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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1963)
V 4 A- THURSDAY. AUGUST 22, 1963 MEDKORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Ivtryou la Ssutbtrn Oregon Itaade The Mill Tribune" Published DUy went Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 3J North Fit St. Ph. 7-141 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising MlMIB GERALD T LATHAM, Bu Mr ERIC ALLEN JR. Mnf. Editor EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CH1PMAN, Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sport! Editor OLIVE STARCHEB Women a Editoi DALE ER1CK8QN. Circulation Mjtr An Indenendant Newspapel Inured aecond elm matter at Med ford. Oregon under Act or March 3, 187 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By MaU In Advance Daily and Sunday 1 yearf li M Daily and Sunday moa 10.00 Daily and Sunday 3 moa. 3.00 Sunday Only One year $5.00 Single Copy (Mailed) 0e By Carnei And Motor Route. Daily and Sunday 1 year 21.00 rally and sunaey i mo. CnnilBtt On 1 v 1 mo. 3O0 Carrier and Vendor. opy loo Official Paper mt City of Med'tonl Oftlciai raper or iwiwn '"" United Preu Internanonai . lull Leaeed Wire TJ. P. 1 Telephoto Nejaspjetures MEMBER OF AUDIT buiuau NELSOtf ROBERTS ASSOC. a pre nitif-M in New Vork. Cnl- eigo. Dttrc.lt, San rnnclMo. Loi AnitlfaV OMIVaW, ar . . - - - Denvar. NIWIFAMI PUIlltHItS ASSOCIATION ' NATION A I fOITOIIAl Memoer California Newspaper PubUshara Aaaociation Flight o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of, The Mail Tribuna 10, 20, 30, 40 and SO years ago. Oregon '$ Outdoor$ If anyone has any doubts that outdoor recrea tion is "big business" in this part of the country, all he has to do to dispell them is to ride around on the highays a bit, and poke his nose into some of the camps and parks and recreation areas. In recent weeks, we have had occasion to do just this driving to such points as Mt. Lassen Volcanic National Park, Lava Beds National Monument, Harris Beach State Park near Brook ings, Timothy Lake, just south of Mt. Hood, and such way points as Eugene, Bend, Salem, the Detroit reservoir on the Santiam, and the gorge ous high Cascade country between the Waupi nitia and north Santiam highways. From the deseit to the beaches, throughout the mountains, and along the rivers and lakes, people are on the move. IRIVING along Oregon's freeways, oftentimes U out-of-state cars outnumber Oregon cars. Many of them are "campers" those handy mobile sleeping rooms loaded on pickup trucks. Many are hauling trailers, from the fold-out-into- a-tent type on through ' sleepers to the behemoth mobile homes. A surprising number have boats, either on trailers or hoisted ud on ton. Manv have roof racks, either for conventional luggage, or for tents and sleeping bags. Off the freeway and into the back country. the picture is the same. The nroDortions varv somewhat, but there can be no doubt that Amer ica has "discovered" the great out-of-doors, and that Oregon, so magnificently endowed with it, is attracting great swarms of them. "I Guess You Fellow Better Go On Ahead" 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 22, 1989 (Saturday) A 1,050 pound Hereford steer owned by Clifford Big htm, Sams Valley, was named grand champion of the annual Jackson county 4-H and FFA filr. Contacts have been made through the League of Oregon Cities leading to the choice of . a police department in vestigator, City Superintend ent Duff said today. 20 YEARS AGO Aua. 22, 1943 (Sunday) Medford Corporation rail spur to tap new timber re . sources In Butte Falls area From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Royal was the only one of the Brown Boys of E. Pt. who towned last week. Ere the advent of the A-card they came en masse and in auto caravans. 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 22, 1133 (Tuesday) Auto Indigents wa.rncd county will provide no relief Problem of surplus milk in city faced by county dairy, men. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 22, 123 (Wednesday) Three Navy planes land at fairgrounds and are viewed by hundreds. City planning commission upholds city council's action in cutting down poplar trees in park. 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 22, 1913 (Friday) Medford named for 1914 convention of Pacific Coast Good Roads association. Chester A. Arthur Camp, Sons of Veterans, USA, or ganized here. What's Your I.Q.? B11a mm I.. MNMl h IllUlitli avasi er eight la aicallent; tle er tit it gM. 1. How many of the seven dwarfs had beards? 2. Did Columbus make two, three, or four voyages to the new world? 3. U.S. currency is printed in what places in this country? 4. Which lour slates are officially known as common wealths? 8. Which of these countries was first to recognise the U.S. as an independent republic The Netherlands, France, or Spain? 