Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1964 — Page 11

WEDNESDAY, JUNE M, pH

LINE-UP OF GOVERNORS N.OAK. \ \ >sJ ?• * I r* 1 | **| REPUBLICAN X r J TtXAS fLA J I _L-Z I 1 DEMOCRATIC r I jT X -A- I ★ k'\iJ£^k'S? l *\ - FLECT {‘““‘l yA-* I*\* \ y A* ! HAWAII XX \ fS Wkß ZJf ptj| N«wsmop | \Z GUBERNATORIAL YEAR, TOO—The present line-up of governors shows the Democrats holding a 34-16 edge over the Republicans. However, the picture may change depending on how the gubernatorial elections go in the states starred on Newsmap above.

India’s Position In World Still Unique

By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst The death of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India ended an era, but it did not alter India's unique position in a world of warring philosophies and in the struggle for influence among nations aligned and non-aligned. A quotation often attributed, to Lenin declared that Communism’s “road to Paris leads via Peking and New Delhi.” A U.S. presidential commission headed by Gen. Lucius D. Clay said in a report on U.S. foreign aid last year: “In any review of front line countries, special attention must be given to India, even though it is not an ally.. .Together with our ally, Pakistan, it is the only area in South Asia able to offset the Red Chinese colossus.” The quotation attributed to Lenin came about 1920, more than 25 years before either the Communist take-over of the Chinese mainland or Indian independence from Britain.’ But the concept as expressed by the Communist International or by the Clay Report remains unchanged. It even takes on added importance with Nehru's death, as India now must grop through a period of transition from an idea as expressed by Nehru toward its final destiny as a nation. Lenin foresaw a victory for world Communism via the Soviet Union, China and India. But since then the Commun-

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ist world itself has fragmented, even though its goal of, world domination remains the same. Today, the struggle for India is three-way, among the Red Chinese with their threat of military aggression, and the United States and the Soviet Union, both seeking to win the final decision through financial aid, military and economic. Against this background, U.S. economic aid to India in three years ending in 1964 will have totaled nearly $1.5 billion, approximately three times that extended by the Soviet Union. Since the Red Chinese attack on India’s borders in the fall of 1962, the United States has given India S6O million in military aid and last week promised another SSO million in the coming year, plus SSO million more in credits with which to buy military equipment in the United States. The new aid would not include the F-104G Starfighter jets which the Indians wanted but would include the deadly sidewinder air-to - air missiles which the Red Chinese are not believed to have. On their side in this unnatural alliance, the Soviets are believed to have committed military aid to India totaling about $l2O million, including MIG jet fighters and are said to be considering credits which would permit the Indians to manufacture TV. The Indians themselves have tripled their defense budget to $l.B billion and are in the proc-

ess of doubling their army to close to a million in the belief the Chinese may plan a new attack in the fall. The fact that the Soviet Union and the United States should in effect join in a common effort to build India militarily* is ironic and will last so long only as both have a common goal in the defeat of Red China. Sad victims are the ill-clad and hungry people of India for whom the only result can be more hardship, with their destiny as a nation still in doubt. Tries To Foretell On Computer Age By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD—At the risk of being arrested for soothsaying about a license, I will attempt to foretell what* the computer age is coming to. It all came through to me this week when I saw the statement that Rep., Oliver P. Bolton, R-Ohio, issued regarding the broadcasting of election returns. Bolton appealed to the television networks not to declare a winner in the next national * election until all the polls have closed. Note, if you please, that he did not go so far as to suggest that they wait until the votes are counted. Hardly anyone would be that old fashioned. He merely wants them to wait, until the balloting is over before they tell •who won. Bolton seems to feel that if a voter knows who the winner is before he goes to the polls, it might influence him in some way. He said it was something like a horse player knowing how the race came out before placing his bet. Not being an expert in such matters myself, I sought an opinion «from a .knowledgeable friend of mine. “Do you suppose,” I asked, “that a horse player would be so unsporting as to bet on a horse that had already won?” “Not in a million years,” my friend said. “We horse players would rather lose than bet on a sure thing.” This does not necessarily mean, however, that voters would react the same way. At any rate, Bolton’s plea that the networks not reveal the winner before the balloting is over provides an insight into awesome potentialities of computer age elections. A few years from now, Bolton may be appealing to the networks not to disclose the winnet before the election begins. As I envision it, if a computer can already project the winner of an election on the basis of 2 per cent of the votes, it is only a matter of time before national elections become obsolete. Only the 2 per cent of us designated by the computer would need bother going to the polls. The other 98 per cent would be superfluous. There is, however, one thing about this prediction that troubles me. Should it come to pass, the electoral system would operate in a manner very similar to the present television rating system. Presumably, therefore, the winning candidates would have the same qualitative level as the programs now being seen. Sooner than that, we should let them draw straws.—

