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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 27

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

50 2 THE RECORD. THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1964 Slight Change In The Slogan Welch will find an answer. The unregimented individualists of the Right wing will parrot it. Call it coincidence. Simeon Stylites liut Don't Try To Eat It By WILLIAM A.

CALDWELL Site ftttOrt ESTABLISHED 1895 Published daily (except Sunday) by THE BERGEN EVENING RECORD CORP. at 150 River Street, Hackensack. N. J. ITU bbafd 7-8000 BR vant 9-7846 DU raont 4-8482 GI lbert 4-0800 ELmwood 6-8150 Entered as second class matter June 7, 1953, at th Hackensack, N.

Post Office under act of March 3, 1879. Subscriotion rates foavable in advance): one week. 50 cents; one month, 52.00; three months, six months, S10.50; one year, $20.00. Foreign oosfaae extra. Newsstand C'Ce 5 cents a cooy.

Home delivery by carrier, 33 cents a week. Trie Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reoubhcation of ail news disoatcnes credited to it or not etherise credited in this newsoaoer and all local news of soco'aneous origin therein. The Record believes that widespread public discussion of governmental and societal problems is a vital concomitant oi self-government in a democracy. Its editorial writers express their uncensored and not infallible opinions on its editorial page. Its readers are cordially invited to express theirs in "Voice cf the stated more straightforwardly, unless Mrs.

Bolte does so in the Hudson Dispatch: "This year pinks and violets are supposed to make a comeback. However, something new coming over the rainbow, Having browsed as attentively as a fellow can browse through the somewhat breathless shrieks of Judy Jeannin and her fellow fashion editors covering the spring 1964 briefings in New York, all I can tell you is the shades of peach, tan, and or- following, er, joke, I think: Q. Why is a fashion ex-1 ange, blended in wool tweeds, Dert's prose like a small boy? are being picked up by pink ac Deliver Us From Such Peace! In a textbook specimen of inexactitude the news disnatches from Auburn, said the University peacefully enrolled its first Negro student. If being greeted with Boo. nigger!" by one's fellow students is a peaceful greeting, then but only then positively serene was the campus that rainy day.

If the sight of Alabama State troopers (in felt hats instead of the customary riot helmets) barring admittance to the college grounds to all except students, faculty, or University employees is peaceful, then peace prevailed, the peace of Hitler's Germany or Khrushchev's Moscow. If the gnawing doubts that eroded the composure of Harold Alonzo Franklin (American, Negro, 31) so that he could not hear the questions of his faculty advisers at the enrollment interview are vouchers of peace, then peaceful it was. If "peacefully" accurately describes the scene at Auburn, Jan. 4, 1964, something is wrong with our language. Worse, something is wrong with us.

A. Because they both come in short pants. I take it there's to be more zing in the spring, more lilt in the kilt, a sling in the swing, a jig in the wig, and it all seems as simple as the integral cal THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1964 cessories. It proves to be quite a flavorsome combination, looking like some unheard-of effect." Mrs. Moser gets it all into focus, though: "Yellow leads in flamboyant pastels peachy tone orange, strong pink, vibrant violets, tropical to icy blues, neutral driftwood tones, and crisp, crisp white." That's crisp, crisp flamboyant pastel white.

The Record's Miss Jeannin didn't squirt color by the tuneful. She mentioned the bedroom look for evening and cocktails filmy black chantilly laces over nude satin and an artless little at-home gown in green w. deep-dish horseshoe neckline, but she had the grace to drop the subject there. It was like going past the girls' dormitory in an express elevated train. The Goatee Is Strictly From '63 I cannot say the first bulletins on the new coiffures leave me entirely sure what to expect.

"Hairdos will be short, because they are youthful," says Passaic; "sleek, for sophistication." But The Associated Press had one of its stars on the scene. She said the siren of '64 has displaced the sweet young thing of '63, and "To prove it, one sweet young thing in a basic straight hairdo blunt cut just below the ear-lobe was transformed into half a dozen different types of se culus until the girls leaping to and fro between the American Designer Series and the competing New York Couture Group get down to the hard-nosed grunt-by-grunt reporting. Then I get more confused than I used to be when the fashion editors just said the new necklines would be daring. To this day I do not understand that participle. Is the girl intransitively daring enterprising, brave to wear a gown making public her topography from here to the jolly umbilicus? Is she daring you (trans.) to examine the terrain? Is she daring you to sweat and fidget and affect not to notice 4'2 acres of silken epidermis? What is the challenge to do something or to have the gall not to do something? Where was Oh, it's about the spring 1964 fashions.

