Austin
,
Texas

--
A
Texas
halfback
who
doesn't
even
know
the
team's
plays
,
Eldon
Moritz
,
ranks
fourth
in
Southwest
Conference
scoring
after
three
games
.


	Time
stands
still
every
time
Moritz
,
a
26-year-old
Army
Signal
Corps
veteran
,
goes
into
the
field
.
Although
he
never
gets
to
play
while
the
clock
is
running
,
he
gets
a
big
kick
--
several
every
Saturday
,
in
fact
--
out
of
football
.


	Moritz
doesn't
even
have
a
nose
guard
or
hip
pads
but
he's
one
of
the
most
valuable
members
of
the
Longhorn
team
that
will
be
heavily
favored
Saturday
over
Oklahoma
in
the
Cotton
Bowl
.


	That's
because
he
already
has
kicked
14
extra
points
in
15
tries
.
He
ran
his
string
of
successful
conversions
this
season
to
13
straight
before
one
went
astray
last
Saturday
night
in
the
41-8
slaughter
of
Washington
State
.


	Moritz
is
listed
on
the
Longhorn
roster
as
a
right
halfback
,
the
position
at
which
he
lettered
on
the
1956
team
.
But
ask
coach
Darrell
Royal
what
position
he
plays
and
you'll
get
the
quick
response
,
``
place-kicker
''
.


	A
208-pound
,
6-foot
1-inch
senior
from
Stamford
,
Moritz
practices
nothing
but
place-kicking
.
Last
year
,
when
he
worked
out
at
halfback
all
season
,
he
didn't
get
into
a
single
game
.


	``
This
year
,
coach
Royal
told
me
if
I'd
work
on
my
place-kicking
he
thought
he
could
use
me
''
,
said
Moritz
.
``
So
I
started
practicing
on
it
in
spring
training
.


	Moritz
was
bothered
during
the
first
two
games
this
year
by
a
pulled
muscle
in
the
thigh
of
his
right
(
kicking
)
leg
and
,
as
a
result
,
several
of
his
successful
conversions
have
gone
barely
far
enough
.


	Moritz
said
Monday
his
leg
feels
fine
and
,
as
a
result
,
he
hopes
to
start
practicing
field
goals
this
week
.
He
kicked
several
while
playing
at
Stamford
High
School
,
including
one
that
beat
Anson
,
3-0
,
in
a
1953
district
game
.


	``
I
kicked
about
110
extra
points
in
135
tries
during
three
years
in
high
school
''
,
he
said
,
``
and
made
26
in
a
row
at
one
time
.
I
never
did
miss
one
in
a
playoff
game
--
I
kicked
about
20
in
the
five
playoff
games
my
last
two
years
''
.


	Moritz
came
to
Texas
in
1954
but
his
freshman
football
efforts
were
hampered
by
a
knee
injury
.
He
missed
the
1955
season
because
of
an
operation
on
the
ailing
knee
,
then
played
77
minutes
in
1956
.
His
statistical
record
that
year
,
when
Texas
won
only
one
game
and
lost
nine
,
was
far
from
impressive
:
he
carried
the
ball
three
times
for
a
net
gain
of
10
yards
,
punted
once
for
39
yards
and
caught
one
pass
for
13
yards
.


	He
went
into
the
Army
in
March
,
1957
,
and
returned
two
years
later
.
But
he
was
scholastically
ineligible
in
1959
and
merely
present
last
season
.


	Place
kicking
is
largely
a
matter
of
timing
,
Moritz
declared
.


	``
Once
you
get
the
feel
of
it
,
there's
not
much
to
it
.
I've
tried
to
teach
some
of
the
other
boys
to
kick
and
some
of
them
can't
seem
to
get
the
feel
.
Practice
helps
you
to
get
your
timing
down
.


	``
It's
kind
of
like
golf
--
if
you
don't
swing
a
club
very
often
,
your
timing
gets
off
''
.


	Moritz
,
however
,
kicks
only
about
10
or
12
extra
points
during
each
practice
session
.


	``
If
you
kick
too
much
,
your
leg
gets
kinda
dead
''
,
he
explained
.
Footnotes
:

In
their
first
three
games
,
the
Longhorns
have
had
the
ball
41
times
and
scored
16
times
,
or
40
per
cent
;
;
their
total
passing
yardage
in
three
games
,
447
on
30
completions
in
56
attempts
,
is
only
22
yards
short
of
their
total
passing
yardage
in
1959
,
when
they
made
469
on
37
completions
in
86
tries
.
Tailback
James
Saxton
already
has
surpassed
his
rushing
total
for
his
brilliant
sophomore
season
,
when
he
netted
271
yards
on
55
carries
;
;
he
now
has
273
yards
in
22
tries
during
three
games
.
Saxton
has
made
only
one
second-half
appearance
this
season
and
that
was
in
the
Washington
State
game
,
for
four
plays
:
he
returned
the
kickoff
30
yards
,
gained
five
yards
through
the
line
and
then
uncorked
a
56-yard
touchdown
run
before
retiring
to
the
bench
.
Wingback
Jack
Collins
injured
a
knee
in
the
Washington
State
game
but
insists
he'll
be
ready
for
Oklahoma
.
Last
week
,
when
Royal
was
informed
that
three
Longhorns
were
among
the
conference's
top
four
in
rushing
,
he
said
:
``
That
won't
last
long
''
.
It
didn't
;
;
Monday
,
he
had
four
Longhorns
in
the
top
four
.


	A
good
feeling
prevailed
on
the
SMU
coaching
staff
Monday
,
but
attention
quickly
turned
from
Saturday's
victory
to
next
week's
problem
:
Rice
University
.
The
Mustangs
don't
play
this
week
.


	``
We're
just
real
happy
for
the
players
''
,
Coach
Bill
Meek
said
of
the
9-7
victory
over
the
Air
Force
Academy
.
``
I
think
the
big
thing
about
the
game
was
that
our
kids
for
the
third
straight
week
stayed
in
there
pitching
and
kept
the
pressure
on
.
It
was
the
first
time
we've
been
ahead
this
season
(
when
John
Richey
kicked
what
proved
to
be
the
winning
field
goal
)
''
.


	Assistant
coach
John
Cudmore
described
victory
as
``
a
good
feeling
,
I
think
,
on
the
part
of
the
coaches
and
the
players
.
We
needed
it
and
we
got
it
''
.


	Meek
expressed
particular
gratification
at
the
defensive
performances
of
end
Happy
Nelson
and
halfback
Billy
Gannon
.
Both
turned
in
top
jobs
for
the
second
straight
game
.


	``
Nelson
played
magnificent
football
''
,
Meek
praised
.
``
He
knocked
down
the
interference
and
made
key
stops
lots
of
times
.
And
he
caused
the
fumble
that
set
up
our
touchdown
.
He
broke
that
boy
(
Air
Force
fullback
Nick
Arshinkoff
)
in
two
and
knocked
him
loose
from
the
football
''
.


	Gannon
contributed
saving
plays
on
the
Falcons'
aerial
thrusts
in
the
late
stages
.


	One
was
on
a
fourth-down
screen
pass
from
the
Mustang
21
after
an
incomplete
pass
into
Gannon's
territory
.


	``
As
soon
as
it
started
to
form
,
Gannon
spotted
it
''
,
Meek
said
.
``
He
timed
it
just
right
and
broke
through
there
before
the
boy
(
halfback
Terry
Isaacson
)
had
time
to
turn
around
.
He
really
crucified
him
he
nailed
it
for
a
yard
loss
''
.


	The
Air
Force's
,
and
the
game's
,
final
play
,
was
a
long
pass
by
quarterback
Bob
McNaughton
which
Gannon
intercepted
on
his
own
44
and
returned
22
yards
.


	``
He
just
lay
back
there
and
waited
for
it
''
,
Meek
said
.
``
He
almost
brought
it
back
all
the
way
''
.


	Except
for
sophomore
center
Mike
Kelsey
and
fullback
Mike
Rice
,
Meek
expects
the
squad
to
be
physically
sound
for
Rice
.


	``
Kelsey
is
very
doubtful
for
the
Rice
game
''
,
Meek
said
.
``
He'll
be
out
of
action
all
this
week
.
He
got
hit
from
the
blind
side
by
the
split
end
coming
back
on
the
second
play
of
the
game
.
There
is
definitely
some
ligament
damage
in
his
knee
''
.


	Rice
has
not
played
since
injuring
a
knee
in
the
opener
with
Maryland
.


	``
He's
looking
a
lot
better
,
and
he's
able
to
run
''
,
Meek
explained
.
``
We'll
let
him
do
a
lot
of
running
this
week
,
but
I
don't
know
if
he'll
be
able
to
play
''
.


	The
game
players
saw
the
Air
Force
film
Monday
,
ran
for
30
minutes
,
then
went
in
,
while
the
reserves
scrimmaged
for
45
minutes
.


	``
We'll
work
hard
Tuesday
,
Wednesday
and
Thursday
''
,
Meek
said
,
``
and
probably
will
have
a
good
scrimmage
Friday
.
We'll
work
out
about
an
hour
on
Saturday
,
then
we'll
work
Monday
and
Tuesday
of
next
week
,
then
taper
off
''
.


	SMU
will
play
the
Owls
at
Rice
Stadium
in
Houston
in
a
night
game
Saturday
,
Oct.
21
.



