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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1963)
4 A "Everyone In Southern Oreioa Reads The Mall Tribune" Fubliineil Dilly except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir StPlv77:i-iai nTiRFrt'f'W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertliinl Manniei r.VHAI.n T LATHAM. But MIT ERIC ALLEN JR.. Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor RICHARD JEWKTT, Sports Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'! Edltoi DALE ERICKSON. Clrculitlon Mir An Independent Newipipei Entered second class matter At Mediord Oregon unaer nti March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES D Unii In AHvanca Dally and Sundayl year 111 00 Deny and aunday o raw sy.yv Dailv end Sunday 3 mot SOU Sunday Only One year S3 00 Sinele CoDV (Mailedl 300 au r-,-r.-r Anri Mntnr Route. Dally and Sunday I year $2100 rally and Sunday l mo c.nriBu nnlu 1 ma SOC Camel and Vendors Copy lOo Official Paper ol City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Villi Leased Wire U. P 1 Telephoto Newsptctures. "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU" 0PClRCULATlONS Advertising R'J?resentaUve: NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOC1. ats-q ntiiM in New York. Cnl rao Detroit. San Francisco, Lot A melts Seattle. Portia no Denver. niwspamk III ASSOCIATION EDITOtlAl - -V ASlS&CKTIOtN J U Memner California Newspaper Publishers Association Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from tne filet of The Mall Tribune 10. 20, 30, 40 and SO years ago. in YEARS AGO Ort. 4, 1953 (Sunday) A Richmond, Calif., man re ported missing in the Dead Indian-Fish Lake area during the week end, turned up Sunday at Klamath Falls, state police said. Howard I. Bobbitt will be in Medford Thursday to present his report on the Medford police department. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 4, 1913 (Monday) Yanks beat Giants 4 to 2 in World Series opener. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Males are running around with gay rooster feathers in the bands of their new fall hats. None yet have strolled by the laundry and been shot for a Chinese pheasant." .10 YEARS AGO Or'. 4, 1933 (Wednesday) First liquor advertisements appear since prohibition, as dry repeal nears. Mrs. Ward McReynolds of Eden precinct raises 1 pound, 9 ounce tomato. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 4, 1923 (Thursday) First snow of season falls at Crater Lake. During September, 3,177 tour ists stopped at city auto camp. 50 YEARS AGO Oct. I. 1913 (Saturday) Mahlon Purdln, pioneer resi dent, elected mayor at special meeting of city council. WCTU delegates report on Corvallls meeting. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten corner It superior; seven oi eight it eicellent; five et eia It food. 1. Is the Blue Danube in Eu rope or Asia? 2. How many equinoxes are there each year? 3. Did John Quincy Adams serve as Representative in Con gress before or after he served as President? 4. Is an artesan a deep well, a blood vessel, skilled crafts man or an imitation of paint ing? ft For whom was the month o( August named? 6. Caliber indicates the muz zle velocity of a weapon: true or false? 7. The American Red Cross was organiicd by Florence Nightengale; true or false? 8. Which state of the U.S. is second smallest in area? . Where was the first cheese made? 10. Tho motion picture, "The Pride of the Yankees," was based on the lite of which New York ballplayer? Answers: I. Europe. 2. To. 3. Alter. 4. Skilled craftsman. S. Caesar Augustus. 6. False. 7. False. 8. Delaware, t. Egypt. 10. Lou Gehrig. $22 Billion Spent For Health Care NEW YORK (LTD - The American people spent an esti mated $'22.7 billion last year to maintain their health and rem edy their ailments, the Health Insurance Institute reported. The billions averaged J 1-4 for each man. woman and child in the nation. The money paid hos pital, doctor, druggist, dentist, nursing home and othcr$ealtjj connected bills. NATION Al FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4. 