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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1962)
i THURSDAY. "Everyone In Southern Oreson ReadBTheMall Tribune Publi'heit Dally except Saturday by MEDFOHD PHINT1NO CO 33 North rtr St.. Ph.772-6Ui ROBERT W RUIIL. Editor HERD GREY Adverltdlns Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui Mar KRIC W ALLEN JR . MM. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teles Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr An" Independent Newspaper Intered ai second claaa matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act 01 March 3. 181)7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance. Daily and Sunday 1 year fill 00 Daily and Sunday moa 10 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 moa. 5.00 Sunday Only One year tSOO Single Copy (Mailed) 20c By Camel And Motor ""' Daily and Sunday 1 year S21.00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1.73 Sunday Only 1 mo. wo Carrlel andendora Jopy 10o rTtficlal Paper of Clty"ol Medford Olllrlal Taper ol Jackson County United' PreHi International ' Full Leased Wire It. P 1 Telenhofo Newplcturea 'MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU "'" ' QF CIRCULATIONS Adverllslng Representative: NELSON ROBERTS 4 ASSOCI ATES Ol'lcea In New York. Chl caco Detroit. San Franciico. Loa Angeles. Seattle. Portland Denver. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL AS(CTICN Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files ol The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 yean ago. 10 YEARS AGO Dec. 13, 1952 (Friday) Medford's Greater Com miinity Chest drive has reached 82.3 per cent of its S56.916 goal, and Its office has been officially closed. Dr. Paul Walker, Medford dentist, will be installed lieu tenant governor of Division 15 of Pacific Northwest dis trict of Kiwanis International here next Wednesday. 20 YEARS AGO Dec. 13. 1942 (Saturday) Allocation of $43,895 In state gas tax money to Jack son county announced by state highway commission. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The rumor that Camp White is to be changed to a submarine base, due to the rains, has not been confirmed." 30 YEARS AGO Dec. 13, 1932 (Monday) Don Faber, Ashland High school coach, schedules ban quet for members of Litlua city football team. Approximately IU0 cases or influenza reported in Kogue valley by Jackson county pub lic health office. 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 13, 1922 (Tuesday) Angel Opera house, first three-story building in Med ford, constructed in 1884, to be remodeled into offices. Gold Hill city council studies plans for new $25,000 water supply system. SO YEARS AGO Dec. 13, 1912 (Thursday) Oregon supreme court reaches decision in fuvor of allowing construction of Main street bridge across Bear creek in Medford. J. A. Wesletiund and C. Y. Tengwald apply to Mcdtord city council for permission to operate "trackless trolley line in city. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten cortact Is superior; seven or eight is excellent live el sii is good. 1. Technically does a per son voting In a Presidential election vote as a citizen of the U.S. or his slate? 2. Was the moon first con tacted by radio waves in 1811 I03B, U14II or 11151? 3. What does a (oothall ref eree announce when he places both hands upright? 4. Which is the swiftest moving planet in the uni verse? 9. What is choreography? 6. How many pieces are used in the game of domi noes? 7. What was Thomas A. Edison's first patented Inven tion? 8. What two slates touch both Kentucky and Mary land? . Approximately how far beyond Ihe earth's surface does lis atmosphere extend? 10. Lulher Hodges, of North Carolina is secretary of what department'' Answers: 1. Stale. 2. 1946. 3. A score. 4. Mercury. 5. Composing ol dance rou tines. 6. Twenty . eight. 7. Electrical vole counter. 8. Virginia and W. Virginia. 9. 620 miles. 10. Secretary ol Commerce. OLD COURTHOUSE Springfield. Ky. -'lTi- The Washington county court house here is the oldest in (he Btate and one of the oldest west of the Alli'ghrnies. It w as creeled in 1814. 4 A DECEMBER 13. 1982 The Profession of Forestry The Bend Bulletin takes note of an article in a recent issue of the Journal of Forestry, in which the author pleads for understanding and respect for the profession. He is worried about appearing with increasing frequency in all soils of nub ished works, snecilicaliv a dook Dy tu- Dreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas, and articles by David Brower, executive secretary of the Sierra Club. The Bulletin makes the very nature of the work they do, foresters particularly those in the cies must expect criticism irom non-ioresiers FEDERAL forest agencies in particular, which manage so much of the public lands in the western part of the nation, must expect the public to take an interest in what they do and