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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1963)
4 A UUTORDtfKrTBIBUNI """"Everyona Id Southern Oregon Beads The Mall Tribune" Published Dally except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTUNO CO 33 North Ftrjlt, Ph. 77H-S141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertlilna Manager GERALD T LATHAM, Bui Mir ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn. Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT, Sports Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women Edltoi DALE EHirMcsON. ClrculaUon Mgr An independent Newspspei gntered as second class matter at March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES sjll In Advance Dally and Sunday 1 year S18.00 Dally and Sunday mos 10.00 Dally and Sunday 3 mm 5.00 Sunday Only One year 5 00 Single Copy (Mailed! 30e hu Ann Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year Ml-00 rally and Sunday 1 mo. L75 Sunday Only 1 mo. Carrier and Vendors Copy 10c Official Paper of City of Md,r. OffleiaIPaperof JksonCounty United Press International lull Leased Wire U P I Telephqlo Newsptctiirea "MxTMB E Rb F AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Si JKSSS ASSOC. .a In NnW York. CHI- cago. Detroit. San Francisco. Los Ansel's SeatOe. Portland Denver. NiWSPAPII ruilliHEtS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL (DITOIIAl MemRer California Newspaper Publishers Association Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County ... i. ika. Hm or Ins m. NTHbun. 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO July 23. 19S3 (Thuriday) This is mumps year in Jack son county; go far there have been 891 cases of the disease compared to 34 for 1952. A certificate honoring Med ford for its 1952 pedestrian safety record has been pre sented to the city by the American Automobile associa tion; there were no pedestrian deaths In the city. 20 YEARS AGO July 23, 1941 (Friday) Stage and gcrcen actor Paul visits Camp White. Frnm Arthur Perry's "Ye miirlci Pot" column: "An. other citizen reports lie dined upon horse meat. His siean he states was evidently cui from the tender of an Espee Iron-horse." 30 YEARS AGO July 23. 1933 (Sunday) Truck and bus bill and ped dling bill hits valley truck gardeners. Oregon votes wet and snows under sales tax in spe cial election. 40 YEARS AGO July 23, 1923 (Monday) Thieves get $70 in cracking of Farm Exchange safe. Willow Springs section pre pares county fair exhibit. tO YEARS AGO July 23, 1913 (Wdniday) Ladles of Greater Mcdford club plan gala fete at Golf and Country club. Mcdford National Guard to send team to rifle competition at Clackamas. What's Your I.Q.? Nina er tan carreer is superior! even or eight It aacellent; live er is is ioo4 1. A young mare is railed a ? 2. A precocious child is one who is bashful; true or false? 3. If your car Is stuck in the mud, would you get more traction if you further infla ted the tires, or if you slight ly deflated them? 4. Did the Seven Years War from 17SS to 1763 extend to America? 3. What colors are the silk fibers In U. S. currency pa per? 6. Who is the leading ac tress in the movie "Break fast at Tiffany's"? 7. By weight ts there more copper in the human body or a penny? 8. The Atlantic Ocean Is saltier than the Pacific; true or false? 9. Which two principal powers fought "The Hundred Years War"? 10. In Bible stories, what did Esau sell? Answers: I. Filly. 2. False. 3. Deflate. 4 Yes (French and Indian War.) S. Rtd and Blue. 6. Audrey Hepburn. 7, Penny, t. True. 9. Britain and Franc. 10. His birthright. LOTS OF PROPACANDA Tokyo (Wl Hanoi Radio aid North Viet Nam pub lished and distributed 334,. 000 anti-American books dur ing last week's "Hate Amert ca" campaign. TUESDAY. JULY 23. 1963 Malthusian Urgency Usually, when the "population explosion" is mentioned, it is discussed in terms of the areas where the growth is the resources, or industrial as in southeast Asia and Latin America. But a newly-published book entitled "The Population Dilemma" does not lie wholly in such crucial areas, but also applies to wealthy, industrialized America. The book was published by the American As sembly, and is a series prepared for discussion, Assembly. O NE OF THE book's "When the demographic facts for the United States are assembled they suggest that instead of smugly patting ourselves on the back for escaping the impact of the population explosion, we must realize that we are participants. At present we are on a collision course that could lead us to catastrophe, timed to arrive only a very few decades after our sister nations (if they too do not alter their growth rates) have crashed on the Malthusian reefs. . . . ". . . It is difficult to escape the conclusion that voluntary family limitation with each couple utilizing means that it finds acceptable on religious, aesthetic and physical grounds, ts the alternative