Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1963)
4 lUujUi). JAiiunii i 4., xaoJ iltDFORlUJHlBUNg 'Evr'vorie in" Southern Orffion Bead! TIM MU Tribune". pabhlind"Daily'nxccpt SHlurdiiy by MLUKOHD PKIN'L INC. CO 33 N.mh Fir SI, Ph.7";i-Im "R'OHKRT"W RU1IU Editor HERB CRKV Advtirtlsins Manaser C EllALD T LATHAM. Bu Mr llilC ALLEN JK. Mnc Editor 1 Alll. il ADAMS. City Editor HARK CH1PMAN. Tclcg Edllor RICHARD JEWETT. Sport!. Edllor Milk and Venom -But Too Cold To Sustain Life A We Know It" Entered as second class matter Mcdloid Orison unaer an . Mnrt-h 3. mm SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mail In Advance .,, Daily and Sunday-I year $ 00 Daiiv and Sunday It mos HI" Dalit and Sunday d moi 5 0 Sinidav Only One year $.i.0 Sinule Copy IMulledl ic By Camel And Motor Route. Dailv and Sunday 1 year Ml on Uailv and Sunday 1 mo l,'J Kuiirliiy Only 1 mo ' Carrlei and Vendura Copy mi nfllil.il Paper ol City ol Hrdlord OMielal I'aiier ol Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U P I Telepho'o Newsptcturca "MEMBER' OF AUDIT BUREAU OH CIRCULATIONS . Adtertistne Reprrtrfnlallve: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES Ol'u-el In New Yolk. Clil c.ioo Detroit. San Francisco. Loi Annclia Seattle. Portland Deil'er. NATIONAL EDITORIAL All, pity the poor reviewer for a small town newspaper. i Mothers, train up your sons to he bank rob-j bers, encourage them to be wastrels and spend-1 thrifts, succor their most foolhardy ambitions, but gaSSE8& never we say never permit them to write dra-i An Independent Newspaper i ma - music IC'VICWS. j For if a person were ever foredoomed to ab ject and humiliating failure in a conscientious enterprise, it is the wretch who finds himself cast in the role of critic where no critjcisni is really wanted. And that, of course, is nearly always the case in a Medford-sized community, where the pros pect of attending a play or concert and experienc ing really first-rate talent is about as likely as having the girl next door turn out to be Hi igitte Bardot. It just isn't in the cards, friends. w E HAT he will see or hear is a group of de termined, well meaning .1 m a t 0 11 r s 1 bless 'cm I. who at considerable sacrifice to their a sQ) c(ti 3n businesses and families, have been working and ' slaving for weeks on some project or other. In tne agonizing process ot putting the tnmg together, they will have all gotten very fond of each other and of whatever it is they are attempt ing to do. They will have convinced themselves that they arc pioneers, if not, indeed, martyrs, in struggling to bring Culture (capital "C," please, typesetter) to the wilderness Ik, 1 tiwte;Q De Gaulle's Intransigence Predictable If Signs Had Been Read Aright in Pas NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION onimui.icat.ons Flight or Time Mcdford and J-ickbon Counly History from ihe ttlcb ot The M.i.l Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Letters to the Editor mus.t bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the ue of a pen name 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 of the Hut the sad fact is that they will be of limited I p'w. lhe conl""v "en the case. ability to start with (else they would be out raK-j Commiltce on ing in the fantastic salaries that are paid to per-1 unamerikan (sic) Activiiics formers these days), and to make matters worse ' To iiic Editor: This is in llioir rehearsal time will iierforce olace further aitwcr to e a. in the m.t. ins, blankets - just anything you vvuuld donate to a family near Jacksonville who lost everything in a lire recently? 10 YEARS AGO Jan. 29. 1953 (Tuesday) A new portable iron lung has been presented to the Mcdford lire department by members of Local 71)1, Inter national Union of Operating Engineers, AFL. -Blithe Spirit," a lly "V Noel Coward, has been chosen as the IflS:) senior class piny at Mcdford High school. 20 YEAflS AGO Jan. 29, 1943 (Sunday) Stale engineers meet with MecUord city council to dis cuss flood conditions in Mcd ford area. From Artlnir Perry s c Smudge rot" column: "Re ports from the hills say snow is four feet deep and whiskers about that lone,." barriers to the possibility of achieving quality, i Jan. 27. After reading his edi-j n so kjlldiy cal me morn. The only way to inaKe tins situation 11101 e difficult is to substitute students in place of adults. At this point whatever is offered to the public is absolutely sacrosanct. 