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Show On Closer -- 4 Roy Cromley Examination" '''' - SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1966 Todays Editorials ";' , ' -- Yank In Viet: 4 Give of Self,, Too V , No Color Problem in Foxholes Army magazine. He adds that this feeling of the Negro soldier should carry over as a responsible contribution toward the attain--ment of inherent rights for all when he returns to civilian life. The U.S. Army was ordered de- Tens of millions of American men have "found a home in the Army" in the past 50 years. Or so the reluctant draftee is usually told by his drill sergeant. In the past 18 years, millions of American men of darker hue have found not only a home in the Army but a "new sense of dijrnity and awareness of personal worth." The conclusion is that of Dr. Charles C. Moskos, University of Michigan sociologist, writing in -- -- segregated by President Truman in 1948. The program of tion was successfully, plished long before the wave of racial unrest integra- accom- -, current in the nation. , This has robbed the Communists of any chance to divide our fighting men along racial lines, who - has . visited fiays-- .- Moskos, around the world. Army-uni- ts Today's soldier, "whatever hji Getting the ear of the public color fights first and foreis essential for, the success of any most as an American" For white and Negro soldiers enterprise that depends on popu- "alike, he says, "the Army is often But one foundation hag undertak- , the only experience of extended en a nationwide campaign that is interracial contact within an framework." quite lateral in its appeal for the Racial tensions still exist, but public's ear. significantly, they are most frePeople afflicted with hearing or disordother ear quent the farther removed solimpairments ers are urged by the Deafness Re. diers are from a military situation or eearch Fmdation of Nep York ' generally in combat, absent to are ear inner totally their They City bequeath iruciures. me organs, neeaea where the only color men see is for laboratory study hold the olive drab. How to develop this color blind- clues that can lead scientists to mnroved. means of treatment and -- ness, teamwork -- and loyalty-- in - civilian life is the social challenge prevention-o- f deafnes- sof the century- One thing can be More than 18 million Amermillion three said, however. Those civil rights icans, including children, suffer from some degree spokesmen who attack the draftof hearing loss. ing of Negroes as humiliating and a: . t? lix: ii. 1V1 LUC kiillC UU9 wuiiuniuii dismmmatory wildn't be is under intensive study through a network of 41 ear research lab oratories around the country par. ticipating in the foundation'! tSo lemporai cone rrogram lor JLar The first quality of education Research. Some people is good manners. Man's intricate inner ear cannot . ... equa-litari- an THE CHOPPING BLOCK - 9 S He S hould -- Have Run Foster - - iu J- of -J J.,J ilunk-thelcours- 44. e,. Vice President Humphrey, after being heckled in California. Thank you very muck for say-In- g my life when I was a baby six its inaccesible location within the temporal bone the hardest bone in the body. To determine the causes of inner ear disorders, the inner ear must be studied after death. But until recently, the answers to most inner ear prob-- lems were buried with thedeaf-ene- years 1 ago". A person who has a hearing impairment merely signs a pledge. There is no cost to the donor, his estate er survivors and the surgical pro- cedure is not disfiguring. The temporal bones are then by line -- Here's the latest news-flas- h on what to get the d man in your , life. . This little gadget will solve woman's most worrysome problem . . '. what to give the man that has everything. The gadget? A can opener. Sound ridiculous? It's not. According "Mod-.- , to, the McGraw-Hil- l publication era Packaging." the newest trend for men is CANNED CLOTHES Now available in cans are such items as belts, pajamas, sweaters, shirts." handkerchiefs and ties which,-b- y the way, are sold in handy six packs. The women have not been overlooked. Soon to go on the market are canned dresses and nylon garments. ; Talk about changing times! Somehow it just doesn't appeal to me . . . buying a complete wardrobe in a gallon can. Can't yo just picture yourself in a clothing store where the shelves are stocked with cans, telling the clerk: "I'll have a gallon of that, two quarts of those and a ' Vi pint of that." . "itsusinessTTharirtheusT-ness Jensen - Some women are so rabid about this "pot" thing that I'm told they solicit one among the neighborhood women.1 Could that be true? Jeoenoff was telling me how rabid a Dodger fan her little girl Nina has be- come. She said her little gal puts .hef and soul into rooting for the Dodg- ers to win. During the second game wnen the Dodgers were shut out, ... Barbara was driving downtown with the radio on and Nina verbally cheering' the Dodgers to . " of the police; Quotes In The News By United Press International