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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1963)
SUNDAY, """"Everyone In Southern Oresoo published Daily txcept Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. s3Northjrjst.Ph7a-si4i " ROBERT W RUKL. Editor HERB CREV Advertiiliu Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Sporu Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Editoi pRlfMsnNCirculaUon Mgr An Independent Newapapel Intend tecond clui matter II Medford. Oregon under Act 01 March 3, 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance ,. Dally md Sunday-1 year $1 M Daily ind Sunday moa. 10 00 Dally and Sunday 3 mm 5 OU Sunday Only-One year 5 00 Single Copy (Mailed) 300 By Carrier And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year 21.00 Pally and Sunday 1 mo. l-ia Sunday Only I mo. w rarriir and Vendor! Copy 10c official Paper of City of Meorf ofIlclallperiDjJacionCounty United Preti International 9UI1 Leaaeo vme U P I Telephoto New!plcturei ATES Of'icel In New York. Chi cago. Detroit. San Francisco, Loi Angelei. SeatUe, Portland. Denver, NATION A I f DITOMAl Member Cilifornll Newipaper PubUiheri Aiioclitlon Flight o' Time Medford md Jackson County History from tne files of Tn. Mail TTribun. 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 yean ago. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 15, 1953 (Tneday) A 37-year-old Walla Walla, Wash., man was being ques tioned by state police today af ter he was caught in the act of burglarizing a safe at Haup ert Tractor and Equipment company last night. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Garndcr, 323 South Peach St., were named winners today of the oldest Bar gain Day receipt contest of a subscription to the Mail Trib une. 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 15, 1943 (Wednesday) Medford water board author izes purchase of $70,000 in war bonds. From Arthur Perry's 'Ye Smudge Pot" column: "A local .speedist used up his weekly gas oline quota Sunday and early to day was going strong on the ac cumulated momentum and flag rant disregard for the law of friction. 30 YEARS AGO Sept. 15. 1933 (Friday) Beer bottles wanted for to mato juice at canning kitchen. Ham and bacon selling on lo cal markets at 17Vi cents per pound. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 15. 1923 (Saturday) Elks lodge to celebrate 14th anniversary next week. Jack Dempsey retains heavy weight title by knocking out Louis Firpo. 50 YEARS AGO Sept. 15, 1913 (Monday) Butle Falls and Eagle Point Telephone company rate stand ardization approved. Attendance at city schools 1,217, up 35 over year ago. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or tin comet ll lupirior; icven or eight ii excellent) Hi or lix it good. 1. Is pure lead a relatively hard, or soft, metal? 2. Docs the month of Febru-j ary ever have five Sundays? 3. Does tactile sense refer lo the sense of tasle, sight, touch, hearing, or smell? 4. Correct the following, "If he would have come earlier, he would have been on time." 5. What docs the name Nova Scotia mean? 6. Who said, "There never was a good war or a bad peace"? 7. In describing members of the seal family, what are a male, a female, and a baby called respectively. 8. What have the following in common: John Singleton Cop ley, Benjamin West, Gilbert Stewart. 9. Is rice principally protein, fat, or carbohydrate? 10 What is the name for a field in which rice is grown? Answers: 1. Soft. 2. Yen. 3; Tourh. 4. "If he had come . . ." 6. New Scotland. 0. Benjamin Franklin. 7. Bull, cow, and pup. 8. All artists. 9. . Carbohydrate. 10. Paddy. loco Man Is found Guilty in City Court Jprrell Norman Kirklin, 37, of 620 South Fir St., was found guilty on disorderly conduct in AloHfnrH munlcinal court Fri day. He was fined 35 by Judge i Donald Denman Kirklin's charge was an out growth of en incident Aug. 31 at his resilience. The court confis cated n gun whirh Kirklin had in his hand ot the lime cf his arrest. 4 A- Vj-AISOCIATION SEPTEMBER IS. 1963 What Do Voters Want? A letter appearing tions column declares that tnere is no "tax re volt" in Oregon, in connection with the referra of the tax program to the Oct. 15 election. Instead, the writer maintains, it is specifically a revolt against the state income tax only. Another reader, who telephoned the other dav. said she viewed the a broadened tax base, specifically the sales tax, which would permit income and property tax relief. IT IS TRUE that these validity, representing that money has to be raised to keep government operating, but who object specifically to tne way it is being done. Neither, apparently, wants to cripple the state and education. Still another view, telephone call, is an objection to what some con sider waste of tax money ment, including the local school systems an objection to "frills" and unnecessary employees and expensive buildings and equipment. But if we are correct, many, many others who plan to vote against the tax measure really ARE "revolting" against taxes in general, against what they consider to be exhorbitant government and school spending, against