Show 6a Mao Warns Russia to Forget Asia Entered at to oaatorflce M Oaten ntar rim it to Act ot Coagreaa Marcb 8 1879 Member of Tfaa Associated Prat Halt w ana n&A a d mci Suhacrtptton price ti33 par month tl300 per tsar Th AmncltfO Pnm IS us for it or not otbarwiso aradttcd la rtpul uua dtapatcbca credited the lore! sew SUNDAY MORNING AUGUST The Diplomatic Class of '51 By Drew Pearson WASHINGTON —The of reduced postal rates for question magazines newspapers which the post is !£?i d""5 rever1 millon subsidy to Life Time and the Saturday Evening Post etc caused a rumpus inside the house rules committee recenthr Two fight nest members of congress Torn Murray Tennes- see Democrat and Clarence Ohio Republican staged the row over the bill to revise second-clas- s postal rate upward 60 per cent In the next three years This increase the post office claims would help to get it out ot the red However Congressman Brown himself a publisher disagreed He contended It would work a hardship on smaller magazines and newspapers which circulate chiefly through the mails thereby creating a "monopoly" for big weeklies which truck their editions to BBfi "This bill would act as a subsidy for the wrong people" ne argued "Yau've got nothing to complainJ aooui countered Murray "As a newspaper publisher - in Ohio you've been getting a nice subsidy from the government in second-clas- s mailing privileges" Produce Statistics Murray produced some statistics on the operating costs of the "Western Star" of Lebanon Ohio one of five weeklies published' by By Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON — Chinese comg munist dictator Mao has clearly warned his opposite number in the kremlin that he considers all of Asia an exclusive province for the expansion of Chinese power This is the only reasonable interpretation of the real meaning of seven articles written by high Chinese communist officials and published within the last month ip China These seven articles make up forty-fiv- e closely-type- d pages of turgid communist prose The best way to extract their inner meaning is to ask the reader to perform a difficult act of the imagination Imagine then that Klement Gottwaid communist president of satellite Czechoslovakia suddenly announces "The Gottwaid theory of revolution" hailing his "theory" as the greatest contribution to Marxist doctrine since Lenin's death Assume further that "the Gottwaid theory of revolution" must guide all future revolutionary activity in western Europe according to Gottwaid because the economic and social structu vakia ii much more like western Europe's than is 'Russia's 5 1951 Tse-Tun- Rains From the Gulf We are told that the rains which have drenched this region in recent days were precipitated from moist vapors that were waited from the distant Gulf of Mexico to be condensed on our cool mountain peaks and slopes This is one of Nature's transportation triumphs she outdoing the most brilliant engineers of the Reclamation Service who rely on canals conduits stream beds and syphons to move water over the routes required for beneficial use Yet if the engineers lack the ability to use the skyways fop water transportation they surpass Nature in at least one respect The facilities they build are more reliable Nature this August may supply us with Atlantic ocean waters and then forget about our needs for months and years So we shall do well to cling to the man-mad- e methods of causing water to flow to where it is needed news-stan- ll"?? water from the Gulf of Mexico having drenched us to the of course standard set by the Poet Chaucer of piercing to the roots "The Gottwaid theory of revoiu- is now finding its way to the "at ?f d w°uW"ev!" Great Salt lak tor very long would "ui T from which the air currents being what they are litfle is Gowaid Yet this is precisely and likely to find its wav back to the sea Yet it won't - h ""-- miH uv ww'w HAS UUW UUUC " of the seven there while any additional water supply for the Great Basin ISf1 the his chief subord nates by Will be welcomed and appreciated Although Stalin's name is not even m orown land-locke- — m aoc-auu- jj VflllMtfiAn I l(rt — iiiCflC T patches telling about another upsurge in the American birth cij" Burma inTo Malaya: : ui r aim unuiuiiiK uie increasea aDimv oi tne united estates T K"n ana otner countries ' in a less farmers to feed our increasing population are entirely wel secona category The new dogma isurgent stated come "The classic type of explicitly: revolution in i countries was the Oc- rpi i ne year 1947 is still the banner vear m the U S for imperialist tober revolution (in Russia tk classic t0 ? revolution in colon- iR w the arrival of babies MAw but if the stnrk M — — — — — " " iai ana countries is "j t umu January i as ne was net ween January and June we ine -- nmese revolution" I Stalin Will i n ii rprnrnc a Mirfi i t ik The agriculture department tumnTlfin admonishes Americana to stand — — mv liuo mau IS in effect "Wtir-SStalin1 £ avm tn