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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1963)
4 A tuwouJI&iTBiwn "Everyone in Southern Oreion n J. - U.ll Trikiinl" Published Dally except Saturday b MEDFORD PRINTING CO 83 North ril 81, Ph. 77a-al41 ROBERT W RUHL Editor HERB GREV AdverUsina Manafer GERALD T LATHAM. Bu. B ERIC IV ALLEN JR.. Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIHMAN. Telej Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporti Editor OLIVE SI ARCHER Women'! Edlto. DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mir An Independent Newspapel Entered aa second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mall In Advance Dally and Sunday 1 year 1 00 Daily and Sunday 6 moe 10 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 moa s 00 Sunday Only One year SS.50 Single Copy (Malledl I0e By Curnei And Motor Route Dally and Sunday 1 year 21 00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo L78 Sunday Only 1 mo. 800 Krrlai and Vendon;Copy IOo Official Paper of City ef Medford Official Paper afjfcefcaeM County United Press International full Leased Wire U. P 1 Telephoto Newsplcturea "MEMBER"0F AUDIT BUREAU O" CIRCULATIONS Advertising NELSON Representative annsnTS At ASSOCl- iteb rt, In New York. Chi. caen Detroit. San Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland Denver. Memner California Newspaper Publishers Association Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mill Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO April 15. 1953 (Wednesday) Medford's city council ap proves nine Class "C" liquor-by-the-drlnk dispensing li censes. James Roosevelt, eldest son of the late president, warned against an "atmosphere of tear" in this country at last night's annual Jackson Coun ty Democratic dinner in hon or ol his lather. 20 YEARS AGO April IS, 1943 (Thursday) Historic victory bell, bond auction, teen rides and mar tlal music to highlight open ing of new Medford Victory Center on Main at. From Arthur Perry's "Ye fnTtitTowi.' hir.'.hoCr? course in accounting for wo men.' (N.Y. World-Telegram) -It can't be done." 30 YEARS AGO April IS. 1933 (Friday) Medford area residents start outcry for "more and cheaper beer." Local World War I veterans announce they will Join In "bonus march" on Washing ton. 40 YEARS AGO April IS. 1923 (Saturday) Southern Oregon residents warned against danger of early season fires in area's forests. Fishing season opens with few fish being caught. SO YEARS AGO April IS, 1913 (Monday) Medford school board re elects U. S. Collins as city fuiperintondent of schools. IS. G Drown, Medford, col lects 52 children from his neighborhood and at fair grounds and takes them all to tlte circus. What's Your I.Q.? Nina ot ten correct it superior; seven or ciqht is excellent; five or is it good. 1. You say it every day, but do you know tlte mean ing of the prefix "tele-"? 2. Of what country is Kar achi the capital? 3. Whose army invaded what country on March 12. HMD'.' 4. It you wanted to visit the Silver State, where would vou go'1 5. Give the general location of the Islands of Lancerhans 6. What sport has one of Jts participants using a mega phone "is the Republic of Ire- chiefly an agricultural, land or a manufacturing nation m. iwo notame steamantp ainkings were those of tin "1, I tanic" and the "Lusitania ; ' which sinking occurred first'! . , .., ...wv... h-i'..- Use forks'.' 10. What would you lecting if you were trying decide on diamond, pearl nonpareil, burgeois or agalc? Ans warn 1. Far, distant. 2. Pakistan. 3. Hitler invaded Austria. 4. Nevada. S. In the pancreas (insulin producing cells). S. Crew rowing. 7. Ag ricultural, t. "Titanic." f. No. 10. Printers' lype. yJnMfj puitiHi vjAMOelATION NATION A I IDITORUl MONDAY. APRIL 15. 1963 Jogging Sanity (with a large assist from sore feet, we expect) has at last prevailed, and the 50-mile hike that wildfire fad which threatened to en gulf us all seems to have died down. It's been weeks now since we've had a call in the newsroom from some incipient publicity chairman who wanted to tell us all about her group's plans to hoof it Ohe-8hot attempt to prove that American youtn really is full of vim and vigor after all. Now that the bunions and blisters have pretty well healed, we wonder what it all came to. Per haps it is good to know that imaginations can still be seized by an off-beat idea, that we haven't all grown so sophisticated and complacent as to smirk at the notion of self improvement. BUT there was a flash-in-the-pan, build-Rome- in-one-day quality to the 50-mile hike craze, together with an unhappy desire for publicity on the part of many of the participants, that