the Legislature and Governor and to heck THE Capital Journal in Salem poses the prob lem : "If the voters reject the present bill, legislators aren't going to know what people want (even assuming that the people know themselves). Would this indicate that the vot ers want more of the local school burden shifted from a state income taxes to local property taxes? Would it be a mandate to hack away at the higher educational program by forcing up tuition and entrance requirements? Would it 'mean tnat a majority oi tne voters want a minion cut back or a $50 million one, and where? Or would it simply mean that the voters are angry at every tax collector in the land, and want to vent some spleen, without any idea -where such a major reduction might be made?" We strongly suspect that all these motiva tions are involved, in varying degrees, among aroused voters. And because of this, the legislature will have no idea what the people or a majority of them want. Thus what they might do is, at this writing, utterly unpredictable. So, in this mat ter, we repeat, with Hamlet, ". . . rather bear those ills we have than fly to others that we know not of." E.A. The Bar Exam Failures The Eugene Register-Guard, commenting on the fact that only 68.2 per cent of the University of Oregon law school graduates taking the recent State Bar examination a telling point.'' "Plainly," the R-G says, "there is a lack of coordination between those who teach (law) students and those who examine them. One group, a faculty, says a student is ready to prac tice law. Another group, the bar examiners, says he is not." And, the Guard adds, "the two sets of require ments ought to be coordinated. The present sys tem is plainly unfair, costly and cruel." THE fact is that the U of O law graduates did better, as a group, than those from other law schools. But, since both Board of Bar Examiners of Oregon, the discrepancy between the number of graduates taking and the number passing the bar examinations is even more shocking. Is the law school course too easy? Or is the bar exam too tough? We have no way of know ing. But we do know that, for a student to sweat out the long years of study, receive his diploma, and then fail to make the grade at the bar exami nation, is a personal tragedy of no small dimen sions. It is a waste of a talented human resource, and a waste of taxpayers' money, much of which is invested in the graduate's education. HTHERE has been some discussion in past years - that the bar examination is "rigged" so that only a certain percentage of those taking it can pass it, the idea being that the legal profession, which operates one of the tightest "unions" in existence, will not becoma overcrowded. We do not know, either, whether this is true or not, but if it is, it is unworthy of a respected profession. Clearly, if future lawyers are to be "screen ed," it should be done at the undergraduate level, rather than after completing successfully those long, hard years of study. It is a matter the Bar Association should re view, for in the present circumstances, the situa tion is little less than a public scandal. E.A. Hellgate or Hellsgate? The Oregon Geographic Names Board now has before it the question as to whether the feature on the Uogue river above Galicc is prop erly known as Hellgate (as it appears on most current maps) or Hellsgate (as it is known in! milcn popular Usage J. If any Mail Tribune readers are acquainted with the origin of the name, and of its popular usage over the yours, it would be most appreci ated if they would let us know. Should it be HellRate or Hellsgate? E.A. in today's Communica referral as a demand for two views have a certain those who acknowledge as expressed in another at all levels of govern with the consequences, managed to pass, makes the University and the are agencies of the state "It Not Practical There' No Assurance That It Wouldn't Also Save The Russians" Matter of Fact c New York Herald THE NEW AMERICAN RESPONSIBILITY BANGKOK, Thailand - If you ride the circuit of the countries living in the grim shadow of C o m m u n ist China; you are left with a vivid and decidedly disturbing i m pression. The i m p r e s s ion grows from In dia to Burma, from Burma to Laos, and from Aimp Laos to Thai land, that the new responsibility the U. S. has assumed in India is vastly bigger than most peo ple tnmiy suspect. Ostensibly, the U. S. govern ment is merely committed to give military aid to the Indian government. There is no treaty, there is no understanding going beyond tne aid agreement. But in Asian eyes, the aid agreement alone is quite enough to cast the mantle of American pro tection over India. , AS A matter of practical pol itics, therefore, the U. S. cannot afford to allow a re newed Chinese attack on India to go unpunished. Right there is the new American responsibility which must be discharged un less the U. S. government wants every Asian to be convinced that America is a tissue-paper tiger, just as Peking says. Judging from the current po sition in India, even the high est American policymakers have not yet looked squarely at this new responsibility