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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1963)
MONDAY, "Everyone In southern OrMoa Published Daily except Saturday Dy MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North FITS, Ph, 17a.ll ""ROBERT W BUHL. Bditor HERB GREV AdvertUInf MUMtt GERALD T LATHAM, B",Mr URIC W ALLEN JR.. Mn; Editor EARL H ADAM9. City Editor HARRY CH1PMAN. Teleg SdlUrr RICHARD JEWKTT, iporu Ed tor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Idltoi DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mg Ainndependent Newepapei Entered ai econd elm matter m Medford Oregon, under Act of March 3, U7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 8r Mail In Adva.no. .,. Daily and Sunday 1 tmtltM Daily and Sunday moe 10.00 Dailv and Sunday 3 moa. 5.00 Sunday Only On year 15.00 Single Copy Mt.ilt.dl JO By Cainei And Motor Rout. Daily and Sunday t yar J 00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. I.7J Sunday Only 1 mo. 500 Carrier and Vndora Copy 100 OTriciirpTpeTVf City of ' qttlclal Paper ot Jsclismi Count; United Press International Jull Leaied Wirt O. P 1 Telephoto Newiploturee mMBEPTTOBlf" BUREAU QT! LOTIONS Advertising Rpreentativ: NELSON ROBERTS 4 ASSOCl- . mine, nidui In Hi York. Chl caao. Detroit. San rrancltco, Lol . AnselM. . Denver. Seattle. Portland MATIONAt "ItOIIAl Member California Nevipaper PubUihera Association Flight o' Time Medford .nd Jackson County History from tne ''let of The Mail Tribune. 10. 20, 30, 40 and 50 years aao., . 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 16. 1953 (Wednesday) Airman Richard Vera Living ston, Air Force MP at Ells worth Air base. S.D.. was an nounced the winner today of tne Mail Tribune's Bargain Days contest of the carrier with the most length of service. , More than 500 persons are ex pected to attend two state con ventions beginning Friday and Saturday in Medford.; U VEHS AGO Sept. 1. 1M t Thursday) Bunaway girls from an over land is main juverme prwicm k.A ...... From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudce Pot" column: "One of the rural Older Girls lownea vesterday. She was disgusted with the squeaking of the 'corn fed canaries' in her spouses new shoes." 30 YEARS AGO Sept. 16, 1933 (Saturday) County court rules no more food or money will be given auto transients. ' ' ' Hunters barred from CCC areas in forests. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 16. 1923 (Sunday) Six buildings at state peniten tiary gutted by fire. New run of steelhead starts in Rogue river. 50 YEARS AGO Sent. 16. 1913 (Tuesday) Ministers protest vulgarity or local street dancing. Home Telephone company re portedly loses S2.0M.85 monthly, What's Your I.Q.? Nina or tan correct li superior, seven or tight Is tictlUnt; tlvt r sis is food. 1. Name the aviator who flew the ".Spirit of St. Louis." . 2. What is tha largest carniv orous animal on earth today? : 3. When major sports events are televised, only one camera Is used; true or false? . 4. Name the former profes sional football player who was nicknamed "T h Galloping Ghost." : 5. Was the Irish Free State (Eric) neutral during World War U? ; 6. Victor Herbert was the composer of the famous "Merry yvinow vtaiiz;" true or false? : 7. A gross is twelve doion; how many is a great gross? 8. Can alien residents of the U. S. receive retirement bene' fits under Social Security? 9. Pliny the Elder was killed during the fall of what city? in. The birthstone for October is the ? Answers: 1. Charles A. Llnd hcrgh. 2. Kndiak Rear. 3. False. 4. "Red" Grange, a. Yes, . False. 7. 144 doicn. t. Yes. I. Pompeii. 10. Opal. Youngster Drowns In Lake Cour d'Alene COEUR D'ALENE. Idaho OlPl) - Scott Patlullo, , Spo kane, fell from a dock and drowned in Lake Coeur d'Alene Sunday. The accident occurred at a summer home 18 miles southwest of here. The Kootenai county sheriff's office said the child, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Patlullo of Spo kane, was Playing with several oth?i' pre-school age children when thetaccldent occurred. V-J-ASSOCIATION SEPTEMBER 1, 1963 The Goldwater Campaign The two-month, nation-wide talking tour Sen. Barry Goldwater (R.