how they do it. Non-foresters may technical competence and know-how are neces sary in this type of work. mat all lllLClJiciit imcicoi, in jjuuvh-o which the skills and competence are exercised are public property, and are validly subject to debate. Beyond this is the fact that large segments of the public have specific and sometimes selfish interests in the forests and lands owned by the public. CO, WHEN an agency attempts to balance one use of the lands against another, some group is troinr to object. If, for instance, the nlans to decrease grazing of range preservation, 10 complain. Likewise, if a scenic area is withdrawn from mineral entry, prospectors and miners will set un a howl. Or, if a large clear cut area, lovers of natural beauty will complain, ana contrariwise, if some area tional or scenic reasons, they are "locking up the WE'RE not as sure as or the Bend Bulletin are purely a recent trend. We believe such criti cisms have been croing on for years. But they are becoming more frequent and more bitter as op posing interests clash over the management of the public lands, and the foresters get caught in the middle. Bv the same token, snread interest in the practices, oi tne ioresi . Mil I . 1 of the important part thev play in the economy of the area, and partly spread recreational use. More and more people are learning that they have a real and personal ment. T7HIS brings us to another problem that of how the public can make its wishes known to the forest acrencies, and respond, or not respond, An interesting article topic. It is entitled "Bureaucracy and the For ests," and was written by Charles A. Reich, law professor at Yale University and conservationist. It was published by the Democratic Institutions. His thesis is that the tually autonomous, and wholly unresponsive to indeed, will write their own version ot the "pub lic good" they are dedicated to maintain, without any suDStanuai reiauonsnm io reamy. pROFESSOR Reich concludes: "Professional planners and managers cannot be dispensed with. But some means of public participa tion, however Inadequate, would at least offer the be ginning of a system of planning that would encom pass a broader vision and a deeper relation to demo cratic Ideals. For the experts and professionals have Ihcir limitations. They can tell us whether an area of forests can be lumbered at a commercially feasible price. But can they tell us whether an 'overmature, spike-topped, catfaccd, conky old veteran' should be saved (or future generations?" The question is a provocative one, and is not easily answered. For by the very nature of their assignment, public foresters must be equipped to resist cer tain pressures which would call for measures inimical to the public good. But this very re sistance to pressures also tends to isolate thorn from constructive and substantial criticisms. PROFESSIONAL public foresters, more than any othei-s, are fully aware of this danger, and frequently bend over backward to avoid ap pearing arbitrary or capricious. And this is good. For as Professor Reich points out: "... The (Forest) Service recognizes . . , that Its ultimate Job is nothing less than the definition of 'the public good,' a task once reserved for philosopher-kings. This Is Ihe the tremendous rcsponsiblity that Congress has delegated to all forest agencies, and with it the power lo determine the very character of the American land. "The great danger is that an entrenched profes sional bureaucracy will become shortsighted In its perception of the public good. It may see only the needs of the next decade when planning for a cen tury Is essential. It may see only local demands when national needs cry for consideration. It may see where immediate economic gain lies but tall to see the values of 'non-economic' uses. It may care so much about today's balance shret that It forgets tomorrow's heritage." These dangers are there. But they are Tairly remote, if our acquaintanceship with public agen cy foresters is any criterion. E.A. the attacks on foresters the valid point that, by employ of public agen agree, in general, that But they also will agree forest service announces allotments as a measure livestock men are going is permitted in a scenic is set aside tor recrea lumbermen may fuss that forests. the Journal of Forestry that attacks on foresters there is far more wide- policies, as well as the agencies, partly uecau&e 1 1.1.. 