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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1963)
'lUtbUAI, JAW UAH f U, lUM MfcUtOHD MAIL TKlttUNt. MLDFOHD. ORtGON """Bvifybno lnSoutherirbfcjo Readt The Mall Tribune1 Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO SS North yir8t. Ph. 7T-611 ' ROBERT W RUHU Editor HERB GREY AdvartUlnl Manafar GERALD T LATHAM. But Mir ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mm. Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Telea Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporta Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women Editor DALE EKlt-K&UH, nrcuiauonijE An Independent NewlDaDer Entered aa second daw matter at aledtora, uregon. unuer ni u MnrcTi 3, 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES nv Mail In Advance. Dally and Sunday 1 yearsia.oo Daily and Sunday moa. 10 00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moa. 0 00 Sunday Only One year fa-00 Single Copy (Mailed l J0o By Camel And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year $31.00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1.75 Sunday Only 1 mo. Mc Carriei and Vendor! j-opy 100 Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jack ton county Ullliea frCIS mieriiHUUH.. Full Leaied Wire U. P. 1. Telephoto NewapicturM MEMBER OF AUUI1 un.u Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: wn.sntsT HrtRKHTS A ASSOCI ATES Of'lcea In New York. Chi cago. Detroit, San rranciaco, Loa Angeiea, ataauie, r u r 1 1 a u w. Denver. NATION A I tDITORIAl 7 NEWSPAPER PUIIISHERS J ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. A Modern Constitution There is a general impression abroad that Gov. Mark 0. Hatfield is a supporter of the pro posed new Constitution. He may, or may not, support the proposal. The impression that he does comes from his inaugural address, but in it he did not say, specifically, that he approves the new Constitution. He said : "The Constitution Revision Commission has pro duced a notable document. This legislature's greatest " legaoy can be the referral of a realistic, ' modern Constitution." , LIE DID not say, be it noted, "this" Constitution, 1 1 but "a" Constitution. This leaves him free oppose specific proposals or Ol- lO YEARS AGO Jan. 22, 1953 (Tuesday) Members of the Jackson County Memorial Auditorium association have voted unani mously to begin circulation of petitions for a special election on an $800,000 bond issue for a proposed countywide audi' torium. Landowners of the Camp White area were , informed last week that the Army still plans to acquire land there for use in constructing a siana-Dy Army training camp. 20 YEARS AGO , Jan. 22, 1943 (Sunday) City Superintendent Frank Ttogers believes nonage si bridge damaged by flood wa- ters when Bea.r creek changes its course, can be saved. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Twice last week there would have been a while Christmas if there had been any Christ mas." 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 22. 1933 (Tuesday) . Low bid of $62,130 sub mitted for projected rerouting of Pacific highway' be.ween Talent and Ashland.. Blizzard covers Klamath Falls with 20 Inches of snow overnight; drifts reported six feet deep in some places. 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 22. 1923 (Wednesday) Plans announced for con struction of $175,000 apart ment hotel on Fir si. in Med ford. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pol" column: "Two movie actors of Los Angeles have announced their inten tion of having a duel, both being under the impression California has a law against it." SO YEARS AGO Jan. 22, 1913 (Friday) Department of Agriculture disapproves bill creating Ore gon Caves National park. Residents of soulhwest sec tion of Medford protest that small boy? arc killing birds with air rifles and firearms. Whal's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct li superior; seven or eight it eacellent; five or ill is good. '1. A writing in cipher Is called a c m? 2, Who followed haul as King of Israel? 3, At which French naval base was the French licet scuttled during World War 11? 4. James E. Oglelhnrpe was the fnundrr of which of Ihe American Colonics1 5. In which slate Is Ml. Whitney? 6. Is Ihe U.S. cciimis pro vided for by Congressional action, by Executive Order or by the U.S. Constilution'.' 7. Where is the Isle of Man? B. Is "the bends'' a disease caused by working in high or low atmospheric pressures? 8. The Romance languages ire derived from what com mon language? 10. Which is the plural form: alumni or alumnus? Answers: 1. Cryptogram. 2. David. 3. Toulon. 4. Georgia. 3. Calllornia. 8. Constitution. 7. Irish Sea. 8. High prassuri. I. Latin. 