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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1963)
wttJ3u. """ivaryone la Southern Oregon RaulS TU Mail ITIDWIB 1 FublUhid Dally except Saturday by twfeHtrEditoi HERBGREY Advertijini iMaajier D ii rt T I ATM A M Bus MKT ERIC ALLEN JB, Mn Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor 5'ThARD JEWErt. Sport, Editor PALE CRICKSON. Circulation Mir Sntcred at econd clin n'" Mediora urcgon unun March 3, 1B97 SUBSCRIPTION RATES at- In IfluanM Dally and Sunday 1 year 1S.00 Daily and Sunday moi 10.00 Dallv and Sunday 3 mos 3.00 Sunriav Omy One year 5 00 Slnale Copy (Mailed) -oe m r7. n Untn Rnllte. Daily and Sunday I year $21.00 rally ana sunaaj i ni. . r.rrlar and Vendors Copy 100 Official Paper ol City of Medford OHICiai raper PI mmmmyu United Press International lull Leaaed Wire U. P 1 Telephqto Newsplcturei "MEMBER-OF AUDIT BUREAU OF uiwi-ljijh i who n.a Mtm In Nctll Viifk. Chi' co Detroit, San Francisco. Loi An ! &eaiu. - w r - Denver. NIWSPACIt PUIlIf HIRS ASiOCIATION ASSPCATIr w y Memoer California Newspaper Publliheri Auociatlon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO August 20, 19S3 (Thursday) The Medford city council last night voted 6 to 2 to au thorize Mayor Flynn "to take preliminary steps necessary for an examination of the Medford police and traffic de partment by an outside per son or agency professionally qualified." Ashland voters yesterday rejected an initiative proposi tion for the city to purchase Twin Plunges swimming pool. 20 YEARS AGO Aumiit 20. 1S43 (Friday) 1 Rent overcharge in Med fnrri area totals SI 1.500. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudse Pot " column: "Many municipalities are now muit Ins nnat-war nlans. In not a tingle instance have arrange ments been made to transform social centers into soup kit chens." SO YEARS AGO August 20, 1933 (Sunday) Mr. and Mrs. A. S. V. Car penter return home after visit in California. M. N. Hogan installs ticker service. 40 YEARS AGO August 20, 1923 (Monday) Prof. Irving Vlning of Ash land named president of chamber of commerce. Rattlesnakes reported plen tiful along Rogue river. M YEARS AGO August 20, 1913 (Wednesday) Total of 2,761 visitors at Crater Lake park smashes rec- Cole auto representatives driving 1914 model car, visit Medford on testing and good roads observation tour. What's Your I.Q.? uu. -. Hind la iu sarler even w tight h mctllent; fin r ah is goo. 1. Which is the correct of- flr-inl name of the European country - The Netherlands or Holland? 2. In what religion is a mosaue a place of worship? 3. Only even numbers are used to designate U. S. tilgn ways; true or false? 4. Name the original col onics that became states of the Union. 5. Was Paul Bunyan a real, or fictional character? 6. Who was the female star in "Mamba'a Daughters," and 'Cabin In the Sky"? 7. What agency is responsl ble for federal flood control? 8. Name the two Presidents of the U. S. whose last names contained only four letters 9. What human organ is pie tured. on the back of a one- dollar silver certificate? 10. Following are names of cities: Burlington, Erie, Mil waukee, New , Haven, Santa Fe; what else have they in common? t Answers! 1. Tha Nether lands. 2. Mohammedanism. 3' Falsa. 4. N.H.. Mass., Conn., R.I., N.Y.. N.J., Dal.. N.C I.C.. Va., Ca. 5. Ral. I. Eihal Waters. 7. U. f . Army Corps of Engineers. I. Polk and Taft. t. The aya. 10. All nicknames f railways. TUESDAY. AUCUBT 20. 1883 Catholics and . . . Catholic Church is a ricidlv authoritarian insti- TI,rinn whns mpmhprs any issue until the pulpit gives the cue. Evidence of how fatuous it is to talk of "the church attitude" as something either monolithic or frozen is abundant in the vast range of Catho lic opinion on birth control, as reflected in The m il. .1 1 1-J ml limes survey mar, conciuaea xnursuay. nriHR crisis rreater. in enormous expansion of population and the resulting misery for hundreds of millions of men, women and children has prompted a widespread -1 e a lji: i : . : reappraisal ui uauiuunai fjusiuuns, uuut as w mntUnla rf lirwiflwn- 1.11'fVla unthflllr VinlatlTIOf trip lllClillUUO Ul lllllllrlllg Uli liio Hiwivuv tv..v. w..w church's basic beliefs and as to the formulation of 1 ! 