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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1963)
4 A- SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. .MEDFORD, ORECON Everyone In Southern Oregon R.d Tfta MiU Tribune" tubllihed Dally except'Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 13 North Fir St.. PhJTi-oiy. t STioi-hTuf RnHL. Editor HERB GREY Advermlnf Mander GERALD T LATHAM. Bua MB hic W ALLEN JR.. Mn. Editor SlCHARD JBWETT. Spo'rt. Editor OLIVE STAHLHta womrii m DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mgr . " i i..K.ni NewBDanel Intered aa tecond claai matter it Ueoiora. urcauii March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Daily and Sunday-1 year 111 M n.ni and Sunday moa 10 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 moa Sunday Only One year ci.ai. rimv (Mailed! By Carrier And Motor ', Dally and Sunday 1 year 2 00 rally and Sunday 1 mo Sunday Only 1 mo. Carrier alidyendon JCopy 10c Official Paper of City of Ued'nrd Official Paper ojJljionCouniy " United Preu International yull Leased Wire O P i Telepholo Nejwsplcturea oTSrcSKtToSs ATES Of'lcea In New York. Chi cago. Detroit, San Francisco Loi Anaelea. Seattle, Portland Denver. sou 13 oo 100 NEWSPAPlt Vj-ASSOCIAIION NATIONAL EDITORIAL lASKpCtrATlaM zj j j Member California Newspaper Publlahera Aiaociatlon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from fn files of The Mali I Tribun. 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 yean) ago. Today & Tomorrow By Walter Lippmann (PI l!l:l. The Wa-hincton Post 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 22. 1953 (Tuesday) A new home on Old Military rd. was destroyed by fire yester- Enrollment in Medford schools Is up 2.7 per cent over this time last year; 4,126 pupils have enrolled. 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 22. 1943 (Wednesday) City sells lots for construction nf It nnw houses. Prnm Arthur Perry's "Ye SmiiHoe Pot" column: "The fair eov arm acain wearing Drndl skirts. As spelled, it looks like a Ukrainian village me nus sians forgot to retake." 30 YEARS AGO Srnl. 22. 1933 (Friday) Oregon football team weaken ed by absence or Bin Bowerman of Medford, great field general. Col. F. F. TouVelle, Jack sonville, heads group to probe NBA complaints in city. 40 YEARS AGO Sept. 22, 1923 (Saturday) Pear carload shipments for season pass 1,500 mark. High school bond election un der way. 50 YEARS AGO Sept. 22, 1913 (Monday) New York Giants, Chicago White Sox to play exhibition here. Two men fined for gambling In pool hall. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or tan corner Is superior; seven or eight Is eicellenr; five or sik is good. 1. The King of the Hellenes Is the King ol which country: 2. Who was the author of the "Fourteen Points"? 3. Do vertebrates, or Inverte brates, have a backbone? 4. Name the Director of the C.I.A. (Central Intelligence Agency). i 5. Complete the title of the John Fox novel, "The Little Shepherd of ," 6. Which Is the lighter gas, hydrogen or helium? 7. A sampan is a cooking utensil: true or false? 8. What famous surrender oc curred at Appomatox, Va.? 9. A cubic foot of Ice is heav ier, lighter than, or weighs the same as, a cubic foot of water? 10. Is a cassowary a cooking utensil, a bird, a priest's robe, or a prophetess? Answers: I. Greece. 2. Presi dent Woodrow Wilson. 3. Verte brates. 4. John Mi-Cone. S. "Kingdom Come". 6. Hydrogen. 7. Kalse (Chinese vessel). 8. General Lee's surrender to General Grant. 9. Lighter. 10. A bird. Why aYes" Vote By ARTHUR S. LEMMING President of the University of Oregon I believe that a substantial majority of the voters of Oregon will vote "Yes" on Ballot Meas ure No. 1 on October 15. Here are my reasons: 1. Those who vole "yes" on October 15 will be voting against an increase in property taxes. There is no question but that a rejection of the tax program approved by the Legislature at its last session will sooner or later make it neces sary for the Legislature to reduce basic school support. Voters in local school districts are not going to permit their children to receive an in ferior education in our public elementary and secondary schools. Therefore they would vote to replace basic school support revenues with rev enues from increased property taxes. The prop erty owner is already carrying a disproportionate share of the tax burden. Voters do not want to add to that burden. They are concerned espe cially about adding to the tax burdens of our senior citizens who own their own homes. There fore, I believe that in order to avoid the necessity of increasing property taxes many of our iellow citizens will vote to approve the Legislature's tax program. 