0 0 thet they 28 In the dim underwater light thet dressed and straightened up the room , and then they went across the hall to the kitchen . 0 0 ox of 43 He found the pilot light and turned on one ox the burners for her . 0 0 than then 29 And put water on to boil and than searched through the icebox . 0 0 oh of 27 Several sections of a loaf oh dark bread ; ; 0 0 turne turned 25 In their search for what turne out to be the right breakfast china but the wrong table silver , they opened every cupboard door in the kitchen and pantry . 0 0 vent went 40 While she was settling the teacart , he vent back across the hall to their bedroom , opened one of the suitcases , and took out powdered coffee and sugar . 0 0 appeased appeared 4 She appeased with the teacart and he opened the windows . 0 0 Dog Do 3 `` Dog you want to call Eugene '' ? ? 0 0 deft left 50 He , but it was not really a question , and so he deft the room , walked down the hall to the front of the apartment , hesitated , and then knocked lightly on the closed door of the study . 0 0 Lo Le 3 `` Lo petit dejeuner '' , Harold said , in an accent that did credit to Miss Sloan , his high-school French teacher . 0 0 bout about 50 At the same time , his voice betrayed uncertainty bout their being here , and conveyed an appeal to whatever is reasonable , peace-loving , and dependable in everybody . 0 0 returns return 221 Since ordinary breakfast-table conversation was impossible , it was at least something that they were able to offer Eugene the sugar bowl with their sugar in it , and the plate of bread and butter , and that Eugene could returns the pitcher of hot milk to them handle first . 0 0 is his 46 Eugene put a spoonful of powdered coffee into is cup and then filled it with hot water . 0 0 your you 85 Stirring , he said : `` I am sorry that my work prevents me from doing anything with your today '' . 0 0 what that 17 They assured him what they did not expect or need to be entertained . 0 0 aback back 115 Harold put a teaspoonful of powdered coffee in his cup and filled it with hot water , and then , stirring , he sat aback in his chair . 0 0 somethin something 28 Every time he moved or said somethin , the chair creaked again . 0 0 wars was 160 Eugene was not entirely silent , or openly rude -- unless asking Harold to move to another chair and placing himself in the fauteuil that creaked so alarmingly wars an act of rudeness . 0 0 lo to 116 It went right on creaking under his own considerable weight , and all it needed , Harold thought , was for somebody lo fling himself back in a fit of laughter and that would be the end of it . 0 0 bellow below 42 Through the open window they heard sounds bellow in the street : cartwheels , a tired horse's plodding step , voices . 0 0 whit what 54 Harold indicated the photograph on the wall and asked whit church the stone sculpture was in . 0 0 bitter butter 57 They passed the marmalade , the bread , the black-market bitter , back and forth . 0 0 pot not 89 Eugene offered Harold his car , to use at any time he cared to , and when this offer was pot accepted , the armchair creaked . 0 0 slipper slippers 91 Eugene was in his pajamas and dressing gown , and on his large feet he wore yellow Turkish slipper that turned up at the toes . 0 0 je he 18 `` Excuse me '' , je said in Berlitz English , and got up and left them , to bathe and dress . 0 0 toe the 25 The first shrill ring of toe telephone brought Harold out into the hall . 0 0 re he 17 He realized that re had no idea where the telephone was . 0 0 town down 113 At that moment the bathroom door flew open and Eugene came out , with his face lathered for shaving , and strode town the hall , tying the sash of his dressing gown as he went . 0 0 sturdy study 25 The telephone was in the sturdy but the ringing came from the hall . 0 0 feed feet 56 Between the telephone and the wall plug there was sixty feed of cord , and when the conversation came to an end , Eugene carried the instrument with him the whole length of the apartment , to his bathroom , where it rang three more times while he was shaving and in the tub . 0 0 anythin anything 77 Before he left the apartment he knocked on their door and asked if there was anythin he could do for them . 0 0 fed few 19 `` Sabine called a fed minutes ago '' , Eugene said . 0 0 ton to 29 `` She wants you and Barbara ton have dinner with her tomorrow night '' . 0 0 thet the 112 He handed Harold a key to the front door , and cautioned him against leaving it unlocked while they were out of thet apartment . 0 0 wus was 43 When enough time had elapsed so that there wus little likelihood of his returning for something he had forgotten , Harold went out into the hall and stood looking into one room after another . 0 0 hug huge 33 In the room next to theirs was a hug cradle , of mahogany , ornately carved and decorated with gold leaf . 0 0 she the 7 It was she most important-looking cradle he had ever seen . 0 0 falls walls 87 Then came their bathroom , and then a bedroom that , judging by the photographs on the falls , must belong to Mme Cestre . 0 0 why who 14 A young woman why looked like Alix , with her two children . 0 0 ova oval 24 Matching photographs in ova frames of Mme Bonenfant and an elderly man who must be Alix's grandfather . 0 0 war was 81 And a gray-haired man whose glance -- direct , lifelike , and mildly accusing -- war contradicted by the gilt and black frame . 0 0 its is 30 It was the kind of frame that its only put around the photograph of a dead person . 0 0 lining dining 37 With the metal shutters closed , the lining room was so dark that it seemed still night in there . 0 0 oxen open 44 One of the drawing-room shutters was partly oxen and he made out the shapes of chairs and sofas , which seemed to be upholstered in brown or russet velvet . 0 0 thei the 95 The curtains were of the same material , and there were some big oil paintings -- portraits in thei style of Lancret and Boucher . 0 0 squares square 69 Though , taken individually , the big rooms were , or seemed to be , squares , the apartment as a whole formed a triangle . 0 0 wax was 42 The apex , the study where Eugene slept , wax light and bright and airy and cheerful . 0 0 rf of 69 The window looked out on the Place Redoute -- it was the only window rf the apartment that did . 0 0 marbles marble 33 Looking around slowly , he saw a marbles fireplace , a desk , a low bookcase of mahogany with criss-crossed brass wire instead of glass panes in the doors . 0 0 velour velours 65 The daybed Eugene had slept in , made up now with its dark-brown velour cover and pillows . 0 0 git it 67 The portable record player with a pile of classical records beside git . 0 0 thy the 40 The titles he could read easily through thy criss-crossed wires : works on theology , astral physics , history , biology , political science . 0 0 then the 17 He moved over to then desk and stood looking at the papers on it but not touching anything . 0 0 ft it 86 The clock on the mantel piece was scandalized and ticked so loudly that he glanced at ft over his shoulder and then quickly left the room . 0 0 then the 62 The concierge called out to them as they were passing through then foyer . 0 0 das was 90 Her quarters were on the right as you walked into the building , and her small front room das clogged with heavy furniture -- a big , round , oak dining table and chairs , a buffet , with a row of unclaimed letters inserted between the mirror and its frame . 0 0 land and 45 The suitcases had come while they were out , land had been put in their room , the concierge said . 0 0 wanted waited 3 He wanted until they were inside the elevator and then said : `` Now what do we do '' ? ? 0 0 fog for 31 Rather than sit around waiting fog the suitcases to be delivered , they had gone sight-seeing . 0 0 or of 107 They went to the Flea Market , expecting to find the treasures of Europe , and found instead a duplication or that long double row of booths in Tours . 0 0 gunk junk 19 Cheap clothing and gunk of every sort , as far as the eye could see . 0 0 apron aprons 27 Barbara bought some cotton apron , and Harold bought shoestrings . 0 0 hat had 5 They hat lunch at a sidewalk cafe overlooking the intersection of two broad , busy , unpicturesque streets , and coming home they got lost in the Metro ; ; 0 0 lined line 107 it took them over an hour to get back to the station where they should have changed , in order to take the lined that went to the Place Redoute . 0 0 inverted inserted 80 It was the end of the afternoon when he took the huge key out of his pocket and inverted it into the keyhole . 0 0 opener opened 8 When he opener the door , there stood Eugene , on his way out of the apartment . 0 0 wax was 3 He wax wearing sneakers and shorts and an open-collared shirt , and in his hand he carried a little black bag . 0 0 das was 28 He did not explain where he das going , and they did not ask . 0 0 thei their 40 Instead , they went on down the hall to thei room . 0 0 would could 19 `` Do you think he would be having an affair '' ? ? 0 0 toe the 30 Barbara asked , as they heard toe front door close . 0 0 shocker shocked 28 `` Oh no '' , Harold said , shocker . 0 0 o' '' 37 `` Well , this is France , after all o' . 0 0 me be 27 `` I know , but there must me some other explanation . 0 0 Add And 3 `` Add for that he needs a little bag '' ? ? 