1- il ! J J 1 1 1 puDiic policy on tne dissemination 01 Knowieuge about birth control. There is among church authorities an increas- moral views of all groups tnai Dircn control nas a mnltinorf onliitinn rvf rho is not for the Catholic .1 ' 1.1 1 IL. aooub meinou on uie nun-auiuiic , il is nut xui the non-Catholic to insist that the Catholic accept birth preventives offensive to his religion. A WORLDWIDE ferment is going on in all in stifnti'nns Thp nrinrph's readiness to keen its own thinkine under constant reexamination has been demonstrated in many fields by ropes Jonn XXIII and Paul VI. Out of the exchanges oroach encourages on birth control come hopes a i ii ?i;a! ior a Detter reconciliation lics on a community and world problem both should be working in joint conscience to solve. New York Times Passports and Cuba A threat of jail and fines hangs over the heads of the 58 students who defied the U.S. gov ernment and accepted an invitation to visit Fidel Castro's Cuba. Their passports not valid for travel from the United States to Cuba, they by passed travel regulations by flying to Czecho slovakia and then to uuba. . Now they are returning the same way. Presi dent Kennedv at his Aue. 1 cress conference said that their journey was Cuban eovernment. Then the President students' passports would be lifted, he said, and "other steps may be considered in regard to a few who are not students but who are Commu nists." The students had faced lail and fines up One of the ctoud. student, on July 31 said believe the government DassDorts. This was after learning by Miami radio that the passports few years ago," Stuart said, "the Supreme Court ruled that a passport is private property." STUART was referring to a ruling of 1958. The Supreme Court also held that the Secretary of State had no authority to deny passports on the basis of an applicant s The House of Kepresentatives in 1958 ana 1959 passed a bill giving the State Department authority to bar passports to Communists, but the Senate did not act in either year. A 1960 report of the Activities Committee recommended that the Sec retary of State be authorized to deny passports to persons "whose purpose in traveling abroad was to "advance the objectives ot uommunists. And in January, 1962, the Department of istate issued new regulations denying passports to Com munist Party members be allowed a hearing. THE case against the students would not appear to be governed by the 1958 ruling, for they willfully violated the terms under which the passports had been issued. A more likely parallel Worthy, Jr., Negro newspaperman who spent 41 days in Red China in 1956 and two days in Hun gary in violation of passport regulations. The State Department refused to renew Worthy's passport. The refusal was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, and the Supreme Court in December, 1959, on travel by newspapermen in Red China and nungary were later nnea.j 1XORTHY ran afoul of the law again two years ago when he shipped for Mexico where no passport is needed but left the ship at Havana because, he said, he was ill. He stayed 11 weeks writing articles for his paper. He returned by plane in October. Curiously, six months indicted for violation of Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952. He was convicted and last Sept. 17 was sentenced to three months in jail and a year on probation. The conviction is beinc annealed. Worthy's prosecution was unusual, to say the least. Indications are that the erring students will tare better with the haps for those who are Birth Control jj.ii.iu n are loath tn sneak nn manv countries bv the must be respected and necessary piace m any nfinlllatinn nmhlfttTI. Tt to impose his morality I!.. . IL .- Af f of viewpoint this ap- -ii.i. f.l .f n.il 01 me lueas 01 tjawiu- paid for in cash by the issued a mild threat, ine been warned that they to $5,000. Todd Stuart, a Harvard in Havana that he didn't could take away tneir had been revoked. "A associations or belieis. House Un-American but providing that they is the case of William denied a review. (Bans passed before he was the McCarran-Walter government, except, per not really students. E.R.R. "I'm A Young Goil Help Youse Wit' iisjil-eRttffc. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear tAe name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication fs permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of trx paper. In fact the contrary is often the case. Rebuttal To the Editor: Your edi torial of 8-16-63 requires an answer. It reminded me of a letter I wrote about two years ago on insecticides. To it you appended a derogatory re mark. Silent Spring has vin dicated every statement. No, we of the "far right do not have a letter writing system. The impulse that causes me to write is the same as the one that causes Everett Acklin to write. The results we get are different because our personalities and backgrounds are different. The function of Robert Welch and other "right wing" lead ers is education - to put us in contact with information concerning current affairs that is not found in the cur rent "controlled" press. To illustrate, I heard last night on the Manion Forum (6:15 p.m. Sat. Channel S) Craig Hosmer, congressman from California. He is a mem ber of the House and Senate Committee on Atomic Energy. Prior to entering Congress he was an attorney for the Atom ic