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 29, 1933 (Tuesday) Joseph G. Uolzgaug and Margaret 13. Turner, both of Morifnrrl. annum spring se mester enriillees at University nl Sniilhern California. Mcdford school board seeks method by which school war rants may lie used in pay ment of school taxes. INVITED to play with this rigged deck is the poor reviewer. Contemplate briefly the extent of lu's dilemma. Me may be totally unqualified by nature and nurture to appraise anything more cultural than a ladies tag team wrestling match. But he will have been given the assignment at the whim of a superior (sometimes, like an idiot, he volunteers) and a story on the event wiil be expected the following morning. Assume, however, that his background is suf ficient to enable him to distinguish between sour notes and sweet notes, between someone who can act and someone who merely has an ability to memorize lines. Is the reviewer than free to write the truth about what he has seen and heard? Not by the hair on your chiny chin ehin. HEN writing of amateurs, the reviewer must w 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 29. 1923 (Wednesday) Alex Sparrow resigns as superintendent of Crater Na tional park alter 111 years in park service. Mcdford High school bas ketball team, coached by lid win Durno, leaves to play series of seven games in Wil lunette valley. 50 YEARS AGO Jan. 29. 1913 (Friday) W. II. Cere. W. II. Canon and C.eorge Putnam return from trip to Salem where they discussed possibility of legis lature passing road laws re tpiested by Jackson county. Steel beams and several carloads of red and white brick arrive in Mcdford to be used in construction of new onera house. alwavs substitute the milk of 'uiman kind ness for the natural venom that may have been aroused by the production he saw. Let him attempt a comment that is even slight ly caustic about a local performer and the wrath of husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, aunts and uncles, neighbors and friends with an intensity paling that of .ens will descend on his poor' head like thunder from Alt. Olympus. "Just who does he think he is," the outraged chorus will scream. "Walter Kerr or Brooks Atkinson or somebody';' torial I wondered if he did not write his diatribes for Ihe fun of gelling a rise out of some of us. If such was his purpose he succeeded where I am concerned. Isn't it a rather childish trick In deliberately call the committee Ihe House Un amerikan (sic) Activities Com mittee? Its real designation is House Committee on Un amerikan (sic) Activities. In K.A.'s case he admits it is not ignorance. By doing so he in no wise hurts the committee. But what about the character trait that permits him to so misname the committee? There is a considerable feel ing of smugness in his edi torial as though to be opposed to the committee is a mark of distinction. Does he not know that when the 87th Congress convened only six members of the House were opposed to continuing the c o m mitlee? Are we to believe those con gressmen favoring the com miltcc are men lacking the judgment necessary to be good congressmen? Whenever so violent an op position arises towards an act of Congress it is wise to learn whence the imposition arises. In this ease it is not hard to learn. The Communist publi cation World Marxist Review for October. 