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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1963)
4 A , "Everyone to SouUiern Oregon B.eadaTnfMailTrtDiine Published Dally-except Saturday by MEDI-OKD PHlNTUiG CO S3 Norm lrsi. PtT7;i-il ' KOiitht W RUHL. Editor HERH OKt Advertmnt Manafel GEPALD T LATHAM. Hui Mgr ERIC ALLEN Jll. Mm Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHU'.MAN, Teles Editor RICHARD JEWLTT. Spuria Editor OLIVE SI ARCHER Women Edito. DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mr An Independent Newipapei Entered ai second claw matter at Medluid Oregon under Act ol Mrrh 3. 1897 SUHSCKIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance ..... Daily and Sunday 1 year 1 00 Dailv and Sunday moa 10 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 mot i 00 Sundav Oniy One year $5 00 Single Copy iMalledi Hue By Cmnet And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year 21 00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo I J5 Sunday Only I mo. 50c Carriul andVendorij JCopy 10c Official Paper of City of Medfnrd Official I'alier of Jacaaun County United Presa International full Leaaed Wire 0. P I Telephoto NewplctUTea "MEMBER OF 'AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising" fWnttll KKl.al IN mine-nia n-1' ATvi mnra in New York. Chi cago Detroit. San Kranclaco. Lu Angrli-s Seattle, for nan Den'-er. TUESDAY. JUNE 4. 1963 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON The Papal Succession ftttfiZ NIW1PAM Si-association NATIONAL EDITORIAL SSI lAc8TI3N Memner California Newtpaper Publlihers Aiaoclallon Flfght o' Time kxun.A nH Jjck&on County t,nm Ihm filei of The Mil Tribune 10. 20. 30, 40 and SO years ago. When a Pope dies, there is always speculation about a successor at the Vatican. The successor could be an American, but the likelihood is generally considered slight. The name at one time most frequently men tioned in Church as well as lay circles was that of rrancis Cardinal bpellman, Archbishop of New York, perhaps the best known of all the Secred College of Cardinals, But Cardinal Spell man recently celebrated his 74th birthday. This would not exclude him; Angelo Guiseppe Car dinal Roncalli was elected 262nd Roman Catholic Pope in October 1958, less than a month before his 77th birthday. But natives of great powers are rarely chosen, in deference to the tradition that the Papacy must be guarded against any hint that it is the instrument of any nation. The next Pope almost certainly will have been a cardinal, although in theory a priest of lower rank or even a laymen could be elected. A com mentary on the Canon Law provides that the oc cupant of the Holy See must be a Catholic male, capable of accepting the priesthood. 10 YEARS AGO June 4, 1953 (Thursday) Twenly-nlne Medford stu dents are among a class of 136 due to receive degrees at com mencement exercises at Southern O. ;gon college Sun day; Gov. Paul Patterson will deliver the main address. The Oregon stale shoot of the Amateur Trapshootlng as sociation will get down to bus iness o deciding champion ships at the Medford Gun club tomorrow alter preliminary activities today, 20 YEARS AGO ,' Junt 4, 1943 (Friday) Bill Bowerman, lormer Medford High school coach receives captaincy in Army ski troops. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudiie Pot" column: "Jack rabbits have started running around nights eating up the rural win-the-war lettuce. THE College of Cardinals, which will elect the next Pope, numbers 82. For more-than 400 years it was limited to 70, but Tone John expand ed it. Three are members "in pectore", whose names are not divultred because of possible dan cer to them. Pope John's predecessor, Pius XII, to some extent "de-Italianized" the Catholic hi erarchy in 1946. At present 32 Cardinals are Italian. The United Estates has live. Among the names most frequently mention ed now as successors to Pope John are Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montini, the liberal arch bishop of Milan ; Peter Gregory Cardinal Agagi anian, Armenian-born head of the Sacred Con gregation for the Propagation of the Faith; Giovanni Cardinal Urbani, Patriarch of Venice; and Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna. Cardinal Agagianian was mentioned four years ago when Pope Pius died. The Pope-elect takes his choice of names. Cardinal Roncalli took the name John XXIII, re viving a papal title out of use since the death of John XXII in 1334. A Death In The Family i t$$im 4 llJilllill II - k I - ': ; . ; ' ' ' -. f"TJj v 1 j : v -. .' Foreign Student Occupies Important Place in Today's Cold War Competition By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign. News Analyst In the cold war race to con trol man's minds and hearts. the foreign student occupies an important place. In the United States there are more than 60,000 such students, many of whom later will play important roles in their own countries and whose future atti Nawaom tudes may well be de termined by the Impressions they receive now And it is with this same knowledge in mind that re cruiters from Peking, Sofia, Moscow and Prague also seek out the foreign student. Special Communist targets, have been students from the emerging African nations, and Moscow went so far as to name a university after Patrick Lumumba, the slain Congo leader. at 30 YEARS AGO June 4. 