Energy Commission. He is an "educated, intelligent and informed member of the com munity," yet he agreed com pletely with every statement Mrs. Pheteplace, L. C. Powell and I had made. He urged every listener to write his or her senators opposing signing. But not a word he said would ever find its way into the Tribune or any other of our controlled" press. We have heard something about the testimony of the chiefs of staff. It was evident from the little we were per mitted to know of their testi mony that they were not too enthusiastic about the treaty. Senator Goldwater remand ed concerning their testimony mat it "contained an unusual ly large number of ifs and buts." The lesson of the Gen eral Walker case has not been lost on them. It is not safe for commanding officers to express opinions differ i n s from those held by the Russo philes in the White House and State Department. No, the huge increase in mail to government officials is due to a growing awareness at the grass roots level, of the terrible inroads Commu nism has made in our country. It expresses the people's de termination to save our coun try while there is yet time. But the time is so short. Dan Smoot said last night the 1964 elections may well be the last free elections in our country. The result of the Young Re publican Convention in San Francisco is an expression of the same spirit. Anna M. Slreed .16 North Peach st. Medford Joins Letter Writers To the Editor: Your edi torial on the letter writers, in Mall Tribune of Friday, Aug. 16. forces me to join those Illiterate, un-informed letter writers. I am not a John Bircher, nor do I condemn them. They are Americans who believe in and express their view i jints as individuals. This is their God-given right. We all can learn a lesson from those so convinced in their beliefs as to take the time and effort to write 500 letters (as the edi torial states one woman did.) If freedom is this important to John Birchers, far-rightcrs or ultra-conservatives as they are sometimes called, I think they deserve credit not con demnation! The United States of Amer ica is the only nation on earth, made up ot 50 states, united into one whole, yet free as individual beings and states i 8 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON What Would Like To Your Shopping" under God to express and act as individuals. Let's not close the mouths of those who speak out for what they be lieve in. There are and always have been, those who think they have an option on wis dom and power, and would make us bow down to them, whether we agree or not. Some of America's greatest leaders were not the so-called intellectuals of their day. far from It, they went down in history for their dedicated duty to preserve and .ven fight if need be for their na tion's freedom. Education is vital as we all know, but it doesn't take a degree in college to write a letter, nor are all people with out a degree un-informd on political affairs, and those who imply this are the most uninformed of all, and would do well to take a long look at their own opinions of right and wrong, and refrain from classing others as illiterate, who do not agree with them. Freedom and Truth pre vails, only in nations where its individuals are free to ex press in the best way they Know, and as long as they are not infringing on another's right, nor forcing opinions on anyone, I say "More power to them." Doris K. Spoerl 89 Janney lane Medford, Ore. Losing Confidence 10 the Editor: Sppmt thai Mark has got himself sorta between the Devil anH th. Deep Sea by making a state ment in a letter and then saying it's ridiculous It is just such things that is caus ing more people every day ;o love confidence in him. In circulatine mv fiv no. titions was surprised at the numner of folks who are do ing just that. After giving the petition the once nvpr thpv would ask, "Is Mark for or against this?" He is against it. "Good, then I'll si an anil only sorry that I can't sign several times." Ten more signatures tn pn and then after countings milpQ over dusty dirt roads old Leapm Lena gets a thorough wash and a long rest In the garage while my pet bunion enjoys a whole afternoon of soaking in the creek. (Jlaude M. Hall 2860 Placer rd. Sunny Valley, Ore. Minority Groups To the Editor: The Demo crats want to change the im migration laws and admit more minority groups to America. The reason should be obvious. If enough minori ties are admitted, they soon will be the majority. When Immigration becomes a tool of the state department, there will be no limit to admit tance of immigrants. The United States has net been able to provide full em ployment since the early days of the big depression. With an increase from births of more than four million per year, and millions of new workers coming into the mar ket annually, one fails to see why