6. In the nursery rhyme, who kissed the girls and made them cry? 7. Ticonderoga, Trenton, Saratoga and Guilford Court House are all historically im portant as what? 8. Angina pectoris Is a a painful disease usually af fecting the teeth, liver, heart or lungs? 8. From what is saccharin derived? 10. Correct the following: She has drank up all the milk. Answers! 1. Six. 2. Four. 1. Washington, D. C. 4. Ken tucky, Maasaehusetts, Penn sylvania. Virginia. 5. Franc in 1778. 8. Georgia Pergi. 7. Battles. 8. Heart. 8. Coal tar. 10. 8h has drunk all . , . OFFICIAL agencies are struggling to keen up with the demand, and. in some cases, iust find out what the demand is. For instance, the Governor's recentlv-annoint ed Oregon Outdoor Recreation Council, at its meeting Monday at Timothy Lake, discussed with some perplexity the problem (among others) of finding out just how much of an economic im pact this recreational revolution is having, or could have, upon the state. It is now officially estimated that tourism is Oregon's third-ranking industry, after lumber and agriculture, and that it is growing rapidly toward second spot. IJNTOLD millions of dollars are pourin ginto Oregon's economy through gasoline stations, motels, restaurants, grocery stores, liquor stores, clothing and general merchandise stores, sport ing goods stores, and many others. The estimate that this business amounts to some $200 million per year, and is growing, may be too conservative. But it is exceedingly diffi cult to find an accurate answer. One counle. with small car, tent, and modest desires, could get by for around $5 per day, while another, trav elling in styJe, could easily spend up to $100 per day for luxury motels, elegant meals, transpor tation, special events, ana so on. Whatever the answers mav be in dollars and cents, the fact is that Ureeron is reamnir a rich harvest in tourism, and that all its outdoor recre ation facilities are overtaxed. AS FOR Oregon's outstanding state parks sys tern, a glance at Valley of the Rogue State Park, or the campine and Dicnickimr state narks at the Detroit reservoir, or Harris Beach, is enough to convince anyone that the state could triple its present system and still not fully satisfy the demand. Not only are people lookine for campinc sites : they are also looking simply for a spot to park their trailer or camper overnight. The few "rest stops" so far constructed along the freeway are often so crowded that parking is unavailable. Other and less well developed camps and parks are also crowded. Olallie Lake, high in the Cascades north of Mt. Jefferson, and isolated by long miles of exceedingly bad road, this week (not on a week end, either) had scores and scores of people bank fishermen, those who had brought their own boats, swimmers, and just those who like to hike or admire the scenery. A ND, despite ominous clouds that often opened to drop light rain, there were many people camping or picknicking at Timothy lake. How are all these swarming thousands to be accommodated? How, in the interests of the economy, are more to be attracted? How can in formation necessary for their enjoyment be con veyed to them? How can they be persuaded to stay a little longer? And what do these questions suggest in the impact on various segments of government and industry? Does it mean an eventual downgrad ing of logging and lumbering, because it tends to mar the beauty that the outdoors-lovers conic to see? How about billboards? Back country road improvements? Directional signs? New campgrounds? Tai VAasfU-orTabH tr " 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. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to adit 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 tha views of tr- paper. In fact tha contrary Is often tha case. No Word Fits ' To the Editor: Right wing pleas that Chief Justice Earl Warren be impeached for treason against this great na tion have rated extensive press coverage. We opponents of the right wing would also like to advance a candidate for the treason charge. But since we abhor humanity dividing nationalism as the tried and true "justification" of every war in modern his tory, our charge is treason against all humanity rather than treason against "this great nation." Our candidate for treason is Dr. Edward Tel ler, the "father of the hydro gen bomb." Drew Pearson has man aged to uncover the fact that Dr. Teller has received $20, 000 from that notorious cov ctor of defense contracts, Gen neral Dynamics. It would be extremely interesting to know all about Dr. Teller's financial affairs, including the size of the fees he is paid or speak ing engagements and journal istic efforts. There cannot be the sliahl- cst doubt that Dr. Teller is a well-informed nuclear physi cist. As such he knows