2. Those who vote "yes" on October 15 will be voting for a program that will in the long run reduce the number of persons on our welfare rolls. The Legislature, acting on the recommenda tion of Governor Hatfield, has provided for a program of rehabilitation in the welfare field. This is the only way to cut down the number of persons on welfare rolls. Rejection of the Legis lature's tax program would throw a roadblock in the way of this forward-looking program. 3. Those who vote "yes" on October 15 will be voting against the imposition of arbitrary en rollment ceilings in our public colleges and universities. The Board of Higher Education hag made it clear that it is going to maintain quality in our public colleges and universities. It has stated that if the Legislatures tax program is defeated it believes it will be necessary to limit enrollment in 15)M-ho to the l!Jh,i-fa4 levels thus denying admission to about three thousand students who otherwise would be admitted. This means that1 some C students would be denied admission. Our State and our Nation will find it impossible to solve their manpower problems if we do not give the C student the opportunity of achieving his highest potential. 4. Those who vnle "van" on Orfohir IS will! '"at far, but Im opposed to b,- . r r in i oc I ,ne theory. I'd like to see some e voting against an increase of from 30 to 35!olner suggestions made in the per cent in tuition charges at our public colleges whole field." Like every other and universities. Again the Board of Higher Education has made it clear that, in order to maintain quality, it will be necessary to increase tuition sharply, if the Legislature's tax program is defeated. I recognize that in the years that lie just ahead it may be necessary for the Board of Higher Educa tion to make slight increases in tuition in order, for example, to enable us to compete successfully for superior teachers. An increase of from ;.0 to 'iio per cent in tuition, however, would destroy the foundation on which higher education rests. It would deny admission to our public colleges and universities to highly qualified students be cause they did not have the necessary funds. This would be unfair to them. It would also, how ever, be unfair to the Nation. We need their high est potential. And yet failure to approve the Leg islature's program would make such action neces sary it those who do attend our colleges and uni "Man, That Looks Like A Real Twister" "'' I.,. I . Mr'-.tma- .... .. GREAT IDEAS... iUa Afoot Rnnlrc I I Will l II 6 Ulvlll vvvnv By Mortimer J. Adler (O 1363. Publishers Newapaper Syndicate Matter of Fact bv joh ai,op c New Vnrk Herald Trlhune Svnntrate HAVE MORAL VALUES DECAYED? Dear Dr. Adler: We read much in our daily press of the decay of moral values. Was there such a decay in the cen turies before ours, and what was done to correct or im prove this situation? Albert Dc Causemackcr 2S Fifth Ave.. Hawthorne, N. J. ment although he avowed that the gifts did not influence his decisions. Elections in England were aj costly and corrupt business wen into the 19th century. The votes of the electorate were bought and sold openly. The average cost of a seat in Parliament in 1812 was 5000 pounds. And a few years earlier in a hotly con tested contest, the total costs of the three candidates amounted to 250,000 pounds. As for the United States, the rapid development of the na tional economy in that 19th cen tury was expedited by bribes of various sorts in high places. n THE EVOLUTION OF GOLDWATER The peculiar genius of Ameri can politics, which is to draw candidates away from extreme positions, is now working on Senator Goldwater. Like every other man who has ever taken him s e 1 f seriously as a Presiden- Honttal ranHi. 