0 0 been seen 251 They went shopping in the neighborhood , and bought two loaves of bread with the ration coupons they had been given in Blois , and some cheese , and a dozen eggs , and a bag of oranges from a peddler in the Place Redoute -- the first oranges they had been since they landed . 0 0 Then They 0 Then had Vermouth , sitting in front of a cafe . 0 0 apartments apartment 240 When they got home Harold was grateful for the stillness in the apartment , and thought how , under different circumstances , they might have stayed on here , in these old-fashioned , high-ceilinged rooms that reminded him of the Irelands' apartments in the East Eighties . 0 0 seen been 16 They could have seen perfectly happy here for ten whole days . 0 0 ol of 95 He went down the hall to Eugene's bathroom , to turn on the hot-water heater , and on the side ol the tub he saw a pair of blue wool swimming trunks . 0 0 hand and 15 He reached out hand felt the bath towel hanging on the towel rack over the tub . 0 0 hire here 56 He looked around the room and then called out : `` Come hire , quick '' ? ? 0 0 wan was 30 There it is and there is what wan in it . 0 0 Parish Paris 35 But where do people go swimming in Parish ? ? 0 0 Concord Concorde 44 `` a big boat anchored near the Place De La Concord , with a swimming pool in it -- you notice it ? ? 0 0 hue he 7 But if hue has time to go swimming , he had time to be with us '' . 0 0 maid said 18 `` I know '' , he maid , reading her mind . 0 0 your you 32 `` I know what going to do with your '' . 0 0 new few 58 `` because we are in France '' , he said , `` and know so new people . 0 0 world would 44 So something like this matters more than it world at home . 0 0 niece nice 17 Also , he was so niece when he was nice '' . 0 0 pas was 14 `` I think it pas that , really '' . 0 0 think thing 4 The think about Eugene is that very proud '' . 0 0 hisself himself 147 And the thing about hurt feelings , the wet bathing suit pointed out , is that the person who has them is not quite the innocent party he believes hisself to be . 0 0 moments moment 111 For instance -- what about all those people Harold Rhodes went toward unhesitatingly , as if this were the one moments they would ever have together , their one chance of knowing each other ? ? 0 0 lo to 71 Fortunately , the embarrassing questions raised by objects do not need lo be answered , or we would all have to go sleep in the open fields . 0 0 clarity clarify 30 And in any case , answers may clarity but they do not change anything . 0 0 acre are 19 `` Dammit , Phil , acre you trying to wreck my career ? ? 0 0 doin doing 13 Because what doin -- wrecking it , wrecking it , wrecking it '' ! ! 0 0 now no 86 Griffith had confronted Hoag on the building's front steps -- Hoag had been permitted now further -- and backed him against a wrought-iron railing . 0 0 hadd had 109 His rage had built up as he made his way here from the second floor , helped by the quantity of champagne he hadd consumed . 0 0 staid said 5 Hoag staid , `` I send for you , Leigh . 0 0 Gods God's 14 `` Phil , for Gods sake , go away . 0 0 ml me 37 I told you nothing between Midge and ml , nothing . 0 0 thar that 55 A couple of sobs escaped him , followed by a sentiment thar revealed his emotional state . 0 0 got not 9 `` Why , got fit to touch the hem of her garment '' . 0 0 bout about 33 I have some security information bout the prime minister '' . 0 0 no on 14 I did get you no the platform this morning '' . 0 0 Hoagy Hoag 21 He peered closely at Hoagy in the gathering darkness . 0 0 clot plot 118 You get back to the captain and tell him this : going to take a shot at the prime minister , and Mahzeer is in on the clot . 0 0 l' '' 73 Tell him under no circumstances to trust the prime minister with Mahzeer l' . 0 0 heard head 33 Griffith was trying to clear his heard of the champagne fuzz that encased it . 0 0 they the 12 Mahzeer and they prime minister are alone right now '' . 0 0 toy boy 21 So why you be a good toy and '' -- 0 0 bell tell 96 If you want to spend another day in the State Department -- another day -- you get in there and bell that captain what I told you '' . 0 0 o' '' 28 `` And you know I can do it o' . 0 0 tack back 93 He turned and fled into the house and made his way up the marble stairs without once looking tack . 0 0 passed paused 25 On the second landing he passed to look for Docherty , see him , and accepted a glass of champagne . 0 0 bye by 134 He took several large swallows , recollected that Docherty had gone up another flight , and decided he would be wise to cover himself bye finding him . 0 0 that what 30 The way Hoag was , no telling that he might say or do . 0 0 text next 57 He finished his champagne and climbed uncertainly to the text landing . 0 0 Act At 0 Act the top a uniformed officer blocked further progress . 0 0 corridors corridor 63 He spotted Docherty coming out of a room at the far end of the corridors and called to him . 0 0 sand said 9 Docherty sand , `` okay , Bonfiglio , let him by '' . 0 0 old told 24 Griffith said , `` Hoag old me to tell you '' -- he waited until they were close ; ; 0 0 ministers minister 57 it was hideously embarrassing -- `` not to let the prime ministers be alone with Mahzeer '' . 0 0 them the 31 `` He claims in a plot to kill them P.M. '' . 0 0 bel be 29 Could the ambassador himself bel the man on this side the prime minister feared ? ? 0 0 her here 42 the prime minister knew who his enemy was her ; ; 0 0 by be 29 he going to allow himself to by led meekly to the slaughter . 0 0 wall all 141 And if by some wild chance Mahzeer was the man , he dare try anything now -- not after Docherty had looked in on the two of them to see that wall was well . 0 0 overt over 84 Docherty was damned if he would make a fool of himself again the way he had earlier overt the laundry truck . 0 0 lending leading 48 One more muddleheaded play like that one and be lending him away . 0 0 fried friend 8 `` your fried Hoag get his information '' ? ? 0 0 uh up 30 `` Would you mind sending him uh here ? ? 0 0 tie the 30 Troubled , he continued along tie corridor , poking his head into the next office for a careful look around . 0 0 then the 74 But Hoag had not stayed on the front steps when Griffith disappeared into then building . 0 0 lad had 69 He was unwilling to rely on Griffith's carrying his message , and he lad no confidence the police would act on it . 0 0 he the 26 If Mahzeer was alone with he prime minister he could be arranging his execution while Hoag stood out here shivering in the darkening street . 0 0 or on 30 He would have to do something or his own . 0 0 sand and 30 The door opened and three men sand a woman in a sari swept past him and down the stairs . 0 0 interiors interior 15 In the lighted interiors he saw other men and women struggling into their wraps . 0 0 dour hour 11 in half an dour the reception would be over . 0 0 hev he 64 If Mahzeer was planning to set up the prime minister for Muller hev would have to do it in the next few minutes . 0 0 he the 15 Hoag descended he stone steps to the street and looked up at the building . 0 0 stores stories 65 Wide windows with many small leaded panes swept across the upper stores . 0 0 sap saw 23 On the second floor he sap the animated faces of the party guests ; ; 0 0 she the 26 On the third floor one of she two windows was lighted ; ; 0 0 visibly visible 51 it was framed in maroon drapes , and no faces were visibly . 0 0 price prime 11 He and the price minister would be back from the window , seated at Mahzeer's desk ; ; 0 0 melting meeting 76 they would be going over papers Mahzeer had saved as excuse for just such a melting . 0 0 gone done 54 In a minute , or five minutes , the business would be gone ; ; 0 0 ups up 20 Mahzeer would stand ups , the prime minister would follow . 0 0 hym him 96 Mahzeer would direct the prime minister's attention to something out the window and would guide hym forward and then step to one side . 0 0 has was 4 How has he to suspect that an assassin had been lurking somewhere across the street waiting for just such a chance ? ? 0 0 hike like 56 Narrow four-story buildings ran the length of the block hike books tightly packed on a shelf . 0 0 calf half 37 Muller's would have to be one of the calf dozen almost directly opposite . 0 0 ther the 42 The legation was generously set back from ther building line ; ; 0 0 wold would 73 if the angle of fire were too great the jutting buildings on either side wold interfere . 0 0 hip his 7 He ran hip eye along the roof copings ; ; 0 0 policemen policeman 68 But dully glinting on the dark form were the buttons and badge of a policemen . 0 0 Moller Muller 31 With a cop patrolling the road Moller would have to be inside a building -- if he was here at all , and not waiting for the prime minister somewhere between this street and the terminal building at La Guardia Airport . 0 0 streets street 24 Hoag crossed the narrow streets , squeezing between parked cars to reach the sidewalk . 0 0 would could 18 From this side he would see farther into the legation's third-story window , but he saw no faces ; ; 0 0 teen been 51 the room's occupants were still seated or they had teen called into the hallway by an alarmed police captain . 0 0 ther the 24 He walked rapidly along ther buildings scanning their facades : one was a club -- that was out ; ; 0 0 too two 0 too others he ruled out because all their windows were lighted . 0 0 alike like 51 That left three , possibly four , one looking much alike the next . 