mj froo ihomKolroc rf umrrmo nkni U ' ue ""PPVi ope is yours But Asia is mine u- -- i— u laniiK uii uicie is irenienaous room lor exnansion nt nrrw- rveeD out It is reasonable tn nm that duction on land already in ue through the application of this none too subtle declaration improved methods We believe the government people are of ideological independence and intention has shaken right This nation will continue to meet its own needs and expansionist the kremlin like nothing else since defection of Tito But does this help to supply shortages elsewhere as we have done in the the mean that Mao g is to beof case India come another Tito? While the United States increases in population at the The whole tone of the seven articles indicates very clearly that rate of 2DOO000 a year and its food supply keeps ahead of Mao g will welcome a really equal alliance with the Soviet the increase the situation in India is in reverse An Atlantic Union provided the sphere of exMonthly article relates that India's ability Jo feed itself runs pansion of each partner is clearly out Tot a time at least behind its 5000000 annual incsease New land being brought marked the kremlin may accept this as the - ---- -- semi-coloni- -11 al 1 m i h — — X""' - -- - 1 - - Tse-Tun- Tse-Tun- under cultivation amounts to only of the amount necessary to maintain a balance This nation has problems many of them but none it seems to us measures up to those confronting India and other countries where babes are born into an environment where hunger and perhaps starvation are in store for many instead! of plenty and opportunity best of a bad bargain But in the kremlin's view it can only be a very bad bargain The kfemlin's has never for a momentpropaganda acknowledged Mao ambitious claims Mao is regularly pictured as a humble and grateful disciple of the great Stalin Moreover to the best intelligence according the Russians are making a determined effort to infiltrate and control the Chinese communist apparatus Finally the kremlin has a very powerful lever to use on Mao the Chinese communists cannot poscarry on the Korean war There are 11 women members of congress at the mo- sibly for example without the weapons and supplies which can come only ment 10 women in the house of representatives and one in from Russia It is interesting that the seven the senate but this is the 82nd congress and there were 11 articles were published soon after women in the 79th so the American women really have the Malik peace bid which suggests that the kremlin may have been to using precisely this lever wave and shout about nothing At rate there is now no The lively India Edwards vice chairman of the Demo-crat- ic doubt any that the seeds of - conflict between the two great communparty says her party should promote the election of ist powers have been sown Yet more women to public office for the benefit of the if the conflict does break into open public flame nothing would be more foolservice and also to increase the number of voters ish than to expect in China a eligible who vote precise repetition of Titoism For one conclusion is implicit in all the After examining the voting figures in four special elec- available evidence Mao China is more violently expansiontions this year she found that the two campaigns in which ist than Stalin's Russia women ran for congress brought out a larger 30 Tears After Revolution of percentage Soviet leaders have had 30 the voters than the two in which the candidates were men The to years digest their revolution The Chinese communists are intoxonly icated with the new wine of power Mrs Edwards suggests that each party should decide "Mao theory of the Chihow many women to put up in each revolution" calls for "armed campaign a system she nese — which means violent struggle" observed in Europe where party leaders allot a third of the revolution The armed struggle In "the colonial and places to women It is argued that the more women on the countries" is to be promoted and ticket the larger the turnout at the polling places on election supported now not at some time in the distant future And an open day break with the kremlin if it comes There is a boss-rul- e flavor to the proposal in our opini- is just as likely to increase as to diminish this for power on- A better idea is to admonish women to use the election throughout Asiaappetite Moreover th Phineea processes to win more places for women on the tickets — Th 1st ambition to T is altogether T ntimoer of women candidates should be determined by the likely violently expand to stimulate the so interest i women take in Dolitics and Yi!imp?lse to expand If a com nnt hv — wi i pennon ior world communist lead J th --Hawii w"YMi lershio develona Stalin must litsr tu- party leaders There are mnrp wnmr than mm l "11 co outdo Mao Tse- S11? tion If thev worker! reallv ai ti — — - jr"-"- -" m wimu vuhuu lids xung hi oraer 10 contain and con nf the nffir rJ trnl his hratioat rival Thus Mao 's challenge to