Show - -- t v— — 1 -v oo 'I ' - : ' i ' I I r — 1 - J o Pibunt ii1t garit Zhe Wednesday Morning September H knuckle under to the late Senator McCarthy and his followers THE MAINE election is an added indication of a Democratic trend This is hard to explain in some respects however 'A number of cndit1ons to which Americans are reacting with antagonism or apathy are chargeable in part to the Democratic-cot rolled Congress And some of the members of Congress from the South have shown anything but statesmanship lately — There can be no doubt but that the chickens ara coming home to roost for the administrat ion gift-taking- n one-part- PR ESIDENTIA Secretary Sherman Adams is the prime target in the wake of the vicuna scandals but like Adams the defeated incumbentzenator Frederick G Payne also received favors from the New England industrialist Bernard Goldfine Governor Edmund W Muskie who ran Up a sensational lead and will be Maine' first Democratic senator elected by the people is personable and popular and has an excellent record both as chief executive the last three years and as a state legislator several terms previously And his opponent's record was not impressive With Muskie setting a terrific pace Demo crats also won the governor's office and two of the three congressional seats Several claim a WWI And there we're renewed demands that Sherman Adams resign This was an important element in the political races but only one of several Maine is traditionally Republican but It has elected many independent-thinkiupersons The holdover senator Margaret Chase Smith is famous for her "Declaration of Conscience" and her refusal to -- g j ' : - I 1 ' - rillIN 1 '1ytc) -- ow 1 ( !! ' S & A ' ' — A kg': -- 'rr 4td' b C-- i i‘ 'I NI'd 'i 1 --1- Q MITI' tk 1cocEs -) - N -- CONTI Magni Utah 11' 7As0- The Aquarius Museum ''''''' 0 ) t 7 (‘ti riety and astonishing beauty Specimens of Indian arts hate come from Alaska to Peru and exhibits that go hark five thousand Years bringing to life the tribes and nations of give continents their traditions and their skills Your state owes a debt to the founder of this museum for placing it within your borders In my opinion it should become more widely publicized Its educational value is obvious My two young grandsons-- 12 and 14 —who were with me on my visit were enthrallgd Could not trips from some of your schools be arranged to give other children a like experience? MRS ALICE D RUSSELL South Pasadena Calif f 1 I - J 4 t 1 C 0 r Ii r a -'- 1 " ' i Ii 1 T $ I 5 --- )) rf 1 I i bare-lookin- 1 ---- ' f-I-g- - k ------ It - IR e) e 0204" )1 ' t ig---- drift into war lie is confused andun- happy so he votes "agin"--thparty In control of the White House The Maine election definitely dims Re- 11 If face-lip-t- e A iji Could This Ilappen? Editor Tribune: I'm shocked 'end also sick I just 'read the article in The Tribune telling about an Alabama man who was sentenced —to be executed for robbing an elderly woman of $195 Please tell me there was a misprint or that part of the story was left out or that it happened in Russia A thing like that just couldn't happen in America Could it? Readers Editor Tribune: During 0 the past summer I had the privilege of visiting your : (( 1 beautiful state particularly k ) the matchless Capitol Reef i414sskg--yMonument Park area and I Let 'Em Serve Time' 1t ‘ii It discovered an amazing and Editor Tribune: It seems 21 unexpected thing On the to me that a N 1141 boy of outskirts of the town z who is strong enough to tv)z::-:-)--a stands Teasdale large drive a two and onehalf ton i rather building ( ( automobile and break the which houses what is called law should be strong enough the Aquarius Museum and to serve his sentence in jail 7r— contains an exhibit of anc A' e& when he is caught ' cient and primitive art and Mother and father and the ' ' handicraft which any muP bishop should spend busy 1 ' seum in any large city would - more of their time preping ' n' --- Junior on the facts of life li 110 - be proud to possess It rep — resents the lifetime- - and unand less time trying to ease tiring work of its owner him out of a jam he got into Tora Nelson who for all by his little own self a small fee takes pleasure in It's tough enough tryingto John lterling showing any chanoe visitor make juveniles rooms 'around the the facts of life without v(tose walls are hung with turning over every possible stone to pull them out of priceless tapestries and who draws upon her vast store their troubles When they do of knowledge and experience Is get out it's natural for them can MICIL "What In tion LANSING Q EAST management unnecessary to narrate and inform to believe it was the dirty old do at the bargaining table others you will see manage— how does auto manageOne is made aware of the to retard the wagecost-pricjailers fault they were there ment view its relations with rnent taking a hands- - off us and the centuries behind and certainly nothing of spiral?" lives of other peoples and their own doing the Auto Work- I po1icy' "Resist the de Bugas: other ways There is wide va TAXPAYER ers Union? in bar mands! Ultimately Q "What are your views John S Buon the prospects of passgaining sessions the issues gas Ford's vp are resolved either by good ing more right to work in charge of hard bargaining across the laws in the states!" 