Huddle
hearsay

--
Held
out
of
Texas
Tech's
sweat-suits
drill
Monday
at
Lubbock
was
tackle
Richard
Stafford
,
who
is
undergoing
treatment
for
a
leg
injury
suffered
in
the
Raiders'
38-7
loss
to
Texas
A
&
M
Because
of
its
important
game
with
Arkansas
coming
up
Saturday
,
Baylor
worked
out
in
the
rain
Monday
--
mud
or
no
mud
.
End
Gene
Raesz
,
who
broke
a
hand
in
the
Owl's
game
with
LSU
,
was
back
working
out
with
Rice
Monday
,
and
John
Nichols
,
sophomore
guard
,
moved
back
into
action
after
a
week's
idleness
with
an
ankle
injury
.
The
Texas
Aggies
got
a
day
off
Monday
--
a
special
gift
from
Coach
Jim
Myers
for
its
conference
victory
last
Saturday
night
,
but
Myers
announced
that
halfback
George
Hargett
,
shaken
up
in
the
Tech
game
,
would
not
play
against
Trinity
Saturday
.
Halfback
Bud
Priddy
,
slowed
for
almost
a
month
by
a
slowly-mending
sprained
ankle
,
joined
TCU's
workout
Monday
.


	The
Dallas
Texans
were
back
home
Monday
with
their
third
victory
in
four
American
Football
League
starts
--
a
19-12
triumph
over
the
Denver
Broncos
--
but
their
visit
will
be
a
short
one
.


	The
Texans
have
two
more
road
games
--
at
Buffalo
and
Houston
--
before
they
play
for
the
home
folks
again
,
and
it
looks
as
if
coach
Hank
Stram's
men
will
meet
the
Bills
just
as
they
are
developing
into
the
kind
of
team
they
were
expected
to
be
in
pre-season
reckonings
.


	Buffalo
coach
Buster
Ramsey
,
who
has
become
one
of
the
game's
greatest
collectors
of
quarterbacks
,
apparently
now
has
found
a
productive
pair
in
two
ex-National
Football
Leaguers
,
M.
C.
Reynolds
and
Warren
Rabb
.


	Rabb
,
the
former
Louisiana
State
field
general
,
came
off
the
bench
for
his
debut
with
the
Bills
Sunday
and
directed
his
new
team
to
a
22-12
upset
victory
over
the
Houston
Oilers
,
defending
league
champions
.


	``
Just
our
luck
''
!
!
Exclaimed
Stram
.
``
Buster
would
solve
that
quarterback
problem
just
as
we
head
that
way
''
.


	Ramsey
has
a
thing
or
two
to
mutter
about
himself
,
for
the
Dallas
defensive
unit
turned
in
another
splendid
effort
against
Denver
,
and
the
Texans
were
able
to
whip
the
dangerous
Broncs
without
the
fullbacking
of
a
top
star
,
Jack
Spikes
,
though
he
did
the
team's
place-kicking
while
nursing
a
knee
injury
.


	``
Our
interior
line
and
out
linebackers
played
exceptionally
well
''
,
said
Stram
Monday
after
he
and
his
staff
reviewed
movies
of
the
game
.
``
In
fact
our
whole
defensive
unit
did
a
good
job
''
.


	The
Texans
won
the
game
through
ball
control
,
with
Quarterback
Cotton
Davidson
throwing
only
17
passes
.


	``
We
always
like
to
keep
the
ball
as
much
as
we
can
against
Denver
because
they
have
such
an
explosive
attack
''
,
explained
Stram
.
``
They
can
be
going
along
,
doing
little
damage
,
then
bang
,
bang
--
they
can
hit
a
couple
of
passes
on
you
for
touchdowns
and
put
you
in
trouble
''
.


	The
Broncs
did
hit
two
quick
strikes
in
the
final
period
against
the
Texans
,
but
Dallas
had
enough
of
a
lead
to
hold
them
off
.


	The
principal
tactic
in
controlling
the
ball
was
giving
it
to
Abner
Haynes
,
the
flashy
halfback
.
He
was
called
upon
26
times
--
more
than
all
of
the
other
ball-carriers
combined
--
and
delivered
145
yards
.


	The
Texans
made
themselves
a
comforting
break
on
the
opening
kickoff
when
Denver's
Al
Carmichael
was
jarred
loose
from
the
ball
when
Dave
Grayson
,
the
speedy
halfback
,
hit
him
and
Guard
Al
Reynolds
claimed
it
for
Dallas
.
A
quick
touchdown
resulted
.


	``
That
permitted
us
to
start
controlling
the
ball
right
away
''
,
said
Stram
,
quipping
,
``
I
think
I'll
put
that
play
in
the
book
''
.


	The
early
Southwest
Conference
football
leaders
--
Texas
,
Arkansas
and
Texas
A
&
M
--
made
a
big
dent
in
the
statistics
last
week
.


	Texas'
545-yard
spree
against
Washington
State
gave
the
Longhorns
a
3-game
total
offense
of
1,512
yards
(
1,065
rushing
and
447
passing
)
a
new
SWC
high
.


	Arkansas
combined
280
yards
rushing
with
64
yards
passing
(
on
5
completions
in
7
tosses
)
and
a
tough
defense
to
whip
TCU
,
and
A
&
M
,
with
a
38-point
bulge
against
Texas
Tech
ran
up
its
biggest
total
loop
play
since
1950
.
Completing
12
of
15
passes
for
174
yards
,
the
Aggies
had
a
total
offense
of
361
yards
.


	Texas
leads
in
per-game
rushing
averages
,
355
yards
,
and
passing
149
(
to
Baylor's
126
)
,
but
idle
Baylor
has
the
best
defensive
record
(
187.5
yards
per
game
to
Texas'
189
)
.
A
&
M
has
the
best
defense
against
passes
,
34.7
yards
per
game
.


	Not
satisfied
with
various
unofficial
checks
on
the
liveliness
of
baseballs
currently
in
use
,
the
major
leagues
have
ordered
their
own
tests
,
which
are
in
progress
at
Massachusetts
Institute
of
Technology
.



	Emory
University's
Board
of
Trustees
announced
Friday
that
it
was
prepared
to
accept
students
of
any
race
as
soon
as
the
state's
tax
laws
made
such
a
step
possible
.


	``
Emory
University's
charter
and
by-laws
have
never
required
admission
or
rejection
of
students
on
the
basis
of
race
''
,
board
chairman
Henry
L.
Bowden
stated
.


	But
an
official
statement
adopted
by
the
33-man
Emory
board
at
its
annual
meeting
Friday
noted
that
state
taxing
requirements
at
present
are
a
roadblock
to
accepting
Negroes
.


	The
statement
explained
that
under
the
Georgia
Constitution
and
state
law
,
tax-exempt
status
is
granted
to
educational
institutions
only
if
they
are
segregated
.


	``
Emory
could
not
continue
to
operate
according
to
its
present
standards
as
an
institution
of
higher
learning
,
of
true
university
grade
,
and
meet
its
financial
obligations
,
without
the
tax-exemption
privileges
which
are
available
to
it
only
so
long
as
it
conforms
to
the
aforementioned
constitutional
and
statutory
provisions
''
,
the
statement
said
.


	The
statement
did
not
mention
what
steps
might
be
taken
to
overcome
the
legal
obstacles
to
desegregation
.


	An
Emory
spokesman
indicated
,
however
,
that
the
university
itself
did
not
intend
to
make
any
test
of
the
laws
.


	The
Georgia
Constitution
gives
the
Legislature
the
power
to
exempt
colleges
from
property
taxation
if
,
among
other
criteria
,
``
all
endowments
to
institutions
established
for
white
people
shall
be
limited
to
white
people
,
and
all
endowments
to
institutions
established
for
colored
people
shall
be
limited
to
colored
people
''
.


	At
least
two
private
colleges
in
the
Atlanta
area
now
or
in
the
past
have
had
integrated
student
bodies
,
but
their
tax-exempt
status
never
has
been
challenged
by
the
state
.


	Emory
is
affiliated
with
the
Methodist
Church
.
Some
church
leaders
,
both
clerical
and
lay
,
have
criticized
the
university
for
not
taking
the
lead
in
desegregation
.



Urged
in
1954

The
student
newspaper
,
The
Emory
Wheel
,
as
early
as
the
fall
of
1954
called
for
desegregation
.


	``
From
its
beginning
''
,
the
trustees'
statement
said
Friday
,
``
Emory
University
has
assumed
as
its
primary
commitment
a
dedication
to
excellence
in
Christian
higher
learning
.
Teaching
,
research
and
study
,
according
to
highest
standards
,
under
Christian
influence
,
are
paramount
in
the
Emory
University
policy
.


	``
As
a
private
institution
,
supported
by
generous
individuals
,
Emory
University
will
recognize
no
obligation
and
will
adopt
no
policy
that
would
conflict
with
its
purpose
to
promote
excellence
in
scholarship
and
Christian
education
.


	``
There
is
not
now
,
nor
has
there
ever
been
in
Emory
University's
charter
or
by-laws
any
requirement
that
students
be
admitted
or
rejected
on
the
basis
of
race
,
color
or
creed
.
Insofar
as
its
own
governing
documents
are
concerned
,
Emory
University
could
now
consider
applications
from
prospective
students
,
and
others
seeking
applications
from
prospective
students
,
and
others
seeking
the
opportunity
to
study
or
work
at
the
university
,
irrespective
of
race
,
color
or
creed
.



Corporate
existence

``
On
the
other
hand
,
Emory
University
derives
its
corporate
existence
from
the
State
of
Georgia
.


	``
When
and
if
it
can
do
so
without
jeopardizing
constitutional
and
statutory
tax-exemption
privileges
essential
to
the
maintenance
of
its
educational
program
and
facilities
,
Emory
University
will
consider
applications
of
persons
desiring
to
study
or
work
at
the
University
without
regard
to
race
,
color
or
creed
,
continuing
university
policy
that
all
applications
shall
be
considered
on
the
basis
of
intellectual
and
moral
standards
and
other
criteria
designed
to
assure
the
orderly
and
effective
conduct
of
the
university
and
the
fulfillment
of
its
mission
as
an
institution
of
Christian
higher
education
''
.