1 (i. published orders from Moscow to Amer ican Communists to achieve Ihe ii o s I rue I i n n ot the I..C.U.A. Il follows therefore, that the question arises, is anyone not a Communist who goes along with their aim. a wigs, as soon as possible, at 399-1C37. Pearl Spackman Box 33 Jacksonville, Ore. Kind Words, and Others To the Editor: The letters appearing in the Communica tions column regarding Mr. By PHIL NEWSOM I most impossible conditions on I Iv Therefore, even if it lakes UPI Foreign News Analyst ! British entry into Europe and t'o years to build up an inde VVhen President Charles dc j his open courtship of the West pendent French nuclear force, Gaulle almost in a single sen- i German Republic have been ; there is no danger of a mill- iciicc nunipcu otner signposts along me way. tary vacuum, t h e Atlantic i They are not of recent origin. if there is a big loser, it alliance and; In Dc Gaulle's concept of a will be Britain and if Britain vetoed British ' French-led Western Europe, I finally docs enter the Com m e m bership ; there was no place for Britain I nion Market, it will be on the co n-1 or for the United Slates. anv terms she can get. France is at its moment of greatest economic strength. It is growing faster than West Germany and twice as fast as either the United States or Britain. Time is important. Along wilh Do Gaulle, the greatest advocate of close Franco-German ties has been West Ger man Chancellor Konrad Ade nauer who is scheduled to leave office in less than a year. Dc Gaulle himself, with ap- the signs been read a little better. In a state of what might be called complacency, his West ern associates simply went on expecting him do things he never intended to do. As early as 1S38. De Gaulle was showing disenchantment with NATO. After that came his determination that France should have its own nuclear force. His imposition of al- in the con mon market, The gods are never ques t h e surprise j tioned and so it seems unlike necd not have j ly that De Gaulle will bother been nearly j to explain himself more than so great had j he already has. But it seems probable that these considera tions lent weight to the final decisions: The European Common Market already is an econom ic success, and for selfish rea sons alone its members arc not likely to abandon il even in the face of a major up heaval. Whatever i 1 s irritations may be. the United States can not abandon Europe militari- Washington Report By William S. While (c) United Feature Syndicate BI-PARTISANSHIP ENDANGERED Washinglon-Both past and present instances of small bore Democratic partisanship have already brought danger to Ihe only proper conduct of our foreign j policy - which I is to say ils conduct. They may bring yet more. The Re publican lead crs of the House of Rep r e s c ntatives have just rc- oaiH President Kennedy's par ticipation in the defeat last fall of the veteran interna tionalist, Rep. Walter Judd of Minnesota. They have calmly 1 II, Dnni,Mif3l iHp Darnel Fry have not passed !",?..' ,' eit-n affairs, ivh If tin Ihe otluT hand, the iv viewer leaws his' follow travi-ur w dupe What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is luporior; tcven or eiqht ii excellent; livt or fx is good. 1. What kind uf aiiinuil is i piu liv ilrrm"' 2. Vti.u litlc hrfrll John the It Would yun otiiuiilc that .ilnmt lit. 2j. (m- 511 pi i" cent il llir pi'i'Mn.s tn thr trUl .uc lUiU-niti'? 4. Is the W of WiKliI oil l!ic north of south eoat of Km; I and' 5. Ui the I'nitrds Slates and Siam exchange Minister; or Ambassador.-'' inieu'ritv at home when he writes uj a local pro- (luetion, he'll end up beine; abused jut as thoroughly by quite another group. Kvery com munity has its hard-core of sophisticates who re gard themselves as the final arbiters of taste and quality. Let tlie reviewer charitably say something was good, when indeed it was quue poor, aim tne slings and arrows of scorn will start flying. "Why doesn't the paper get someone to re view these things who really knows what die is talking about?" they will demand. Would a Irue American want to be on the side ot Ihnsr who have promised to bury us'1 Another question that nat urally arises is why Mich de termined animosity-.' W.iuld the Kremlin be interested in an innocuous organization" Is not this extreme opposition the greatest compliment fur the committee? Would the Communists concern t h e 111 selvei wilh the committee if it were not dangerous to tluir plans? To attempt to accomplish ., . i , i 'the orders from Moscow the II II cannons to the right of him, and cannons communists in the u.s. have to the left of him, primed to Volley aiUl ri;aiiized the National Comi- thu.nl,.', the pnulfiit .vvi,vvcr may try to oorj-lti'S: tllC cailtitHlS lllilUllc