-Ariz.) is engaged in can hardly be viewed as other than a Presidential nomination-seeking campaign. Inasmuch as part of the American political mystique is that it's un wise to admit candidacy too early, Goldwater is making no announcements. One day (Sept. 2) he says he will decide by January. Another (Sept. 10) he says he'll give a yes or no "sometime when the primaries start in the spring." But nobody close to the charismatic Arizona senator has any doubt that he wants to be President or that he is anything but an unan nounced candidate for the G.O.P. nomination. For openers, he has reserved the whole 15th floor of the Mark Hopkins Hotel in San Fran cisco 51 rooms, including the Presidential suite for before and during the 1964 Republican convention. And he does not bobble, blush, or demurely demur if you he d do if he were President. GOLDWATER lists as an exclusive asset his seven years traveling the country as chair man of the Republican Senatorial Campaign committee. His million miles and thousands of speeches have given him a wide acquaintance. The senator is in the process of adding to that asset in criss-crossing the nation to make speeches. His journeys will take him into Ohio, Illinois, Oklahoma, California, New Jersey, New York, then back to California, Pennsylvania, Oregon, Texas, Massachusetts, and then back to New York. It is altogether characteristic of Goldwater that he should have accepted the invitation or po tential favorite sons Gov. James A. Rhodes of Ohio and Gov. William vania, for example to events. As he himself raised considerable sums for "men like Senators Javits, Case, Kuchel, and Cooper," and has sought money in New York City for Governor Rockefeller. WHETHER he hopes to cloak himself in the Mr. Republican mantle of the late Sen. Taft, or whether it is merely a reflection of his conservative mindset, there can be little doubt of the sincerity of Goldwater's party regularity. He already has pledged support, to any Republican Presidential nominee in 1964 as better for the country than "any New Frontiersman." "We Republicans ought not to be harassing each other," he says. "We have a common polit ical enemy, the Democrats, Let's fight them in stead of each other." These sentiments will be put to a test during the cross-country tour when he speaks at a Western Republican conference in Eugene, Ore., on Oct. 10. Governor Rockefeller Of New York, who has charged that the "radical fight" was trying to capture Goldwater, will ad dress the same group on the same day. Goldwater s tour is shocks. As a remarkable interview soon to be published by Congressional Quarterly will dis close the Arizona senator is not nearly so right as either his most moonstruck supporters or his most adamant critics would have him. From the use of-federal troops in domestic situations to water fluoridation, his attitudes may surprise and even confound both his followers and his foes. E.R.R. Footballs Color Line Another break in college football's color line is coming up this fall this time in the Atlantic Coast conference. Darryl Hill, a Negro, is due to start at wingback for the University of Maryland, Saturday, Sept. 21, in a home game with North Carolina State. No trouble is anticipated then or a week Inter when Maryland travels to Columbia, S.C., for a conference game with the University of South Carolina. Maryland coach Tom Nugent served notice some months ago that "Any team that plays us plays the best men we have." Hill will be the first Negro to compete in a major sport in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The breakthrough in the Atlantic Coast Con ference leaves in the all-white-player category only the Southeastern Conference, comprising 12 institutions in seven Southern states, and the Southwest Conference, comprising seven Texas schools plus the University of Arkansas. Neither oi mese conferences nas a written rule barring Negroes from their football teams, but on this there is a "gentlemen's agreement." CVEN in the Southeastern Conference, where resistance is high because of official atti tudes in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, change is inevitable. Southeastern Conference Commissioner Bernic Moore is quoted as predict ing that Negroes will be playing in the confer ence in four years. Kentucky and Tennessee are expected to be the first. Comptition with integrated teams is permit ted for all except a handful of the all-white teams. Georgia Tech's Board of Regents this year approved competition