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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1963)
i? i i 4 A- ""itvarrona ta Souusani draioo Haada Tha Mall Trlbuna fiibUihtd BaUy axcapt Saturday by MCDFORD PRINTING CO. 31 North rir St, Ph. 77a-ei41 "6BE dUBU Wltos HEKB GRIY Aiv.rtl.ini Manaiat GCRAUi T LATHAM. Bin Mir MICW ALLZN JR. Mr,;, editor - KARL H ACAM. City Miter HARRY CWFMAN. Talai Mltor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporli Ed tor OLIVE 8TARCHER Worrnn'iMltoi PALI IRICKSON. ClreuUUon MP ArTindaiMndint Nawipapai Cnttrtd aacond elaai mattaral Madiord. Ortgen undtr Act of March a, ' . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br MaU In Advanca Dally end Sunday l raar tw.oo gallr and Sunday J mot. 10.00 ally and Sunday a mop. 8.00 Sunday Only On yaar S5.00 Simla Copy (Mallad) , oo try Camai-nd Motor Rout. Dally and Sunday 1 yar $2 .00 rally and Sunday I mo. I.Jo Sunday Only J mo. Mo Carrier and Vandors Copy 100 67ftelat Papar of City of Mtdford Official Papar of Jscjiaon County United Preaa International full Uaied Wire V. P. i Telephoto Newipleturea ATES Of'icea In New York. CM caio. Detroit. San rranelieo, Loo . Ancelea. Saattla. Portlaod Denver. AIIOCIATION NATION A I IDITOtlAl Memner California Newipapar PubUahara AaaoelaUon Flight o' Time Madrons' and Jackson County Hlitory from the file of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 30 Vtr 0O. 10 YEARS AGO July 14, I"3 (Tuaaday) An Illinoli Valley grocer fell to his death Sunday after noon in an accident at Crater Lake National park. Chuck Mansfield, Oranti Paw freewheeler, piloted his racer to triumph in tht Soap Box derby in Medford. 20 YEARS AGO July 14, 143 (Tutidty) Mail Tribune, in need of carriers, calls on girls. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "No statesman has yet come for ward with s plan to centralize the official muddling at Wash tntton, B.C.. with an Ottlcs ot Bum Guwlm." J - 30 YEAR! AOO Jnlv 14. IMS iFrldav) Surplus cherries of valley crop told to CCC camps. Phoenix and Laka Creek Grangers plan picnic. ( . 40 YEARS AOO July 14. 1133 (Saturday) JN Curtis plans does going business taking up citizens at $3 a ride. First loganberries sell at $1 per crate in Portland. SO YEARS AGO July 14. 1913 (Monday) F. E. Jordan pays $12,000 for 120-acre ranch at Browns boro, Five divorce cases coma be fore circuit court at Jackson ville. Whjl't Your I.Q.7 Nina ar ran eerreat Is svparlar; seven at eight la assailant; live ar sis M sea. 1. In golf. Is a birdie a hols in one stroke less than par or two less than par? 3. How many angles or sides are in a heptogonT 3. Name the author of the novel, "All Quiet On The Western Front." 4. Is a curfew s bird, in' sect, or mammal? S. Complete the saying: "Impaled on the horns of a d " 6. What is a claw-hammer coat? 7. An odometer Is an In si rument which measures odors, distances, or electrical currents? 8. To be elected U. S. Pres ident, a citizen must be at least 23, 30, or 33 years o( age? 8. A grandmother clock is a miniature grandfather clock; true or flaw? 10. "Golden Stale" Is the nickname for which State? Answers) 1. One less. 2. Seven. 3. Erich Marie Re marque. 4. Bird. S. " . . . dl lemma." I. Dress (tall) coaf. 7. Measures distances. 3. Thirty-five. 9. True. 10. Call ferula. f tmort Purchases lor For Office Building Harry Elmore, former own r ot Elmora Trailer Villa, has purchased property at Crater Lake ave. and Stevem St., formerly known as Kim' may's Korner. Elmore said he plans to erect a one-story office and store building for lease. ' Sale of the property and leasing arrangements were handled by Keith Bates, real. tor, 133 North drape st., Meaiora. j23? niwipami SUNDAY. JULY 14, 1963 Morgan as Candidate Howard Morgan, it has been aptly said, is a tough guy in a Brooks Bros, suit. You also will be hearing his name more, rather than less. He's quite a guy. He put himself through college by operating heavy equipment on construction jobs in the summer, for one thing. He was elected president of the college student body, as another hint. He has been a member of the legislature, state Democratic central committee chairman, state Public Utilities Commissioner, successful ranch er, and member of the Federal Power Commis sion. He will soon return to Oregon. THE reason his name will be heard more is because Howard Morgan is a fighter and a politician. Both are so ingrained in his person ality that it is odds-on that he won't be able to stay out of the political arena. And he has ad mitted he is mulling over Governor in 196b. If he does run, it won't all be a down-hill pull Morgan has some things going for him. He has a vivid personality. He is articulate. He has guts. He has a unified philosophy of government. He has stamina both physical and psychic. collar. . . DUT there are also some adverse factors. A nnrinrr Vila oavpov toes. He (and former Mate sen. Monroe Sweet land) Duut tne state force