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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1963)
4 A Ttrmoa In koutbern Oregos rUada Tbm Mall Tribune fuUlinaS bUT eMejrt Saturday by SWoilD flUNTWG CO S3 North fir Bt, Fh. iTil-SU ROBERT W rSlWtTSditor HERB CREV AdverUslns Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bua Mgr IR1CW ALLEN JRrKln. Editor EARL U ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CH1PM AN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT, Sporta Sd tot OLTVf STARCHEB Women's Editor DALE EBJCKSON. Circulation Ujt An Independent Newapapel Battered aa accond claw matter at atediord Oregon under Act ot March . 1887 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mall In Advance Dally aad Sunday 1 yaar S1S0O Dally and Sunday 4 moa 10 00 Dalit and Sunday S moa JflO Sunday Only One yaar 5 00 Single Copy (Mailed) 0e Sy Cemei And Motor Route Dally aad Sunday 1 year $31 00 peiiy ana Sunday I mo J-jfo Sunday Only 1 roo. Canter and Vendors Copy 10c ftfflelal Paper of City of Medfnrd Official Paper of Jacamn County United Press International full LeaKd Wire V. P I Tclephoto Newiplwuree "MEMBER '6rJHjDlf BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Adveriialng rtepreaentative: NELSONT ROBERTS . A8SOC1. ATM OMcee In New York. Chi caio. Detroit, San Francisco, Loi Angelaa. Seattle. Portlaod Danrer. SUNDAY. JUNE 16. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Outdoor Family Fun Editor's note: The following is adapted and con densed from remarks made at a visitors host school conducted here Thursday by the tourist and conven tion committee of the Medford Chamber of Commerce. Washington, D. C, June, 1963 ...TMr NIWS'AMt. rumsHiis AIIOCIATION NATIONAL (DITOtlAl hc6TI3N Member California Newspaper PubUihera Association Flight o' Time Madford and Jackson County Hlitory from tha files of The Mall Trlbuna 10, 20, 30, 40 and 60 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO June II, 1M1 (Tueaday) Woman unanimously elect ed by ths Medford city coun cil to fill the unexpired term as city recorder of the late Ralph Woodford. ' Television t r a n s m 1 1 ter equipment for station KBES TV. shipped by express from Syracuse, N.Y., arrived in Medford this morning by train. 20 YEARS AGO June II, IMS (Wednesday) Three Aihland young peo ple killed when car careens over 200-foot bank on Pacific highway over Blsklyous. From Arthur Perry's "Ye fimudaa Pot" column: "Stove rationing will start Aug. 1. H has not been admitted the stove shortage is due to ship ping too msny stove legs to Japan as scrap Iron. 30 YEARS AGO June II, 1133 (Trlday) Fifteen Army planes join in search for plane lost in Cas cade mountains on flight from Medford. Jackaon county judge fur ther implicated in ballot thefts by witnesses In second trial. , 40 YEARS AGO June II, 1923 (Saturday) Attorney Frank DeSouza temporarily assumes duties of district attorney due to illness ot Rswles Moore. Oregon Ku Klux Klan re portedly ready to start recall movement against Gov. Wal ter Pierce. 80 YEARS AGO June II, 1113 (Monday) New law cancels all voter registrations In Jackson covin ty, residents must register to vote or sign petitions. Automobiles line up on both sides ot street for more than a block as local residents turn out in downpour of rain to see vaudeville show at Page theater. The favorite, most popular family outdoor activity of all is just plain driving around in a car. There are many spectacular scenic drives in southern Oregon, and they do not end with Li a ter Lake or the Ashland Loon road. It may be to the top of Mt. Ashland, or to Tallowbox lookout, or up Anderson Butte. Per haps it is up the Applegate or Little Applegate valley. It may be a loop trip to Crater Lake, down the west bank of Klamath lake, and back by Lake of the Woods and the Dead Indian. They all are enjoyable ASIDE from driving around, surveys indicate "that picnicking is the most popular form of outdoor family activity. Southern Oregon is rich in picnic spots from Tubb Springs Wayside on the Green Springs highway, to the state parks at Valley of the Kogue, Touvelle, Mct-eod, uasey and Laurelhurst. For the sliirhtlv moro adventurous, there are 31 forest camps in the Rogue River National Forest, plus several county parks, plus other spots sucn as fcicieroerry nat campground, main tained by the BLM in the Evans creek country, or simple open glades where one can spread a blanket, eat lunch, and count tne ants. One of the most charming of all picnic spots hereabouts, one easily reached and beautiful, is outstanding Lithia park, .where one may either eat at tables, or on the greensward. FROM picnicking to camping is an easy transi tion. Much the same geographical informa tion is identical, for in most of the good picnic spots, camping is also available. li tne tourists wno seen your actvice are in a camper or are dragging a trailer, you