fours1 : ! mitlee. The executive director llo'll soaivh ilt'spri att'ly fur somoUiini; to praise (to keep the family happy) ami will erili ei.e mily a few of the produetionV more obvious faults in order to assert his credentials and keep the sophisticates contented that the bastions of quality are beinjr protected. The result of such pussy-footine; is usually unhappy too. The reviewer will keenly feel the compromise of his integrity, and he'll be doubly reluctant w hen it comes time to write another one. The families won't be appeased because a mod icum of praise is hardly enoimh. And the final of the committee is Mr. Kniuk Wilkin.son. a known Cononu niM. 1 hiii sure most of thue re;idiny this would not wish to travct in les company If my assumption is eorreet tvon't e.ieh one of you write lo e.ieh of our concrcssniou telling llieni how you feci'1 'P'ry arc Kohert Duncan, Al I'lhnan. Kdilh ("I recti and Waller Norhlad. House Office lildi; . Washington. D C. Anna M. Streed :;n North Teach st Medtord me by unnoticed. The large percentage have been base and degrading in quality, and could only have been perpe trated by those steeped ill ignorance and blinded by Ihcir own self-righteousness. To the gentleman who was sincere in his intimation that Mr. fry is dealing with Sa tanic forces, may I remind him that there arc al?o forces of light which arc much stronger at work in the uni verse. If that writer has not as yet noticed these in opera tion in his own life, it might he wise for him to kindly re Irain from judging others by himself, lie might do well, in fact, lo recall that Jesus ad monished us not to judge at all. lie would also do well lo remember that Jesus said that by ihcir works we would know Ihcm. If that gentleman knew Mr. Fry personally, he would find many good works lo his credit. He could be sure, loo, thai these were not achieved through Mr. Fry's cavorting with any Satanic forces, but through his aituuc ment lo and cooperation wilh the forces of light. To those who so brazenly made fun of him, I have noth ing lo say. 1 do not condemn. They have my pity, and if Ihey can't acquire a greater degree of intelligence in the near future, 1 hope that at leasl they may develop ronie I belter manners. If these per i sous, instead of wasting their energies dreaming up such horrid things lo write about a leilow human being should ! lake the trouble to meet the , object of their slanderous as i sanity, Ihey would find :i quiet, modest, unassuming person of outstanding sineer i it and integrity. Indeed, s it o ii I d they open-mindedly search a little further. Ihey I would be impressed with the (act that they were in the presence of one of great depth ot soul and superior intelligence. II o w ever, on second thought, no. At the present stage of their spiritual unfold ment they are not ready to reeom.-e qualities of this sort in anyone, so blinded arc they by their inllaled little egos. A t, w persons of higher ethics and deeper insight committee with five new anti- foreign aid members. This comes at a lime when the continuation of the for eign aid program, one of the very keys to the administra tion's whole world approach, is admittedly in hard straits in Congress. NO ONE on the administra tion's side can fairly cry "foul" at this action o the CO. P. For if ever there was a case of built-in and inevit able tit for tat, il was thi: unhappy instance of presiden tial intervention against a first-rate member of congrcs: simply because he happened to be in the other party. Judd in fact risked hi: political life last fall by stay ing in Washington lo assist Kennedy's then current for eign aid bill-while the presi dent was out in Minnesota de manding Judd's head in be half of the Democratic party. It was a singularly clear il lustration of Ihe odd unwis dom of President Kennedy's uncharacteristic decision to go all out in a domestic cam paign to return a Democratic congress which just might be more amenable to him in such relatively picayune issues as medicare. The President has always regarded the cold war as neither a Democratic nor a Republican but simply an all American undertaking. Ami but for this momentary switch from