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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1963)
OkJISUtXl, Jrtn UAIV t Id, XUUii incur unu whil inluuL, mcurunU. utiLkiOM , "Everyone'lirsoutheriroreffon" Reads Tile Mail Tribune" published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Xlrjil.. PhjJTJ-eM ' ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertulnf Manaier GERALD T LATHAM, Bui Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn Editor . EARL H ADAMS. City Editor ' HARRY CH1PMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporla Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation M An Independent Newspaper Entered aa second claia matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act ol Mnrcn 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' By Mall In Advance Dally and Sunday I year $1 00 Dmlv and Sunday moa 10 00 Dally and Sunday 3 moa 5.00 Sunday Omy On year $500 Single Copy iMalledl J0c By Camel And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year $21 JO Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1.75 Sunday Only 1 mo. 50c Carrlei and Vendori opy loo Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jacklun County United Press International Full Leased Wire TJ. P. I Telepjioto Newsplcturea "MEMBER Of AUDIT BUREAU" Uf UP til- U Urt 1 ivjii a Advertising ReprcaenUtlve: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES Of'lces In New York, Chi cago Detroit. San Francisco. Loa Angelra Seattle. Portland Denver. NATIONAL EDITORIAL NEWSPAPER PUILISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from th files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Jan. 13, 1953 (Sunday) A second 24-hour skywatch station has been set up in Jackson county, according to civil defense officials. Dick House elected chair man of the Salvation Army's advisory board. 20 YEARS AGO Jan. 13, 1943 (Friday) Sheriff reports only four prisoners in county jail; low est winter month total for sev eral years. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A mob in the Deep South nearly lynched the wrong man. This would have been quite a joke on the mob." 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 13, 1933 (Sunday) Dr. Henry Hartman tells lo cal orchardlsts that "Medford is rapidly losing its reputa tion for first quality pears." Anton Cermak, mayor of Chicago, critically wounded when Guiseppe Zangara at tempts to assassinate President-elect Franklin Roosevelt. 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 13, 1923 (Monday) Oregon Jones, held In Grants Pass jail, confesses holding up couples leaving dance at Medford fairgrounds. Local minister, speaking on third anniversary of national prohibition, tells Medford au dience there Is no chance of repealing prohibition. SO YEARS AGO Jan. 13, 1913 (Wednesday) W. W. Eifert, longtime member of Medford city coun cil elected mayor by margin of 100 votes over C. E. Gates. First persons cross near Bear creek bridge at Main St. when foot plank laid over concrete floor of span. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or fen correct is superior; seven or eight is axcallentf live or sm il good. 1. Which U. S. President was a tailor by trade? 2. Was the novelist George Eliot a man, or a woman? 3. Who played the movie role of Babe Ruth in "The Babe Ruth Story"? 4. Correct the following: A basket of flowers were pre sentcd to the patient. 5. Of which state is Olym pia the capital? 6. What land was ruled by the House of Orange? 7. Does the male mosquito bile or sting? 8. Was Niccolo Machlavclli a writer, painter or musician? 9. What do these men have In common: John Jay, Salmon P. Chase, William Howard Taft, Charles E. Hughes? 10. Is there a limit to (he number of pennies that con be used in paying a debt? Answers: 1. Johnson. 2. Woman. 3. William Btndix. 4. A basket of flowers was , . . 3. Washington. 6. The Nether lands. 7. No. Writer. 9. All chief justices of the U. S. 10. No. GUEST SPEAKER Ashland - Dr. Arthur Kreis man of the humanities divis ion at Southern Oregon col lege, was guest speaker at the American Association of Uni versity Women's chapter meeting recently In the Ash land Trinity Parish house. The Case for Clemency Three Oregon daily newspapers the Eu gene Register-Guard, the Coos Bay World, and the Portland Reporter have called upon Gov, Mark Hatfield to commute to life imprisonment the death sentence of Jeannace Freeman. Various others are of the opinion that the death nenaltv should be earned out. This division reflects the division among the populace at large over this highly emotional ques tion. Those who believe in capital punishment believe in it strongly; those who disapprove, do so equally strongly. UR opposition to capital punishment is a mat- w ter of record But the Freeman case has elements to it which would cause us to oppose this particular execution even if we believed in capital punish ment