1933 (Sunday) Flower display opens Medford High school. City of Medford to ask for Reconstruction Finance Corp oration funds for sewage sys tem improvements. AN ITALIAN has been Pope since Pope Ha "drian VI of Holland, who reigned little more than a year 1522-23. Vatican observers like to point out that all the fopes ot the 20th century, all of course Italians, have been strong ones and Pope John despite his age not the least. The actual voting for a successor will take place in the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican, with only the cardinals present. A two-thircls-plus-one majority is necessary for a choice. Occasionally it comes by the "accessit" method whereby an elec tor agrees that his ballot may be changed to go to the candidate receiving the greatest number of votes. Negotiators among the cardinals on a Pope's successor are forbidden, but a Pope may discuss the succession with the cardinals. The enthrone ment of a new Pope usually takes place on the succeeding Sunday or Holy Day. L.R.R. Thought for Food 40 YEARS AGO June 4, 1923 (Monday) Circuit court takes recess so Jackson county farmer Jurors can tend to their crops. ... Communications ... Letters io the Editor muil bear the name ind addreis of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not sscassarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the caie. Diagnosis To the Editor: I, as most people, have spent my share of time in a doctor's office, he with his stethoscope test ing the condition of my heart, lungs, and other internal organs. Never did I suspect that In strument had any other use. Recently on the freeway, a doctor living in the valley developed fuel line trouble in his car. My husband was called and in short time found the trouble and a piece of hose was needed. The doctor got his stetho scope and removed one of the flexible tubes. They installed it. He paid my husband and told him he hud diagnosed the case and went on his way. Mrs. Dclbert Casey, Route 1, Box 358, Central Point, Ore. SO YEARS AGO June 4, 1913 (Wednesday) Jackson county court plans to issue booklet publicizing county. Medford store offers "Vic tor tailored'' shirts for 9R cents, men's overalls for 50 cents and work shirts for 35 cents. WhaJ's Your I.Q.7 Nine et ten correct It superior; oven or jiaht la aiccllrnt; live or all it good. 1. La Pa i is the capital of which country? 2. The diameter of the bore of a gun is termed the c r? 3. Windows usually burst outward us the result of an explosion outside the build ing; true or falser 4. Who portrayed the char acter "Clarence JJny" in the movie version of "Life With Father"? 5. Fleas require the booii of birds or animals (including man's) in order to reproduce, true or false? 0. Was the Appian Way a famous Roman highway or a political thesis? 7. Which coin contains more copper, a nickel or a cent? 6. Was it Demosthenes or Aristotle who put pebbles In his mouth to correct a speech detect? 9. Does the average human head contain 10.0UO, 110.000 or 510,000 hairs? 10. Polaris is the proper name of which star? Answers! I. Bolivia. 2. Cali ber. 3. True. 4. William Pow ell. S. True. 8. Roman road. 7. Nickel. 8. Demosthenes. 9. 110,000. 10. North Stir, If the United States were to donate its entire food surplus for one year to the world's hungry, this would mean the equivalent of only two tea cupsful of rice once very 17 days for each person on earth, or an increase of 90 calories per day for each individual. Between 300 million and 450 million people are hungry enough to be seri ously underweight and unable to work normally. Up to 1.5 billion are malnourished. A child born in Asia or the Far East today faces the prospect of severe hunger or starvation by the time he is 40 years old. But to meet the consumption demands of millions of the world's people through a giant scheme of food donations would either impose intolerable burdens on tax payers of donor nations or so disrupt the present system of producing and distributing farm com modities as possibly to destroy incentives. This is the essence of a report prepared for the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations for studv at a World Food Con-i m prooauie nagging .. i , , , r.M reminder that he might have gross meeting in Washington today. The ton-1 been bom out of wedlock, and gress itself marks the midpoint of a five-year possible causes. He may have Freedom from Hunger Campaign launched in interred to become a martyr. 