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The News from Paterson, New Jersey • 23

Publication:
The Newsi
Location:
Paterson, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Oct. 17, 1967 INSIDE LABOR Dump-LB Campaign Dumped by Liberal BUCKLEY On The Right PEARSON Merry-Qo-Round Sprain Tour Ankle In, Own Backyard dent A. Philip Randolph's denunciation of Stokely Car-michael and Rap Brown as dangerous irresponsibles. But even from this veteran Negro leader there were no. cries for abandonment of America's position in Vietnam.

ON. THIS dais were labor leaders without whom there cannot be any effectiye junk- jonnson campaign. wnat we had there tne whenever we can prove a night was an intelligent aHnn th, lauf (Cont. from Preceding Page1 of Ewing's activities. Unfortunately, under 'existing laws within 'which we.

must work, we are unable to curtail Ewing's mailings. You may be assured, that we will continue our efforts in prosecution "We cannot "administer the poke in the nose for you, but Ewing's whereabouts are known to us, if yotr wish them the next time you are in the Los Angeles area." IT IS obvious that Los An- mlpa tippHs nn nririifinnnl rerl 23 the center court at Wimble don. Also provided is a splendid excuse for riding up on elevators. Our doctors tell us that to keep the heart beating strongly we should walk upstairs. And so, huffingly and puffingly, we do.

But who can ask a man to walk when he, has this interesting flaw in one leg? We, are. all wqrried about seniority. Young know-nothings around the office-aril taking over. Respect is demanding. And with just a hint of a limp, a suggestion of bravery with which you overcomepain, the young snips will stand and let you "At his age," one will say: "I don't see how he does it." "Does what? another will ask? f.

"Never the first will reply, he does, it's amazing that he is able to do it at all." Yes. men. a sprained ankln is recommended to one and all. The only drawback that it hurts like the devil. Warning LINCOLN, Neb.

(UPI) -Self-diagnosis and other, people's medicine can be says the University "of Nebraska Extension health educa- tion specialist Helen The wrong medicine or treatment not only gives no permanent relief, but also covers up important symptoms of real illnesses, postpones' proper treatment, and may allow serious disease to progress unchecked. PaterSOn News wt. it mother or a cousin on his fa-but however, it is dismaying therV si(Je his ankle WHAT I recommend if you need a little attention in your. circle is a sprained ankle. It puts you in the company of the big-time athletes, f.

What confronts the eye the minute you read a sports story these days? It is, the anatomical details of VAUGHAN some callow or who has sprained his anKle, The mystery is whether he will be able toyflay or ftyen suit up for the next game. You and I read this with freat seriousness. We don't now this lad or even his rivets our attention. I sprained my ankle the other day and I have never been so popular around the homestead. Fortunately, I did it under antiseptic circumstances ankle out of town.

A man JZYLT fMflv Sm flv-knnw will bm city on an emi- nently respectable errand, such as introducing the new line or contacting important contacts. Somewhere along the way there may be a loose cobblestone underfoot, or he will leap to rescue the banker's blue-eyed daughter from her runaway horses. It doesn't happen too often, as most bankers these days have torown-eyed daughters; but it is still possible. Still, when he comes home limping, a light flickers in the nuptial eye. )' WW By BILL VAUGHAN- "Aha, dum-dum," the wife remarks, "you have been consuming legal beverages -and making a4 fool out of yourself, a man your age." There isjio solicitude, and no point in explaining about the.

banker's daughter, np matter what the color of her eyes. 1 MEN whom this has happened say that it fs worse that spraining an ankle on the diamond or gridiron. The warrior of these places can hobble around and receive the -plaudits of the multitude. The average man who -twists an-ankle out of town doesn't even dare wince as he a little weight on the injured member. The minute he does there are cries of, "Aha, dum-dum, living it up in Gary, Indiana; you have tripped over your petard and don't conje running to me for symathy." And it does no "good to say, "I am not running to you for sympathy.

I am trvine to crawl over the breakfast table, for a cup of coffee, No, boys, sprain your ankle within full view of your wife. Then-she-kpower-how-innocu- ous it was. There Js no ques- tion of having looked upon the wine while red. It is merely a case of a badly done sidewalk. Once we have achieved the sprained ankle under impeccable circumstances we find it immensely useful.

i IT ADDS a touch of distinction to the gait. Just that slight hesitation which indicates that you may have caught a bit of shrapnel at Vlmy Ridge or perhaps an unbelievable backhand shot on By JACK O'BRIAN mat me supreme court. ap- pears to have left the disciplining of Mr. Ewing to the free enterprise system. The state courts are listless against the likes of Mr.