the horrible possibilities in ex tensive nuclear testing andor war better than most. It is my opinion that the English language boasts no proper ad jective to describe an en lightened man who would willfully diminish the health of all posterity and risk the annihilation of humanity for lew fleeting months of wealth and dubious limelight. L. Forster 5104 n.E, Cleveland Portland 11, Ore, A LL thesd questions are receiving hard study bv atrencies at all levels of p-ovprnmpnt. as well as by many private concerns which have '"h interests at stake in tne answers. The orientation of the cities and counties, of the state, of the several federal agencies, of pow er companies, lumber companies, resort opera tors, may be due for further shiftinc. J here is one big drawback, to touns Three Reasons To the Editor: Mr. Allen. you and your editorial cohorts wonder why the so-called ed ucated, intelligent and in formed members of the com munity fail to take a stand publicly on political and cur rent controversial subjects. I give you three reasons: One Many of the educat ed, upper crust are in busi ness of one kind or another. By expressing themselves they are afraid of offending a customer and thus lose a few almighty dollars. To put it bluntly, they do not have the courage of their convic tions. , Two-Some are on the so cial ladder and never know whose shoulder they can stand on to give them a boost up. So they develop the technique of fence-riding. Third The better educat ed man is broader minded be cause he can see all sides and merits, of a question, conse quently he Is less decisive. He docs not have the courage of his convictions for he has no positive convictions. The so called "Age of Rea son" will be the curse of man kind for it is also to be the age of procrastination and in decision. Tell me this Where did Christ go lo select his "Twelve Disciples?" He went to Ihp common working class, not to the syn agogues and temples of learn- like no proof reader to me. I think he is Everett Cacklln' - oh well, I never can spell right since I took Gregg 60 years ago. I'm glad "you all" missed me so muchly - but I've been picking raspberries, blueber ries and plums in that order, climbing (I should say "clam merin") over timbered hills, dancing for exercise, playing in the Senior Center Orches tra at the Activity Center, 601 East Jackson blvd., and Red Cross building. Son came up from San 'Tone, Texas, and I met my daughter-in-law and four grandchildren whom I'd never seen, and "we all" went places, so there wasn't time to add clipping to the scrap book you tell me I am adding to. I've sold mv eauitv in the Jacksonville home, but still have P. O. Box 33 in that town, for I love that old place where John and I were so happy, and I shall be there often. Don't anybodv miss that J'ville dance the 30th of August. That music is of the greatest, too. t just saw more quail in one nock man I ve seen in all my life. There must be at least a nunarea and they aren't airaid of me at all. I still go to the Security Benefit club Wednesdays from 11 till 4: first door north from the Gro- ceteria on Grape st., Medford. II you do not find me there- I will be on a trio to Mexico City. Shall be seein" yuh. fearl Spackman Jacksonville, Ore. Threats, Repression, Mark Vietnamese Regime; Dinh Family Firmly in Control Hu quit Mrusnu . , ; i , ... ... ;. . By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Nawi Analyst Despite the tensions of war, Saigon remains one of the loveliest cities of the Orient, a city of smart 3T shops, com fortable hotels and beautiful girls bicycling in silken trou sers along tree- lined, shaded streets. There can be u g 1 i n e s s. There is the tossed grenade in a crowded cafe. And now there is the tension between the Buddhist majority and the government, and the accompanying hideous sight of an aged Buddhist monk turning himself into a flaming torch in a Saigon street But for sheer physical beau ty the city has few equals. There is then an almost nightmarish quality to Saigon dispatches suggesting that the government would reduce Saigon to ashes to keep itself in power against a revolt which the president's brother and chief adviser says he re gards as "inevitable.' This brother and close ad viser of President Ngo Dinh Strictly Personal By Sydnoy i. Harris (cl Field Enterprises. Ine. ow is Pontius rilate incmbo red? Leila Morrow 531 N. Bartlelt st. Medford. Heap Big Treaty Big Chief Editor: Three big chiefs hold big pow-wow, smoke big peace pipe, makum big treaty, buryum big hatch et, drinkum joy juice. Three sub chiefs signum treaty, six ty nttie. chiefs signum treaty. Ever body happy, whoop a la la. Urn. everboHv h annv cept U. S. Senate. Them hnlri big pow-wow. Senator sav treaty heap much propaganda, him no liketim, but gotta vot um for um effum know what good for um. Big