OCR Text |
Show "- 1, . . . - 44. 404 , -- 4. ,,- ,, 4, - ar, -- , . ' , ,, , , , . . , EzirlEPE yr C,,f ,4 ,e ; E Clbea'''',011 Scat' tokt Ire stand for the , ?a, - ' S" . 41, ,,, - .s -' l I,' ,:: 4., 4" itild ' , - v t: - even though the -- already is: , -- - 'P. - affair. quarrel That, of course, Is all to the t441'44') , li - to pm ., 1 11' Ia ' J.k - JP SP u I. Mil riI LII 16 li" 11:J, nI t , dall IML 14" A - For - '- , f 1 - - ' - - r ,r - - ,1 - ,, 1 . , - . important part in two ton campaigns for Mr. Dewey and one for Gen. Eisenhower. Such help meats putting extra political know-hoat the disposal of the already Rockefeller headquartem ; - '''. ii- .. i' ..):' i ,, OBVIOUSLY '; 4. ' ' 3 ,, 1 ,,... I I r , 1 , i . - .' IT IS TOO SOON for Mr. Rockefeller to tie himself to any unchangeable bald " ' strategy. But one thing can be eam-paI , sure. An all-ofor Rockefeller ? 1 I , ign will Involve entering, presiv ,f dential primaries in several states g .1 'and he will be hopeful that Mr. will be,willing to .contest ,,golaWater I I 1 one or several of the primaries i.. , against him. ,1 i 1 would expect that Mr. Rock& : , feller would submit to the first available in 1964. This Gov. Nelson Rockefeller , would be the proving attack 'radical right' ground for presidential aspirants--the New Hampshire primary where Gen. Eisenhower's victory over Sen. lately been receiving unexpected Taft In 1952 gave his , .which telephonecalls ' campaign its early Impetus.' beZni "Hello, there; how are you Then probably amidwestern How are things going?" It's a Ja as a .a k . tr"''''' t well-staffe- ..; 1,. I i ., , ., , ,, -.., Sen. Barry Goldwater faces brisk challenge - ', long-famili- The only way the Republicans can have a choice of policy 'is to have a choice of candidates who In their record and views embody a choice, of policywithin the broad " long-distanc- -- :ta' 7r;;;;P ilvevidEa-li-for-e.ni- - internatided L"idatrt, , - - .. - - - -- , -- - - - , ' , - . :;4,.........,zow.;::. ; .. --- --- . ' oda, -- ........,.,,,, -I music world THIS REGION'S heart with the recent pub. lished announcement that O. Preston Robinson, editor and general manager of the Deseret News & Telegram, was unanimously named resident of the Utah Symphony Eoard, succeeding Raymond A. Ashton who contributions during past , -- ' ,......" -- ,N,4411011,01P ......... --- - -- A New Image For Utah 'Education i CHIN ' -------- 14''''. ...- , 'IZC 1., -- WEST: Why Tabbed 'Spectator Sports?' . --- - .. - , :0'a MUSIC AND ART ' IN THE MOUNTAIN !, - . ,t,,,,., , , -. 011401186,.. o lirsL dontdeleat,themselves IS . fo a -1 . w ., coast-to-coa- r""Milmill"1"1",""""P4.------------.-r-- . . et dispute , t e provides a magnificent opportunity for the Free World eventually to defeat corn- munism:---if- , indeed, the Communists as long as the Communists 'fight each other, it is that much more difficult for them to fight anyone else. conflict also Moreover, the Sino-Sovi- , to . - AT .1 lb' IA l'Y il klitil tv E 417:11:i LtteS , , , i ' f. , ''' A 41: oNIO good. I SMCIt'innViN PR a No nu d, - ol ino-S- I I N ., By ROSCOE DRUMMOND ICEIV,YORK, N.Y,-,-I- t is evident that the Rockefeller the is cast. It remains only for the governor of Nrw York to make hiswords fully conform to his actions which now show he is committed to an Unrelent- -' ing campaign for the 1964 Republi. can presidential nomination. Thi s means that Mr. Rockefeller is prepared to challenge Sen . Barry Goldwater and the more con,serva-tive wing of the. Republican Party face-to- . in an face contest which will almost eer-tairay not be decided until the San Francisco convention next summer. I freely concede that this is repertorial judgment But there I .belleve, no 'other conclusion corn. patible with the actions andmatements which have come from the governor in recent days. Mr. Rockefeller's positron-paper- . attacking the "radical right" on every major aspect of 'national policy and warning the Republican Party against becoming its captive, is proof enough that .heyis In the race all the wayand In due course will say so. iner . could be Mpreover, a Chinese used Just as easily against Russia as -7--Against other nalionS7,---',-----:---This