seemed to make the whole flap increasingly distasteful. A sounder, and perhaps more sincere ap proach to the problem of physical deterioration caused by the sedentary life many of us lead has come to our attention in the current issue of Old Oregon, the University of Oregon Alumni association publication. Its cover picture, as well as two and a half pages on the inside, is devoted to a description of a new activity brought to the campus by Track Coach Bill Bowerman upon his return to Eugene from a one-month s stay It's called jogging, and its proponents claim big things for it. It seems premised, praise be, on the notion that physical improvement should be undertaken gradually, not accomplished in some quixotic, herculean endurance. IN A little folder entitled "the Joggers Manual," Bowerman sets forth the simple directions for becoming a jogger: "Jogging is a bit more a short distance (50-100-150 yards), then in crease as you improve. Jog until you are puffing, then walk until your breathing is normal again. Repeat until you have covered a mile or two. or three. If you do not like make it a time jog of live, ten, fifteen or per haps thirty minutes to start." The author of the Old Oregon article, Dick Leutzinger, says that the effect of jogging is amazing. He reports cholesterol content of duced," and respiration BOWERMAN is quoted as emphasizing that jogging is "not a weight reducing activity. u"'ess a person is just going to be much loss of (Judging from the pictures of coveys of gen erously endowed coeds jogging across campus, pictures that had to be taken with wide angle lenses, perhaps Bowerman's point on that score hasn't been completely understood.) Competition is advised against: joggers want ing companionship are counseled to find some one of equal ability. Too, jogging should be done regularly, perhaps a minimum of five days a week, the article says. While all of that was mildly appealing, the real clincher was another piece of Bowerman advice: "Just use moderation as a guide. Eat what you like, have a drink if you will, smoke if you like . . ." Ah, at last a way to continue to grow healthy without surrendering cherished old bad habits. Jogging anyone? G.H.B. A View From Roxy Ann Motivated by a need up to Koxy Ann butte one afternoon last week and parked on the rim road to watch the sun j go down. It is a source of constant wonder how, when Olie IS Unable tO achieve thing 111 his own mind, he in a position so that his eye has a geographical perspective to contemplate, frequently discover order and clarity in the midst of confusion. The view from Koxy Ann of the valley below and the hills beyond is pleasant and .soothing. Medford a growing, problem-beset com munity lies, an irreirularlv shaped smudire. in ,l " . e ,t the center of the scene, thill, DUnioseful lilies a Fringing the city here and there are slant- .Ij-j , , . ,, , 1 sided orchards in odd geometric patters, color- tuny pastel in chartreuse blossoms and blltl A DOZEN Of SO Columns of white smoke C8H 1 oe seen rising into the air from mill burners, j At such a moment, one .,, Is efin nla kt ),., , 7 . "ml" "- '.V Placed StlCKS ot lhcehse. The Manor, which seems so imposing from uie valley Moor, lies o f bc ,,..11110 Uie nacKgl'OUntl (IlKe a tawn Sleeping 111 a Ins to thicket) that one has to Inhk h'lrrl to MS it" oeai ' ii , .,, : i . I V IV , , gradually replaces the dimming light, aild as the , brillance of neon and mercury lights beiewell fhn ,.itv WOrewi.V HM"-S Ut-Jitttu Uietlty. 11 IS Ullle (0 go, lime wun respoiisiDiiitics. One must always return. It is easier now, sqpiehow. G.H.B. from here to there in a in New Zealand. effort at long distance than a walk. Start with to think of distances, that pulse rates drop, the the blood is "greatly re is "improved slightly." terribly fat, there isn't weight." for solitude, we drove i perspective 011 some- can, bv putting himself I - t, . .,. . ; pu ts of it trailing; off in ; bile' hitrllWaVS. I and white with early j forgets about pollution. I, .1 ui to the eft. ant so b em s 111(1 COlOl'S tade as SOlt (tUSk (o resume ail Identity "We Are In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS From Washington: The Navy gave up the nu clear - powered submarine Thresher and the 129 men who rode her down into a mile and a half of water 220 miles off Boston Wednesday Admiral George W. Ander son, chief of naval operations made the announcement more than 25 hours after contact was lost during a deep diving test of the recently overhaul ed vessel. He said: "Very reluctantly, I have come to the conclusion that the Thresher has indeed been lost." FROM Palm Beach: President Kennedy order ed flags