we need skilled fore;gn workers. r. bert Hutchins tells us there are not enough jobs for trained workers already in ti e United States. Birth rates abroad are so high that any quotas given would provide only minor relief. O. L. Brannaman 3970 Sierra Vista ave. Sacramento 20, Calif. Should Visit Rhodes To the Editor: It is enlight ening to read that Gov. Hat field is against submitting to the voters the issue on Ore gon State Income Taxes. Ore gon has the second highest in- Door Open for Legitimate Speculation Over Course Now Possible for Red China By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Just as the nuclear test ban agreement has aroused spec ulation over possible new areas or agree ment between the United States and the Soviet Union, so there also is room for , legitimate I I s p e c u 1 a- VJ tion over the course now to N..om bfi followed by Red China. President Kennedy phrased In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS As this is written, word has just come from Washington that acceptance by both sides of BINDING ARBITRATION of the two key issues involved has apparently killed the threat of a nationwide rail road strike which has been hanging over the country for months. Late Friday, Labor Secre tary Willard Wirtz announced the acceptance of his proposal -first made on Aug. 2-that the questions of firemen's jobs and train-crew makeup be submitted to an arbitration board made up of representa tives of the railroads, the five on-train unions and two PUB LIC members. This board would make a final decision, BINDING on both parties, only on the fire men's jobs and the train-crew makeup. Throughout the bat tle over what the railroads call feather-bedding there has been general agreement that if these two thorniest prob lems could be solved the par ties could AGREE on all less er issues without great diffi culty. THROUGHOUT the long ne gotiations, COMPUL SORY (binding) arbitration has been the chief issue. That raises this question: What is compulsory arbitra tion? LET'S PUT IT this way: The jury system is com pulsory arbitration. Individ uals, or corporations, or part nerships disagree. They can't settle their dispute among themselves. Somebody sues somebody. The disagreement goes to court. A jury decides it. There may be appeals. But when all the courts-clear up to the U.S. Supreme Court, if it is carried that far-have had their say, the final decision MUST be ac cepted. What Is that but compul sory arbitration? It is an interesting story. The jury system was estab lished in England by Henry II, grandson of William the Conqueror, in the late 1150's. Prior to that time, both civil and criminal cases had been decided through the oath, the ordeal or the duel. THE COURT would order one of the litigants to muster a body of men who would swear to the justice of his cause and whom, it was believed, God would punish if they swore falsely. That was me oatn. Or. the lurleps wnnM mn. demn the accuser!, unrlnr thp supervision of a priest, to carry a red hot iron, or to eat a morsel of bread nr tn he plunged into a pool of water. If the iron did not burn him, or the bread choke him, or the water REJECT him so that he could not sink, then Divine Providence was adjudged to have granted a visible sign that the accused was innocent. The duel, or trial by battle, was a Norman innovation based on the theorv that tho God of Battles would strength en tne arm of the nghteous and so the winner of the duel would be innocent. Or, if he HIRED a champion, and his champion won the duel hi would be innocent. If his cham pion lost the duel, it was a sign that the accused was guilty. WEIRD, isn't it? But, after all -Is it much different from our modern system of settling labor disputes PROBING question: 1 What is a strike but a come tax of all our 50 states. Perhaps Gov. Hatfield, instead of visiting so often with Gov. Rockefeller of N. Y., should call on Gov. James Allen Rhodes of Ohio. When Gov. Rhodes took of fice he found the State of Ohio's finances badly out of balance. Representatives of ten states have come to his office to hear and to se how he has taken "chaos out of government and is restor ing sanity to the State of Ohio." In ix months time n has saved the state $22 mil lion dollars, and he isn't through yet. Bruce Y. KleinSmid 1719 SE Portola dr. Jrants Pass, Ore. it in somber tones when he said at his Aug. 1 news confer ence that a continuation of present Red Chinese policies into the 1970's could create a situation potentially more dangerous than any since the end of World War II. The failure of the two Com munist giants to settle their dispute in last month's Mos cow meetings effectively iso lated Peking from Moscow, and the nuclear agreement simply added to Red phinese frustration. This is a frustration of long- DUEL? Tt isn't waged with swords and spears and battle axes, as were the duels prior to Henry II and the jury system that he introduced into England, but it is a test of endurance, nevertheless. The jury system succeeded the duel in Henry II's Eng land, as a means of settling disputes. Maybe in our time, it will succeed the strike as a means of settling industrial disputes. Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris c Field Enterprise!, Ine. CREATURE OF CREATION While driving through a state park the other day, the children saw me carelessly tossing a dead match out of the car win dow, and re minded m e of S m o k e y the Best's warning: "One tree can make a million matches, but one match can burn a mil 1 i o n trees." This is more Barrla than a homely aphorism for children, and it says more than the dangers of being careless about fire. It strikes to the very heart of the hu man condition. We can observe the same truth, on the chiildren's scale, at the seaside. Six chil dren may labor for hours to build a lovely and intricate sand castle - but in one sec ond a baby can come along and wantonly destroy their achievement. Man is a creature of crea tion and destruction. The cre ation requires labor, talent, skill, patience, co-operation, imagination, and often great courage. The destruction us ually requires little except the urge to destroy; or calls for no distinctively human abilities. Naiura has loaded the die against us. One fanati cal assassin with a gun can change the course of his tory, no matter how many statesmen and savants art ranged on the othtr side. The work of decades can be undone in an instant, as a cathedral that took a century to build can be de molished with a well placed charge of dynamite. These are all the most obvious truisms - yet tru isms seem to be the last things that human beings learn, accept, and act upon. Our capacity for creation and for co - operation has lagged far behind. Humanity has not yet be gun to fight its real war -which is not the war of people against people, but the war of all against our own destructive tendencies, and against Nature's indif ference to our fate. Better control of the physical uni verse, combined with better control over our own na ture, is the only way to as sure our survival as a species. But we have not yet begun to regard man as a species. What L. L. White calls "the unitary nature of man" is dimly perceived by only a few in each country; the rest re tain a primitive view of their own sub-culture as being the finest and the best. The basic task of modern education is not to teach read ing and writing and counting, but to teach young people (and older ones as well) what it means to become a human being. All other tasks are sub ordinate to this one, for if we turn out skilled technical animals who do not know what a human being ought to be. we are simply hastening our violent extinction. Man's nature is not for ever given, like the other ani mals, which cannot help being what they are. We make our selves, as we make our his tory; and it is wholly up to us whether we use the trees for matches or $V the matches to trees. o ; standing, having its roots in steadfast U. S. opposition to Red Chinese expansions and now abetted by Soviet refusal to help the Chinese develop a nuclear arsenal of their own. Will Consolidate Influence It may be expected that Red China will move strongly now to consolidate her influ ence over the Communist par ties of Asia, and to extend it over similar parties in Afrfica and South America, using the color line as one of her weap ons. She also may be expected to continue boring from with in tactics. She has denounced the leadership of the World Federation of Trade Unions, the International Union of Students and the World Fed eration of Democratic Youth for supporting the Nuclear Treaty. But she has made no move to withdraw member ship in such Communist or ganizations. Militarily she is able to pose a threat in Korea, in southeast Asia and against India. But reckless as the Red Chinese leadership has been with words, it has shown no Matter of Fact (CI New York HfraM (Joseph Alsop will be on vacation this month - and gathering material both in this country and abroad for future columns. During his absence, top members of the staff of the New York Herald Tribune will sub stitute for him.) By SEYMOUR FREIDIN THE MEANING OF AGUILLA KEY The arrogant Castro Cuban raid on a little Bahama islet the other day was a dry run for bigger combined oper ations to come. It involves a future Soviet technique aimed at all underdeveloped areas and tempting soft spots. Actually, it is based on the most mammoth intelligence program in history. Organized care fully, plotted cogently, the Russian aim is to pick off the immense potential in the markets of the underdevel oped world. They cannot achieve - so they