10. Alumni. to support changes. In any event, the Governor remains a support er of Constitutional revision. So is practically everyone else who has given thought to it. We suspect that the proposed basic charter will have a tough time getting through the current legislature unscathed. Still, we would prefer that the voters of the state would have a chance to pass onvit next year. THE Constitutional Revision Commission was 1 a "blue ribbon" group of 17 distinguished citizens, who spent lontr hours and davs. assisted by full-time staff workers, in writing the pro posed Constitution. It comprised virtually every segment oi the political spectrum, and represents trie careful, considered judgment of 6ome of the state's best political minds. The Legislature, bv its verv nature, cannot do a similar job. Each member has a multitude of other things to claim his attention; a multitude of pressures to contend with; concerns having nothing to do with tne constitution. . . The Legislature should accept the proposed constitution pretty much as it is now, and give the voters a chance to pass on it. THE proposed Constitution is not merely a 1 patchwork job of repairs done on the old one. Although it retains many of the principal features of the old one, it is essentially a new document, integrated and balanced. The changes it would make are of two kinds: first, "housekeeping" changes, designed to elimi nate outmoded or unnecessary provisions which either belong in statute law. or do not belong at all, and, second, substantive changes. It is the substantive changes which have attracted the most attention thus far, tending to obscure the iact that many ot the changes are minor, and the fact that many of the essentials of the old Constitution are retained. MO Constitution, no law, no proposal, can be 1 designed to the satisfaction of everyone. We disagree, personally, with a few of the provisions of the proposed Constitution. So do individual members of the Commission. Still, it must be judged as a whole, and not as a series of unrelated provisions. In judging it thus, the commission was near- unanimous in declaring it is, in "our collective best judgment a model for a modern state having Oregon's historical, political and economic back ground; it is far superior to the existing 1857 Constitution. 1 hey added : "Its adoption by the Legislature and the people will give Oregon one of the three or four best Constitu tions among the SO states." We agree with Governor Hatfield's sugges tion that the Legislature's "greatest legacy" can be the referral of a realistic, modern Constitution. We would add "this Constitution." E. A. Bullock's Hits Back We have been told by the super patriots whv they are harassing merchants who retail such items as Polish hams or Yugoslavian baskets. Now we hear another angle, that of the mer chant involved. Bullock's department store in Los Angeles has filed a $3-milhon damage suit and a request for an injunction against the local "Committee to Publicize the Sale of Communist Goods." A story in Women's Wear Daily reported : "The case was viewed here as the first strong legal counteraction to advocates of the so - called 'card . parties,' which seek to identify certain stores as mer chandisers of 'Communist goods' from Iron Curtain ! countries ... "Bullock's charges that defendants, without its per mission, have secretly distributed the cards in a con spiracy to maliciously and unlawfully injure its bus iness and reputation . . . "Bullock's charges that It did not permit use of Its name and that defendants have unlawfully trespassed on its property and defamed the good name which it has enjoyed in the community for more than 50 years. It Is specifically charged that statements on the cards give the false Impression that Bullock's Is sympathetic with Communism and is promoting its cause . . . TRADE with certain Iron Curtain countries is advantageous to this nation, has the approval of President Kennedy and the State Department, and, if halted, would put two workers out of jobs in this country for every one idled elsewhere. . Super patriots make a lot of noise about "slave labor," and so on, but they have not shown, nor can they show, that harassing loyal citizens en gaged in legal retail activities is anything more than the hysterical use of smear tactics. The stoic issued a statement in connection with its suit for damages which said, in part: "Bullock's believes that the democratic way is to follow the lead of own Government, rather than to capitulate under the harassment of indivduals who have no representative authority. "When Individuals Invade our properly and secretly ' distribute their defamatory cards, vc must use legal processes to protect our good name and bur patriotic intentions." Amen. E. A. "Reminds Me Of That Crazy Idea Of Henry Ford' That You Can Make More Selling i At Lower Prices" IM4B. tJrfHlateEr fMT Fanfani Outwardly Unconcerned as His Government Faces New Trouble in Italy Br PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News " nalyst Showing little outward sign of concern, bouncy Italian Premier Amlntore Fanfani re turned home from the Unit ed States this week to face another of the tests which regularly have