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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1963)
TUESDAY. JANUARY I. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON FubTuhediiiy except Saturday by u.nvnnn PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St, PhJTMIM n .. . nrr 11, BtTUf. Kriitnf HERB GREY AdverUsing Manatee GERALD T LATHAM. Bus Mir Kmc ai ALLEN JR.. Mnt. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor . . ...... nntnulll Talita F.flltftF RICHARD JEWETT, Sports Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women a Editor DALE ER1CKS0N. ClrculaUon Mgr Entered second clan matter at Aleaiora. urcsun, uua March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Dally end Sunday 1 yeertlB OO Dally end Sunday moa. 10.00 Dally end Sunday 3 mos. 5.00 Sunday Only One year 13.00 Single Copy (Mailed) 30c By Camel And Motor Route. n.ll.. I c.nrtiv I VAHF SUl.OO nuiiw mnA Sunday 1 mo. 1.73 Sunday Only 1 mo. 30c Carrier and Vendura Copy loo Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U. P. 1. Telephoto Ncwspiclurea "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Advertlslnl Representative NELSON ROBERTS . Asenrt. ATES Of'lcea In New York, Chi. cago. Detroit. San Francisco. Los Angeifs. oca.n. . w ., Denver. NATIONAL EDITORIAL A kc6T,3N NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Mcdford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Jan. 8, 1953 (Tuesday) Howard Lemuel Champ, 32, sentenced in circuit court to life imprisonment in the stale penitentiary for the fatal stab bing of a Mcdford resident on Dec. 21. Mcdford Attorney Kenneth Dcnman named chairman of the Oregon slate game commission. 20 YEARS AGO Jan. 8, 1943 (Sunday) Election of Oregon stale senate president deadlocked between Dorothy McCullough Lee, Portland, and W. H. Stei- wcr, Fossil; deadlock delays inauguration of Gov. Earl Snell. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Dem ocratic leaders of Oregon met at Portland Saturday to dii- cuss reasons for defeat in the November mandate. Every thing was blamed but too many Republican votes." 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 8, 1933 (Tuesday) Frank P. Farrell, Mcdford, elected president of League of Oregon Cities, succeeding William M. Briggs, Ashland. J. A. Perry elected presi dent of Mcdford National bank 'ol lowing resignation of W. H. Gore. 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 8. 1923 (Wednesday) Members of the 1022 Mcd ford High school football team receiving "M" letter awards include Peter Batcman, guard; Frank Perl, sub tucklc; Ru dolph Singlcr, halfback: Ash cr Ncff, fullback; Howard Glascock, sub guard; and Har lcy Dressier, tackle. Doctor makes emergency Irip from Grants Pass to Cen tral Point in 35 minutes; time believed to be a record. SO YEARS AGO Jan. 8. 1913 (Friday) Mcdford city council passes ordinance giving M. T. Mill ncy company right to con struct street railway in city limits. Survey shows Jackson coun ty rates third in stale in pro duction of gold. What's Your I.Q.? Nine er ten correct It superior. seven er eight is excellent; five or ii Is eood. 1. In what bay Is the Isle of Capri located? 2. Mexicans who swim or wade the Rio Grande to enter the U.S. illegally are known as what? 3. The capital city of which slate is named for the fourth President of the U.S.? 4. Name the five Great Lakes. 5. Insert the missing word: In field where poppies crow. 6. Is writing paper properly designated as stationary, or stationery? 7. What is the cupilal of Vermont? 8. Which stale is nicknamed Wolverine Stale? 9. In what two epic poems docs the ancient city of Troy ligurc? 10. Correct the following. "Everyone should do their lob." Answers: 1. Italian Bay ol Naples. 2. Wetbacks. 3. Madt ton. Wisconsin. 4. Superior, Michigan. Huron. Erie. On. tario. S. Flanders. 8. Station- try. 7. Monlpelitr. 8. Michi gen. 9. Illiad and Odyssey. 10. "Everyone should do hit Job." 1 ML Ashland Ski Area We have been to be quite honest just a tiny bit skeptical about the possibility of a major skiing; development on Alt. Ashland. No more. Not after Saturday, when we had an oppor tunity to inspect it in its winter beauty; to watch the enthusiasm of the skiers in the party: to listen to their tales of how it compares with the best slopes in the west; to learn how skiers will travel hundreds of miles to find a good slope. THE weather was ideal. There was a chilly wind blowing intermittent ly, but when it died down, one basked in the warm sun. The snow ranged in depth from noth ing in sunlit spots on the south slopes to up to three feet in the sheltered spots on the north slooes and this early in a winter which has seen sparse snowfall in most localities. We are told that only Bachelor, near Bend, and Mt, bhasta are in full operation so far this year, due to Jack of snow