with integrated teams, even in Atlanta, and Tulanc has the same policy. College athletes in the South seem to be ahead of the public in the regation in snorts. It is recalled that even Mississippi State al lowed its basketball squad to compete in the racially-mixed N.C.A.A. basketball champion ships up North. To balk show-cause orders seek ing; to restrain them, the Mississippi State coach sent a stand-in team to the airport to accent sub- peneas while he spirited vine by other meajq. ask him point-blank what W. Scranton of Pennsyl speak at fund-raising has pointed out, he has i likely to produce some willingness to end seg his boya out of Stark- .jc.Js;. "I'm All Right Now This Time I've Changed My Name To Bo-Peep" . . Co Letters lo the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pGn name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right lo edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitled ior publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in iaci the contrary is often the case. Good Night To the Editor: The American police-stale is now under way, having been launched in the South against desperate gov ernors and individuals determ ined to maintain racial purity and honor. The "Ncgro-fi-cB-lion" of the nation is bv now of course far along, having be gun at first by Hie acceptance I of the Negro culture influence j jazz, ragtime, Ihe Charleston, Ihe Twist, etc.. and Hie fillhv noveJ-lhings which while moil j at first resisled, but succumbed : i "'is scnooi. ouu, u is cum in anrl which t remember were ! Plllsoiy to buy One, and it is forbidden us by our parents as immoral. Now Ihe Negro morals are accepted, the hlood is acceptable. Your off-bear of several generations will be ofl color and degenerate. The "hill-of-riuhls," heller called Ihe "bill-of-licrn.se" (The "Ten Commandments" of Ihe Jews was the law of the land), is used by this Catholic presi dent and decadent government, to bring to pass this racial merger, which they cannot or will not recognize as such. By forceably breakm? the- taboo against interracial fraterniza tion and equality of blacks a:id whites, this President will ac complish what, a Catholic re gime long ago accomplished in Mexico and in all other coun tries it dominated, with ohvinu.-. result: The destruction of the. white race. The end of the white man in America is not f-ir off. The evil influence of Negro carnality is only equalled hy the worst quality of Jcwcry, that is, selfish materialistic cunning The god here worshipped - ir respective of prclcnsioni is a trinity: hedonism, cpicuriani.-.m, and sophistry that is to .say, love of pleasure and profit. It i disquieting to feci oneself he:ng influenced to the cause of the Nazis. But what can a less than minor citizen do, even in pro test against atom bombs? If a Catholic president can n.-e fed eral Negro troops and dictator ial powers against protesting Southern whites, he can use force against protesting Protest ants, Jews, and other "heret ics," political and religious, and usher in a new "inquisition " The end is clearly visible, ami is soon to come. Since this is no longer to K- a "while man's a in," whose people no longer have pride in their race, this white man no longer wishes to live in it, Having never left progeny. he is now glad of it, and never intends lo. Having been bum ( an t our politicians realize into it, there is oi course no di.it Ihe average taxpayer is escape. Your black brothers ,K1W being taxed lo and be you may be equal lo. and eo-,Vond our limit? It's as sim Joy their delicacies: They are ; pie as this we just don't earn not his. lie will live piotej-t-', enough lo be able to pay more inch', because he must, and taxes! only so long as he must, to endura the sorrv spectacle. As Ihe black is opposite from the white, so is darkness the op posite from light. It is Evening. Good Night. Ralph McKinnis P.O. Hex X!l Ashland, (he. The Parents I'uv To Ihe Editor: Winn will par- enls stun navine tor their chil-1 drrn's "Free Education" offered and demanded by our govern- ment? After school clothes .nut sun plies are purchased, pare ts ;.ie expected to pay tor slill other items. For years, a focal - h! charged' from :'0 lo sin lor various students' hook lees. Siu dents were to receive m r rent of each book s cost it it was kept ill good roinlilion Many