	A
young
man
was
killed
and
two
others
injured
at
midnight
Friday
when
the
car
they
were
riding
slid
into
a
utility
pole
on
Lake
Avenue
near
Waddell
Street
,
NE
,
police
said
.


	The
dead
youth
was
identified
as
Robert
E.
Sims
,
19
,
of
1688
Oak
Knoll
Cir.
,
Aj
.


	Patrolman
G.
E.
Hammons
said
the
car
evidently
slid
out
of
control
on
rain-slick
streets
and
slammed
into
the
pole
.


	The
other
occupants
were
James
Willard
Olvey
,
18
,
of
963
Ponce
De
Leon
Ave.
,
NE
,
and
Larry
Coleman
Barnett
,
19
,
of
704
Hill
St.
,
SE
,
both
of
whom
were
treated
at
Grady
Hospital
for
severe
lacerations
and
bruises
.


	The
Atlanta
Negro
student
movement
renewed
its
demands
for
movie
theater
integration
Friday
and
threatened
picketing
and
``
stand-ins
''
if
negotiations
failed
.


	The
demands
were
set
forth
in
letters
to
seven
owners
of
first-run
theaters
by
the
Committee
on
Appeal
for
Human
Rights
.



'
intend
to
attend
'

``
We
intend
to
attend
the
downtown
theaters
before
the
first
of
the
year
''
,
the
identically
worded
letters
said
.


	The
letters
set
a
Nov.
15
deadline
for
the
start
of
negotiations
.
They
indicated
that
stand-ins
and
picketing
would
be
started
if
theater
owners
failed
to
cooperate
.


	Downtown
and
art
theater
managers
and
owners
,
contacted
Friday
night
for
comment
on
the
COAHR
request
,
said
they
had
no
knowledge
of
such
a
letter
,
and
that
it
was
not
in
the
Friday
mail
.
However
,
three
of
the
managers
did
say
that
they
would
agree
to
attend
the
proposed
meeting
if
all
of
the
other
managers
decided
to
attend
.



Gather
here

The
COAHR
letter
comes
on
the
eve
of
a
large
gathering
of
theater
managers
and
owners
scheduled
to
begin
here
Sunday
.
Several
theater
operators
said
,
however
,
that
there
is
little
likelihood
of
the
subject
being
discussed
during
the
three-day
affair
.


	Student
leaders
began
sporadic
efforts
to
negotiate
theater
integration
several
months
ago
.
Charles
A.
Black
,
COAHR
chairman
,
said
Friday
that
three
theater
representatives
had
agreed
to
meet
with
the
students
on
Oct.
31
but
had
failed
to
show
up
.
He
declined
to
name
the
three
.


	Friday's
letters
asked
for
a
Nov.
15
meeting
.
Failure
to
attend
the
meeting
or
explain
inability
to
attend
,
the
letters
said
,
would
be
considered
a
``
sign
of
indifference
''
.


	Black
said
COAHR
``
hoped
to
be
able
to
integrate
the
theaters
without
taking
direct
action
,
but
we
are
pledged
to
using
every
legal
and
nonviolent
means
at
our
disposal
''


	A
prepared
statement
released
by
the
student
group
Friday
stated
that
``
extensive
research
by
COAHR
into
techniques
and
methods
of
theater
integration
in
other
cities
indicated
that
the
presence
of
picket
lines
and
stand-ins
before
segregated
theaters
causes
a
drop
in
profits
''


	Besides
managers
of
downtown
theaters
,
the
students
sent
letters
to
owners
of
art
theaters
in
the
uptown
area
and
Buckhead
.



R.
E.
Killingsworth

Raymond
E.
Killingsworth
,
72
,
died
Sunday
at
his
home
at
357
Venable
St.
,
Aj
.


	Mr.
Kililngsworth
was
a
foreman
with
S
and
W
Cafeteria
.
He
was
born
in
Pittsboro
,
Miss.
,
and
was
a
veteran
of
World
War
1
.
He
was
a
member
of
the
Baptist
church
.


	Survivors
include
two
brothers
,
C.
E.
Killingsworth
,
Atlanta
,
and
John
Killingsworth
,
Warren
,
Ohio
;
;
and
two
sisters
,
Miss
Minnie
Kililngsworth
and
Mrs.
Bessie
Bloom
,
both
of
Gettysburg
,
Pa.
.



John
W.
Ball

John
William
Ball
,
68
,
of
133
Marietta
St.
NW
,
Apartment
101b
,
died
Sunday
at
his
home
.


	Mr.
Ball
was
a
house
painter
.
He
was
a
member
of
the
Oakland
City
Methodist
Church
and
a
native
of
Atlanta
.


	Funeral
services
will
be
at
2
p.m.
Tuesday
at
Blanchard's
Chapel
with
the
Rev.
J.
H.
Hearn
officiating
.


	Survivors
include
his
sister
,
Mrs.
Emma
B.
Odom
of
Atlanta
.



Mrs.
Lola
Harris

Mrs.
Lola
M.
Harris
,
a
native
of
Atlanta
,
died
Sunday
at
her
home
in
Garland
,
Tex.
.


	Survivors
include
a
son
,
Charles
R.
Fergeson
,
Memphis
,
Tenn.
;
;
two
daughters
,
Mrs.
Gene
F.
Stoll
and
Miss
Nancy
Harris
,
both
of
Garland
;
;
her
father
,
H.
T.
Simpson
,
Greenville
,
S.C.
,
and
three
sisters
,
Mrs.
W.
E.
Little
and
Mrs.
Hal
B.
Wansley
,
both
of
Atlanta
,
and
Mrs.
Bill
Wallace
,
Wilmington
,
N.C.
.


	A
24-year-old
Atlanta
man
was
arrested
Sunday
after
breaking
into
the
home
of
relatives
in
search
of
his
wife
,
hitting
his
uncle
with
a
rock
and
assaulting
two
police
officers
who
tried
to
subdue
him
,
police
said
.


	Patrolmen
J.
W.
Slate
and
A.
L.
Crawford
Jr.
said
they
arrested
Ronald
M.
Thomas
,
of
1671
Nakoma
St.
,
NW
,
after
he
assaulted
the
officers
.



Police
account

The
officers
gave
this
account
:


	Thomas
early
Sunday
went
to
the
home
of
his
uncle
and
aunt
,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
R.
C.
Thomas
,
511
Blanche
St.
,
NW
,
looking
for
his
wife
,
Margaret
Lou
Thomas
,
18
,
and
their
11-month-old
baby
.


	The
younger
Thomas
ripped
a
screen
door
,
breaking
the
latch
,
and
after
an
argument
struck
his
uncle
with
a
rock
,
scratching
his
face
.
He
also
struck
his
aunt
and
wife
,
and
during
the
melee
the
baby
also
suffered
scratches
.


	When
police
arrived
the
man
was
still
violent
,
Slate
said
.



Attacks
officer

He
attacked
one
of
the
officers
and
was
restrained
.
About
five
minutes
later
he
jumped
up
,
Slate
said
,
and
struck
the
two
policemen
again
.


	He
was
then
subdued
and
placed
in
the
police
car
to
be
taken
to
Grady
Hospital
for
treatment
of
scratches
received
in
the
melee
.
Then
he
attacked
the
two
officers
again
and
was
again
restrained
,
Slate
related
.


	Slate
said
he
and
Crawford
received
cuts
and
scratches
and
their
uniforms
were
badly
torn
.


	Thomas
was
charged
with
four
counts
of
assault
and
battery
.
Two
counts
of
assault
on
an
officer
,
resisting
arrest
,
disturbance
and
cursing
,
police
said
.
A
hearing
was
set
for
30
a.m.
Tuesday
.


	Mrs.
Mary
Self
,
who
knows
more
than
any
other
person
about
the
5,000
city
employes
for
whom
she
has
kept
personnel
records
over
the
years
,
has
closed
her
desk
and
retired
.


	Over
the
weekend
,
Mrs.
Self
,
personnel
clerk
,
was
a
feted
and
honored
guest
of
the
Atlanta
Club
,
organization
of
women
employes
at
City
Hall
.


	After
18
years
in
the
personnel
office
,
she
has
taken
a
disability
pension
on
advice
of
her
doctors
.


	As
personnel
clerk
,
she
handled
thousands
of
entries
,
ranging
from
appointments
to
jobs
,
to
transfers
to
other
employments
,
to
pensions
.


	``
I
have
enjoyed
it
and
will
feel
a
bit
lost
at
least
for
a
while
''
,
she
said
wistfully
Friday
.


	One
of
the
largest
crowds
in
the
club's
history
turned
out
to
pay
tribute
to
Mrs.
Self
and
her
service
.


	Georgia's
Department
of
Agriculture
is
intensifying
its
fire
ant
eradication
program
in
an
effort
to
stay
ahead
of
the
fast-spreading
pest
.


	The
department
is
planning
to
expand
its
eradication
program
soon
to
four
additional
counties
--
Troup
,
Pierce
,
Bryan
and
Bulloch
--
to
treat
132,000
acres
infested
by
the
ants
,
according
to
W.
E.
Blasingame
state
entomologist
.


	Low-flying
planes
will
spread
a
granular-type
chemical
,
heptachlor
,
over
30,000
acres
in
Troup
,
37,000
acres
in
Pierce
and
65,000
acres
in
Bulloch
and
Bryan
counties
.


	The
eradication
effort
is
being
pushed
in
Bibb
and
Jones
counties
,
over
37,679
acres
.
The
department
has
just
finished
treating
20,000
acres
in
urban
areas
of
Macon
.