Chief Kroosh wanlnm treaty. Him mebbe have big row with Red Mousie, want um friendly white men in him tepee. Too, him wantum big money makum wash mashenp stead of war mashene Big Chief Howly Mac want um treaty. Big stinky Perfu mo makum air bad. Chief Howly Mac wantum treaty makum air sweetum 'fore election. Big Chief Johnny K. want um treaty please passisls, peacemarchers. church tribes, makum big vote so him stay in White House stead of go back to tepee. Some senators run for election too. Effum " voium lor treaty, mebbe run other way. Effum no vo um treaty Big Chief Kroosh makum big propaganda show all over world. Everbody howl, tar and feather U S Senate. Evcrbodv drink 'jov juice, makum big whoop-la", sing -Pease, pease, sweet pease." Pale face Sachem writum letter. L. G. Weaver 301 Haven st. Medford PERSONAL PREJUDICES The most unrewarding task in the world is trying to tell people the truth about them selves before they are ready to hear it; and even Aesoo. who cast such truths in fable form, was eventually thrown off a cliff because his morals struck too close to home. With all kinds of weird and improbable musical ad aptations going on in the theater today, it seems strange that the finest of American folk - plays, "The Green Pastures," has never been turned into a musical. It's a good thing for them lhat the people who enjoy re lating their dreams in public aren t generally aware of all the implications of what they're saying. Most of will go to a "pre view" of something we don't especially want to sea, simply because wa are of fered a chance to tee it ahead of others; and pre view audiences are cordial ly detested by performers. We think of America, on the whole, as a "law-abiding" country; but reading a book on British law - enforcement, I was mortified to learn that (in 1954, when the book was published) Greater London had only 19 armed robberies all year, while New York or Chicago had about that many each day. It's a curious trick of the mind that the day after you learn a new word you d never heard before, or tha name of a parson hitherto unknown to you, the word or name pops up again immediately. A person has gone from social drinking to heavy onnKing when his response to the invitation to have another is "Why not?" Every potential alcoholic I have known has given this laconic answer. One of tha real para doxes of personality is how people in show business can be so warm-hearted and so cold-blooded at the same time. . No other book ever writ ten contains so much non sense and so much profundity as Nietzsche's "Thus Spake Zarathustra" the only trouble being lhat by the time you're capable of sepa rating the nonsense from the profundity, you don't need to read the book any more. Most mother-in-law jokes, though perennially popu lar, are terribly unfunny; the only amusing one I can recollect is about the son-in-law who was given two ties for his birthday by hit mother-in-law; when he ap peared at her house wear ing one of them, she greet ed him with: "What's the matter didn't you like the other one?" Men don't have implacable enemies the way they did in past ages but they don't have as closely-w elded friendships, either; our inter personal relations have be come more tentative and society has grown more dense and complex. Cynicism in the young it alwayt a wholesome sign it indicatei lhat a sensitive, idealistic nature has been shocked and is trying to come to terms with the folly of the adult world; it it only cynicism in the old that I find spiritually objectionable. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Mishmash in the news: The governor of Tennessee, who says he is a liberal, ap points a conservative to fill the Senate seat left vacant by the death of liberal Sena' tor Estes Kefauver. ine conservative he ap pointed is a self-made man who parlayed a team of mules into a big construction busi ness employing thousands of men. to our economic systems each year. Paul Harvey, radio com mentator, recommends more and longer hours to produce what we fre unable to consume. What we really need is 4 or 6 hours day of labor, and if necessary add 3 or 4 shifts ot employees, to meet con sumer needs. We need less exploiting in manufacturing in foreign countries, because of chenper labor methods. La- uor produces all products re gardless'if it is by hand work or automation. We simply are "running a rat race." When we quit this "rat race." no one misses us. A true democracy may be the solution to depressions. Bert Kissinger 322 So. Riverside ave. Medford TN HIS current piece in the newspapers. Liberal Col umnist Marquis Childs says: "Of the 4,322,000 persons recorded as being without jobs and looking for work, two-thirds have not completed high school and one-fifth have not gone as far as the last year of elementary school. Short of a massive retraining