SAIGON -- Cpl. William Hut-tofollowing the death of Marine Capt. J.'J. Ridge when two of his own company's tank rounds fell short as the Leathernecks were taking Hi n, S Sounds more like an alcoholic on Four words most heard today are 'Ya in a pot?" "Pot" meaning the system used to relieve rone of his earnings during world series time. Some people cari" hardly wait from one world series lo another just so they can gefln a "pot" And to some -'" peoplethe end of the series leaves them in a "pot" Suddenly she stopped chance a without lo fight back." - WASHINGTON President Johnson, teling a news confer, ence heT&pected to see the Senate .session end with approval for. 85 of the 90 bills he TheToIcamT erupts and-the-- radv lence. The white .policemen in Gre-- . nada had absolutely no excuse Jorprotecting-theegro-oieanagerlIank-Ba- ZURICH --Vice Squad Chief Hans Witschis, defending his proposal to legalize brothels: "You cannot weed out prostitution and it is "better to lead it onto roads where it can best be controlled." : LOS ANGELES -B- altimore rt commiserating Los with BERRY'S WORLD An- - Davs, who dropped two fly ballsxand set a World Series record with three errors in an inning: "I've played in sun fields, and it's rough. ! don't blame the poor guy." "1 0. BERRY But I have found the most rabid are usually womcnf Take the case of Kay Spa'ckman, a member of The, Herald advertising staff. He .recently moved his wife and family Jown from Salt Lake City where his wife Bevj entered world series "pots";, with . annual consii-. ... tency, tt"7 Being new to the community she, found herself at a loss in nof having a "po" number to root for. How- 'pot-fan-s" fending, "I would like to see the y men, drafted for the srmyahd stay in their own village. At teous to people, even on the, telephone. This morning at a very busy moment the phone r ., and a sugary Miuw u i iiauwau w wau carpeung. 1 saia no, ana menshe asked if we had any rugs. "That," I replied, "is nobody's infernal business.'', The sugary voice changed to the utmost sarcasm. "Thank you, Mr. Robertson, for" your coopera- -' tio." There was a giggle, and the receiver clicked. If I want ,a survey of my. furniture made, and Lord knows it needs it, I'll do it myself without the urging of any tele- pest FORUM RULES And that aint. all!! I'll bet every "bookie" in the country was asking the same question-"- Are thev playing footr ball or baseball." Letters from readers are In- vited. They should be as concise as possible, with a limit, of 350 words. Letters longer thw this must be cut. Typewrite If possible, double spaced. Letters must carry, writer's . true name and address. Pseudonyms are not permitted. The Herald assumes no responsi bility for statements in the -- " J L.i m ft .w k m 1 1966 . .EilfcilrnTrf reserves the right to reject or edit letters which are too long,: not in good taste or potentially libelous Letters; which dea with church Joctrlnal subjects or contairr statements deroga-- " lory to any religion of creed 1 " y NEA, ImC will be ''If the religion angle doesn't work out, Mr. Leary, maybe TRAVEL AGENCY ! we could establish some kind v. d tamlets. "Vu are not al V rejected - want Ihp hip war with un4.tiiH T...I iU. ets that must be protected we're to win." if Z7 Notional Windo Conf idnce Lacking In Wgiren Commission Report By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International Some Americans are record ing a vote of no confidenc in the report on John F. Kennedy's assassination prepared under the direction of Chief Justice Earl Warren. This poses a question: Does the no to confidence extend the investigating commission and . its chairman? Warren was chairman of the commission set up by. President Johnson to establish the who, how, and why of assassination. An Kennedy's official inquiry and an official verdict were urgently necessary to establish the facts and to lay to ( rest the fancies that enveloped the tragic incident.' justice of the United" States is headman of the U.S. judiciary is to sift whose, funcion evidence and to determine facts. ' ....... An uneasy feeling of no confidence in the chief justice wniilH have nnu'orfnl nnliti1 impact if it became at all general among the voters. This impact would have no kinship with the far rightists' dream of impeaching Earl Warren. The nnlitical imnart unnlH he in the area of dispute about the1 Warren Court's extension of its own powers Into the field of legislation'. ' The current Supreme Court has discovered in the Constitution federal powers and prohibitions that escaped the notice of preceding justices. This usually has been true from generation- to generation as one clutch of Supreme Court justices suceed- ed another. Apart from civil rights and the court's umbrella of protection over the personal -- " Half-truth- s, opposed to the collective rights of citizens, the Warren court probably reached further into legislative apportionment than into any other controversial field. that the chief Conceding justice is not engaged in a popularity contest, it