flown at half staff from all government build ings until sunset Monday in tribute to the 129 lost aboard the Thresher. The President, a former na val officer, issued an execu tive order calling for the nation-wide gesture as a mark of respect for those who gave their lives aboard the vessel in performance of their duty. WHAT happened out there a mile and a half under the stormy Atlantic is a grim tragedy. It is an ancient tragedy. Ever since the first men, hun dreds of centuries ago, fash ioned the first crude ship and paddled it out into the Great Unknown that was the sea, women have waited on shore for them to come back and have mourned when they didn't come back. MORE than a century ago, William Whiting nut into Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial tor publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the riaht to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of t-e paper. In fact the contrary is often the case. Stamps for Hospital To lite Editor: The Sisters of Charity of Sacred Heart hospital wish to express their sincere appreciation to the many people in the commu nity who have so generously donated their trading stamps and books toward the new Sa cred Heart hospital. More trading stamps will be needed to help furnish the new hos pital. If enough stamps arc- collected, such useful items as ltospital beds will he obtain ed. Anyone wishing to donate stamps to help furnish tlte new Sacred Heart hospital Heart hospital. 124 Florence Ave., Medford. Oregon Edith Campagna Secretary Providence Guild Sacred Heart Hospital Medford, Ore. What Women Can Do To the Editor: Will any women who are sincerely in- lercsicfl in preserving peace in ,hc (u,urc world read the article and study the chart In the APril ?.' .1,lR,rp"'" magazine titled. What Wo- ,,, Can D for pcace". whether or not you win agree, you cannot help but find it interesting - indeed, provocative. Thelma Carson Star Route Box 60 Prospect, ore A Christian Deiined To the Editor; You titled Mr. P. G. Pederson's letter of 4 2, "Who's a Christian.'" A ! verv cood question, indeed "ooauiy many anouter nea thing gives thanks His heart "skcd " flcr rwK,1"K some j is full of love to all mankind, of ,hr conflicting opinions inland is purified from envy, lhve columns, from persons of varied religious affiliations but fi1 Presl'mll,1 - would regard themselves as , Christians Mr t caerson mm m.u m lelter of 3 31 "leaves the pi esslon that the Russians that ! are here, and the people (hat M1DFOBD MAIL TBIBUNE. MEDFOHD, OREGON Not A Muse" immortal verse their fears and their hopes when he wrote Eternal Father, strong to save. Whose arm hath bound the restless wave, Who bidst the might ocean deep lis own appointed limits keep: O, hear us when we cry to Thee For those in peril on the sea! ?OR countless generations, the wives and the families of fishermen have stood on the shores, watching the red skies with their message of hope and comfort as express ed in the sailor's weather creed: "Red at night, sailor's delight." THE perils of the sea! Thcv are VERY old. They are grim and terrible. AND yet Over these vast stretches of time, unfailingly there have been men willing to face these perils of the sea both to win a living for their families and to satisfy their own driv ing curiosity to find out what was on the other side of those losing waves. And there have been wom en with the stamina and the courage to send their men forth to risk their lives on the sea in the performance of their duty. THERE are STILL that kind of men and that kind of women. Mankind isn't as bad as it sometimes seems to be. sponsor litem, are Christians." True, I did so testify. Some of the American hosts are per sonal friends of mine whom I have known for decades as devout Christians and disting uished churchmen and who, in turn, have had similar per sonal knowledge of the visit ing Russian brethren. These visitors represented six churches: Russian and Georgian Orthodox, Armen ian, Evangelical Lutheran of Estonia and Latvia, and (lie All-Union Council of the Evangelical Christian (Bap tists). They came in response to an invitation from leaders of our National Council of I Churches who had visited ' churches and church leaders j in Russia last year. i Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, Stated Clerk (chief admin istrative officer) of the United Presbyterian Church in the j ntM. iaWeV-o. tlr U.S.A. and one of the hosts, has said: "This is not a CUl-ldle tural exchange. The differ - ence between these men and other Russian delegations is that these men, like ourselves, are practicing Christians." As to Mr. Pederson's un identified quotes about heaven (presumably attrib uted to some of our visiting Russian friends), I would re gard them as of only mar ginal interest, not pertinent to any basic answer to the ques- i tion, "Who is a Christian?" John Wesley furnishes us a good definition of a Christian, if we substitute that word for "Methodist" in his statement: Me is one who loves me Lord w'th all his heart, who prays ,vithout ceasimr and in everv- malice, wrath, and every un- kind affection . . He does not neak evil of his neighbor any more than he can lie. He i does good unto all men. neigh- .ors. mends, and enemies These are the marks of a I true Methodist ' That Wesleyan definition I Foreign News: Khrushchev's Birthday; I British N-Force Commander; Tokyo View By WILLIAM J. FOX United Press International Notes irom the foreign news cables: Khrushchev's Birthday Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev will be 69 years old this Wednesday (April 17), and normally such an event for a leading figure of a country should be a major Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris fc field Enterprise!, Inc. AIR-TIGHT BRAINS Mentioning the man who wanted to surpress certain "dangerous"' books, as I did the other day, reminded me of the curious way in which people live in i n t e 1 1 e c t -ually air-tight compartments What I mean J by that cum Barria phrase easily seen in the people who want to "crack down on what they consider to be of fensive literature: they want the laws sharpened in this area. But, in other areas, they complain that there are al ready too many laws. They're worried about expanding gov ernmental power. They insist that citizens should be left alone to pursue their own pleasures and profits. a ' a Thus, the word "govern ment" to them exists in separata air-tight compart ments. When they are FOR something, lhay want no g o varnmant intarf erenca with it; whan ihay ara AGAINST tomething, thay promptly demand that wa pass anothar and stricter law to copa with it. Wa can sea the same process operating, on a broader scale, in tha area of government spending. Those who protest most loudly about government axpanditurai in tha civil ian sector do not make a murmer of protest about tha massive government spending in the military sector. Yet it is the plain fact that 75 per cent of our fed eral spending goes to pay for past, present and future military needs. We could spend twice as much on tha domestic front without feeling it. if the military budget were made up in a rational world. a a Moreover, it is historically accurate to point out that if we are really worried about "government control," the way most governments take over is by maintaining a state of military emergency until it becomes an accepted way of life. Most of our extra tax es are hangovers from World War II, which" have never been repealed. What we may or may not need for "defense" is a mat ter of speculation and con troversy. But hardly any of the vocal opponents of gov ernment spending dare to question our military appro priations, the government has virtually a blank cheek on this, an d its authority is un questioned. We cannot have more laws "no fewer laws at the same time. We cannot impose res- traints upon the government's domestic spending while at the same time acquiescing in its astronomical arms budget. We cannot do this without contradicting ourselves and become ineffectual. To keep one's ideas ll such air-tight j compartments is eventually to from psychic suffocation, ! Editorial Comment MORE MONEY Members of the British House of Commons won't get a pay raise this year. They will continue to make British law for $4,!HH) a year, al- though some perhaps will; come to America, take out ! citizenship papers, and run f,,r he Oregon Legislature, -Eugene Register Guard. ' ' i accords with Jesus' snprifir rMtnlmmanii rr ihM ,.-i,A would bo his disciples, as stat- ed m Lk. 10:27, Mt. 5:43-44 i and Lk. 6:27. 28. 32 and else- when- or hi lnineiinn : Lk. 6:37: "Judge not. and vou will not be judged; condemn not, and you will not be con- j demncd: forgive, and you will ! be forgiven. iRSV). j Aronld Eugene Jennv Rogue Valley Manor Medford mm news event. But throughout the Soviet Union, it probably will eo almost unnoticed. So - viet custom is to mark decade birthdays, but not those in between for Moscow's leaders. Furthermore, although he is infected with more than the Matter of Fact ic) Nw York Herald THE MAIN CONCERN Vienna - Officially, this city is not one of the capitals of the Western Alliance, by reason of the A u s t r i ans' commiim e n t to a neutral policy in their pcace treaty with the So viets. Yet Vi enna is not a bad place to try to sum up the results