can as sume that they know the ropes, and are simply seeking help in finding a spot. The tent camper is a. bit ruggeder breed, and if he is dirty, un shaven, sunburned and happy, you can likewise assume he knows what he is doing. But beware the tenderfoot on his first camping trip. You'd better also give him the name of a good motel to which he can retreat in case of rain. Camping in a state park is, at worst, semi civilized. Most of them have flush toilets, hot and cold running water, and daily newspapers. National Forest camps are a bit more primitive, but usually there is a rudimentary sanitary fa cility, and water is almost always available. the back- amen- itieB, and you don't have to worry about him, either, for he knows his business well. He will know where he is going and how to get there. Most of them will be heading for our two wild or primitive areas, Sky Lakes, between Mt. McLoughhn and Crater Lake, and Mountain Lakes, southeast of Lake of the Woods. Those seeking information about horse-pack ing trips can be referred to Clyde Wilhelm, who has a string of horses with headquarters at Lake of the Woods. This summer he also has an oper ation at Howard Prairie, and information, rates and advice are available. BOATING whether it be in an inflatable rub Vi.ni lo Tf ft i q M l nViria A mM licni olnoni nr civ uvi ioiv vi an uiuuniu vi uioci oittpm o. - is the most rapidly growing of all outdoor recrea tion. The practitioners may be after fishing, or water skiing, or sailing, or just roaming. Howard frame is probably the best all around, all-purpose lake in the area. It is large enough to accommodate skiers and sailboats, as well as fishermen although you may be sure there is no great love lost amonc the three groups. Lake of the Woods is also multi-purpose, but Fish, Fourmile, Willow and Hyatt lakes are pri marily for fishing. Emigrant lake is principally tor skiing and boating, though there is some fish ing there. Savage Rapids reservoir is principally for active water sports. Squaw lakes are pri marily for fishing, but the swimming is good. Matter of Fact By Joseph AUop (CI Nw York Herald Tribune SynrHcif fNLY the ruggedest type of camper, the packer, need go without any of these Whit's Yoir I.Q.7 Nine at tan correal h tuaerler; aaaa a alaM t eitallenti Hva at ais h f4. 1. What sort of brlds saved the pioneers of Utah from the ravages ot the grasshop pers? 2. A horse which is entered and then withdrawn from a race Is said to be s 3. What is the leading Bra zilian export? 4. Nam th CI A. chief. 5. Complete the saying, The hand that rocks the cradls ..." 6. A section of land is how many square miles? 7. What if. the capital of Maine? S. Does sound travel lamer In water, or in air? 9. Is it true, or untrue, that rifle bullet will not pene trate an alligator's hide? 10. An atom of uranium has a diameter of one-hundredth, one-millionth, or cne-hundred-milliontb ot an inch? Answersi 1. Sea ' lulls. 2. 2. Scratched. 3. Coflee. 4. John A. McCone. S. ". . . rules of the world." I. One square mile. 7. Augusta. I. In water. I. Untrue. 10. One hundred mtllioaik. THE Rogue itself is highly popular among boat- ing fishermen, and there are several public launching ramps upriver. But those boating on the Rogue should either be experienced boatmen, or should employ a guide particularly on the lower Rogue, where the trip from Grants Pass downstream is justly famous, but hazardous. - Swimming is available at a number of loca tions, but some are better than others, due to dangers, or muddy water, or cold water. Other forms of outdoor recreation in which the whole family can join include rock-hounding, birdwatching and wiulflower hunting. Since so much of the choice recreational area in south ern Oregon lies in the National Forests, questions about these can perhaps best be referred to the forest headquarters or a ranger station. A GOOD tourist host should be fairly well ac "quainted with his own area know where the campsites are, where the lakes are and what their particular attractions may be, where to advise a view-seeking visitor to drive. Lacking the opportunity for personal famili aricty, a good host should equip himself with the reference resources maps, directories, in formation booklets, and the wide variety of other literature which is available to be able to an swer questions about our outdoora. It we are all acquainted with the great wealth of outdoor resources for fun with which we are blessed in southern Oregon, we can be far more effective hosts to the visitors who help keep Oregon green with money. E.A. 'THE OTHER AMERICA" Washington.