4 date, the sena- Liniimann tor is now en gaged in remodeling his ideas, in moving away from the far right and toward the more moderate center. A striking example of this re treat from the extreme is his Dear Mr. De Causemacker: Fred J. Cook recently wrote an expose of our present moral state, entitled. "The Corrupt So ciety: A Journalist's Guide to ( These took the form of money, the Protit t-tnic. tie cuea j shares of stocks and bonds, or shocking instances of dishones-1 free railroad tickets for co-oper-ty and corruption in business, j atjVe legislators. Politicians in politics, the judiciary, the no- turn rewarded supporters with lice, and television as examples contracts for public works and of a prevailing moral pattern, j services, soft public jobs, , or which he ascribes to the profit desired legislative action, motive. He concludes that this Possibly venality and dishon country may be approaching esty are more widely acceptable j the moral level oi aniceni car- now than in the past, as Mr. he is not going to ask for the j thagc, where, according to the j Cook maintains. It is dubious, repeal of the graduated income j historian Polybius, "nothing however, that they are more tax. He is not going to ask for j which results in profit is re-1 widely practiced now than in the repeal of Social Security. I garded as disgraceful." the good old days, and that pres- He is not going to oust Castro j Apparently, then, moral cor-1 ent day men are more suscep by sending American troops to ruptjon am Venality are noth- tible to corruption than their invade Cuba ling ing the racial question to the separate stales, somehow he is not going to be in favor of leaving it to Governor Wallace. e HE is doomed to suffer this evolution as the nominating convention draws nearer. It is wrong, but it is going to hap pen. He says it is tne auiy oi the Republican Party to cease to be "Little Sir Echo" to the Democrats. The party should offer the country a clear choice lax. tie sun Deiieves, as ne did, ;i c-s-iicm h inHivi. in 1960, that "the graduated ! j0iicm ' Mnrnnvnr it is had politics. The party must differ- And before long we shall see and taking of bribes are not a that while he believes in leav- peculiarity of our business civili- new. Certainly the giving j forebears, who lived in simpler zation. The Old Testament fre quently inveighs against bribe taking judges, who "justify the wicked" and condemn the inno cent for the sake of cash re wards. Even the sons of the prophet Samuel "turned aside after lucre, and took bribes, and perverted judgments." It is evi dent that money talked in the courts of Israel too, despite the firm precepts laid down against taking bribes. Wuf 'h 8;aduated incom;i between right and wrong, good I motive also occurred in ancient Greece. The public officials of income tax is a confiscatory tax" and that we should "abolish the graduated fea tures of our tax laws" (the big ger the income the higher the rate of taxation), "and the sooner we get at the job, the oettcr. But now in I:t he is telling the editors of U.S. News & World Report that "I won't go politician who has to handle a hot potato, Senator Goldwater as a candidate would like to have the tax code rcstudied by an assembly of "knowledge able" people. cntiate itself distinctly and sharply from the Democrats for there is, he fondly believes, a great majority in the country which is now divided between the two parties. This great ma jority will vote Republican if Sparta are pictured as corrupt and venal in the writings of He rodotus and Thucydidcs. Aris totle ascribed their corruption to the fact that Spartan magis trates were chosen from the whole people, and hence often included "very poor men, who being badly off, are open to times. You 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 question of general interest for Dr. Adler to consider for inclusion in this column. Each week he will select as first prize win ners the writers of the three 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 Bonks 413 works by 74 authors, spanning 30 centuries of thought. Address the letters to Dr. Mortimer .1. Adler, in care of this newspaper. IJETWEEN abolishing t h e " graduated income tax and studying it, there is all the dif ference between a radical and an extremely cautious moder ate. The effects of this suction toward the center arp breaking basis out all over the original ex tremist Goldwater views. Thus he has declared himself op posed to all federal programs in the field of social welfare, education, public power, agri culture, public housing and urban renewal. Rut now it ap-; pears the welfare stale is to be repealed, but only very slowly. This fudging process' is char- J