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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1963)
MsroRoU!tlKTiiBUNt "Everyone in Southern Oregon R1U1 Tin Mail Tribune" PublUhed DaUy except Saturday by WEDFORD PRINTING CO. 83 North Fir SI- Ph.77a-lll " ROBERT W RUHI.. Editor HIHB GREY Advertiilnf Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bua Mir ERIC ALLEN JR, Mne Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIHMAN, Telef Editor RICHARD JEWETT, SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHER Women'a Edltoi DALE ER1CKSON. ClrcujaUonJJtr An Inderjendent Newioapei Entered aa aecond clan matter at Medlora. uregoa unaar abi oi March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES n Mall In Advance Dally and Sunday 1 year IIS 00 Sally and Sunday t moa 10 00 : Dallv and ounaay moa ouw Sunday Only One year 13 00 Single Copy (Mailed) JOe By Carrier And Motor Route. Dally and Sunday 1 year $21.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.75 SunHaw flnlvl mil. 300 Carrier and Vendora Copy 100 Official Paper of City of Medford Official Paper of Jackion County United Presa International rull Leaaed Wire U. P 1. Telephoto Newsplcturea MEMBER Or AUDIT-BUREAU" Of CIRCULATIONS Advertising Rpreaentatlve: NELSON ROBERTS St ASSOCI ATES Of'leea In New York, Chi cago. Detroit, San rranclaco. Loi Angelaa. Seattle. Portland Denver, NIWSPAPII UllllHIli ASSOCIATION NATION A I (OITORIAt TAfc8T,3; Member California Newipapar Publlahera AiaoclaUon Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from tne film of The Mall Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. ' 10 YEARS AGO Ort. 13. 1953 (Tneidiv) The 1953-54 tax statements for Jackson county will be mailed this week, Howard Gault, sheriff and tax collector, announces. United Medford Crusade of ficials report contributions this year are running 35 to 200 per cent over last year's total. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 13, 1943 (Wednesday) Second Lt. Thomas Helman, co-pilot of flying fortress which bags 12 Nazi planes in raid on Germany. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The duck shooting season opens Fri day. Several local , enthusiasts plan funerals for mythical grand maws in the tules of Klamath county." 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 13, 1933 (Friday) Body of Frank Turner, Lon don, England, found on south bound train out of Ashland; death ruled suicide over girl left behind. Picturesque route reported se lected for highway over Sis kiyous. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 13, 1923 (Saturday) Tax evaluation of Jack son county placed at $24,700,570. Work starts on Tiller Trail road. 50 YEARS AGO Oct. 13, 1913 (Monday) Siskivou holduo man arrested at Marshiield, suspect held at Roscburg. Georse W. Dunn. Ashland elected orand commander of the Knights Templar of Oregon What's Your I.Q.? Nina or fan correct is superior! seven or tight Is eacellent) five or six Is good. 1. Choreography concerni dancing, singing or map man-ine? 2. Is the average weight of a standard bale of American cot' ton about 49, 490, or 4,900 pounds? 3. Is a diving bell open or closed at the bottom? 4. Name the city in the U.S. which is said to be "the home of the bean and the cod. The Tax Decision Most daily newspapers in the state are sup porting the state tax measure to be voted on next Tuesday. (At least two in Klamath Falls and Ashland are against it. At least one in Coos Bay is straddling the fence. Quite a few weeklies are against it.) Why, when all indications are that the tax measure is going to go down to overwhelming defeat, do the majority of daily newspapers sup port this measure, most of them strongly? Wouldn't it be "smarter" to play it cool, go along with what appears to be popular sentiment, and then smugly say "I told you so" when it was all over? pERTAINLY it would be easier. It would be more peaceful, too, and more comfortable not to be accused of "brainwashing" and "intimi dation" and all the rest. The Oregon Journal gave thought to this the other day, and printed an editorial which said : "Newspapers have been accused of being part of a con spiracy to shove the 1963 tax legislation down the throats of an unwilling public. "If they are, their part in the conspiracy is not very sinister. "If they were acting out of selfish motives, they would oppose the tax program. "Newspapers and their employees pay taxes. They do not like to pay taxes any more than other Oregon citizens. "Furthermore, they know that to urge higher taxes is an unpopular cause. If they were solely interested in winning popularity and adding to their circulation, they would oppose the tax package. "But most newspaper people like to think of themselves as responsible citizens of Oregon. They are convinced that the revenue provided by this legislation is essential to the welfare of their state, particularly in the field of education. "They are willing themselves to pay the higher taxes that will be required of them. They are willing to forego the popularity they might win by taking the easier course. "They believe that to do