must be conceded also that his prestige wouIdTe "muchdamaged by identification with an law-abidi- - manipulation ue current which' challenge the report. That is the more now likely doubt X and no-trut- fantasies accepted as facts in the hysteria of the moment include the suspicion' that there had been a conspiracy of which the assassin merely was the agent, --that Kennedy was the victim of plot, that two gunmen were involved and that Jack Ruby killed Lee Harvey Oswald to assure that ' he w6uld not talk. The Warren Commission discovered no consipracy, no second gunman and no such motive as had been suggested. The pollsters now discover the American people to be suspi- Warren report. This cious A skillful follow from may Madison-Aven- ed of explanation -- - 'guptriHUHi - report rr uu ajwecc. ..whole truth. . 1 Scoffers.,, brushy aside.these expressions ' of public opinion, jn, f We accept as valid the. of election presidents and lesser officials by voters who probably do not know any more about the campaign issues involved that they know about ' the Warren report.' .Surviving, therefore,- -. is - the questions whether' the suspect-e- d inadequcy of the Warren report will Cause a substantial number" of citizens to identify the chief ...justice with.' a sifting,1 A chief The opinions and statements expressed by Herald columnists are. their owe and do not necessarily re' " .. natter asserting that they reflect merely the uninformed opinions of persons who never read the Warren report and probably did not read far beyond the headlines of the news stories about it. Maybe so, but that is about as well informed as mi-rm nn m ovar mmpc in flect the views of this tr as- on a - pres public that Warren and his associates came up with the and evidence - idential assassination. NEW YORK (UPI) --Wright Investors it Service says believes' that al its current severely depressed price level the stock market represents a constructive opportunity, which occurs onlv about once in three j xi . t tion upon which ' investment fortunes are built. 1 k be.- - . some-times- . phone Dodgers "booted" the ball so much that day they set new world series records. we female voice warned .10 Know u 1 owneo my own nome. x saia i gele&Jlc4geruifi BY JAMES before move out of the path of the hot lava. We still haven't learned that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. As a rule I try to be cour- ran? uerr cniiarpn irom uieir aaun assau-ant- s but the San Francisco policeman had every right to hoot a. car thief who refused to stop. What the police down there and the National Guards-heamen who were called out to quell the -- rioters should have done, was meet violence with her Then, there's ihe story of- - the naughty little ghrl that was put in a " clothes closet for punishment For IS ' long minutes there wasn't a sound. Finally the stern, but anxious mother opened the door and peered inside. "What are you doing 1b there?" ' '"' . she asked. , FYom the darkness came the em- . phatic answer, "I'm thpittin ojj your new hat,. I'm thpittin' on your new - dreth --,r m thpittin' on your new thatin thlippers and . . . and : S' There was a breathless pause. "And what!" cried the mother ' . Came the voice of vengei nce, more "Now I'm waiting for thpit!" would deprive them of education and opportunity, and force them to vent their blind fury upon the innocent and helpless. As usual, we wait until who recommended: 'I think that is a pretty good bo score." cheering and turned to her mother and said, "Mother are they playing football or baseball?" .. Youjirliave to admit that it's a pretty goooTobservation on the part of an 8 or year-ol- d girl specially when the ...... Negro rioters had been taught to read the history of. their city they would have known that criminal violence could bring them nothing but death, but they are no more iporant than the white people .himget it to see . "come-on.- " some-.thin- a k; Vietnamese. "Your decisions ways best for. us. ot-us.- again. If those 428: "I hated rest- - .. There is all the difference in the world between the Grenada police who stood idly by, and the San Francisco police who performed their duty. If riots, by either whites or blacks, are not stopped no man's life or ' : property will be safe. If the San... Francisco police had acted as the Southern police too often do there could he a repetition of history in the city by the Golden Gate. Bafck well over a hundred yeaja ago a gang of thugs calling themselves, "The Sydney Ducks," took over the city but after a few prommentmen were murdered the' reljponsible citizens organizedfhe first American Vigilanjes and hanged a few of the Ducks, and law and order iWas restoredIt, can happen - not to solve social problems. And they have sure are these people that they are .oing to win and deny-al- l people with a dark skin the dignity of membership in the human race that they now talk confidently of electing bullying 'little Governor George Wallace of Alabama to' the Presidency of the United States, and "the white backlash" will