711'N industrial rela- table or sometimes perhaps ' tions has pro- By Ham Park st' Rugas "Not being much by strikes If the economic vided a of a political prognosticator eral "shots" of John Mooney power of the parties is fairly If it is the truth what 56P-' look ahead to although I talk about polwell balanced I think that it? does matter who it says The Tribune's sports editor ''‘44: industrial rela- flies a great deal I give you you generally come out with —Anon One tionsin a study day last week Charley just a horseback guess sound wellreasoned The Bridge Club Meets Issued by the 04NNi4 ittpiA think the atmosphere as of pretty dropped in the Mint Murphy and packages Well girls I don't know Labor and In- - Mr Herling 1957 was somewhat conduafter a long absence After or agreements" how you feel about it but dustrial Relations tenter of dive to the passage of scanning the "picture gal "THE DANGER arises"laws in a few more try as I will I can't work up Ivry he said: "Ham this Michigan State University Mr Bugas says "when one a n y enthusi states I think their spread looks like it might be a edited Stieber But side is so powerful economasm over the if any is apt to be slow with John Mooney Fan Club" his opinions shed light on 'her ically that the size of the some ceiling on the coming e I e C Jim Young's the critical period of the tion Take the of states passing such laws" package in terms of dollars opooe) daughter Christine found a --or perhaps in terms of pro- - candidates for next 20 days cottontail nearly dead baby Is of visions the for agreement r Congress : Together with five other from starvation She took not sound—the package is it: :: the tiny creature home fed key men in labor arbitration Those who are excessively large and its and nursed it back to health and university Mr Bugas refeet Is inflationary Where "How" asks a voice on for running l and r mv i t lg rapidly of 411 e have collecthe exploitation concludes that free bus "do these juveniles tear fIotilioswsg election a r you b t Christine excessive power by one side themselves away from the tive bargaining will continue the place Her heartbreak can on to much is not TV there rec you bpcome their long enough Ham Park to be the basic tool of Nvill come Jim fears when do about it—no one likes to ords and if you delinquent?" the jackrabbit reaches its relations is all be a dead hero It ask me girls the record of very full growth and returns to ' First its trouble in the well and good to talk about about is 85th the Congress But he expresses manits natural habitat Aliddle East then the Far unless a but stand to strike shakiest the taking thing agenient's mounting conFast To keep a clear eye you is can- seesome possibility so a No man on I can think of As for good but cern about labor's political I on International of winning that sfrike you those who want to succeed good woman can't make him activity these days you need bi- - think better them -- - well my husband long and hard before locals Mr Bugas gloomily says: you submit to it" says that like Hamlet he'd 'Perfection Of Map rather bear those ills we This conclusion is shared "If organized labor achieves A lot of people who are I know that I could never t the dominant political posi- by UAW President Walter have than fly to others that worrying about the other plan tion for which it strives it side of the moon don't even Reuther who refused to we know not of creature so superb as It seems girls that the A man "take" a strike when the opis altruist certain that free know what's on the other are— of both him offered was leaders neir in we side of the tracks collective bargaining as parties portunity A scion of the human race own town know it today will have befeverishly hunting high and by management last June smart enough to — Who's low for a presidential candicome an interesting historshave his face date for 1960 Someone with ical fact" Who thought up cellophane glamor and oomph Casting the zipper IN REPLY to a series Of directors in Hollywood use Knows whereto look to find Mr Bugas requestions the 'same procedure When the Dipper vealed some of the basie they have a part to fill—say speak at length of plebi tenets of management's Qtiemoy: Who Pulls WI that of a- successful business Can scites philosophy in handling its or professional man — they Christian Science Monitor: Of turbines Hoffa union union relations ghost invariably engage ah (President Eisenhower has said) that the deployment rights ! Q "Why don't the auto of about a third of the Nationalists' total forces (on the actor with a minimum of How in any creature here be- companies join together ability and a maximum of islands of Quemoy and Matsu) makes "a closer inter ' low looks in preference to one bargaining to counteract the locking between the defensive systems of the Islands a Can make rocket that tactics of the UAW?" a of with maximum ability with Formosa" will go Bugas: 'historically in and a minimum of looks If this consideration Wrre allowed to become predomiCan march for weary miles the automotive industryOn The' most impressive-lookinUnited States policy in a very touchy situation could nant all things including labor reparading men I have seen or met be made a prisoner of the whims and ambitions of GeneralisOr understand a bill of lations ther9 has been a simo have been headwaiters hotel Kalshek For it would follow that wh'erever Chiang total absence or VACUUM of the generalissimo disposed his men the United States would lading doormen and United States I do not see nor ever will coordination I see nothing Senators while the most suebe obliged to protect them But that convinces me that that cessful in the fields of busi- - Man is miraculous We do not read any such obligation into the mutual still Is apt to be altered" ness finance and science defense treaty of 1955 or the congressional Formosa resolu"You do re- If Q "If 'unions attempt to have been rather Insignifi- tion of that year and We feel sure that President Eisensmember say collar white the do in not and cant hower organip appearance Secretary Dulles That this is the tenth of Sep workers do you think manThe latter's warning that it would be "highly hazardWhat did you say my tember to ous" for the Chinese Communists to assume that an attack agement will take steps dear? That I made a misWith sixteen people du t at block this move?" on Quemoy "could be a limited operation" may have been deal? If I did it's no wonder seven?" Bugas: "I don't know I necessary under the circumstances But American policy for that's what life is mostly imagine that the attitude of would have much better backing among allies and more I'll lie howls and calls on high hand back the cards-an- d est heaven management toward white deal over again acceptance among neutralsif Presidrnt Chiang had been lie tears his hair he clucks collar organization will vary ' persuaded during the past two years to draw his forces Notes on the Cuff Department and flaps from one company to anback to Formosa and leave the Strait as a clear-cu- t boundary The Mint Cafe being a And goes into complete vol other and you will find between himself and the Communists for rendezvous manSome almost is The Nationalist lapse dependgovernment entirely policies varying popular has a I've prattled of the date for ent on America for finances equipment and naval support sports enthusiasts agements will take an agdays It ought not be given authority even indirectly to draw large display of photographs gressive policy within the in an the United States into war with Red China over an issue of prominent figures in the My hero never heard a limits of various fields Conspicuously which probably most Americans and certainly almost all effort to convince white col7 phrase others In thefree world would consider —Elizabeth Dunn lar employes that organiza placed in the display are sev- - 7 was and THAT IS not the lull story The average voter realizes that most problems in this complex world are beyond human solution He is aware that he has precious little to say about federal taxes or whether this country is pushed or allowed to lion of his dealings with Goldfine - AliEm!' 2'(r1 praised for ending the Korean War acting to prevent one with the Chinese three 'years ago but lately a series of crises all seemingly related to "brinksmanship" and bungling are a far cry from what the voters had been led to expect The administration has failed even to live up to its "clean as a hound's tooth" pledge reflect- ?: I y The President Republicans d high-Oare- that Payne's de(eat ' The Public Forum Airco( lv? By Our i Results Blow to the GOP Maic Election Republican leaders are being realistic in acknowledging that the party took "a bad beating" in Maine's election And we believe there is truth In the comment that the smashing Democratic n victory in this traditionally-Republicastate was due in part to "drift and inde't cision" and "favoritism and cm the part of some high officials in the Eisenhower administration - 958 r- - s l 3 1 10 P- aser Is the Honeywoon high-celle- Labor Political Power Causes Concern publican hopes for November There tnay of course he a change in the political climate of 1960—but this will require real strengthening of administration leadership - a 'a C e ( a A — Nasser's Shadow