otherwise would mean abdication of their duty as citizens and as newspapermen." THAT PUTS it about as well as it can be nut A Thprfi are nrhprs rnn wVin are snnnnvt. mg tne tax measure at considerable personal risk We refer to some of those who are (often con temptuously) referred to as politicians. We have respect for such people as Gov. Mark Hatfield, Rep. Shirley Field, Rep. Ed Branch field, Rep. Jim Redden and others who, knowing full well the possible consequences, have stuck their necks out and supported the measure be cause they know they are right. This takes guts. We have far less respect none, really for legislators who, having voted for the bill in the legislature, now crawfish, equivocate, or come out against it. 1 his is pure political expediency, a less than admirable trait. The most reprehensible example is that politi cal irresponsible, Sen. Walter Pearson. There are others, closer to home. CINCE 1957, Oregon has been living off. the "fat" in the treasury. That fat is now gone. Meanwhile, costs have risen. And, most im portant of all, the numbers of students in ele mentary and high schools, and in colleges and universities, has skyrocketed. The state, acting under the mandate of a vote of the people, has increased its share of the financing of the local school districts, thus help ing to hold down local property taxes, which are already at a near-conhscatory level. This is the largest single item in the general fund budget. All these things zeroed in on the 1963 Legis lature, which "solved" them by putting together a patchwork tax bill which would raise the need ed money. IT IS NOT a particularly good bill nor a 1 terribly bad one. It has obvious flaws. The worst one is the $12 million to be raised bv speeciect-up withholding, which is nothing but borrowing trom the next bienr.uim. But it is not nearly as bad as the hitrhlv-emo tional critics declare. It has some badly needed reforms, which benefit those who have been too hard hit in the past. It broadens the base, without hurting anyone who can't afford it. (The $5 filing fee will not hurt anyone seriously it is principally designed to collect a small fee from the 84,000 odd persons who have gotten off with out paying any tax at all in the past, even while collecting refunds on tax withheld.) The best thing to be said about it is that it will raise, for this biennium only, the money which the state needs to continue its vital services, and without which it will be crippled seriously. IT IS INEVITABLE that the state of Oregon is 1 going to have to find added sources of Matter of Fact By Joseph AIsop ic New Yorc Herald Tribune Syndicate 5. if an automobile is driven i income. This may be a sales tax, it may be, in Kit mime nnr nn r nnw mnnv , . . . . . part, a revised income tax, or added taxes on such other things as cigarettes, motel space, and other special taxes. It is also true that some economics can proba bly be made in certain areas of state govern ment. But to slash state services (or, rather, part of them for some are funded independently) to the tune of up to one quarter of their budgets mis is complete iiscai lriesponsionuy. As stated previously, we expect the tax bill to be voted down, and by a consderable ma jority perhaps as much as two or three to one. There is too much resentment, not only of the tax increase itself, but of the Legislature's unwise raising of its own members' salaries too much, its political bickering and partisanship, the junkets to Hawaii, and so on. But also as stated previously, we believe that those who insist in voting "no'1 will be doing so knowing that the results will be fiscal chaos for the state (no matter what self-seeking and craw fishing legislators say), and a damaging blow at responsible state government and at education which is the slate's most important product. j tu: ; ....... t.- ' at 60 miles per hour, how many feet per second does lt travel? 6. Was Robin Hood a legend ary or actual person? 7. Whom did Theodore Roose velt succeed as President of the U.S.? R. What does a barometer reg ister? 9. Who was Uie husband of Marie Antoinette? 10. Correct the following: "The condemned man was hung." Answers: 1. Dancing. 2. 4IM. 3. Open. 4. Boston, Mass. 5. U feet. 6. Legendary. 7. William McKlnley. 8. Atmosppherlc pres snre. 0. Louis XVI, King of France. 10. ". . . was hanged." EROSION, SLOW BUT SURE Taipei, Formosa This is not as good a vantage point for the study of Communist China as Hong Kong, but there is one C o m m u n ist problem that stands out in stark relief from the Taipei angle of vision It may prove the central Alinp prooiem ai uiai. In brief, the Soviets mod ernized the huge Chinese Com munist armed forces during the Korean War. But although the big bill that Moscow then pre sented to Peking has not yet been paid in full, Mao Tse-tung's army, navy, and air force are already decaying towards their pre-Korca status of an immense militia possessing only a few advance weapons. At the time of the Korean truce, for instance, the Chinese Communist air force was one of the world's strongest, equipped with close to 4,000 aircraft of the latest