The key word is "white" (Ruth Olis, Camden Courier-Post, and Alexis Cole, Newark Evening News). Don't picket the joint yet; no, it isn't white (Caye Bolte, Hudson Dispatch, and Ellen Weber Moser, Passai Herald-News); it's a veritable ooze of hues. Wait. Hey Nonny, And Welt That Bias The Larger Chessboard Bobby Fischer, the 20-year-old United States chess champion, broke a lot of records in the recently completed national tournament in New York. Since he was 14, when he first captured the title, he has won the championship six times.

That breaks a deadlock with Samuel Reshevsky of Spring Valley, a 5-time winner. Young Mr. Fischer won 11 straight games, a perfect score and the first in a major tournament in this country in 70 years. (Dr. Emanuel Lasker won 13 games in a row in 1893.) This man Fischer is a redoubtable champion in our small corner of the world of chess.

Next comes to mind the world championship tournament, the first games of which are to be played in Holland next June. The latest six world champions have been from the Soviet Union. The United States has never had an official winner. This is not the time for Bobby Fischer to rest on his record. The Russians have invaded basketball, hockey, yachting.

On Robert, to Holland! efficiency and economic ad-1 vancement of the State. Alexis Cole says all the designers in town seem to have Enter Candidates, In Platoon Strength The complete confusion of the Republican Party in New Jersey has perhaps never been more graphically demonstrated than it was the other night at Trenton. If it were not so serious as far as New Jersey Republicans are concerned, it could be a veritable howl. Here are 31 grown men and women trying to pick a candidate for the United States Senate from among 16 other grown men and women and naively expecting the selection not only to stick but to be not even challenged. Let it be hastily interpolated that this hilariously unhappy situation is not the fault of the Republican Party as an institution or of the 47 wholly earnest and sincere men and women involved.

If any one has a better way to find one suitable candidate in a hurry, let him speak! The cause lies in the fact that the Republicans have not had a New Jersey Governor since Alfred E. Driscoll in 1952. This may indeed be their fault. But the resulting disintegration of leadership is a normal if distressing consequence of having no rallying point, no focus, no one to make or enforce the decisions. The Republicans nationally face exactly the same situation, only on a grander scale.

Actually things are not so awkward as they appear. Of the 16 candidates not more than a half dozen or so can be taken seriously. Six asked that their name be scratched almost as soon as they had been entered. Several others are improbable starters. David L.

Cole, Paterson labor lawyer and arbitrator, has been quoted as saying he's available. Dun-ellen Mayor Bernard R. Rodgers, Representative William T. Cahill of Camden, National Committeeman Bernard M. Shanley, Assemblyman Carmine Savino Jr.

of Lyndhurst, and possibly Representative Florence Dwyer of Union and former State Senator Wesley L. Lance of Hunterdon must be considered palpable possibilities. The death of President Kennedy has made the prospect of opposing Senator Harrison A. Williams more attractive than it had been. This applies to the Republican Presidential nomination too.

It's no shoo-in for the Democrats, or so the Republicans keep telling themselves. Thus the probability of a contest for the Republican nomination is greater than it was last fall. And if there is a contest for the United States Senate nomination it could easily hook into a contest for pledged delegates for Presidential aspirants, and that would mean a ripsnorting primary. State Chairman Webster Todd is seeking to avoid unpleasantness by appealing for unpledged delegates and by calling together this week's mob scene in an effort to settle on a single Senate nominee. If he succeeds in both endeavors, he should himself be nominated for something, possibly the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize.

Both issues and candidates may develop on the road to the August Democratic primary. And even if Faubus gets past the primary he could face his first real general election test if Republicans can persuade Winthrop Rockefeller to run. ductresss with pin-on pieces of hair. Not wigs, the pieces included false bangs, a cluster of black curls Southern style, long guiche sideburns, and puffed-up pillow chignons." Miss Jeannin remarked on the Tiffeau-Busch models' air of wide-eyed innocence. Sensibly, she has emphasized in her reporting the fact that inside all the apparatus and fluorescent tubing are to be found people.