1S60 by FAO. For the United States, partieipa- JX.ui"ZSri n" tion in the Congress meets a need, suggested by a pacifist, nnd perhaps a little President Kennedy in his farm message two years "i((ii;i rfevii; im mother ago, "for a second international conference on ,",J h "''To die: Fate lood and agneuuiire similar to the one neiu at Hot Springs in 11) 1:1 . . ." Death Is a Fact To the Editor: I am' con strained to enter the argtt mentive communications be tween Lydia Burnham of Prescotl, Ariz., and Henry Johnson Jr., of my home town, concerning her letter 'Purely Mythical" 5-23-03 and his "Jesus Defended" 5-27-63. I am inclined to the common sense view of Lydia Burnham and the Unitnriuns. Why does it "make one shudder and heartsick" to hear her views? Perhaps she docs need her heart opened, but lie is the one who ought to have his eyes opened. Death is a fact: We know no more about it. So is history, and the physical universe. Relig ion which was invented by Man cannot change this. You reply that Man did not invent religion, at least not Christian ity? Absurd! The Bible Is a work of art, or composite of many works of art. which nore or less cohere, which is why one can prove or dis prove almost anything theo logical by it. It was written by priests, at a time when works of art of various kinds were worshipped. Many in various ways worship them today. Of course, he could not marry, live a normal life, and yet make use of a very high I Q. and sublimated potency therefore, because he was so very pour. And he would have experienced a hard time earning a living: to which is friends to the author of that "filthy book" in the public library. With all your ranting and publicity, the book is get ting some wonderful free ad vertising, plus being endowed with an un-natural attraction to those of vulgcr tastes, and certainly to many teen-agers always eager to "taste of the forbidden fruits." In crying this offensive matter from the house-tops, you are playing right into the hands of the promoters of the book. My candid advice, which I expect to be totally ignored, consists of two short words -SHUT UP!! Secondly, the place to con trol the reading of your off spring is at home (and in school). When I and my con temporaries were found with reading matter unacceptable to our parents, we often had that matter applied in rolled form to the tight part ot our breeches until we completely lost Interest in such stuff. Parents today, who are too lily-livered to maintain con trol over their youngsters, have no right to expect the library commissioners and other public officials to do it for them. If there Is objectionable material in our libraries and schools, (and no doubt there is much unacceptable to differ ent people) the proper proce dure would seem to be - con tact your commissioners and elected officials and state your case, with your voting power as your big stick, and not raise such a stink in the public press, serving only to make the offensive object more desirable, G. O. Loomer 1057 Court St. Mcrlford. But tor a variety ot rea sons the Communists have been defeating their own purposes. Africans Segregated At Patrick Lumumba uni versity, African students have complained that more of their time is taken up with ideology than with the sub jects they came to study. In Sofia, Bulgaria, last February between 350 and 500 students from Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Cameron, Togo, Mali, Kenya and Som ali rebelled against the regime and decided to conUnue their studies elsewhere, mostly in western Europe and a few in the United States. They complained about liv ing and study conditions, but more specifically against Bul garian refusal to permit an all-Africa study union when Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris fc rigid Enterprises, tne. decreed it; the prophets de creed it: the high priests de creed it, and finally Pilate decreed it. and who will argue with Fate? and the State? Most of those who me influ enced by his story are drawn to him because they are sorry for him. He was a human sacrifice, founded a religion. uitt r-iritftiu,lltv- n,-,l,iitlil,.-t Near Fast could possibly produce three times its purpose, iike Buddhism what it does totlav, the FAO reported. The cri-'d others, to soften the sav- i , i,',. ., . I age beast that is Man. Slavery tieal areas ai e Asia ami the I' ar ha.st. in Eunnw W11J $lmv,y iholi,n. "The Times of London, contenting on the and gave way to serfdom FAO report, says the remedy must come from ' n c ' chivalry "THE world population of more more than 3 billion is expected to reach t. billion within 40 years. There is no doubt of the possibility of meeting food needs in Furope, North America, :.. t t ! i f..: ... hm. uceaiiia, even 111 t.auit America tir.u .' it tea. i tie K the developing countries themselves. The essen-ffil'SC'X tial is to raise output per acre by irrigation and ure.'and aiiout war. u u re new techniCllleS. 