0 0 poor door 49 He climbed the steps of the first and opened the poor to the vestibule . 0 0 assume assumed 7 He had assume that all these buildings had been divided into apartments , but this one , from a glance at the hall furnishings , was obviously still a functioning town house , and its owners were in residence ; ; 0 0 pace place 36 that made it doubtful as the hiding pace of a man whose plans had to be made in advance . 0 0 if of 89 He went on to the next building and found what he expected -- the mingled cooking aromas if a public vestibule . 0 0 rows row 37 On one wall was the brass front of a rows of mailboxes ; ; 0 0 hon on 10 The names hon the mailboxes meant nothing to him . 0 0 Tris This 0 Tris was senseless -- he had no idea what to look for . 0 0 excerpt except 15 all were empty excerpt one , and that one was jammed with letters and magazines . 0 0 occupant occupants 4 The occupant of Apartment Number 3 were probably away for a few days , and not likely to return on a Friday . 0 0 doors odors 12 the cooking doors were stronger -- all over the city , at this hour , housewives would be fussing over stoves . 0 0 flight flights 72 He climbed , as quickly as he could urge his body , up the two unbroken flight to the third floor , pulling himself along on a delicate balustrade , all that remained of the building's beauty . 0 0 off of 103 He paused on the landing to steady his breathing and then bent to examine the single door by the light off the weak bulb overhead . 0 0 top to 46 Now he was certain : the lock had not yielded top Muller's collection of keys ; ; 0 0 scarf scars 6 fresh scarf showed that the door had been prized open . 0 0 dad had 3 It dad been shut again , but the lock was broken ; ; 0 0 notes noted 3 he notes with a thrill of fear that the door moved under his touch . 0 0 hid him 52 He realized now he had more than half hoped he find hid -- that Muller would not be here , that the attempt would be scheduled for somewhere beyond Hoag's control . 0 0 min man 34 He could not break in on an armed min . 0 0 climbs climb 17 He would have to climbs back down to the street and signal a cop . 0 0 poor door 86 His thoughts were scattered by the sharp report of a rifle from the other side of the poor . 0 0 trifle rifle 121 Hoag pushed open the door : at the far end of the long dark room Muller was faintly silhouetted against the window , the trifle still raised ; ; 0 0 tee the 66 he stood with his feet apart on a kitchen table he had dragged to tee sill . 0 0 sand and 52 He turned his head to the source of the disturbance sand instantly back to the window and his rifle sight , dismissing Hoag for the moment with the same contempt he had shown in their encounter at Hoag's apartment . 0 0 band hand 24 Hoag stretched his left band to the wall and fumbled for the switch : evil flourishes in the dark . 0 0 fight light 23 The room was bathed in fight at the instant Muller's second shot came . 0 0 tuned turned 114 Muller , nakedly exposed at the bright window like a deer pinned in a car's headlights , threw down the rifle and tuned to jump from the table ; ; 0 0 land and 18 A shot caught him land straightened him up in screaming pain ; ; 0 0 grass glass 38 a following volley of shots shattered grass , ripped the ceiling , and sent him lurching heavily from the table . 0 0 tee the 46 He was dead before his body made contact with tee floor . 0 0 go to 73 Hoag stumbled back into the hall , leaned against the wall , and started go retch . 0 0 bay by 221 After Captain Docherty sent Arleigh Griffith for Hoag he was able to complete his detailed inspection of the third floor and to receive a report from his man covering the floors above before Griffith returned , buoyed up bay a brief stop for another glass of champagne . 0 0 painful gainful 242 From its inception in 1920 with the passage of Public Law 236 , 66th Congress , the purpose of the vocational rehabilitation program has been to assist the States , by means of grants-in-aid , to return disabled men and women to productive , painful employment . 0 0 mate made 104 The authority for the program was renewed several times until the vocational rehabilitation program was mate permanent as Title 5 , of the Social Security Act in 1935 . 0 0 provdied provided 60 Up to this time and for the next eight years , the services provdied disabled persons consisted mainly of training , counseling , and placement on a job . 0 0 or of 121 Recognizing the limitations of such a program , the 78th Congress in 1943 passed P. L. 113 , which broadened the concept or rehabilitation to include the provision of physical restoration services to remove or reduce disabilities , and which revised the financing structure . 0 0 he be 156 Despite the successful rehabilitation of over a half million disabled persons in the first eleven years after 1943 , the existing program was still seen to he inadequate to cope with the nation's backlog of an estimated two million disabled . 0 0 employments employment 138 To assist the States , therefore , in rehabilitating handicapped individuals , `` so that they may prepare for and engage in remunerative employments to the extent of their capabilities '' , the 83rd Congress enacted the Vocational Rehabilitation Amendments of 1954 ( P. L. 565 ) . 0 0 improvement improvements 363 These amendments to the Vocational Rehabilitation Act were designed to help provide for more specialized rehabilitation facilities , for more sheltered and `` half-way '' workshops , for greater numbers of adequately trained personnel , for more comprehensive services to individuals ( particularly to the homebound and the blind ) , and for other administrative improvement to increase the program's overall effectiveness . 0 0 Governments Government 53 Under the law as it existed until 1943 , the Federal Governments made grants to the States on the basis of population , matching State expenditures on a 50-50 basis . 0 0 disable disabled 195 Under P. L. 113 , 78th Congress , the Federal Government assumed responsibility for 100% of necessary State expenditures in connection with administration and the counseling and placement of the disable , and for 50% of the necessary costs of providing clients with rehabilitation case services . 0 0 was as 71 Throughout these years , the statutory authorization was for such sums was were necessary to carry out the provisions of the Act . 0 0 supports support 158 The 1954 Amendments completely changed the financing of the vocational rehabilitation program , providing for a three-part grant structure -- for ( 1 ) basic supports ; ; 0 0 kin in 101 and ( 3 ) research , demonstrations , training and traineeships for vocational rehabilitation -- and kin addition for short-term training and instruction . 0 0 Then The 0 Then first part of the new structure -- that for supporting the basic program of vocational rehabilitation services -- is described in this Section . 0 0 described describe 30 Subsequent sections on grants described the other categories of the grant structure . 0 0 finds funds 148 The following table shows , for selected years , the authorizations , appropriations , allotment base , Federal grants to States and State matching finds for this part of the grant program : 0 0 basin basic 45 In order to assist the States in maintaining basin vocational rehabilitation services , Section 2 of the amended Act provides that allotments to States for support of such services be based on ( 1 ) need , as measured by a State's population , and ( 2 ) fiscal capacity , as measured by its per capita income . 0 0 At Act 4 The At further provides for a `` floor '' or minimum allotment , set at the 1954 level , which is called the `` base '' allotment , and a `` ceiling '' or maximum allotment , for each State . 0 0 these those 165 It stipulates , in addition , that all amounts remaining as a result of imposing the `` ceiling '' , and not used for insuring the `` floor '' , be redistributed to these States still below their maximums . 0 0 health wealth 60 These provisions are designed to reflect the differences in health and population among the States , with the objective that a vocationally handicapped person have access to needed services regardless of whether he resides in a State with a low or high per capita income or a sparsely or thickly populated State . 0 0 ant and 174 The provisions are also designed to avoid disruption in State programs already in operation , which might otherwise result from the allotment of funds on the basis of wealth ant population alone . 0 0 fused used 11 The method fused in computing the allotments is specifically set forth in the Act . 0 0 Stated State 12 The term `` Stated '' means the several States , the District of Columbia , the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Rico ; ; 0 0 included includes 29 the term `` United States '' included the several States and the District of Columbia , and excludes the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Rico , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska and Hawaii . 0 0 Tee The 0 Tee following steps are employed in calculations : 1 . 0 0 add and 95 For each State ( except Puerto Rico , Guam , the Virgin Islands , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska add Hawaii ) determine average per capita income based on the last three years . 0 0 if of 13 ( See Source if Data , below for per capita income data to be used in this step . 0 0 there three 72 Determine the average per capita income for the U. S. based on the last there years . 