It is, after all, going to be no more confusing than ever next spring. Reassurance is not intended. Voice Of ThePeople (A public forum for readers' comment on matters of public interest and on this newspaper's editorial opinions. Like Voltaire, we may wholly disagree with what they say but will defend to the death their right to say it. Signature and full address are required to be published.

Short letters will be cut less.) decided at once on a bright spring. "Cerise, kelly green, absinthe, citron, brighter-than-navy, lighter-than-baby-blue, shocking pinks, pastel pink, and a range of yellows from lemon to buttercup provide spring fashions with living color." She says white will be predominant. I think that makes it clear enough. "Forward-looking fashion is preparing for a white spring," says Ruth Olis. "White is right for spring." I don't think the prospect could be Rockefeller has been a poten- Mr.

Faubus Still Willing By JOHN R. STARR Little Rock, Ark. wi A few years ago the idea of a third-term Governor seemed preposterous in Arkansas, which had a 50-year tradition of two terms and out. Now Governor Orval E. Faubus, a mountaineer whose name once was a symbol of resistance to school desegregation, talks like a man who will seek a sixth term.

Faubus says he will announce his plans next month. But he generally is regarded by friend and foe as a candidate this year for re-election. His decision apparently will hinge on a private poll, a device he uses frequently to sound public opinion. Who'd Make The Fight? Sensing public distaste for de tial Republican candidate since 1960, but observers believe he will wait to challenge some one less experienced than Faubus. The Winning Combination How does a controversial Governor return to office election after election? Working for Faubus are: 1.

His personal charm. 2. His claim to have administrative record without scandal. The World Today A Certain Knack With Spotlights By JAMES MARLOW Ruining The U. N.

Editor, The Record: Humor has been said to be a sign of maturity. It may also be related to homogeneity of population. Woodrow Wilson One More Word Before The Hissing Starts Those ceremonies last week which so few of us attended were the homeliest aspect of government at work. Here was the 20th Century town meeting, the place where even the humblest of citizens could tell his neighbor the mayor how to run the settlement. In most places the ceremonies were patterned.

In Pa-ramus, to be sure, blows were struck almost. In some other of Bergen's 70 municipalities. Republicans blocked Democratic appointments or vice versa. But in most cases the mayor made a speech while the mayor's wife and children beamed and the Republican (Democratic) Club presented to the new officials desk sets or attache cases. Stuffy? Per 3.

Continued economic expan- sion allowing broader State ser- overlooked defining the word vices without a tax increase As a result the United 4. An excellent political or Nations is accepting as members so-called nations about Congress. But that's only a start. The rest of the world, after Washington President Johnson has had amazing luck. It was as if the rest of the ganization.

ain strength i '1 but faubus being almost hushed for weeks. world agreed to take a holiday ai ii nm nuiii uuuiuc me may lie in his ability to turn the halls of this great international from the news so he could get will have to return to normal organization. The 113th is Zan uncnauengca me uiggesi pua-wuu us mmuns, iauua, nuu, sible front-page play. He did. tensions, conflicts, confusions, Anrl Va hoc hnnn frna ftf the I and usual insanities.

That's haps, but so very important to all of us, and how many even knew it was going on? more competition for Johnson. anauish that comes from deal past election's enemy into next election's friend. Mc.Math's old organization helped Faubus win his first race in 1954. but he broke with Mc-Math. He said McMath tried to dictate to him.

He campaigned as a racial moderate in 1956, and beat an ardent segregationist. In 1958 he was the seprega- segregation. Faubus used National Guard troops in 1957 to block integration of Central High School in Little Rock. Arkansas responded by breaking its tradition, and gave him 70 per cent of the vote in the 1958 Democratic primary. In Arkansas the primary usually decides the Governor's race.

Now he has held the office 9 starting any day now. Shortly after President Kennedy's funeral it became clear Johnson, with less than a year before election and therefore ing with Congress except for a brief hurly-burly with absent members when he twisted their arm to get them back to vote on foreign aid just before Local government in Bergen County is largely the work of unpaid volunteers. To be sure, no one points a gun at any one and compels him to run for mayor or councilman. But holding office in municipal government involves some measure of personal sacrifice. In payment the official is called in the dead of night because some one's street has not been zibar with 1.026 square miles, population 310,000.