Ewing. True, last May the Court overturned three state pornagraphy conBOYS, DO not ever sprain (Conk from. Preceding PageV- who has a notorious record for siding wjth the Farm Bureau anaMhe big food processors against the-farmers and consumers. More surprising, however; the meat lobby has also lined up Rep. May work against the housewives whom she claims to represents -The American Meat Infill- tute has also brought pressure upon the Agriculture Department to suppress the inspector general's reports on the alarming traffic in.

diseased meat. His inspectors have found, for example, that raw and cooked garbage is fed to hogs in violations of health regulations. One tuberculosis sanitorium in California was found to be selling its raw garbage to a hog rancher. The prevalence of hog chbl- era in American hogs has. become so serious, in factthat "England has banned the im- ort of pork products from the nited States.

INSPECTORS' REPORTS MEANWHILE, HERE are excerpts, all too typical the reports on processing plants that are now sending meat to the supermarkets, From an inspector's report of a California plant: ''The operation is located in building that, is falling flies cockroaches and rn- fiies, cockroaches, and ro dents. Storage facilities are lacking; everything is out in the open no semblance of sanitation. From a report on a Teaxs plant: "The inside of this plant as dirty and filthy as any place can get. Flies, nests, cobwebs, weeds, manure, dried blood, causing very unpleasant odors welcomes-any visitor to this plant. i-From a report on a Ken- tucky plant: "The dirtiest plant I've seen in 40 years the walls, ceilings, floors were filthy, fly-covered; in fact, everything visible was badly in need of a thorough cleaning." From a report on an Illinois plant: "Junk and unused equipment littered the perimeter of the curing and preparation rooms.

Direct contamination of product from dripping beams and rusty overhead structures was observed." these are facts which Congress worn an May, the ex-Episcopal Sunday School teacher, would like to cover up. William Morris On Words A PRIDE OF LIONS YES BUT NO TO COWARDICE OF CURS Name Performers Hooked on Dope NEW YORK TV's "Laura," starring Jackie Kennedy's sister Lee Radziwill, has a headline due to splash shortly. By VICTOR RIESEL the other night, in the same grand ballroom, history -repeated itself and dumped the, dump-Johnson campaign. IN THAT ballroom last Wednesday night were jam-packed 2,000 sophisticated, politically astute liberals-some new, some old, some young hopefuls, some already highly placed What might have been a flash fire anti-J rally turned merely into a fireworks display for more spending, say $50 billion, for butter as well as bullets, for ripping out ghettos as well as whipping up guns. No one attacked the fighting.

No one demanded withdrawal. No one rose and departed when hawks were introduced. No doves fluttered. They cheered and applauded when speakers called' for spending as much money on urban crises asori the military crisis. But they also clapped loudly when Mayor John Lindsay warned that he was neither for "isolationism" nor for "unilateral with-' drawal" from Vietnam.

Yet this was the most mas sive gathering of active and In recent history. This evening it was to each his own. When a telegram was read from Vice-President Hubert Humphrey, the throng barely stopped digging into its fruit salads, when a wire was read from Sen. Robert F. Tfpnnpriv tho annlatiQA ni This was a crowd hungry for action on the urban front It cheered demands for more and more domestic spending It heard no outcries for less and less fighting abroad.

It applauded and roared approval of AFL-CIO vice presi- ed with American aid 10 years ago. In all this, Jackie will be giving the back of her hand to American foreign policy, which until now has been to let Sihanouk stew in the unsavory juice he-eoncocted by his1 slavish adherence to Mao Tst-tung. She will be acknowledging Sihanouk's official existence, at the same time adding to his. prestige and suggesting that the Kennedy family is not necessarily bound to Lyndon Johnson's policies. LATELY, SIHANOUK has been rowing with Peking, but only because the Mao crowd has meddled in Cambodia's intprnol affairt Vt spplrtnff t'n infiltrate agents into the Phnom Penh government.