Over Another Arab State A recent article by Reiman Morin of the Associated Press in The Tribune re- ported that the Nasser bandwagon is rolling and that "nothing In the world can - stop it" President Nasser's successes so far have been confined to the Middle East Put he is obviously determined to use the force of Arab nationalism to extend his lalluence into every Arab state That in- eludes' North Africa with particular em- phasis at the moment on Libya Egypt's next door neighbor As a matter of fact one' Western diplomat In Catru-tolMorin that Nasser Could probably take Libya by kelephone—if he wanted to And the future of Libya is of prime importance since the United States main- tains one of the largest air bases in the world at Wheelus Field just outside Tripoli KING IDRIS ot Libya Is Ile is backed by British troops which Incidentally were reinforced immediately fter the coup that overthrew the pro- Western regime in Iraq d But according to George Williamson of the Wall Street Journal the country4tFelf doesn't go along with 'the king The university students are strongly pro If Proof Is Needed We doubt if travelers on the commexcial airlines need any further proof after the tragic crash of an airliner and a military jet 'over Las Vegas that there is urgent need to keep scheduled commercial aircraft and military training flights separated But the crash of two huge B52 jet bombers over a busy highway just outside of Spokane Washington Monday does lend further support to that separation demand The two planes were'on routine training flights from nearby Fairchild Air Force Base They must have—or at least should have—known of each other's presence In view of the fact they were flying at an altitude of only some 1500 feet -above a heavily-travele- d road and a fairly populous area they should have been flying with restraint rather than enkaging in any unusual maneuvers Yet somehow the two craft crashed raining debris over a wi 1 e area Eleven of 15 men aboard were kii ed outright and Iwo of the foUr survivors are critically' do - Injured The crash of military aircraft is serious enough But there is a certain hazard in military flight training and maneuvering which must be accepted The risks involved in such flying however must be kept removed from regular commercial aviation If military planes are going to crash—and at course every effort should he made to prevent such crashesi—they must not take innocent travelers on the ation's airways to sudden death with them Y1 bug: Cartoollit 1) 44 lo IA s44 ot ' A: d V 70 — ' 1 - 40P '4': - - - 411 I N: — 4f - - it bp c pc- 'If You - AcAsss E44W2 s -"v in the Philadelphia Can't C) - - -- : u- - Evening Bulletin Lick 'cm Smash 'ern" Nasser The Egyptian president's trait is displayed in the bazaars American aid and such foreign enterprises as oil exploration are assailed as "monopolistic capitalistic and imperiaper-widel- y - t d came independent seven years ago The US is spending more than a million dollars a year on teachers' salaries Darns roads power plants and communications systems have been built Seven and a half million is budgeted for agricultural development irrigation projects and water con- by-Jac- oil com- el-th- e affairs Instance e I v e v i stci I In the Middle East Craw Responsibility' The case of Peter Frank who posed as a physician and treated scores of patients in Chicago has caused the Chicago Medical Society to initiate a probe of a physicians' referral service through which he obtained patients The society said the referral service Is neither licensed nor regulated and there is no assurance that those registered are In fact qualified physicians Still another indicatio of lack of ade- quate control over medic practices is the recent report on a two-yea- r study of California hospitals authorized by the California Medical Association The report cited cases of incompetence and negligence 'including a fist fight across an operating table during surgery and refusal clone doctor to treat a critically injured accident victim because he belonged to a group health insurance plan the doctor disliked Poor medical practice is of course the exception not the rule For one bogus physician who goes into "practice" or manages to get into hospitals for patient care or surgery there are thousands of qualified physicians For one incompetent or neglectful doctor there are hundreds of devoted and able medical men But with laymen putting so much trust 1 and confidence in the whole medical system with their very lives at stake there rests a tremendous responsibility upon physicians as it group and hospital rxecutives to maintain the tightest controls to prevent quackery trickery and malpractice The most encouraging thing 'about these Chicago and California cases is that in both instances the medical society or association helped make the situations public and are now actively seeking correction ci ' ilfl ni Oi 1 1 ( — 1 t k t rn PI tc gi 1 - ' tc hi 1 - ! ri rr 1 s( f 4 1 4 $ t - tt tr ti ci tt 11 i Si 11 TI e tc 1 s ) k i' TI I t 1 1 t i t Taft-Hartle- e ! 