elsewhere. The more expert skiers in the groun came schussing and slaloming down slopes which they described as "intermediate, but which struck awe into the breast of several of the non-skiers alone. And thev said the snow was ideal, desnite the Tack of recent precipitation fast, packed and powdery. "THE countryside in all directions is breath- takingly beautiful. It has long been a favorite spot of ours in the summer, and winter's touch simply adds to the beauty. To the south, Mt. Shasta stands mighty above its surrounding foothills. To the east, Mt. Mc- Loughlm looms in conical snow-capped splendor. On the far northeastern horizon lesser peaks cluster around the rim of Crater lake. Below, on Saturday, a blanket of white, fluffy fog covered the Rogue Valley and the Bear Creek drainage, with only Roxy Ann, Baldy and their companions poking above it. To the south and southwest, range alter range of blue-purple hills marched into the distance. COME problems still stand in the way of the development of the area as a winter or year around recreational development. Natural fea tures are not among -them, for the site is ideal. But sound, well-financed bidders must be found; the new road (from Highway 99 near the Siskiyou summit) must be punched through; problems of water supply, drainage and sanita tion must be solved satisfactorily; buildings must be designed and parking areas laid out; decisions must be made on what types of lifts and tows shall be installed, and where and when. None of these are insuperable, however, judg ing by the enthusiasm of the members of the Mt. Ashland Recreational Developers. . IN GENERAL, three types of people toured the area last Saturday. They were, first, those who want it because it will make their favorite sports available; second, those who look forward to the economic benefits such a development would bring the area, and third, representatives of the governmental agencies which are involved. borne of these, of course, overlapped. But all three came away convinced that this is a poten tial gold mine to those who love winter sports, to those who seek financial gain and a sound, year-around economy, to those who are always on the lookout for additional tax income, and to those whose job is to serve the public. It certainly will take the cooperation ol all three kinds of interests to make a Mt. Ashland ski development a reality. But it will certainly be worth all the effort if it becomes one. We might even be persuaded to make a couple sitz-marks ourself. E.A. What's an "Engineer"? Most professional groups have a vested in terest in being addressed properly. Realtors, for instance, are insistent that the term applies only to those who belong to a Real Estate Board. Doctors are also chary of having that title used bv others who are not bona fide M.D.'s, D.D.s, Ph. D.s, Ed. D.s, O.D.s, and so on. Lawyers have a legal monopoly on that title, but also tend to monopolize the word attorney, which technically can be used by any one who is acting on behalf of another. MOW come the engineers, or, to be more spc cific, the National Society of Professional En gineers, who claim that the word engineer is used far too loosely, often applying to one who is not qualified to employ it. lhey say: "The press can contribute significantly lo public understanding of the role of the engineer in our society by urlng proper qualifying identification where the term engineer' is used . . . Consistent use of this term when the concerned are not actually professional engineers is. we think you will agree, going to have the cumulative effect of blurring the image of the ci.glneer and that of his educational background and professional knowledge and skill. May we suggest that you consider such synonyms as 'cngincman' for 'loco motive engineer'; 'crane operator' for 'operating engi neer': and 'technician' when an Industrial worker is nut an engineer." XTLTK UNDERSTAND their point. But they're too TT late. They're trying to appropriate and mon opolize a word which long has been in the lan guage in a far broader context. The desk dictionary says: "Engineer, n 1. A designer or constructor of en gine 2. Mil. ts Nav. One ot a corps of men who per form engineering work ... 3, One versed in. or w ho follows as a calling, any branch of engineering. 