1M3 Conant on Teacher Education James B, Conant is one of this nation's most distinguished citizens. He has been an outstanding scientist, presi dent of Harvard University, wartime science ad visor to the government, ambassador to West Germany, and has held dozens of lesser but still important roles in the nation's behalf. Since his "retirement," he has performed still another function that of investigator and con structive critic of the nation's elementary and secondary gchools. It is entirely possible that this latter role is the one he will be longest remem bered for. IN THIS day of committees to investigate and survey and report, Conant's work is that of an individual, and the findings are published in his name, although he had a staff to assist him. Two previous books have grown out of his studies, one concerning high schools, the other about junior highs. But his most recent book is apt to be the most controversial of all, for he has stepped into the long-simmering conflict between "educationists" those who put the emphasis on teaching methods in the training of teachers and the "academicians" those who put the em phasis on adequate preparation in subject matter in training teachers. He calls for greater cooperation between the two camps. But it is obvious in reading his rec ommendations that his heart is with the subject matter people, not the methodologists. e e OIS book, "The Education of American Teach- ers," hits hardest at present methods of teach er certification. He would eliminate many of the tradition-hallowed criteria for such certification (calling the whole process "a nuisance" which "ought to be simplified"). And he calls upon the colleges and universities to use greater intel ligence and initiative and preparing iuture teachers. Aside from academic preparation and the backing of the institution graduates, Conant would require only a period of successful, supervised practice teaching. He feels this is important far more important than meeting certain arbitrary certification require ments. , Space prohibits a detailed review of his find ings and recommendations, but in essence he is calling for a real revolution in the education and preparation of teachers. DUTTING his recommendations into effect would require action at all levels in local school districts, by legislatures and state educa tion officials, and by colleges and universities. In any long-entrenched group of profession als, change comes slow and hard, and it is too much to hope for that any significant degree of change, along the lines he overnight. But his book is clear It is bound to have a though change comes slowly. Change for change s able. But change based on common sense and an intelligent look at problems and possible solu tions is not only desirable, it is inevitable. And that well may be tant contribution to coming generations of teach ers and students. b.A. Orchard Labor Problems Medford district fruit growers, long confront ed with a "public relations problem" of telling local people about their problems, how they go about solving them, and how important the indus try is to the economy, are going at it more posi tively than at any time in the recent past. Some days ago they invited a representative group of valley residents to visit the farm labor camp near the airport, to have lunch, and to hear discussions of the problems encountered in find ing fruit pickers for the short and crucial harvest season. Those attending were impressed not only with the magnitude of the problem, but with the constructive manner in which is being handled. State and federal officials were high in their praise of local fruit men for the cooperative pro gram that has been w-.ked out. rpHE story is well-known to many valley people, but it bears periodic repeating. Local labor sources simply are not adequate, in numbers, or willingness to do the hard work, or in availability, particularly after school opens. Migrant workers are often unavailable during the period when fruit must be picked. Itinerants arc cither unavailable, or unsatis factory, or both. The answer, in most cases, is to supplement I what labor forces ate available with contract' workers from the southwest, and with Mexican nationals the braceros brought from Mexico for farm work. fpHli solution, as w ith many complicated prob lems, boils down to a series of make-do's and compromises, none of them wholly satisfactory, but which, in combination, do the job. It is expensive, it is inconvenient, it requires a high degree of cooperation among the fruit growers (who arc pretty individualistic cusses, mostly), and it should have the understanding and sympathy of the community. We are pleased to see that, at long last, the fruit men are going out of their way to seek that understanding and sympathy from their friends, and nijjglQajs. E.A. imagination in properly from which the teacher recommends, will come - eyed and clear-headed. long - range impact, even sake is hardly ever desir Conant s most impor "Observe Closely, 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 it permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letter! with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted tor publication must not exceed 400 words. The lettert printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of paper, in fact the contrary It often the caw. ADDRESSES NEEDKr- Editor's note: To be con sidered for publication, letters to the Communications column must bear the name AND the address of the sender. Sev eral recent letters lacked a return