1 because of more wide staKe in iorest manage how the agencies should to public sentiment. recently dealt with this center lor the study oi forest agencies are vir in many cases can be public sentiment, or, MEDFOHD "There. No Secret About My Black Box Plan" eWnf -eiKl Drummond Reports (Walter Llppmann is In Europe. Roicoe Drummond reports from Washington in his absence.) () 1962 New York Herald Tribune Inc. MORE THAN "TUT, TUT" IS NEEDED Washington When one or more of the highest officials of the government leak Na tional Security confidence to torpedo one of their own col leagues that is not the kind of scandal which can be brought to an end by one of the participants saying, iut tut, we've heard enough of this." There is great public anx iety at this breach of security at the highest level and pub lic revulsion at this indecent, McCarthy-like tactic of trying to destroy Ambassador Adlai Stevenson by anonymously calling him "soft" on getting rid of Soviet missiles in Cuba. This anxiety and this revul sion will not go away by just repeating over and over that the incident Is closed. The blot which this scan dal is fastening on the Admin istration will be removed only when President Ken nedy himself shows that he is sufficiently disturbed or suf ficiently disgusted or both by the affair to discover who Is guilty and take the necessary action. riMIE leaking of National Sc- - curily Council secrets by one or more members of the NSC is a grave crime, and I do not see how the President or the public can be com fortable until the guilty have been detected and dealt with. The attempt by some of his colleagues within the inner circle of Mr. Kennedy's clos est advisers lo destroy Am bassador Stevenson is an of fensive spectacle which has now rebounded against the perpetrator. If Mr. Kennedy had wanted to relieve Mr. Stevenson of his UN post, (he "non-admiring o f f i c 1 a 1," whom Ihe Saturday Evening Post article quoted as saying lhat "Adlai wanted a Mu nich," has made it nearly im possible for him to do so. The higher echelons of of ficials know very well that survival in Washington goes lo the fittest and toughest. They are not easily shocked by the political in-fighting which they witness going on around them. 1UT these strongfihercd public officials can be shocked and horrified by the extremes of unfair and dis honorable tactics. They were shocked and horrified by the meat-axe, guilt-by-association attacks launched by Sen. Mc Carthy a few years ago. They are shocked and horrified by what they consider the same ladies used against Adlai Ste venson today the attempt by anonymous Innuendo to so undercut Mr. Stevenson that he will be forced out of government. r -r r MEM WOMEN ' ill! J. ! V I ?. n f :v(uv pri .ri "That's right, 'hawks' end 'doves' we're changing 'em In all government buildings as MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON There are many points on which I would take a view radically different than Mr. Stevenson's, but I do not see how any honorable person can condone this attempt at ananymous assassination. Everybody is hurt. The President is hurt, perhaps more than anyone. Mr. Ste venson is hurt. The otherwise superb handling of the Cuba crisis is partly smeared. And the morale of high-grade pub lic officials is seriously in jured. THE latest turn in this NSC leak makes it more im perative that the President determine the responsibility. Life magazine this week pub lished an article reporting, on the basis of its informa tion, that Mr. Kennedy him self provided access to the top-level sources for the two Saturday Evening Post writ ers, Stewart Alsop and Charles Bartlett. Pierre Salinger, the White House Secretary, instantly and flatly denies this sugges tion. But it is only candid to say that in Washington, both inside and outside the gov ernment, this denial is not universally accepted. Those who question the de nial will be disproved if the President acts with the same decisiveness he did a few months ago when there was a lead of classified informa tion bearing upon the results of recent U.S. nuclear tests. Mr. Kennedy directed the FBI to Investigate every per son who had access to this in formation, including the members of the NSC. I under stand that the President was satisfied that the leak did not come from the NSC but from a lower level in the government where part of the information had been evalu ated. It would be a fair as sumption that something was done about it. Something needs to be done about this latest NSC leak. Only the President can do it. This scandal will con tinue to harm everybody until the responsibility is fixed. People To People Group Gels Letters Kansas City, Mo. - iliFD - People are interested in peo ple. More than 80.000 letters from people abroad interest ed in contacting Americans have been received by People to People headquarters here since the program's reorgani zation last December. They have come from over 100 for oipn countries. Groups of volunteers sum moned by newspaper, radio and television media are working full lime matching the overseas requests for new friends. I 1 I t reminder ol, uh, Cuber'l" i Solution to Kashmir Dispute May Come As Result of Red China's Indian Venture By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst It was on Nov. 2, 1947, that Prime Minister Nehru of India announced, "We have declared that the fate of Kashmir is ultimately to be decided by the