-On the day the good news came in from Ala bama, the tickers also carried reports of the assassination of a. M i s s i s s I p p i Negro leader, of men wounded in race riots in C a mbridge, Md and of the Rev. Mar tin Luther Aimp Kings deci sion to organize mass sit-In demonstrations in Washington, In other words, the racial crisis is not subsiding, even though a grave challenge in Alabama was successfully handled by the careful fore- ight and cool judgment of the Justice Department. In deed, the crisis is moving into new phase, as the projected Washington sit-ins clearly indicate. Washington, it must be re membered, has not been a segregated city in the South ern sense for a very long time. But in Washington, as in the Northern cities, the great ma jority of the Negro popula tion Is to be found in a scries of Negro ghettos. MOST OF THE Washington ill Negroes belong to what the Catholic sociologist, Mich ael Harrington, has called "The Oilier America," in his indignant and deeply disturb ing study of poverty in the United States. In other words. they are trapped in poverty, which IS "the other Amer ica," because they have not the educational and other equipment needed to esenpe Into Prof. Galbraith's "afflu ent society." If so many of the Wash ington Negroes were not trapped in this "other Amer ica ' from which most of us prefer to avert our eye3, they would be less ready to demon strate with Martin Luther King. But their emotions, un dcrstandiiblc as they may be, are only one aspect of the matter. The social and political aspects are Just as important as the emotional aspect. It is downright frightening, for In stance, that the level of job lessness among Negro youths of working age In many dis tricts of Philadelphia has now risen above 77 per cent. 'THE YOUNGPEOPLE, . many of them school drop-outs without the training tor skilled Jobs, clearly const!' tute the worst part of the problem. If they arc simply left to rot, with more than seven in every ten unem ployed in cities like Phila delphia, then the gravest re sults of all sorts must be ex pected - in crime rates, in political tendencies, in de teriorating social patterns. But the young people are by no means the whole prob lem. It Is also downright frightening, for example, that In the huge Negro population of Chicago, no less than 17.8 per cent of those who want work are now unable to find Jobs. That means that, tor the Chicago Negroes, the Job situation today is worse than ihe worsi this country expe rienced In the bitter depths of the great depression. Any one of an age to rememb-r what 16 per cent of unemploy ment was like in 1932 will feel his stomach turn at the grim meaning of this Chicago figure. Hence assurance to all ot equal rights under the Con stitution, without regard to creed or color, is only the first part of the task ahead Attorney General Robert Ken nedy has said: "For practical purposes, the education bill and the tax bill, which will create jobs, are even more im portant." The Administration's policy makers are also Increasingly convinced that the attack on the race problem needs a third prong. In other words, in addition to insuring civil rights and creating more jobs, an emergency effort must also be made to assist escape from their trap by all the inhabi tants of "the other America," who Include the populations of very depressed industrial and mining areas, as well as the Negro population. SUCH AN EFFORT would reauire a nrnffrum mm. bining several different activ ities. One line of action is rep resented by the Youth Oppor tunity Bill, providing for a CCC-llke program for jobless youths, A broad vocational training program for school drop-outs, a body like the Peace Corps to work In the ghettos and other underprivileged areas, a more energetic attack on Juve nile delinquency, a program to retrain men whose jobs have been lost by automation -all these are also needed. All these things have been proposed already. But the proposals need to be strength ened and the whole needs to be combined into one broad effort, imbued with the sense of urgency the crisis imposes. Today & Tomorrow In y Walter Uppmann ISM Tha Washington Port In the Day's News r FRANK JENKINS THE PRESIDENT AND THE COLD WAR The Presidents announce ment at American University of a meeting in Moscow to discuss a nu clear test ban seems to have been inserted only recently in an address w h i ch has, quite evident- lv hj,n ma. turing for a I -Carnal lnn0 HmA In Lippmaiia his mind. The President must have decided quite some time ago that it would be useful to make a fresh statement of how the United States Is now thinking and feeling about its relations with the Soviet Union. For while there has not been, as the President said, any change in the American resistance to an expansion of communism, there have been changes in the American esti mate of developments in the Soviet Union and In the Com munist world. Yet most of the language of the cold war has remained unchanged, has be come stereotyped and official and popular reactions to news from the east have become mechanical. We on our part and the Russians on their part have raised higher than the iron curtain