to some much more radical choices only a few years from now. . . ." Unfortunately, there manv neonle. very likely have thought about the sense of urgency concerning it. lo them tne problem is either academic, or so far off that it makes little ciinerence. How to convince Americans of the reality of the situation we as a people are facing, and its urgency, is difficult, perhaps impossible. h. A. Road Network Grows The Del Norte Triplicate, published in Cres cent City, put out a special edition last week in celebration of the opening of the new Randolph Collier tunnel under Oregon mountain, just in side the California line on Highway 199. The tunnel opening, interesting enough to all of us in Southern Oregon, is more than merely in teresting to the California portant. That area is even more "isolated than we are, and the tunnel opening is an event com parable to the opening of the new freeway in this area. And they certainly went all-out to celebrate it, with three full days parties and general whoop-te-do. rpHE FABLED Winnemucca-to-the-Sea high- I ... 1.. -1 1 L -- way, oniy a aream a now a reality. It is readily now, and with the completion of the Lake of the Woods road before too long, it will be even better. Reports from east of that the Lakeview to Winnemucca section, start ed by Lake county and the state of Nevada, and completed by the two states, is not receiving as much use as had been predicted. Very likely, this is simply because the route is new enough so that it isn't well known, and usage will increase when more publicity, and newer maps, bring it to more people's attention. Eventually, then, the mountain route Winnemucca and Crescent City will be the biggest beneficiaries. DUT THE way points Lakeview, Klamath Falls, Medford and Grants Pass also should benefit in a material way as tourists and shippers discover the advantages and savings made possible. Medford, in particular, should benefit, for it is now the hub of a network of roads and high ways in three states which will enhance its im portance as a distribution center. Transportation today, as much as in past eras, shapes the whole direction of a local economy. E. A. Eclip, We followed the advice of the experts last Saturday, and did not look directly at the sun during the eclipse. Instead we took a couple of sheets of cardboard, punched a hole in one and let the sun shine through cardboard a foot or so away. Rather to our surprise, it worked. The image of the sun, small but as did the progressive . . A... A moon passing in ironi oi it. It wasn't a tremendously impressive show here, and if it had not warning, few people indeed would have noticed anything different. The sun might have been shining just a bit less brightly tha n usual, but no more so than on a normal hazy day. A LL THE advance publicity about the eclipse and its potential danger to the eyes probably was good and necessary, and presumably averted most eye damage. But some reactions to it were a bit odd. Some people apparently got the idea that it wasn't even safe to be outdoors. Others got the idea that it was dangerous to look at the sun during the eclipse, but that it is OK to do so when there is no eclipse. Actually, of course, the sun is dangerous to view directly at any time, but most of the time there is no reason to warnings were put out, fastest and the natura development, are the least declares that the dange of background papers plus the findings of the authors has this to say is reason to believe that a majority, even if they matter at an, nave no north coast. It is im of barbecues, dinners, snort; lew years ago, is negotiable all the way the mountains indicate two ends of the cross- se the hole onto the other distinct, showed plainly, bites taken from it by the i li been for the advance do so. that is why the K .W "How Long Is a Boarding-House Reach?" 'T 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 for publication is permissible. Tha Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters uihmit!H far ntihlication must not exceed 400 words. The letters orinted In this column do not necessarily represent the views of tr paper. In fact tha contrary is often Jlmenei To the Editor: The United States has always had great, overwhelming pride in its tra dition of political asylum. Right now we are giving a protective home to over 100,- 000 refugees from Castro s Communist rule. At one time we gave asylum to Castro, himself. Then when he over threw Batista, former ruler of Cuba, we gave asylum to Ba tista. Nobody that I know of has ever been turned away from our shores, not even the infamous Bolshevik, Trotsky. In 1948 Perez Jimenez, an a n 1 1 - Communist Venezuela army officer, overthrew the alleged Communist, Romulo Bctancourt, ruler of Venezu ela. And we gave asylum to Betancourt. By 1956 Mr, Bet- ncourt's Communist connec tions become so objectionable to our government that he was arrested, on