models of that period. TODAY, however, the same air force has not received a new plane or even any serious shipment of spare parts from Russia since 1959. Cannibaliza- tion and attrition have there fore reduced it by about one third, to approximately 2,700 semi-operational aircraft, all of obsolete or obsolescent models. Semi-operational is probably an optimistic description of the Chinese communist MIG-17S. aging Ilyushins, and the rest. The planes themselves get very little time in the air, which al ways leads to deterioration. The pilots get even less flying time hardly more than five hours per month which has surely led to loss of proficiency. in snort, the same factors that caused the humiliatingly bad performance of the Chinese Communist air units in the 1958 Formosa crisis have been op erating ever since with increas ing power. And unless training can be intensified soon, and un less replacement aircraft or at least spare parts are soon forth coming, the decay of the Chi nese Communist air force must quickly enter an accelerating phase. a tyHE condition of the army is A more difficult to gauge, since there is clearly a very wide spread between the average army units and the crack out fits, like those on the Indian frontier. Yet the army con fronts essentially the same problem as the air force. Its heavier and more advanced weapons are not locally re placeable, and no replacements have come from Russia for four long years. Even army trucks are being cannibalized, and the cannibalizatinn of the higher army weapons is even more rapid. This does not mean, of course, that China is now defenseless. On the contrary, the Chinese Nationalists have had distinctly bad luck to date with their harassing and penetration raids along the coast, largely because the Communists have made a supreme effort to keep their air and coastal warning nets in good order. Yet the gradual, re morseless, . and inevitably ac celerating decay of Chinese Communist military power is still a world fact of the highest significance. This fact's meaning in itself, moreover, is probably surpassed by its meaning as a model. It is easier to detect, describe, and give figures concerning the deterioration of the air force, for instance, than to estimate and describe the erosion of the Chinese Communist industrial plant. Yet here again, the same kind of erosion is slowly but surely at work, for precisely the same reasons. A small part of the Chinese industrial plant is not Rus sian in origin. A very large part, considerably more than half in fact, is not now being used, because Peking has had to al low industrial output to slump to between 35 and 40 per cent of capacity. The unused part of the industrial plant is nonethe less subject to decay; and the part still in use is being worn out rather rapidly. In Canton, for instance, a tractor plant and a plant pro ducing chemical fertilizers were very recently closed down. Botn factories belonged to the pro ductive sector which the regime is supposed to be going all out to expand, in order to strength en Chinese agriculture. The rea son in both cases (certainly known because of Canton's com paratively high visibility) was simply the want of both spare parts and raw materials to keep these factories going. Right here, of course, is where the Sino-Soviet split pinches the Chinese economy. A vast deal of ignorant non sense has been written about "Soviet aid" being cut off. China never has received any Soviet aid, having been requir ed to pay through the nose for all exports from the Communist bloc since the very beginning. BUT the Chinese armed forces got all their higher equip ment from Russia. Chinese in dustry is almost wholly equipped with machinery imported from the Soviet Union or the Eastern European satellites. A high per centage of China's railroad cars and long haul trucks are Rus sian or Eastern European in origin. Thus the whole mechanical sector of the Chinese Commu nist economy has been, in ef fect, completely designed around machines for which neither parts nor replacements are any longer available. A more ter rible national problem can hard ly be imagined, especially for a government which has already been forced to cut back its capital investments almost to zero, in the attormalh of its own megalomaniac follies. GREAT IDEAS... From the Great Books By Mortimer J. Adler 1 963, Publliheri Newipaper Syndicate 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 4nr rMihllratinn J Mrmkcihl Th Mail Trihiin rrv th rink ,n ! edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letterj submitted tor publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of tr paper. In fact the contrary Is often the case. RELIGION PRO AND CON Dear Dr. Adler: What do the great thinkers of the past have to say about the values of organized religion? Do they agree that the church is in dispensable to the moral and spiritual welfare of the indi vidual and the nation, or do they differ from this common ly held opinion? Mrs. Eleanor Schapiro RFD 3 Box 325 Beech rd. Wadsworth, Ohio Dear Mrs. Schapiro: Religion involves a basic trust in the order and direction of