	Also
being
treated
are
Houston
,
Bleckley
,
Tift
,
Turner
and
Dodge
counties
,
Blasingame
said
.
The
fire
ant
is
thought
to
infest
approximately
two
million
acres
of
land
in
Georgia
,
attacking
crops
,
young
wildlife
and
livestock
and
can
be
a
serious
health
menace
to
humans
who
are
allergic
to
its
venom
,
Blasingame
said
.


	The
north-bound
entrance
to
the
Expressway
at
14th
Street
will
be
closed
during
the
afternoon
rush
traffic
hours
this
week
.


	This
is
being
done
so
that
Georgia
Tech
can
complete
the
final
phase
of
a
traffic
survey
on
the
North
Expressway
.
Students
have
been
using
electric
computers
and
high
speed
movie
cameras
during
the
study
.
Perhaps
the
engineers
can
find
out
what
causes
all
the
congestion
and
suggest
methods
to
eliminate
it
.


	Incidentally
,
14th
Street
and
the
Expressway
is
the
high
accident
intersection
during
daylight
hours
.
It
is
followed
by
Cain
Street
and
Piedmont
Avenue
,
NE
;
;
the
junction
of
the
Northeast
and
Northwest
Expressways
and
Jones
Avenue
and
Marietta
Street
,
Aj
.


	Four
persons
died
in
Georgia
weekend
traffic
crashes
,
two
of
them
in
a
fiery
crash
near
Snellville
,
the
State
Patrol
said
Sunday
.


	The
latest
death
reported
was
that
of
4-year-old
Claude
Douglas
Maynor
of
Calvary
.
Troopers
said
the
child
ran
into
the
path
of
a
passing
car
a
half-mile
north
of
Calvary
on
Georgia
111
in
Grady
County
.


	That
death
occurred
at
50
p.m.
Friday
and
was
reported
Sunday
,
the
patrol
said
.



Bursts
into
flames

An
auto
overturned
,
skidding
into
a
stopped
tractor-trailer
and
burst
into
flames
near
Snellville
,
the
patrol
said
.


	Bobby
Bester
Hammett
,
21
,
of
Rte.
3
,
Lawrenceville
,
and
Mrs.
Lucille
Herrington
Jones
,
23
,
of
Lawrenceville
,
died
in
the
flaming
car
,
the
patrol
said
.



	Sing
Sing's
prisoner
strike
was
motivated
by
a
reasonable
purpose
,
a
fair
break
from
parole
boards
.
But
once
the
strike
trend
hits
hoosegows
,
there
is
no
telling
how
far
it
may
go
.
Inmates
might
even
demand
the
34-hour
week
,
all
holidays
off
and
fringe
benefits
including
state
contributions
toward
lawyers'
fees
.
Some
day
we
might
see
a
Federation
of
Prison
and
Jail
Inmates
,
with
a
leader
busily
trying
to
organize
reformatory
occupants
,
defendants
out
on
bail
,
convicts
opposed
to
probation
officers
,
etc.
.

A
three-day
confinement
week
,
with
a
month's
vacation
and
shorter
hours
all
around
could
be
an
ultimate
demand
from
cell
occupants
of
the
nation
,
with
fringe
benefits
including
:
1
.

Wider
space
between
iron
bars
and
agreement
by
prison
boards
to
substitute
rubber
in
20
per
cent
of
metal
.
2
.

An
agreement
allowing
convicts
to
pass
on
type
of
locks
used
on
prison
doors
.
In
case
of
a
deadlock
between
prison
boards
and
inmates
,
a
federal
arbitration
board
to
include
a
``
lifer
''
and
two
escapees
should
decide
the
issue
.
3
.

Specific
broadening
of
travel
rights
.
4
.

The
right
to
leave
the
hoosegow
any
time
to
see
a
lawyer
instead
of
waiting
for
a
lawyer
to
make
a
trip
to
the
prison
.
5
.

Recognition
of
Prisoners
Union
rule
that
no
member
of
an
iron
or
steel
workers
union
be
permitted
to
repair
a
sawed-off
bar
without
approval
and
participation
of
representative
of
the
cell
occupant
.
6
.

No
warden
or
guard
to
touch
lock
,
key
or
doorknob
except
when
accompanied
by
a
prisoners'
committee
with
powers
of
veto
.
7
.

State
and
federal
approval
of
right
to
walk
out
at
any
time
when
so
voted
by
51
per
cent
of
the
prisoners
.




The
death
of
Harold
A.
Stevens
,
oldest
of
the
Stevens
brothers
,
famed
operators
of
baseball
,
football
and
race
track
concessions
,
revived
again
the
story
of
one
of
the
greatest
business
successes
in
history
.
Harold
,
with
brothers
Frank
,
Joe
and
William
,
took
over
at
the
death
of
their
father
,
Harry
M.
Stevens
,
who
put
a
few
dollars
into
a
baseball
program
,
introduced
the
``
hot
dog
''
and
paved
the
way
for
creation
of
a
catering
empire
.
Family
loyalties
and
cooperative
work
have
been
unbroken
for
generations
.




IBM
has
a
machine
that
can
understand
spoken
words
and
talk
back
.
Nevertheless
,
it
will
seem
funny
to
have
to
send
for
a
mechanic
to
improve
conversation
.




Rembrandt's
``
Aristotle
Contemplating
Bust
of
Homer
''
brought
$2,300,000
at
auction
the
other
night
.
Both
Aristotle
and
Homer
may
in
spirit
be
contemplating
``
bust
''
of
the
old-fashioned
American
dollar
.




The
owner
of
the
painting
got
it
for
$750,000
,
sold
it
for
$500,000
in
a
market
crash
,
and
bought
it
back
for
$590,000
.
Apologies
are
in
order
from
anybody
who
said
,
``
Are
you
sure
you're
not
making
a
mistake
''
?
?




``
Wagon
Train
''
is
reported
the
No.
1
TV
show
.
After
all
,
where
else
can
the
public
see
a
wagon
these
days
?
?




Lucius
Beebe's
book
,
``
Mr.
Pullman's
Elegant
Palace
Car
''
,
fills
us
with
nostalgia
,
recalling
days
when
private
cars
and
Pullmans
were
extra
wonderful
,
with
fine
woodwork
,
craftsmanship
in
construction
,
deep
carpets
and
durable
upholstery
.
Beebe
tells
of
one
private
car
that
has
gold
plumbing
.
Jay
Gould
kept
a
cow
on
one
deluxer
.
Washington

--
Rep.
Frelinghuysen
,
R-5th
Dist.
,
had
a
special
reason
for
attending
the
reception
at
the
Korean
Embassy
for
Gen.
Chung
Hee
Park
,
the
new
leader
of
South
Korea
.


	Not
only
is
Mr.
Frelinghuysen
a
member
of
the
House
Foreign
Affairs
Committee
,
but
he
is
the
grandson
of
the
man
who
was
instrumental
in
opening
relations
between
the
United
States
and
Korea
,
Frederick
T.
Frelinghuysen
,
Secretary
of
State
in
the
administration
of
Chester
A.
Arthur
.
In
addition
Rep.
Frelinghuysen's
brother
Harry
was
on
the
Korean
desk
of
the
State
Department
in
World
War
2
.


	Next
year
is
the
80th
anniversary
of
the
signing
of
the
treaty
between
Korea
and
the
United
States
and
experts
in
Seoul
are
trying
to
find
the
correspondence
between
Frederick
Frelinghuysen
,
who
was
Secretary
of
State
in
1883
and
1884
,
and
Gen.
Lucius
Foote
,
who
was
the
first
minister
to
Korea
.


	They
enlisted
the
help
of
the
New
Jersey
congressman
,
who
has
been
able
to
trace
the
letters
to
the
national
archives
,
where
they
are
available
on
microfilm
.



On
the
job

A
top
official
of
the
New
Frontier
who
kept
a
record
of
his
first
weeks
on
the
job
here
gives
this
report
of
his
experiences
:


	In
his
first
six
weeks
in
office
he
presided
over
96
conferences
,
attended
35
official
breakfasts
and
dinners
,
studied
and
signed
285
official
papers
and
personally
took
312
telephone
calls
.


	In
addition
,
he
said
,
he
has
answered
more
than
400
messages
of
congratulations
which
led
him
to
the
comment
that
he
himself
had
decided
he
wouldn't
send
another
congratulatory
message
for
the
rest
of
his
life
.

Sen.
Case
Aj
,
has
received
a
nice
``
thank
you
''
note
from
a
youngster
he
appointed
to
the
Air
Force
Academy
in
Colorado
.


	Air
Force
life
is
great
,
the
cadet
wrote
,
``
though
the
fourth-class
system
is
no
fun
''
.
He
invited
Mr.
Case
to
stop
by
to
say
hello
if
he
ever
visited
the
academy
and
then
added
that
he
was
on
the
managerial
staff
of
the
freshman
football
team


	``
We
have
just
returned
from
Roswell
,
N.M.
,
where
we
were
defeated
,
34
to
9
''
,
the
young
man
noted
.
``
We
have
a
tremendous
amount
of
talent
--
but
we
lack
cohesion
''
.



Kind
Mr.
Sam

Among
the
many
stories
about
the
late
Speaker
Rayburn
is
one
from
Rep.
Dwyer
,
R-6th
Dist.
.
Mrs.
Dwyer's
husband
,
M.
Joseph
Dwyer
,
was
taking
a
10-year-old
boy
from
Union
County
on
the
tour
of
the
Capitol
during
the
final
weeks
of
the
last
session
.
They
ran
across
Mr.
Rayburn
and
the
youngster
expressed
a
desire
to
get
the
Speaker's
autograph
.


