I PAGE 10 A HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. Ttiunulay, February 7, 1963 Revenge Thought Motive For De Gaulle Act : By TOM A. CUIXEN ' -Newspaper Enterprise Assn BKUSSEI.S (NEA) Is revenue what makes President de Gaulle tick? Is it vengeance that moti vales him in his dealings with the United States and Great Britain te he still smarting from the wrongs, which lie fancies he suf fered at the hands of Allies dur ing: the war? The revenge theory is popular with Die British at the momcnt- It js advanced to explain Pres ident de Gaulle's intransigence in jamming the door of Europe shut on Britain. H is also said In be the reason why he rejected America's offer of Polaris mis siles. According to this theory, De Gaulle never forgets a grievance In this case, he has been har boring his grievances against the Western Allies for 20 years Tie Gaulle was humiliated by Pmme Minister Churchill and President . Itooscvclt during the war. both of whom failed to rec ognize his genius, end now he cfPx his oonortunity tor ven chance. So runs the argument. ' Jlie trouble with the revenge theory, in the opinion of those who have followed fiencii poll tics closely, is that it is much too simple to explain a complex man. If revenge were really what motivates the Krench president then the present moment should see France at loggerheads with Germany instead of forging the Paris-Bonn axis. Himself the veteran of two wars against the Germans and (he son of a soldier who was wounneu in the war with Prussia, Charles de Gaulle would liave good reason for being anti-German instead of pro-German. A tragic but mutual misun derstanding lies at tile bottom of Die present impasse between f'r a n c e and tlie Anglo - .Saxon world, according to students of French politics. In the first in-i-timce, the Anglo-Saxons have niver understood l)c Gaulle, him- Mtg-'--- - v - -i "-tST'' .....tAJAi.,.;.! SPEECHMAKER French President Charlei de Gaulle in typical speechmaking pose. self, or appreciated his character. The best self-portrait of De Gaulle is to be found in his writ ings as a young, keen-eyed army officer, where he refers to him- self impersonally as "the lead- "ilis assion for acting on his own." De Gaulle wrote, "is naturally accompanied by a cer tain roughness of conduct." The leader is distant, too. for authority is not to be had with out prestige, nor prestige without aloofness ..." In the years that have elapsed since this was written, De Gaulle hasn't altered, in the opinion of those who know him. His hair is now while, his figure porlly, and he suffers from eye catar acts, but he is still the same un bending figure. The Anglo-Saxons, for t h c i r part, have mistaken "roughness of conduct" for rudeness, author ity for stubbornness, aloofness for arrogance. Of all the crosses I had to bear during tlie war the Cms s of Lorraine was the heaviest, Winston Churchill remarked of De Gaulle. The Cross of Lorraine, of course, was the Free French symbol. President Roosevelt found him no less dillicult to gel along with. De Gaulle, in turn, blamed the Allied leaders for not giving prop er attention to France and to French interests in their conduct of tlie war. And this basic dis trust undoubtedly lies behind his fear today that the Anglo-Saxons are plotting to dominate hurope. ' Britain's entry into the Euro pean Common Market would cre ate "a colossal Atlantic Commu nity duiendent upon and controlled ity me uniicu ouiurs, iik mm his recent press conference.! The suspicion grows in Britain that De Gaulle is himself trying to dominate Europe through the reation of a Western I h i r d Force extending "from the Atlan tic to tlie Urals." in his phrase. We Buy 'Em By The Truckload . . . We Sell 'Em By The Truckload! and the equal of America or Ihe Soviet Union. the Guardian, which accuses De Gaulle of using the European Common Market as an instru ment for "the renaissance of France as a commanding Euro pean Mwer." says that this is perversion of the European ideal." The Daily Telegraph also speaks of De Gaulle building a Third French Empire at Europe's expense. One thing appears certain here there is no place for Britain in the Europe which De Gaulle has in mind. The British are not even real Europeans, to his way of thinking. "Britain is insular, maritime, and linked by her trade, her mar kets and her suppliers to a great variety of countries," the French president declared at his press conference. In brief, the structure of Bri tain is definitely different from that of the continental nations." Such a view is regarded as heretical by the British. It is a hangover from the l!Mh Century when Anglo-French trade rivalry dominated European politics, in the view of most British with whom I have talked. It also illus trates how wide the gulf between these countries has now grown. Elks Plan Home For Retirement PORTLAND (UPU Plans lor a 300-unit, 10 story retirement home in southwest foruana 10 cosi million were announced Tuesday by the Elks Lodge. The home will be located on 9.5 acres ot lano ai w zoin ve. and Capitol Highway, providing the City Council grants a zone change. I i wr x w , f r i ? i i I i 1 L old. LONG-LIVED Mrs. Harriet Isaacs. 105 years watches Monday as a candle is lit on her birthday cake at a Santa Rosa, Calif., rest home. Mrs. Isaacs born on Feb. 4, 1858, in Michigan, has outlived all but one of her children. However, she has 14 grandchildren, 30 great grandchildren, 20 great-great grandchildren, and two great-great-great grandchildren. UPI Telephoto State Wages Fall Short SALEM tl'PD The Oregon State Employes Association lOSEAl said today that 1,166 state employes not only fail to earn enough to match Oregon's cost of living, but may be eligible for federal surplus food. The OSEA said Oregon's aver se family has two adults and two children, and must earn $3,- 182 yearly to meet the cost of living index. James B. Daniels, executive secretary of OSEA. said state em ployes possibly falling short of the mark in earnings are those in the gross monthly salary range of $210 to $236. Catholics Urge Debate 1 On School Aid Proposal WASHINGTON (UPD- Roman Catholic educators said today fed eral aid to parochial schools can be constitutional and urged Con gress to debate the issue openly. Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, education director nf the National Catholic Welfare Conference, told the House Education Committee that President Kennedy's proposal for grade and high school aid In public institutions was discrimi-, natory and "totally unacceptable." The committee got full endorse ments from two groups of Ken nedy's $5.3 billion grade school to graduate school . assistance pro gram. They were the National Education Association, speaking principally for elementary and secondary schools,- and the Ameri can Council on Education, the leading representative of colleges and universities. The church-state fight led to the death of Kennedy's school aid pro gram in the last congressional session. The church position, as outlined today, meant that the battle will go on again this year. In .prepared testimony, Hoch walt said the issue of federal aid to private and church-connected schools -should not be dismissed with the simple statement that it violates the constitutional ban on government establishment of re ligion. "We assert just as confidently. and with- the assurances of lead ing constitutional authorities, that such assistance is constitutional to the extent of the public function it fulfills," Hochwalt said. He said the specific question involved has not been decided by the Supreme Court. Referring specilically to Ken nedy's request for an end to "end less debate" on the religious school issue, Hochwalt said "we do not consider the debate. . .A luxury or a waste of time since the issues involve God-given as well as constitutional rights." Bonding Bill SALEM (UPD - New college dormitories worth $10 million got nearer reality today as tlie House passed a bill to raise bonding lim its for self - liquidating college buildings. Rep. 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