bis usual course, he has tried to keep partisan home politics out of his foreign policy. crime? Why, he docs not sup port the President on every little domestic issue that may come up. The ultra-liberals are high ly unlikely to be able to bar either Dirkscn or Smathers from earned committee ad vancement. The mere fact that they have set off upon these absurd and juvenile vendettas, however, will sure ly do nothing to promote bi partisan foreign policy unity in a world in upheaval every where. The President himself could do worse than to call off these frantic advocates of a tolal conformism at the cost of what really mattcrs-the prop er, or bipartisan, conduct of foreign policy. Strictly By Sydney J. Harris ((.' Field Lntcrpriscs. inc. proximately three years left in office, also must firm up his own concept of a ftituro France before it can be un done by his successor. France's partners in lha common market have said plainly that Dc Gaulle's idea of a Europe of the future is not their idea. But Dc Gaulle apparently feels himself on firm ground. The West German reaction, may be his greatest weakness. The German Bundestag must ratify the accord recently no. goliated by Adenauer and Do Gaulle. The Germans want Britain in the Common Mar kel. And they have indicated strongly that if they must choose between Paris and Washington for national de fense, it will be Washington. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop (c) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate & . lt:inl fleets." he AND NOW FORMOSA Washington - Evidently, this is the year of great de cisions for President Kenne dy. Gen. dc Gaulle has put a pistol to his head in ' Eu rope. The nu clear lest ban talks, having been stalled by the So viets before Ihey really Alsop g o l sianea, arc already calling for an other grave choice. And in Formosa, of all places. Gen eralissimo Chaing Kai-shek is beginning to finger a pistol of another sort. The potential Formosa de cision, being over the hori zon, is not as yet engaging the attention of the somewhat distracted Kennedy policy makers. But the signs are plain that a decision may too easily be called for in the months just ahead. The first symptoms lo con sider are the commando-type lanriin which small groups of Chiang's troops have been making, at intervals, on the Chinese Communist mainland in recent months. There have been ten of those landings all told, according to report. rpiIE commandos have gone in across the beaches, in groups of about ".0 men each. No airlift has been used, and the troops employed have not been drawn from Chiang's crack highly - equipped and trained special forces outfits. All those who have landed have been rolled up by the Chinese Communists. Yet several of these rather primitive commando groups flocks and have made successful contact ships come in I wjti the peasant population, said, "but even anc ,ave maintained them- THINK. THANK. THUNK A foreigner who has been in this country several years approached me not long ago and said he had been amused and gratified to read a recent column of mine about the "nouns of multitude'1 in the English language. "It's hard for a foreigner to learn I h a 1 1 sheep come in harder lo master are the an-1 selves on the mainland for fercnt tenses and moods of significant periods of time English verbs.' "11 doesn't seem so to us," I answered. "What seems to perplex you about our verb forms-.' They're much easier to learn than the irregular verbs in French." "Perhaps so," he said, "but I can find no rule or con sistency about your verbs. For instance, the past tense of 'leach' is 'taushl', but the past tense of 'preach' 'praucht.' and the past tense of 'screech' isn't 'scraughl Because all have been rolled up in the end, the American policy-makers are wholly un impressed by the results of these operations, but the Gen eralissimo is known to re gard them as not un-prom-ising preliminary tests. The fact that the General issimo is far from discouraged by the results of these first I test gains much added sig- VTEVER moved him, it i sence from the House will cause the president infinitely more trouble on the things that really matler than any possible gain it can bring him on the things that matter a great deal less. Nor is this the end. While the House Republicans have been moving to retaliate, the ultra-liberal Senate Demo crats have been marshaling in a characteristically myopic way to spread the damage, by way (if both petty ideological and purely partv partisanship. 