acteristic of serious candidates for election. I say serious can the choice is clear and bribes." However, he noted that absolute. many members of the Spartan Yet, we know that when the council of elders, which was election comes, tne choice win not be clear and absolute. Even if Senator Goldwater is nomi nated, the Eisenhower Republi cans will tie him to a platform which rejects the extreme posi tions of the earlier Goldwater. Whv? Because Senator Gold- water is wrong about the funda-! mental facts. The great major-1 ity of Americans are not on the I extremes, but in the center, ! and that is why every serious candidate must adapt himself to the moderation of the center. I This peculiar condition is the of the genius of the American political system. It forces the people into a consen sus even though they are (ii cided. I would say that this is the inner mechanism which has enabled the American na tion to do what has not been done elsewhere at any time to preserve personal liberty under Democratic government on a continental scale. There, was one terrible exception! when the svstem broke down : composed of noblemen, also took bribes. And Thucydidcs records that the Spartan gen erals and admirals took bribes to betray the interests of their own country. Aristotle held that covetous ness and public service do not go together, and advised that communities should take the profit out of public office. To insure that public funds be handled honestly, he advised that "the transfer of the revenue should be made at a general as sembly of the citizens, and the duplicates of the accounts de posited with various commu nity groups. Moreover, he said, special honors should be be stowed on conspicuously incor tuptible officeholders. To come closer to our own day and tradition, jury tamper ing was a common practice in England under the Tudors. A high British churchman once noted to Cardinal Wolsey that it would have been easy to bribe a London jury of their day to convict Abel of having killed DOCTOR NAMED SALEM (UPI)-Dr. Carl Kos- lol of Baker has been named to the Oregon Board of Medical Examiners by Gov. Mark Hat field. He r e p 1 a c e s Dr. Max Hemingway of Bend, who resigned. IN THE GIA LONG PALACE SAIGON In the Gia Long palace, President Ngo Dinh Diem's brother, the all-power ful State coun cillor, Ngo Dinh Nhu, inhabits a long, high room full of books and mementoes, with a view over the gar dens. It used to be an interest ing, and even on occasion an encouraging, place to spend an hour or two in talk. Whatever his other failings, Ngo Dinh Nhu is an exceedingly intelligent man with an original turn of mind. Here, for instance, this reporter first heard about the strategic hamlet program, which gives the best hope of winning the civil war against the Com munists. In large measure, the idea was Nhu's. But go today to this nerve center of President Diem's gov ernment, and you will come away with a very different im pression. Something of the at mosphere was suggested by the last report in this space, de scribing the French intrigue to defeat American policy in Viet Nam quite largely in Ngo Dinh Nhu s own words. Yet even this strange story, with all its mc- phitic overtones, docs not con vey the full ripe flavor. T IKE a good many other clev- cr men, Nhu has never been without vanity. It goes beyond normal vanity, huwever, when a man at one moment speaks of himself as the "unique spine" of the anti-Communist struggle in Viet Nam; at the next mo ment remarks that he is "the only serious modern theorist of guerrilla war,' and then adds: "Even if you Americans pull out," I will still win the war here "at the head of the great guerrilla movement which I have prepared." It goes beyond normal vanity, too, when a man proclaims that "no one in this country has any ideas except me my brother only knows how to say 'no' and no one else knows anything at all." Yet this is how Ngo Dinh Nhu now talks. TvTOR is that all. He bitterly declares that he is "the lightning rod for my brother's mistakes; all are his, yet are blamed on me." He warns that if he bows to "American pres sures" and retires from the scene even for a few months, "the whole strategic hamlet program will collapse, for I alone am the inspiration of the VCl'SltieS are to be provided a "first-rate" rather Uhdates. For the fringe candi-. ") a civil war over the issue Cain. And Francis Bacon, one