the Kremlin gives the west no grounds vvhatsnpvpr fnr mmnls cency But at least It is worth noting that Mao is nn hmmht one-thirtie-th Tse-Tung- 's Women in Politics Tse-Tung- Tse-Tung- 's 's semi-coloni- al - us ui J rliti -- Tse-Tu- Crime and Punishment nf Tse-Tu- n and-naid-f- nr sat11its wnne tne United States army on Fridav was annnunrino in" ne sa not — most the dismissal of 90 West Point cadets for cheating in acad-- wnnoui l roc this is vmi ' buuitlllK the methods used in the election of Senator Butler of Marv - — - — 1 t f I Ct t0 become one determined strug- one of the central facts of our time L Sketches land last year were despicable because of the efforts made By Ben Burroughs by Butler's campaign workers to throw doubt on the loyalty "Our Churches" of Butler's opponent In each hand-Dicke- d community there stands The cadets though — — for mental anrl likirs — a piace to worsnip uod a rjm iCal qualities are young and immature They are being se-- house where we can gain new hope ' Jffv - lLf! ur Milttii verely -punished the effect to endure — thrnur th vca Ives I jjiouci ii us uij om j wn thint that all The matiirp nnlitioiane mlu : wiiu n ieH stuiucu uy senate commit- - iis that our God is waitma (ivmiU thir tee are mature and experienced They escape with a mere w anve away our woe n matters not what faith you are slapping of their wrists u — — L?1- i ??Ji - ' j liBtBte The cadets used dishonorable methods in an attempt ami welcomes one and all esPeciallv if you've left the path our SrcheY of to retain the services of outstanding athletes to bolster the alhbackrSne West Point football team-- and haanvde they failed and are punished if" wfdiff afraid of what would be ine politicians used dishonorable methods to elect so nav a visit United States senator They succeeded and they escape GTbove and Vwm'gaTS l — ise-Tun- gs Good news is always welcome particularly in these revolution" an "enrich- oh! days when melancholy tidings including tragic and brutal be the°basirfXoroivin2nS deaths of children sour and embitter the news So the dis- - andemia It lnnk it ' lit-" - - senator from Alabama — Taft Compliment to Lewis Carnegie Library Needles Eric Johnston New Books at New books now ready for circulation at the Carnegie Free library ire as follows: "Sand In Their Shoes" by Edith and Frank Shay The story of life on Cape Cod told by the people who lived it or observed it at first fiand "The Best American Short Stories of 1951" edited by Martha A collection of stories Foley picked from hundreds of magazines big and little from all over the United Stages chosen for their literary significance and their per- manent reading value "Cowboy and Indian Trader" by A book of Joseph Schmedding memoirs anecdotes and essays revealing much about the author and the broad unsettled country he knew at the turn of the century Portrait of Society "The England of Elizabeth" by A L Rowse A "portrait" of Elizabethan society — its agriculture economics the towns social classes law government the church and education "Pleasures of London" by M Willson Dissher A survey of theatres and other places of public amusement past and present by an author "who has his eye on gaiety thrills and laughter" "Alcuin Friend of Charlemagne" by Eleanor Shipley Duckett A study of the world and work of a great English scholar of value to the general reader as well as to students of history theology and literature "The Socialist Tragedy" by Ivor Thomas An exposure of the delusion that socialism is a barrier against communism by an Englishman who has gone over from the labor government to the conserva- tives Allergy Diagnosed "Pediatric Allergy" by Robert An attempt to show the pediatrician and general practitioner how to diagnose and treat allergy in children with a greater Chobot M D degree of success "The Old Bailey and Its Trials" The comby Bernard O'Donnell plete and authoritative story of the Central Criminal Court by a Fleet Street crime reporter "The Iron Mistress" by Paul A novel based on the Wellman turbulent career of James Bowie frontiersman fortune-hunte- r and soldier "The Roosevelt Treasury" edited by James N Rosenau A collection of items — letters articles speeches and book excerpts dramatizing the memorable life and times of t reter case things Agriculture people had WASHINGTON — John L Lewia tried that and it hadn't worked to overrule of the United Mine Workers who fhut MiAils?n ' in 1950 wrote letters to the coal WBU Fb" P°W" ooerators tellln thm nnt t y refi ?arDba!SnSnrt up-to-d- t Poductr eXT hasceTved11 ing tribute from the Ohio oarThasbeen seni-- 1 direc'tor of production engineer- ng ior uenerai Motors He was commit- - a member of APB in World war 1 H- swDiiiza-But he declined to come into f000"?1? iSL nTJ-sjonnsion defense mobilization set-uwas the witness"JM-He was testify- - present unless given absolute power ing that without wage and oncei rwn controls U S wage levels would jn Washington don't want to give w vUau