1'hoy have been attempting ti. winch language is spoken arbiters, who rigidly refuse truck w kh mediocrity, j arc be the most persons'1 7. Is it true that then tv hile orchids'' B. How many of the eight parts of speech in the Eng llsh language call you name II Which radio news com mentator began his program w itli t h e words. "Ah es. 1 tr.eiv's good news tonight"-' 10. ho was the "Sullait ot Sttaf" Answers: 1, An elephdnt. J. Ho was beheaded by Herod. 3. Kilty per cent. 4. South. 5. Ar.ibritfc.idors. 6, Chinese. 7. Yes (Among Ihe most valu- aele and rdrel. 8. Nouns, pro- ; nouns, verbs, adjcdlvei. ad- i veibs, piopoMlions, conjunc-; bons, intcr)Ci.tionii, 9. Gabriel I Trdllrr. 10. Geoigc Herman (Babe) Ilulh. i will set him down as a lily-livered equivocator. T1IK ONLY loophole left, one may by now ii,;,, i, L- .;,,,,,! t.. .i;....,,, i .,. ;., .'; ti,. 1 1 1 11 1 1 , is, 1 1 r i it. n hi wiiiiii.it It H 111 till Lrttcrs and Gilts To the rduor: This column was of givai micros! t. tny hush.unl and me. Now t h.it I .. .i t , , t i am aione. eaili letter seems 'paper ol anything but in ulcssional productions , bl. PlM OM., thai vi.-it the community. Unit too is wishtal think inc.. The (nly thine,- worse for the amateur per former than having somethini;- unfavorable about K In lint he ment inn, ! get lonely al time no! to send, someone "Il rodivtion is as uuthink- wro'.c in defense of Mr. Fry. j lo bar the Senate Republican While lie is too big a man to ; leader. Sen. Everett Dirksen hat. hi ihe others-touch him, ot Illinois, from a seat on the 1 am com idem that these kind : tavwnling Senate finance words meant a great deal to j eonmiiliee. They proceed here hen To liieni. I add these of "Docs a stranger lo our tongue find many like that?" I asked. "Hundreds." he sighed. "I learn thai the past of 'sink' is 's-jnlc', but 'wink' isn't 'wunk', and 'Ihink' isn't 'lhunk.' 'Speak' be comes 'spoke.1 but 'seek1 doesn't become 'soke,' and 'leak' does n't become Toke'." "Odd how we take such changes of lense for grant ed," I said. "Nobody who speaks English ever thinks about il. Al least, I've never lhunk about it before." He smiled wanly. "The past of 'steal' is 'stole'," he continued, "but the past of 'kneel' isn't 'knolc.' and the past of 'feel' isn't 'folo.1 Again, Ihe pas! of 'cling' is 'clung,' but the verb 'wing' doesn'l become 'wung,' and 'bring' doesn't turn into 'brung.1 except lor small children." 'sn H nificancc from another scl of fads. To begin with, the much more highly qualified troops in Chiang Kai-shek's special forces number per haps as many as 10,000 men in all. r'0 GO on with. Chiang has substantially more capa bility to lift troops onto the mainland than is generally imagined. Counting all pos sible sources, he has enough airlift for a night drop of over 4,000 troops - and the men in his special forces are intensively trained for air drops. Most significant of all. Chiang Kai-shek has also be gun to build landing craft in Formosa in the past 12 months, and for all anyone really knows, he may also have additional landing craft on order in Japan or else where. The Formosa govern ment's defense budget wast heavily increased last year, to pay for the landing craft and to permit stockpiling of cer tain other calagories of sup plies that would be needed in the event of a successful landing on the mainland. In sum, the preparations for an attempt to return to the Communist mainland arti well advanced. Chiang Kai shek will have the means for such an attempt, quite prob ably in the favorable spring season towards the end oC May, and quite certainly in the almost equally favorable autumn season. It must be understood, ot course, that Ihe kind of at tempt Chiang has in mind will depend for its success on the response of the mainland population. Ferrying largo armies across the Formosa Strait is not