address, and for this reason can be neither used nor acknowledged. Why Send Two? To the Editor: Yesterday my husband and I received our Vot er's Pamphlets. Since we are both registered in the same po litical party and reside at the same residence, this is my point: Why send two? I recall reading in a past Tribune an article which told of a bill to abolish this thing. The saving was $150,000. This bill was defeated. Why? Why pay a publisher this amount for something as un necessary as this, when there are much more worthwhile things to spend it for, such as education, welfare, etc.? It states in the Voters Pam phlet 450,000 school children will be victimized by a no vote. Now if that is true, and no doubt it is, who would be guilty? The legislators set the fore going example. Why threaten our children's education for lack of funds and make such foolish expenditures as above? Another thing that comes to my mind is the furor over pris oners working on construction of women's I penal) quarters, etc. The objection was, the prisoners deprive organized la bor. Why not let them earn their keep, and at the same time remove another financial burden of the state and taxpayers? Most homemakors soon learn what is necessary and what is not, when they must maintain a budget based on a husband's monthly income. Often times the income is subjected lo lay offs due to low market prices, inclement weather and what not. Furthermore, when they do make a blunder, stupid or other wise, they must make do, as there arc no other funds from which to draw. Most certainly they cannot raise taxes to offset a mistake. So before all the threats to education and welfare, etc., per haps it might be well for our state legislators to do some re vamping along these lines. No doubt there very well could be more of these types of situa tions. I believe most people don't object to taxes, especially when their money is wisely spent, but when they are being threatened with more taxes and the money has been squandered In the past, then I think they are entitled to question and object to any new tax issue. I urge voters lo compare their last year's income tax return with the new rates and sched ules in the Voter's Pamphlet. Eunice Richardson, DO Haskell st , Central Poult, Ore. THE INCOME TAX MEASURE This is one of a series of brief presentations of some little-known aspects of the income tax measure on which Oregon voters will decide at a special election on Oct. 15. A "es" vole appuivcs the law; a "no" vole detests it. and paves the way for reductions in stale services and a second legislative sesion. (JIESTION 1 am a widow earnim; $.i.(mo and supporting two children How will the tax law altect me? ANSWER The tax bill contains several income ta reforms that are long overdue. You would now have "head of household" status, which would reduce your taxes from Slat per year to $77. Until this year, only families qualified for the special lower rate Under the old law that would continue if the 19M tax measure were defeated, you paid 35 per cent move tax than a man, wife and child paid on the same income., BEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON Mi Amigo Utility of Words To the Editor: Re: C. R. Bur rill. Congratulations on your adroit example of superfluous articula tion. I didn't know you were a sycophant or Webster not a homosapien. in a past letter you say in re gards to civil rights, "In other words what seem to be obstacles now will disappear as we ap proach them. Approaching my letter you say you could make my letter "More understandable, even to its author." Then, later. ". What DID you say?" How do you reconcile THIS: Utility of words is an asset to expression and condensation expected controversy and since it accomplished that, I had an opportunity to give a broader ex planation to those truly inter ested. Others were not interest ed beyond issuing verbal ti rades. I am surprised that a person of your caliber after "exhaustive research is still confused. Those I REALLY addressed must have investigated as you. Any misapprehension by them would likely be a yielding to bias. The newspaper did not help my cause by misspelling in temperant (intemperEnt), ab struse (Obstruse), and despari- ties (disparities). Failing a meaning to all was my loss. This was not a unani mous reaction, however. Sorry for the wearing on dic tionary and mind. I'm glad you like the word miasma. Leonard Firman 318 Beatty Medford o Editor's note: Which diction ary DO you use? Class Rule! To the Editor: What is the cause of teenage crime? Al though this is a serious problem in other countries as well as our own, statistics show that the United States leads in youth crime. Teenage terror is most ram pant in slum areas, but it is sig nificant that delinquency is hardly less common in the sub urbs and among sons and