which was assumed with such Galbraithian blitheness. The same mistake seems to have been made that was made in Laos. A great many thousand words have been written about the mis take in Laos without correctly identifying it. The Americans on the scene are blamed, yet they judged rightly. When there was no one in Laos but the Lao tians, the American-baked Lao tians defeated the Communist backed Laotians in every round of the contest. What was done in Laos would have succeeded if Laos had not been invaded. The real misjudgmcnt was in Washington, where it was as sumed that the majestic pres ence of President Eisenhower in the White House would be enough to deter any border crossing by North Vietnam. WHEN Laos was invaded, the U. S. government was there fore wholly unprepared to cope with the resulting mess. All it could do was try to localize the mess in Laos. But there will be no way on earth to localize the mess that can be expected if the brisk presence of President Kennedy in the White House is not enough to deter another Chinese invasion of India. As already reported in this space, the Chinese have made the most complete preparations for a further advance into In dian territory. A huge chunk o( India, the Northeast Frontier Agency, has been left without a soldier in it. And no visible preparations have been made to force the Chinese to pay a se rious price for a further ad vance. In these circumstances, one must pray that the U. S. govern ment is right in thinking, as it apparently docs think, that the Chinese advance will not take place after all. But it is at least Imprudent not to consider the consequences i( the Chinese merely grab the Northeast Frontier Agency and this new grab goes effectively unpun ished As the area is remote, moun- j tainous. and inhabited only by tribal people, the Indian gov- ernment seems to hope that the ! ioss, if it'occurs, can be shoved ... ... .....- . '!' 5. nig. mere win be a clamor in India that will be heard from one end of Asia to the other . ERE clamor will be the least consequences, moreover. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON By Joseph A I sop Tribune Syndicate In Burma, to begin with, the government's hesitant current movement down the road to wards alignment with Peking will be speeded to a rapid trot or even a gallop. In Laos, and even here in Thailand, every friend of the West will grow fainthearted, and the friends of Chinese Commun ism will be proportionally em boldened. Worst of all, the Chi nese Communists themselves and their satellites in North Viet Nam will also be enormously emboldened. Tne North Viet namese, for instance, have al ready broken the Geneva agree ment by leaving several thou sand troops in Laos. If further emboldened, they are likely to send in enough additional troops to roll up Laos like a carpet. In plain truth, another Chin ese attack on India will now have the effect, because of the new American responsibility, of a general assault on the entire American and Western position in Asia. That is surely some thing to think about, as the campaigning season approaches on the Indian frontier even if the odds against such an attack are every bit as high as the U.S. policy-makers reportedly be lieve. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS From Washington: Over-riding solid Republican opposition, the House ways and means committee approves an $11 BILLION tax cut-the big gest tax cut in the nation's history. Republican members lined up solidly against the measure after the committee rejected by a one-vote margin a GOP at tempt to make the second stage of the tax cut that applying to ISMS incomes contingent up on President Kennedy HOLD ING FEDERAL SPENDING to specified levels. qiHAT is to say: - The Republican members of the committee insisted that if we are going to CUT TAXES we must CUT SPENDING also. rpHE position of the Republican members of the powerful House ways and means commit tee is based upon a statement issued the other day by Former President Eisenhower, in which he said: "Various members of Cong ress have asked my views on the proposed legislation to re duce taxes this year. These are my views: "A tax cut is highly desirable but only if the persistent and frightening increase in federal expenditure is halted in its tracks. It is my position that any tax cut without firm HALT ING of expenditure increases is unwise, undesirable and certain to damage our currency and the nation. "Before a tax cut can he justified, therefore, 1 believe there should be explicit execu-1 tive of EXPENDITURE control This assurance should be that until a budgetary surolus has I been achieved, future annual ex penditures will not be permitted to rise above the already inflat ed level for this fiscal year of approximately $98 BILLiON, U'HAT Ike is saying is this: Jit I-A tllVAC flt-M Tfl'l tII-Mf Thev n'uchl In h. r:'J I They are taking so much out of the pockets of the people that , " 1 ,u"mr",us" L " - r 'm-?Jvp,' ,0. , "., R' ' j If we cut taxes and GO ON i M't .MJ Nii AS RECKLESSLY AS EVER, we'll wind up broke T WAT'S about the size of Ike's argument. To those of us who pay the taxes, it sounds like good com mon sense. GREAT IDEAS... 