possibility is not as farfetched as It might seem. Czarist Russia overran large chunks of territory that once be- longed to China. China may now want that land back to provide more room for Its population explosion. It 'China can't get that territoryby relatively peaceful means involved in its current haras$ment of Russia, it conceivably could out of necessity resort to more forceful m ethod;. . - ' Ing his calls to old cronies. He is gund for a contest. making new acquaintances - and HERE IS TRE 310ST populous- talking with past critics. At this , state 'lb the rnion where the stage, he is, not so mucb askinglori- ' '' , l'ight!!--161:adjP11 ; active andarticu. - open wrommitmentit-7- as a state that 'recently elected a late, tomes IIn hisownarty. sit would There minds. other evidence is that the mocratic governor and a, Repub. be an Idle exercisi vin rhetoric if he My information is that a good governor is waiting only to time Lean senator. The outcome there did not inten8 to become an avowed deal of assistance and i o quiet f his cand poltical the convention with candidate for the presidential nomi- - - the not waitinme up MS mind. :-- counsel is coming, from two old 7avic;olid lue as to , whom the Repub. nation so that the Republican Party ...PTV's. former Gov'rbornas E. Dewey - ' limn voters would like the party to ItErUBLICAN FAIITY leaders in and former Attorney-Genera- l aorhave 'a micaningturthoice Ilerof candidates next year. all parts of the country have bert Brownell who played such an nominate.' g , it, 194 ' , - " ' Tills- INITIATIVE by the governor Sen. Goldwater and Gov. Rocke Would have all the force of car feller provide that ,cholce. I feel bonated water- - tossed into a stiff is-Rockefeller's wind it he did hot to make sure- -It ''''ment Of the mod. ..,tiort to make such possible, ,even - '. '-- . et , , , , -- ' nk- - , dis- . - ' - - -- low "Elm, API -- 7, R ' -x relucicre - all-ou- t, we need to edly has said he could get a settlement with Peiping if he gave the Chinese nuclear weapons. TES do so ' höWev 4'asilY understandable. Nuclear Wi!aPuna In thtiarids,OLRed ChinaAvould make It even more independent of Russia than it -- pute deals a setback to the cause oi world communism, neither side seems able to' refrain from adding fresh fuel to the fire. NOT ONLY have the Russlons and Chi- nese been unable to agree to even so much as a moratorium on their dispute. They have Inot even been able to keep their i 014; THING, SolitetTTSTlierAittriglIChei-rePftt.:,,....-- - ,tion.For - , - - -- Sino-Sovi- , stop refer- to the dispute as an Ideological one. It is that, of course. But It also is much more. At its heart seems to be a conflict not merely of ideas but of basic interests. One such basic conflict Is Russia's re- fusel to give nuclear weapons to Red --- -d:::- - ' '' being E vidently even the Communists theme own schizophrenic diffi- -' Selves view-the- ir of hypnotic fascina- sense a with culties --, , Sino-Sovi- - -- t , FOR . 1 , - - Sino-Sovi- et .,'''''' - makes it possible for more Red nations to follow the path of. Tito' s Yugoslavia Into relative Independence of either Mos- COW or Peiping, thus splinteling the Cornmunists not merely into two blocks but into several. And a splintered Communist bloc is a weakened one In all this however, it's possible that the time nature of the 'dispute between Russia and China has been obscured. A tnore accurate understanding of the split must be developed if we are to Improve our-chanceof explotang it. -a sttangeian' -- - With It is , - ,,nn Li U I - - , this same sense of watching momentous history in the makingwith 4.4 the power it has to shape our Own iridi- t, -- vidual futurethat the ... -slit Vic "'' - ' ' sand miles away in theKremlykthat lett,- -, to the Communist- - Invasion of South the result that American Korea xprtire - boys were celled int. 4,..... r, I . on ';',' - been tilvinely ittipired as havino. A - st , 1963 - - , o'-- I. Constitution of the United States , - A GLANCE AT today's news will show Russia and that as the split beti-eeRed China gets wider, the chances for an East-Weaccord on it nuclear test' ban seem to improve.' If the two developments ave