in principle. The Register-Guard, in a closely reasoned editorial, reviews most of the reasons given for commutation, and rejects them. These include the "sob-sister" arguments, that she is a woman, that she is a weirdie, that she s had a fantas tically burdened and deprived life, that she need- eu ucip aim uiun l get, il. In rejecting these, the R-G then comes to its . i ; i I 11 .1 ...i point; uiai a simple injustice nas resuueu, wnen of two women, equally guilty, one is given life imprisonment, the other death t THE Register-Guard gives this brief review of the case : "The mother of the (dead) children confessed, im plicating the Freeman girl. Her confession supplied the evidence of premeditation that was essential for a capital case. Using this confession and the mother's additional testimony, the state tried the Freeman girl for first degree murder before a jury that was under standably angry and shocked. She was convicted, with no recommendation for mercy. Death was mandatory. "Then, after the Freeman girl was on her way to . the death house, the mother was brought back inlo court, But she was not tried before a shocked and angry jury. She was permitted to plead guilty (and to throw herself on the mercy of the court.) She was sentenced to life imprisonment ... "The evidence against the Freeman girl, especially the evidence of premeditation, came from a woman who said she was equally Involved. How can the state of Oregon believe that one committed a premeditated crime, the other a (lesser offense)? Why, if the evi dence of premeditation was so strong in the Freeman case, was it so conveniently forgotten in the mother's case? "... Ordinarily ... we would not appeal to the governor to use his special authority in a specific case. The first time we have urged its use is now, in the case of Jeannace Freeman. "The governor has the power of executive clemency for use in cases like this. No legal errors are apparent, so in law there is no remedy. Yet, it is apparent, equal justice under the law was not achieved . . " THE provision for executive clemency was nlotorl in tVio Cvarrrn P.nnof if:if inn fni a VOQ. son. It is there to be used in cases where the Governor feels an injustice has occurred. Thus, in 'employing that power to prevent an execution, he is "upholding the laws" just as he would be if he allowed tne execution to take place. Thomas E. Gaddis, author of "Birdman of Alcatraz." writintrin the Orerronian. ouotes noted crime writer (and lawyer) Erie Stanley Gardner as follows: "It is true that a governor is elected to enforce the law, not as he would like to have it but as the citizens have enacted it. Where a state maintains the death penalty, a governor has no right to extend clemency simply because he or a large group of his constituents may be against the death penalty. "The moral obligation upon a governor, therefore, to extend clemency in cases where the equities require it is just as great as the obligation to see that any of the other other laws are enforced." ET it be said that, for a conscientious and 1 PtViipiillv-mntivfltprl rrnvprnnr. siioh as Mark . . . . , - , 0. Hatfield, a decision such as the one he must make is an agonizing one. The responsibility for saving, or not saving, a human life is awesome. Nor will we linn it possible to be unduly crit ical of him should he withhold executive clem ency in this case. Still, on the basis of the facts as they have come to light in the past few months, we believe that, flip Paso for pxppntivp pIpiupiipv is rlpar cut and iron ciaa. it is our nope mat ijovernor nat- r:t-i ...mi : :i n a iiuui win uxui 1'ise it. The Times' Unreported Story No newspaper in the world does a better job of covering the news than the New York 1 mies. It takes very seriously its boast of being the "news paper of record," and of printing "all the news tl,.,(V. fit ,,.,( Hint, o ill. in jm nil. But there is one story a fascinating one which it hasn't even hinted at in its own columns. Thiu is tlto stnnr nf flip Wnnr Yiil'L- Timna iteolf and particularly of its western edition, during the New York newspaper strike. 1 he western edition was started a few months ago to make the Times truly a national news paper. It had a circulation of several thousand, but it was not a profitable operation. . llITH the "mother paper" in New York closed down, one would expect the western edition to close, too. But no. It has continued printing each day (except Sunday) since the strike started. A llil tl liltTl'llrT Kv tlm aviilnnon It i"o i In inn iiiejt about as monumental a job as before. Most of j I .! 