Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 94, Decatur, Adams County, 20 April 1964 — Page 9
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1964
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New Clash Between U. S., France Looms
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst F A new clash between the United States and France may be in the making for next month. That will be the scheduled z. May 4 opening in Geneva, g Switzerland, of the “Kennedy J round” of talks aimed at ex- 2 pansion of world trade through• drastic tariff cuts ranging up to « 50 per cent. The clash, if it comes, also will involve France’s partners in the European Common Market — West Germany, The Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and Italy. And while the argument involves trade rather than military or political alignments, the line to be followed will be the now-classic one —the U.S. concept of free world unity against communism and Pr esident Charles de Gaulle’s drive for a Western Europe under French leadership which would act as a “third force” between the United States and the Soviet Union. The talks, to be held under the auspices of GATT, the General Agreement on Tariff and Trade, are technical and not of the glamorous stuff to attract wide popular attention. Affects $1 BiUion In Exports But upon them depends the fate of approximately $1 billion in annual U.S. agricultural exports to the Common Market nations plus literally thousands of industrial items also exported by the United States. Agriculture is an important key. From the start, the United States has insisted that liberalization of world trade in agricultural goods must accompany cuts in industrial tariffs. Here it runs head - on into France which has agricultural problems of its own and which De Gaulle insists must have first calPon the West European market to get rid of its surpluses. French agriculture, while not so efficient as that of the United States, is producing more now on less land than it did before World War II ?nd says that by 1970 it can fulfill the
AHSKIOU Hope For Appalachia By FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, JR. Chairman, President’s Appalachian Regional Commission [ (Second of a Two-Part Series) President Johnson’s Plan for Appalachia offers '. a variety of programs to attack the region’s prob- ; lem| on all fronts. Because the easing of poverty
' in Appalachia depends heavily on creating more jobs, every effort must be made to bolster the regional economy which now lags behind the national economy., A major deterrent to industrial and recreational development in Appalachia has been the severe shortage of good highspeed highways thronghont the mountains. The Appalachian Commission has therefore recommended the construction of almost 2,200 miles of development highways in the region to provide much easier access into and within the region. These high- ( ways, in addition to 500 miles of access
roads, will tie in with the Interstate Highway System and will open up areas which now are virtually inaccessible to all but the hardiest travelers. Appalachia’s abundant annual rainfall should play a more important role than it now does in stimulating industrial development in the region. The Commission has recoin- , mended the accelerated construction of water resource facil- ■ ities through the Army Corps of Engineers and the Depart- , ment of Agriculture in order to utilize the potential of Ap- > palachian water resources by converting the affliction of flood and pollution to the economic benefits of controlled . abundance. ' . The proper control and management of the region s water | resources through the building of dams and reservoirs will i give a substantial boost to recreational development, an | increasingly important economic factor in all parts of the < country. ■ ' ; The physical resources of Appalachia—coal, timber, agri- • culture, and power—all have a significant part to play in ; the rejuvenation of the Appalachian economy. Our recommendations concerning natural resource development are directed at the creation of new growth by creating a new employment of the region’s natural riches, by guiding their uses to emerging national regional needs. We propose to coordinate all of the various programs for Appalachia through the Appalachian Regional Commission which we have recommended in our Report to the President. This Commission would consist of representatives from each of the nine Appalachian states and a Federal repreeentativa appointed by the President. Because the problems of Appalachia are regional In scope, their solutions must be worked out on a regional basis. In seeking a developmental organization tailored to the dimensions of the Appalachian problem, we have recognised two extremes of size which that organization must serve: the bigness of the total region, the smallness of the local jurisdiction. The approach and the structure must be regional to encompass the diversity of problems which are found in so large a region. In addition to coordinating a multitude of projects designed to assist Appalachia, the regional Commission will also encourage the creation of local development districts in order to stimulate local leadership and initiative. These local development districts will work with their State gov--1 ernmenta and with the Appalachian Regional Commission in solving local problems and building a stronger local base I for action. Finally, we believe that the President’s Appalachian Regional Commission has recommended a completely workable and practicable method of solving the economic ills of Appalachia. > .
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grain needs of the entire Common Market And a plan which the United States has declared unacceptable proposes a Common Market system of levies which virtually would cut off U.S. grains to Common Market Nations and would, in addition, affect all U.S. food exports ranging from marmalade to beef. Agrees With UJB. Ally of the United States against this plan is Chancellor Ludwig Erhard who feels that the Common Market nations have made enough concessions to France. Erhard, further, is determined to make the GATT negotiations a success. One of Erhard’s reasons is his desire to preserve the Atlantic alliance which De Gaulle disdains. Another is West Germany’s dependence on its own international exports. The celebrated “chicken war” in which the Common Market’s so - called “sluice - gate” levies virtually banned U.S. frozen chickens from the West European market, resulted in retaliatory U.S. tariffs against West German trucks. Erhard seeks to prevent the spread of such wars to other areas of commerce. Success is not anticipated immediately in the enormously complicated discussions of reduced tariffs. But, in the end, whether they succeed or fail, depends upon De Gaulle. Clip-On Glass Cases To make a elip that will secure your glass case in a shirt or coat pocket, take the clip from a discarded mechanical pencil and attach this to the glass case. Punch the case to accept the clip prongs, and then rivet the ends over (slipping a bit of flat metal inside the case to act as an anvil) by hammering lightly. Put a bit of tape over the inside prongs to prevent them from scratching your glasses. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
FranHtai D. Keoeovete, Jr.