	Mr.
Dwyer
said
that
although
it
was
obvious
that
Mr.
Rayburn
was
not
well
he
stopped
,
gave
the
youngster
his
autograph
,
asked
where
he
was
from
and
expressed
the
hope
that
he
would
enjoy
his
visit
to
Congress
.


	Two
days
later
Mr.
Rayburn
left
Washington
for
the
last
time
.


	The
350th
anniversary
of
the
King
James
Bible
is
being
celebrated
simultaneously
with
the
publishing
today
of
the
New
Testament
,
the
first
part
of
the
New
English
Bible
,
undertaken
as
a
new
translation
of
the
Scriptures
into
contemporary
English
.


	Since
it
was
issued
in
the
spring
of
1611
,
the
King
James
Version
has
been
most
generally
considered
the
most
poetic
and
beautiful
of
all
translations
of
the
Bible
.
However
,
Biblical
scholars
frequently
attested
to
its
numerous
inaccuracies
,
as
old
manuscripts
were
uncovered
and
scholarship
advanced
.


	This
resulted
in
revisions
of
the
King
James
Bible
in
1881-85
as
the
English
Revised
Version
and
in
1901
as
the
American
Standard
Version
.
Then
in
1937
America's
International
Council
of
Religious
Education
authorized
a
new
revision
,
in
the
light
of
expanded
knowledge
of
ancient
manuscripts
and
languages
.
Undertaken
by
32
American
scholars
,
under
the
chairmanship
of
Rev.
Dr.
Luther
A.
Weigle
,
former
dean
of
Yale
University
Divinity
School
,
their
studies
resulted
in
the
publishing
of
the
Revised
Standard
Version
,
1946-52
.



Not
rival

The
New
English
Bible
(
the
Old
Testament
and
Apocrypha
will
be
published
at
a
future
date
)
has
not
been
planned
to
rival
or
replace
the
King
James
Version
,
but
,
as
its
cover
states
,
it
is
offered
``
simply
as
the
Bible
to
all
those
who
will
use
it
in
reading
,
teaching
,
or
worship
''
.


	Time
,
of
course
will
testify
whether
the
new
version
will
have
achieved
its
purpose
.
Bible
reading
,
even
more
so
than
good
classical
music
,
grows
in
depth
and
meaning
upon
repetition
.


	If
this
new
Bible
does
not
increase
in
significance
by
repeated
readings
throughout
the
years
,
it
will
not
survive
the
ages
as
has
the
King
James
Version
.


	However
,
an
initial
perusal
and
comparison
of
some
of
the
famous
passages
with
the
same
parts
of
other
versions
seems
to
speak
well
of
the
efforts
of
the
British
Biblical
scholars
.
One
is
impressed
with
the
dignity
,
clarity
and
beauty
of
this
new
translation
into
contemporary
English
,
and
there
is
no
doubt
that
the
meaning
of
the
Bible
is
more
easily
understandable
to
the
general
reader
in
contemporary
language
in
the
frequently
archaic
words
and
phrases
of
the
King
James
.


	For
example
,
in
the
third
chapter
of
Matthew
,
verses
13-16
,
describing
the
baptism
of
Jesus
,
the
1611
version
reads
:


	``
Then
cometh
Jesus
from
Galilee
to
Jordan
unto
John
,
to
be
baptized
of
him
.


	``
But
John
forbad
him
,
saying
,
I
have
need
to
be
baptized
of
thee
,
and
comest
thou
to
me
?
?


	``
And
Jesus
answering
said
unto
him
,
Suffer
it
to
be
so
now
:
for
thus
it
becometh
us
to
fulfill
all
righteousness
.
Then
he
suffered
him
.


	``
And
Jesus
,
when
he
was
baptized
went
up
straightway
out
of
the
water
:
and
lo
,
the
heavens
were
opened
unto
him
,
and
he
saw
the
Spirit
of
God
descending
like
a
dove
,
and
lighting
upon
him
''
.



Clearer
meaning

Certainly
,
the
meaning
is
clearer
to
one
who
is
not
familiar
with
Biblical
teachings
,
in
the
New
English
Bible
which
reads
:
``
Then
Jesus
arrived
at
Jordan
from
Galilee
,
and
he
came
to
John
to
be
baptized
by
him
.
John
tried
to
dissuade
him
.
'
Do
you
come
to
me
'
?
?
He
said
;
;
'
I
need
rather
to
be
baptized
by
you
.
Jesus
replied
,
'
let
it
be
so
for
the
present
;
;
we
do
well
to
conform
this
way
with
all
that
God
requires
.
John
then
allowed
him
to
come
.
After
baptism
Jesus
came
up
out
of
the
water
at
once
,
and
at
that
moment
heaven
opened
;
;
he
saw
the
Spirit
of
God
descending
like
a
dove
to
alight
upon
him
''
;
;


	(
the
paragraphing
,
spelling
and
punctuation
are
reproduced
as
printed
in
each
version
.
)


	Among
the
most
frequently
quoted
Biblical
sentences
are
the
Beatitudes
and
yet
so
few
persons
,
other
than
scholars
,
really
understand
the
true
meaning
of
these
eight
blessings
uttered
by
Jesus
at
the
beginning
of
the
Sermon
on
the
Mount
.


	To
illustrate
,
the
first
blessing
in
the
King
James
Bible
reads
:
``
Blessed
are
the
poor
in
spirit
;
;
for
their's
is
the
kingdom
of
heaven
''
.
The
new
version
states
:
``
How
blest
are
those
who
know
that
they
are
poor
;
;
the
kingdom
of
Heaven
is
theirs
''
.


	Some
of
the
poetic
cadence
of
the
older
version
certainly
is
lost
in
the
newer
one
,
but
almost
anyone
,
with
a
fair
knowledge
of
the
English
language
,
can
understand
the
meaning
,
without
the
necessity
of
interpretation
by
a
Biblical
scholar
.
To
a
novice
that
is
significant
.


	In
the
second
and
third
chapters
of
Revelation
the
new
version
retains
,
however
,
the
old
phrase
``
angel
of
the
church
''
which
Biblical
scholars
have
previously
interpreted
as
meaning
bishop
.
This
is
not
contemporary
English
.



Mostly
contemporary

For
the
most
part
,
however
,
the
new
version
is
contemporary
and
,
as
such
,
should
be
the
means
for
many
to
attain
a
clearer
comprehension
of
the
meaning
of
those
words
recorded
so
many
hundreds
of
years
ago
by
the
first
followers
of
Christ
.


	Originally
recorded
by
hand
,
these
words
have
been
copied
and
recopied
,
translated
and
retranslated
through
the
ages
.
Discoveries
recently
made
of
old
Biblical
manuscripts
in
Hebrew
and
Greek
and
other
ancient
writings
,
some
by
the
early
church
fathers
,
in
themselves
called
for
a
restudy
of
the
Bible
.
To
have
the
results
recorded
in
everyday
usable
English
should
be
of
benefit
to
all
who
seek
the
truth
.


	There
is
one
danger
,
however
.
With
contemporary
English
changing
with
the
rapidity
that
marks
this
jet
age
,
some
of
the
words
and
phrases
of
the
new
version
may
themselves
soon
become
archaic
.
The
only
answer
will
be
continuous
study
.


	The
New
Testament
offered
to
the
public
today
is
the
first
result
of
the
work
of
a
joint
committee
made
up
of
representatives
of
the
Church
of
England
,
Church
of
Scotland
,
Methodist
Church
,
Congregational
Union
,
Baptist
Union
,
Presbyterian
Church
of
England
,
Churches
in
Wales
,
Churches
in
Ireland
,
Society
of
Friends
,
British
and
Foreign
Bible
Society
and
National
Society
of
Scotland
.


	Prof.
C.
H.
Dodd
,
76
,
a
Congregational
minister
and
a
leading
authority
on
the
New
Testament
,
is
general
director
of
the
project
and
chairman
of
the
New
Testament
panel
.




Resuming
atmospheric
tests

One
of
the
inescapable
realities
of
the
Cold
War
is
that
it
has
thrust
upon
the
West
a
wholly
new
and
historically
unique
set
of
moral
dilemmas
.
The
first
dilemma
was
the
morality
of
nuclear
warfare
itself
.
That
dilemma
is
as
much
with
us
as
ever
.
The
second
great
dilemma
has
been
the
morality
of
nuclear
testing
,
a
dilemma
which
has
suddenly
become
acute
because
of
the
present
series
of
Soviet
tests
.


	When
this
second
dilemma
first
became
obvious
--
during
the
mid
to
late
'50's
--
the
United
States
appeared
to
have
three
choices
.
It
could
have
unilaterally
abandoned
further
testing
on
the
grounds
of
the
radiation
hazard
to
future
generations
.
It
could
have
continued
testing
to
the
full
on
the
grounds
that
the
radiation
danger
was
far
less
than
the
danger
of
Communist
world
domination
.
Or
it
could
have
chosen
to
find
--
by
negotiation
--
some
way
of
stopping
the
tests
without
loss
to
national
security
.
This
third
choice
was
in
fact
made
.


	With
the
resumption
of
Soviet
testing
and
their
intransigence
at
the
Geneva
talks
,
however
,
the
hope
that
this
third
choice
would
prove
viable
has
been
shaken
.
Once
again
,
the
United
States
must
choose
.
And
once
again
,
the
choices
are
much
the
same
.
Only
this
time
around
the
conditions
are
different
and
the
choice
is
far
harder
.


	The
first
choice
,
abandoning
tests
entirely
,
would
not
only
be
unpopular
domestically
,
but
would
surely
be
exploited
by
the
Russians
.
The
second
choice
,
full
testing
,
has
become
even
more
risky
just
because
the
current
Soviet
tests
have
already
dangerously
contaminated
the
atmosphere
.
The
third
choice
,
negotiation
,
presupposes
,
as
Russian
behavior
demonstrates
,
a
great
deal
of
wishful
thinking
to
make
it
appear
reasonable
.