an impenetrable fog of suspicion. This shuts off any serious effort to use a diplomacy which is adjusted to the great changes on both sides of the iron curtain. THE President's address is more than a talk. It is a wise and shrewd action which is intended primarily to Im prove the climate of East West relations. He is. I be lieve, moving with the on coming tide in human affairs. The tide is bringing in a gen eration which is losing inter est in the post war conflict between the crusading Com munists and the crusading anti-Communists who reacted to them. For Kennedy and for Khrushchev, the notion that either of the two rival nu clear powers can bury the other has become nonsensical. All that is left of the old slo gans are the tired old words themselves. In the age o: nu clear parity, there is no alter native to co-existence. some distance away, pumped up the water and carried it back to the kitchen. AS OF NOW. moreover, the position is due to get worse rather than better, The unskilled jobs are the jobs which are getting scarcer and scarcer. The new Jobs that are being created by the U. S economy almost invariab'y demanded advanced skills. These are the skills which the educationally underprivileged Negroes tend not to possess. At a breakfast meetins in Washington the other day with about 160 GOP congress men, former President Eisen hower offered this opinion: "Anybody who would spend $40 billion dollars in a race to the moon tor national pres tige is NUTS." He drew sustained applause from the congressmen present at the breaktast. There was no report, at the moment, from out in the sticks. But most of us have confidence enough in the common sense of the aver age American to believe that a lot of taxpayers patted their hands together in enthusiastic applause and let go with the equivalent of BRaVOI Prestige is a wonderful thing, but the average citizen can't pay his taxes with it. IH'EN the scientists are not " In complete agreement with the present fantastically costly space program. Al a panel discussion in Washington the other day. Dr. Polykarp Kusch, head of the Columbia -university physics department, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1955 said flatly he could think of many great national needs that far outweigh the needs tor space exploration on the "urgent schedule now accord ed it." In the course of the panel discussions. Dr. Philip Abel son, who participated in the production of the first atom bomb, protested that manned space flight, partcularly to the moon, has been getting over emphasis. ll'HEN our great-grandpar- ents wanted to go down town to do their shopping, they had to go out to the barn, harness the horse, hitch It to the buggy, drive slowly to the business district, find a hitch ing post, do their shopping, drive home, unhitch the horse, put it In the barn and unhar ness it. When they needed water, they picked up a bucket and went to tht well, which was rpO DO their cooking, they built a fire in the range, going out to the wood house for their fuel. When washday came, they did their washing on a board and carried it out in the back yard and hung It on the line. When they wanted fried chicken, they ran the chicken down, scalded it in hot water, plucked off the feathers, cut it up and fried it on the hot stove. And so on. It all took a lot of time. In effect, the President has said to Khruhchev that since, in the nuclear age, we have to co-exist, crusading which might involve armed violence must be abandoned. It both powers are to live, they will have to learn to let live. The President's way of stating these governing truths was admirable. It was not only lucid and untimorous, but It was couched in the kind of language which ought to be used in talking to and about the Russians. It was the lan guage of self-confidence and self-respect, of resolution and magnanimity. a a FOR the outsider, it is im possible to make any judgment now about the coming conference in Mos cow. We do not know what has been passing to and fro which has persuaded the three governments that some thing important might be achieved by a meeting at a high level, indeed, just under the summit. If, as is conceivable from the report of Mr. Harold Wil son's talk with Chairman Khrushchev, some kind of partial moratorium may be negotiable, it would come as a great relief to the whole world. The Soviet view is that underground testing is of negligible significance. There are some American nuclear scientists, but by no means all of them, who think the underground tests can be of decisive significance. These underground tests are differ ent from all other tests not only because they do not con taminate the air, but because they alone cannot always be detected without on-site in spection. But the Soviet gov ernment has a deep hatred of on-site inspection. MIGHT it then be possible to make an agreement to ban all tests which