shall we get out? If we do, we ought to be everlastingly ashamed of ourselves. numncrs u million, includine; -tlilUHH) engineers. 360,000 teachers, 1:50,000 doctors, dentists, and muses, and 150,000 scientists. In observance of vet another Veterans Day it seems especially appropriate to recall the words President John K. Kennedy spoke on Nov. 11, 19(51: "On this day of remembrance ft US pray ran "'come a great, more or in the name of those who fouuht in this country's !!"!; J""""- ' "". ; i - , , . ,, .. , But if yon are born unequal wars, and more especially have fought in the first I that , ail the em ironm. nt Few Vacancies To the Editor: The public relations dinner of the Mcd- f o r d Toastmistress club Wednesday, Oct. 24. proved a success with almost as many visitors as members present. The Toastmistress club, which aims to develop social poise as well as speaking and leadership ability in women, is growing. There are only ten vacancies at the present time for new members. When the club has reached the maximum allowable member ship, applicants will have to remain on a waiting list for a vacancy or until there are sufficient members to form another club. Prospective members are expected to attend at least two meetings of the club be fore their applications are given consideration. The meetings are held the second and fourth Wednesday of every month at the Girls Community club. Are there local women in terested in this valuable train ing who have not contacted the club" If so they should call Miss Voda Brower. 773-S039 or the president, 773-2427. Mrs. Ruth Acord .1976 Crater Lake highw ay Medford 4T ANY rate, he claimed this lovely land for Spain, and from 1492 until 1898, with a few brief intervals, Spain owned Cuba. The Spanish did a rotten job of governing the lovely island. There was no gold there, so they started cultivat ing the rich soil, following the plantation system. They en slaved the friendly peaceful Indians, and treated them so cruelly that by 1530 they were all dead. The Spaniards then sent out slave-raiding parties to bring in more slaves from the sur rounding Islands. When this supply of slave labor failed, they brought in Negro slaves from Africa. By 1532, more than half the people in Cuba were Negroes. OPANISH misg Cuba went government of on for cen turies. The U S. protested of ten against Spanish cruelty. That led to ill feeling between the U S. and Spam. Spain, of course, resented our attitude. On our side, sympathy with the Cubans flamed into hatred of Spain. Relations became more and r.uirc tense. Then - in 1898- Thc U.S. battleship Maine ; Panics held 53 I 306.903 Slupid Voters and . . . Second World Wars, that there will!nd training will never make opm To the Editor: I am of the exploded mysteriously in Ha vana harbor. That led to the Spanish American war. It was short. The U.S. congress de clared on April 21 that a state of war existed. Late in July the Spanish government ask ed for peace. Hostilities ended on August 12 and a peace treaty was signed in Tans on December 10. Sales Finance Companies Hold Credit Dollars New York -UTO- When deal ers extend installment credit to buyers of automobiles or washing machines or other appliances, the largest single portion of the credit dollar is likely to be held by a sales finance company, the Ameri can Finance Conference re ported. The conference is a national association of independent sales finance companies, and in a newly-issued booklet it reviews the uses 'and sources of credit employed by mil lions of American household ers in their purchases of dur able goods. The dealers who make the original sales to the consumer extend more credit than those who lend money, the booklet explains. But in turn, these dealers or merchants sell most of their retail installment con tracts to credit institutions. Held More Than Half At the start of 1962, $12 3 billion of installment sale credit was outstanding on automobiles, the booklet ex plained: sales finance coni- per cent of But the extraordinary nature of the Republican triumph of the statehouses is undeniably more important for 1964. In winning the governorships of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan the Re publicans have now captured the very political mechanisms by 'A'hich Mr. Kennedy could well be defeated next time out. More than this, they have broadened the field of effec tive Republican presidential aspirants as it has not been broadened before in half a century. But for the defeat of Richard Nixon in Califor nia in the reelection of Gov. Pat Brown, the struggle for the critical statehouses would have been an unbroken dis aster for the Democrats. Even as matters stand, il is an enormous defeat. The fact that some small states went Democratic at the statehouse is not of much significance. What is important here is not so much how many states are to be held by which party but what states they are. . . FOR New York, Pennsylva nia, Michigan and Ohio between them can go far, be cause of their high presiden tial electoral vote, toward dominating any presidential election, assuming they all go the same way. Before this election, three of them Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio were in Democratic hands. The newly elected gover nors William Scranton in Pennsylvania, George Rom ney in Michigan and James Rhodes in Ohio will now be up and about, with all the power of patronage and per suasion, to turn those states Republican in 1964. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's reelection in New York by better than half a million votes makes him the most for midable present challenger for the GOP presidential nom ination. To say he didn't do so well as he should have is to quibble. The plain fact re mains that the conservative- to-ultra-conservative Republi cans will find it far harder to deny him than they would have had Nixon not fallen in California. PRESENTLY next in order of probability for 1964 is Scranton of Pennsylvania. Next comes Romney in Mich igan. Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona is now a distant fourth. But it is foolish to suppose he is altogether out of it. His prospects, too, have been somewhat promoted, rather than the reverse, by the essentially conservative Nixon's defeat. If the conservative and ultra-conservative Republicans should reach veto power over the 1964 convention they would be far more likely to turn to Goldwater than be fore, now that Nixon has been finished. And such a veto power is by no means out of the ques tion. For while the election again confirmed that political moderation in most of the country which has persisted since 1952, it also showed the clear rise, in the south, south west and mountain west, of a deep conservatism. This mood is not presently any thing like a decisive move ment; but it could spread. spell out hard, detailed proj ect studies acceptable to in ternational financial institu tions. The Philippines failed to take advantage of any of the $50 million made avail, able to it for 1962 by tha U.S. Agency for International Development. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c- Field Enterprises Ino. LEARNING I was watching a mother in the park playground ths other Saturday morning. Her 4 - year - old boy was climbing tha monkey bars, perhaps for the first time. She thought she was help. in him learn J how, but sha """ w a s r e a 1 1 y Hams h i n d er i n 2 him. She would not permit him to do anything wrong, to maka a mistake. Her misplaced zeal called to mind a comment by Dr. Earl Kelley in his interest ing book, "Education For What Is Real." Dr. Kelley pointed out: "The learning experienca must provide for trial and er ror, with a recognition of tha fact that more is often learn ed by what we do wrong than by what we do right. We mis educate almost universally in that we fail to realize the ed ucative value of mistakes." This misguided mother was following her child around to see to it that ha did not do anything "wrong." But doing things wrong - with the frustra tions they bring is what actually promotes growth, learning and the ability to solve problems with a senss of security. You may recall the anec dote of the sage in a little village who was asked where he got his wisdom from. "From my good judgment," he said. "Where did your good judgment come from?" he was asked. "From my bad judgment," he replied. Perhaps the most import ant part of education -both at home and at school -is leaching children to en joy and appreciate the ad venture of being wrong, of turning back and taking another trail. As Dr. Kelley says, "To be always right, if it were possible, would be deadly dull, and one would never learn any thing." rr, " Too many parents follow their children around to keep them from making mistakes; instead, the children should be told that making a mistake is not a sin or a crime, but the only way toward change and growth. "If a child," ob serves Dr. Kelley, "gets tha idea that to make a mistake is to sin, so great becomes his fear of error that he re fuses to try, and retires into inaction." The research head of a areat firm remarked many years ago that children should ba taught what it takes to be a "researcher." From the tima they start school, children are examined a few times a year; if they flunk. Its a disgrace; if they fail once, they're out. in contrast." the research head went on, "all research is 99.9 per cent failure and if you succeed once, vou're in. Here's what we ought to teach them: The onlv time von don't want an experiment to ran is the last time you try I hope the mother of th 4-year-old, and others like her, read this - and take It to neart as well as to mind. this, commercial banks held 43 30 per cent, and auto deal ers. 2 93 per cent. Other consumer goods sold on installment credit totaled about S11.8 billion: sales fi nance companies held onlv 26 34 per cent of the credit. , but theirs was the larse.-t share. Banks held 22.8 per cent, other financial institu- he no veterans of Any further wars not because j 5011 -,1'jKc'1,,"("d','''r' all have perished, but because all shall havei Route 2! boVsook. learned to live together in peace." E.R.R. ( centrai'roint, ore' 1 tmn A 10. nir -,-,, JA..-..-t I n that a lot of people I IX) R the next few years. I'u- ! re r n't siors "n M ,',,- : misunderstood the title to the ba was ruled by American furniture stores 9 IS t-er cent ' ' ' -' .' - 'JtJ- I ballot measure, "Repeals . military governors. Cuban annliance siore ? 7.1 nr :'-'' -A School District Reorganiration : self ecu eminent was Gradual., nA ..., t t j.... t. . . !.... j j j L ; oln9 o sdoui a job now 4 what did you do before wejm.de you a missile expert ..." Law" and voted "So," tbjnk-1 ly built up during these eaj-s. I per cent.