1 1963, THE WAY TO PEACE Dear Dr. Adler: Is world peace possible, or is it con trary to human nature? For the past thousands of years man has spent his time kill ing off his fellow man. Why has he not been able to live in peace with his fellow man? Would world peace really be possible? Mrs. Marjorie Blose 525 Winchester Rd. Akron 13, Ohio Dear Mrs. Blose: Thomas Hobbes, writing in the 16th cen tury, provided an illuminating approach to the problem of war and peace. Wherever there is an organized political community, with sufficient power and auth ority to maintain law and order, he said, there you have peace. Where there is no such com munity, you have war, whether actual fighting is going on or not. War, Hobbes said, consists in the disposition to take up arms whenever men think it neces sary to secure certain ends. War in this sense existed in the state of nature, before civil so ciety existed, in the tooth-and-claw struggle for survival and Editorial Comment BUT YACHTLESS Teen-age boys and girls look upon careers in medicine, law, science and engineering as most -exciting, a recent survey in dicates. Scholastic Magazine recently surveyed more than 4,400 youths in high schools throughout the nation. Participants were asked to register reactions to various career possibilities, rating them exciting, moderately interesting or dull. We wouldn't argue against any of the four suggested. For one thing, different people find excitement in different things. And all four offer considerable opportunity for service, as well as monetary reward. But we believe at least three other careers ought to be right at the top of the list. They offer almost unlimited opportunity for worthwhile service, for men and women of talent and dedication who aren't intent upon acquir ing a couple of yachts. We refer to journalism, education and the ministry, three of society's most important callings. Capital Journal, Salem. EDUCATION AND ECONOMY Oregon is going to be inundat ed with people within this dec ade. Every sign points to it. What kind of work will await these people, and what kind of incomes they will make and pay taxes on, will depend to a very large extent upon what kind of an education system we have when they arrive. If we have a top-notch one, progressive industries which need top-notch graduates in abundance will be here to util ize them. If we have a mediocre system, industries will stay where they are and attract our fewer top graduates to other states. Education makes up one-third of the 1963-65 Oregon state bud get, and it will be set back for a decade if the state income tax bill is rejected. It doesn't seem possible that Oregonians could even consider such short-sighted action. Capital Press, Salem. 03 mi Test Ban Treaty Doubts Finally Resolved ??'E.D . . The danger in is not as l":! T. ' - - T V...!.UI VT " Those who write or sneak or vote on the nuclear test ban treaty feel a certain sense of -J " 1 h e 1 p 1 essncss , iiieir mail 'these davs "I from listeners, I readers a n A c o n s tituents. Most informed proponents and opponents o f the treaty are Sfvrrid doubts about ridden with their stand, he. usc lhal. is 'hc na,ure ?f lhis exercise in hope, so clouded with uncertainties. But nearly all the letters from citizens, iew of whom, one gathers, can have read the testimony with care, reflect no doubts at all the treaty is a Russian trap, or, conversely, tne treaty is un ir reversible step toward peace j ana friendship, an end to the '"utt", " more nueiy 10 in cold war and sanity at long last !crpase them for a time, be- of man. Would that things were so sirnne.' II thev werp. this treaty would not represent an net of t.t . nn ih r,n : jof ... Amrican leadership ii ' took great courage for the Pres- iricnt t0 issue an ultimatum to the Soviet Union over Cuba last year, and, though it represents center. the reverse side of the coin ofj But the more one plows cold war, this treaty has re-, through the testimony and pon quired courage of much thejders its meaning, the more one same order, even though the test realizes that while these objec of It is less immediately in pros-! tions are possibilities and prob pect. I abilities, there are more cer- From the Great Books By Mortimer J. Adler Publisher! Newspaper Syndicate domination between individuals. It also exists now in the re lations between nations, which always hold in reserve the ca pacity of making war on one another. Whether they are en. gaged in military action or not, they are in a state of war at all times. If Hobbcs's analysis is cor rect, then it would seem that world peace requires an orderly, non-violent system of settling disputes between nations, on the model of the arrangement that prevails for the settling of disputes between individuals within each nation. "Civil so. ciety," John Locke said, "is a state of peace amongst those who are of it, from whom the state of war is excluded by the umpirage which they have pro. vided in their legislation for the ending of all differences that may arise amongst any of them." A worl d without war then