have apparently decided - dominance in these markets with the euphemism of com petitive co-existence. In short, their policy-makers have de cided that the vast and cum bersome Soviet heavy indus trial machine cannot compete with that of the U.S. There fore, the answer is planned upheaval, directed by highly skilled agents who build up the apparatus for a takeover , in a given territory. ' 11HIS is not the synthesis of some exile committee, bit ter and burdened psychologic ally with no futures. It is the hard- headed assessment, based on what they claim are indisputable fact, statis t i c, and operation, of important men who try to advise on the course of policy for this gov ernment. Nobody, including the dedi cated men involved, can pre tend to say whether their un emotional, surgical presenta tions can affect the present course of U.S. policy. This is an epoch, somewhat schizoid, in which the quest for power accommodation with the Rus sians has become obsessive. The plangent bells of caution keep the pace, at least out wardly, rather dignified and measured. Soviet policy isn't deterred by our approach. It has been made up and implemented abroad for some time now. Let's get down to a few cases, as the men who make these assessments would say dryly. Take the wretched episode of Aguilla Key. Castro gunboats sealed off and invaded the heat -seared British - adminis trated islet. 0 UR planes watched. Under orders, they did nothing. rsOr-Co .-4' i! Lex. L "Do you ever get the feeling that this luaaiit is a re-run of last summer and the tumatr kfoa thai and the summer befora that and . . . ?" real desire to take on a fight it is certain to lose. With the U. S. 7th Fleet patrolling the Straits of For mosa, she has made no real move against the Chiang Kai Shek stronghold or even against the off-shore islands of Quemoys or the Matsus. When shooting broke out along the Korean truce line and three Americans died there last month, there was a flurry of speculation that this might be the start of a new Chinese - directed attempt to start something. South Korean Elections Finally, more than to any thing else, it was attributed to the season and to a desira to disrupt approaching South Korean elections. The chance that Red China, with an obsolete air force and without nuclear weapons, would start a major action against such a lineup seem increasingly remote. But, meanwhile, the nu clear reactor given to Peking by the Russians in 1958 con tinues to cook its bomb-making material and In 10 years the picture could be different, By Joseph Alsop Tribune Syndicate Onto Aguilla Key stormed a landing party. Their comrades trained anti-aircraft guns on watching U.S. aircraft. They even sent in a helicopter from one of the little war ships. So, 19 exiles from Cuba were forcibly repatriated aft er a bald invasion of foreign territory. The incident - so melancholy in its utter insen sitivity to human dignity and right - was Soviet conceived. The U.S.S.R., around thn world, never ceases to try and bring back citizens who fled and want no more of the So viet system. The act of Aguilla Key, while successful from the So viet operational point of view, was small potatoes. It proved one most useful point, though, to the vast and recast Soviet intelligence methods: that Cuba under its present regime is of untold value as a jump-ing-off spot for Latin Amer ica. The biggest, proportionate ly, Soviet intelligence oper ation abroad is in Cuba today. Access is easier and more di rect, as a result, with Soviet missions throughout Latin America. Every Russian mis sion in Latin America today is headed by a highly ex perienced intelligence officer. THE grim, old joke that the chauffeur in a Russian Em bassy really ran the show has long since been interred with Stalin. Instead of using intel ligence agents in covert and lower-echelon levels, deliber ate Soviet decision has placed them in No. 1 spots. And not just in Latin Amer ica. This is now true in most of Asia and Africa. The objec tive is the same: seizing by subversion the regimes and, thereby, the markets of new countries. An undergr o u n d apparatus and disaffected, ambitious politicians are all pay dirt in the targets marked out by Soviet policy. Some ultra - sophisticated people may say, loftily, that it doesn't sound very new. Well, it is and had better be recognized, because the Rus sians never before used intel ligence operations on such a high level to strike for a given objective. Maybe this remark from a highly gifted man, who holds glittering credentials, has a little impact: "It's a life-and-death compe tition for the markets," ht said, dry smoking a filter cigarette. "There ought to ba a lot more said about it. But that's not up to me." Obviously, ifs up to the top to see and shed some light on this deadly phase of co-existence.