plagued Ital i a n govern ments since 1803. It was nothing par- licularly new for Fanfani who had his first crack at the job In 1854 and became but one in a bewildering succession of Italian premiers. It also seemed that Fan fani would keep his job at least until after general elec tions which President Antonio Segni is expected to call for April or early May. Chief opponent in the test facing Fanfani this time was Communist Palmiro Togliatti ... Communications ... i.iirs 10 in taiior must Mar trie nam and address of the wriUr, although under .. uitnaiuwEii in u.. oi a pen nam or initial for publication is permissible. Th Mail Tribun reserves in right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication muat nat .H ann wnrri. Th. i...... printed in this column do not necessarily represent th views of th paper; in fact th contrary is often th cast. Th Place for Prayer To the Editor: I read your column each day, really en joying other people's opin ions. This shows we still have one of the things our fore fathers left to us, freedom of speech. Here is an item that has bugged me lately, prayer in schools. Let's say that all of the stu dents, parents and teachers, except one, would go for a few minutes each day for a prayer. What shall we do with this one? If he or she is a student shall we send him to a closet or out in the hall? Or shall we brand him an atheist or communist and send him home? The Bill of Rights guaran tees freedom of religion to each of us, not to a majority. Let s let the schools teach the 3 R's and let's send the kids to church to learn about prayer. Earl L. Groves 1103 West Fourth si. Medford Farm Work To the Editor: Is it to be a question of money or morals, this county farm experiment? It has been my very earnest endeavor to know more about it. The M-T City Editor should remember a couple phone- calls from me suggesting some kind of a wrileup on it as it has come to me mostly by the old grape-vine, which to say the most is not too dependable. The most convincing came from one of the unfortunates picked up on some sort of drunk and disorderly charge that landed, as he said, "In that God-awful tank." A soul shattering, initiative destroy ing thing that set him weep ing in trying to say what it was line. That it was like escape from hell just to get out in the field of growing things of Nature's gift of free air, water and soil, at least the air is free most of the time. ' Not knowing too much about it, there's little for me to say. But we do know that there is usually a loss sus tained in the best of planned ventures, till check and re checks can be made to get it onto a paying basis, if it is to be merely a question of money. Clackamas county's venture looks like it might disclose methods that would make it pay off In money. But if morals, the possible rejuvenating of otherwise de cent men, is to be at all con sidered, then it would seem worthy of risking some money on it, If morals is to have a place on the wavering balance. For as the immortal Rob't. remarked, as memory has lt:- "But ah, young friend Humanity's little to be trusted For when self (county inter ests) The wavering balance shakes, 'Tis seldom right adjusted. F. J. Clifford Route 2. Box 200F Central Point, Ore. Problem Solving To the Editor: We want a question answered by the southwestern Oregon popu lace or anyone: How can someone get our two sections of the country together in the solving of your distribution of your crops, profitably to all concerned? That is the question and we welcome the answer straight from the shoulder. t count many trucks parked Idle and waiting for the brief hay and grain season. All winter long the trucks loaf in part time employment only. Meanwhile I have noticed that people advertise the sale of fruits and vegetables far below the local rates. I am tempted to make it another question and if I should, it would be "Why should the problem not be solved by com plete cooperation between our local . Lion's club and you folks there or through co operation of my own Metho dist Sunday class or through me as an individual person interested- in the material prosperity of all concerned?" I would like to correspond with interested parties, as I think that Christianity in ac tion is one in helping to solve the problems of the people financially as well as spiritu ally. We have an honest bunch of people here. Our banker and local bank will go all out to do anything under God's heaven to give full em ployment to the inhabitants of this region and in the pro cess to promote the happiness and welfare of the fine citi zens of the northwest. To this end, we trust that you will courageously face the prob lem that we have raised to day and will advise Clay Eng land of Schcll City, Missouri (no other address is needed or necessary). There are a lot of us who will be glad to cooperate with you. We have many men with large families who need the work. And they need your and my intelligent planning and direction for the