information supplied by the FBI, expelled from the U.S., ana denied re admittance (Cong. Record, 2-7-63). Still he was not sent back to Venezuela and placed at the mercy of Jimenez, but was allowed to live in Puerto Rico. It should be pointed out here that Perez Jimenez, while president of Venezuela, gave that country the best government it ever had, and made it the most prosperous country In all Latin America. Further more, Mr. Jimenez was decorated by President Eisenhower for his staunch support of the United States, and for his leadership in the fight against Communism in this hemisphere. In spite of this, in another revolution, Leftist groups in Venezuela overthrew his gov ernment, and Bctan court again came to power there. Then Jimenez, the great South American antl Communist leader, sought asylum in America. But what did we do? We put him In jail. And now our State Department is pre paring to return him to Betan court in Venezuela to be ex ecuted, undoubtedly a crush ing blow to all antt-uommu-nists in Latin America. Never in all U.S. history is there an Instance where a rctugce president, or ruler, of a for eign nation, against every warm hearted, generous, and decent Instinct of the Ameri can people, has been sent back to his political enemies to De butchered. President Kennedy could stop this shameful thing. Sec retary of Slate Dean husk could stop It. And both may possibly do so, if we bury tne While House and the Stale Department, Washing ton, D.C.. In an avalanche ot pro lestlnu letters and telegrams. The eyes of a brave and de cent man have turned to you as his last hope of life. Can you take lime out to write those two letters? Or wouia vnu rather endure the shame of turning him down, and of having the whole worm iook upon your President and your Secretary of State as Beian court's hangmen, the cxecu tloners of Jimenez. Latin America's greatest antl-Com munlst? L. C. Powell 316 SE Eighth St., Grants Pass, Ore. The Hereafter To the Editor: The most In triguing subject of the cen- tury is life hereafter. This new life could be confusing for a while, because every thing would be so different All bald-headed men would have a heavy head of hair the toothless would nave mouthful o( teeth (not plates) the near-sighted would have perfect vision; the overweight would be properly reduced and those too thin would be filled out. As I said. It would take time to get reacqualnted 1 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON tha case. When I meet my ancestor of 10,000 B.C., I wonder what we will talk about! For one thing, would there be a lan guage barrier? It might be quite a chore finding him from among upwards of one hundred billion souls. David Frisch, P.O. Box 292, White City, Ore. Pip Fitter's Plaint To the Editor: After read ing Mr. May's letter in the communication about Local 418 of the Plumbers and Fit ters Union, I think that I will say what I think and let the chips fall where they may. I have been a member of the Plumbers and Fitters Union for the past 23 years, and a member of the AFL for the past 30 years. In that time I never knew that a Union could get by run like this one here in Medford. When I joined the union back in 1926 wages were low and we were told of all the benefits we would get if we would become a member of the union. About that time Westbrook Pegler was fight the unions of all kinds. I laughed at his writings. Since moving to Medford four years ago and finding how Local 418 is run, I have to admit Mr. Pegler was right. The Oregon Plumbing Code states that a plumber must pass the state plumbers' exam ination and get a state compe tency card before he is al lowed to install plumbing. The plumbing is all the sanitary piping, fresh water lines, roof drains, septic tanks. After the plumbing is done and there are steam lines, air conditioning, oil and gas lines to run, the plumber says on and does this work, and ac cording to the union they have that right. It doesn't say that a pipe fitter can't work these. The union has a consti tution that all members will abide with like the govern ment. In article 61 it states that the business manager or agent shall find employment lor the members. I believe in live and let live. It the plumbers are installing work that a pipefitter has a right to do and there are pipe fitters to do it, I think it is up to the Union to see that the contractors hire pipefitters to install the pipe as long as there are fitters on the bench So far this year I have worked three days. If the plumbers were Union men at heart they would let us two fitters here in Med ford work at least enough to draw unemployment, while they make up to $11,000 t year. Maybe this letter is un union, 1 might even get fined for saying the mean things I have said. There is a quotation that noes something like this: "I don't agree to what you say but I'll defend with my life your right to say it." Leslie