returns weir from si paid in, with the hooks m gin! condition. Students bought !xks that couldn't be refunded, lis mi-.e Ihey were otil-oui.ile. Whv should the (Indent huy them'' This year Ihe school has a maximum chaige of (in lot' en h MEDKORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON student's book fees. Why wasn't I his done before? It surely costs more this year than before. Where did this extra money go before? There is also the compulsory buying of a student body card. The reason given this compul sory purchase is to save the student admission to certain events. Hut what of Ihe students who can't attend these func- lions? They won't save enough money lo warrant paying $6 for a student body card, as Ihey already written into the stu dent's fees. Next come physical education lees, including a $1 towel fco. The student can't bring his own towel. Each pays for a towel that the school "keeps for rags" at the year's end. Somehow the towels students receive aren'l new ones. Where do they come from? Where do those dollars go" There i:; a S2 30 fe for a P.E. uniform liut. has already been j us.cd. Vvhy ec.-i'y y,,;u Jmuid they cost. K M) , Since P E. is a re- j qu.rnri subject for all students, Ihw is JO for each student. in i high school of over 400, ; ;;iis is a tremendous sum! This Hc refused lo have his name is not counuig the grade school . on tne w refus(,d to sign it, studenti who buy them Also, , savjng it was a bad billi tnen to it students don't pay P.E. fees. ,.ap tne cHmaXi rcfused l0 vcto the teacher tells him hell re-it sn jn that evasjve manner al ceive a failing grade in the ow(,d same to become a law. Sublet'' Am olaH Ihnneh hp is snout- Then periodicals SO cents to S1..V). if these are "important lo the , understanding of the subject," '. wny don t the schools provide ' tr.Tn? U h v can students do without mail they can afford tiiem? Fast, grade students pay '. rents for Ihe "Weekly Read er" when they can't even read! When these fees arc added up. they aren't favorable to the poorer family, or the larger lamily. if parents don't pay these fees, their children's names are i ported to humiliate them. Also ! students may receive detention ' time or have their grades with held until the fees are paid. , Is this free education? When I will the parents stop paying, and paying, and paying? t i Name on file) i Ea'4le Point, Ore. ' f'.in't Mfonl More To the Editor: The sixty mil lion dollar increase in taxes seems to stand a very good chance of being voted down. In retaliation we will face .uioihcr increase in property and n,Pr ,,V J3n't it time we protested? William IS. Hill Hill Queens dr. Medford. Discrimination To the Editor: In Ihe news we note that since President Ken- ilv took steps to slop Gov. 'W.ilhice's ulist ruction and three 'schools were integrated wilh a minimum of disturbance, il seems that litis phase of th Civil Rights basse! is well on Us way to a reality. Theio rotnams. however, the problem of integrating stores, lesf.tiir.iut.s and oilier public Places, it is my iiiwci si.inding that President Kennedy has a bill before Congress lo regul.itr ' (his Let il be hoped thai r-s j bill includes protection ior all mmoiily groups, so long, of course, the individual is clean, sober and well behaved. In .short, .in aim - discrimination l.iw tti.it mokes services m.tnda loiy regardless of nny racial or ! safeguard Ihe Inventor instead lehgtotts affiliations. j of exposing him to a lite ef men- Iheir is much more of this,ul loilure through apprehen-My itis, i iir.m.ilion gome en than is generally rcilurd so long as: have, anywhere, a minority I gioup or an individual hc is I Foreign News: Tito Acceptance; De Gaulle's Tight By PHIL. NEWSON UPl Foreign News Analyst Notes from the foreign news cables: Communist Middle-Way Having concluded a successful meeting with Khrushchev, Yugo slavia's Marshal Tito may be e x p e c ted to turn on the charm when he sees President Kennedy in W a s h i ngton next month. He wants economic c o o p e ration with the United States at least as much as with Russia. Yogoslavia badly needs western trade and assist ance and has been doing rela tively well out of her dealings with the West in recent years. American good will is impor tant to Yugoslavia's economic future and Tito can be expected to try to convince his American hosts