	We
take
the
position
,
however
,
that
the
third
choice
still
remains
the
only
sane
one
open
to
us
.
It
is
by
no
stretch
of
the
imagination
a
happy
choice
and
the
arguments
against
it
as
a
practical
strategy
are
formidable
.
Its
primary
advantage
is
that
it
is
a
moral
choice
;
;
one
which
,
should
it
fail
,
will
not
have
contaminated
the
conscience
.
That
is
the
contamination
we
most
fear
.




Leaving
aside
the
choice
of
unilateral
cessation
of
tests
as
neither
sane
nor
clearly
moral
,
the
question
must
arise
as
to
why
resumption
of
atmospheric
tests
on
our
part
would
not
be
a
good
choice
.
For
that
is
the
one
an
increasingly
large
number
of
prominent
Americans
are
now
proposing
.
In
particular
,
Governor
Nelson
Rockefeller
has
expressed
as
cogently
and
clearly
as
anyone
the
case
for
a
resumption
of
atmospheric
tests
.


	Speaking
recently
in
Miami
,
Governor
Rockefeller
said
that
``
to
assure
the
sufficiency
of
our
own
weapons
in
the
face
of
the
recent
Soviet
tests
,
we
are
now
clearly
compelled
to
conduct
our
own
nuclear
tests
''
.
Taking
account
of
the
fact
that
such
a
move
on
our
part
would
be
unpopular
in
world
opinion
,
he
argued
that
the
responsibility
of
the
United
States
is
``
to
do
,
confidently
and
firmly
,
not
what
is
popular
,
but
what
is
right
''
.


	What
was
missing
in
the
Governor's
argument
,
as
in
so
many
similar
arguments
,
was
a
premise
which
would
enable
one
to
make
the
ethical
leap
from
what
might
be
militarily
desirable
to
what
is
right
.
The
possibility
,
as
he
asserted
,
that
the
Russians
may
get
ahead
of
us
or
come
closer
to
us
because
of
their
tests
does
not
supply
the
needed
ethical
premise
--
unless
,
of
course
,
we
have
unwittingly
become
so
brutalized
that
nuclear
superiority
is
now
taken
as
a
moral
demand
.


	Besides
the
lack
of
an
adequate
ethical
dimension
to
the
Governor's
case
,
one
can
ask
seriously
whether
our
lead
over
the
Russians
in
quality
and
quantity
of
nuclear
weapons
is
so
slight
as
to
make
the
tests
absolutely
necessary
.
Recent
statements
by
the
President
and
Defense
Department
spokesmen
have
,
to
the
contrary
,
assured
us
that
our
lead
is
very
great
.
Unless
the
Administration
and
the
Defense
Department
have
been
deceiving
us
,
the
facts
do
not
support
the
assertion
that
we
are
``
compelled
''
to
resume
atmospheric
testing
.


	It
is
perfectly
conceivable
that
a
resumption
of
atmospheric
tests
may
,
at
some
point
in
the
future
,
be
necessary
and
even
justifiable
.
But
a
resumption
does
not
seem
justifiable
now
.
What
we
need
to
realize
is
that
the
increasingly
great
contamination
of
the
atmosphere
by
the
Soviet
tests
had
radically
increased
our
own
moral
obligations
.
We
now
have
to
think
not
only
of
our
national
security
but
also
of
the
future
generations
who
will
suffer
from
any
tests
we
might
undertake
.
This
is
an
ethical
demand
which
cannot
be
evaded
or
glossed
over
by
talking
exclusively
of
weapon
superiority
or
even
of
the
evil
of
Communism
.


	Too
often
in
the
past
Russian
tactics
have
been
used
to
justify
like
tactics
on
our
part
.
There
ought
to
be
a
point
beyond
which
we
will
not
allow
ourselves
to
go
regardless
of
what
Russia
does
.
The
refusal
to
resume
atmospheric
testing
would
be
a
good
start
.



Ecumenical
hopes

when
his
Holiness
Pope
John
23
,
first
called
for
an
Ecumenical
Council
,
and
at
the
same
time
voiced
his
yearning
for
Christian
unity
,
the
enthusiasm
among
Catholic
and
Protestant
ecumenicists
was
immediate
.
With
good
reason
it
appeared
that
a
new
day
was
upon
divided
Christendom
.
But
as
the
more
concrete
plans
for
the
work
of
the
Council
gradually
became
known
,
there
was
a
rather
sharp
and
abrupt
disappointment
on
all
sides
.
The
Council
we
now
know
will
concern
itself
directly
only
with
the
internal
affairs
of
the
Church
.


	As
it
has
turned
out
,
however
,
the
excessive
enthusiasm
in
the
first
instance
and
the
loss
of
hope
in
the
second
were
both
wrong
responses
.
Two
things
have
happened
in
recent
months
to
bring
the
Council
into
perspective
:
each
provides
a
basis
for
renewed
hope
and
joy
.


	First
of
all
,
it
is
now
known
that
Pope
John
sees
the
renewal
and
purification
of
the
Church
as
an
absolutely
necessary
step
toward
Christian
unity
.
Far
from
being
irrelevant
to
the
ecumenical
task
,
the
Pontiff
believes
that
a
revivified
Church
is
required
in
order
that
the
whole
world
may
see
Catholicism
in
the
best
possible
light
.
Equally
significant
,
Pope
John
has
said
that
Catholics
themselves
bear
some
responsibility
for
Christian
disunity
.
A
major
aim
of
the
Council
will
be
to
remove
as
far
as
possible
whatever
in
the
Church
today
stands
in
the
way
of
unity
.


	Secondly
,
a
whole
series
of
addresses
and
actions
by
the
Pope
and
by
others
show
that
concern
for
Christian
unity
is
still
very
much
alive
and
growing
within
the
Church
.
The
establishment
,
by
the
Holy
Father
,
of
a
permanent
Secretariat
for
Christian
Unity
in
1960
was
the
most
dramatic
mark
of
this
concern
.
The
designation
of
five
Catholic
theologians
to
attend
the
World
Council
of
Churches
assembly
in
New
Delhi
as
``
official
''
observers
reverses
the
Church's
earlier
stand
.
The
public
appeal
by
the
new
Vatican
Secretary
of
State
,
Cardinal
Cicognani
,
for
renewed
efforts
toward
Eastern
and
Western
reunion
was
still
another
remarkable
act
.
Nor
can
one
forget
Pope
John's
unprecedented
meeting
with
the
Archbishop
of
Canterbury
.


	Augustin
Cardinal
Bea
,
the
director
of
the
Secretariate
for
Christian
Unity
,
has
expressed
as
directly
as
anyone
the
new
spirit
that
pervades
the
Church's
stance
toward
the
Protestant
and
Orthodox
Churches
.
Noting
all
the
difficulties
that
stand
in
the
way
of
reunion
,
he
has
said
that
they
ought
not
to
discourage
anyone
.
For
discouragement
,
or
the
temptation
to
abandon
our
efforts
,
``
would
show
that
one
placed
excessive
trust
in
purely
human
means
without
thinking
of
the
omnipotence
of
God
,
the
irresistible
efficacy
of
prayer
,
the
action
of
Christ
or
the
power
of
the
Divine
Spirit
''
.
Can
any
Christian
fail
to
respond
to
these
words
?
?



The
budget
deficit

the
administration's
official
budget
review
,
which
estimates
a
6.9
billion
dollar
deficit
for
the
current
fiscal
year
,
isn't
making
anyone
happy
.
Certainly
it
isn't
making
the
President
happy
,
and
he
has
been
doing
his
apologetic
best
to
explain
how
the
budget
got
into
its
unbalanced
condition
,
how
he
intends
to
economize
wherever
he
can
and
how
he
hopes
to
do
better
next
year
.


	We
sympathize
with
Mr.
Kennedy
,
but
we
feel
bound
to
say
that
his
budget
review
doesn't
please
us
either
,
although
for
very
different
reasons
.
Furthermore
,
we
find
his
defense
of
the
unbalanced
budget
more
dismaying
than
reassuring
.


	In
the
first
place
,
a
large
part
of
the
discrepancy
between
President
Eisenhower's
estimate
of
a
1.5
billion
dollar
surplus
for
the
same
period
and
the
new
estimate
of
an
almost
seven
billion
dollar
deficit
is
the
result
of
the
outgoing
President's
farewell
gift
of
a
political
booby-trap
to
his
successor
.
The
Eisenhower
budget
was
simultaneously
inadequate
in
its
provisions
and
yet
extravagant
in
its
projections
of
revenue
to
be
received
.


	The
rest
of
the
deficit
is
also
easily
understood
.
Four
billion
dollars
of
the
spending
increase
is
for
defense
,
an
expenditure
necessitated
by
the
penny-wise
policies
of
the
Eisenhhower
Administration
,
quite
apart
from
the
recent
crises
in
Berlin
and
elsewhere
.
Four
hundred
million
dollars
of
the
increase
is
for
the
expanded
space
program
,
a
responsibility
similarly
neglected
by
Mr.
Eisenhower
.
The
farm
program
will
cost
an
additional
1.5
billion
,
because
of
unusual
weather
factors
,
the
Food
for
Peace
program
and
other
new
measures
.
Anti-recession
programs
--
aid
for
the
unemployed
,
their
children
and
for
depressed
areas
--
account
for
only
900
million
of
the
6.9
billion
dollar
deficit
.