lil-aircraft production priority over ca4 have challenged everything else If Boyer does government he will be trols first General Motors executitrat to "I disagree intensely" said John- join the team ston "Look what Mr Lewis got Another surprise on the list of for the coal miners in January Washington lobbies is an organbefore wages were frozen" men who are "Just supposing Mr Lewis had ization of inbusiness favor of price and had that business three months actually to wage controls fight inflation later" replied Taft "I would be Founders heads of the organwilling to bet you a hat that ha ization areand Stevens of Stevens would have gotten what he want-a- d Industries Ed Dawson Ga and W As a matter of fact you had L McAllester of McAllester Hosto come in after he got it and apiery Mills Chattanooga Tenn prove it retroactively" Outfit has taken the name of DiSalle "American Association of IndepenPrice Stabilization Director dent Industries on Controls and Michael V DiSalle made a speak- Taxes" It will also fight sales tax idea which many big busiing tour swing out through Duluth and Fargo Mr ness groups have been promoting himDiSalle is no great beef-eatas substitute for higher inepme self Bat every place he went on and corporation taxes to finance this toijr they served him fish defense effort Finally ha cracked: "I don't know whether you're serving fish In my honor or because of me" Can't Tombstones Office! of price stabilization has By Carey Williams just puti out an order decontrolling Reason given was tombstones: a cute dish gets taken out that they had no appreciable effect to Many dinner on the cost ot living: Wilson Backs NPA It usually takes an idle mlInri Old line government bureaucrats to keep a tongue buy are finding Mobilization Director The man who first called them C E Wilson a tough man to deal with The department of agricul- easy payments never tried to make ture recently went to him asking two or three a month that allocations of aluminum for The girls like to kiss Barkiey rural electrification cables and tin plate for canning be raised to help in public After all there is some farmersj ' pleasure in being vice president Wilson told them to take it up If all the with national production authority were which was supposed to handle such placed end to end a sunburn would not be as bad ti happened at a senate - aV" 1 ±:m' HraJE t1! Fish-Eat- p ni er Min-neapol- is er -- Paragraphs Ft-eea- e back-slappe- Questions And Answers F D R "Darkness at Noon" by Sidney A play based on the Kingsley novel by Arthur Koestler which probes the communist mind and recreates the Moscow trials "Salad Days" hv Bellamy Part A record of school and ridge fraternity days by the author of "Country Lawyer'1 and "Big Family" "Lost in the Stars" by Maxwell Anderson The dramatization of Alan Pa ton's famous novel "Cry the Beloved Country" which interlaces a moving tale of Negroes and whites in South Africa with music suited to its mood "All About Spain" edited by A complete acVirginia Creed curate and guide made possible by the author's recent research trip through Spain plus the cooperation of Spanish tourist officials New 'Western" Work "Range Trouble" by Dean Jennings A new "western" centered about a man who has been an Indian fighter steamboat pilot a trail herd driver in Texas and a miner in Colorado "The Bride's Encyclopedia" edited by Dorothy Sara A storehouse of information covering every im- subject from beaut ycare Ertant most minute details of etiquette cooking and miscellaneous items Novel Shows Courage "Hot Corner" by Robert Sidney Bowen A novel of courage on the baseball field by the author of ' Player Manager" and "Winning Pitch" "Mr Anonymous" by H C The biography of a man who believed that a strict following of the golden rule would bring happiness and who kept his gifts secret from the world "The Theory and Practice of Communism" by R N Carew A book telling what comHunt munism is how it began how it developed from Marx and Engels through Lenin and Stalin and how It attempts to gain world power lt Q— What is responsible for the Reversing Falls at St John New Brunswick? A— The tides of Fundy are rey falls At sponsible for the low tide the river rushes through a gorge and plunges 11 sheer feet into the sea At half tide when the waters of the Bay of Fundy have risen enough to balance this drop the whirlpool is quiet At high tide the ocean waters force themselves upriver so violently that the water becomes somewhat salty Q — Why is the cucumber a fa- forite vegetable in desert countwo-wa- ties? rs You can tell if it is a heavily traveled highway You will see a wrecker pulling a car Things were simple in the old World conditions could be days appraised in a few minutes by tne gathering in Jhe barbershop I Old Dobbin had his faults but one didn't have to take out liability insurance in driving nlat Job had patience but of course he never had a youngster take a shot at him with a water pistol little Fable: Once there