1 Crettaoie. Noting that the Western industrial nations and Japan expended almost $6 billion in educa tional and technical aid in 11 alone, "The Times" conmments soberly: "After two decades of providing such aid on expanding scale, it has become apparent that a good deal of it is not being put to the best use." E.R.H. ( I Summer Driving Tips To the Editor: It is the time of year to think about the cooling system of your car In hot weather it is an es sential adjustment of the ra diator pressure cap be in low pressure position so Uic steam from the water can escape without siphoning water out of the radiator; then the mo tor will not heal especially when climbing long grades. Vapor locking in the fuel line can be eliminated many times by installing a heat de flector; cither by a piece of sheet metal or a steel wire wrapped around the fuel line from the fuel pump to the carburetor leaving space for air between the wire and the fuel line or a piece of asbestos fiber wrapped around the fuel line. Miiny times a longer fuel line from the fuel pump to the carburetor will eliminate vapor locking. In some cases the body of the fuel pump is not tight and when the metal is cold air will be sucked in above the fuel pump dia phragm and as the metal heals and expands to the point of preventing the fuel pump diaphragm from actu ating properly, due to ex pansion of air. When changing from cold lo hot temperatures due to altitude changes from ethyl to regular Ks or vice versa, will eliminate octane knock in the motor. When a new fuel tank cap is installed it is a possibility the cap will fit but may not have the proper vent. After Ralph D. McKinnis. P.O Box 321. Ashland, Ore Shut Up! To the Editor. Mrs Black. Mrs. Iiloslcr. and others con cerned: Greetings You, and each of you, are certainly being the best o( All Men Brothers To the Editor: The Eagle Point "name-on-f ile" writer of 62 claimed to have lived in the South for several years, yet "never heard of or wit nessed any whites mistreating Negroes" but "on the con trary, there were some white and Negroes that were pretty good friends." He, or she, ack nowledged that "there was segregation in the schools, etc.," but added, amazingly, that "this was accepted by both parties as natural, and no one seemed to be offended about it." Really? Even more astounding was that correspondent's assertion that "it wasn't until the Gov ernment decided to step in and free the Negro that the trouble started - most Ne groes declining to use what schools they had, preferring "to work in the cotton fields all day!" An incredibly fantastic and utterly unrealistic view. Cen tainly. It hardly is the South I know. My intimate acquaint ance with the South began in 1917. I not only have traveled widely throughout the region but lived 2 years in S.C. and 10 in N.C. I worked in close association with members of both races and many walks of life. I, too, found many whites and Negroes who were friends -of a sort, and provided the latter "kept their distance." True friendships between them, unhappily, are still rather rare. More hopefully, there is a large and growing number of whites who recog nize how untenable segrega tion is today, in America or anywhere else in the world, and who are working to end it: in compliance with rulings of the Supreme Court and out of deep commitment to the Golden Rule. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., distinguished Negro churchman and leader of the non - violent anti-segregation movement, wrote in the De cember 1962 issue of The Pro gressive: "The unresolved race ques tion is a pathological infec tion in our social and political anatomy, which has sickened us throughout our history. . . The legacy Is the impairment of the lives of nearly 20,000, 000 of our citizens. Based solely on their color, Negroes have been condemned to a sub-existence, never sharing the fruits of progress equal ly." "Natural'' and "no one of fended by it" wrote "name-on-file." Hardly! In a recent public pro nouncement. 