things. It presupposes a bond between men and the absolute principle, person, or order which under girds the world. It is expressed in ethical deeds, ritual acts, and inner devotion by individuals or by communities. It enlists the whole of the human person body, intellect, emotion, and imagination. It provides for the religious man the basic pattern by which his life is lived and the whole of things is approach ed. Both an affirmation and de nial of the value and validity of religion appeared from the earliest times in our tradition. The Greek philosopher Plato af firmed 2,500 years ago that the world is ruled by a supreme divine will, which directs it in its course and governs human affairs. He vigorously opposed the view that matter is the sole reality and chance the cause of events, as well as the theory that religion is a human inven tion without any basis in reality. He also opposed the convention al popular view that man may attain salvation by performing certain formal, ritual acts, en tirely apart from the ethical quality of his life. The Roman philosopher and poet Lucretius provides a good example of the materialistic, anti-religious view which Plato opposed. Lucretius held that all things, including human thought and feeling, are caused by ma terial events. He did not deny that gods exist, but he denied that they concern themselves with human affairs or have the power to control the infinite uni verse. In his view, things just happen as they do, without sup ernatural direction or a tran scendent goal, and without any relevance to human needs and hopes. Lucretius believed that re ligion was the product of sup erstitious fear mainly Uie fear of death and what might occur in the after life. He held that man could be relieved of these baseless fears by a true knowledge of the nature of things. This ancient view that religion is born of fear, a theory which some modern thinkers seem to think that they have invented themselves, was reit erated by Thomas Hobbes in 16th Century England. Hobbes, who, like Lucretius, was a com plete materialist, ascribed the natural oricin of religion to ig norance and fear, although he was careful not to apply his theorydo Christianity, which he claimed to view as a divinely revealed and true religion. Of course, the most famous and impressive reduction of re ligion to emotional needs was offered by Sigmund Freud in our own time. Freud held that religion arises from the childish need for security amid the stresses and strains which we suffer in the harsh reality of adult life. In his view, religion offers a false, futile, and harm ful solace, and we would do better to adhere to the methods and results of modern science, which are more reliable, though not as emotionally gratifying. The "psychogenetic" explana tion of religion reducing it to a product of emotional needs has been subjected to much crit icisms Freud himself acknowl edged that even if it can be shown that religious beliefs and attitudes satisfy emotional needs, this is no proof that the claims of religion are false, al though he himself was convinc ed that they were. It must also be recognized that psychologi cal analvsis is a two edged sword, which may just as well! be used to question the moti vations of non-believers as of believers. Many intelligent spokesmen for traditional religion grant that Freud's analysis is an ac curate description of the needs and satisfactions of many simple-minded and neurotic believ ers. However, they question whether it applies at all to the faith exhibited by the great Biblical figures, who did not seek ease in some never-never land beyond the human condi tion, but rather girded them selves to fulfill a divine demand, against all the lures of ease, comfort, and consolation. Ac tually, they say, the natural temptation is to follow the false gods of power, profit, and race, and the false satisfactions which they bring, rather than serve the God of Biblical faith. Threats Never Win To the Editor: We will close your schools, we will make this a dole state if you don't go along with our ideas for tax increases. We will bury you eventually, why not now sound familiar? Are we the voters and tax payers and parents being told by our employees and elected officials just what we can do and not do with our tax dollars? Threats never did win from the American citizen, especial 1 y from within. Should our city, county, and state officials, as such, in their official title, express a public opinion for or against a tax bill? As an ordinary citizen, without their official title I say yes. As an elected official ex pressing the opinion of their office or association I say no. Right now 79.8 per cent of our property tax dollar goes for schools. Surely there must be something wrong, and as ex pressed on a local radio station by a private citizen it is time we as the public paying this tax bill do a little checking into the educational tax dollar. Are there too many chiefs and not enough Indians in our school system? Why not have our single purpose chiefs teach a class or two and give our regular teachers a little relief as well as our scnoot tax