was boy who bathed early In the morning and be kept clean jail t through the day Senator Byrd wants to put Santa Claus in the deep freeze But some one would thaw out the old man's gift pack — ' A —The cucumber is a favorite vegetable in desert countries because when eaten it quenches the thirst WHY WE SAt G0NE TO POT Many a man has lost his bold on a steering wheel only to catch a grip on a harp The reds have a lot to learn if they think the U S is not united roll-an- Congressman Clint McKlnnon the livewire congressman from San Diego jumped out of his car at the airport the other day in his bare feet The congressman could afford shoes but lost them when his car cot stuck in a water ford while he was attending the George Vournas party for Sam Raybura A flow of income fax cases ate coming in the wake of the Kefau-crime committee Quiet GOP Senator Williams of Delaware is doing quite a bit to Stir them up The justice can't make up its minddepartment whether to try Dennis Delaney the ousted Massachusetts tax collector in Boston or New York Hell be charged with accepting bribes to fix cases not only in Massachusetts but for a New York insurance firm— hence the Indecision Making Democracy Work You hear so much about inefficiency in government these days that the public forgets about the long roll call of patriotic public servants who are doing a good job for their country Here are some of them: Fleischmann defense Manly production administrator — learned the hard way through the war pro- ouciion Doara oi world war picks good men believes in letting tne puonc Know what s happening °"u "1 impon- ant aeiense agency Edward Barrett assistant secre- 01 st"e & charge of t?ry -- iV oanHn snj vai i News! up Ttop weetc magazine to take lowly gov- ernment pay and more headaches than any other job in Washington has put new ideas new energy into American propaganda abroad Works Long Hoars CMrles E Wilson defense mobilizes — works lpng hours and takes all sorts of cnticism "for the country which gave him a great opportunity as head of General Electric Isn't good at human relations but knows how to correlate indusW it " W uumg nnnniH lh! Tsecond'clas 1 It's eaay to get A yall out of a man when the bite Is plMtat on his pocketbook Business was transacted differ- ently in the old days It didn't take cocktails to close a deal It's n mighty quiet session of congress that doesn't product a fist fight between two members Cor-nuel- le The honeymoon is over when he complains about the toast being When we say that something is son to pat" we mean that it is no lenger useful The expression alludes to the practice of sending useless scrap metal to the melting pot to be reused burned If a girl on the beach Is conscious of her figure she either has a horrid one or an unusually good one You can tell when the situa tion is serious in England They awsys can inurcnui into ference 1 satatTaSffS' I: m try 'r Hokhes Baldridge assistant attorney general — has one of the most thankless jobs in Washington handling claims against the government and by the government Thousands of legal cases swamp him every year including the nevf price violations under OPS Congress votes no additional money to handle these but Baldridge la getting action just the same Newsprint Monopoly Senator Joe O'Mahoney the hard fighting Wyoming trust buster it Pressing the justice department for an anti-truinvestigation of the newsprint monopoly ® newsprint prices keep soaring" OMah6ney warned "it won't the small newsnvsra be longwillbefore ' V have to suspend publiv utwavc ' 1 ill 3 papers tut means that a senate amendment cation" The senator also told the justice providing for a 30 per cent increase that: in second-clas- s rates instead of 60 department 1 Six or seven newsprint over a three-yeproperiod will prob- ducers s account for of ably be —substituted and approved all in the Note newsprint consumed Brown's Congressman United CanStates are and either newspapers are: The Western Star f Lebanon Ohio the Star Repub- adian companies or Canadian subsidiaries of American firms In Onlican BlanChester O: The Mlamis-tuNews Miamisburg O the tario province a law was passed Lynchburg News Lynchburg © to keep U S courts from examHe is also a' stockholder in another ining the records of even Canweekly the Franklin Chronicle adian subsidiaries of the American companiesFranklin Ohio No newsprint mills have been J Washington Pipeline in Canada since World war opened Joseph B Keenan the Japanese II although demands have jumped war crimes prosecutor once pros- - The newsprint cartel has createcuted Bill Langer of North Da- ed a uniform price system for the kota when Keenan was chief of United States (A few days ago the Justice department criminal di- the Crown Zellerbach Corp vision Now as attorney for Mm the price of newsprint $10 a uppad ton to man he once prosecuted Keenan a new high of $$10 a ton without collected $25000 in a libel case the office of price stabfrom Bill Cunningham Boston