4. One who operates an engine." Talk to the lexicographers, friends. E.A. "I Know What I Don't L ike" i I 1 Washington Report By William S. Whit (c) United Feature Syndicate DARK IMPLICATIONS Washington The United Nations has assumed a fright ful responsibility before his tory assuming that history, rriJTCTUn be rewritten r, Yj to suit the If: -- 14 wishes of its ruling A f r o Asian clique as current facts have al ready been a hundred times suppressed or distorted - in White the Congo. For the first time in an organization supposedly de voted to "peace," U.N. troops and tanks and bombers have moved with crushing military force to settle an internal dis pute in a supposedly independ ent country. This is the un arguable meaning of the Unit ed Nations offensive to drive the breakaway province of Katanga back into the central Congo government and to de stroy that province's elected leader, Moise Tshombe. No less terrible a responsi- bilty has been assumed by the United States of America. Against the advice of our three best allies Britain, France and Belgium-we have directly assisted this military adventure by a United Nations whose imperious Asian lead er, secretary uenerai u Thant, may yet disturb even our own most eager apologists for this fatcfully crude thrust in power politics. I port if the United Nations, without the slightest right except the sanction of force backed by a massive propa ganda, can intervene in the internal affairs of the Congo today, it can intervene tomor row in the internal affairs of any country in this world in theory not excluding the Unit ed States. In some other time and In some other atmosphere of whipped up emotionalism, any other state or province can be described as 'seces sionist," and U. N. troops can go In there, too, so long as the power of effective re sistance is absent. Repeatedly, the motivation of the United States in this wretched affair has been de scribed in the state depart ment as a desire to furcc Ka tanga s return to the cen tral Congo government to strengthen it against a pos sible Soviet takeover. MEN who really do not en joy feeling that their own government ha.) taken up an indefensible policy have tried lo accept this explana tion. It it is true, it could at least help justify by way of harsh expediency what can not possibly be justified on any higher ground. But even the argument of expediency is open to grave question. At the very moment the state dcparlnicnt was speaking of Its fears of Soviet intrusion in the Congo, our very ambassador to the U. N., Adlai Stevenson, was casting great doubt on that line. On Dec. 21, Stcvcnson-who is surely no enemy of the Afro Asian clique -was thus quot ed by United Press lntcrna lion: "As to Soviet interfer ence, or intervention, in the Congo, so far as I know at the moment there isn't any whatever. 1 hope I am prop erly informed on that sub ject." The ugly truth is thai de ceil and evasiveness and in credible arrogance have marked the U. N s course In the Congo, from first to last. Men of good will toward Ihc U. N. have been compelled to conclude, long since, that its word in this affair c old not be trusted. A few illustra tions: IMPARTIAL war correspon dents have formally pro tested U. N. "censorship and duplicity" in the field. A score of' U. N. disavowals of any intention to force the mili tary submission of Katanga have been followed by the use of force for just such a submission. Heated U. N. de nials of atrocities by U. N. troops have been proved false by the eye-witness testimony of independent correspond ents. Thant, in an ultimatum to Katanga on Dec. 31, implied that attacking U. N. forces would halt after seizing Elisabethville to give Tshom be time to submit decently. Instead, on the U. N.'s own account, they went forward lo assault another town, Jadot villc. This was explained by the U. N. as a "breakdown in . . . coordination." So sor ry, we'll investigate. Maybe a "victory" has been won. But not all the power of the U. N. to force con formity can hide the dark im plications, for the future, of this campaign. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publica tion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publica Uon must not exceed 400 words. Shirt Charges To the Editor: Mr. Jenny's observations of 1-6-63 were of special interest, particularily as to why Medford laundries insist on charging nine cents more for doing a plain cotton shirt, and delivering it on a hanger in a bag, than for a neatly folded dress shirt. However, Mr. Jenny was fortunate in receiving even one answer, as I have made several protests to the laun dry that has done our family laundry for 29 years. Even though I pointed out this long time patronage, I have yet lo receive the courtesy of a reply. Upon telephone re quests, the answer has been that it would be necessary to attach a note to each shirt each lime, repeating the re quest; and even this usually does not work. This would seem to make it obvious why the laundries have not "polled the public" to find out their wishes. I find myself in full agreement with Mr. Jenny, as usual, on other segments of his Communica tion. F. H. Cray 122 Valley View Dr. Medford Who Knows? To the Editor: In these days of confusion and perplexity, wouldn't it be great if we could point definitely to one source of information and say, "This is the authority." We have so many sources of information or