1 t 4 mi . .t tne laminar oy-nnes 01 i lines writers continue to "Gee, That Wai Exciting Some Day, Let'a Actually Go In" n P f tJi,auc. .. I'i, Matter of Focf , By j0..Ph auop (c) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate 1 vf Z t A SOLID GAIN FOR KENNEDY Washington- The members of the House of Representa tives registered their opinion of the out come of the f i'tJjJm 1982 election I I in votes on Tuesday and U7 a A a .Jo.. fMvj ' 4?! The House m e m De r s plainly think that the elec 1 1 o n result, Mmp t n e meaning of which has been much dis puted, was really a major win for the President. After that kind of election result, It is hard to imagine the younger Republican mem bers successfully challenging the super-partisan and ob structionist leadership of Rep. Charles Halleck of Indiana as they did on Tuesday. And it is almost Impossible to ima gine a major victory of the House Democratic leadership in the battle over the Rules Committee on Wednesday. INSTEAD, Hallcck's aging henchman, Rep. Hoeven of Iowa, was replaced as chair man of the House Republican Conference by Rep. Ford of Michigan, as a result of a well-planned junior Repub- 1 1 c a n insurrection against their party's dictatorial House leader. By the same token, the liberalization of the Rules Committee was voted the next day by a majority of 235-196- a far better showing than two years ago. The vote on the composition of the Rules Committee, which was also a vote againts the conservative despotism of Committee Chairman Howard Smith of Virginia, was the more important and more interesting of the two tests. Broken down, It first of all showed an increased Repub lican group in opposition to the Southern Democratic-Republican coalition headed by Reps. Halleck and Smith. In 1062, only 22 Republicans voted for enlargement of the Rules Committee (and hence for dilution of Chairman Smith's control), and the en largement was approved for one session only. This time. 28 Republicans voted for permanent enlargement. In adition, the Rules Com mittee vote showed an equally striking decline of Southern Democratic support for the conservative coalition. Last time, 64 Democrats, all South erners of course, voted down the line for Howard Smith. This time, he was only able to muster the votes of 48 of his colleagues, or one-quarter loss than ill 1HISU. For Howard Smith, the bell has begun to toll. rpHE INCREASED Republi can vote against the Hal-leck-Smlth combine Implies a rejection of the Southern leaning Republican strategy advocated by Halleck and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona. The declining South ern support for Smith, ironi cally enough, also indicates the Southern Democrats, reaction to the Republican gains in the South, which are the grand Laim of Halleck and Gold- water. The shrewder Southerners like Sen. Herman Talmadge of Georgia have long predict ed that important Republican advances in the South would drive the average Southern Democratic politician to aban don the extreme conservative posture, and to make a stronger show of party loy- lty. It is difficult to see any thing but a fulfillment of this prediction in the recent House vote, occurring just after a significant Republican pick-up of Southern House scats. Still anoUier feature of deep interest, in the Rules Committee vote was the proof of the extreme efficiency of the new leadership team of Speaker McCormack, House Majority Leader Carl Albert, and Reps. Hale Boggs, Wilbur Mills, and Richard Boiling. rTHEY HAD their bases so precisely ana completely covered that Speaker McCor mack, at breakfai. at the White House on Wednesday morning, was able to tell President Kennedy just what the vote would be that after noon despite the last-minute Republican attempt to throw all into confusion by demand ing a vote on the previous question. Even the great Speaker Rayburn did not do this kind of meticulously de tailed Job. Over-all, however, these House votes mainly prove that nothing succeeds like success. President Kennedy and his supporters did far better at the polls in November than the wiseacres anticipated. The result was a solid win for the President at the opening of the new Congressional session. This win in turn forecasts a more successful session for the President than most peo ple have been expecting. The forecast is reinforced by the highly significant fact that the crucial House Ways and Means Committee has two vacant seats, which will be filled with men pledged to Kennedy's views on medicare and tax reform and reduction. On Wednesday evening, the President was reported as downright cock-a-hoop, and with some reason. Today & Tomorrow By Walter lippmtnn (cl 1983. The WaihlnfUn Post Kip PROGRESS WITHOUT CRISIS 'the new Congress is meet ing in a time of letdown from a prolonged crisis. There has come a pause in world af fairs. For the first time in a number of years - say since the chal lenge over Berlin in 19158 - the threat of uppmann thermonu clear war has receded some what into the background. From Berlin, the Congo, the resumption of nuclear testing. and finally to the imax in Cuba, the crisis mounted. Now, for the time being at least, in both halves of the world, the pause which has a faint resemblance to peace has