people . . . We are pre pared when peace, law and order have been es tablished, to have a refer endum held Ntwtom under International auspices Strictly Personal By Sydney J- Harris (c Field Enterprlsea Inc. PERSONAL PREJUDICES Periods, like people, have their own overweening egos; and whenever we moderns mention the "Dark Ages," fP?,2 we do not in- -f "-". elude our own but it is HKeiy tnai t. n thousand years from fcW" now the bar barism of the 20th century will seem not far removed Harris from the bar barism of the 10th. An expert in any deli cate feat never gets as much public applause as the second-rater, because the expert by definition is one who has mastered the art of making the difficult look easy. The superiority of classic al music over the popular kind is not a cultural preten sion but an easily demon strable experience in that popular music quickly ex hausts itself and must be re placed weekly or monthly, whereas one can listen to Mo zart for a lifetime and still not exhaust its potentialities for giving pleasure. (It is quite exactly the difference. indeed, between infatuation and genuine love.) People seem "ungrate ful" only when we expect more gratitude than we have any right lo; those who bother lo keep careful scores of favors and recom penses are always sure to feel themselves on the short end. Small children prefer adults who are cool, dry, off hand, humorous and un pa tronizing; yet some adults who approach them are warm, moist, intense, ponderous and condescending and then wonder why the children are "shy" or "unresponsive" with them. The man who prides him self on being "just" with out considering whether he is also kind is deluding him self about his "justice" lor there is no possibility of giving others what is due to them if we are not willing to give them a lit tle more than is their due, if necessary. Justice with out kindness soon degen erates into an inhuman equation that contradicts its very intentions. Of all the millions of words written on the state of mar riage, the only sensible ones were penned by Samuel But ler, when he said: "Matri mony and bachelorhood are both of them at once equal ly wise and equally foolish." It is the vanity of fearing lhat others might think one was not invited that prompts many persons to attend parties they might otherwise forego. More people believe in re ligion than believe in God; they regard religion as a ther apeutic process, and they hypostatic God as a kind of cosmic masseur. Astronomers Show Pictures of Moon Ml. Hamilton. Calif. -TPP-Astronomers have taken pic tures that give a preview of scenes moon-flight astronauts will see as they get to within 300 miles of their destination. Tile nictiircs. taken at the University of California's Lick i Observatory u-ilh its giant 120-inch reflecting telescope, clearly show rugged moun tain areas, broad n(t valleys, prominent and half-submerged craters of many sizes, jag ged cracks, and the mysteri ous level "seas" that may really be oceans of dust. DISCOUNT STORES BOOM New York - in The nation's I discount stores will grow at a rale of mure than Si billion annually, a spokesman (or the Interstate Department Stores ' said. Tills would result in an j increase from Ifst year's volume of )ust under $S bil- j lion to a total ol Sia billion j m 10 years. ! f. V : ..";', e,T like the United Nations." It was a high sounding pro nouncement but It was not to be. Indian troops already were in Kashmir, sent there to put down a pro-Pakistan uprising. At first clandestinely, then openly, the troops of Pakistan aiso were moving up and soon Kashmir was divided, about one-third to Pakistan in the west and north and the remaining two-thirds to India. And that way it has re mained for the last 15 years, with the threat of a major clash between Pakistan and India always a possibility. United Nations and Pakis tani demands that Nehru per mit the plebiscite he promised were ignored and finally ... Communications ... Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen na.ue 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 oi the paper: in fact the contrary is often Ihe case. ' Coming Soon To the Editor: Yes, the Lord is coming very, very, very soon! Three months ago He started to impress upon us just how soon it will be. His messages to us in church (for to His own He speaks aloud through yielded vessels of which there are about 12 such people In our little church, and He is indeed, in every way, Our Father) state that He will come and take away those who are without blem ish of sin - His born - again, saved ones. If you are saved and have the joy of His pres ence within you, you can be very happy that He is coming. Three months ago I felt an urgency to listen and remem ber well all our Lord said. Within a week I noted that wherein He usually ended most of His messages with, "I am coming soon," then for nearly two weeks He stopped speaking of His