misinforma tion it is very difficult or im posible to sift out the true from the false. Mark Twain said something about so many people who knew so many things that were not true. 1 wonder what he would say now. 1 find this condition applic able to the Congo affair. There are widely divergent views among supposedly well informed people, newsmen. Congressmen, local citizens, and others. Can we definitely draw a line between right and expediency" At the very beginning of the Congo trouble some of our missionaries, men and women who had spent years among the Africans, warned thai ihc natives would not submit to a w hite man s democracy that would cut across their tribal lines. A few days ago Dr. Schweitzer said, "The U.N lias absolutely no business try ing to force Tuch a govern ment upon the Congolese." 1 Peru Is Example of Special Problems Faced by Many Latin American Nations BY PHIL NEWSON UPI Foreign News Analyst Through Lima's misty and fogshrouded streets over the weekend, Peruvian army trucks were carting scores of know and suspected Com munists off to army security com pounds. The reason, to nip a plot "planned by the agents of to re- r - -r LtU Mewsom Moscow and Havana implant a pseudo-farmer gime of the extreme left. . . align the nation with Fidclist Cuba and prepare for the Marxist revolution to subju gate the nation for Moscow." Early targets, according to Peru's ruling military junta, were to be the American-own ed Toqucpala and Marcona mines and Standard Oil of New Jersey's subsidiary Inter national Petroleum Company. By May Day the revolution was to be complete. Almost any Latin American nation presents its special problems for the United States, but perhaps none as dramatically as Peru. When, in August of 1961, the United States was setting up its Alliance for Progress program in a meeting of American ministers at Punta del Este, Uruguay, it was Peruvian Premier and Fi nance Minister Pedro Bcltran who became the chief oppon ent of Cuba's Che Guevara. Peru preceded the United States in breaking relations with Castro's Cuba. But on a chilly night last Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (c) Field Enterprises, Inc. YOUTHFUL HONESTY A 7-year-old boy I know know very well left a note on his father's dresser just be- fore Christ m a s, asking for an Eastern Ring - Necked Snake for a 'Ni pet. A At the end - of the cx 3 i j liaustive r e- i cital about the Harris lues, its amia bility, its well-bred feeding habits, and its all-round suit ability as a member of the household, the boy appended P.S. to the note. "I speld some words rong," he wrote, "because I did not stop to think." The boy didn't got the snake, 1 am sorry to report, owing to the horrified objec tions pf his mother, a woman of overwhelming sensibility. But his father would have brought him a whole nest of (defanged) pythons as a re ward for that wonderful Post Script. "I did not stop lo think." How many of us would ever say that? How many of us would exhibit the candor, the modesty, the blithe con fession of thoughtlessness? When I spell a word wrong in the column, and it happens to get into print, I blame the typesetter, or the proof-reader, or even if possible the dictionary for betraying my literacy. More importantly, when I make a mistake in judgment or taste or evaluation, it would not occur to me to say, "I did not stop to think." Instead, I will us ually find some defense, or explanation, or rationaliza tion, that glibly shifts the blame from me to some thing outside me I was given the wrong informa tion, or I was misinterp reted, or I really meant it in another context. What we lose as we grow older is the marvelous fresh ness and honesty of youth that is not afraid or ashamed to say, "I did not stop to think." I have no doubt at all that this is what Jesus meant when he said that "a little child shall lead us." Because only this spirit, which dulls as we grow older, can show us the right road to our true selfhood. Millions of words have been written on how and what children can learn from us; but little has been said about what we can learn from children. Yet the education that a part with open eyes, cars and mind can get from a growing child is incompar ably more important than the education a child can get from all its formal training. What we get (if the child has not been damaged in ear ly years) is a portrait of our lost Eden, of a land in which shame and vanity and self-deceit have barely begun lo erect their bristling barri cades. In a few years, of course, the child will become more like us; that is to say, he will be "educated" and skilled in orthodox hypocrisy. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS One of last week's most in teresting stories concerns the little band of CHRISTIAN peasants from Siberia who somehow got clear to Moscow in an effort to get out of Com munist Russia to some place where they could find reli gious freedom. In Moscow, they pushed their way into the U.S. em bassy, apparently seeking sanctuary. The United States doesn't recognize the grant ing of asylum by embassies or consular offices. The instruc tions to our people in these of fices arc to permit exceptions "on humanitarian grounds" in cases of 'uninvited fugitives whose lives are in immimcnl danger from mob violence but ONLY during the period the active danger continues." cried out: "Let us be sent to any country. There is no place for us here. We appeal to all brothers and sisters who be lieve in Christianity." 1HIE shabbily dressed Siber ian told embassy officials they had hoped that the Amer icans would help them to get out of the Soviet Union. They described themselves as Evan gelical Christians. They said they do not believe in submit ting to any slate religious authority. CO- U Our embassy people had lo call up the Soviet Foreign Office and describe what had happened. After a four-hour delay, the Russians sent over a bus. The little bund of seek ers for religious freedom w-as pushed aboard the bus and driven off under guard of plainclothes Russian police men. As they left the American embassy, they were weeping and protesting. One of them shouted: "We dun't want to go anywhere here in Moscow. They will shoot us." Another ! believe Dr. Schweitzer knows as much or more about Africa and Africans than any other j white man alive. Paul Harvey, who is known and respected in Oregon, in cluding Mcdford. says the Ka- tanga deal is a shot gun wed- j ding. i Senator Dodd. Democrat. is demanding a Congressional investigation of ihc affair. ; Former Congressman Walter ; Judd. speaking in Mcdford. said, "The United States must j have alius and must support I them as they support us." In the present conflict in ! the Congo, we hae offended i Britain. France and Belgium. three of our oldest and nio.-l dependable Allies. Who tells the truth1.' L. Ci. Weaver, :i0l Haven si., Medford. WHAT shall we say about it all? Well, there isn't much that we can say. If we are to have an embassy in Russia, we must submit to Russian regu lations just as the Rus sians must submit at least openly to American regula tions if they arc lo Have an embassy in Washington. All of that was involved when many years ago we extend ed diplomatic recognition to Russia. But it's hard for us to for get that a very large share of the immigrants who came to this new land centuries ago came seeking freedom from religious oppression. That im migration, and the reason for it, is a very important chapter in our history. INTERESTING thought: One seldom hears of BIG SHOT COMMUNISTS run- jning away from communism T-nvtv ... ... vi iiu i.u in .nil n, from communism. They are TOO WELL TAKEN CARE OF there. The communist system is designed to take care of the Big Shots. It Is the ordinary run of people who are so anx ious to get aw ay that they can be kept in communist coun tries only by WALLS and by police regulations The Berlin Wall provides a shining ex ample of that. July, army tanks rumbled to the gates 01 Limas presiacn tial palace, arrested 73-ycar-old President Manuel Prado and established military rule. Prado had refused military demands that he invalidate June elections which gave the most votes to moderate left ist presidential candidate Raoul Haya de la Torre. Under the Alliance for Progress, the United States already had allotted nearly S90 million to Peru for new roads, for water and sewage systems, and for aid in the program to open up new lands for Peru's landless Indians. The military coup struck a blow at the foundations of the alliance, conceived as a U. S. answer lo threats either from the political right or left. President K e n n e dy de nounced the coup and prompt ly suspended U. S. aid. Rejoined Gen. Ricardo Perez Godoy, the junta's gray haired leader: "What Washington does not understand is that this is a Peruvian solution to the prob lem of preserving democracy.' On Aug. 17, the United States, convinced that the military men intended to keep their promise of free elections in 1963, lifted the aid ban and recognized the new govern ment. The present situation puts to the test the military junta's claim that theirs is the way to preserve democracy. Alaf fer of Fact By Joseph Alsop lc) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate Alsop THE NEW DEBATE Washington-Alter the first violent spasm of combat over the House and Senate rules, the new ses sion of Con gress seems likely to settle down to a pretty dull routine in most of the major legisla tive areas. To be sure, another t r y will be made, this time per haps successfully, to pass the medicare bill; and there will be other, subsidiary excite ments. But the sole topic of really vivid interest and great long term significance still