Abraham Lincoln said he told jokes because he felt like weeping. The U. N. is a magnificent concept and a great achievement. But now as we see it being reduced to an absurdity, a tragic future, we have to laugh.

Its fate looks so tragic that we cannot stand to face up to it. Zanzibar is made up of two small islands, only 6 degrees south of the Equator. Temperatures in the with a need to make the great- Christmas. c' La finiH personal impact soonest, So he had the field pretty, .1 cl, plowed or some one's neighbor's dog is bark much to himself. This bound to end, like all good Running The Show things, as it is ending now with jIc worked overtime, some-Congress, times 18 hours a day or more.

ycflrs, and the hard core of his lionists champion, nut Attor-opposition is weary from fruit- ney-Gencral Bruce Bennett in less battles to oust him in I960 I960 and Alford in 1962 were the and 1962. His foes are wondering staunchest segregationists in the not so much about whether he i Governor's race. T.I not only at his job but at ere- shade usually range all year round from 77 degrees to 84 1 Including The K.tchen Sink ating news in 50 different ways. Yesterday Congress got his ing. Perhaps at the end of a long and arduous tenure the official may be given a dinner and a silver tray.

In most cases he is lucky if he gets more than an offhand "Thank" for your These arc the municipal officials whose decisions this year will have so very considerable a bearing on our pocketbooks and our habits. This is the grass-roots government Recently an Alford lieutenant of 19(32 was given a well paying State position because, Faubus explained, he needed a job. It was one of many times Faubus has found a place for the politically wounded. degrees. This is a definition of poverty and misery: the open hand with palm up.

There are several Bantu languages and a vast assortment of peoples in these islands. In 1964 the Maltese Islands are to get independence. The There weren many events that took the play away from him since that last week in November. Some of the outstanding exceptions were the kidnapping of Frank Sinatra the trip of Pope Paul VI to the Holy Land. state of the Union message, in which he offered something for practically every one.

One derisive Republican called it a cut-rate Utopia. Johnson offered so much in so many fields that even a much harder working Congress than this one, i For Faubus above all works I from day to day as a practical politician. Converted enemies i mean votes. and Senator Goldwater an- II, mil mi At mr. jonnson lesis Some Flabby Reflexes Correctly, in his first message to Congress on the state of the Union President Johnson gave his highest priorities to the two Ps peace and prosperity.

Properly and inevitably he played them big, to catch the headlines and for a few days at least to dominate the nation's thought and its talk. We shall have now to see how he plays the third of the big Ps politics. Except for certain shades of emphasis and diction such idiosyncratic phrases as "unconditional war on poverty in America" and "the millions, Negro and white, who now live on the outskirts of hope" this is the Kennedy agenda. It is the program that bogged down last year. We have been over and over the details before, from the tax cut to Medicare, from area ulation 330 000 How ironic to'whlch wants t0.Rct home faM nouncement he would like to be will run as where a worthy opponent can be found.

So far onlv State Representative Hardy Croxton of Rogers, a proponent of government reform, has demonstrated a desire to oppose Faubus. But the names of former Governor Sid McMath and former United States Representative Dale Alford. two of his five opponents in 12, arc mentioned often enough to make Faubus take critical stabs at them. State On The Move Two years ago Faubus himself appeared weary. A hard and losing fight for a StiO-millinn State construction bond issue was Just behind him.

He had feuded for years ith the powerful Arkansas Education Association A losing battle for a school. closing constitutional Amendment had followed his fourth term success in 19M which may decide whether or not you can plant a hedge at the corner or build an addi-l tion to your garage, swim in a pool of your1 own. go to night adult school, leave your car; on the street all night. To a considerable cx-j tent it will decide your lax rate, and it most certainly will provide or try to provide the I police and fire protection which guarantees the security of your home and your person. Most residents attend a meeting of a mu talk about independence at a for tne, 19M, wouia President, time when interdependence islPass ony 8 of ms Pro Even with the world back to the rule of life and isolation Srams.

normal, the possibilities for the wav of death! Will this also! He knew before he proposed creating eye-catching news are be called a nation? And will it them that, unless he fought for by no means exhausted for the ioin the U. N. with a vote equal them, he would be accused of publicity-conscious Johnson, io the United States in the Gen- making only an empty political Even the Republican Presi. eral Assembly? The Interna-' gesture. So he can be expected I dcntial candidates can hardly tional Monetary Fund has votes to fight.