that he can be a Com- ications ... denied services open to the pub. lie we do not have a free Ameri ca where equality reigns. f once had the privilege of witnessing the breaking down of such discriminatory barriers, and after the law was passed it was really surprising how smoothly the change-over work ed. Some people fear that Ihis would bring about a reversal of conditions where they would be treated as they have treated oth ers in the past. I do not share this fear, for it has been my ob servation and experience that each group, according to what sels them apart, be it religion, color, language or race, chooses to do business, enjoy recreation and in general associate wilh (heir own whenever possible, C. R. Burrill 8114 Mt Cherry st. Central Point, Ore. x The Answer To the Editor: Well, well, 1 see where nip M-onev D-r H-ell u,- changed courses jt?nin anrl .,. ,., ,mrir ,hp Rip Mnmt Cnnrs Now lellins we common scrubs not to vote against the income tax bill on (,, . mg oft as publicity is just what we want and he can dish out more in ten minutes than my two fingered peck and hunt sys tem can get out in ten days. Considering it from every an gle brings up a question: "Do queer chaps make politicians, or. does politics make queer chaps?" Know the answer? Claude M. Han 2860 Placer id. Sunny Valley, Ore. Inventors To the Editor: How do in vestors fare under the "free en terprise" system? In the first place, few inventions can be turned to financial profit wilh little capital. Generally the capi tal needed is large. Very often it is gigantic. The inventor wno owns the requisite capital to ex periment, perfect, and finally turn out the product of his geni us, does not exist; ai icasi, no. "to any alarming extent -and so is revealed one oi ine mosi distressful pages of capitalist history, full as that history is of distressful pages. The pace of the fate of 'he in ventor of machines "worth mil lions to society" was set, in this country, from an early date of its history by the fate imposed upon Eli Whilney. So valuable to the then Southern society the dominant portion of the country was the cotton gin which he invented that it was immediately prized at its (rue value, and as promptly seized and appropriated by the domi nant class without any returns The thorny path of legal pro- cediirc that Whitney was forced to enter upon onlv added to his trials. He himself tells of an n stance when Ihe whir of his ma chine, in full operation only a block away, could be heart dis tinctly in the very courthouse where he was endeavoring to assert his rights, and where de- fendants. lodge and lury. sink-1 mg the ostrich posture, affected; 0al ignorance ol tne all 'gefl infringement." Whitney died disappointed, brokenhearted, in povertv, while his Invention, true to Ihe "billions it was worth to society" made his dcspoilers affluent. What a fine example of the "blessings" of capitalism! The coming new social order will I sions that generally come true. l.vdia Burnham 814 Wamr st. Prescotl, Aril. munist and at the same time cooperate with the West. De Gaulle French security authorities will take no chances with Presi dent Charles de Gaulle's life when he makes a four - day speaking swing through south eastern France Sept. 25-29. They believe Secret Army Organiza tion (OAS) desperadoes, who who have failed in several previ ous attempts to kill him, may make an all-out try again. Secu rity precautions wilbe the sev erest yet seen. " Franco-German West Greman Foreign Minis ter Gerhard Schroeder visits Paris this week and diplomats expect some hard talking. The French are disappointed in re sults of the six - months - old French - German alliance and complain that every time there is a policy showdown the Bonn government tends to side with the United States rather than with France. Church Rift There is anxiety in the Vati can that the Greek Orthodox Church, which was one of the new major Christian groups thai failed to send observers to the first session of the Ecumemical Council last year, again will go unrepresented in St. Peter's Basilica when the second ses sion opens Sept 29. Pope Paul VI made an appeal last month for Christian reunion which was regarded as aimed especially at the Greek Orthodox. Greek Or thodox bishops are reported op posed to attendance. They will Strictly Personal By Sydney tcl Field