L. Valerians (Member of Local 481 Mcdford) Route 1, Box 333AA Central Point, Ore. Fantasy To the Editor: Sunday's edi torial (7-2 1-63). should have read "Eric Allen's Attack.' Drivel such as the above, de signed to drive a wedge into the Republican party is on the Increase; and your edi torial may only be another worn patch on the already threadbare quilt you have been piecing together. The overall pattern Is already Identifiable, and the principa raw material used is politica nonsense. So what if It has proven to be effective. Its nonsense nonetheless. Purportedly, the RepubU- I Matter of Fact y joPh a.mp c) New York Herald Tribune Syndicate WHAT ROCKEFELLER FEARED Washington - Practical, solid, though unmentioned po litical developments undoubt edly spurred Gov. Nelson A. Rockefel ler to launch his strong counteroffen sive against Sen. Barry Goldwater ten days ago, and to renew it, with mixed results, at the Governor's con ference. Two places to look for those developments, it is now clear, are the two large, Mid Western Republican - leaning industrial states, Ohio and II linois. Ever since the Goldwater Presidential candidacy began to be taken seriously, it has been a truism that the An zona Senator could never get very far without the support of the convention delegates from one or more of the big Industrial states. Moreover, Senator Goldwater's brand of politics has far less appeal in these states than in the South, Southwest, and Rocky Moun tain area. Hence, the need for industrial state support look ed like the hurdle Goldwater could not overleap. But long before the Rockefeller state ment denouncing the "radical right, the surge to Goldwater was showing alarming power in both Illinois and Ohio. npHE situation in Illinois Is much more favorable to Goldwater but also much more disorganized than that in Ohio. Here, the Cook Coun- t y Republican chairman, Hayes Robertson, whose con stituency ought to be less fav orable to Goldwater than most, is nonetheless waving Banner in the Goldwater vanguard. More impressive still, the sole announced Gubernatorial candidate, Charles H. Percy of Bell and Howell Co., is go ing to great lengths to con ciliate the Goldwater support ers. "There's no doubt." he says, "that Barry has the strongest kind of support in Illinois." As Percy used to be regarded as the younger pro- can party is divided. The fan tasy runs something like this: "Rockefeller, or someone like him, 'ain't nothin but a houn dog' as far as the (nebulous): radical, extremist, lunatic (no tice the moderation in your choice of labels), right is con cerned. On the other hand there is Goldwater - not a racist, but . . . genial, but . vote getter, but . . . handles himself well, but ... in short, everything desirable in a fine leader, but ... So, the Liberal Establishment, through its numerous editors, commenta- o r s, educators, politicians etc., have pinned the Senator hopelessly (they hope), to the grossly unwholesome (non ex istent), far right. You know Mr. Allen, that until a few years ago the Liberals denied the existence of a threat from the left 'Everything is under com plete control , so the story went. It wasn t until citizen groups in increasingly large numbers rose up across this country, calling for a return to the sound principles of our Founding Fathers, that the Liberals suddenly decided there was not only a threat from the left, but also from the right. But how could the left be threatening? The es tablishment has been spend ing millions trying to con vince the people they (the left), was over there not here." But this new grass roots movement. Ah! here was a legitimate threat to the Lib eral's continued abuse of gov ernmental powers. Like pres to man! Automatic crisis: Since the establishment in reality docs not believe in the one (the left), and have constructed the other (the Tight), largely out of their own imaginations, they have not, to date, had the courtesy lo define either one. To de fine the left, they would have to repudiate themselves for the past 30 years. To define the other would leave them naked to their newest false hoods. So, just continue smearing the "rightist'' la bels (its always worked be fore). If the establishment can drive a wedge into the Repub lican party it can be weak ened. If the wedge can be designed to do injury so criti cal as to insure a Democratic victory in the next presiden tial race, well then, good! The falsehoods will have been Justified. This point is clear. A united Republican party could win the presidency. And this nation would see a fabulous, a real campaign in the process! A divided Repub lican party however, is as much political joke (and tragedy), as the Liberal's fab ricated "left-right" sloganiz ing. Robert J. Howard, 702 Beekman St., liadioxd ( tV' Mi gressive model of an Ideal Eisenhower Republican, his pro-Goldwater gestures speak volumes. To be sure, the Illinois Re publican