in this state, after can domination and control. In the course of do ing bo, he bloodied the noses of a lot of the Old Guard, many of whom are still around. He has few friends in the Republican party, for, as noted, he's a vigorous fighter. He has even managed to alienate many of the "modern" Democrats, supporters of President Kennedy, by reason of the blistering letter he wrote the President declaring he did not wish to be reappointed to the Federal Power Commission. SO IT MAY look, at this juncture, that there fll'A llliar. inn mnnv thinrrs runninrr arraincf Mne. gan for him to make a successful and state-wide run for office. But it would be a sad mistake for anyone to count him out of this race, or out of politics. And it is being predicted freely in the state's press a prediction with that 11 and when he does run for office in the state, it will be a memorable campaign. Morgan is probably without equal in Oregon, except only for Sen. Wayne Morse, for punch and clarity in speaking. ,rNE final item may the fact that, due training and experience, of his campaign on opposition to the state's utility companies principally the railroads and power companies. If we read the temper of the times correctly, this is no longer the issue that it was a decade or two ago. By and large the state's electrical utili ties have won public approval and acceptance. And the railroads, by eliminating passenger serv ice, have removed themselves from the area of majority public concern. What's done is done. But if Morgan can either find an issue with more punch, or can enliven this one into a matter of public concern again, he will be a candidate to be reckoned with. E.A. Eclipse Coming Prior to next Saturday, whpn thn Merlfnrrl area will be favored with a partial eclipse of the sun. our acnimintanop. with snoh a nlipnnmprmn was limited to viewing a ivza or wzv, and to reading Mark Twain s "Con necticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." rtni i ii i . ,a inus. we iook iorwarn tn trip pvpnt But there is a note nf . . . . . 7.. sounded by those with a people s eyes, it is extremely dangerous to view an eclipse, and unless nroner- nrprnntinns mo taken it can lead to blindness ranging from par- uai ana temporary 10 complete and permanent. e e QNE professional group goes so far as to sug v gest that people stay indoors during the eclipse, and later view it m pictures. Or, they say, if one must look at it, do so ONLY through a double thickness of photo graphic film which has been fully exposed and developed to a maximum density. Another safe way is to get two sheets of white cardboard, punch a pin-hole in one, and let the image of the eclipse shine through onto the other. Size of the image can be varied by changing the distance between the two pieces of cardboard. CCLIPSES, once the source of mystery and awe " and superstition, are ter of celestial mechanics," as Royce Brier points out in the San Francisco Chronicle. They have been known and predictable for some thousands of years in China. Astronomers now can when and where they will occur. Brier adds: "If one ever arrives an hour late, we're In more trouble than you ever imagined." mi ,. .. . ,i . , i nis is true, lor ii wouki mean a major loui-un in the clockwork of the solar system, and we'd probably all be dead and gone long before. Eclipses of the moon place than eclipses of the sun. So it is natural to want to observe a solar eclipse. But remember: Be careful ! E.A. K the idea of running for and well-thought-out And he wears no man's ' Vip's cfpnnnrl nn a lnf nf Democratic party into a many years of RepublL which we fully concur work against him. It is to his background and he is apt to base much partial eclipse in about pvtrpmp. mntinn hpinor " . "w..e, professional concern f or nothing but a "mere mat predict to the second are much more common Cold I . . r .....v -..'. ;-'" -.iv-'r. .- V- at..- : -,-.,. sacd 1 BR I Matter of Fact sy Joseph aijop c) Nfw York Herald Tribune Syndicate THE PRACTICAL " POLICYMAKERS Washington - A great deal can be learned from the epi sodes of Gov. Averell Harri- man's send-off on his poten tially import ant mission to Moscow. The main episodes were the two meet! n g s at the White House - the first a formal session of the AJtnp National Security Council on Tuesday, and the second a long talk with the President alono on Wednesday, when Governor Har'riman was given his final instructions. On both occasions, Harriman was told, in the current jargon, "to play it cool." In itself, this is a " note worthy fact, for the fairly ob vious reason that the tempta tion not to "play it cool" has been very strong indeed. After all, the President and those around him have been waiting and working for a hopeful turning point in Soviet-West ern relations ever since the 1960 elections. " , INSTEAD, the most notable Soviet-Western' episode of the Kennedy .administration has been the Cuban crisis, which ended well