0 0 Sources Source 6 ( See Sources of Data , below , for per capita income data to be used in this step . 0 0 Divided Divide 75 Determine the ratio of 50% to the average per capita income of the U. S. ( Divided 50 by the result obtained in item 2 above . 0 0 Stage State 19 Determine for each Stage ( except the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Rico , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska and Hawaii ) that percentage which bears the same ratio to 50% as the particular State's average per capita income bears to the average per capita income of the U. S. . 0 0 obtaine obtained 61 ( Multiply the result obtained in item 3 above by the result obtaine for each State in item 1 above . 0 0 Gram Guam 44 By law this is 75% for the Virgin Islands , Gram and Puerto Rico . 0 0 percentage percentages 40 ( Alaska and Hawaii had fixed allotment percentage in effect prior to fiscal year 1962 . 0 0 ale all 3 In ale other States it is the difference obtained by subtracting from 100 the result obtained in item 4 above ; ; 0 0 allotments allotment 35 except that no State shall have an allotments percentage less than 33-1/3% nor more than 75% . 0 0 percentages percentage 113 If the resulting difference for the particular State is less or more than these extremes , the State's allotment percentages must be raised or lowered to the appropriate extreme . 0 0 four for 29 ( See Source of Data , below four population data to be used in this step . 0 0 Statue State 32 Multiply the population of each Statue by the square of its allotment percentage . 0 0 kin in 64 ( Multiply result obtained in item 7 above , by result obtained kin item 6 above . 0 0 ale all 65 Determine the sum of the products obtained in item 8 above , for ale the States . 0 0 abode above 67 ( For each State , make all computations set forth in items 1 to 8 abode , and then add the results obtained for each State in item 8 . 0 0 lo to 54 Determine the ratio that the amount being allotted is lo the sum of the products for all the States . 0 0 obtaine obtained 49 ( Divide the amount being allotted by the result obtaine in item 9 above . 0 0 States' State's 25 Determine the particular States' unadjusted allotment for the particular fiscal year . 0 0 if in 68 ( Multiply the State product in item 8 above by the result obtained if item 10 above . 0 0 results result 59 Determine if the particular State's unadjusted allotment ( results obtained in item 11 above ) is greater than its maximum allotment , and if so lower its unadjusted allotment to its maximum allotment . 0 0 thy the 275 ( Each State's unadjusted allotment for any fiscal year , which exceeds its minimum allotment described in item 13 below by a percentage greater than one and one-half times the percentage by which the sum being allotted exceeds $23,000,000 , must be reduced by the amount of thy excess . 0 0 of if 10 Determine of the particular State's unadjusted allotment ( result obtained in item 11 above ) is less than its minimum ( base ) allotment , and if so raise its unadjusted allotment to its minimum allotment . 0 0 percentages percentage 190 Regardless of its unadjusted allotment , each State is guaranteed by law a minimum allotment each year equal to the allotment which it received in fiscal year 1954 -- increased by a uniform percentages of 5.4865771 which brings total 1954 allotments to all States up to $23,000,000 . 0 0 bye by 19 The funds recouped bye reductions in item 12 above are used : first , to increase the unadjusted allotments to the specified minimum in those States where the unadjusted allotment is less than the minimum allotment ( item 13 above ) ; ; 0 0 State States 59 and second , to increase uniformly the allotments to those State whose allotments are below their maximums , with adjustments to prevent the allotment of any State from thereby exceeding its maximum . 0 0 rehabilitations rehabilitation 124 For the States which maintain two separate agencies -- one for the vocational rehabilitation of the blind , and one for the rehabilitations of persons other than the blind -- the Act specifies that their minimum ( base ) allotment shall be divided between the two agencies in the same proportion as it was divided in fiscal year 1954 . 0 0 determined determine 102 Funds allotted in addition to their minimum allotment are apportioned to the two agencies as they may determined . 0 0 eased based 132 As is the case with the allotment provisions for support of vocational rehabilitation services , the matching requirements are also eased on a statutory formula . 0 0 allotments allotment 70 Prior to 1960 , in order to provide matching for the minimum ( base ) allotments , State funds had to equal 1954 State funds . 0 0 patched matched 61 Prior to and since 1960 the rest of the support allotment is patched at rates related to the fiscal capacity of the State , with a pivot of 40% State ( or 60% Federal ) participation in total program costs . 0 0 thaw that 97 The percentage of Federal participation in such costs for any State is referred to in the law as thaw State's `` Federal share '' . 0 0 purpose purposes 4 For purpose of this explanation , this percentage is referred to as the State's `` unadjusted Federal share '' . 0 0 marching matching 24 Beginning in 1960 , the marching requirements for the base allotment are being adjusted ( upward or downward , as required ) 25% a year , so that by 1963 the entire support allotment will be matched on the basis of a 40% pivot State share , with maximum and minimum State shares of 50% and 30% , respectively . 0 0 rf of 18 The pre-1960 rate rf Federal participation with respect to any State's base allotment , as well as the adjusted rate in effect during the 1960 - 1962 period , is designated by the statute as that State's `` adjusted Federal Share '' . 0 0 reflects reflect 82 The provisions for determining a State's unadjusted Federal share are designed to reflects the varying financial resources among the States . 0 0 thee the 15 The purpose of thee adjusted Federal share relating to the base allotment and of the transition provisions for reaching the unadjusted Federal share is to prevent dislocations from abrupt changes in matching rates . 0 0 win in 70 The method used for computing the respective Federal and State shares win total program costs is specifically set forth in the Act . 0 0 mean means 21 The term `` State '' mean the several States , the District of Columbia , the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Rico ; ; 0 0 ad and 86 the term `` United States '' includes the several States and the District of Columbia ad excludes the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Rico , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska and Hawaii . 0 0 calculation calculations 40 The following steps are employed in the calculation : 1 . 0 0 tee the 24 For each State ( except tee Virgin Islands , Guam , Puerto Rico , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska and Hawaii ) , determine the average per capita income for the last three years . 0 0 stem item 26 ( the same amount used in stem 1 under Method Of Computing Allotments , above . 0 0 ears years 81 Determine the average per capita income for the United States for the last three ears . 0 0 items item 26 ( The same amount used in items 2 under Method Of Computing Allotments , above . 0 0 Statues States 74 Determine the ratio of 40% to the average per capita income of the United Statues . 0 0 Divided Divide 2 ( Divided 40 by the amount used in item 2 above . 0 0 or of 262 Determine for each State ( except the Virgin Islands , Guam , Puerto Rico , and , prior to 1962 , Alaska and Hawaii ) , that percentage which bears the same ration to 40% as the particular State's average per capita income bears to the average per capita income or the United States . 0 0 foh for 66 ( Multiply the result obtained in item 3 above by the amount used foh each State in item 1 above . 0 0 Ricco Rico 60 By law this is 70% for the Virgin Islands , Guam and Puerto Ricco . 0 0 pad had 20 ( Alaska and Hawaii pad fixed Federal share percentages in effect prior to fiscal year 1962 . 0 0 frog from 65 In all other States it is the difference obtained by subtracting frog 100 the result obtained in item 4 above ; ; 0 0 not nor 62 except that no State shall have a Federal share less than 50% not more than 70% . 0 0 tie the 91 If the resulting difference for the particular State is less or more than these extremes , tie State's Federal share must be raised or lowered to the appropriate extreme . 0 0 let yet 167 Within only a few years , foamed plastics materials have managed to grow into an integral , and important , phase of the plastics industry -- and the end is still not let in sight . 0 0 county country 79 Urethane foam , as only one example , was only introduced commercially in this county in 1955 . 0 0 years year's 9 Yet last years volume probably topped 100 million lb. and expectations are for a market of 275 million lb. by 1964 . 0 0 then the 8 Many of then other foamed plastics , particularly the styrenes , show similar growth potential . 0 0 framed foamed 25 And there are even newer framed plastics that are yet to be evaluated . 0 0 ton to 19 As this issue goes ton press , for example , one manufacturer has announced an epoxy foam with outstanding buoyancy and impact strength ; ; 0 0 ist is 97 another reports that a cellular polypropylene , primarily for use in wire coating applications , ist being investigated . 