daugh ters of the rich. Anti-social atti tudes are certainly not class limited. In fact, they may well exist as commonly among peo ple of adequate income who commit more sophisticated and subtle offenses and who are less frequently arrested or convicted for their infractions of the code. While children of the working class automatically acquire po lice records when they get in trouble, children from upper-income groups have their delin quencies, even crimes of vio lence, treated as "pranks." All thoughtful adults shudder in wardly over the implications of teenage crime. Although the crimes are often shocking in themselves, there is also the ut ter absence of reason and hu man feeling among many of the perpetrators. Judges, social Soviet Farm Problems Bring Nearer U.S. Wheat Exports; Policy Revision Necessary By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst ..In the Ukraine surveying the wreckage of what had been hoped would be a banner crop year, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev de fin livered himself Sr i I h i s proverbs. ' I A. I..- ... IV.. na lung ua uic thunder does not crash," he said, "the peas- . ant does not cross himself." The remark was interpreted as a suggestion to Soviet plan ners that they might have done more to foresee this year's dis aster which has turned the So viet Union from a normally grain-exporting nation to one forced to scramble on to the world wheat market to meet its minimum needs. For this, aside from a bitterly cold winter and a long summer drought, the Soviet premier could give himself a large share of the credit, since the direc tion of Soviet agriculture has been his own particular baby. workers, psychiatrists, police, and others, have offered various explanations for this animalistic behavior. Violence on television, broken homes, parents too en grossed with their own prob lems, courts that are "too soft," not enough police, etc., are some of the "answers" given by those supposed experts on teenage crime. The fact is that youth-crime co-exists with class rule, and there is, therefore, no solution to the problem as long as class rule exists. It is a monstrous re flex of cynicism, greed, selfish ness, callous unconcern for the rights of the weak, violence and the ever-present threat of anni hilation thr are the common ex perience of all people living under class rule. How can juvenile delinquency be arrested in such an environ ment? Every trend and every example in this outmoded soci etythe flaunting of material wealth beyond the reach of the majority of youth, the cynical pervading corruption and com petitive dog-eat-dog struggle, and above all, the threat of nu clear catastrophe all encour age a cruel, live-it-up philosophy and a blind hatred of everyone and everything that obstruct self-indulgence. The corruption of citizens in the spring-time of life, when they are most susceptible to ex ample, is conclusive evidence of moral decay and impending so cial collapse. Lydia Burnham 814 Warne st. Prescott, Ariz. Post Cards To the Editor: I am a 13- year-old girl who collects pic ture post cards as a nobby and I was wondering if you could help me out of a predicament? I need cards from your very beautiful and picturesque state of Oregon most desperately! Would you please be so kind as to print my plea for cards in your newspaper? I'd be most In the Day's News By FRANK From Washington: Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, of Minnesota, assistant Senate Democratic leader, believes that President Kennedy may decide soon to lift restrictions on the sale of wheat to Russia He had just come from a meeting of party chieftains with the President and reported that the concensus of leadership was in support of sales of wheat stocks to the Soviets and to other countries in their orbit. If ROM MOSCOW: Premier Nikita S. Khrush chev has told the Russian peo ple that large amounts of wheat r i-nmino frnm Panada and Australia. He hinted that he Problems by makeshift meas mav not need U. S. wheal. I "n ha decided to divert ..'ir ... .... -.i,i large amounts of money from uie .blcad fconomical-i INDUSTRY AND DEFENSE to y, ' he said, "the resources we ',,," m"' -k ,.k.,j r.i now have will be sufficient for I W or a thorough overhaul of the normal supply of our popu- Russ,an 'Snculture. lation." Tlmmmmmmmm. II 'HAT cooks? 