enough but was not exactly good augury lor tne luture. Bui now, in contrast, it really does seem to be possible (though far from certain) that a 'real turning point is at hand. " Even II Harriman merely brings home an agreement to ban nuclear tests in the atmos phere, in outer space, and underwater, this will be a major event. As previously pointed out in this space, such an agreement, if obtained, will be the first Soviet-Western accord since the Austrian state treaty over eight years ago. Governments, like people, tend to overexcltement when they have been waiting for a break for a long time, and suddenly have reason to hope that the long-awaited break is coming. There have been some signs of this kind of overex cltement in Washington; and this was why the Security Council collectively, and the President Individually, em phasized the importance of "playing it cool." . I'O EE more specific, some policy-makers have want ed to seize the opportunity to open negotiations with the So viets on all sorts of subjects, even including the status of West Berlin. A few others have been eager that the Har riman mission should lead on to a summit meeting; and there has been strong pro-sum mit pressure from London, where the British government is feeling its usual pre-election pangs of summit-itis. Instead, Governor Harri JS JvtS i EDITORIAL I ,y Df-MRTMENT JT-.-l Jr-f mm Jtow ti "Why can't wa rerun editorials in the summsr lika TV programs' Paepla are too busy playing lo think anywayl" MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Line man was instructed at all cost to avoid spoiling a good oppor tunity to make a good begin ning by trying to do too much all at once. If the Soviets open the topic of Berlin, or any other comparable topic for that matter, Harriman will of course have to listen to what they have to say. But he will not Invite such an opening, for if it occurs, he will simply note what is said and report it back to the other Western allies. By the same token, the Pres ident indicated that he was not particularly anxious for a summit meeting at this time. He is not opposed to such a meeting either, provided that every precaution Is taken to avoid presenting ' it to the world as a grandiose and de cisive encounter capable of solving every problem. But he does not much want it; and it will only take, place if it is pressed for by Nikita S. Khru shchev. In sum, the send-off of Gov ernor Harriman was a good demonstration of what may be called practical policy-making -that is, policy-making which does not lose hope, but also avoids everything that is doc trinaire, or excitable, or self deluding. IT MUST be added that the mere existence of the op portunity which- Governor Harriman will try-to aetze in Moscow is also a rather re sponsible proof that the Ken nedy team are practical policy-makers. What is impressive is the combination of tempting mistakes that have been avoid ed and judicious initiatives taken at the right time. The main mistake that has been avoided-and its avoid ance really . deserves high pralse-is foolish official crow, ihg about the Soviets' difficul ties with the Chinese. For do mestic political consumption, this would have been a pleas ant form of self-indulgence; but it also could have been fatal abroad. Then, too, the lines to Mos cow have been kept patiently open. The decision to send Governor Harriman to Mos cow, which was taken at a time when his mission looked fairly hopeless, was an ex tremely shrewd stroke. So was the choice of Harriman as the President's special emissary, for he has a standing in Mos cow unlike that of any other Kennedy team-member. As for the President's Amer ican University speech, insist ing on the need to look at and talk with the Russians as hu man beings, it was solely the result of one of the Kennedy hunches. But it led on quite directly to Nikita S. Khru shchev's speech in Berlin, breaking, or seeming to break, tie nuclear tcsl log-jam. Al together, in this instance and up to now, a good Job has been done in the best way, quite quietly but very efficiently. ftKimrpi aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa I , . . . .W J. A LARGE BARGE AND YOU, CLEO BABY It is true that the hip bone connects to the seat bone and you won't forget it after sit ting through more than four hours of "Cleopatra". Someone once said that there has never been a statue erected in the memory of a critic. If this is true, then here's where I shoot my chances for a statue right down the old tube. Please understand that I'm fond of Elizabeth, I like Rich ard and I tolerate asps. How ever, I think it's possible that writer director Joe Mankie wicz erred in adding anyone to this talented boy-meets-girl-meets - snake little theater group. This you can best de cide for yourself when you see it at your favorite neigh borhood theater or when you view it in a few years on "Sat urday, Sunday, Monday, Tues day and Wednesday Nights At The