Enterprises Inn. REMEMBERING NAMES Oscar Wilde once defined a gentleman as "one who is never unintentionally rude." 1 wonder how many men, and wo men, realize they are being u n inlcnfional Iv rude when Ihey ask: "You don't remem - b e r me. do you?" They mean It in a narri" kindly way, perhaps. Yet Ihey are always a little bit hurl when you have to confess you don't remember In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Last Friday was Ihe l:tlh a day traditional for "bad luck." Whence Friday's bad name? In countries of Anglo-Saxon derivation, the sixth day of the week is named for the goddess Froya. In the Romance 1 a n guages (French, Spanish, Ital ian) (he sixth day is named for Ihe corresponding Roman goddess Venus ( the French word for Friday is Vendrcdi). In the Scandinavian mythol ogy, Freya was the goddess of love and beauty. In the Roman mythology. Ve- i nus was the goddess of love and beauty. UfHY is that bad? " Well, if you read Ihe papers carefully, you must, concede that too much concentration on love and beauty has got a lol of people into had trouble. 1JESIDES- "Friday is considered the day when Adam was created, the , day when he was expelled from , nil,aHis., Ih riav i,' u ,:,, paradise, the day when he died. the day when Christ was cruci fied and Ihe day when the dead will rise for the last judgment. And Friday used lo he the day for execution of capital punishment, and is often called Hangman's Day. lyHAT about thirteen'' ' Everybody knows that sit ting down with 13 at dinner is bad business. In the Scandana vian mythology, 12 of the gods and goddesses were sitting at dinner when Loki, the god of strife and the spirit of evil, barged in and put a spell on Balder, the son of Odin and Froya, that resulted in his being chained to a rock with ten chains and condemned to stay there in his chains until the twilight of the gods appears. In Christian countries, the evil quality of thirteen is confirmed by the Lasl Supper of Christ and his twelve aposlles. THE Italians never use the numuer i:i tn tneir loi'enes In Paris, no house bears the number 13. Also ii Paris persons called QVATOR7.IE.MES ( Four teenths 1 are available for call in event that by some miscalcu lation it turns out that there are 13 guests at dinner Sailors, the world over, bul especially in the Euroix-an conn- tries, object to leaving port on the tsth of any month, esperial- if it happens lo he on a I'ri- day. If it is absolutely necessary lo leave on such a day. Ihe sail ors shiver in their boots until the voyage is completed, f sfii--&.il6ti' Hopes for not bend to Rome's claim of papal primacy Still Western-Minded Fears that the Philippines was aligning itself with neutralist In donesia at the expense of its Western alignment now appear to have been groundless. Both countries opposed establishment of the federation of Malaysia, Home of the Free (Travel Prohibited) By Arthur Hoppe These college kids who went to Cuba are raising a big fuss over getting their passports re voked. And I think the problem here is they don't realize this is a free counlrv. You see, Mr. Kennedy says we can't go to Cuba because Cuba isn t a free country like us. And he says if we go to Cuba tins win Be nacl tor our secur ity and foreign policy objec tives. Which, of course, aim at keeping our country free. So go ing lo Cuba, hc says, isn't good for us. Now it used to be that Red China was the only country that wasn't good for us to go to. But the State Department, as years went by, decided to add North Korea. And then North Vietnam. And then Albania. And now Cuba. In order to keep our coun try free. And you can certainly under- i. Ha.ris them. They are hurt, and you are embarrassed. Being one of thai vast and un happy number who not only have no memory for names, but forget faces just as easily, I have been tormented for years by Ihis question, or variations thereof. And further, being wholly incapable of pretending, I cannot cany off this social awkwardness with any kind of case. Those of us who meet pen pie several times anrl slill have no lecollniion nf Iheir irlenlllv (and no memory of the ineeling) arc pitiful crea tures whodeservc sympathy; instead, we are considered lo he haughty and aloof and self important. The most gracious persons I have mel are those who anti cipate such lapses of memory, and nccost you