program (including the three Rs) these people will continue to be jobless." He adds: "This is structural unem ployment - built, that is, into the structure of the economy. The affluent can concicvably go on becoming more affluent while the jobless, as they in creasingly exhaust their un employment benefits, become poorer." Diem is Ngo Dinh Nhu In a stern lecture to Viet namese generals, whom he ac cused of inadequate precau tions against the expected coup, Nhu is reported to have said in such an event the city should be razed and the gov ernment, if necessary, take lo the mountains. With only a ruined capital remaining, he said, the plot ters could not last three months. Nhu is a devious man who ordinarily prefers to operate behind the scenes. His wife is the beautiful Mme. Nhu whose stern views against dancing led the United States Embassy in 1962 to cancel a square dance for its teen agers. Living in the presidential palace with bachelor Presi dent Ngo Dinh Diem, they are two of the most influential persons in South Vietnam. Nhu runs the secret police and reportedly tells the presi dent which army officers should receive promotions. Nhu frequently has accused the United States of encourag ing an abortive revolt against ine Ngo Dinh Diem regime in 1960. This time, he says, any new attempt at a coup d'etat would be both anti-American and anti-Buddhist. Mme. Nhu has accused tha United States of bringing pressure to stop her own anti Buddhist statements, includ ing one that the women of South Vietnam should clap hands at each new Buddhist burning. Nhu's threat to burn the) city ignores the fact that for the government the act would be as suicidal as the fiery deaths of Buddhist monks. But Nhu in the past has been suspected of creating emergencies for his own pur poses and this threat could be interpreted as a warning to the U.S. that its own future in Southeast Asia is inextricably tied with the future of tha authoritarian Dinh family. ine conflict between tha Buddhists and the government has gone on for more than three months and the Dinh family is on the defensive. And meantime the Communist enemy has been the gainer. This is the situation into which Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. moves this week as the nev U.S. ambassador. Matter of Fact By Joseph Alsop ICI New York Hgrald Trlhune Syndicate Joseph Alsop will be on vacation this month and gathering material both in thit country and abroad for future columnt. During hit absence, top members of the staff of tha New York Herald Tribune will sub stitute for him.) By MYRON KANDEL QUESTION: Who will be better in the long run for these four mil lion-odd persons who are re corded as without work and looking for a job A conservative who can parlay a team of mules into a big construction business, employing a LOT ot men. or a liberal who thinks the gov ernment snouid go on spend ing billions keeping them on the unemployment dole? FROM Cape Canaveral: ........ ,iiii;c:-llc1ll rtpUl- lo space ship blasts off toward ine moon, late in this rinrarip the launching will climax the most expensive peace time venture ever undertaken by man. Estimates of the total cost range upwards from san rit.. LION, with some sources pre dicting an outlay of S40 Rll- LION. J jf , , .. ifll MINI IMC lIlUlMIt- IIHS IWU mind of a native son. It means the crowding and ! proof readers and i d tike to ii i i i ... ..... . Humeiimes suiiying 01 places long Known and loved in their natural state. But tourism's advan tages, as an economic bulwark which Hops nnt deplete natural resources unduly nor brings the disadvantages of industrialism.' cannot hp n-nin. said. E.A. Solution To the Editor: These are the real rpaenne n ti, - To tne Editor: I done heard ; and tne masses.' have ,, nr ., 1 Pearl's Back learn whether they ever found that needle in the haystack, the picture of which covered a whole page of above news paper 'tother day. The little man pictured in search in' position in the shad dcr of the stack didn't look in one of the most resourceful countries on earth. Raising a surplus of food stuffs that litterally goes to waste, over - protitaction f automobiles, and alfearvir.a automation in normal yeara. because we are normaly add ing new and mure millionairta ! Medford Firms File Incorporation Papers Salem-HTP-Articlcs of in corporation were on file here today for two Medford firms. Articles for both firms were signed by D. L. Pickcll. B. Kent Blackhurst and Gregory T. Hornecker. D. L. Pickell Builderi. Inc.. lifted a a furni roastrect i uMa. tm Vi. k. Pick U RaaJ hW4, In . 