would be one in which arm ed force is ruled out as a meth od of settling international con flicts, and recourse is had to alternative means of adjust ment negotiation, arbitra. tion, legislation, and law courts In our time, the nations still reserve the right to make war on one another. The great now. ers are engaged in an intensive race to attain military super iority. Yet if they ever use the arms they have amassed, it will probably mean their mutual de struction in a thermonuclear in ferno. The necessity of establishing a peaceful world order is clear. But the power struggle between the Democratic and Commu nistic countries is so intense, and their ideas of what justice consists in so opposes, that it seems impossible that any viable agreement can be made between them. Can permanent world peace be established, when the basic conflicts have been unresolved? It is the contention of one fam ous student in this field, Wal ter Millis, not only that it can be done, but that this is the only practicable way it can be done. We cannot do away with the struggle between the con tending political systems, says Millis, but we can demilitarize the conflict, and provide the means for it to be conducted peacefully. Demilitarization of the power struggle would re quire a basic agreement to for swear war as an instrument of national policy, implemented by a disarmament agreement lim iting each nation to the force necessary to keep peace within its borders, and by an inter national agency to supervise dis armament and safeguard world peace. Millis contends that such a compact would set up the at mosphere in which the various procedures and institutions to handle power disputes could be constructed. To wait until the contending power blocs have at tained similar social systems or until a fully constituted world government has been establish ed would be impracticable and disastrous. Millis assumes that the competing systems would still battle for supermacy on the various outstanding issues, but not by organized international warfare. Millis is proposing something midway between HnhrWs stat of nature and civil society. Vio lence would still occur in the plausible as the elernallv sanr. uine among us appear to think the danger is not something ex clusively conjured up in the passionate anti-Russian recess es of Dr. Edward Teller's com plicated mind. There IS a pos sibility, however remote, that the Soviet Union might find, in advance of this country, a work able anti-missile system. There IS a real possibility that many of our best weapons laboratory people will drift away, that our own missiles in their silos will deteriorate in reliability as the years pass without atmospheric testing. There is a strong pos sibility that for some time to come, at least, the treaty will NOT slow down the arms race. There is a strong possibility that the treaty will NOT de crease the military tensions be- ,wcpn ,nis country and Russia. ii is wiihi miliary plan ners DON'T know about the cncm' tn.a'. most . persistently """its anu 5U5. P.1"5' J""? is ""ng pos. sibihty that the treaty will fur thcr relax the alertness of our European allies and fasten the i TO mhamsm even more ! thoroughly on its present dead United Nations' Role Continues to Widen; Critics Still Vocal By RICHARD SPONG The United Nations, as Sec retary Gen. U Thant once re marked, is a "large and con spicuous figure at which things can be thrown with impunity." The world forum is an open target for the isolationists of every country. Often as not it is also being pelted simultane ously by those who thing it should be doing something it is incapable of. The lastest voice to come to the defense of the United Na tions is that of "The Economist" of London. The British press has been extremely critical of the U. N. mission in Yemen. For example Viscount Camrose's "Daily Telegraph" snappishly commented recently: "If U Thant would next turn his at tention to finding out what the unfortunate people of Yemen want, he could earn back some forfeited respect." On the same day "The Guardian," whose po litical complexion is consider ably more rubescent, also was berating the U. N. observer team for failing to end the fighting in Yemen. But as "The Economist" pointed out, that U. N. mission, whose 200 members were sup plied mainly by Canada and "warless world" which Millis envisages, but in the form of revolutions, popular demonstra tions, and guerrilla warfare the acts of small groups not the world - destructive con flicts of the nations. Such vio lence would be limited by gen eral disarmament and demili tarization, and offset by "a slowly growing corpus of law and pacified customs," leading to a world government in the future. Yon can win a 54-volume set of the Great Books of the Western World by writing a letter, not to exceed 150 words, incorporating a ques tion of general interest for Dr. Adler to consider for inclus ion in this column. Each week he will select as first prize winners the writers of the best letters. He will use ONE of these letters as a basis for a future column and will an swer it in terms of the intel lectual heritage of