Movies" on TV. ; I somehow had the feeling that this whole thing was the result of a high school prin cipal calling in the drama coach and saying, "This year we're going to have a little bigger budget for the annual operetta. Let's see what you can do with $40,000,000." Because there are so many extras and so much action, you're probably going to miss something important if you don't know what to look for. With this in mind, I'd like to alert you to a few things you might otherwise miss. In one of the opening scenes, I felt a lump in my throat (it later turned out to be a piece 01' popcorn instead of an emotion) as Cleopatra is selling Girl Scout cookies to help her go to camp with the rest of the girls. The actual camp scene was left on the cutting room floor because it didn't appear expensive enough. Early in the picture (about 60 squirms) someone presents Julius Caesar with a big cookie jar filled with nothing but his brother-in-law's head. Although this was a neat bit of early day merchandising, it has subsequently been proven that there wasn't much future in this type of packaging. Nothing much happens for another hour and a half until Cleopatra makes her trium phant entry Into Rome. If you WBlch closely during this great scene, you will hear one of the slave bit players say to another: "George, I think I have a scorpion in the toe of my left sneaker." It could very well be that he did have, too, because we watched for him in all of the later mob scenes but never saw him again. Caesar makes a lot ot sena tors sore at him and they de cide that they can't wait for the next primary election to get rid of him. The next day, the Ides of March, seems like a pretty good time to Cassius and Cicero to do Caesar in. Sure enough, Caesar's day get off to a bad start the next morning when a bunch of senators start stabbing him like crazy. At this point, Bru tus has the greatest line in the whole picture.' As Caesar stands there looking like a Sensitive By ERIC SEVAREID London - Responsible En glishmen, masters at criticiz ing their own institutions - i ana who l Sr9V fiercely resent criticism from $ fore igners - ! are getti j we a ry v, 1 p e c t s of are getting with the pects of 'the sex - and se- curity crisis. Daily servings savartio of sex stories have the same effect as daily servings of pink champagne -the stomach rebels. Security is what Interests them now. What they really want to find out is whether the accepted tradition of mas terful British supersleuthing, fictionalized and enshrined in a succession of folk heroes from hawk eyed Sherlock Holmes to steely-eyed James Bond. 007, is itself a fiction. Editors and politicians who have been crying, "What's go ing on in this country?" now want to know if the supposed geniuses of MIS know, them selves, what's going on In this country. Reluctant admission by Macmillan's government that the man who tipped off the escaped British diplomat-trai tors, Burgrv, and Maclean, was Indeed another British diplomat. Harold Philby, al though Macmillan himself once denied it - this has been the last straw. Whether it will break the back of the Con servative regime is uncertain. pincushion, old Brutus says: "Hey, Ceese, how are you fixed for blades?" At this point comes an hour and thirty five minute inter mission. This is apparently how long it takes to sell the last of the refreshments. Part, two is concerned most ly with Mark Antony and some of his every day prob lems. Cleopatra, reading the evening papyrus, remarks to Mark, "Mark, I see your name has been mentioned again as a possible candidate for vice president." Mark just shrugged his toga is a sort of a I-want-to-see - what-Barry-is-going - to-do-first manner. Near the end, everything seems to fall apart. Mark stabs himself through the heart and gets a bad infection. Cleo puts her hand in a fig basket and is bitten by a fig worm that turns out to be a fig asp. As everyone dies, I checked my pulse and noted with some glee that I was still alive. I sat quietly in my seat and watched several hundred pa trons leave the theater, all stooped at least half way over. I was still wondering why they weren't staying for the second feature when an usher shook me and told me to wake up and go home. 3s In the Day's News y 'RANK JENKINS Two big news possibilities hung in the air last week: 1. That a nationwide rail strike might be called. 