col- consulting ilization) umnist Senator John Spark-ma- n Note — O'Mahoney also recombumped into Time Magazine mends that American publishers get Correspondent Frank McNaughton together and- promote newsprint as he left to take over a production ' within the United cattle farm "I'll bet" quipped the States i i st ! St s' ar four-fifth- p - t t - 900-ac- re US Not Prepared Enough For Russia Says Public By George Gallup Voters were asked in a recent In 1 stitute survey: Director American Institute "If the Korean war is brought Of Public Opinion PRINCETON N J Aug 4 — to an end soon do yon think the Are we well enough prepared to United States should continue our defense program as planned lick Russia if a War started now? or do you think the defense proThe average American — no ex pert at military strategy or logis- - gram should be reduced? tics H- thinks we are not strong Continued j 12 war Reduced enough now to fight an all-oNo opinion with Russia Their views on the subject were 100 revealed when interviewers for the Institute questioned typical voters ( h mcps af War in approximately 200 communities Defense Mobilization Director from Maine to California Charles E Wilson has said that inWith the Truman budget com- dustrially we will not be ing under fire in congress the av- for a mjor war until well ready into erage voter's impressions about the 1952 state of our defense are of vital Will Russia let us alone until Whether the large then? importance military budget is cut will depend The Americana goat partly on whether the public puts It tint average come within the won't on sto economize congres pressure next the chances bat that year Are We Prepared? or o r i ii war III within the next Each person was asked: five years are overwhelming "Do you think the United War Within Year? States Is well enough prepared ai a recent survey the Institute war found 26 per cent saying they think today to fight an with Russia?" we'll have to fight a major war within a one-yeHere is the vote: period and 58 Yes iSr par cent saying within five years On the other hand the doctrine No 4 49 that "war with Russia is inevitaole No opinion 11 so let's get on with it" finds littta public support 100 The Institute's last test in OctoVoters who have had a college education are more inclined than ber of sentiment for starting a one? others to feel that we aren't yet with Russia found 13 per cent in wall enough prepared Here is the favor of declaring war on the Soviets 79 per cent opposed and vote by education levels: Col- High Grade per cent undecided lege School School 38 Yes 37 42 j' -- ut JN r v all-o- ut ar Breathes there a woman so conarfca laa tent with bet never gone on a reducing diet Some things mellow with age No but Harold Ickes is not one of them No Opinion sit-tir- c 111 backs" di they Were supplied you by the post office department in an attempt to smear ana intimidate me I wonder if the department also told you about fne number of papers I have had to deliver by paid messenger because of the of the mails under this inefficiency administration"! '"The figures are typical of weekly newspapers" replied Murray "Well it seems mighty' strange that you single mine out of all the weeklies in the United States" blazed Brown "Besides this' bill doesn't seriously affect weekly newspapers which would still get free second-clas- s mail privileges that Would be hurt" Making Too Much Fuss A passing remark by Gene Cox of Georgia that theRepcommittee was making too much of a fuss over "gimlet" newspapers only added to the hostilities Weeklv Publisher Brown took this as a personal affront Glaring at Cox he remarKea acidly: 'Mavbe the nuhlUher in vmir district will be happy to know what you think of them' Chairman Adolph Sabath of Illi nois finally got all the gladiators quieted down but Murray "that soon getting a telegram from d 'ou denouncing beef price "Whlr HidP tJtKeS9e?n you thun°ered Brown "I guess mentioned four of these articles in the three others there are formal bows in his direction But on the essential points Mao makes himself entirely clear Mao theory of the Chinese Babies and Food Supply r ii ShlJ'lfliV??8"?"' -- i Low Postal Rates Urged By Publisher-Congressma- n jL:59 53 42 10 10 100 100 100 JOSEPHINE Today's survey also finds younger people (21 to 29 years) less inclined than older people to believe that We gre well enough prepared now to iight an all-o-ut war with 'iaHH! Russia : Defense Program The fact that the average American feels we are not well enough prepared today to fight an war With Russia is undoubtedly one of the reasons why the public by the overwhelming ration of votes to continue the present large-scal- e defense program as planned regardless of the outcome in Ko-all-o- ut SO far as the public Is concerned the fear that peace in Korea wonld bring a serious "let down" in our defense efforts appears groundless nt the presiai "How would you like it if offer ytj wash the cor I looked under he fenders- ?- |