	Our
complaint
is
that
in
many
crucial
areas
the
Kennedy
programs
are
not
too
large
but
too
small
,
most
seriously
in
regard
to
the
conventional
arms
build-up
and
in
aid
and
welfare
measures
.
And
yet
Mr.
Kennedy
persists
in
trying
to
mollify
the
intransigents
of
the
right
with
apologies
and
promises
of
``
tightening
up
''
and
``
economizing
''
.
We
wish
the
President
would
remember
that
``
fiscal
responsibility
''
was
the
battle-cry
of
the
party
that
lost
the
election
.
The
party
that
won
used
to
say
something
about
a
New
Frontier
.



Ethics
and
peace

introduction
of
the
``
dialogue
''
principle
proved
strikingly
effective
at
the
thirty-fourth
annual
meeting
of
the
Catholic
Association
for
International
Peace
in
Washington
the
last
weekend
in
October
.
Two
of
the
principal
addresses
were
delivered
by
prominent
Protestants
,
and
when
the
speaker
was
a
Catholic
,
one
``
discussant
''
on
the
dais
tended
to
be
of
another
religious
persuasion
.


	Several
effects
were
immediately
evident
.
Sessions
devoted
to
``
Ethics
and
Foreign
Policy
Trends
''
,
``
Moral
Principle
and
Political
Judgment
''
,
``
Christian
Ethics
in
the
Cold
War
''
and
related
subjects
proved
to
be
much
livelier
under
this
procedure
than
if
Catholics
were
merely
talking
to
themselves
.
Usually
questions
from
the
floor
were
directed
to
the
non-Catholic
speaker
or
discussion
leader
.


	In
the
earlier
sessions
there
was
plentiful
discussion
on
the
natural
law
,
which
Dr.
William
V.
O'Brien
of
Georgetown
University
,
advanced
as
the
basis
for
widely
acceptable
ethical
judgments
on
foreign
policy
.
That
Aristotelean-Thomistic
principle
experienced
a
thorough
going-over
from
a
number
of
the
participants
,
but
in
the
end
the
concept
came
to
reassert
itself
.
Speakers
declared
that
Protestants
often
make
use
of
it
,
if
,
perhaps
,
by
some
other
name
.
A
Lebanese
Moslem
told
about
its
existence
and
application
in
the
Islamic
tradition
as
the
``
divine
law
''
,
while
a
C.A.I.P.
member
who
has
been
working
in
close
association
with
delegates
of
the
new
U.N.
nations
told
of
its
widespread
recognition
on
the
African
continent
.
The
impression
was
unmistakable
that
,
whatever
one
may
choose
to
call
it
,
natural
law
is
a
functioning
generality
with
a
certain
objective
existence
.


	Another
question
that
arose
was
the
nature
of
the
dialogue
itself
.
The
stimulus
from
the
confrontation
of
philosophical
systems
involving
certain
differences
was
undeniable
.
It
was
expected
that
the
comparison
of
different
approaches
to
ethics
would
produce
a
better
grasp
of
each
other's
positions
and
better
comprehension
of
one's
own
.
But
a
realization
that
each
group
has
much
of
substance
to
learn
from
the
other
also
developed
,
and
a
strong
conviction
grew
that
each
had
insights
and
dimensions
to
contribute
to
ethically
acceptable
solutions
of
urgent
political
issues
.


	One
effect
of
the
spirited
give-and-take
of
these
discussions
was
to
focus
attention
on
practical
applications
and
the
necessity
of
being
armed
with
the
facts
:
knowledge
of
the
destructive
force
of
even
the
tiniest
``
tactical
''
atomic
weapon
would
have
a
bearing
on
judgments
as
to
the
advisability
of
its
use
--
to
defend
Berlin
,
for
example
;
;
the
pervasive
influence
of
ideology
on
our
political
judgments
needs
to
be
recognized
and
taken
into
due
account
;
;
it
is
necessary
to
perceive
the
extent
of
foreign
aid
demanded
by
the
Christian
imperative
.



	Radio
is
easily
outdistancing
television
in
its
strides
to
reach
the
minority
listener
.
Lower
costs
and
a
larger
number
of
stations
are
the
key
factors
making
such
specialization
possible
.


	The
mushrooming
of
FM
outlets
,
offering
concerts
(
both
jazz
and
classical
)
,
lectures
,
and
other
special
events
,
is
a
phenomenon
which
has
had
a
fair
amount
of
publicity
.


	Not
so
well
known
is
the
growth
of
broadcasting
operations
aimed
wholly
or
partly
at
Negro
listeners
--
an
audience
which
,
in
the
United
States
,
comprises
some
19,000,000
people
with
$20,000,000,000
to
spend
each
year
.


	Of
course
,
the
nonwhite
listener
does
his
share
of
television
watching
.
He
even
buys
a
lot
of
the
products
he
sees
advertised
--
despite
the
fact
that
the
copy
makes
no
special
bid
for
his
favor
and
sponsors
rarely
use
any
but
white
models
in
commercials
.


	But
the
growing
number
of
Negro-appeal
radio
stations
,
plus
evidence
of
strong
listener
support
of
their
advertisers
,
give
time
salesmen
an
impressive
argument
as
they
approach
new
prospects
.
It
is
estimated
that
more
than
600
stations
(
of
a
total
of
3,400
)
do
a
significant
amount
of
programing
for
the
Negro
.
At
least
60
stations
devote
all
of
their
time
to
reaching
this
audience
in
about
half
of
the
50
states
.


	These
and
other
figures
and
comments
have
been
reported
in
a
special
supplement
of
Sponsor
magazine
,
a
trade
publication
for
radio
and
TV
advertisers
.
For
10
years
Sponsor
has
issued
an
annual
survey
of
the
size
and
characteristics
of
the
Negro
market
and
of
successful
techniques
for
reaching
this
market
through
radio
.


	In
the
past
10
years
,
Sponsor
observes
,
these
trends
have
become
apparent
:

Negro
population
in
the
U.S.
has
increased
25
per
cent
while
the
white
population
was
growing
by
18
per
cent
.
``
The
forgotten
15
million
''
--
as
Sponsor
tagged
the
Negro
market
in
its
first
survey
--
has
become
a
better-remembered
19
million
.

Advertisers
are
changing
their
attitudes
,
both
as
to
the
significance
of
this
market
and
the
ways
of
speaking
to
it
.

Stations
programing
to
Negro
listeners
are
having
to
upgrade
their
shows
in
order
to
keep
pace
with
rising
educational
,
economic
,
and
cultural
levels
.
Futhermore
,
the
station
which
wants
real
prestige
must
lead
or
participate
in
community
improvement
projects
,
not
simply
serve
on
the
air
.


	In
the
last
decade
the
number
of
Negro-appeal
radio
program
hours
has
risen
at
least
15
per
cent
,
and
the
number
of
Negro-appeal
stations
has
increased
30
per
cent
,
according
to
a
research
man
quoted
by
Sponsor
.


	A
year
ago
the
Negro
Radio
Association
was
formed
to
spur
research
which
the
30-odd
member
stations
are
sure
will
bring
in
more
business
.


	The
1960
census
underscored
the
explosive
character
of
the
population
growth
.
It
also
brought
home
proof
of
something
a
casual
observer
might
have
missed
:
that
more
than
half
of
the
U.S.
Negroes
live
outside
the
southeastern
states
.
Also
,
the
state
with
the
largest
number
of
Negroes
is
New
York
--
not
in
the
South
at
all
.


	In
New
York
City
,
WLIB
boasts
``
more
community
service
programs
than
any
other
Negro
station
''
and
``
one
of
the
largest
Negro
news
staffs
in
America
''
.
And
WWRL's
colorful
mobile
unit
,
cruising
predominately
Negro
neighborhoods
,
is
a
frequent
reminder
of
that
station's
round-the-clock
dedication
to
nonwhite
interests
.
Recently
,
WWRL
won
praise
for
its
expose
of
particular
cases
of
employment
agency
deceit
.
A
half-dozen
other
stations
in
the
New
York
area
also
bid
for
attention
of
the
city's
Negro
population
,
up
about
50
per
cent
in
the
past
decade
.


	In
all
big
cities
outside
the
South
,
and
even
in
small
towns
within
the
South
,
radio
stations
can
be
found
beaming
some
or
all
of
their
programs
at
Negro
listeners
.
The
Keystone
Broadcasting
System's
Negro
network
includes
360
affiliated
stations
,
whose
signals
reach
more
than
half
the
total
U.S.
Negro
population
.


	One
question
which
inevitably
crops
up
is
whether
such
stations
have
a
future
in
a
nation
where
the
Negro
is
moving
into
a
fully
integrated
status
.


	Whatever
the
long-range
impact
of
integration
,
the
owners
of
Negro-appeal
radio
stations
these
days
know
they
have
an
audience
and
that
it
is
loyal
.
Advertisers
have
discovered
the
tendency
of
Negroes
to
shop
for
brand
names
they
have
heard
on
stations
catering
to
their
special
interests
.
And
many
advertisers
have
been
happy
with
the
results
of
letting
a
Negro
disc
jockey
phrase
the
commercial
in
his
own
words
,
working
only
from
a
fact
sheet
.


	What
sets
Negro-appeal
programing
apart
from
other
radio
shows
?
?
Sponsor
magazine
notes
the
stress
on
popular
Negro
bands
and
singers
;
;
rhythm-and-blues
mood
music
;
;
``
race
''
music
,
folk
songs
and
melodies
,
and
gospel
programs
.
Furthermore
,
news
and
special
presentations
inform
the
listener
about
groups
,
projects
,
and
personalities
rarely
mentioned
on
a
general-appeal
station
.
Advertising
copy
frequently
takes
into
account
matters
of
special
Negro
concern
.


	Sponsor
quotes
John
McLendon
of
the
McLendon-Ebony
station
group
as
saying
that
the
Southern
Negro
is
becoming
conscious
of
quality
and
``
does
not
wish
to
be
associated
with
radio
which
is
any
way
degrading
to
his
race
;
;
he
tends
to
shy
away
from
the
hooting
and
hollering
personalities
that
originally
made
Negro
radio
programs
famous
''
.