11 if Mr Kroosh wants to learn " Well, business is business how to groow more wheat in i and this wheat deal is Big Busi-1 Russia, we can tell him: ncss. It may run into the nun- i cut out vour outmoded social dreds of millions of dollars, j jst system'. And I Sell land to vour farmers I Mr. Kroosh is the buyer. As or GIVE it to them. ! the buyer, he naturally wants Let 'em KEEP for themselves, to beat the price down as low wnat h(,v ma)ie a(tcr taxes, as possible. So. ... he plays 0( course ; casual and uninterested, inti-. TURN 'EM LOOSE. ' mating that he has about all Tn(, fjrS( thine vou know, the wheat he needs and will he thcv ll be SWAMPING vou with interested only if he gets an wheat. extraordinarily good deal. 11 'ELL. let's HOPE that's the wiv It is If we can get our relations with Sov iet Russia down to a ' BUSINESS basis, we will bet making progress toward peace, i . M ORE from Moscow: ) Priemier Khrushchev is out vn one oi nis numerous trouoie- - His virgin lands project had not been a s tccess and it an- peared he now was abandoning a previous belief that the Soviet Union's growing population needs could be met simply by expanding acreage. Instead, the emphasis now would be on irrigation and a vastly expanded output of fer tilizer. Contributing also to the dis aster were the weaknesses which annually plague the So viet agricultural economy low incentives, inadequate transpor tation facilities and a shortage of farm machinery. At any rate, as the premier said, the U.S.S.R. was in a "dif ficult position." For Canada and Australia, one man's loss was another man's gain. From Canada alone, Soviet buyers purchased nearly seven million tons of wheat in a record $500 million deal which scraped the bottom of the bins of Can ada's exportable surplus. From Ottawa, where U.S. wheat dealers were meeting with a Soviet delegation, came reports that the Soviets wanted still more and would buy up to 200 million bushels from the United States if the U.S. gov ernment would authorize it. Wheat has been on the U.S. list of goods embargoed against sale to Russia and such a sale would require a major change in U.S. policy. There also was the virtual certainty that if the United States sold wheat to Russia some of it would find its way back to Cuba. But the temptation also was great. The U.S. government held more than a billion bushels of surplus wheat and another bil lion was on the way. Crop damage suffered by the Soviet Union and by much of the remainder of Europe al ready had benefited U.S. farm ers. Analysts already were predict ing record wheat shipments and grateful if you would as I do not know how I will ever get cards from Oregon otherwise. All cards will be most welcome such as: unused, used, old, cards from other states and also from foreign countries. Thanks a million, dear editor! Sheralee Rhodes, 2527 Keyworth ave.. Baltimore, Md., 21215. Sad Songs To the Editor: The present generation of young men Is the unhappiest of this century. Just listen to their songs. The poor fellows sine of the tragedy of losing their girl friends. It is all very sad. But what of those guys who win the girls? Do they feel lucky? Suggested title for a song: "I Won the Girl (that my best friend lost)" Question: When a girl is called "baby" docs she feel flattered? David Frisch P. 0. Box 292 White City, Ore. JENKINS shooting trips through the agri cultural areas of the U.S.S.R. He says drastic steps are be ing planned to improve the 'LAGGING PRODUCTION of Russia's state-run farms. He is . ... I ca ling for more use of chemi-1 mo.rATlnv ' 6 ".Se f 1 IRRIGATION to guarantee a grain crop whether there is ; sufficient rainfall or not. He says it will cost $1.87 billion to handle the fertilizer and an! nfi,l...,n CD Q Kllllnr, tn I the irrigation works. His trip and what he is telling the Russian farmers lead to speculation that he feels he may be Unable to Solve his farm I 1I0W DO we know? Well, we tried the system 11 long time ago. First at Jamestown. Then at Plymouth, It WORKED in both places. It will work for0Russia if you will give it a good honest trial. The free enterprise Svstem beats the communist system all nollow. ( ) M total farm exports of another record close to sfj billion. By this week, it seemed the U.S. government had made up The Hoofenannies rn Will Get Us All Jhj By Arthur Heppe tiull Senator Keating, the New York Republican, is poking fun at the Right Wing for demand ina a Congressional investiga tion of folk songs. On the grounds, says the Right Wing, that these "Hootenannies have been used to brainwash and sub vert" us all. The Senator is making speech es about "Mine Enemy, the Folk Singer." Which is very funny and all that. But, personally, I think the Right Wing's right. Do you want to be brainwashed by a hootennanny? It's enough to give you nightmares. Moreover, most authentic folk songs are laments about love and peace and that sort of thing. Issues which definitely smack of Left Wing tendencies these days. Is this fair? Of course not. What our Nation needs, so that we can be brainwashed equally by both sides, are mort Right Wing folk songs. So Ive been working on it. And we now have plans for a Superpatriotic Hootenanny in the Hollywood Bowl starring the Slimefighters, a dashing quartet composed of a Young American for Freedom, two