than a "second-rate" prliu-it inn date s-Socialists. Prohibition-! of slavery But except for that o( the writers of the great books, man a seconn Ida enmation. isSi Vegetarians-are able to lre. of which we are still was convicted of receiv i n g 5. Those who vote "ves" on October 15 will Tpp lhcir views sharP and un-j suffering the consequences, the bribes from litigants involved in a. i nose wno vote yes on uctooer lo Wlll(u(i(,cdi because ,hev alc not system has worked exceedingly j suits in which he sat in judg be voting in ravor ot our States continuing to really running for office. but vve11- i receive approximately S16 million each year in 1 are talking to influence opinion. grant, from private foundation, and the Federal"-- Government. well along on the road where prs a,c divided is of paramount : w. r , e . i . I he will sound less and less like importance to the operation of the increase 111 funds from these sources 111 Goldwater and more and more a tree and democratic govern- the past few Years tO OUr public Colleges and uni- Eisenhower. If he is to be ment.' Because the inner se- versities has been amazing. Our colleges and uni-1 n',minalcclf aild ' any cict of orderly government ,s ... , . ."7 " w i chance of election, he must that the minority can and will Versities nave received these hinds because We ; make himself acceptable to the accept peaceably and with good have attracted superior persons as members of preponderant mass of the vol- will the verdict of the major- our faculties. The grants are a vote of confi-;", T,ho' "rp on '.'l0 r;sh;i,-- B American standards. , . ,, i ., , i-i an(l "lev are not on the Icfl. anvone who refuses to do that, tleiice in tliem. A no vote as contrasted WltlV hut around the renter, a little who advocates disobedience. a "ves" vote on October 15 would be interpreted 1,111 no' mm'n ,n the "Rht of it nullification, secession, is an jby these superior facultv members as a vote for;"n,d Vi,,,le h,lt m" m,lch 10 , extremist and belongs to the ,. ., . .-. ,. . . i left of it. tar right or the far left. iiiuuioiiu, in our puoiic colleges aiKl liniver-i What makes this suction to- Senator Goldwater. who is not Slties. 1 IH'V Would lminediatelv make platlS to ward the moderate center so universities Their ,mprosslvf ls lna' s,'n:,,or I 1 1C1 MlltS. 1IH11 (;0idwatcr ,s ppos,,d , c i licit, us uiic in int POLITICAL RALLY fiij 7 7 YS's r7 young fighters who defend tha hamlets." Or he casually re veals that he has kept from his brother, the President, such a major matter as a French-spon. sored overture from the North Vietnamese Communists, be cause he does not think that Diem would handle the problem wisely enough. Hearing all this, you say to yourself that this man, who all but announces that he is now the real master of the Vietna mese government, has somehow lost touch with any kind of hu man or political reality beyond the bounds of his own tortured ego. Yet you suspend judgment until you make the second cus. tomary call, in the more pomp. ous rooms of the Gia Long palace's upper floors, where President Diem receives his visitors. Here, too, it used to be pleas ant to go. Ngo Dinh Diem, it must be remembered, is a man of admirable determination and courage, who saved his people almost single-handedly from tha grim Communist takeover that everyone regarded as quite in evitable back in 1954. To bo sure, he has always had a way of complaining about his Ameri can allies. But in the earlier days, when the U.S. presence here was both inadequate and all too often woolly-minded, the complaints were frequently jus tified. "OW, however, what you hear ' is something else again. Ona instant, the Buddhist crisis is attributed to a well-laid plot of the Communists. And almost in the next breath, the whole ugly business is laid to "the machi nations" of the U.S. Information Service. At one moment, the course of the war is being quite rationally and sensibly discussed. But at the next moment, the danger that the vaporings of Madamo Ngo Dinh Nhu and such-like goings-on will turn Congress shan ty against the Vietnamese r d program is being furiously dis missed as "a mere straw, whereas the beam that weighs heaw on us is the plotting of the USIS." Here, in sum, is another man who has taken leave of reality, no doubt because his naturnl tendency to be suspicious has been daily played upon by his brother. And