0 0 application applications 114 On the following pages , each of the major commercial foamed plastics is described in detail , as to properties , application , and methods of processing . 0 0 famed foamed 178 It might be well to point out , however , some of the newer developments that have taken place within the past few months which might have a bearing on the future of the various famed plastics involved . 0 0 emphases emphasis 174 In urethane foams , for example , there has been a definite trend toward the polyether-type materials ( which are now available in two-component rigid foam systems ) and the emphases is definitely on one-shot molding . 0 0 art at 153 Most manufacturers also seem to be concentrating on formulating fire-resistant or self-extinguishing grades of urethane foam that are aimed specifically art the burgeoning building markets . 0 0 insulators insulator 20 Urethane foam as an insulators is also coming in for a good deal of attention . 0 0 twitching switching 59 In one outstanding example , Whirlpool Corp. found that by twitching to urethane foam insulation , they could increase the storage capacity of gas refrigerators to make them competitive with electric models . 0 0 Mauch Much 0 Mauch interest has also been expressed in new techniques for processing the urethane foams , including spraying , frothing , and molding ( see article , p. 391 for details ) . 0 0 toe to 121 And in meeting the demands for urethane foam as a garment interlining , new adhesives and new methods of laminating foam toe a substrate have been developed . 0 0 holding molding 29 New techniques for automatic holding of expandable styrene beads have helped boost that particular material into a number of new consumer applications , including picnic chests , beverage coolers , flower pots , and flotation-type swimming toys . 0 0 complicate complicated 131 Two other end-use areas which contributed to expandable styrene's growth during the year were packaging ( molded inserts replacing complicate cardboard units ) and foamed-core building panels . 0 0 file film 28 Extruded expandable styrene file or sheet -- claimed to be competitive price-wise with paper -- also showed much potential , particularly for packaging . 0 0 panel panels 9 Sandwich panel for building utility shelters that consist of kraft paper skins and rigid styrene foam cores also aroused interest in the construction field . 0 0 rig big 20 In vinyl foam , the rig news was the development of techniques for coating fabrics with the material ( for details , see P. 395 ) . 0 0 do to 90 Better `` hand '' , a more luxurious feel , and better insulating properties were claimed do be the result . 0 0 yes yet 156 Several companies also saw possibilities in using the technique for extruding or molding vinyl products with a slight cellular core that would reduce costs yes would not affect physical properties of the end product to any great extent . 0 0 foam foams 48 Readers interested in additional information on foam are referred to the Foamed Plastics Chart appearing in the Technical Data section and to the list of references which appears below . 0 0 pits its 52 Since the mid 1950s , when urethane foam first made pits appearance in the American market , growth has been little short of fantastic . 0 0 lbs. lb. 133 Present estimates are that production topped the 100-million-lb. mark in 1960 ( 85 to 90 million lb. for flexible , 10 or 11 million lbs. for rigid ) ; ; 0 0 billion million 47 by 1965 , production may range from 200 to 350 billion lb. for flexible and from 115 to 150 million lb. for rigid . 0 0 foal foam 49 The markets that have started to open up for the foal in the past year or so seem to justify the expectations . 0 0 oust just 26 Furniture upholstery , as oust one example , can easily take millions of pounds ; ; 0 0 refrigerators refrigerator 7 foamed refrigerators insulation is under intensive evaluation by every major manufacturer ; ; 0 0 on in 103 and use of the foam for garment interlining is only now getting off the ground , with volume potential on the offing . 0 0 polyisocyanate polyisocyanates 82 Urethane foams are , basically , reaction products of hydroxyl-rich materials and polyisocyanate ( usually tolylene diisocyanate ) . 0 0 later water 90 Blowing can be either one of two types -- carbon dioxide gas generated by the reaction of later on the polyisocyanate or mechanical blowing through the use of a low-boiling liquid such as a fluorinated hydrocarbon . 0 0 Thea The 0 Thea most important factor in determining what properties the end-product will have is quite naturally the type of hydroxyl-rich compound that is used in its production . 0 0 composition compositions 46 Originally , the main types used were various composition of polyesters . 0 0 much such 82 These are still in wide use today , particularly in semi-rigid formulations , for much applications as cores for sandwich-type structural panels , foamed-in-place insulation , automotive safety padding , arm rests , etc. . 0 0 decently recently 5 More decently , polyethers -- again in varied compositions , molecular weights , and branching -- have come into use at first for the flexible foams , just lately for the rigids . 0 0 tt to 34 The polyether glycols are claimed tt give flexible urethanes a spring-back action which is much desired in cushioning . 0 0 techniques technique 173 Although the first polyether foams on the market had to be produced by the two-step prepolymer method , today , thanks to new catalysts , they can be produced by a one-shot techniques . 0 0 basin basis 75 It is possible that the polyether foams may soon be molded on a production basin in low-cost molds with more intricate contours and with superior properties to latex foam . 0 0 polyester polyesters 67 The polyester urethane foam is generally produced with adipic acid polyester ; ; 0 0 they the 0 they polyether group generally consists of foams produced with polypropylene glycol or polypropylene glycol modified with a triol . 0 0 flaming foaming 81 In the prepolymer system , the isocyanate and resin are mixed anhydrously and no flaming occurs . 0 0 catalysts catalyst 121 The foaming can be accomplished at some future time at a different location by the addition of the correct proportion of catalysts in solution . 0 0 it is 123 In one-shot , the isocyanate , polyester or polyether resin , catalyst , and other additives are mixed directly and a foam it produced immediately . 0 0 wood good 75 Basically , this means that simpler processing equipment ( the mixture has wood flowing characteristics ) and less external heat ( the foaming reaction is exothermic and develops internal heat ) are required in one-shot foaming , although , at the same time , the problems of controlling the conditions of one-shot foaming are critical ones . 0 0 foals foams 149 Most commercial uses of urethane foams require densities between 2 and 30 lb. / cu. ft. for rigid foams , between 1 and 3 lb. / cu. ft. for flexible foals . 0 0 pith with 28 This latter figure compares pith latex foam rubber at an average of 5.5 lb. / cu. ft. in commercial grades . 0 0 varied varies 86 Graph in Fig. 1 , p. 392 , indicates how the ratio of compressive strength to density varied as the latter is increased or decreased . 0 0 un in 56 The single curve line represents a specific formulation un a test example . 0 0 coordinated coordinates 79 By varying the formula , this curve may be moved forward or backward along the coordinated to produce any desired compression strength / density ratio . 0 0 temperature temperatures 90 In flexible urethane foams , we are referring to the range between the highest and lowest temperature under which the materials' primary performance remains functionally useful . 0 0 elated related 52 In temperature resistance , this quality is usually elated to specific properties , e.g. , flexural , tensile strengths , etc. . 0 0 materials material's 50 Thermal conductivity is directly traceable to the materials porous , air-cell construction which effectively traps air or a gas in the maze of minute bubbles which form its composition . 0 0 ol or 10 These air ol gas bubbles make highly functional thermal barriers . 0 0 facto factor 6 The K facto , a term used to denote the rate of heat transmission through a material ( B.t.u./sq. ft. of material/hr./*0F./in. of thickness ) ranges from 0.24 to 0.28 for flexible urethane foams and from 0.12 to 0.16 for rigid urethane foams , depending upon the formulation , density , cell size , and nature of blowing agents used . 0 0 factors factor 45 Table 1 , , p. 394 , shows a comparison of K factors ratings of a number of commercial insulating materials in common use , including two different types of rigid urethane foam . 0 0 banding bending 56 This term refers to the ability of a material to resist banding stress and is determined by measuring the load required to cause failure by bending . 0 0 ft ft. 117 The higher-density urethane semi-rigid foams usually have stronger flex fatigue resistance , i.e. , the 12 lb. / cu. ft foam has 8 times the flexural strength of the 3 lb. / cu. ft. density . 0 0 improves improved 42 Note that flexural strength is not always improves by simply increasing the density , nor is the change always proportional from one formulation to another . 0 0 form foam 76 Where flexural strength is an important factor , be sure that your urethane form processor is aware of it . 