relaxed the tension enough to release the rival ries and ambitions of normal and unfrightened men. After the armistice which ended the fighting of the First World War, Winston Churchill wrote that the bat tle of the giants had ended and that the wars of the pyg mies had begun. In the after math of mortal crisis, there are removed the unifying pressures to hang together lest we hang separately, the urgency to rally around the leader lest everything should fall apart. Thus, with the Cu ban crisis behind him, Mr. Khrushchev can turn on his Chinese rivals. In the West. dispute has broken out over the leadership of the alliance. The dispute is possible, in deed it is conceivable, only since the alliance no longer feels that it is seriously chal lenged by the Soviet Union. WE may expect that the new Congress will refWr th pause in world affairs. In our American constitutional ex perience, the power of the President to lead is, generally speaking, a function of some kind of national crisis, abroad in time of war and -it home in a time like the great de pression of the 1930s. Presi dent Kennedy's problem in this Congress is how to lead it when there is no apparent national crisis. There is, to be sure, plenty of trouble and danger in the world in which we are so deeply involved. But trouble which does not carry with it the danger of nuclear war is, for this case-hardened genera tion, not a real crisis. At home, there are many problems. But there is no crisis remotely resembling that of the Thirties which generated the stear" behind the New Deal. While a great many Americans are very an gry about a good number of things, more people are wor ried that the government may lake away something that they now have, than are hop ing that it will provide them something which they do not now enjoy. This is the feel ing of a satisfied population. A ND yet, under the compla cent surface, there are great matters which need to be attended to. These matters do not show their conse quences immediately, but only in the long run. A prime example of this is the weakness of American education. As we fail to edu cate one generation of school children, the rvll result nf this failure do not appear tuny until these children grow up and become the un educated parents of a still-less-educated generation. It is hard to arouse dem ocracies about the long run. This is the President', diffi culty in dealing with the cru cial mailer ol overcoming the chronic slupffishnpsfi nf th American economy. The American economy Is not do ing what it could to provide the means for meeting the long-time needs of our ex panding urbanized popula tion. But the American econ omy, sluesish thnush it is does nevertheless provide a remarkable defense and a ris ing standard nf nrivnti liv. ing. The President must try io rany me support ol a peo ple which does not feel it self under the nressure of a crisis. TIE has to try, because he is not President for this day but for the many days to come. As there is no crisis which drives the people to follow him, he must lead: by persuasion. He has to prove his .case not only in a court of impartial judges, but in the arena where prejudice and passion and special in terests contend. Thus, he has to be not only persuasive, but overwhelm ingly persuasive, which is impossible with a very big and complicated program of measures, but may be pos sible with a program which is concentrated on some great issue, as for example and in particular, the expansion of the American economy. To achieve overwhelming persuasion where there is no great surge of emotion behind him, he will have to take the risk of boring the public by saying the same thing over and over again, if possible in different words. That has not been in the Kennedy style. But it may be indispensible. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS The news? As this is written, there's nothing on the wires to cause one's hair to stand on end. Nor are there any develop ments to lead one to cry "ho sanna!" It looks like a good time to go along with Lewis Carroll, who put it this way: "The time has come," the Walrus said, "To talk of many things: "Of shoes -and ships -and scaling wax- "Of cabbages-and kings- "And why the sea is boiling hot- "And whether pigs have wings." THEN In the news There's the director of the Baltimore zoo, who-intrigued by Old Kroosh's crack that asbtract art looks to him like it was painted with a donkey's tail - took an actual donkey's tail, dipped it in ink, and watched while the cooperative jackass swished his tail up and down over a square of canvas, producing a design of feathery black lines. He then framed the picture attractively, hung it on a wall in the zoo's art gallery among other examples of abstract art, titled it "Black Wisk," and called in an art critic for an appraisal of its artistic worth. The critic praised it highly, called it a new contribution by a hitherto unknown artist. (The signature on the picture was JACK.) BUT that isn't all. The nieturi ant inln ihp papers. A San Antonio (Texas) man saw it, was intrigued by it, and wrote the director of the zoo as follows: "I would like very much to own 'Black Wisk' by Jack. I am enclosing a check for $50, and also $5 for packing, insur ance and postage." To which Zoo Director Ar thur Watson replied: "Black Wisk being packaged for ship ment to you. Received check. Thank you." Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- A WINDY, UNRECONSTRUCTED Southern senator put Jn an unexpected appearance at a big country picnic one late summer aiternoon and announced that if a plat form could be provided. he happened to have a few words to say to his constituents. Reluctantly, somebody pulled up a farm wagon which the Senator mount ed. He then whipped a long speech out of his pocket and began to read it, while some two hun dred picnickers, slices of watermelon or ears of corn in their hands, gath ered reluctantly to hear. . When he reached the bottom of Page Twelve, the Senator looked up for the first time. His audience had simply melted away with the exception of one bedraggled, pop-eyed farmer who stood motionless before him. The out raged Senator bellowed, "1 thank you, my good friend, for being the one voter in this county who is sufficiently inter ested in world affairs to stay and listen to my comments. I am grateful to you, sir." The farmer shook his head vehemently. "I don't care a hoot for your comments on international affairs," he ad mitted, "but you're standing on my wagon!" Have you haard about the odd-ball who kept throwing his dog at a pie and missing? He couldn't mutt the custard. They've discovered another of those fabulously rich Texans. This one has an unlisted telephone company! C 1963, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by Kins Features Syndicate COMMENT? Well, Puck put it about as well as it can be put when in Midsummer Night's Dream he said to Oberon: "Lord, what fools these mortals be." TO PUCK'S Immortal crack, Especially these mortals who pretend to see something wonderful in abstract art. That would be Intolerant. Let's go along with Voltaire and put it this way: "I dis agree, sir, with everything you say, but I am willing to die in defense of your right to say it." Personally, I wouldn't give a plugged nickel for the Black Wisk. but I'm willinu to on quite a way in defense of the Baltimore zoo director's right to collaborate with the donkey in maKing it - and later sell ing it for what any admirer of abstract art is willing to pay for it. Communications Under His Banner To The Editor: We have re ceived one of the brochures entitled "Challenge To Ameri cans," sub-title - "The Strug gle We Face And How To Help Win It." Its content: First the re marks of our President; then the recommendations of our past President. They seem to agree that something must be done, and that it is high time for the in dividual American to be cog nisant of that fact. There are some 29 listed methods where in various in stitutions are involved, to pro mote, from different angles, knowledge of what Commun ism really is. Now dear friends, Fellow Americans: After all these years of rubbing elbows with Communism, should it take us another period of time to es timate its root, its foundation, its actions, and its results? The subjugated peoples of Poland, Slovakia, Austria, East Germany, and all China witness to the actual death of liberty within their borders and the enthronement of sla very there. No worship of God our Creator, unless done secretly or to their dictates. Now, what kind of weapons would you use going into bat tle with the atom? To be victorious we must be intellegent in our defense and selection of weapons. Again we make mention to you that we are in warfare to the death, and that we are waging a spirtual war; our enemy is an anti-Chirst, and his plan is to destroy with eternal death every living per son; his logic and course is to catch and kill man burdened with unconfessed, unforgiven sins, which are recorded in the books in heaven. Rev. 20:12 Christ is our cover up. Wo are all sinners. The blood of His innocence is sufficent, when accepted by faith, t o achieve our victory and to blot out of the books, those sins. This is practical warfare " for His blessed Word says, "is God be for us who can be against us?" Rom. 8:31 Let us not delay but get under His banner today. "Wherefore He is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him." Heb. 7:25. James Williams P.O. Box 441 Jacksonville, Ore. U.S. Withdraws From Popularity Contest appear. If the news and editorials are being pro cessed as before the strike, it is all being done xt r i. .. j.. ii . ... ...I. . iu'w i ui k it mil siau putting mil a gnosi iwspaper," which is being published nearly 000 miles away. We'd like to read the story of this operation -some time, if not