with the love ly phrase, "I'm Mis. Blank Itlank; we met at Ihe Cip hers' dinner." This charming gambit per mits you to counter graceful ly with, "Of course, 1 remem ber it very well." This im mediately creates an atmos phere of relaxed civility. W h e t h e r Ihis shocking lilankness of r e c o 1 I e c -(ion comes from a deep fear of people, or from self-absorb-(ion, or mere lack of atlcn livcness, it s consequences can he humiliating lo anyone who is at all in (lie public eye sensilvp people Inevitably feel thai he considers himself ton superior lo acknowledge their existence. This is, of course, nonsense. Many persons who give Ihe im pression of being self-assured are, in reality, painfully shy; ! ' i ,1 nd so freeze up when thev meet new people lhal the whole episode is blocked off from con sciousness. Al any rale, it is the finest : caused damage estimated at be point of politeness never to as- tween $8,000 to $10,000. sumo that a casual acquaint-! Four fire companies fought tha ance remembers who you are. j blaze, which started outside tha and to remove him from em-1 structure and damaged the four barrassment by giving him a i inch wood walls of an adjacent handle In swing on. Thank you. grain elevator. Feed inside tha friend. i warehouse also was damaged. local ;, M I REPUBLICAN CLUB V'- ' j , campaign sSf;r HEADQUARTERS UPmV Si"T, QK:3r,& imps "Hold up Coldnaler again, t like to see jyl Western Security which is supposed to be another anu -.uommunist nastion in Southeast Asio. But in recent weeks Filipino leaders have gone out oi their way to ex press their continuing ties with the United States and their con tinuing stake in the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization. SEATO always has been op. uuauu uy inuunesia. stand this. But has our State Department, I ask, thought things through? Don't be silly. Take, for example, South Vietnam. Americans go over there and get the idea we'ra giving $1.5 million a day to fur ther a corrupt dictators ship. They come home and say so. Does this help further our for eign policy objectives? Of course not. South Vietnam should certainly be added to tha list. And Latin America. Here we are trying to promote a Good Neighbor policy. And here are all of us Americans going down there getting drunk, spat on or expropriated. No sir. The only way to promote a Good Neigh, bor policy is never to drop in on your neighbors at all. So there's another score of countries that are bad for us to go to. As for Africa, you know how louchy things are there. And lo let a lot of us fool Americans wander around these new na tions shooting off our mouths . . "What about Europe?" you say. I agree. Not onlv do wo American tourists add to our gold drain, but our morality's involved. Is it really good for us Americans to visit a country like England? Where Cabinet members chase scantily clad girls around swimming pools? And if the State Department's going to let us go to France, it should al least stamp our pass, ports: "For Adults Only." But the country that worries me most is East Germany. Do you realize our Stale Depart ment still lets us Americans travel in East Germany? Which is such an awful dictatorship thai it's even got a high wall around it? To keep its oppressed citizens from traveling where they want to? Why, this wall which keeps East Germans from traveling where they want has become the very symbol of Ihe fact that East Germany isn't a free country! Like us. So I say our State Depart ment should get on its toes . . . under the slogan: "Today Cuba, Tomorrow the World!" And we can stop all this fuss about pass ports. Because we Americans won't need them. Meanwhile, I suggest these angry students just remember Ihis is a free country. Where one of our rights has always been to travel where we please. But to keep this a free country with the right to travel where we please, we naturally have to give up certain rights. Like traveling where we please. And it behooves all of us in these times of help Our Leaders preserve our precious freedoms. By giving them up. One by one. Or, as my friend Miss Amanda puts it: "Anybody who says this isn't a free country should be clapped in jail!" Newberg Warehouse Damaged by Fire NEWBERG, Ore. -(UPD-Fire al a Chehalam Valley Mills grain warehouse here Sunday still ran t decide which on I'd the nomination!" ,