1 1 1 i rati ana personal aoptjrly. A BUT Vnn umII The spending of these 41) Billions of dollars will create a lot of jobs building this equipment that will be re quired to GET A MAN TO IrlrJ MOON. How about that? THE RE-EMERGENCE OF STRAUSS Bonn, Germany For West German politicians the place lo be seen this summer is the picturesque Bavarian lake area of the Tegernsee. What attracts them are not the water sports or the mountain scenery, but rather a portly, cigar-smoking former profes sor who is due to take over the reins of the West German government when 87-year-old Konrad Adenauer reluctant ly steps down as Chancellor in October. In the popular magazines, Ludwii Erhard, the Econom ics Minister, Vice-Chancellor and Chancellor-Designate, is pictured romping with his grandchildren on the lake front lawns of his modern summer house at the Tegern see. But he also has spent much of his time when not called back to Bonn by af fairs of state in serious con ferences with political lead ers. Of all those who have beat en a path to his door, none has aroused as much interest and concern, both within the gov ernment and without, as Franz Josef Strauss, the fiery former defense minister. TT is no secret that the out- spoken Mr. Strauss is anx ious to make a political come back following his ouster from the cabinet last Decem ber in the aftermath of the arrest of the publisher and several staff members of the weekly news magazine, Dcr Spiegel. E'en after losing his De fense Ministry post, he was able to win a convincing re election last month as chair man of the Christian Social ist Union, the Bavarian af filiate of Chancellor Ade nauer's Christian Democratic Union. But he did not regain the national spotlight until three weeks ago, when he began leading the intra-party fight against West German accep tance of the limited nuclear test-ban treaty negotiated in Moscow by the United States. Britain, and the Soviet Union. nist East German regime gain diplomatic recognition, Mr. Strauss remained bitterly op posed to it. He has held tt this view, even though he did not raise any objections whila attending the cabinet meeting that officially decided last Friday to ratify the treaty. Many people here believe lhat Mr. Strauss seized on tha test-ban issue to project him self back onto the front pages. They also saw a desire to em barrass Foreign Minister Ger hard Schroeder, who strongly favored West German acces sion to the pact. If these were his aims, Mr. Strauss succeeded admirably in the first one, but failed completely on the second. The 52-year-old Mr. Schroeder -who holds the post that Mr. Strauss would like to have and who is considered a good bet to follow Dr. Erhard into the Chancellorship, a path Mr. Strauss once had mapped out for himself - emerged as the victor on the issue. rpHE fact remains, however, that the Bavarian leader demonstrated a good deal of party support before finally bowing to the view that West Germany had to agree to the treaty or risk standing before world opinion with such oth er non-signers as Communist China, North Korea, Albania, and France as its partners. What Mr. Strauss succeeded in doing, even while wagine a losing fight, was to resur rect his standing as a political power far more quickly than most observers thought pos sible eight months ago, when his national career appeared at an end following his ous ter from the cabinet. As a result, many peopla here are taking a hard look at the course Mr. Strauss might be taking. Some sea his nationalist position on tha test-ban treaty leading him into the Gaullist camp on other matters as well. But the French approach toward the United States and tha North Atlantic Treaty Or ganization has won little pop ular support in West -Germany, and what Mr. Strauss needs at this point is an issue with widespread appeal. Ha guessed wrong on opposition to the test-ban pact, but might not do so next time. Meanwhile, the former De fense Minister, buttressed by the 50 Bavarian deputies ha heads, has Dr. Erhard's ear if not his confidence. At the. 11 'ELL, you have a point " there. The Cape Canav eral dispatch that tells about the ultimate cost of getting io ine moon goes on to sav: "The Apollo effort is so widely spread that it can not be handled by a handful of companies. The space agency estimates lhat more than 20, 000 firms and 300,000 people eventually will be involved in the project." You will ask Won t that CREATE A LOT OF JOBS - and won't these jobs create a lot of prosperity? I1 RUE enough. But after it is all over . . . after we have created t h e jobs . . . after we have built the space ships . . . after we have got a man to the moon What will we have left? Where will we go from there? same time. Dr. Erhard, as Dt-crjiTE- . j Chancellor, is certain lo rely ESPITE repeated a s s u r- strongly on Mr. Schroeder s anccs from Washington advice on foreign affairs. Tha and London that the treaty in-fighting should be interest would not help the Commu-1 ing. CAFE VIU ' COGNAC U fell 4 . jj -jigr 1 "Don't 'Hit chari' me a fins unofficial ambassador America you aral"