But it takes two to, be more than occasional major graded by the economic strength I fight. competition for him on Page I. of the members. The U. N.

i So from now on he will have i They're Just would be Trefi- Voice Of The Press nicipal governing body only when thev are i i 1 redevelopment to youth employment to An-! 1 'u. 1 He's the real thing. should do the fame. Pitcairn io share much of the news with dents. Island is 2 square miles, and i Perennial Indulgence Moved by the spirit of the season.

State Health t'omniis. sinner Kantle will permit house-holder to burn their Christmas It Was Today has 127 persons. WALTER G. BOWER MAN 2U1 Fort Road Uotiia. Jan, 2.

14 palachia and back. Mr. Johnson's approach' 1 rt 1 ears reso ion to go down to the own hall to forcing broadened employment opnortu- i nitv hv jt.ni next New cars Dav and at least applaud nity ny intervening aga nst excessive reliance i when these officials of ours take the oath of on oxcrtime pay in some industries is a de-1 ((-, vice of his own. But even the study of over-! oim'c' time usages industry by industry depends on legislative permission. As the test of his cut- back in nuclear production will await the re- The I' irst MCI) Faubus.

sHying he wanted to trees without bring cited for write, announced in a dramatic violation of the Nw Jersey air television appearance that he pollution control rode it is was rrtinnc from jxilitics explained, of course, that there A week later rcxrts eucu- must be compliance with local laird that he was haung second ordinances, most of which are thmmlit month later he an aimed at protection against tire (JANUARY 9, State Supreme Court decided in The first military finnj in 11 of the Republicans, the Civil War occurred when the The Massachusetts Colony be Then Why Watch It? Editor, The Record: sponsc of Soviet Russia, so his domestic plan-, Hn f.rpnf fniirnov ning must await the response of a Congress 11 1 T. V. is a wonderful medium nouses, noiinced for a fifth term, and rather than asamst pollution of steamship Star of the West im; Kn to build separate attacked by Confederate baiter- but why oh, not thus far celebrated for the alacrity of its reflexes. But Mr. Johnson can do something he polled st per rent of the first the air commercials are some t-ll- ies at Charleston and was l.irnnn hark In Vnrk 1RK1 bargO 1861.

bargo act I'liiiuii sou-s eseapr run 1 om" lllli.itri iir nannies t(( loud and see i against foreign corn- so many in aootu recalcitrant Congressmen. Let's how diligently ho minds his Ps. nu riecuon mr uie lounn umc iMiirvonni spirit is not conimed rrZ was pasa, jsur. jnis Now Fauhix does not talk of to stieh minor source ed the Grab Me Act. M'Ch "ml 50 ThF n4(l Wn by mPrC Li i kr onr has ,0 jump up! Government with supplies and oi vnris.mas ,0 tlln(, cleanser tor rrlnforcemcnts for Fort Sum-: If all toes well.

1 should ttc completely sober within 10 day and, with God blessing, I shall nevrr take another drink The facts are that I am an alcoholic This is part of a remarkable prepared' statement bv John Spencer resigning as Vermont's Slate Democratic Chairman Mr Spcnror was one of the kev factors in l.st year's election of Philip lloff. the Stale's first Democratic Governor in years He is retirement The Mate Kern as the burning rs were placed in ser i 1.1. .1. MH-ni ns run nvrr me urcs ttiKBnuc ciouus oi noxious nrnj)(jn, then a hurricane comes isl r.ir ne nas sriueii ni' sases ana ny are oeicnea from the factor, where the air A F. A An ilhjnite with tMe forth throughout the year bv The Nonconformists Always Say Yes is being squeezed out of the expanding fconomv i brmcma factory stacks, and the exhausts there is the crash ter.