But he still pledges friendship to Peking and he has not retract- ed his Statement Of 1963 that "The Communists will surely triumph in South Vietnam. If we do not side with Communists now we will have to do so in 1965 or 1966. Communist China is the wave of the future." According to Jackie's secretary, Nancy Tuckerman, "Prince Sihanouk was most cordial in his invitation." And why not? It is Jn the interest of opportunists like Sihanouk to exploit differences between-Lyndon Jonnson and the Kennedys. His invitation is part and parcel of the North Vietnam propaganda campaign which trumpets that Americans are angrily divided on the Vietnam war and that this division will result in ultimate victory for the Reds. The point will be made, I suppose, that as a free citizen Jackie has a right to go anywhere she pleases.

as we are constantly reminded, Jackie is a special case because she is both Kennedv and the widow of a president. Somehow I would not expect the same tolerance from the Kennedy courtiers if Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower decided she wanted to see Cuba. Voice Of The People (Cont.

from Preceding Page) is another man's poison. This holds true for this toxic poison. So there are many doctors and dentists who are opposed- to fluoridation in spite of what the AMA, the ADA, and. the Public Health Service say. And the cost is enormous for most of it goes for washing dishes, floors, clothes, cars, sprinkling lawns, etc.

So those who believe that this law would be an infringement on their moral and God- given right to control their NEW YORK Actually, "though" still unreported, the earliest dump-Johnson moy.e- mem was ui- ganizedin the summer of '63. By August! of that grim year its leader with Arthur Schle-singer had at least eight "insid-. ers" organ-" ized into a leak-It met and RIESEL proof caucus. planned- carefully to jettison me vice-presiaeni, nrst oy undermining him with the late' President Kennedy and then by mockingly discrediting him The get-Johnson operation was in high" gear when it blew a gasket. Somehow, someone -got word to Mr.

Johnson. a few" days later he was invited to make the principal speech at the Oct. 15 annual dinner of the Liberal Party which swings the balance of power in this big swing state. Mr. Johnson and conquered.

Most New York progressives expected the Texan to have longhorns or ooze crude petroleum. In own language They cheered. He carried the Liberal crowd as he would Johnson City. That evening during which he was hailed as the future Democratic presi dential nominee in '68, as well uii me ucKci. nie otiuesjiiger caucus ispuniereu.

oame oi us memoers attempted to Keep Liberal party leader and chief strategist Alex Rose, the political hatter, from the White House. Exactly four years later, TULLY Whirligig ANDREW TULLY WASHINGTON It is not surprising -that Mrs. Jackie Kennedy will visit Cambodia next month as the guest of its nut-type dictator, Prince Noro- do Sihanouk, because the Kennedy Royal Family has its own foreign policy. Less explicable are all thoe soothing1 noises from the State Department. "Diplomatic sources" are quoted as commenting that Mrs.

Kennedy's visit, although a purely personal 'one, can be expected to "thaw" U.S.-Cam-bodian relations. I trust this does not mean that Jackie will persuade Sihanouk to accept of this essay, i wisn, insieaa, to express curiosity over the State Department's bland acceptance of Jackie's projected trip. The United States has not had diplomatic relations with Sihanouk's unhappy little kingdom since 1965, when Sihanouk told us to go home. in that respect, Cambodia snouio oe oii-umiis iu any American, just as are North Vietnam. Cuba, Red China and Albania.

Yet a State Department which quite properly makes angry noises when some student shows up in Hanoi has taken the position that Jackie will be travelling as a kind of-ex-officio ambassador. This is understandable only when viewed in the light of the Administration's absolute terror of seeming to obstruct or criticize any member of the gov-ernment-ih-exile. MRS. KENNEDY, of course, is playing it straight. She's to Cambodia, because of a 20-year ambition to visit the ruined temples of Angkor Wat.

But in fact she will be a state visitor. She will stay at Sihanouk's lavish, gold-roofed palace in Phnom Penh and she will dedicate in a nice piece of irony a street in Sihanoukville named for her late husband. Sihanoukville is the Gulf of iam port deyelopr. Ml TULLY Rhodesian sanctions get silly: Russia's buying sian tobacco via W. German middlemen.

Karl Mai-den said (at Gallagher's) he'll return to the Bdwy. stage after nine years in films is his latest). Gov. Ronald Reagan Is it true Yule visit Vietnam this Christmas? Anyone calling "Haven" clinician Dr. O'BRIAN discussion of the -urban di lemma," said one oMhose la- bor chiefs around whom the Liberal Party pivots as it.

expands across intellectual-class lines. "Our "state chairman, Donald Harrington, said it's a matter of money, not a question of dumping Johnson. "I'm for our position in Viet-nam. I'm for Johnson. But I'm also for solving the urban problems.