nomination for the Governorship will almost cer tainly be contested; and the betting at present favors the veteran Secretary of State in Illinois, Charles Carpenter. The Republican Governor, if nominated and elected, win have the most to say about the Illinois delegation. Thus the Goldwater breakthrough In Illinois cannot yet be re garded as final. N OHIO, the same rule holds true with even great er force, were, tne DreaK through centers in a group of big business men who used to finance the campaigns for the late Senator Taft. More than one of them is now a leader of the national Goldwater movement. In Ohio, however, political power of the big businessmen has declined. The key figures are now the able National Committeeman, Ray Bliss, the Republican Governor, John A. Rhodes, and Senator Tatt's highly promising son, Rep. Robert A. Taft, jr. For vary ing reasons, all three appear to lean on an Ohio delegation initially committed to Gov ernoor Rhodes as the state's Favorite Son. Thiss is where the Rocke feller counteroffensive has had the real effect. Pre-Rock- efeller, it might have been very hard for the advocates of a Favorite Son delegation to stand off the pro - Goldwa ter pressure. Post - Rockefel ler, it is bound to be much easier. And the same effect will be felt in Illinois, if a Republican Governor is elect ed there, and he too wants a Favorite Son delegation. The other side of the medal was observable last week end, however, in the agitated poli tics of the state of California. The strongest Republican in the state. Sen. Thomas Kuch el, was already a leader in the fight against the "radical right" when Governor Rocke feller was still carrying wa ter on both shoulders. On Sat urday, he met with friends and supporters from all over the state, to discuss ways and means of preventing the John Birch Society and its allies from capturing the California delegation to the Republican Convention. AT THE meeting, Kuchel made it very clear indeed that he would fight hard against any attempt to win the California delegation for senator Goldwater. This does not mean, however, that Ku chel favors Governor Rocke feller's candidacy at this time. In fact; many of those at the weekend meeting voiced the opinion that a Favorite Son delegation pledged to Kuchel would have a better chance of beating a Goldwa ter pledged delegation than a Rockefeller -pledged dele gation supported by an active California campaign by the Governor. Historically, Favorite Son delegations are always handi capped against competition with pledged delegations. Yet this handicap was widely considered to be outweighed by the handicap of Governor Rockefeller's remarriage. In short, Governor Rocke feller's counteroffensive has had some of the results the Governor hoped for. But its effect on his own Presidential prospects is still far from clear. A LIVING DOLL York, England - (Wll - Po liceman Brian Senior thought he saw something odd in the clothing store window: A clothing dummy that was breathing. Railwayman Clif ford Scott. 20, was fined 50 pounds (S140) Monday for shop-breaking. "Aha! Se. Ih blacks ar pink, Ih Supreme Court thing it financed by New 4 Strictly Personal By Sydney (ci Field Enterprises. Inc. THE IMMODEST "I" . Because the word for "my self is a single letter In Eng lish, it is capitalized as "I. And because it is tall and thin and stands alone, it pre s e n t s a psy chological trap to the author who writes about himself. This Is not the case in other Ian. Harris guages - the French "je," the German 'ich," the Italian "io," and almost all others do not capi talize and isolate the subjec tive ego. It ts a pure accident in the English tongue. Thus, writing about oneself in English tends to arouse some irritation if the page is spattered with the obvious I. It is so self-assertive, it leaps out of the sentence, it almost strikes the reader physically with its unique presence. Because of this peculi arity, soma writers with an overpowering sense of modesty have used the im personal pronoun, "on." But this is weak, and sounds almost prissy In our time. It is not a man speaking, not a personality, but an attitude: who can imagine saying "On loves you," or "One would willingly die for one's country"? The abrasive quality of Ih first person singular in English was remarked by Charles Horion Cooley a In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Let's talk today about guns. It's always an interesting subject, and a particularly in teresting old gun find has just been made over in the Snake River country. The finder is Jack Gallagher, a biologist with the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries. There were ten of the old weapons, and he came upon them by the purest accident. He was SCUBA diving in the Snake River in search of metal salmon tags - that is, aluminum tags attached to the fins of hatchery salmon to enable the fish biologists to trace