sake of their children and the fair distribution of the products that you have there. Now if 1 am "off sides," say so and If I am barking up the right tree then do say so." Anyway who will cooperate and when? If you want to talk to some of us or will want to look me straight in the eyes, I say "batters up" as we will come If need be to get the ball rolling. Or we will welcome and extend the floor to any of you who will want to come and talk. We want action but will certainly tolerate and en courage lots of talk if action is in the wind. Let me know. Clay England. Schell City, Mo. Old Horn Place Gone To the Editor: Sunday one of the landmarks of another pioneer family burned to the ground when my grandpar ents' home burned. While the house still stood, it seemed they were still, with us, even though they had boon gone so many years. The fire put such a final ending to such a sweet memory of Aunt Lot and Uncle Amos McKce, as they were known to all Apple gatcrs. I like to sit and think about all the good times that we had there when we kids were growing up. I think the thing Ihat stands out the most in my mind is her lamp in the window. Each night about the same time, Grandma would light her kerosene lamp and put it in the kitchen window for all to sec. It was there tor so many years, that it finally grew to be a symbol for all who traveled the Applegatc road. In those days we knew most of the people who trav eled the road, and it was al ways a welcoming sight to all who saw it. I can still sec my great grandmother rocking In her chair, telling about sitting on Abe Lincoln's lap as a small girl, and all the troubles they had crossing the plains in a covered wagon, , I can even taste grandma's apple pie and sour dough bis cuits and home made bread with that good blackberry jelly she always made. No one ever left my grandparents without eating something. There was no greater thrill than to sleep at my grand- I parents' in the feather bed, listening to the mantle clock striking out the time, as we watched the fire in the fire place sending out its dancing figures on the wall, until the fire finally went out. I know that the burning of a house can't take away your memories of years past, but still it hurts to see the old home place gone. Clara Faye Pursel 1394 Beekman Medford Congo Clarification To the Editor: To counter balance the lengthy attacks against the UN and U. S. pol icy in the Congo, I submit the following. The Congo, one of the rich est mineral areas in the world, was left in turmoil bv the abrupt and unprepared-for de parture of the Belgians. Three factions immediately became interested: the mining associ ation, the- U.S. and the Rus sians. The mine owners prob ably feared an eventual take over and possibly had a racial interest. The Russians would have liked to have this terri tory or at least be influential in it. The U.S. wanted to keep the Russians out. That Rus sia was interested is docu mented by news dispatches and photos showing their planes and technicians. The U.S. and Its allies lined up behind Adoula, the Rus sians behind Lumumba and the mine owners behind Tshombe, the latter hiring white mercenaries and setting up lobbies in Europe and the u.s. me power of these lob bies should not be under-estimated. If the U.S. had stayed out. Russia, behind Lumumba, had a good chance of winning; if, later on, we had let Katanga secede, there would have been nothing but war with who knows what final result. With the UN. there is some chance of an equitable solu tion for the mining interests, the Congolese, and the rest of the world. Their forebcar ance with Tshombe is indica tive of that. Frank Crum White City, Ore. U. F. O. To the Editor: Seems we al ways have about three tvnes of reactions from people when we rcaa oi an U.F.O. encount er such as Mr. Daniel Fry's. There are those who simply ignore it, those who take it as a joke, and, last but not least. those prophets of doom and darkness that tell us it is a demonic force, and the last is about the most intolerable to me of them all. When any thing out of the ordinary hap pens that cannot be easily ex plained to the human Intelli gence, the cry goes up Devil. Devil, Devil, as thouuh the heavens be only inhabited by torccs oi evil, I recall a man named Christ that walked among men doing good. He was persecuted and put to death because He per formed miracles the people am noi understand. If we were to take a T.V. set and turn It on in front of some of the African natives we would get the same reaction of Dev il, Devil, Devil. The heavens also contain the powers of God and good, and let us not forget that we should look more for the good In things and less of the evil. I really enjoyed Mr. Fry's article and wish we might have more like It. 1 found it very stimulating to the mind as well as enlightening. More power to a man who is not afraid to face ridicule to re port his experience. (Name on File) Eagle Point. Ore. whose party of an estimated 1.3 million