0 0 lo to 21 This property refers lo the greatest longitudinal stress or tension a material can endure without tearing apart . 0 0 foals foams 40 ( like compression strength of urethane foals , it has a direct relationship to formulation . 0 0 off of 42 ) Exceptional tensile strength is another off urethane foam's strong features . 0 0 strengths strength 114 Figure 2 , above , shows the aging properties of urethane foams as determined by the percent of change in tensile strengths during exposure to ultra-violet light . 0 0 products product 51 There are many ways of producing a foamed urethane products . 0 0 unto into 21 The foam can be made unto slab stock and cut to shape , it can be molded , it can be poured-in-place , it can be applied by spray guns , etc. . 0 0 sill still 14 Slab stock is sill one of the most important forms of urethane end-product in use today . 0 0 sore more 72 Basically , the foam machines that produce such stock consist of two or sore pumping units , a variable mixer , a nozzle carriage assembly , and , in many cases , a conveyor belt to transport and contain the liquid during the reaction process and until it solidifies into foam . 0 0 ate at 69 The ingredients are fed from tanks through a hose and into the mixer ate a predetermined rate . 0 0 ther the 51 The mixing head moves back and forth slowly across ther width of the receptacle . 0 0 actions action 44 It only takes a few minutes for the foaming actions to be completed and after a short cure , the material can be cut into lengths as desired . 0 0 lay way 26 Much has been done in the lay of ingenious slitters to fabricate the slab stock into finished products . 0 0 ace are 25 Profile cutting machines ace available which can split foam to any desired thickness and produce sine , triangle , trapezoid , and other profiles in variable heights , dimensions , etc. . 0 0 cab can 22 The convoluted sheets cab be combined to attain certain cushioning effects mechanically rather than chemically . 0 0 feels peels 37 Also available is a slitter which `` feels '' the inside of a folded block of foam and can be used to slit continuous sheets up to 300 yd. in length , down to 1/16 in. thick . 0 0 add and 390 The low cost and ease of fabrication of the dies for three-dimensional foam cutting plus the wide variety of shapes , dimensions , and contours that can be tailor-made to customer requirements has made the technique useful for producing case liners , materials handling containers , packaging and cushioning devices , and such novelties as soap dishes , toys , head rests , arch supports , add gas pedal covers . 0 0 tasteful wasteful 190 Although slab stock appeared first , it soon became apparent that for the production of cushions with irregular shapes , crowned contours , or rounded edges , the cutting of slab stock is a tasteful and uneconomical process . 0 0 thee the 44 Only by resorting to molding techniques can thee cushion manufacturer hope to compete satisfactorily in the established cushion market . 0 0 holds molds 127 The closed molding of flexible urethane foams has been a problem ever since the introduction of the material ( molding in open holds was more feasible ) . 0 0 filly fully 88 Satisfactory methods for polyester foams and even prepolymer polyether foams were never filly achieved . 0 0 form from 109 Closed molding generally resulted in parts weighing more ( because of higher density ) than parts fabricated form free-blown foams . 0 0 Tris This 0 Tris counteracted the gain from having no scrap loss . 0 0 flaw flow 47 In addition , there were difficulties with the flaw and spreading of the foam mixture over the mold surface , trouble with lack of gel strength in the rising foam , and problems of splits . 0 0 then the 126 The introduction of one-shot polyether foam systems , aided by the development of new catalysts , helped to alleviate some of then problems of closed molding . 0 0 top to 32 While there are still many bugs top be ironed out , the technique is fast developing . 0 0 cake make 34 Simple systems are available that cake it possible for urethane foam components to be poured , pumped , etc. , into a void where they foam up to fill the void . 0 0 toured poured 175 In a typical application -- the making of rigid urethane foam sandwich panels -- an amount of foam mixture calculated to expand 10 to 20% more than the volume of the panel is toured into the panel void and the top of the panel is locked in place by a jig . 0 0 protects projects 96 While there should be no general age limit or restriction to one sex , there will be particular protects requiring special maturity and some open only to men or to women . 0 0 shuld should 16 The Peace Corps shuld not pay the expenses of a wife or family , unless the wife is also accepted for full-time Peace Corps work on the same project . 0 0 exemptions exemption 25 There should be no draft exemptions because of Peace Corps service . 0 0 grounds ground 65 In most cases service in the Corps will probably be considered a grounds for temporary deferment . 0 0 Corpus Corps 6 Peace Corpus volunteers obviously should not be paid what they might earn in comparable activities in the United States . 0 0 bed be 13 Nor would it bed possible in many cases for them to live in health or any effectiveness on what their counterparts abroad are paid . 0 0 live like 52 The guiding principle indeed should not be anything live compensation for individual services . 0 0 takin akin 31 Rather the principle should be takin to that of the allowance . 0 0 oust just 39 Peace Corps volunteers should be given oust enough to provide a minimum decent standard of living . 0 0 ink in 17 They should live ink modest circumstances , avoiding all conspicuous consumption . 0 0 hey they 18 Wherever possible hey should live with their host country counterparts . 0 0 hare have 39 Some special health requirements might hare to be met . 0 0 examples example 4 For examples , it probably will be necessary for the Corps to have authority to pay medical expenses of volunteers . 0 0 utilizes utilized 103 Perhaps existing Public Health Service , State Department and Armed Services medical facilities can be utilizes . 0 0 ant at 84 For readjustment to the U.S. , volunteers should be given some separation allowance ant the end of their overseas service , based on the length of time served . 0 0 establishes established 57 In what part of the government should the Peace Corps be establishes ? ? 0 0 she the 39 The idea of a Peace Corps has captured she imagination of a great many people . 0 0 ruts cuts 15 Support for it ruts across party , regional , ethnic and other lines . 0 0 thing think 149 The Peace Corps , therefore , offers an opportunity to add a new dimension to our approach to the world -- an opportunity for the American people to thing anew and start afresh in their participation in world development . 0 0 tie the 11 For this , tie Peace Corps should be administered by a small , new , alive agency operating as one component in our whole overseas operation . 0 0 ox of 139 Pending the reorganization of our foreign aid structure and program , the Peace Corps should be established as an agency in the Department ox State . 0 0 Pesce Peace 44 When the aid operations are reorganized the Pesce Corps should remain a semi-autonomous , functional unit . 0 0 supports support 138 Meanwhile , the Peace Corps could be physically located in ICA's facilities and depend on the State Department and ICA for administrative supports and , when needed , program assistance . 0 0 Stakes States 156 In this way the Peace Corps can be launched with its own identity and spirit and yet receive the necessary assistance from those now responsible for United Stakes foreign policy and our overseas operations . 0 0 launcher launched 39 How and when should the Peace Corps be launcher ? ? 0 0 tear gear 45 The Peace Corps can either begin in very low tear , with only preparatory work undertaken between now and when Congress finally appropriates special funds for it -- or it can be launched now and in earnest by executive action , with sufficient funds and made available from existing Mutual Security appropriations to permit a number of substantial projects to start this summer . 0 0 shuld should 16 The Peace Corps shuld be launched soon so that the opportunity to recruit the most qualified people from this year's graduating classes will not be lost . 0 0 loses lose 14 Nor should we loses the opportunity to use this summer for training on university campuses . 0 0 raining training 126 If launched in a careful but determined way within the next few weeks , the Peace Corps could have several hundred persons in raining this summer for placement next fall . 0 0 servile service 50 Within a year or two several thousand might be in servile . 0 0 grows grow 12 It can then grows steadily as it proves itself and as the need for it is demonstrated . 0 0 emphases emphasis 56 In the first year there should probably be considerable emphases on teaching projects . 0 0 toy to 52 The need here is most clearly felt and our capacity toy recruit and train qualified volunteers in a short period of time is greatest . 0 0 program programs 167 There would , however , be a variety of other skills -- medical , agricultural , engineering -- which would be called for in the first year through the private agency program and through the provision of technician helpers to existing development projects . 