TMM MIOHTY MIDOCT WANT ADS WORK M r»” jM fc ‘U*« -!-7

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

Cairo Largest City In Egypt

EDITOR’S NOTE — What makes a city great other than its slse? This is another in a series of dispatches on 15 of the famous cities of the world. GREAT CITIES No. 9 — Cairo - By DAVID BISHAI United Press International CAIRO (UPI) — Cairo is Egypt, and yet it is not Egypt. It is 1,000 years okLybut a youngster in the measure of Egyptian civilization. It is Africa’s largest city and its most crowded with 3.5 million people and a population density of 250,000 per square mile in places. It is noisy and it smells. Its traffic is chaotic. It has lovely, tree-lined boulevards and horrible slums. Cairo is all that is old, much that is as new as today’s newspaper. As a city it has no certain pattern, no conformity. There is nothing homogenous about Cairo. It has a little of everything but not always the best, of everything. Need Each Other Cairo has the Nile and each needs the other. Without Cairo the Nile would have been just another river. The Nile is the life of Egypt. In a hundred other places it is larger, deeper and wider. But nowhere else is the Nile as beautiful as when it winds through Cairo, cool and solemn by day and gay with light and bouncing moonbeams at night. At first sight the tourist is apt to be disappointed with Cairo. “It doesn’t look like much,” he may say — and be right. But the visitor who takes a quick look at the pyramids, hurries through a museum and then catches the next flight out is doing himself and Cairo a disservice. It isn’t that kind of city. One cannot be impatient with Cairo. She is like a woman with a dozen veils that only hint at what may be concealed. Cairo’s age hides under a veil of impulsive modernism. Its vigor is almost imperceptible through a veil qf laziness and torpor. A thin layer of dist and the 1 acrid smell of sweat blur its deeper beauty. Belongs To None Cairo is haughtily aloof and does hot belong to anyone. The man who created this city 1,000 years ago is forgotten. Islam was born elsewhere, but came to Cairo for life. Only here did it become an established religion. go to Mecca for their pilgrimage. But it is in Cairo that they know Islam. Yet the nearly 500 minarets poking through Cairo’s skyline do not make of it a Moslem city. Nor do the elaborate ■ cathedrals and profusion of church domes make it a Christian place. It just shelters and humors both. It is as gay, and frolicsome at Yuletide as’•it is serene and pious during the holy month of Ramadan. Cairo’s facade is Egyptian, Islamic, Roman and Gothic all in one great confusion. Its suburban villas range from English country houses to Spanish haciendas. Along its streets walk people in sober English busmess suits, loud American shirts, tight Italian slim

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trousers — and the inevitable local 'galabiya, the flowing gown now worn mainly by peasants. Offerings Are Modest Whatever Cairo can offer is invariably of modest quality. Its restaurants serve up Chinese chowmein, Italian spaghetti, American roast chicken, Hungarian goulash, Greek mezzelikya. None is really of top quality as elsewhere. But then the price is usually cheaper and the inferior quality tends to be overlooked. To compensate there is the incomparable kebab, small pieces of spiced lamb meat grilled over, charcoal. In addition to its own 3.5 million people another half million people visit Cairo daily and a good number of these are tourists. Thus modern Cairo has a string of plush hotels that is constantly getting longer. Fabulous Fit! Printed Pattern ■ \ 10-18 , /I / \ ’ // \\ /I r / u a /jfl * » ■ I '■ ] ’ >' ’ Sfe * tJr ’» ■ ■ 1 / V I1 V . W / I I 1 I 1 ln| 'flTMifc** IT FITS FABULOUSLY for thia reason—bias panels mold the princess bodice gently to you. Otherwise, it’s simple, devastatingly simple! For day, night. Easysew. Printed Pattern 9332: Misses’ Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 takes 2% yards 35-inch. FIFTY CENTS in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin, Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. YOUR FREE PATTERN IS READY—choose it from 250 design ideas in new SPRING-SUM-MER Pattern Catalog, just out! Dresses, sportswear, coats, more! Send 50c now.

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Palaces of the former royal family are being rapidly transformed into more hotels. Cairo’s seven months of summer are a blazing inferno when the mercury reaches 113 degrees. The hills that protect it dump about 150 tons of dust on the city every day. Many of its streets are narrow and claustrophobic, jammed with sidewalk vendors. Its drivers are reckless. There is a shortage of housing. Shopping is not good unless one buys only local handcrafts. Smells And Sounds Cairo is an audible and pungent city. Its sound is the noise of streetcars, street vendors, car horns, blaring radios, loud laughter, hysterical shouts and anything that is human or

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mechanical. The smell is worse. A prejudiced visitor may categorically say it stinks. Maybe so after the first whiff, which is mainly that of dust-laden air and stenching sweat. But this gradually give way to Cairo’s predominant smell — that of cooking. ' If one takes the city by smell then Cairo might be classified as an oversized kitchen. Anywhere through any street one’s nose picks up the tempting fumes of roast kebab, or the dull aroma of baked beans, or the pungent smell of garlic and onions. There is no deception in this. Like an army Cairo lives on its stomach. There are more eating places than anything else.

PAGE THREE-A

An. Egyptian housewife probably spends more time in the kitchen than in bed. And it shows on the people. The men are stout and the women generally plump. Only some of the new generation keep their shape through dieting and exercise.

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