members had filed a motion of no-confidence against Fanfani's 10-month- old center-left government. u ine communist cause were to be helped it would come from dissident members of Pietro Nennl's left-wing So cialists whose failure t vote in the Chamber of Deputies had helped keep Fanfani's government in office and who now were accusing Fanfani of betraying his promises. Overall it was a picture ot the general confusion among Italy's political parties which for 10 years have prevented establishment of a stable gov ernment. Fanfani's Christian Demo- Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (ci Field Enterprisei. Inc. Harm SEPARATENESS AND UNITY We divide the world along tne grain oi our infirmities, Whatever it is that we feel we most lack, or , need, be- comes the boundry lino between U s Here and Those Out There. Illness, chronic or dis abling illness, is the most striking example of this di vision. To someone who is really ill, seriously and for a considerable time, all other loyalties and animosities arc submerged beneath the sense of separatencss between the Sick World and the Well World. To the poor perhaps not so much in America, where eco nomic mobility is possible, but in most other countries the social order is irrevocably di vided into the Haves and Have-Nots. The lack of funds, the lack of food, makes every other division seem artifical and meaningless. This, of course, is the great fulcrum by which communism has moved half the world. And to th Black, espe cially today, color is th abiolute line oi demarca tion. Th world is a color world, sharply and simply; all other distinctions are at bottom temporary, super ficial and in th end mean ingless. ' Thus, whether our basic infirmity or incapacity, is physcial, economic or social, it is this cleavage that' de termines our view of our selves and of mankind and that . eventually per verts any real idea of "brotherhood," which is more of a slogan than a feel ing. Our brothers, in point of fact, are only those who share our lacks, who feel our needs, who stand under the tame threat. When is a nation most "united"? When under at tack. Th American Revolu tion united the colonists as peace never could; the Civil War solidified th peoples of the North and the South; Naiiiim gave th British people a sense of solidarity and unanimity not seen since then, ... It is one of the profound paradoxes of human nature that separatencss creates unity; it is the Other that makes us One. And this con cept of oneness comes only times of crisis, through hate, enmity, deprivation, dis crimination, conflict and fear. Such negative feelings are what engender our positive virtucs-our loyalty, our hero ism, our unselflishness, our willingness to subordinate the individual interest for the common good. There are few heroes of peace, there are few martyrs of love. Persecution held the Jewish people to gether for 5.000 years: ac ceptance might dissolve them In a generation. It is Those Out There who keep Us Here identifiable and ready to fight for our rights, or our wrongs, or simply our survival. Communique Backs Cubans' Struggle Pno Penh, Cambodia -IVPT- Visiting Czech President An- tonin Novotny and Cambo dian chief of state Prince Norodom Sihanouk issued a joint communique Monday supporting the "struggle of the Cuban people for inde pendence and liberty." The statement also called for the admission of Red China to United Nations mem bership. Novotny promised con tinued technical, i n dustrial and cultural aid to this South east Asian nation and praised Cambodia's policy of "neu trality." - ? crats, the dominant party, are split three ways, among left, center and right. The man who held them together, for mer Premier Alcide de Gas peri, has been dead for nine years. Smaller, right-wing parties do not trust them. Ten months ago, Fanfani formed his center-left coali tion which included Social Democrats and Republicans but depended for its existence upon a marriage of conveni ence with the Nenni Social ists who agreed to support measures favorable to their own platform and to abstain from the vote on others. In return, Fanfani promised to decentralize state adminis tration by creating 15 region al govern menu, to press school and agricultural re forms, to develop low-cost housing and to build more hospitals and health centers, to act against tax dodgers and to press for nationalization of certain utilities, notably elec tricity. When the chips were down, the Christian Democrats re fused to go through with the plans for regional government out of fear that the Nenni Socialists might rejoin the Communists to take control. Out of this came the Com munist challenge, with the additional charge that t h e government failed to foresee the development of a Paris Bonn axis endangering the European Common Market. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop (c) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate OS. AGAINST TWADDLE Washington - In this week's Saturday Evening Post, Stew art Alsop will publish the un avoidable epi logue to the resoun d i n g row about Ad- lai E. Steven son's role in the Cuban cri sis. Brotherly feeling aside, t h e epilogue Alms seems una voidable to this reuorter be cause of the charges of bad faith and inaccuracy that were so loudly made when Stewart Alsop and Charles Bartlett published their ac count of the way the Cuban crisis was handled by the Ken nedy administration. In that account, it is im portant to note, the role of Am bassador Stevenson was dif ferentiated from the roles of the other chief Kennedy pol icy-makers in only one way. Stevenson was described as "dissenting" from the general view, in the specific sense that he alone wished to use Amer ica's overseas bases as bar gaining counters to get the Soviet missiles out of Cuba. a T NOW appears that before this highly significant fact was published, it was careful ly checked in three conversa tions with Clayton Fritchey. By his assignment on the UN Ambassador's staff, Fritchey is just as fully and formally authorized to speak for Stev enson as Pierre Salinger is for President Kennedy. On the first occasion, Frit chey stated he did not know what position Stevenson had taken, but would soon find out. On the second occasion, Stevenson's willingness to use the overseas bases as bargain ing counters was frankly con firmed by his official spokes man. Fritchey even volun teered the new fact that Stev enson had said the U. a. 'might even consider yielding the Guantanamo base" itself, if this "were necessary to sweeten our negotiating position." Stevenson's suggested sweetener" was omitted from the original account of the Cuban crisis, as being some what too explosive in its pos sible repercussions. But be fore that account was sent to print, the actual language de scribing the position Steven son had taken was checked in third conversation with Fritchey. ' WHAT was not checked, to be sure, was the oninion truthfully attributed to anoth er high Kennedy policy-maker, that Stevenson wanted another Munich." It is a mat ter of judgment, whether it would have been another Mu nich to consent to use Amer ica s overseas bases, even Guantanamo, as bargaining counters to trade the Soviet missiles out of Cuba. Before the end of the dan gerous phase of the Cuban crisis, some respectable per sons in this country and al most the entire British press publicly advocated the ap proach that Stevenson had ar gued for in private-though no one else, as far as is known, went quite so far as suggest ing the possible abandonment of Guantanamo. This reporter happens to believe that adop Hon of his approach would have been an irremediable dis aster, but those who believe differently have a right to their view. A public man does hot have the right, however, to lie down on the floor, and drum his heels, and cry foul, be cause his positions on ques tions of urgent public interest are given to the public. . TUttS is a point which has been mysteriously missed by Ambassador Stevenson. In the early phase of the Berlin crisis, for instance, he de scribed his position with great frankness to a French news paperman, apparently on the ill-founded assumption that he was talking off the record. The unfortunate Frenchman then printed a quite accurate account of the not-exactly-hard-boiled Stevenson position on Berlin-only to find himself in the eye of a hurricane of reproach and recrimination. But the fact remains that the public has a right to know about the position which pub lic men take on public ques tions. Public men, in this re spect, are like cooks or house maids, who expect to give ref erences before taking a job. Public men's references are nothing more or less than the positions they take, which de fine their outlook and reveal their viewpoint. And if you hold a high post and are also openly disappointed because you are not Secretary of State, you are not being victimized because your position in the Cuban crisis is publicly and accurately described. a TT IS high time, in fact, to protest against the tor rents of twaddle that have been poured out on this point. The original Alsop-Bartlett ac count of the Cuban crisis was denounced as a breach of se curity by a great but sadly smug newspaper which had tried to put together exactly the same sort of account but had done it much less well. A mighty publisher also rushed to the defense of Am bassador Stevenson only a few weeks after suggesting that President Kennedy was hard ly better than Neville Cham berlain, because he had not already invaded Cuba. But if we stop this twaddling and get down to hard facts, the facts are simple. In the Cuban crisis. Ambas sador Stevenson gave advice most Americans would not have agreed with-which does not mean that he is not ideally equipped for his present pe culiar post. P0UTICM. PARTr HEADQUARTERS J . I YOURMW f , r. ! ? v.,,h nw n"' "sm up in th social whirl in Washington. Next lime I'm going t vol for an anti social rprintative!"