any connectionas, indeed, they may well havethe world has reason to tope the split continues if only because of the test ban agreement it could produce. Even if such an agreement doesn't come about, the potential effects of this rift in- - the Red camp are ,of such .faryeaching consequence that it deserves the intense interest it is receiving. For what develops from this poweraistruggle between two alien titans can feet countless Individual lives as much or more as decisions being reached by gov,or home ernments in one's own-nati- ' town. Anyone who doubts this need only ;72 ROCKEFELLER-GOLDVATF- or communism ,Can Be Bealon - 7.; THE ,...dEM10, , , r, . litoh, Monday,',14ty 22, Citt., '' ,. ' - ' -- , A 0 : E , . , 4 ' - -- . . . , I w 4 . ' '' ' . . . 1 20A r-- r r-4 . , ...'. 4004N, - .""464.1141stize...; ., ., .V.... 41;11 ., SOUR : the lasting values of spectator sports-- alongside those of the artsHeaven help our democratic republic! -Lowell M. Durham Dean, College of Fine Arts University of Utah Price Canyon Highway AlAY I take this opportunity to thank the Deseret ill the excellent article on READERS' for News the Price: Canyon Highway and the hazards. ' 6' ' Involved there. vAy CONGRATULATIONS are in order for . are that the UEA will provide for a secret 1 ,,,, i The same day members of the ballot. In a democracy, that's the Nvay it 4 the Utah Education Association on the --- --'' --Road Commission flew down State , p----be and should is moving 4 surely steadily w;Yft - ward here (they used good judgment -, school to --impasse bringing Utah's Of course, everyone should be given a . : here) to dedicate a State Road Corn.. ' conclusion. a .7., ,0') , mutually satisfactory chance,...IQIpeak his 'mind freely during , , .; lttung, 1. went tiSkit years have been very considerable we--w ' X allrgoes welt, ugAollIcers say, these important meetings That, too, is N. 1 V i Lake City to attend the Summer ,-1 schools can open on schedule next fall. I but whose health resulted in his' Music ,..., Most of us were f,,::31 part of the democratic process. . .- "1,14 resignation. 4 That should be good news for everyone, held up three or four times ; , But when it comes to reaching a final oet.)",...is This an announcement of far24.1,, to clearone. including not least of all the teachers Ing for the . dec. ision, no teacher should want anyone reaching significant, appreciated -- way stretches,- - house trailers, etc.-- tt, ''' :I themselves. else to- know- which l way lie- voted any - by too few but affecting a most . How many News readers have tried Just-hmuch progress is being made -- , more than citizens would want someone ... important phase of our region's life. to 'negotiate this highway when " , in that direction may be seen from the fact Dr. Robinson impressed a lunch- - house trailers were on it? Drivers else looking over their shoulder when they A 4 vs a . tAtt,f the. that LTA's the .7. past'weekend during audience- - at musie- --voted in - a , politicalelect ion., The secret. "Vehicler ire '". TLIA L -,)1u Board ---o f ecendedthat----- r In. ,., leaders last month during the an- - ,generally courteous and try to let SM BL Protects tfie individualN) ...,;.. tr, 00, nual Meetings of the American Sym- - a A teachers consider the impasse to be "sat- 7.1 , : :trip both in his right to privacy and in his drivef pass, but even that Is a terri; Orchestra League with his tying hazard. "4"40,"7,400 ,,is isfactorily resolved." phony be undue to from presgh;m. protected right AP' more That leaves the UEA only sound, forward looking views on ' :: ihose of us who live in Carbon - , ' t 00 sure. ,,!,- o , nancing such community cultural and Emery counties know this is - 11.0. steps to takeratification of the trustees, endeavors. AT ANY RATE, the public should be !"1 the only way to get to Salt Lake proposal by the UEA House of Delegates He is opposed to federal control A is the and when you have to depend upon that 'and by the organization's general member- progress being gratified by and federal aid, feelingand rightly such a road, the 6.: ,01P:',,---- -. made toward settling the school impasse . .m..,,.;,.rtpSbt trip looms exceed. ship. The House of Delegates