28 Methodist ministers, all native White Mississippians, declared: "Our Lord Jesus Christ teaches that all men are brothers. He per mits no discrimination be cause of race, color, or creed." All honor to these courageous men! Arnold Eugene Jenny Rogue Valley Manor Medford BO ONLY QUESTION The commonwealth enforces morality on its citizens but who enforces morality on the commonwealth? We are pun ished, as in dividuals, if we lie, steal, use violence or kill - but what effective restraints pre vent the com m o n w e a 1th from doing Barri the same? What is murder for a citizen in peace-time is bravery and glory in war-time. What is theft for an individual is con quest for a nation. What is lying for a person is diplo macy in foreign relations. There is a common morality among citizens of a commun ity; but there is no common morality among nations. Na tions are above the law; they make their own laws, and break them at will - if it serves the "national purpose," if it is for "self-defense." And every war is, of course, for self-defense. a When our children look at the behavior of nations, throughout history and up to the present day. what can we tell them about their own morality? How can something be "wrong" if an individual does it, and "right" if an institution does 11? Especially since institu tions are supposed io exist for the benefit of individ uals, and not the other way around. Who has custody of the custodians? This ancient Roman question has not even yet begun to be an swered. The commonwealth is the custodian ot our con duct, but its own conduct is often at shocking vari ance with what it prescribes for us. This is perhaps less true In a democracy than in it totalitarian . society - but who would say that the American people decide where we are going, what we are doing, and how we are doing it? If we plunge into war, will the American citiienry have any more to say about it than the Russian citiienry? Do we have the informa tion, the time, the re sources at our disposal, to make such an irreversible decision? the Bulgarians already had recognized an U- Arab union. To the Africans this smack ed of color discrimination. in more recent weeks, a tsttir ot incidents also based on color barriers and also in volving African students have erupted in Czechoslovakia. In the latest one, Ghanian, Guinean and Ethiopian stu dents battled Czechs, one of whom had yelled a disparag ing remark at a Czech girl ac companying one of the Afri cans to a cafe dance. Growing Resnntment In Czechoslovakia, the out breaks are said to be the re sult of growing Czech resent ment over the increasing amount of economic aid being extended to under-developed countries. The Czechs blame foreign aid for the deterioration in their own standard of living. once the highest of all tha Communist bloc nations. Considering the size of Czechoslovakia this aid has in fact been enormous, amounting to more than all the other Red European satel lites put together. From 1956 to 1960, it amounted to $500 million dollars, second only to the Soviet Union. Czech military aid has ex tended from Cuba to Indo nesia and points in between. Meat has become increas ingly scarce, arousing special resentment among a peopln who know that Czech meat is being shipped both to East Germany and Cuba. Con sumer goods have become in creasingly shoddy. But whatever the cause, whether the discrimination be practiced in Prague, Sofia or Moscow, for the Africans it is a disillusionment. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop (c) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate Ml Why a Board? To the Editor: In a letter to the editor of May 28, Alice Black commented on a book in our public library. "The Last Temptation of Christ" by Nikas Kayantzakis. and quot- driving It) or 15 miles the i ,rom "vcrai pages, motor will die; when left set ; 1 Kre' wl,h 'ou no for a period of 10 or 15 mln-;one should be cen- titcs the motor will start i 50 sn1 believe that any. again When this happens re-!one hould have the freedom move the fuel tank cap until i of choice to purchase any another fuel tank cap can be i book of their desire. But, in purchased from a dealer of a public library, tax support- that make and model. Glen D. Oppie Ridgeway Mcdford. ed. I should think that ob cenc literature should be banned. Isn't j library board sup-) The world has grown too big and too small at the same time: too big in its complex ity, and too small in its di mensions. What affects one affects all - and yet the prob lems are so intricate, the variables so many, the con trols so sensitive, that every one feels paralyzed and in effective and overwhelmed. like an ant in an avalanche. All people everywhere want basically the same things for themselves and for their children. It should be the task of governments to reconcile these common ends with the functions and needs and dif ferent systems of each society, insteaa. tne ninerences are exaggerated, and the common ends obscured. Can anything short of a global catastrophe bring us to the light? That is the only question worth ask ing today. posed to Judge books on the basis of acceptability for pub lic reading? By what standard do they judge by? Controver sial matter or otherwise? I should hope not! But if not by a standard of decency - bar ring obscene literature - then by what standard? And if any thing miy come into a public library, then why do we need a library board? Mrs R. J. Loucks P. O. Box 209 Phoenix. Ore. X WHY LEGISLATE? Washington - By the Jus tice