2. That there might be an open break between Chinese communism and Russian communism. Neither has come to pass- yet. IN Washington, President Kennerlv annminrort thai there would be no immediate rail strike. The nation's rail roads and their - operating unions, he said, had accepted a Presidential proposal for. a delay until July 29 in the na tionwide rail strike that had been threatened by the dis pute over work rules. The President, after meet ing with both parties, said they would accept the good offices of a special board made up of six mem bers of his labor-management advisory committee. The board, he said, will make a comprehensive review of then' work rules change dis pute and will send a report to congress on July 22, along with Presidential recommen dations for any legislation needed to resolve the four yea r-od case. TN the meantime, the rail- roads will withhold ac tion to put into effect the new work rules and the unions will call off the strike which they had said would follow the putting into effect of the new rules. The President said, in mak ing his announcement, that British Complicate Security what is certain is an over whelming demand for a renov vation of the personalities, procedures and - this seems fundamental - the attitudes and values prevailing in Brit ish security services. Embat tled authorities were pleased to have the television testi mony of Mr. Allen Dulles, who said British security was efficient, but this will satisfy almost nobody here. The purpose of counter-intelligence is not Just to catch spies, but to prevent their spy ing. Macmillan claimed the identification of Philby to be a security success, not a fail ure, to which the furious op position retorts that the man, like Burgess and Maclean, not only got away with his spy ing but got away himself. if there is a gross slackness in British security, that con cerns every government allied with Britain: what remedies shall be applied, and how. con cern Britain alone. Her po litical procedures and tradi tions are very different from ours and what is appropriate in the context ot Washington may not be appropriate or workable -in the context of London. Whatever Is done, we may be quite sure that nothing re- srmbling a "witch hunt"' is go- ing to develop in Britain: guilt by simple accusation, which is essentially what happened to many Americans in the Mo Carthy period, is not likely to get out of hand. Nor would a British policeman, even one GREAT IDEAS... From (cl 1963, MERCY KILLING Dear Dr. Adlar: Tha in troduction of tha drug thali domide brought to focus many eases of mercy kill ing, abortions, and infanti cide. Author Glandvilla Williams talis us, however, that mercy killing and in fanticide wera practiced by tha ancient Greeks and Ro mans as a matter of course far population control. What do the great authors have ' to say about thasa practices, specially mercy killing? Mrs. Frank A. Mabiui 1219 Washington ava. Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio Dear Mrs. Mabius: "I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel." This pledge is part of the ancient Oath of Hippocrates, which is still taken by medical gradu ates today. Clearly this for bids so-called "mercy kill ings" by a physician. However, the medical pro fession today faces the ques tion of whether the prolonga tion of life benefits a patient suffering from an incurable, malignant, and painful dis ease. In the advanced stages of cancer, for instance, mod ern means of medication may keep a patient alive for awhile longer, through often in a state where he lacks con sciousness and will, and at the cost of great mental and financial strain on his family. Would it be professionally, ethically, and legally right for a physician in such a case to let nature take its course, and, aside from easing pain, not to interfere with what would happen inevitably, anyway? As far as the law is con cerned, administering a dead ly 'drug to an' incurably sick patient is murder. However, according to the "Encyclopae dia Britannica," "a physician may lawfully decide not to prolong life where there is ex treme suffering; and he may administer drugs to relieve pain, in the increasing doses necessary to overcome habitu ation, even though he knows that this may shorten the pa tient's life." . , As far as ethics is concern- he would request NO FUR THER truce. WHAT of the communist ruckus? This statement in a Mos cow dispatch Thursday morn ing seems to offer a hint of what may be in the air in the big communist dispute: "Knowledgeable communist sources in Moscow said to day it seemed that the two sides realize the pointlessness of the present negotiations and are anxious to call them off, but neither side wants to take the blame for any breakdown." WHICH is to say: Neither Peking nor Moscow wants to give the ap peacrance of having CHICK ENED OUT. What both sides need is somebody who can provide an out that will save the faces of both sides. as highly placed as the coun terpart of Mr. J. Edgar Hoover, be permitted to act as his agency's press agent, admitting never a failure, or be permitted to indulge in homilies and lectures on the political philosophies of those to the left of center. All this, Britain will cer tainly spare herself. But the painful problem of reconciling the interests of the state with the rights of the individual will not go away. Almost cer tainly British authorities in their security procedures are going to have to move, how ever cautiously, in the direc tion of giving