and the gen- r'" irtE 4.0 sothat such projects, should be Piz; Ingly dangerous. I suspect inembers A smooth and equitable settlement could iwa eral membership will meet August 2 and supported on a local basis. Both his of the commission read your article Ir'f'f'-k--,a-"-"' ' ---to vote on the mat- go a long vi..ay toward offsetting much of .1,.,,,Ig,m, 7 August 3 respectively ' )1 i7--..,: newspaper and the morning news. and decided to fly down here rather 6.. the undeserved ', bad publicity that Utah , ter. , paper have gone the second mile" in than drive. r-When it comes to a vote, Indications suffered during the dispute. ''We May Have To Look At ThoPradical Sider Utah is losing much business out doing their share of sponsorship of special benefits (Rubinstein, Spot- - of-these counties because our people I light on Youth, Book of Morm'on prefer to go to Grand Junctionand , Oratorio Scarlattl Mass 6tc.). But More power to them--as theysto not NIKITA L1 AND THE CHINESE: want to take their lives In their more, their pages have devoted gen ;,'7 VIOLENCE in rela- done muTch harm and no good by resdrt..',, hanos going up Price Canyon. erous space to articles by local and -- Mrs. Rue! M. Redd national writers. .", ing to violence. tions is rarely, if ever, excusable.' And Ot-Long 690 N. 3rd East St. ' '42The News has recently devoted After all, total rn embership in unions ,-the current strike of the Teamsters Union . ,. , t lei Price to editorials this ss acro e no :' is declining. And th realm, space country ' , 4. in Utah is no exception'. The let-- the Chinese comrades if they realize ASHINGTON, D.C. some with which I disagree. Par. responsible person wants to join an organter of the Soviet Central Corn ,. what sort of 'ruins a world nuclearas this true of one re. The unhappy record of disorder .in - ization that is identitied with Sen. Moss Was There :: ,: ticularly . mittee of the Communist Villy., rocket war would leave behind." . printed from the Wall Street Jourconnection with the strike against Utah which can or its gain goals only by ing IS IRONIC that Senator Moss about the HERE IS THE CRUCIAL Issue be. nal which referred to the Hechscher with China is' . ,, Sand and Gravel Products Corp. includes muscle poser instead of by brain power ' long, about dispute tween Peking and Moscow. The three pages of news. - addressed i .those who attended terms. in I disparaging Report viois The main that is a n a.beating whether war would be thought it was a worthwhile point, though, paper print Anyone who drives him. andpossiblya fire. apprai . the ceremonies of the groundbreakself to read it all will do well to acceptable or intolerable, indeed de. lence in relations is un log of the oe's Valley fl.eservoir in sal of the problems facing the nil. P'. Two men have been charged with assirable or disastrous. The Red Chi. tion's remind himself that the SinoSoviet. warranted because it is unnecessary. Any Emery County. orchestras and professional conflict in Central and Eastern Asia nese who profess to regard nu- number of laws exist for settling griev- ,,, sault and battery in ,connection with the he to unable WO First, generally. persuade . -existed long before either country clear war as so tolerable that it need .arts, fight, and authorities are investigating ,.,. ances, either collective or individual, to But what I objected to, in par. the Kennedy administration became Communist The conflict ex. not be avoided, so desirable that it to determine whether or not a fire at a . the statement that "in budget funds t1 start the project. through orderly, pbaceful procedures. ' be t have .,,,,;''''s, provoked, construction site was deliberately set. isted when the Ro- - might profitably Then he took off for Europe on one THE CHOICE is a simple one between : , not yet been able to understand- - the s . s, ., m anovs and the admissions to It would be unfair to blame these inci- , for hisjunkets at taxpayers' the law of the landor the law of the legitimatethea, actual. nature an u the revolutionary ' 1 at the very time that the pense, similar and entertainters, dents on the union Or on any union local opera were Manchus in choose the latter, then I I jungle.. And if we ' consequenes of nucler weapons. ments substantially more than totalk Senate considered the reelamati'on ,,,. f as a thole. Most union leaders realize power. neither side in a dispute Will be safe from 1' ,: The most important thing in the , i ..., ,o, 4 j money measure Including funds for and Soviet letter is the elaborate admissi,oris (whether this included that the cause of the labor movement is strong-artactics. ,. 