The first balloon flight in America wa made by Francois of France, 1793. He landed at Woodbury. after being in the air 45 minutes vice in the first electric trolley system of the overhead type to be successfully oprratcd on a commercial basis, at Richmond. Va I8T-S England nude with the I)uk" of lirunswirk the first treaty in revenue fa'rr than It he cif trucks and buses contine to Tim Lin, tin use uitm'tsivl hv By otic of the coincidences which are held the father of five children a wealthy man to be interesting although they could scarcely who has also devoted considerable energies be duller, a number of writers to The Record's to the cause of mental health "Voice of Hi? People" have begun to bear1 The classic pattern o( Alcoholics noin- for mercenary (Hes of class demr: thrown into a metal pail and replaced by a determent box, there are loud talk and discordant music from commercials of new movies, and there is a woman who irons shirts all day and sines (not too welli and whose feet arc killing her. And her commer befoul the air over the Male's road And if the Stale pepart-mrnt of Health has done any thing to curb the menacp the results uf its efforts are hidden behind the smoke screen that hovers oer latte areas of the Mate down hard the thesis that Mr.

Kennedy i mous rehabilitation bctms with just this sort mi sjrn! Intrgiattoit' (irait lnr In this tranquil atmopherr Faubus has iMWrd for the first time utter lr.S of what he will do if he rr rlrrtrii Ills train platform hr said, will be a rural mat mnstrurtien pro-tram lbs U'! rrorrt tr- nrc of admission and self appraisal, as must the sian i (mop to ficht in the American Colonies. 1776 ftichard Millions Niaon, fnr-mrr Vlrf frfident of the t'nited States. hrn In Call forma. J9U vroi jie siiiih.ioti Connecticut ratified the Con stitution. the fifth Mate to do so.

17M. The hanging of Captain John Smith, founder of the Jamrn-town Colony, averted by was assassinated by a Communist carrying out a party command What's coincidental is that this view has lately been reiterated by Robert Welch, the John Ditch Society's fonder, thinker in residence, and still No" 1 successful treatment cf any functional emotional ill The avknowlcdcmcnt is seldom if ever so public: but Mr Spencer business is in fact. nt gramma ot a "pr cials are kiilmg our nerves .1. 1 1 Sir Anthony Eden resigned as oi uiwnsauin ior mr ium- ytierp are manv more. ins of t'hristma trre Is akin to arrival of Captain Newport from Prime Minuter t.f Great Ilritam public, and with considerable personal va(or we drme The only benrfit tite-that he would fight ch.ml permitting a citizen to ram from this annoyance is that we idea man The evidence docs not support the' he assumes a public ntbt to knew m'erra'ton He kept hi, nH fly swjtter riurtnc a drive rl'--tig I ittie iWk schools acaint concealed weapons Sev ering the P's VI trrm and t-v rfnn't fall asleep watching get sonie jumping up and running to the set 1 question the benefit these corn t'lcrctaN do fof ihe various Engianl, lv I'niied State Sixth Arrry troops under (leneral Mar Arthur landed on Luzon, openini the I'mtrd Mates in taston of the Philippine l'4l sir Humphry Daw safety iair.p wa st U'ed in mire" dm- to ill health, Preldent Gamal Abdel Nasser of the I'mtrd Arab Republic set off a 10 ton dynamite plonon to ita-i construction t1 the Awan High Dam on fh (rane M.

mmf.hafi and wa Unn in Inglanl pireciatr lr Handle indulgence during the season Sink) will We wuh however that 111 tolerating hypothesis Nor docs Birch dogma, which i This is the kind of act whuh should bnrs ncxer wrorg According to the earlier writ1 hope to the more hopeless. cnreurnccHcnt to Mr. Kennedy was soft on Communis'n the more disciui raced. hoticy the jecrr perhaps hot a conscious agent of the Connui- live sick II is ail rxairplc of sonic sUtutr. nist conspiracy (that would be General Firtv the mote so if it can be followed in time bv a hower but soft It remains to bo demon-' return to politics and the publu Vrr stratcd what it would profit the Kremlin to wishes Mr Spencer well a one wubcs wrll away with a tested friend and take its the individuals still unable to make this erst-chances with Lyndon Johnswn, Hut Mr I teal hrst 1rp on the road back ptodurfs I think fitiptsifiS Iht srbn.il flc-sing a-'-'T.

'run Mrnuih the I.riU-1 turr It it hi he ha, hot letrgfaV-fi a a Cam tr.o anl isnetH it f-'h )ear tarn i I a v. (-xnnn SMITH major air po.uithti j- hr would not prat tier ftr-tiiu-i on a rrermal hKHK.) ha. i Taik lr At rmic Democrats and Hepu li-ans organim! srpjtate Senates in The At Library in York Trenton, 'H In March 'he City was opened, Hii biter fee 31. JW.J i.

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