less benefit of the doubt to the suspected in dividual. It will be difficult, almost as difficult as altering the pattern of a physical re flex; so homogeneous and deeply patriotic a people have a hard time crediting the existence of such a thing as treason: people so passionately jealous of their own privacy and personal dignity find it excruciatingly painful to in vade the privacy of any one among them. In the realm of security, many Englishmen now con cede they have been tolerant to a fault. Item - when For- eign Secretary Harold Mac- millan, eight years ago, ac- ccpted without question the , assurances that Philby was all right, he said to the House of ! Commons: "We must take care that in protecting our way of ; life w do not destroy it." i Item - when Miss Mandy Rice-Da vies, the second little the Great Books By Mortimer J. Adler Publiahera Newapaper Syndicate ed, there is a considerable dif ference in the attitude toward euthanasia between Christian and non-Christian thinkers. Ancient moral philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle ap proved of infanticide for weak and sickly babies. Plato railed at physicians who keep an incurable patient alive. The art of medicine, he said, exists to make the sick well, not to keep the incurable; alive. And the Stoics coun seled voluntary euthanasia as "a good death" for thosa whose life was too painful fop them. - Christian ethics, on the other hand, extolled care toe the incurably sicK and suffer ing, and condemned euthana sia as murder. One outsttmd ing Christian thinker, Thorn-, as More, it is true, pictured euthanasia as a rational means of putting incurably sick peo ple out of their misery. Ha did so, however, in a portrait not of a Christian community, but of an imaginary human society, based on reason and nature. In our day, euthanasia as a social measure is indelibly as sociated with the inhuman and irrational administration of Nazi Germany. Hannah, Arendt has reminded us in her recent book on Eichmann that the pattern for the ex termination of the European Jews was based on Hitler's earlier program empowering doctors "to grant a mercy death to incurably sick per sons." This euthanasia pro gram, run by Hitler's personal office and applied to persons judged incurably insane, did away with over 50,000 peopla in gas chambers in a 20-montli period early in World War II. In the later years of the war, the program became t he model for the extermination, of the Jews, of whom the old, the sick, and those unable to work were the first to ba "granted a mercy death." Hitler's program in all its stark utilitarianism and in credible horror makes us pause. Whatever we may think about the ethics of not prolonging the life of an in curably sick and suffering person, most of us find it morally repugnant to end the life of a person .simply be cause he is malformed or' handicapped. We question whether any human being has the right to decide on wheth er such a person may live. We recall the case of Helen Keller, blind and deaf fronx infancy, who was able to achieve a richly human Ufa through the care and patienca of Annie Sullivan. We recall also the example of Frar.3 Rosenzweig, the great Ger man Jewish religious thinker who composed some of his most brilliant essays when he was completely paralyzed and forced to signal the letters and syllables by blinking his eye lashes. And there is also tha case of Sigmund Freud, who in his later years suffered from an exceedingly painful and malignant disease, but went on working to the end; refusing to take anything; stronger than aspirin, lest it dull his mental functions. i doxie in the Profumo affair, ' had testified, the first angry questions in the House wera demands to know by what right the government had pre vented her from leaving tha country. Item - the private incomes of traitors Burgess and Maclean are still regu larly forwarded to them from Britain. But the mora) and intel lectual climate in which Brit ish security people must work is not exclusively composed ot native and ancient traditions. Two other latter-day influ ences have played a part. Ona was made in America - Mc Carthyism - and the profound revulsion it created in British minds. The other has been tha intensive, if not extensive, ef fect of intellectual Marxism, beginning in the universities and extending into some areas of the civil service. A bona fide Communist would ba hard to find today in the Brit ish government. Others, from the habitual fellow-traveler, to a kind of person who equates A m e r I can policies with Russian policies, to tha simple, "let's not be beastly to the Russians" fellow, are not jo rare. Nor are they rara in some areas of press and broadcasting. Whatever his tory in the remote future may ! prove about their attitudes, : present history merely proves ! that the Russians try to usa j them and sometimes succeed j (Distributed 1963, by Tht Hill Syndicate. Inc.) I (All Rights Raitrvtd) A