4 ,,. dem, -Joe's Valley. Fortunately, Utah was as cultural values" such lasting China N.," ,, ' have long sohneshtreavtiorneSa zesf w weexisKtehrunce. , , protected and funds approved in Itollywood movies is not made clear) 1 I ,' 1 had conflicting vital , that Nitk, of Moss and the Kennedy Is a If Rusneed ' spite .to sports. Interests. spectator .,,A The nuclear of 1 weapons has changed ministration. federal reason for sound benevo. . sian ,L, empire pushed 1, .,....,, radically the problem of war and ,.,,c But once again, Senator Moss Pa- ' lence, this sounds more- like an aegu- , NO MODERN Pioneer Days observance is '''''..": t I eastward to the peace and the problem of 'revolu- - me-n141S0 It. winner 1 homa, and t pageant beauty for a 'subsidy- to sOctator " De, cifici' the elltee'Re ' s put , ,, junketeering above the welfare tion reforin. 'and mmPlftevitilout-It- -Aiar-1- 4, motion pietAires,-.Mr.larsetr- , will of thi imop;li of Mall and of Ernery ' An pagent. and so two trie7In-to-IersPorts; Which are' also performing Mr.'1,1ppmatm ''O'm p I Y e 'Pushed of understanding these great and colorful spectacles be narrator arid Miss Miles the voice of arts. Certainly the Washington ball County. Now he junkets out to northward into Nianchuria and to-- able nature of nuclear ch again this year provide the pioneer at- Utah to claim credit for Joe's Val. Amy Shand, pioneer heroine of the pagward Siberia. This conflict is still be catastrophic alike for cap- - - club could use a little help with its could 7" ,' celebra- mosphere for the "Days eant. A. large the Wall ley. will provide unresolved. infrastructure," cat italism quoth and what communismis ' 0, tion. , -S-amuel H. Wilson Unless we bear this in mind, we Street Journal, not exactly vex the support that makes the presentation impels Kennedy and Khrushchev V: In the Salt Lake Tabernacle this weck 80 Alain St must Wender 'why the Soviet letter to seek an understanding. by a real populi, but an opinion shared be, L4 ..TIM TWO G OVERNMNTS which many mr Main- Street, U.S.A. - ----, starting Tuesdn y, buLtnii.sing Thursda y. A 1960" AS when tied the be "in to cotemelsts totter and for the I -If To which sayown April, make gan be pioneer and nuclear weapons T.tNIC s:pirit during presented '"Vahandy Onward" quarrel merely 1, will stritors ess this fir thoso of the sottsswo s. the Chinese comrades openly di& , know better than anyone else the Deseret News places the quality -of 4ml net hcessasilyPIMthose of The DosereLtiosts. , and in Ogden the popular' "All Faces the 'Days of '47" observanci through. ferenees--with---ttheir-41- 1f Infernal cbaractr- of nuclear weep; ''' t - ---- --cornpirted these -two and -'dramatic '''''"-,:; ' rtah, ' '- world (I.e.. Soviet) Communist moveons. It is Ignorance of the true na- .' ' --.- , - - IVxliohtly Onward" natures - 1.!tah's ' pageants do much tothrilling " rep alive our revment... ." Why 19607 By then, the ture of nuclear war- which .creates seemewe - heith Larsen, Hollywpod ,tar of TV and ere'nce for the pioneers Tabernacle ,Choir Greeted f:41,IIIIIITD114 r44,'"i'q:sd,s Soviet Union had given China mas- - - the opposition in both alliances ,,, , motion picturest, and Vera Miles of Okla- for our piSneer heritage. sive aid In the task of indlistrializaSinger Emma Thursby? troiom MO OtwiretMews Piiri) , - tio,n. What caused the Soviets to pull .2.-- . ' 4 ' r ' Red the J I away, thereby infuriating Yes 25 Years Ago peered with the choir. She watli visit. , Chinese? Salt Lake City to observe the , July 22, 1938Children's Day, a lug. " ' 'HIGHEST and most speetacular Coastal ; ' Pioneer be--. or tit Days celebration. was it AT it BOTTOM, the1.1.S.., 'seems, Under,. Focest Sent-feature of the Pioneer Days celebra, , ;,,,;.