So let's spend as much on our cities as on the military. There was no attack' on our fighting. Didn't John Lindsay say: I believe that this country should continue to help those people who want and need help to achieve self-respect, a decent living standard and the inde- T0Ved Aoparently the difference settles down to some $50 bil- lion. But there appeared no doubt that the broad-based liberal coalition, which has' helped Democratic presidents carry New York State for decades, seeks no political dumping grounds. They do talk a fine independent game.

But then, these are the men, who helped invent collective baf gaining. lfjhere was any need for Ttrthe '67 Liberal Party banquet assured Lyndon Johnson's renomination, as did the '63 breadbreaking. about their health and this wasteful cost, write to your legislators protesting the passage of this bill, or those who will sign a petition -sponsored by the N.J. Council 'Opposed to Fluoridation, please contact MARY HEATH 142 Union Ave. Paterson Found Her Friend Editor, Paterson' News A very special thank you for your co-operation in 'find- ing my long lost friend, Mrs.

William Morgan Grieder. Phone calls, letters, and pho tographs have wiped away the vls years. Do you realize what Mlto PC widely, read paper can do to bring happiness to many people? ompiei gunugeiB wueun mother in Paterson to aid in our search, anxious to help others. It was a great experience, and I have always had a tender spot in my heart for your paper My deepest appreciation and sincere thanks. MRS.

RALPH F. SHUTE 60 Grant Road Lynn, Mass. Neighbors Are Alert Editor, Paterson News I want to thank the person across the street from the Kossuth Street School for so dutifully having a helpful, efficient officer issue the first summons of my life on, Wednesday, Oct. 11. Ironically, I was listening to a talk by Chief Roy Martin of Haledon's Police Department at the time.

If only the police department was as efficient as my neighborhood. RICHARD S. STEYLING i 74 Bernard Ave. Haledon' Union Dues Hiked Editor, Paterson News I was surprised to hear on the radio that the rank and file of the UAW had agreed to contribute to the Ford strike fund. My husband was even more surprised you see, he is one of the rank and file.

On Oct. 12 the "volunteers" were told that they were to be assessed $10 a month for the duration. After the strike is over, their union dues will be increased. Did the rank and file agree? What do you think? I can't help but wonder what the union would do if management tried to do something like this. Please don't use my name.

I want my husband to keep his Job. OKAY IlL surveys now to count such an instant Ig- nore. Louis Armstrong singing "You'll Never Walk Alone," which he dedicated to parents of kids in Vietnam on, The "Tonight" Show, was one of the quietly most affecting -moments in all music; Satch delivered the' deep-rich drama of the Rodgers- Ham-merstein hymn from "Carousel" better than anyone we've ever heard. Louis' mood switched from happy to heartbreak in a manner we'll bet he never anticipated when he struck out on his own more than 40 years ago in Chicago. 1 Guess: which big politician's daughter has an identification bracelet, but the old boy friend refuses to pay the 59th' St.

jeweler. Same lad's mansion-mortgage -was financed by his long ago fiancee, but when he went socially public, had to be threatened with gaudy welshing-headlines before he paid up. Comic London Lee's studying singing "With coach Carlo Menotti and several comedians are happy he seems headed for a musical career. Mrs. Meriweather Post, once famous for her fortune, nw for being Dlna Merrill's mother, lought 18 dozen pairs of hosiery at a Madison Ave.

shop (Shirley Harris) as Christmas gifts. Composer Richard Rodgers loved Florence Henderson's triumph here in the summer7 revival of "South Pacific" at Lincoln Center so much, he gifted the so-gifted Florence with ruby4, and diamond earrings. Max Showalter of "Hello, Doliy" is no dilettante dauber: he's sold 450 paintings. "Henry Sweet Henry" producer Nor-''I man wain gave aide Ann Kempner a week v' off as a wedding gift; Ann will wed James Allen. Here's another survey-conclusion; -when the Stock Market droops, so: so does newsstand circulation of financial publications; a bull market turns 'em into hotcakes.