contemplated. The idea is simply to effect a strong lodgement in a good position. TT IS hoped, perhaps not foolishly, thai a solid lodge ment of Nationalist troops will rally local support, and thus have the effect of a, spark in the Communist hay rick. All will turn upon tho state of mind of the mainland peasants, the militia, and tho army. Hence the American policy - makers say tho scheme is hare-brained; but in Peking there is more an prehension, for Mao Tse-ttm--last year reinforced the For mosa Strait area with about 200,000 additional troops. In addition, the internal balance in Formosa has been shifting, of late, in favor of the activist group headed by the Generalissimo's extreme ly tough and able son. Gen. Chiang Ching-kuo. The new governor of Formosa. Gen. Huang Chieh. Huang Chich's successor in the key garrison command. Gen. Chen Tu ch'ing, and Ihe chief of staff, Gen. Liu Han-chi, arc all close lo Gen. Chiang Ching kuo. Last year, there was at least one ch.incc in three that the Generalissimo would at tempt a landing on the main land, in defiance of U. S. ad vice. The Peking leadership was sufficiently impressed by the possibility to order the large reinforcement above mentioned. This year, for all the rea sons cited, the odds are at least even on the Generalis simo's going ahead at all costs. The practical prepera lions that have been mada for a quite significant effort, the preliminary tests now be ing made, and the altered po litical climate in Formosa, all point the same way. The el derly gentlemen the Presi dent has to deal with are in deed high-handed and difficult. mine lllnsl I am s.. thankful for our editor to- Irs kindness in al lowini; i s litis space lo a'f our view s m 1 mi.ti;ine that most of on i hit late, perhaps, but j sincere' ; l etr-e Wopschall, lloule 1. Box -1113, Fade Point, Ore ! "1 vc got a couple," I said. eUi'ig uilo the spirit of the iuni;. "Vol example, 'catch' on ihe curious theory that becomes 'cauchl.' but 'snatch' Dirksen is likely lo be eriti-1 lfn't 'sunlight.' and scratch' cal of the president's lax bill: jsn t 'seraiiuh: ' L i k e w i s e. eruo. Duk.-en has no right lo n-e.-e- becomes tro.'e.' but be on the committee. j -iease- ilnun'l turn into lose.' I'm this touches foreign and sniiee.-e- doesn't become mm appear in a rev lew in the rev iew at all. Aiu the ."-taff to cover a local able as leaving out the daily horoscope. I lis only net i for the rev iow er lo write w hat he wants to ami then leave his phone off the hook for a week, and wear a false no-e and mustache vv henev it he v cntiires out in public. i ;.i l.r.. get loncK , lo imp.ti; ll'einU ,. Nairn.,!'., alike, and and like night to n t me! believe -sit I "lie! t:i-,l i n ov ale! 1 be'iv I Hue e 1' dew !! for i :! utsUad ef tli.it a, i! IS el. i'.!i- I Minute Particulars To tne r.hvr Seeing the atT.it of sell appointed solu tions tit. it f:ii i;!e Comnium-; ea'.'O'is pact, 1 an reminded 1 of two line., by W Uham lllakc: i 1 e t ho t e. !vl do good to anotl-cr must ri. it in minute pallleulai's tie. ti -rai is iho plea of 'he seoiuuil el. ll pi ecritO and flatterer Hill Pee-,-:'' Vii.;.:i Ujv, Medtord policy, too. because Dirksen I until now had bce:l a letter of he.MMis'an slreng'.li to the President on all the lop for nun i risis in which he lias i thus far had to he engaged 'squiVc 111 tercel t NO t'tc ulna hh etn re onc of 1 i Hie eon 1 ncM an same PeniiKT.C ic terals arc ninninc ; campaign againsf in Ihe Senate tor ens cemillU'.cc ef lew puMic men in w lio hat e been Cas'.ro Cuba (:eni slarl. Sen Georcc Sn aln ef I'iond.i S in a 1 h c r ".VkI ih" past of -ride' is i Tod.-.' but the pasl of glide' ' l-u I cii'f'c. ar. t the past of Tide l-:t I hneo.- Also, 'grow' : becomes "uretv.' but "mow" do.su l hi , e.ue 'n.ew,' and flew- n est e. rlau'Iy doesn t rh.i'i::.- inln 'flew' May I saw: I b.it Kn.I'sh l-.-s a .,.. fa ll,! e but a If! ri.'lc Mt -" j ' You in. v ," 1 said "Ami i rote !' s 1. re I d;oe away, h- i-i- 1 am c eal'iv. and ee!,-.;,v, e lo n ai.e aiHilil.T CIV i mm ff f "Why get o excited about the Chinese developing bomb? The radiation will probably only stay with you tor a couple of hours!" O o o o e