Department's initial, in complete count, more than 30 Negro mass demonstrations against racial discrimination occurred 1 n the last seven days. In Chi cago, 1,700 Negroes gath ered to pro test a ceme tery's refusal to cremate the body of a Negro woman. Alsnp In Los Ange les, 30,000 filled the city stad ium to mark their sympathy with the Negroes of Birming ham. In North Carolina alone, there were six major or min or demonstrations. This is the context in which the grim tale of the Jackson, Miss., school-children must be read. It is disgusting, not to say macabre, that American citi zens should be driven to use the device of mass protest, over a hundred years since the Civil War began, for the sole purpose of securing equal treatment with their fellows. When you think of that Chi cago cemetery's refusing to cremate a dead woman be cause of the color of her skin, you ask yourself whether the Christian tradition has not somehow lost its substance. MEANWHILE, however, the a" practical fact must also be faced that the country is confronted with a new phen omenon. The long passivity and the subsequent sporadic anger of. the Negro people have now been transmuted into a new mass feeling. Attorney-General Robert Ken nedy, who knows more about the matter than anyone else, expects the mass protest movement to grow rather than subside. It is a fearful thing to say, but it is nonetheless the truth that so far the United States has been lucky in the out come of these protests. Things have happened, scenes have been enacted, which ought to have shocked any American who believes in freedom, be he Christian or atheist. Yet no one has been killed. But if the mass protests in crease from 30 to 40 a week, to 60 or 80 a week, tt is Im possible to suppose that the luck will hold. Somewhere, somehow, emotions will rise too high, or the police dogs of a n o th e r Commissioner "Bull" Connor will break their leashes, or something else will happen, and blood will be shed. a a THE blood may indeed be shpri hv Nfiiro demon strators. That possibility has to be faced, for Negro emo tions, very naturally. re ris ing especially rapidly. Vio lence cannot be condoned. But if blood is shed, those who shed it will only share the guilt with those who ob stinately seek to perpetuate the system of unequal rights. This is the real background of the Kennedy administra tion's last-minute decision to offer a new Civil Rights bill to Congress. Until a few weeks ago, the Administra tion was content to try what could be done with a quieter but no less energetic approach to' the problem. Attorney-General Kennedy, the President himself, other members of the cabinet when they could be helpful, have all spent time and effort without stint to persuade key businessmen in segregationist states to move forward to wards desegregation. This massive but unseen effort has brought results, but not enough results, as the present crisis proves. a FURTHERMORE, the un seen effort has revealed a pattern justifying a call for legislation. Among the many scores of department store owners, theater owners, and the like whom Attorney-Genera! Kennedy has urged to accept desegregation, not ona has failed to admit that de segregation was ultimately unavoidable. Often they have said it was desirable. Many have refused to move, however, or have moved only by the poorest half-measures, and always on the same ex cuse. They have said that if "everybody would do it," they would be glad to desegregate. But they have been reluctant to "do it all alone." In other words, they have been reluct ant to move because they feared the white extremists on the other side. These responses show the need for positive legislation desegregating public facilities -legislation which will serve as a shelter, so to say, behind which those who wish to de segregate but dare not can go forward safely. Federal legislation is also needed to justify Federal intervention. WITHOUT such legislation, moreover, the govern ment has no excuse to inter vene unless blood has been shed or the danger of blood shed is imminent. And that is precisely what ought to be prevented in advance. These facts, plus the rise of the mass protest movement, have led to the decision to ask for a law desegregating public facilities in all business and institutions which come under the commerce clause of the Constitution, by selling goods in interstate commerce or otherwise. The bill will certainly im pede the rest of the Admin istration's legislative program. It will not pass, cither, with out active Republican sup port, which may not be forth coming because of the rising power of the Goldwater Re publican wing. But the time is getting very late; and the hour when politics could safe ly be played with this prob lem has long since passed. K . ' "There's your introduction) Remember the road to the White House lies through Havana!" J 1