of Alsnp a long European tour, for it has its own lesson. The So viets relaxed their grip on Vienna nd on most of Aus tria for only two reasons: be cause the Austrian people were courageous and united and becasue the Western Al liance was united and strong. The facts are all the more important to remember be cause the Western Alliance today is most certainly not united, and in some respects it hag almost ceased to be an alliance. In Paris, where this reporter stopped briefly on the way here, all the allied foreign ministers were mak ing the familiar allied noises, but they had a very hollow ring. S e , rTHE plain Iruth of (he mat tor is that we are close to the end of the postwar era, which will come when Chan cellor Adenauer hands over the leadership of Germany to his successor. And it is well to remember that tlte ends of postwar eras have always, in tne past, led to the dissolution of alliances. There is a practical, almost mehanical reason for this curious historical phenome non. Grand alliances, like the union of the powers that final ly overcame Napoleon, or our own Western Alliance, are formed in the enforced inter national intimacy of wartime. In war, victory is the only preoccupation, and thus the wartime leaders are accus tomed to sacrificing petty local interests to the larger interests of the alliance. But let a Castlercagh be succeeded by a Canning. Or let Dean G. Acheson and Rob ert A. Lovett be replaced by the exceptionally able young er men of the Kennedy ad ministration. Then there' is an end to the old, war-imposed familiarity with the problems of the alliance as a whole and of all its constituent members. And then the danger to the alliance begins. IN THE present instance, the danger is particularly acute because the strongest figure in Europe, Gen. de Gaulle. can reasonably be described as anti - Alliance. He keeps saying ne is not. He means it. Yet what he says is untrue. ine apparent contradiction! vanishes when you grasp the '. simple fact that what Gen. : oe uauiic means by an alii- ance is quite different from nodi anyone else means. At most, ne means the kind of loose agreement to fight on the same side in case of need that France and Czarist Rus sia had before World War I. in the H-bomb ,e and the era of the cold war, this kind ot alliance which Gen. dc j Gaulle favors would be quite useless. Meanwhile he is against the kind of alliance the cold war demands - an I alliance in which all the allies continuously coordinate their! views and policies by a con tinuous process of compromise and mutual consideration, as tha Western allies formerly did. RESPITE the allied noises! everyone made in Paris, there are in fact very few ! ! major problems of foreign j policy, and almost no prob-! lems of defense policv, on which the Western allies are now fully agreed. The machine functions in a : kind of way because the ma- chinery is there Even so, no ! one can say what will happen i to ,A10 in 1968-61), when Gen. de Ga will have to consent to ihe renevr-3i nr ihe NATO treaty. By the same can say what ll token, no one Western Alliene -.-in h if Harold WiLson is Britain's next Prime Minister. His elec-' tion is less certain than Wash- ington seems to believe. But' if elected, he is also less ccr- I tain to be a helpful ally than fl Bamngton now supposes. In Ihe days of Castlcjcagh ' usual quota of egoism, Khrushchev has been hitting j away at the old "cult of the personality" theme which pre dominated in Stalin's day and cannot very well become the center- of such sycophancy himself. At 69. so far as is By Joseph Alsep Tribune Syndicate and Canning, all these threats to the alliance could have been accepted wun greater ier-s p0st is not clear at pres equanimity. But in the era of!cnt. The force is to be made the H-bomb and the cold war, the situation is very different indeed. IF THE Western Alliance J West Germany, the Nether holds together somehow, i lands. Belgium and Italy. there is every reason to be confident that we can go on living peacefully albeit at times dangerously. But if the Western Alliance falls apart, it is almost as certain as the succession of the seasons that the ending of the postwar era, which is now so close, will also prove to be the beginning of a prewar era. The main concern, there fore, must be the maintenance of the Alliance. In this re spect, President Kennedy may well get some help from the Kremlin. The new turn of Soviet inner politics may well bring on the kind of renewal of Soviet aggressiveness that has helped to strengthen the Alliance in the past. Nonetheless, it is also clear that the Alliance must be modified and modernized if it is to survive and be