1 Moppets Don't Car6 if Little Goldilocks Is a Rejected Child By Douglass Welch Students of human behavior have been studying the effect of fairy tales and chil- dren's stories upon the and sprouts moppets of our times have Nv eI and they pretty I decided that young- r1i 1 - stets are not r4 morbidly movei by them It ap- - pears a rejected ' Mr liVe - that children learn at age to distin- very early guish between and reality and can take fantasy or leave it in stride But there is no doubt that many age-olfairy tales have 'deep psychological signifimake-believ- Ca IICP Take Little Goldilocks for Instance This clearly was a child shunned by her fellows perhaps because of her undisciplined curios' ty Unable to integrate with kiLls her own age she turned for companionship to bears breaking into their houses tasting their porridg e thumping their beds evinc and hurrying somewhere stricken with fear that he will be late Actually he is on kind of an emotional treadmill The Dormouse feels a need to debase himself and he satisfies this need by falling asleep at public functions and by eating out of the dirty plates and drinking from the used cups and saucers of other persons This indicates definitely that he feels guilt ing an Interest in them which had sinister overtones "ALICE in Wonderland" is nor not quite a fairy-taleven entirely a children's story but it is widely read by children It is of course a wa PSyclitiana IN1 sh full lilment to escape lyzp Alice today we MhOiild from the cares and burdens P44)On 'find why she imputed of this world and return to KWh and anxiety to the the embryo state Dormouse Alice dreamed herself into The Mad Hatter is of and curl this escape fantasy course an odd character His ously she peopled her - fantur— very manner of dressing is tasy with psychoPathSdevice neurotics exclusively The an attention-gettinHe needs to be loved ' White Rabbit is a classical The opttera In "Alice case of compulsion—he's continually looking at his watch Through the Looking Class" - - ( who left their beds to walk whole walls of the main barroom and cocktail lounge with the Walrus and the the "Marine Room" eonsist Carpenter and were con sumed by them were "death of fish tanks and it is known wishes and so alsols Rockthat persons seated beside some tank i drink more than abye Baby on the Tree Top No mother in her right mind persons seated beside other would set her baby's cradle tanks Occasionally a smaller —resident of the tigerlish's ip a treetop uhless-sh- e tank will disappear down the consciously wished for the child's early demise tiger fish's throat before the What about Jack Be Niro bugging eyes of a customer bin who lumped over candle and when that happens there Is always a cry from that sticks? Obviously a very dislittle boy and a potenturbed table for doubles and much' -— talk about the transitoriness -- tial arsdnist of life PEOPLE TEND to relax "W etching fish swtrn more in a restaurant where around is not only entertaina large floodlighted aquarium Is part of the decor And ing" the magazine says 'hut seems to have a soothing for some strange reason peneffect on people who are seem to become ple hungrier fidgety" says the Allied Food and Wonder if anyone has ever Beverage Magazine distributed to the restaurant and thought of putting ru small hotel trade octopus in such a tank And At the Olympic Hotel in a pitcher's mitt for It to Seattle we are told three play with st N it) 1 0 ther Vie wmints aren't Arab THE AMERICANS and British are up against what could' be an irresistible force There is no "Libyan crisis" as yet But a crisis seems in the making Best US hope is that in the little time which still may be left the West will find a better formula than the one which failed so badly A ti standing Reclamation of the desert is too slow In producing results The Libyans would prefer shoe factories cement plants and textile mills which would raise employ ment fast American aid to education is regarded as an at tempt to sever Libya's cultural ties with Egypt Oil exploration is viewed with suspicion All of this would seem to prove that dollars won't buy friends however there is more to the Libyan problem than that For the Americans and British are outsiders They aren't Moslems certainly e! k Soaper Says Yet the Libyans aren't impressed or pleased most b I k -- panies will spend 60 million dollars this year prospecting for new wells and they nationalists (- right-to-wor- po-ure- addition American c - The United States has millions of dollars into Libya since the country be- In n I) r listic" servation II Senator From Sandpit -- iI( 1 - f Tr P iir t I 1 f r( Itc IT I 1 1 f I 1 tt 1 t I11 ei 1 II t P 1 a P 1 a Iic |