aoiiar. And at the state level, who said we demanded so much extra curricular service as our public officials say, why not start the tax cut at the non - essential services first and work on the school cut last. With our increased assessed valuation throughout the state and our higher per capita in come and increased population, it is possible that our tax com mission has underestimated the income the state will receive in the next two years. In any event, we can be sure the state will find a way to spend every cent we allow them to tax us. for, so now is a good time to call a "look see" until we can elect new senators and legislators who will take time to write a real equitable tax bill for Oregon. It would be interesting reading if the "yes" crusaders would publish before election time the money they have spent in their efforts to defeat the referendum. This would include cash money. that portion of the Governor s and other high official salaries we are paying on their "stump ing tour" and the time involved by school superintendents, prin cipals, board members, and other public officials. We are apparently paying from both ends kind of a "heads you win tails I lose" game. Let's all get out and vote as we see fit on election day. (Name on File) Medford, Ore. Name for Park To the Editor: I have just read your editorial in the Mon day, Oct. 7, issue asking for a name for the new park along Bear creek. Why not call it the David Loring Park after the man who named Medford. Byron Coleman, 351 California St., San Francisco 4, Calif. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS The big wheat deal in a nut shell: We're selling Russia about $250 million worth of the stuff. We're selling it at the world market price, which is about $1.30 a bushel. At $1.30 a bu shel, the sale of $250 million worth of wheat would translate into a little better than 192 mil lion bushels. Getting rid of 192 million bu shels would eat up a little bet ter than one-fifth of the present U.S. SURPLUS, which now stands at a little better than 900 million bushels. WHICH is to say: Russia gets the wheat which she needs to feed her hungry people. We get rid of about 20 per cent of our wheat surplus which we need to do. It costs us about $300 million just to STORE our surplus wheat. According to dispatches, the cost of MAKING the deal would be somewhat in excess of $115 million, since this country has been subsidizing wheat exports at about 60 cents a bushel. A ND President Kennedy says: "The sale of the wheat for about $250 million and the addi tional income for American shipping (which will carry the wheat to Russia) will REDUCE OUR BALANCE OF TRADE DEFICIT and provide income for Americans." BIG question as to Kroosh and the wheat deal that has just been negotiated: Are we doing him dirt? Or are we saving his bacon by providing him with the wheat with which to feed his people. Anyway We get rid of a lot of wheal that was costing us a lot of money in the way of storage bills. FIGURE it out if you can. It's a weird world we're liv ing in. There are times when it al most looks like the more you lose the more you make. Only Temporary To the Editor: Some people) around here are of the "learn ed" opinion that the legislature can do anything in a day. About the only thing I can see them do in a day is collect their pay then they come back the next day and collect again. I'm not for having them do that again this year. Even though the tax bill Isn't so hot, it's only temporary until we can elect somebody smart enough to pass a better one. None of us likes higher taxes and that goes for property taxes too, which would be raised if income taxes weren't. Income taxes hit everybody, not just those of us with property. I'd say we better pass the tax law this time or we'll be worse oft than ever we'll just have wasted lots of hot air. Richard R. Klor, 371 South Mountain St., Ashland, Ore. NHU BEAUTY AID! Goldwaterism: Protest to Paralysis By ERIC SEVAREID including his simple, homespun l perate, confused protest against has put it: "They (the prob- The Goldwater Phenomenon sincerity and charm, he is much i a desperately confused new has already reached proportions more another Eisenhower than i world of human living rising far beyond anything that most i another Taft. Like Eisenhower -r-a serious observ-; in both his campaigns, and un k ers, especially j like Stevenson and Kennedy in 3t t h o s e in the theirs, he is making no demands 'sv WBr eastern centers upon the people for greater and 'All11 r- 0 f t ho u g h t, 1 greater intellectual and physi- . - j i m a ff in e ri 1 1 cal exertions around us at home and abroad. Millions have simply given up trying to understand it, let alone cope with it. Most of the human race abroad is convulsed with the paroxysms less course, lems) do not respond to our existing means of correction and control." It is in a profound sense that, as Heilbroner states it, "Our society seems no longer under our control. Running its master- Subscribers To report Improper or Ron delivery o4 the Mail Tribune In Mertord. phone 772-8111; Aah Und eaJl at 41$ Bridie t . at phone 