right here, rather than in the "plots of the CIA. is the explanation of the wide spread expectation of a coup d'etat that now prevails in Sai gon. There are countless Vietna mese who are still determined not to be the victims of a Com munist takeover, whether by courtesy of the French, or wilh the help of the growing faction of American appeasers, or in any other way. Yet a success n the struggle against the Commu nists can hardly be expected when the leaders of that strug gle have taken leave of reality. So there are likely to be changes here. W ij 7 t "Don't make it too conservative or loo liberal, just middle-of-the-road stuff knock 'em dead!" Free Bus Rides Not Exclusive SALEM (UPI) - Free bus transportation to the Western Republican Conference in Eu gene Oct. 12 will not be exclu sively for supporters of New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, Tuck Wilson, Portland, said Fri day. Wilson, coordinator of an in dependent Republican confer ence committee, said buses "will leave Portland in time to arrive for Rockefeller's speech, and they will not return until after the evening speech sched uled by Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater." Two Major Turning Points in Past Year Bv ERIC SEVARIED It is nearly a year now since there occurred the first of the two great events whose conse- "i sequences nave MEETING SCHEDULED New canal maps will be shown and information as to land to be irrigated by the proposed Rogue basin project will be given at a meeting at the Sams Valley Grange hall at 8 p.m., Wednes day, Sept. 18, according to Ralph A. James, secretary and treasurer of the Sams Valley Irrigation district. POSTMASTER ELECTED DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) - Jack R. Bailey of Scio, Ore., Friday was elected one of five vice nres Idents of the National League of Postmasters for 13- 64 in the closing session oi tne group's five-day convention her. thinks it is wrong in principle and he thinks it is had politics for the Republican rartv. Yet move to other colleges and grants would go with them. reasons Governor Hatfield is right in declaring that a "no" vote on October 13 would set the State of Oregon back 'JO years. 1 know that it would do just that to the L niversilv of Oregon. 6. Thou who vol "vp." n., fl-lnk-. IS will 0U1' follow citizen; be votina forre.Don.ible tovernm.ni in iK, s.t t;lN ) we can cxprc of Oregon. a fanalic of the rxtreme. but an ambitious politician, is now in the process of reshaping himself for the political reali ties of this country. It is inter esting ' alliirpd the clriitiim nf Mm X- world power balance as well as the dynam t ics of the cold war. We shall i all be busy for ' a long time try 1 ing to trace out s-arrid the hlucpnnt oi the new structure and to take the temperature of the new dy namics All one can say (or Soviet Union. And both events able. She has tested the nuclear together have produced, as their " wi" of ,he United States and has first tangible fruit, the treaty und H 8 realit-v- shf, lost r ,u i . .; t . her one important ally- in the for the limitation of nuclear , world. Her diplomats are now tests. This much we have; no her most important leaders: one can yet be sure that it will i they have a whole new course to prove productive of further spe-1 chart and every day's front page cific steps in a momentum to-1 shows them to be busy about it. ward a detente between Russia Her current opening bids for sue and the West. j cessive steps to the nuclear trea- The desire for alliances is an ,v must DC viewed less skeptical instinct as well as a calculation j ? tnan cver before, but always in the biology of nationhood with the concern that these steps to watch him and com-.5""' IS mai euner one k in mill, nf him.