	The
sociological
impact
is
perhaps
most
eloquently
summed
up
in
this
quotation
of
J.
Walter
Carroll
of
KSAN
,
San
Francisco
:


	``
Negro-appeal
radio
is
more
important
to
the
Negro
today
,
because
it
provides
a
direct
and
powerful
mirror
in
which
the
Negro
can
hear
and
see
his
ambitions
,
achievements
and
desires
.
It
will
continue
to
be
important
as
a
means
of
orientation
to
the
Negro
,
seeking
to
become
urbanized
,
as
he
tries
to
make
adjustment
to
the
urban
life
.
Negro
radio
is
vitally
necessary
during
the
process
of
assimilation
''
.


	Presentation
of
``
The
Life
And
Times
Of
John
Sloan
''
in
the
Delaware
Art
Center
here
suggests
a
current
nostalgia
for
human
values
in
art
.


	Staged
by
way
of
announcing
the
gift
of
a
large
and
intimate
Sloan
collection
by
the
artist's
widow
,
Helen
Farr
Sloan
,
to
the
Wilmington
Society
of
the
Fine
Arts
,
the
exhibition
presents
a
survey
of
Sloan's
work
.
From
early
family
portraits
,
painted
before
he
entered
the
schools
of
the
Pennsylvania
Academy
of
the
Fine
Arts
,
the
chronology
extends
to
a
group
of
paintings
executed
in
his
last
year
(
1951
)
and
still
part
of
his
estate
.


	Few
artists
have
left
a
life
work
so
eloquent
of
the
period
in
which
they
lived
.
Few
who
have
painted
the
scenes
around
them
have
done
so
with
so
little
bitterness
.
The
paintings
,
drawings
,
prints
,
and
illustrations
all
reflect
the
manners
,
costumes
,
and
mores
of
America
in
the
first
half
of
the
present
century
.


	Obviously
Sloan's
early
years
were
influenced
by
his
close
friend
Robert
Henri
.
As
early
as
1928
,
however
,
the
Sloan
style
began
to
change
.
The
dark
pigments
of
the
early
work
were
superseded
by
a
brighter
palette
.
The
solidity
of
brush
stroke
yielded
to
a
hatching
technique
that
finally
led
to
virtual
abandonment
of
American
genres
in
favor
of
single
figure
studies
and
studio
nudes
.


	The
exhibition
presents
all
phases
of
Sloan's
many-sided
art
.
In
addition
to
the
paintings
are
drawings
,
prints
,
and
illustrations
.
Sloan
created
such
works
for
newspaper
supplements
before
syndication
threw
him
out
of
a
job
and
sent
him
to
roam
the
streets
of
New
York
,
thereby
building
for
America
an
incomparable
city
survey
from
paintings
of
McSorley's
Saloon
to
breezy
clotheslines
on
city
roofs
.


	One
of
the
most
appealing
of
the
rooftop
canvases
is
``
Sun
And
Wind
On
The
Roof
''
,
with
a
woman
and
child
bracing
themselves
against
flapping
clothes
and
flying
birds
.
Although
there
are
landscapes
in
the
show
(
one
of
the
strongest
is
a
vista
of
``
Gloucester
Harbor
''
in
1915
)
,
the
human
element
was
the
compelling
factor
in
Sloan's
art
.


	Significant
are
such
canvases
as
``
Bleeker
Street
,
Saturday
Night
''
,
with
its
typically
American
crowd
(
Sloan
never
went
abroad
)
;
;
the
multifigure
``
Traveling
Carnival
''
,
in
which
action
is
vivified
by
lighting
;
;
or
``
Carmine
Theater
,
1912
''
,
the
only
canvas
with
an
ash
can
(
and
foraging
dog
)
,
although
Sloan
was
a
member
of
the
famous
``
Eight
''
,
and
of
the
so-called
``
Ash-Can
School
''
,
a
term
he
resented
.


	Not
all
the
paintings
,
however
,
are
of
cities
.
The
exhibition
touches
briefly
on
his
sojourn
in
the
Southwest
(
``
Koshare
in
the
Dust
''
,
a
vigorous
Indian
dance
,
and
landscapes
suggest
the
influence
of
western
color
on
his
palette
)
.


	The
fact
that
Sloan
was
an
extrovert
,
concerned
primarily
with
what
he
saw
,
adds
greatly
to
the
value
of
his
art
as
a
human
chronicle
.


	There
are
151
items
in
the
Wilmington
show
,
including
one
painting
by
each
member
of
the
``
Eight
''
,
as
well
as
work
by
Sloan's
friends
and
students
.
Supplementing
the
actual
art
are
memorabilia
--
correspondence
,
diaries
,
books
from
the
artist's
library
,
etc.
.
All
belong
to
the
collection
being
given
to
Wilmington
over
a
period
of
years
by
Mrs.
Sloan
,
who
has
cherished
such
revelatory
items
ever
since
she
first
studied
with
Sloan
at
the
Art
Students
League
,
New
York
,
in
the
1920's
.


	To
enable
students
and
the
public
to
spot
Sloan
forgeries
,
the
Delaware
Art
Center
(
according
to
its
director
,
Bruce
St.
John
)
will
maintain
a
complete
file
of
photographs
of
all
Sloan
works
,
as
well
as
a
card
index
file
.
The
entire
Sloan
collection
will
be
made
available
at
the
center
to
all
serious
art
students
and
historians
.


	The
current
exhibition
,
which
remains
on
view
through
Oct.
29
,
has
tapped
14
major
collections
and
many
private
sources
.


	Any
musician
playing
Beethoven
here
,
where
Beethoven
was
born
,
is
likely
to
examine
his
own
interpretations
with
special
care
.
In
a
sense
,
he
is
offering
Bonn
what
its
famous
son
(
who
left
as
a
youth
)
never
did
--
the
sound
of
the
composer's
mature
style
.


	Robert
Riefling
,
who
gave
the
only
piano
recital
of
the
recently
concluded
23rd
Beethoven
Festival
,
penetrated
deep
into
the
spirit
of
the
style
.
His
readings
were
careful
without
being
fussy
,
and
they
were
authoritative
without
being
presumptuous
.
The
32
C
Minor
Variations
with
which
he
opened
moved
fluently
yet
logically
from
one
to
another
,
leaving
the
right
impression
of
abundance
under
discipline
.


	The
D
Minor
Sonata
,
Op.
31
No.
2
,
introduced
by
dynamically
shaped
arpeggios
,
was
most
engaging
in
its
moments
of
quasi-recitative
--
single
lines
in
which
the
fingers
seemed
to
be
feeling
their
way
toward
the
idea
to
come
.
These
inwardly
dramatic
moments
showed
the
kind
of
``
opera
style
''
of
which
Beethoven
was
genuinely
capable
,
but
which
did
not
take
so
kindly
to
the
mechanics
of
staging
.


	Two
late
Sonatas
,
Op.
110
and
111
,
were
played
with
similar
insight
,
the
disarming
simplicities
of
the
Op.
111
Adagio
made
plain
without
ever
becoming
obvious
.
The
two
were
separated
from
each
other
by
the
Six
Bagatelles
of
Op.
126
.
Herr
Riefling
,
in
everything
he
gave
his
large
Beethoven
Hall
audience
,
proved
himself
as
an
interpreter
of
unobtrusive
authority
.


	Volker
Wangenheim
,
who
conducted
Bonn's
Stadtisches
Orchester
on
the
following
evening
,
made
one
more
conscious
of
the
process
of
interpretation
.
Herr
Wangenheim
has
only
recently
become
the
city's
music
director
,
and
is
a
young
man
with
a
clear
flair
for
the
podium
.


	But
he
weighted
the
Eighth
Symphony
,
at
times
,
with
a
shuddering
subjectivity
which
seemed
considerably
at
odds
with
the
music
.
He
might
have
been
hoping
,
to
all
appearances
,
that
this
relatively
sunny
symphony
,
in
conjunction
with
the
Choral
Fantasy
at
the
end
of
the
program
,
could
amount
to
something
like
the
Ninth
;
;
but
no
amount
of
head-tossing
could
make
it
so
.


	The
conductor's
preoccupation
with
the
business
of
starting
and
stopping
caused
occasional
raggedness
,
as
with
the
first
orchestra
entrance
in
the
Fourth
Piano
Concerto
,
but
when
he
put
his
deliberations
and
obsequies
aside
and
let
the
music
move
as
designed
,
it
did
so
with
plenty
of
spring
.


	The
concerto's
soloist
,
Hans
Richter-Haaser
,
played
with
compensatory
ease
and
economy
,
though
without
the
consummate
plasticity
to
which
we
had
been
treated
on
the
previous
evening
by
Herr
Riefling
.
His
was
a
burgomaster's
Beethoven
,
solid
and
sensible
.


	Everybody
returned
after
intermission
for
the
miscellaneous
sweepings
of
the
Fantasy
For
Piano
,
Chorus
,
And
Orchestra
In
C
Minor
,
made
up
by
its
composer
to
fill
out
one
of
his
programs
.
The
entrance
of
the
Stadtisches
Gesangverein
(
Bonn's
civic
chorus
)
was
worth
all
the
waiting
,
however
,
as
the
young
Rhenish
voices
finally
brought
the
music
to
life
.


	The
last
program
of
this
festival
,
which
during
two
weeks
had
sampled
most
compositional
categories
,
brought
the
Cologne
Rundfunk-Sinfonie-Orchester
and
Rundfunkchor
to
Bonn's
gold-filled
hall
for
a
performance
of
the
Missa
Solemnis
.