482-3002: YrekA, phone Victory 1-lttM before 145 p m. daily ufed 10 JO a m. Sunday If iwuUr delivery wrlve shortly eftar you oat) pi notify fflee, thne nminUn epecui MMfifir THE INCOME TAX MEASURE This it one of a series of brief presentations of tome little-known aspects of the income tax measure on which Oregon voter will decide at a special election on Oct. 15. A "ves" vote approves the law; a "no" vote defeats it. QI'KSTIOX I've worked all my life, and saved as much as I could to put my kids through school and provide for my retirement. Last year I was told that if I sold my investments. I would pay over 9 per cent of my gain to the State, if I used the money as I wanted. What will the new Tax Law do for me? ANSWKR The new Tax Law makes a substantial reform in the treat ment of capital gains by eliminating the reinvestment require ment and taxing all capital gains on assets held over one year at no more than 5 per cent. The old law had the effect of bunching Income accrued over many years Into the year ol sale, penalizing those who saved for education, retirement or other personal purposes by pushing them into the highest bracket in that one year. Only those who reinvested were helped. This inequity has been removed by the 13 Tax Law Sevarrld described as it disposes of us - ; .i-j i in h g in e u 1 1 im twei nuns, in no uumt'aui: oi a revuiuuun ihhi is esbcmiauy ai u sees, ill ana not as we -r-it)M could attain a proposals, he issues no rallying socialist and non-white. These might desire." TTVr wa year ago, ana cry lor me people 10 cnarge , parts ol tne woria reiuse to . i ne traditional agencies of the phenomenon the barricades or cross unknown "turn out" as men like Gold-1 correction and control local is just hitting frontiers. He seems, instead, to water had wanted to believe government, limited federal gov- its real stride, be issuing a rallying cry for they would. At home, labor un-: ernment, the Congress, the mar- If it is to be passive resistance to the baffling ion power has grown enormous- ket place, the most exhaustive a conservative problems of a nightmarish age. ly; giant corporations become 1 reporting and analvsis of facts movement, clearly it has little - When he advocates turning super-giants, beyond detailed by the press these agencies connection with the ideas and civil rights over to the states comprehension; the people mi-1 are no longer truly effective, the climate that surrounded (that is, turning desegregation grate like heedless lemmings, ; Nor is the agency to which Gold Senator Robert A. Taft, the true, I in the South over to the segre- draining the farm states, inun- water appeals, traditional horse traditionalist conservative of the gationists), when he asks that dating the cities where the or common sense. It is not to post-war period. Taft largely the progressive income tax be slums and the maddening traf-, be wondered at that Negroes created his own following, the abolished, when he suggests that (ic increase. Crime spreads, have taken to the streets or hard way: a great deal of Gold- family relief in the vast, sprawl- technology baffles and disor- that a crime organization which ing Harlems of America be ganizes our daily lives, throws I should have been dealt with turned over to lodges, unions, millions out of work, and be-1 in the quiet of grand jury rooms private charities and relatives fore these monsters of the sci- j becomes the subject of a Sena- of the indigent when he says entific Frankenstein even edu-: torial, TV and press circus. mese tnmgs ne is not solving cated men seem powerless. ' i We have entered the age of Problems we have always had what Heilbroner calls the "Great ' with us, even massive prob- Paralysis." I do not know how Yet he is perfectly correct lems, because we are not and the paralysis is to be broken, when he retorts that the prob- never have been one of the inert but broken it must be. The last lems of our time and our so- societies of earth. But what is thing we can do is escape it, ciety are not being solved as different this time, what manv ae se ntasy of GoUwater's (el- sees about him, and the emo- matters are going. And in this of us have sensed mcreasinaJy Itwerg seen to wish, by think- tional battery that gives them profound frustration must lie and what aaele'ens peeile we iifl earselves back to a simpler energy is all but pure nostalgia the key to Goldwater's large make up the Gelvaar (eleiv- lm. for a society that is gone. following, lt is not half so much ing bemuse llfry believe tew (Distributed 1963, . ' 1 a movement with a program as MUST be a simple answer, is 8y The Hall indicate . Inc.) 1 For these and other reasons, 'one with a protest. It is des- this, as Mr. Robert Heilbroner. (All Rights Reserved) water's following has rushed to him, including groups he is bound to find an embarrass ment sooner later. Taft knew exactly what he thought and the philosophical the problems, he is wishing and historical reasons behind them awav. his thoughts, and he built a sys tematic program from this foundation; Goldwater's domes tic ideas spring essentially from negative reaction to what he