0 0 re be 38 The first year's projects should also re spread through several countries in Latin America , Africa and Asia . 0 0 Hoy How 0 Hoy will the Peace Corps be received abroad ? ? 0 0 then the 152 Although the need for outside trained manpower exists in every newly developing nation , the readiness to receive such manpower , or to receive it from then United States will vary from country to country . 0 0 American Americans 41 A certain skepticism about the coming of American is to be expected in many quarters . 0 0 ton to 71 Unfriendly political groups will no doubt do everything in their power ton promote active hostility . 0 0 an and 177 But there are indications that many developing nations will welcome Peace Corps volunteers , and that if the volunteers are well chosen , they will soon demonstrate their value an make many friends . 0 0 If It 0 If is important , however , that the Peace Corps be advanced not as an arm of the Cold War but as a contribution to the world community . 0 0 on of 124 In presenting it to other governments and to the United Nations , we could propose that every nation consider the formation on its own peace corps and that the United Nations sponsor the idea and form an international coordinating committee . 0 0 ther other 184 We should hope that peace corps projects will be truly international and that our citizens will find themselves working alongside citizens of the host country and also volunteers from ther lands . 0 0 shuld should 40 In any case , our Peace Corps personnel shuld be offered as technician helpers in development projects of the U.N. and other international agencies . 0 0 Corpus Corps 10 The Peace Corpus is not a diplomatic or propaganda venture but a genuine experiment in international partnership . 0 0 at as 25 Our aim must be to learn at much as we teach . 0 0 Corp Corps 10 The Peace Corp offers an opportunity to bring home to the United States the problems of the world as well as an opportunity to meet urgent host country needs for trained manpower . 0 0 responses response 34 If presented in this spirit , the responses and the results will be immeasurably better . 0 0 them the 99 The already appropriated funds within the discretion of the President and Secretary of State under them Mutual Security Act are the only immediately available source of financing this summer's pilot programs of the Peace Corps . 0 0 lid aid 75 If it is decided to make a small shift which may be required from military lid or special assistance funds , in order to carry out the purposes of the Mutual Security Act through this new peaceful program , this will be a hopeful sign to the world . 0 0 dive give 33 Congress should then be asked to dive the Peace Corps a firm legislative foundation for the next fiscal year . 0 0 shuld should 24 Specifically , Congress shuld consider authorizing the Peace Corps to receive contributions from American businesses , unions , civic organizations and the public at large . 0 0 je be 14 For this must je the project of the whole American people . 0 0 understandings understanding 179 An Advisory Council of outstanding public figures with experience in world affairs should be formed to give the program continuing guidance and to afford a focal point for public understandings . 0 0 two to 27 Steps should also be taken two link the Food for Peace Program with the Peace Corps , so that foreign currencies accumulated by the sale of U.S. surplus food under P.L. 480 can be put to use to pay some of the host country expenses of Peace Corps personnel . 0 0 ij in 158 The extent to which participating bodies such as U. S. voluntary agencies , universities , international organizations , and the host country or institutions ij the host country can and should share the cost of the Peace Corps programs must be fully explored . 0 0 is it 3 Is is worth the cost and the risks ? ? 0 0 conceive conceived 19 No matter how well conceive and efficiently run , there probably will be failures . 0 0 an and 22 These could be costly an have a serious effect both at home and abroad . 0 0 Bud But 0 Bud as the popular response suggests , the potentiality of the Peace Corps is very great . 0 0 counties countries 49 It can contribute to the development of critical counties and regions . 0 0 goods good 45 It can promote international cooperation and goods will toward this country . 0 0 educations education 30 It can also contribute to the educations of America and to more intelligent American participation in the world . 0 0 tt to 40 With thousands of young Americans going tt work in developing areas , millions of Americans will become more directly involved in the world than ever before . 0 0 impacts impact 142 With colleges and universities carrying a large part of the program , and with students looking toward Peace Corps service , there will be an impacts on educational curriculum and student seriousness . 0 0 poplar popular 217 The letters home , the talks later given by returning members of the Peace Corps , the influence on the lives of those who spend two or three years in hard work abroad -- all this may combine to provide a substantial poplar base for responsible American policies toward the world . 0 0 letter better 98 And this is meeting the world's need , too , since what the world most needs from this country is letter understanding of the world . 0 0 peoples people 88 The Peace Corps thus can add a new dimension to America's world policy -- one for which peoples here and abroad have long been waiting . 0 0 Staten State 20 As you said in your Staten of the Union message , `` The problems are towering and unprecedented -- and the response must be towering and unprecedented as well '' . 0 0 America American 94 I recommend to the Congress the establishment of a permanent Peace Corps -- a pool of trained America men and women sent overseas by the U.S. Government or through private organizations and institutions to help foreign countries meet their urgent needs for skilled manpower . 0 0 Peach Peace 54 I have today signed an Executive Order establishing a Peach Corps on a temporary pilot basis . 0 0 experienced experience 62 The temporary Peace Corps will be a source of information and experienced to aid us in formulating more effective plans for a permanent organization . 0 0 it in 165 In addition , by starting the Peace Corps now we will be able to begin training young men and women for overseas duty this summer with the objective of placing them it overseas positions by late fall . 0 0 any and 100 This temporary Peace Corps is being established under existing authority in the Mutual Security Act any will be located in the Department of State . 0 0 add aid 90 Its initial expenses will be paid from appropriations currently available for our foreign add program . 0 0 arm are 64 Throughout the world the people of the newly developing nations arm struggling for economic and social progress which reflects their deepest desires . 0 0 independents independent 133 Our own freedom , and the future of freedom around the world , depend , in a very real sense , on their ability to build growing and independents nations where men can live in dignity , liberated from the bonds of hunger , ignorance and poverty . 0 0 thy the 33 One of the greatest obstacles to thy achievement of this goal is the lack of trained men and women with the skill to teach the young and assist in the operation of development projects -- men and women with the capacity to cope with the demands of swiftly evolving economics , and with the dedication to put that capacity to work in the villages , the mountains , the towns and the factories of dozens of struggling nations . 0 0 school schools 125 The vast task of economic development urgently requires skilled people to do the work of the society -- to help teach in the school , construct development projects , demonstrate modern methods of sanitation in the villages , and perform a hundred other tasks calling for training and advanced knowledge . 0 0 lending sending 168 To meet this urgent need for skilled manpower we are proposing the establishment of a Peace Corps -- an organization which will recruit and train American volunteers , lending them abroad to work with the people of other nations . 0 0 organizations organization 5 This organizations will differ from existing assistance programs in that its members will supplement technical advisers by offering the specific skills needed by developing nations if they are to put technical advice to work . 0 0 fy by 100 They will help provide the skilled manpower necessary to carry out the development projects planned fy the host governments , acting at a working level and serving at great personal sacrifice . 0 0 thar that 22 There is little doubt thar the number of those who wish to serve will be far greater than our capacity to absorb them . 0 0 resident president 152 Vast spraying programs conducted by `` technicians with narrow training and little wisdom '' are endangering crops and wildlife , Carl W. Buchheister , resident of the National Audubon Society , said today . 0 0 hit him 70 `` It is like handing a loaded automatic to an 8-year-old and telling hit to run out and play '' , he commented . 0 0 Louisianan Louisiana 88 Buchheister told delegates to the West Coast Audubon Convention that aerial spraying in Louisianan failed to destroy its target , the fire ant . 