effective. This is now the primary task facing the Presidenl. The Ant Culture of The Pentagonians By Arthur Hoppe Washington - Work is go ing apace on my book, "Strange Native Customs in Washington and Other Sav age Lands." I've got a new chapter ready on one of the largest indigenous tribes, the Pentagonians. Or, as they're usually called by the other natives, "The Dambrass." The Pentagonians dwell in a strange hivelike edifice called "The Pentagon," where they've evolved a weird cul ture comparable only to that of the soldier ants of north east Mozambique. Within their fortress the Pentagoni ans are virtually self-sufficient. Except for one staple of their life process. This is called "Appropriations." For Appro priations, the Pentagonians depend upon an other native tribe, "The So lons," who dwell on nearby Capitol Hill. This parasitic relationship duplicates that between the ant and the aphis. Which the ant, as you know, milks regularly. Like the aphis, The Solons j appear to enjoy being milked by the Pentagonians. And the more they're milked, the more they give. But The Solons bellow with outrage and alarm on being approached by j even the most skilled milker , of anv other tribe. The milking process is in the hands of the most feared j of all The Pentagonians, who are called "The Generals. And seeing them scurrying to and fro on Capitol Hill with more and more appro- priations is a sight to behold. I consider this most doubC The nominal ruler of this i fill. Firstly, the all-consuming strange colony is known as ! interest of The Pcntagonian "The Secretary of Defense." j is in milking The Solons, a Or, in Pentagonesc "The Sec- pastoral pursuit. Secondly; Dcf." The curcnt SecDef is known to his subjects as . hivclike Pentagon would con "That Damacnamara." B u 1 1 vince any anthropologist that not to his face. j whatever The Pcntagonianj Oddly enough. The Pcnta- j are fit for, they aren't fit for gonians invariably hate their I war. VOTERS REGISTER je, HERE Xi-1 Picture of a men with "man's bast friend" keeping other men from exercising man's most cherished right! 4 known, he still 19 In good health and quite capable of handling Kremlin affairs in the foreseeable future. British Commander Britain wants the post of commander of the projected inter-allied nuclear force to go to a British general. The blueprint for the force is to be completed in lime for ap proval by the NATO council of ministers when it meets in Ottawa May 21. But whether the Western allies will agree to give Britain the command- up of British V - bombers, three to five American Pol aris - firing submarines, and Air Force contributions from Japanese View Japanese diplomat ECoichiro Asaki is now back in Tokyo after a six-year stint as his country's Ambassador to Washington, and what he is telling government leaders could have a profound effect He is saying that Americans are impressed with Japan as a trading partner but uneasy about it politically. Asaki says U.S. misgivings stem from Japan's habit of street dem onstrations and parliamentary brawls, Japan's reservations about dispatch of American troops to Thailand last year and entry of U.S. nuclear powered submarines into Japanese ports this year. The government could become more accommodating to Amer ican needs. But it will be another thing to change tlte street demonstrations and fist-swinging legislators. SecDef. This appears due to the ritual of choosing the SecDef from the very lowest and despised rank of Penta gon i a n: "The Civilians." (While Civilians abound in the Pentagon, they arc, like drones, assigned only the most menial tasks.) The reason for this ritual is unclear. It ap pears to have something to do with an old dogma called "Ci vilian Control of the Mili tary." But no Pcntagonian be lieves in it. That Damacnamara is hat ed even more bitterly by The Pentagonians than his pred ecessor. This is due to his efforts to curtail appropria tion hunting. On the grounds The Pentagonians have more now than they need. Such in; terference with the Pentago nian life process lias natural, ly stirred up the ant nest and confusion now abounds. With Generals darting hither and thither, feelers quivering, pincers poised. The Solons, who love- to be milked, are, of course, aiding the Generals. And they keep heaping more appropriations than he wants on That Damac namara. Which is apparently nornble kind ot punish- I ment. However, more and more appropriations are desperate ly needed as The Pentago nians are the fastest growing tribe in Washington. Indeed, some experts fear they may j outgrow their appropriation j supply and attempt to con- j quer the other native tribes. - even a cursory tour of the