-I 4- The program for the July' 2Ith -sand dunes in North America cause Mr. Khrushchey recognized betion," was observed by programs at interdepartmental agreement : celebration vvas published with, a - beautiful, shifting, Oregon Dunes., This basie conflict was (0',IS''''' s that the old and 'N the various playgr9unds. Featured of Agriculture Freeman lfand in China as a will.- . ,,, description manifestineTt-scof the area on the Pacific Coast is now under , and Secretary .of the Interior Udall at the Jefferson School playground , elaborate floats that would take to i Z as a potential national sea- . consideration se were, old fongs sung by Betty Rae , itself a milestone, in conservation his- - ingness, perhaps even as a will, I 10. a war between the Soviet 1 NLA I McCarrel and Carol Fullmer. part In the parade., , , chore nark.' s to have of - precipitate 'v ? ' f Staes. Union and the '14 I It: Former residents of St. George have long advo--the p;b-lerns. ,,t, 75 Years Ago b' 1 Tbe letter quotes a horrifyhigly. ,., .A,, an organization in Salt pike DIMPS 'formed blocked seahore at ' transfer 6 , . cated a national of Forest Oregon Service land . Ju1y'22, 1888The Oiden Brass sthtement approved by the i i t,.:,7,--4 lc) Officers' were Samuel Brooks, to protect significant scenic and recrea- to the NationalPark Service.,, . City. ' band Of the Chinese And Committee serenaded Central paraded in Salt Qtr I t Rtah IticQuarrie Penrose, Clifford..,.. tonal values. Sometimes referred to as - SECRETARY tbALL recerTtly stated -- Communist Party which welcomes a TT Lake City to advertise the Pioneer 4 4 t I Empey end Edith Iwins. "the Cape Cod of the West Coast," its ' after a visit to Oregon Dunes that the , thermonuclear wall. "On the r vineat Syracuse, ., Day celebration , , natural features include a wide area of '' area, without question, presents one ' of destroyed imperialism, the ' . s -- , 50 Years Aga 100 years Ago ' , 360-fo.,,,, , high Sahara-typ- e 41 dunes, fresh- - , of the finest remaining opportunities for - tol lolls peoples will create with tre.' , . 11Se4, 22, of the 1913Members thoua 22, civilization 1863Du é to the many a July mendous July speed it, water lakes, evergreen forests, and 4-0-- seashore' .pleservation to he found." Like ' i Tabernacle choir greeted Miss Erna- , the than under about irregular mail sand times complaints higher . miles of white sapel beach. on Fire IsTatitt the East Co.ast, The Ore' ' ma Thursby on her arrival in the , t , service in the Territory, T. B. H. capitalist system." Unlike othKestablished or proposed Dunes on the West Coast require 31y weekly haul of conatituente The Soviet letter, which at this city. Miss Thursby, 25 years aggy ,Stetthouse had been appointed spe- , national seashores, Oregon Dunes alreadk ' 'protection as a naanal preservenow. cial agent to investigate all such 1.vorld's is Khrushchev, mallI get it from the Dead Letter , was known as one of point is 70, ter,eent in public ownership most, to ssi :Office, alter pay the peatageAluel"L York Ilmei iemarks; oremost singers-and-hid.- often z . ' - , a , - : ' ' , ' - -- . Ttees t, .t U Pk0 - to i-. -- , - -- - , ---""- .. s Which Law? . ..,4100.11 it, - 1 off tat 6 AV I 777,E - wait-highw- 4 - the-natio- S, d11,100 Conflict - r WI A -- If 1.0. n's, - .o..' N-q-- ----- - - I Vital Interest . " W law-break- yr " 11- labor-manageme-nt . Iv- . -- . ' ,,,',.. - '.,..:, - ' 7 Ilussia m - - Pagegnts With The Pioneer Spirit I -- , - ;;;,-- rr " t',,,, -- -- -"--- -:' ..,,,...,---,,,,,- war--whi- of-'4- all-St- "heart-throbber- ." ..... , -- he . rxettcjit-run-Fulldas-.7---o- - , ' - - i - - .- 1 Senator Caucus , On Oregon Dunes '' . - , . S. ary T11 - , , Utd i - 4 , , , ' I - . ' - -- 4, . ... - I .., - . .' .: . . ' 1, ' . or t 4.,,,,,,,,01,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.Ap,, - , . 1 , I- k . A , , ., ' . , ,- ,1t.'.1;-per7missible :;;ew , , , ' -- . .- - c ot - . , e W it - - 4 . . 1 - . ' 411" - twocA-Setret- , . ' , to - - , oRtRd tr,l,a4t.,..,,,,,L4,0,..Plot"V I ,4 .'' - . ,,,osttot,egg,,k,s,ottott,t,,,,,,,4,,,,...4,akit41,d4opten.ve.4-mOkt,J'P.,..k..4.001..,6-.4-.',04,0,14.00..tAtl.t.',."0,44-,A- . ' - ,11';,:174,," ''''t |