coming, some thing like the quiet before the storm. Then to me, in great power, the Lord made known that I must deliver a message to certain people, of His soon coming. The next meeting at church He spoke thusly, "I AM com ing soon!" This in four dif ferent messages. Then at the next meeting He said, "I AM coming SOON! SOON! SOON!" The tempo has in creased at each meeting, with His instructions for us and with the requirements of purity for His chosen. Still later, He said, "My coming is even AT HAND!" Recently He said, "Ye think ye have years and years, but I say unto you the time of MY Coming is at the VERY END!" I hope I have not waited too long to give you this message. NOW, TODAY is the safe time to pray through to Salvation! When you receive Salvation you will know it! Seek wis dom from God and the Bible only; but go to church and worship and witness to all people! Now the Church that I eventually selected, because of its Spirituality (the little Phoenix Assembly of God Church), all of the gifts of the Spirit are present because the Holy Spirit, is not given second place to programs, nor is the Spirit quenched. The brethern obey the Father's commandments and ordin ances, though they are ridi culed for it. Therein are they His chosen - Hence the Fath er, Our Lord speaks aloud to us. Mrs. Maxine Johnson 205 First st. Phoenix, Ore. Good Work To the Editor: I hesitate lo enter the discussion on the ac tion taken by the Democratic central committee on the tem porary appointment for post master, but feel the central committee has been attacked unjustly. First: When ha it hn wrong to place a name in nomination from the floor of any organization? Second: There was a screen ing committee appointed lo screen applicants for post master, not to make a recom mendation. Third: The majority voted for Marv Madden who was nominated for the floor. I. as a committeeman, voted for Mr. Madden. No one asked nie to vote for him or anyone else. It was not a "put up" job. We central committee men and women did our job maybe right or maybe wrong, but by the majority rule. We are responsible for the Demo cratic party in Jackson coun ty. No newspaper editor or radio announcer, W a y n e Morse. Bob Duncan or any other elected official has lhat responsibility. The people that write to the editor that are not central committeemen or women complaining of our action should be central committee men or women; then they could vote, or is working for good government too big I Nehru's own pledge was re nounced. Had plebiscite been pos sible, Moslem Kashmir al most certainly would have gone to Pakistan. But when the Red Chines began in a major attack on India, they did more than up set Nehru's long-cherished ideal of the five principles of coexistence. They also brough Nehru face-to-face with the Kashmir problem again, for thousands of his best troops were tied up guarding the cease-fire line with Pakistan. A negotiated settlement be gan to look more attractive. Pakistan, uneasy and ang ered at the flow of Western arms to the assistance of Nehru against Red Chinese, Job? It is easy to say, "dirty politics, mixing in politics would hurt my business, you do the work and I will tell you how to vote on all ap pointments. If you do a good job, I will take the credit for it but if you do a bad job, you take the blame." I for one ask no favors from any elected official but I do ask for good government, fed eral, state and county, and try to help get it. The majority is not always right but it is the right way to run any organiz ation or election. It is easy to disagree with the central committee. Candi dates that are elected tell you what a good job you did right after election. A few forget then until the next election. Good work if you can get it. Mark Norton, Democratic Precinct Committeeman Executive Board Member of the Democratic Party of Jackson County, P. O. Box 85, Phoenix, Ore. Flood Assistance To the Editor: We wish to express our heartfelt thanks to our dear neighbors and rel atives for the wonderful help that they have given us dur ing our flood conditions. With Matter of Fact Id New York Herald THE BLOCKING QUESTION Paris There are excep tions, it seems, lo the rule that nothing succeeds like s u c c e s s. At any rate, t h e Presi dent's great success in Cuba has only succeed ed in compli cating the Am erican prob lem of leader- Ming ship of the Western Alliance. This is not to say lhat our allies were not properly im pressed by the adroitness, courage, and wisdom that marked the U. S. govern ment's management of the Cuban crisis. On the contrary, it is known that Gen. cie Gaulle, for instance, was im pressed to the point of rad ically revising his entire esti mate of the Kennedy admin istration. The old notions that the American government was either irresolute or trigger happy, or both at once, have been largely banished by the Cuban episode. But that im provement by no means