-v Bounced from the "Valley i of the Dulls" Judy Garland took, away no money, just the $5,000 mod-green lounging outfit she sports on her current, tour. Big Conservative name's due for a radical announcement. Once a hungry 1 actor, if that's not a redundancy, Terence Stamp just opened Chelsea restaurant In London. Former N. Y.

Herald Tribune editor Bob Endlcott opened an antique shop in Litchfield, i Conn. The "Adams Dana SUverstein" ad agencies founded last year- by Don (Get Smart) Adams. Bill (Jose Jimlnez) A READER'S letter yester- another billion dollars of U.S. day complained that her die-, aid, but in the past most dip- tionary did not contain either' lomatic attempts to (of geese) or ness with that 45-year-old mix- "pride" (of lions). It's too ed-up kid have caused a raid bad that the limitations of on the Treasury.

-space prevent editors of the shorter dictionaries from in- DISTRUST OF both Sihanouk eluding many of these col- and our diplomatic thaw ex- orful special names given to perts, however, is not the, point victions. But the same maior- ity authorized convictions bf the states if either of the fol- lowing three circumstances applied. 1) If the state statute showed "a specific and limited concern for juveniles" (that would apply in the case of a 14-year old boy). 2) If it involved an assault on individual privacy "in a manner so obtrusive as 1 to make it impossible for an unwilling Individual to avoid exposure to it" (that would apply in. the case of a mailed communication, the opening of which 4s impossible to avoid.) Or S) IMhere is evidence of "pandering" in the "context of prurience not science" (the mailed literature is conslusive here.

Science not being a dirty word, Mr. Ewing hasprobably never heard of it). Only one count is necessary: but all three counts would appear to apply, which point I respectfully commend to the attention of the prosecutors of Los Angeles, if only to spare them a rise a cases of assault and battery. The Ralph McGill Column (Cont. from Preceding Page) This was the sad situation when Wendell Willkie, that very admirable man who had been the Republican presidential nominee in 1940, arrived in Moscow in 1942.

Willkie had never been in sympathy, with the foreign policy of the GOP leadership. There was too much isolationist sentiment in it. Lend-Lease to England had been opposed by these Republicans. Willkie, believing that civilization required some sort of world organization, took a fact-finding journey in 1942 to -t the Middle East, Russia, and China, at the request of President Roosevelt. Willkie's book, "One World," was written that long and dangerous 'trip.

v-" Eddy Gilmore as, of course, among those who covered Willkie in Moscow, He saw him often and managed to bring up his personal problem of Tamara and her banishment. Wendell Willkie brought it to Stalin's attention and made an urgent request, that young love not be impeded. Stalin agreed. back to Moscow. She and Eddy were married and lived' happily ever after until Eddy died, swiftly, unexpectedly.

IN MARCH 1945, on a journey to Moscow, I carried along two pairs of nylon stockings for Tamara. Iff' Moscow Tamara helped show me the city and took me to visit friends. There was also a dinner at the Gilmore apartment and time for long talks and lots of laughter. There was always laugnter where Eddy was. It was not until after Stalin's death that Eddy could bring, Tamara' and the children out to He won a Pulitzer prize, he wrote books, and lived the sort of life he liked always close to the news, to Tamara and his fam-' ily.

He was a good reporter, the boy from Selma, Alabama, went a long wayy. He always made One never forgets a man like Eddy Gilmore. by Brickman VOTE 10-17 Rob't Balrd will get a scarey story, about too many of the biggest "name" performers now hooked on narcotics. Owner Ray Parker of the Concord Hotel (in the Catskills) says he is serious about a $3,500,000 bid for the S. S.

Queen Elizabeth; Ray must want to dig his own At "21," wealthy Freddy Hope of Palm Beach requested not just any captain, "I want one with glasses" Why? "I forgot mine and I can't read the wine list" "21" does get the cream of names: Lauren Bacall, Jason Robards, writer Irwin Shaw, sisters Joan Fontaine and Olivia DeHavilland (yes, that'son again), Judy Garland and Liza Minnelli (at separate tables), and a lot of just plain anonymous millionaires. At Goldie's New York, New Yorktest nightspot in -Manhattan, Ethel Merman was raving about Marlene Dietrich's one-woman show and tins sexygenarian's gold evening gown: "She looked just like an -v Sarah Churchill on the Merv Griffin Show was just finest, nicest, most charming, articulate, amusing and welcome girl-guest in the history of TV chatterthons. Her tales of her grandmother. (Jenny Jerome, formerly of Brooklyn), and the quietly stated affection her whole family had and has for the. U.