seems pretty certain to be taxation - plus - long - term -economic policy. This is the outlook because the Kennedy administration's proposals for tax reduction and tax reform arc slated to be decidedly more radical and far reaching than has yet been realized. Of course, the plans now being drawn up in the Treasury and elsewhere may be sharply scaled down this week, when the president and Secretary of Treasury Douglas Dillon take a a final look at them. ON PRESENT prospects, however, the coming ses sion will be different from any other since the days of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, in that its central, domi nating preoccupation will be an argument about the real shape and true motive forces of the American economy. This is certainly unavoidable if the President docs not change the present plan to present a tax program in which economically stimulat ing tax reductions will bulk much larger than tax reforms. In crude terms, what is now to be expected is a re quest for reductions of indivi dual and corporate income taxes which may cost the Treasury from S12 to $13 billion; plus a request for certain changes in lax base which will entail some furth er loss of revenue; plus a re quest for loophole-closing changes in the tax base which will recapture from S3 lo $5 billion of the revenue sacri ficed by tax cuts. The net sacrifice of reve nue, at least at the present level of business activity, may well run to S9 or $10 billion. The proposal to sacri fice revenue on this scale is to be put forward when Ihc budget is already unbalanced, and in a year when Federal expenditure requests are act ually due to increase. These simple facts insure that the main debate will concern the inner nature of the national economy. T 'HE PROPOSED tax re forms will also arouse embittered controversy, as might be expected. The oil depiction allowance is to be tackled, though with cautious hands. The capital gains tax is also to be altered. These and other changes in the tax structure will surely meet with strong opposition from individuals and corporations adversely affected. In addition, the impact of the proposal to sacrifice reve nue by tax cutting is to be somewhat softened, mainly in deference to the powerful and able chairman of the House Ways and Means Com mittee, Rep. Wilbur Mills ot Arkansas. The reductions in corporate and individual income taxes are to be asked for in stages, running through this year and next. Thus the whole loss ot revenue will not occur at once. NONETHELESS, the central issue will certainly be the validity of the theory clearly staled by President Kennedy in his important speech to the Economic Club of New York. After saying that he had been disappointed in his hope to ask for tax cuts "in the atmo sphere of a balanced budget," the President continued: "We shall neither postpone our tax cut plans nor cut into essential national security programs. . .Our true choice is not between tax reduction, on the one hand, and the avoid ance of large Federal deficits on the other. . .It is a para doxical fact that tax revenues are -too low (to balance the burgct), and the best way to raise revenues in the long run is to cut rates now." In other words, the aim is still to balance the budget, at least at some future date. But the old methods are consid ered to have failed. TTENCE it is proposed lo use -the wholly new method of big rale reductions both for individuals and corporations Ihc corporate income tax, for instance, may be cut by four or five points, from 52 per cent down to 47 or 48 per cent. And these tax cuts are in turn expected to cause such growth in national produc tivity and income that the eventual tax take will be far larger, even at the new, low ered rates, than the take is today. As proof of this, the Ad ministration policy makers constantly cite the Eisenhow er administration's $7 billion, lax cut in 1954. The next year, the lax take was the; same though the rates had been much reduced. The year after, the take was $7 billion higher than it had been before the S7 billion cut. This was be cause there was more income to tax. Nonetheless, what some policy-makers call the "myth ology" of the balanced budget still has a strong hold in the country and the Congress. Hence the new approach tc budget balancing, by growth-and-income-stimulation rather ! than by spending decreases j by tax increases, is bound to touch off a debate of great heat and high importance. IT IS MUCH lo be doubted if a system as foul as the communist system can last in definitely in this century of the common man. If wc cm Just keep out of war long enough, communism will set tle its own hash. It is too foul to live forever in this modern world. i "As President of fhe United States, it gives me great pleasure lo unveil the art treasures from the French government the Moner Lceser!"