-ir hn ic l,,m. fnrlinn In Ihink lh.1t the nvslem CVCnlS WOlllfl n.lVC mai KCO me drawn into moderation Thus is working so well twelvemonth in capital letters o red. meir cimurmiie uas made both definition and prrdic If we do not like our present lion hazardous m the extreme. Oil!' disapproval OV The first event was the estab- getting back ot the kind ot a tax structure that we believe we should have in the next biennuim. even the professedly non-aligned seek to band together in their own ad hoc alliances and i the bare bone of the matter is i that each of the two great Com munist nalions is now isolated. cause recent events nearly ev erywhere in the world. America included, have given it a dy namic of its own. This thema is the racial theme. The Chinese are boldly and blatantly inter preting the break with Russia in racial terms to the rest of Asia and to Africa and Latin Amer ica. This is the most elemental and inflammable of all great an imosities. It is. so far, no bigger than a man's hand on the hori zon of the future. Our elected represent"' ives, the members of : And, if we cannot persuade the Legislature to the Legislature, have decided on the amount of j adopt it, we can take it to the voters and ask money they believe is essential to the effective them to adopt it. Our Legislature must know functioning of our State (iovernment for the j w hat the tax structure is going to be before they present biennium. All departments and agencies! approve appropriations. Any other course of ac are operating on the basis of those decisions, i tion is sure to lead to inefficient and irresponsible io lettuce, m eitect, uie amount ot money avail- government. -n i oi. -I .i . . .,.. ... ... ...... . I'"' auie iu oiaie uovernmem oy .(u million ;.. t is lor these reasons that 1 believe that might lead to the ungluing of the Western alliance, an outcome I Moscow must logically hope for. i It has. nevertheless, a certain lo alleviate her nightmare frightening potential. The new, " I aroused racism lies close behind Developments in the world of the new nationalism in parts of Each laces, in the far reach of politics simply produce further! this world. I am one who takes its strategic thinking, the dis- developments. Two new themes seriously the warnings of rare tinct possibility that, if it found are now emerging. Their capacwar in Africa coming from Sir itself in war. it would face a ; ity for contagion is very hard to ; Roy Welensky of Rhodesia. The war on two fronts. That is the judge: if it is a real capacity. 1 potential in Southeast Asia is oldest nightmare of ail among we are in for an interesting considerable and there a r a governments time. Boih themes are being places in Latin America Peru, stimulated by the now isolated for one example where tho It could be that the whole post-! Chinese. " i class war has audible and dis- war world svstem of alliances is One theme proclaims the nat-1 turbing overtones of race war. breaking ui General DeGaulle "rid identity of interest between : The Chinese will try to identi'y may provide the final answer to the non-nuclear powers as the nuclear power that har :a thai. The strains within the mil- against the three nuclear pow- over the world with white power, itary framework of the North ers. and to the current of this Few can now accurately guss Atlantic Alliance are great, with theme General DeGaulle adds a at the possible consequences of no relieving reforms in smht. freshet from time to time. this: but one may logically s'ig- " yet the community of culture The second new theme is the Rest that in this pregnant ma;. tr event accelerated and and common interest among more consequential because it we could use the help of OiT to produce the second the western nations is such lhat seeds lie in the nature of the psychologists as well as that a. lishmenl. at long last, of the credibility of the American de terrent. Credibility had been the vital but missing ingredient for all the 17 years in which the deterrent had physically existed, and the incredicnt was supplied in the affair of the Cuban mis siles by the uncommon boldness of the President's ultimatum. V Mill nil ion HL. II is tor thesp reasons that believe that a heinwi months after tho hiiMininm is nnilir u-nv rnn Lviil jiilict-iiti-il m-i iim-Iu- nf irio vivt.ii-s nf ("Irnnmi w-ill ' creat event of this unusual vcar one cannot conceive of a break human being himself, not the our diplomats and spies to nothimr hilt chans in imvrrnmenl m.'l v.wnll int vi.l.i "v,,c" n 'i;-.ll',,l Mmcm-o Vn 1 on n.-tnlior ,hp f',rmal nn1 sPP-enHy ir- so clean as the break between nature of governments; because; (Distributed 1.1. hy The Hall l l- m 1 ln 1 II' dill HMIIlan ,MlP ,U 011 b.lllot .Me.lMlie .NO. 1 011 UttObei sparable consummation of the Russia and China lit is all but permanent, while! Svndic.le. Inc.l nailisnip aiKl SUtlering on the part Of many oflo. .break between China and thej Russia's position is not envi-1 nuclcax alicaments shift, be- (All Rights Renrrvrd) i