was just the friendly frosting on the appreciative Trans-atlantie pattycake. Ch. 13's drama critic John Simon (in a' "stationhaus" accent as it was called in vaudeville) tried really cruelly to bury Dietrich's one-grandmother show: suggested Marlene may have been made up by a mortician, cited the "mask she has for a. face" and "microphone she has for a voice," called the cultish enthusiasm of the First Nighters an "audience of and sounded like a cub-critic trying to blast for attention or get even for something; it just didn't come off on TV because Marlene's shrewd stage "per- form ance very definitely "came off," was a triumph of canny showmanship over limited to be sure but not anywhere near the abject hopelessness of -Simon, who delivered this popgun shot for the "educational station" He seemed fascinated himself as a TV performance, it was a brutal, witless attack, unleavened by 1 or perspective. Gossip: famous Conn, prep school fired three students caught with marijuana; its -most famous grad is rolling in his pre- mature grave.

Andra famous-fancy E. Side girl's school expelled three young ladies caught with pot LSD and in flagrante delicto. One pitiable teen- ager's dad is about as big a celebrity as news can create. Gray Flannel phraseology (evasive advertising semantics) continues its euphe-J mistic way: inattention" means turning off your mind, ears and, eyes hm 4 stead of the TV set when you encounter a boring dull entertainer, the latest That folks who actually turn off a show to switch hopefully elsewhere; are Dana and Donald (Who?) Silverstein will .1 "go n. New East Air- lines," with N.

ice scheduled for December, is dealing for a Manhattan dock as an air its 1 STOL (Short Takeoff and Landing) 18- I passenger planes can userunwayi less 1 Kiuupa vi uiros. ana animais but that's how it is. Some years ago a newspaperman friend of mine. F. Mordaunt Hall made quite a collection of these oddities which he shared with me and now I'llshare them with you.

Hunters at least the more proper among them speak of a "cast" ot nawKs and a "covey" of quail. A countryT man speaks, of course, of a "swarm" of bees, but only the most adventurous souls have run on a "skulk" of foxes, a "sloth" of bears, a "cete" of badgers, a "down" of and a "fall" of wood-, cocks to say nothing of a "troop" of monkeys. onlv in regional dialects but. in davs when the hunting of fame or food was of vitl Importance, euch distinctions in the labeling of Animal' groups were carefully observed. Todav the collection and preservation of such labels is mostly work of connoisseurs of word oddities.

A sord of mallard, a i of kine such -wnrd-rnlleetnrs. Rut who; would know that elk the animal, not the human variety-travel not in herds but in "gangs." For veteran birdwatchers, the eye is cocked for a "nye" of pheasants, a "watch" of a "muster" of peacjeks, a "covert" of coots, and inspired phrase an "exaltation" of larks. Back in the animal kingdom, one finds a "shrewd- ucss ui sMcs, a mum a of cats, a "rout" of wolves and a "sounder" of boars. lUilCUO, 111 fcUlU, VU111C 111 "kindles" but around our house the word is still And" when the group label for mongrel dogs is given as a "cowardice of curs," your editor strongly protests and Is joined by the howls of our somewhat disreputable "Poopsie" no blue-blood but courageous just the same. the small society MM than 1,000 feet long.

George Eels quit as editor of "Signature," Dinner Club magazine; he'll write a book about LoueUa Parsons nd Hedda Hopper for- Putm "which published his fascinating Cole' Porter biog. Might say Louisian's singing ex-gov- ernor Jimmie Davis has hit a New Low; OcU 21 he'll be the "singing attraction" at Meramec Caverns, Stanton, and that's a cave. Spelunkec? Spielunker? At a TV ball (AFTRAV Garry Moore looked around at all the re- -tired, cancelled, and reeling TV, oldtimers i and cracked: "It looks like a Yankee Old-timers Game." We're tapping this out at 4 a.m. with the music from "Camelot soothing our -i rock-sore ears; and let's- note as we did when it opened on Bdwy 1, it is lovely music. It suffered simply from 'the backwash of "My Fair by its same creators; so we're more than mildly looking forward to its film premiere short- TolVfe'EMTVIB 3QI l- "Lr5 Mas MILLION girrrwArJTfT MANY WAY Wee-Hirtfton Star Syndicate, tne.

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