probably do it. Then we, too, will be free to beat up crippled little children wjtti a chunk of gas pipe. Oh, happy day! On the other hand a police-- " ' man' in San Francisco shoots Ne and kills a sixteen-year-ol- d gro boy running away from a stolen car. At once Negro youths noted,cates of Black Power screai ill police brutality. Yet thereare people who can see no connection between keeping Negro children in ignorance7 and poverty and Negro riots and vio- ever, like sll women sEe Ingeniously overcame her loss by handing her husband a quarter each day with instructions to put her In a "pot". This he does and now she has purpose in watching and listening to the world series. ... s, So ., asweu asone iarn(LLeyQUiaJiQi. pipe. warding life or continued imprisonment in a silent world. a right to defend themselves until the mob wreak their savagery on inno cent people. If heads should be cracked, crack 'era. The old cry of police brutality- will not hold water. Whether in' the North cr the South the law should be upheld so that the public can go about crippled friend, and the noble representative of the white race found more use for his piece of - sent to the nearest laboratory together with the individual's hearing and medical records. What scientists learn from them may - one day mean for many thousands the difference between a rich, re- - The procedure for bequeathing the inner ear is simple. , T , more violence By FRANK C. ROBERTSON One of 4he charming pictures coming out of Grenada Miss. when a group of white adults chains armed with and iron pipes attacked and beat up a group of little Negro children on their way to school, was that of a man chasing a little Negro girl who had had polio andlatingher on the legs with a length of gas pipe. The children had been legally sent to school, but the Grenada police force stood idly by and refused to interfere. One little girl ran to the aid of her Anna Marie Goddard, who has just learned to write, in a let-- ter to firemen in Phoenix, Ariz. d. , Mr. Robertson - Tny bay 1 : g. ..- :. your urging, the draft is taking the young merr of the villages away to fjght elsewhere. So there arenot enough young men -- . Tmi fc - - S. policy disagreement with but worry at the growth of U.S. Influence on domestic Vietnamese decisions when you don't know reaipicture rath-- " er than leaving it up to the , . off-dut- y. off-po- st "Take this example : "Your people organiied the Revolutionary Action which are supposed to go out and change the hamlets. X "The trouble with these teams is that they are not organized from the people, but from the outside. . "The Revolutionary Action Team members, even., when -- they're recruited locally, come into the hamlet from the outside with an outside team. "I know some team members whq stay with the people at home in the daytime and stay . in military posts at nifht so not to be attacked by the Viet Cong. So. they are not part of the people. "Instead of this, I would like to see the oeonle of the villaees organize themselves. g "I think we must build not from the bottom :from the top,.,But yojAmerfc.-- . cans don't, see it that way. I think it should be the people from the hamlet who face the danger and defend them.el-e- s at night, not men brought in from the outside who do the de 'to . That Others May Hear SAIGON' (NEA) Perhaps we are making the wrong ep- proach to the Vietnamese people, giving them too many ma--: terial things and not enough of " ourselves. " . Sometimes it's good for us to, see ourselves as others see us. "Americans go down into the country," said the Vietnamese student. They are so good. They givefood. They give amV biotics. . : "'You need it,' they say. Take H.' See the contrast between the' American rich man with so many things and the Vietnamese poor man. "You are so eager to help. But Asiatic people are sensitive the way of giving rather than to the gift itself. They need not so many things, but rather they need more of friendship They want friendship more than gifts. '.'Go with me to the people's restaurant and squat and eat .witiuJMr-- Something like - this means so much to us as people. "You are always building schools. But we don't care if you build 100 or 1,000 schools for the children. U you want to do something for my people, do something personally friendly us and our children. Do it yourself. Don't, hand us some-thinGive yourself, not things. "My disagreement with the Ralph E. Samuel & Co. Says is somewhat difficult to adopt a bearish position after seven' months of falling prices. The firm says many investors, at - this : juncture - will - prefer to stand still and it takes no issue with that approach. But be- .tween buying and selling, the nrm says, u is an lor tne former at this point. it - Goodbody & Co. 'says the. market, is likely to continue under pressure m the week ahead, reflectine further exam ples of the -- corporate profit margin 'squeeze,' speculation over the possibility of a major step up of military aciivity..in Viet Nam and. the prospects of a tax boost. '".. |