can cels out the unfavorable after effects. rpHESE flow from two -1 sources. On the one hand, even those EuroDcans Who ar. shrewd enough to see that the fearful Cuban risks would have been fearfully multiplied by consultation of our allies, have been instinctively shocked by the fact that the allied governments were not consulted. On the other hand, (his non consultation of our allies in the first great crisis involving a serious risk of an H-bomb exchange has vastly inflamed the already painful question of control of the West's nuc lear power. The British and French, in particular, are say ing that Cuba only goes io show that they cannot perm anently tolerate the virtual American monopoly of nuc lear power in the west. The inflammation has been rendered much more acute by the Defense Department's brusque decision to drop the "Skybolt" missile, which alone gave some color of power and reality to the Brit ish nuclear deterrent. The "Skybolt" matter, which is be ing reexamined, is particular ly instructive. IN BRIEF, (he "independent" British deterrent is In fact Ml & also became more amenable to negotiations, for in the end both face the possibility of a common enemy. Kashmir is bounded by India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Communist China and Tibet, and is separated .from the Soviet Union by only a few miles of Chinese and Afghan territory. For Nehru to agree under United States and British pressures to the negotiations) was a reasonably simple de cision. At the worst, the situa tion would be unchanged. At the best he would free im portant forces for his defenses against China. It is an ill wind that blows) nobody good, and out of tha Chinese attack on India may at last come a settlement of the Kashmir question. out all of the help which wa received we couldn't have started to recover from tha terrible experience. It is impossible to enumer ate each person individually and this is our most sincere way of expressing our feel ings. Many of our possessions are scattered in the many homes of our community, be ing washed, dried and taken care of. Without the help of one of my former students, Charles Stanley, it would have been nearly impossible to have saved our car and left safely. We are so very fortunate in having dear neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Marsters, that have taken us in, and wa are still using their home as our home. Our new home is severely damaged and will re quire months to restore to near its former self. Again, we wish to convey our sincere thanks to all that have helped us. We can never hope to repay them; but our blessings to each one. Thank you. Sir, for permit ting us to send this througli the communications column. Mr. and Mrs. Leland M. Charley, L. B. Star rt Box 140, Eagle Point, Ore. By Joseph Aliop Tribune Syndicate wholly dependent on this weapon of American design. Furthermore, the British are unable or unwilling to foot the bill if the Americans de cide they do not want "Sky bolt" and therefore cease to pay the lion's share of tha development costs. The French nuclear deter rent, by the same token, is now proudly announced as coming into being. But in its first form, it will be com posed of "Mirage" bombers carrying free-falling atomic bombs of rather low kiloton nage. The American exper ience with the Soviet anti-aircraft missiles in Cuba has now revealed that the Russian anti-aircraft defenses are even more formidable than had been supposed which means that the "Mirages" would have hardly any chance of reaching Soviet targets. Reportedly, the French are making important progress in rocketry. Yet the present con dition of the French and Bril ish nuclear deterrents is cer tainly the opposite of impres sive. Nonetheless, as wise and pro-American a Frenchman as Raymond Aron continues to insist lhat "the American nuc lear monopoly, combined with the rule of non-consultation, finally reduces the European states to the condition of American protectorates." fllZ WAY out of the dilen;. - ma which Aron long ago proposed is a Europcna deter rent .which would have an adequate economic base. There is some support for Aron's idea in Washington. But at the moment, discussion of ways to escape from lha dilemma is less needful than recognition that the dilemma is real and urgent. After Cuba, the view ex pressed by Aron has a strong grip on our European allies. It is quite clear in fact that none o( the other urgent West ern problems, such as tha need for more ground forces in NATO, can finally be ,-e-solvcd until the problem of the nuclear relationship has been resolved. The job has to be done somehow. For the problem will only grow uglier if it continues to be neglected. VISITORS UP Washington --ITI - Business and pleasure visitors to the United Stales in the first seven months of rose 22 per cent above the same 19HI period, according to the V S, Immigration and Naturaliza tion service.