can be de tected without on-site inspec tion, and then to permit a lim ited number of underground tests which the Soviet govern ment does not take too seri ously? This may be a pipe dream. Indeed, I do not dare to be lieve In it, because it seems too good to be true and be cause It Is too sensible to be practical. We have all noticed that Mr. Khrushchev has set the date o the meeting for July. That will be after the Sino Soviet talks have taken place. We can make a guess about the meaning of this, and we BUT Back in those days, every body had lenty of leisure. Now NOBODY HAS ANY TIME. AND- Back in those days, a trip over into the next county to visit Aunt Hattie was a big event. Now we're all talking about going to the moon. It's a strange world we re living in. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer although under cer tain circumstances the use of a fien name or initial for pubtica ion is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publica Uon must not exceed 4O0 words. Twister To the Editor: Referring to your "twister," if the meas urements are correct then, as I have it figured, the answer will - be 5,541.25 inches or 461.77 feel. Of course, actually the cor rect term used should be how far the record grooves travel against the needle, but the way you give it is more sim ple. Earl R. Miller Route 1, Box 570 Central Point, Ore. WELL KNOWN FACTS ABOUT LITTLE KNOWN PEOPLE Dale Carnegie, who made a fortune influencing other people to influence other peo ple, once wrote a book titled, "Little Known Facts About Well Known People." The chances are that you have forgotten the book so we'll just refresh your mem ory with a few high lights. For instance, Abraham Lin coln's Dog was an ardent seg regationalist and bit the presi dent soundly on the leg at the signing of the Emancipa tion Proclamation. Betsy Ross was color blind and thought she was putting together a green, yellow and purple flag. Teddy Roosevelt pushed his horse all the way to the top of San Juan Hill because the horse was chick en and'wanted to wait at the bottom until the rest of the guys got back. 33 By coincidence, Christo pher Columbus was born on Columbus Day and always received time and a half when he worked on that day. Davy Crockett never did real ly wear a coonskin hat but he did have the nuttiest hair cut in Kentucky. Eli Whitney invented a ma chine for extracting the juice from cotton from which he made gin from which he made very dry martinis. Luther Burbank crossed a pussywil low with a dogwood tree and got nothing but bitten and scratched for his efforts. Babe Ruth once pointed at the cen- can make several guesses. For example, if Mr. K has appeased the Chinese in order to heal a little bit the rift in the Communist movement, he could balance it by appeas ing the United States a little bit. Or, if Mr. K has a still bigger quarrel with the Chi nese, the time will have come nearer as almost cer tainly it is coming someday when the Russians will ful fill General De Gaulle's prophecy by re-entering Eu rope and the West to which they belong. terfield and then flied out to s shortstop who had never caught a baseball before in his life. Napoleon was a hypochon driac and always kept his hand inside of his shirt to see if his heart was still beat ing. William Shakespeare re fused to go to movies be-' cause he was afraid that they might be a bad influence on his writing. Naval hero Admiral Lord Nelson always looked lumpy in his uniform because he never went anyplace without his life-preserver. Louisa May Alcott, who wrote "Littls Women", collected midgets. Whistler's mother had no children. Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone when the local utility com pany cut off his carrier pigeons for non-payment of his monthly bill. Jim Thorpe, reputedly tha world's greatest drop kicker, once kicked his coach clear over the fence when he be came angry because the coach asked him to wear shoes on the gridiron. Mohandas Gan dhi was the nice kind of a guy who'd give you the sheet off of his back. Bela Lugosi, who portray ed Dracula on the screen, was really a fun loving person who was very kind to his bats. Sigmund Freud once psy choanalyzed his high strung cat and found that the cat had an understandable fear of violins. Robinson Crusoe tried to sell his life story to Satur day Evening Post but it wa. rejected for the lack of any love interest. (He later re wrote it changing his man Friday to Tuesday Weld but it still didn't sell.) The Duke of Windsor do nates his weekly unemploy ment checks to a charity.. Ni kita Khrushchev is pleased as punch when he is mistaken for Yul Brynner. Edsel cars are now bringing as high as $7500 in the collector's market. lifl!8ei4IW,lMtiS Tints. "Another demonstration! Listen, if I had wanted some one with such a burning social conseiance, I'd hava married Albert Schweitiar!" Negroes Revolt