chiropractors wearing steel - rimmed glasses and a little old lady in tennis shoes. Who sings bass. To warm up the crowd, the program will open with one of those typical love songs you hear at hootenannies. You know, the girl is torn trying to choose between two swain. The lights will go down, the three men will humm mournfully into their kazoos and the little old lady will clutch the microphone to croon that sad ballad: "Ive Got Strictly Personal By Sydney (e) Field Enterpriser Inc. SELF-DEFEATING EVIL It is a comforting thought on a grim day that what keeps' the world from falling wholly into crime and cor ruption is the p s y chological fact that evil is a s e p a r a tist thing, while goodness is a unifying thing. We would be ut terly under the the rule of evil, ns were it o t h- erwise; for evil is industrious, while virtue is too often apa thetic: evil is cunnine. while virtue is credulous; evil is at- tractive and exciting, while vir- lalns the seed of its own de tue makes no similar appeal to struction. Its center does not ' the senses. 1 holc. il fll'es apart, it cannot But the one redeeming factor, Ihp nnp element that tends tn cancel out all the other advan - tapes of evil, is that by its very , mpaning requires order, coher nature it separates itself, not once,' unity, proportion, and merelv from the good, but from .""y- A" "ipso factors are. other evil as well. It is not only , a lon.. t0 the sP'r,t f evil. Most . I destructive; it is ultimately self - destructive. , . . ..,. Samuel Johnson put it pith- v two c.n,ur.s ago: com- binations of wickedness would ov(,rwnelm the world did not )osc h , (jscd .. ... ri.i,i-.. . v"hAl grow fai,hlcss t0 Mch 01l,n Thieves fall out; thieves must fall out, for it is the essence of their character, the mainspring of their behavior. They can have no enduring loyalty to one another, no ba sic trust, no disinterested ac tivity. What is anti-social in Jf L 1 & "Your wife just phoned in the nsed Masvlle s commercial DUGOUT bTiL OUr Commercial tKtet times!" r- M its mind. If they asked for it, the Soviets could have 200 mil lion bushels of wheat for $380 million cash on the barrel head. Two Loves, Quemoy and Mat su." With that, the quartet will swing into a foot - tapping ren dition of "There's Something About Earl Warren," followed by one of those true folk tributes to a true folk hero: "Oh, My' Darling Robert Welch (The: Marxist - Leninists You Will Squelch;." Then we'll have a brief inter-' mission to give members of the audience time to pass their tracts, brochures and im peachment petitions among themselves. The lights will dim once mom and we will hear the plaintive strains of that Old English la ment: "Where Have All the Sky--bolts Gone?" With a counter-' point of "We'll Hang McNamara from a Sour Apple Tree." When the applause and call; for lynching have died down,1 the quartet's voices will sweli goes: "And I'm going to bomb; "I've Got an H-Bomb." Which into the stirring grand finale: for victory, all over this world. . . ." Oh, there won't be a blood less eye in the house. Of course, the purists will sniff , at our hootenanny. They'll say, these old folk songs we madtt. up aren't authentic. But what can we do? Very few authentic old folk songs have militant Right Wing messages. I guess it's that the plain peo ple who make up folk songs would rather sing yearningly about love and peace than mili tantly about hate and war. But, after all, they've been doing it for a couple of hundred years. I say let s give the other side a chance. i. Ha.ris them In the beginning turns ' Into anti-one-anothcr in t h a end. This Is worth remembering In an age when evil seems ascendent, powerful, organlz-'' ed, and ruthless: when society ' assumes the dimensions of a ; magnified racket; when expe diency becomes the mark of ' polity: when nations, like so phisticated gangsters, engage ' promiscuously in threats.' bribes, blackmail, and all the loner forms of intimidation. It is no mere sentimentalism to insist that barring some. cosmic cataclysm evil cannot 'survive and flourish: for it con . cpe ml tne one thing ! above all success. 1 or. success, to have any. For .a"." - , - , - ?!' '"r cooper- ation at the deepest t 'l 1' cooperation is impossible for the separatist spirit. Riv al gangs kill one another ' off; within each gang, struggles, for power disintegrate the group. ', Hitlers and Stalins cannot main: tain "non-aggression pacts" for very long. Tyrants are assassi-' nated hy their own lieutenants." The same instinct that drives a man into wickedness drives him to dominate and destroy his as-" sociates in the enterprise. Evil " in its very nature is self-defeating; in dark days, this truth is sometimes all that good men" have to cling to. latest boiscore they've once, Koufax s tw Ice and 7 i 07) IP) () l"i) (Q) Q Q 0 'O) O 0 o CO)