the Great Books 443 works by 74 au thors, spanning 30 centuries of thought. Address the let ters to Dr. Mortimer J. Adler, in care of this news paper. JEPARTMENT or ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA rQ,-A,,' .... . "Comrade, if I were a religious man, I'd say a nice little prayer mr uovernor Wallace: tain advantages on the other side of the argument. One, of course, would be the sham dim inution in the radioactive dust settling upon the earth. Another ,,u i,. ,u. i , . WOUld be the fntrlv rpr am slowing down of the spread of wnrkshlp nnp enr uiunm i other countries, which has al wavs spemerl In me the mnct pregnant danger of all more dangerous man any iiKeunooa ot surprise attack or war bv ac- cident. We have Bone thrnuah pni- snrlps nf "near rllnhnriQ,, h- fore-after the "spirit of Ge-1 npvn" and nf nr Ih. "nnl .(I Camn David" . hn eh 7A n i J- T... 7, j know that we suffered much n,r9 S1IA m A nitl'fiirv mca ac n i --.--. j "" -? result). But in the political 'mix" Ihflt is nrftHllrino tho nr.. sent detente there is an addi tional and vitally different in gredient. in tne present case. Mr. Khrushchev's nnliliral mnliva. tions are not solely perhaps j .;: .: ' -. . i" ed with his western front. They are surely concerned with Chi- na This rnnsiHpralinn has nnvar not even importantly connect ....... ..v.. ( before been present in anything , like its current oronnrtinns. His 1 China problem is, pre-eminent-1 sees and this is what he is seiz ly, the problem he must get un-; ing upon, and the Senate is der control before he does any- j surelv right to give him the ben thing else; and if the Russians ; efit of the doubt for this rare rlrt ahrrtffalp this trpntv it ic wacinn highly unlikely that they will do so before Khrushchev has won the widespread and absolutely Yugoslavia, was sent to Yemen early in July solely to verify the "disengagement" from the civil war that Egypt and Saudi Arabia had agreed to carry out. And the journal comments: "It is ... an odd reaction to blame the observers for failing to ac celerate it (disengagement); there was never any question of their being in a position to force either party's hand." In its scant 18 years of ex istance, the United Nations has developed, by a process of ad ventitious growth, a great many more functions than its founders could have contemplated. It has never become the sort of world parliament that some of its critics feared it might. Its orig inal function of world forum meeting - place, sounding-board, tension - easer, whatever image one likes remains its essent ial one. But its corridors and lounges and committee rooms have proved at least as useful as its rostrum. Xcxing world prob lems, such as the Soviet block ade of Berlin lifted in May 1949 have been solved in informal talks at U. N. headquarters. Aside from its special func tions performed by pendant agencies like the World Health Organization and its Education al, Scientific, and Cultural Or ganizationand these continue to proliferate the United Na tions constantly takes on more functions. It has been the po liceman in Palestine ever since the state of Israel was born. For the Arab refugees it plays also the role of substitute par ent. In a major crisis like that of the Congo the United Nations has actually assumed the role. of law enforcer, and this has created much of its financial sickness. Less dramatic, less controversial, and probab ly more effective is the work of its "in the field" teams as in North Borneo and Sarawak and in Yemen. The transcendental function of peace-maker the United Nations may never fulfill certainly not until individual states are willing to yield a measure of national sovereignty. But among other things, Turtle Bay re mains a useful place for for eign ministers of major powers to meet without protocol. Soma sort of such sub-summitry ap pears to be in tne making for the General Assembly regular session opening on Tuesday. Editorial Research Reports. fundamental nuarrel wiih rhino within the world of Communists. He knows that fought on purely ideological, Marxist - Leninist' Cfounds ho mini l. ii.:. " . iwc una battle. As one authority puts it, 1.7. u"e auwority pu s it I "14. k., ' r w. b.w ' ho Z sT ! 1 ., 1 lu sl,,a world.' The only ground on which he can fight this war with China is the "peace" ground. It is the Communists, inspired from Moscow, after all, who have been parading, year after vear, all over the world, in their "ban the bomb" demonstrations. He MUST d ivc Ed ,h" ........... ., u " l" ",,st ? 0'? l? sruP " wt- vim amance, out now more ur- gently to beat back the Chinese ... ... innuencc around the wor d. He rannm irct rt,i- man we can. It is. for now, totally to his interest that Chi nese acquisition of a nuclear arsenal be prevented, as it is to our interest. What is happening, therefore is not just another Camp David "ul Jul nnomer Lamp uavia diversion. The test ban treaty has emerged at the moment of, KAnn... -r nllll uvmusi' ui, a rare conea tenation of world events. This is uhsi ih. o,..;,i.., ,v.ii.. u. occasion. (Dlttrihulrd 19R3 by thr Hall Syndicate. Inc (AH Rights Reserved)