immediately. E.A. 51 j ft mm -iiil 3 C-J "It's part of tht training for tht nsw phase of the cold war. They hava to stand yeball-to-tytball without blinking!" By ERIC SEVAREID It would require a candle larger than any realist dares light in this naughty world to produce a re flection from the newly minted coin. Anno Domini 1963, bright enough to blind the wicked; but a dull glow of hope is per- Sevareld CCpllOle JUSl the same. Perhaps the glow will never truly sparkle as long as the seven-league stride of this armaments race is not broken, yet both sides of the coin give off a new light. On the one side are the new prob lems of the Communist camp, now so fragmentized and quarrelsome that Moscow fairly surely has been forced Into an extended period of reticence for reconsideration of its strategies of indirect ag gression which have failed in so many places. e The light of hope from the other side of the coin - our side - is a reflection of new confidence in Washington, but also, so it seems to me, new understanding of how the m At the risk of appearing of fensively smug, I must say that the thinly disguised "background" comments by the President in Florida, con cerning his decision to strike out more boldly as the allied leader, came as both relief and justification for some of us who have long been plead ing for precisely this posture. There are, after all, a few axioms that can be firmly fixed even to the shifting swamp of inlernatonal con duct. Two of them would go about as follows: e 1. It is not possible for any alliance to follow a line of conduct that is alien to the policy of the major power within the alliance, which policy must necessarily serve the ultimate security ends of the major power. their conventional forces, on which they have been default ing for domestic reasons, and in discouraging ideas of in dependent, national nuclear arsenals. This is not to say that the United States will. In fact, prove to work Its will; but the whole logic of the situa tion obliges it to try. It is not to say, either, that the areas in which Washington can suc cessfully strike out on its own are unlimited. Berlin carries a built-in limitation upon uni lateral action. So docs the Congo, given the present state of the U.N. involvement, pos sible as it may be that we will become chief supplier of manpower and strategies as well as of money and materi als - a prospect this observer contemplates with dread. I realize the size and Influ- 21 In a peacetime alliance encc of the opposing school of of democratic governments, it thought, those convinced that unless an alliance moves all in step it will break apart. My own answer would be that the true test of an alli ance is whether it can act ef fectively In a true crisis. 1 1 see little evidence that any I of our systems of alliance can I do this even with the push i ship comes to this sooner or alone in the Caribbean; ad-1 from behind: what is inherent-1 later, whether In a domestic vance agreement from our I ly required is the pull from ! family or in a family of na Latin American allies would In front. j tions. It must - in the name jnr power is historically ; never have come. For these! I believe these axioms can j of the final good for the great- is impossible to achieve ad vance agreements on actions that will cause serious and im mediate pain to any of the members, even though the dis tant goal appears of over riding importance. For these reasons the Uni ted Slates was obliged to act the Alliance for Progress. I doubt very much that even a country of such good purpose as Brazil, now half drowning in inflation, will act to save itself unless we act first, even though our action is negative. We are obliged to convince Brazilian leaders that we real ly will cease our periodic bail out unless they act to over master their domestic ailment, excruciatingly painful though the cure may bo. In this case and in others we are now obliged to establish, so to speak, the credibility of our economic deterrent. In acting upon the foremen tioned principles, we are go ing to undergo an intellectual and emotional crisis ourselves. The prevailing pyschology of 20 years encrustation is not to be changed without suffer ing; and if we think we have an "unpopular image" now, it is nothing to what it will be, and in places where we very much want to be liki'd. But the President has now finally and frankly stated what some of us have long waited for - we are withdraw ing from the popularity contest. Morally responsible leader- obliged to behave not only I reasons the President now j and must be applied even In towards the common enemy feels obliged to put the the case of our ad hoc alii but towards the commonality screws to our European allies ances for economic uplift and of friends and allies. 1 in pressing for a build-up of stability, meaning particularly cr number. (Distributed 1963 by Th Hall Syndicate. Inc.) (All Rights Restrvtd) r