more accurately the mi grations of the fish after their release from the hatcheries. HE OLD GUNS were dis- covered in a mud-filled eddy between Swan Falls and Walters Ferry on the Snake, about 45 miles south of Boise. James Brinda, of Ontario, traced their history and identi fied them as: A Spencer carbine, caliber .50. A "Kentucky repeater,' possibly made by Burnside or Whitney. Two Henry repeaters, one with a brass receiver, pat ented in 1860 and 1866. A Springfield flintlock muzzle-loader, U. S. Army Caliber .69. A Sharps percussion car bine caliber .54 round barrel buffalo gun patented in 1859 and another caliber .50, pat ented in 1852, with an octag onal barrel. A Winchester 1866 lever action caliber 44.80. A Colt slide action Light ning repeater, caliber .44. A USN Springfield single shot percussion breech loader. JUDGING BY the condition of the wood, Mr. Brinda estimated that the guns had been under water for a period of between 65 and 80 years The metal, he reported, was in surprisingly good condi tion. Where they came from is a mystery. I Mr. Brinda surmises that reds. Ih Whit Houi it is color-blind and the whole York Jewish bankers!" J. Harris generation ago, whan h observed: "The chief objection to the frequent use of 'I' is that it is always a vivid not, somewhat perturbing because it awakens a self in the reader, harsh if it fails to be harmonious. There is something conten tious about in the sens of self; it is born of opposition) and when a man writes 'I' emphatically, he puts a chip on our shoulder, h starts a quarrel with us, un less he makes us feel at tha same time that we are on his side." Goethe, for example, wrota freely in the first person, yet even though he had a well, developed ego, his work does not sound self-centered in tha German; if translated into English, his personal works (not, of course, poems lika "Faust") would disconcert us with "I" sticking up in every paragraph to remind us of his singularity. The English m i s t r u s t of egotism, even when it is genial and harmless, is re garded as amusing and rather pompous by people of other nationalities. The well-bred Englishman does not (or did not) speak about himself; yet only in his language is the "I" given such orthographia prominence. In German, the writer capi talizes "you" ("Sie"), and in Spanish he does the sama ("Usted"), while the pronoun referring to himself is in tha discreet lower-case. English is a strong and supple lan-guage-but hardly a courteous or modest one. they might have been lost when a trader's boat capsized in the Snake. Or, he says, they might have been part of a shipment of guns from tha Silver City mines. WHATEVER THEIR history, therp mttel ka a fnP;nt. ing story back of their loss- some three-quarters of a cen tury ago if Mr. Brinda's esti mate of the length of tima they have been under water is reasonably accurate. Does any reader of this newspaper know whv thesa old guns were dumped inlo tne &naKe river back in what must have been the early days of the West? THAT BRINGS UP another In 1872. when the ModoS Indians retired into the fast nesses of what is now tha Lava Beds National Monu ment and stood off a U. S. army for weeks, their sharp shooters hidden in the cracks and seams of the lava beds, picked off a considerable number of the attacking troops. Legend has it that the troop ers' rifles were picked up by the Modocs and carried back into their stronghold. Tha story goes that these rifles were put in a cave and tha cave was roughly walled up. TllANY YtARS AGO, Peter Sconchin told this writer that he was a boy of seven or eight years at the time of tha battle and that he remem bered quite clearly seeing tha guns put into the cave. Ha said he believed that if he could go back and make a careful search he might be able to recognize the spot. He confirmed the story of the walling up of the cava containing the guns. He said the wall was roughly built of lava blocks and fragments, and might have gone unrec ognized over all the interven ing decades. We made several appoint ments to go down to the Lava Beds and carry on a search, but something always inter vened to cause a postpone ment. Before we could get around to it, Mr. Sconchin passed away. PRESUMABLY, the old guns are still there - waiting for some observant searcher to find the wall that closed the cave containing them. If so, it would be quite a find. Swayless Satellite Launched by Navy Washington -1TPI- The Navy has put a satellite into orbit with an ingenious stabiliza tion system that keeps the same face of the moonlet to ward the earth. The device, involving a long boom and a springlike "yo yo." takes the sway out of the satellite as it spins around the earth, the Navy said Mon day. The value of the device is to make radio communica tion easier and, in the case of weather satellites, to keep tha cameras aimed earthward. The Navy did not say when the satellite was launched. I