Against 'Non-Existence' r ri es longer Sh I licves that ill laws will I Jaaasl enforced By LttIC SEVAREID However painful this is for most ot us, the plain truth of the Negro revolt is that the American Ne- - -. g Kro n a s, ai 4 1 O n g, long last, lost taitn tz I in tne wnue J' V 1 man and his soriptv. Hr no be- that the ill be un- Sevarel css nCi hlm. self, forces their enforcement. This is what the most patient and enduring of American races has come to, and we who are while have no one to blame but ourselves. There is no place to hide, anymore. But there is a second barrel to this weapon pointed at the dominant white culture in our country. With the end of Ne gro faith in the white Ameri can has come the beginnings of the Negro's faith in him self. Respect from others de nied, he had nowhere to go to find it save in a self-generated self-respect. He could not find It from the passive moral and Intellectual assurances of religion, or science and logic; he could find it only In action -an old precept of psychiatry, but an extraordinarily diffi cult bootstrap operation, for an individual or a group. It should go without saying tion occurs in the individual breasts and the collective ranks of the most cohesive voting and acting bloc in America, almost anything can happen. There are likely to be both events and remarks of a brutish as well as of a noble nature, and one is tempted to think that politi cal alisnments will never be quite the same again. The Negro vote has been an indispensable political sword in the hands of the Democrat ic party for 30 years. But no "white power structure"' owns this sword anymore, and it could be very quickly turned against the vitals of that par ty and this President, who merely inherited this upheav al, as President Hoover inher ited the depression of the late twenties. If the generality of Ameri can Negroes have now lost faith in the good intentions of white Americans, educated Negroes long since lost faith in the practical common sense of white Americans. They are aware, by the hard atatistics, that for a supposedly materi alist society, we are stupefying ly wasteful ot our materials. Here we are-exhorting, plan ning, wracking our brains for ways and means of getting the country moving, economical-ly-while right to hand lies the most certain, if not the fastest, remedy of all. That is to allow 19 million that when such transforms-1 Negroes to fully Join the American common market. It would be like adding a whole nation of producers and con sumers to increase our com mon wealth. As Harry Golden has recently put it, this would not only mean the lifting of a great burden from the white man, but it would mean "a boom so charismatic that the white Southerner will one day wonder what his resist ance was all about." If Negroes were employed to the same degree as whites and paid as much (right now, both gaps are widening, not narrowing) the economic turn over in this country would increase by a mammoth $12 to $14 billion a year. And that figure represents only about one-half the price we now pay for maintaining a Negro sub culture within the general culture. For we must also pay, in billions, for swollen forces, for ever - increasing charity medicine, children's homes, pensl institutions, unemploy ment compensstion and straight relief checks, an im mense portion of which is di rectly due to the stupidity of trying to keep the Negro "in his place"-that is. semi-lllit- erste and unskilled. The full and equal educa tion of American Negroes Is not only a moral but a prac tical necessity: not an act of charity toward others but of enlightened self-interest. I be lieve it to be far mors certain of results than the spending" of billions for the advance ment of people in various for eign countries. Education is the key. As the President said in San Di ego, less than one-half of the-non-white population of this country has finished high: school. In actual numbers, this proportion of the unskill ed increases every year, while the actual numbers of unskilled Jobs decreases every, year as automation spreads and we become more and more a white-collar nation. ' It takes no brains to see that unless we quickly get about the business of educat ing every child capable of it and training or re-training ev-. ery adult now devoid of usa ble skills, the problem will! get beyond us. We shall then" have to carry a permanent' albatross of many millions ot unemployable human beings. Tax loads will only get hesv: ier, bureaucracies thicker; po- -lice forces will multiply be-, cause crime will become a normal, not an abnormal way of life. a a a In this 20th century, the" uneducated man is not a man. He does not quite exist. In its deep-seated, visceral motiva tions, the Negro revolt is, in part, a desperate spasm of re action against non-existence. (Distributed 1963. by Tha Hall Syndicate, Inc.) (All Rights RMtrvtd) .