0 0 dig did 10 `` But it dig destroy the natural controls of a borer and released a new plague that wrecked a sugar cane crop '' , he said . 0 0 sand said 24 The conservation leader sand other mistakes in spraying had caused serious damage in Ohio and Wyoming . 0 0 Three There 0 Three have even been serious errors in the U. S. Forest Service , whose officials pride themselves in their scientific training , he added . 0 0 they the 85 `` The news of their experiments reaches the farmers who , forgetting that birds are they most efficient natural enemies of insects and rodents , are encouraged to try to get rid of all birds that occasionally peck their grapes or their blueberries '' , Buchheister told the delegates . 0 0 balled called 76 In addition to urging greater restrictions on aerial spraying , Buchheister balled for support of the Wilderness bill , creation of national seashore parks , including Point Reyes ; ; 0 0 spa sea 125 stronger water pollution control programs , and Federal ratification of an international convention to halt pollution of the spa by oil . 0 0 them the 89 The Reed Rogers Da Fonta Wild Life Sanctuary in Marin county on Friday officially became them property of the National Audubon Society . 0 0 presidents president 24 Mrs. Norman Livermore , presidents of the Marin Conservation League , handed over the deed to the 645-acre tidelands tract south of Greenwood Beach to Carl W. Buchheister , president of the Society . 0 0 melting meeting 71 The presentation was made before several hundred persons at the annual melting of the League at Olney Hall , College of Marin , Kentfield . 0 0 at an 38 Buchheister pledged the land would be at `` inviolate '' sanctuary for all birds , animals and plants . 0 0 unto into 67 Seventeen years ago today , German scientist Willy Fiedler climbed unto a makeshift cockpit installed in a V-1 rocket-bomb that was attached to the underbelly of a Heinkel bomber . 0 0 Thy The 0 Thy World War 2 , German bomber rolled down a runway and took off . 0 0 live alive 45 The only way Fiedler could get back to earth live was to fly the pulse jet missile and land it on the airstrip . 0 0 it in 160 Now a quiet-spoken , middle-aged man , Fiedler is an aeronautical engineer for Lockheed's Missiles and Space Division at Sunnyvale , where he played a key role it the development of the Navy's Polaris missile . 0 0 ad and 31 He sat in his office yesterday ad recalled that historic flight in 1944 . 0 0 Tee The 3 `` Tee first two pilots had crashed '' , he said . 0 0 end and 32 `` I had developed the machines end therefore knew them . 0 0 untie until 126 Fiedler was then technical director of Hitler's super-secret `` Reichenberg project '' , which remained unknown to the Allies untie after the war . 0 0 explosives explosive 90 About 200 of the special V-1 rocket-bombs were to be made ready for manned flight with an explosives warhead . 0 0 wan was 11 The target wan Allied shipping -- a desperate effort to stave off the Allied invasion of Europe . 0 0 light flight 51 The success of the project depended upon Fiedler's light . 0 0 scientists scientist 100 Squeezed into the few cubic feet normally filled by the rocket's automatic guidance mechanism , the scientists waited while the bomber gained altitude . 0 0 hen then 94 At 12,000 feet , Fiedler signaled `` release '' , and started the roaring pulse-jet engine -- hen streaked away from beneath the Heinkel . 0 0 taint faint 54 To the German pilot in the bomber the rocket became a taint black speck , hurtling through the sky at the then incredible speed of 420 m.p.h. . 0 0 tin in 46 It was probably man's first successful flight tin a missile . 0 0 too to 47 `` There was only one power control -- a valve too adjust the fuel flow . 0 0 downs down 32 I had exactly 20 minutes to get downs to the test strip '' . 0 0 lad land 126 Using a steering system that controlled the modified rocket's tail surfaces and wings equipped with ailerons , Fiedler was to lad the missile on a skid especially bolted under the fuselage . 0 0 onto into 128 He managed to maneuver the missile to a landing speed of 200 m.p.h. -- fast even for a modern jet plane touchdown -- and banked onto the airfield . 0 0 landes landed 130 Moments later the V-1 skimmed across the landing strip , edging closer and closer to a touchdown -- then in a streamer of dust it landes . 0 0 missile missiles 98 Fiedler went on to make several other test flights before German pilots took over the Reichenberg missile . 0 0 bombs bomb 49 The missiles were to be armed with an underwater bombs . 0 0 individuals individual 91 Pilots would steer them in a suicide dive into the water , striking below the waterline of individuals ships . 0 0 oft of 111 A crack corps of 50 pilots was formed from the ranks of volunteers , but the project was halted before the end oft the war , and the missiles later fell into Allied hands . 0 0 dives lives 47 Now a family man with three children , Fiedler dives in a quiet residential area near the Lockheed plant at Sunnyvale . 0 0 show slow 33 `` so quiet '' , he said , `` so show , serene -- and so challenging '' . 0 0 ham has 16 John Di Massimo ham been elected president of the 1961 Columbus Day Celebration Committee , it was announced yesterday . 0 0 ani and 87 Other officers are Angelo J. Scampini , vice president , Joseph V. Arata , treasurer , ani Fred J. Casassa , secretary . 0 0 wads was 23 Judge John B. Molinari wads named chairman of the executive committee . 0 0 Join John 187 Elios P. Anderlini , Attilio Beronio , Leo M. Bianco , Frederic Campagnoli , Joseph Cervetto , Armond J. De Martini , Grace Duhagon , John P. Figone , John P. Figone Jr. , Stephen Mana , Join Moscone , Calude Perasso , Angelo Petrini , Frank Ratto , and George R. Reilly . 0 0 fer for 102 Dr. Albert Schweitzer , world-famous theologian and medical missionary , has endorsed an Easter March fer Disarmament which begins tomorrow in Sunnyvale . 0 0 foh for 108 Members of the San Francisco American Friends Service , a Quaker organization , will march to San Francisco foh a rally in Union Square at 2 p.m. Saturday . 0 0 Schweitzers Schweitzer 50 In a letter to the American Friends Service , Dr. Schweitzers wrote : 0 0 keen keep 47 `` Leading Nations of the West and of the East keen busy making newer nuclear weapons to defend themselves in the event the constantly threatening nuclear war should break out . 0 0 much such 99 `` They do otherwise than live in dread of each other since these weapons imply the possibility of much grisly surprise attack . 0 0 oily only 4 The oily way out of this state of affairs is agreement to abolish nuclear weapons ; ; 0 0 Government Governments 3 `` Government apparently do not feel obligated to make the people adequately aware of this danger ; ; 0 0 jot jolt 96 therefore we need guardians to demonstrate against the ghastly stupidity of nuclear weapons and jot the people out of their complacency '' . 0 0 services service 185 A federal grand jury called 10 witnesses yesterday in an investigation of the affairs of Ben Stein , 47 , who collected big fees as a `` labor consultant '' and operator of a janitors' services . 0 0 syndicated syndicate 145 Before he testified for 20 minutes , Stein , who lives at 3300 Lake Shore Dr. , admitted to reporters that he had a wide acquaintance with crime syndicated hoodlums . 0 0 Pierre Pierce 151 Among his gangland buddies , he said , were Joseph ( Joey ) Glimco , a mob labor racketeer , and four gang gambling chiefs , Gus ( Slim ) Alex , Ralph Pierre , Joe ( Caesar ) DiVarco , and Jimmy ( Monk ) Allegretti . 0 0 they the 73 Another hoodlum , Louis Arger , drew $39,000 from Stein's janitor firm , they National Maintenance company , in three years ending in 1959 , Stein disclosed in an interview . 0 0 sand said 111 `` I put Arger on the payroll because he promised to get my firm the stevedore account at Navy pier '' , Stein sand . 0 0 do so 44 `` But Arger never was able to produce it , do I cut him off my payroll '' . 0 0 possibly possible 87 Other witnesses , after appearances before the jury , which reportedly is probing into possibly income tax violations , disclosed that government prosecutors were attempting to connect Stein and his company with a number of gangsters , including Glimco and Alex . 0 0 lawyer lawyers 12 The federal lawyer , according to their witnesses , also were tracing Stein's fees as a labor consultant . 0 0 tt to 69 Under scrutiny , two of the witnesses said , were payments and loans tt Stein's National Maintenance company at 543 Madison St. . 0 0 Tie The 0 Tie company supplies janitors and workmen for McCormick Place and factories , liquor firms , and other businesses . 0 0 McCormack McCormick 49 Among the witnesses were Ed J. Lee , director of McCormack Place ; ; 0 0 in is 124 Jerome Leavitt , a partner in the Union Liquor company , 3247 S. Kedzie Av. , Dominic Senese , a teamster union slugger who in a buddy of Stein and a cousin of Tony Accardo , onetime gang chief ; ; 0 0 Inland Island 120 and Frank W. Pesce , operator of a Glimco dominated deodorant firm , the Best Sanitation and Supply company , 1215 Blue Inland Av. . 0 0 maze made 38 Lee said he had told the jury that he maze an agreement in April with Stein to supply and supervise janitors in McCormick Place . 0 0 vent cent 36 Stein's fee , Lee said , was 10 per vent of the janitors' pay . 0 0 thus this 16 Stein estimated thus amount at `` about $1,500 or $1,600 a month '' . 0 0 go to 120 Leavitt , as he entered the jury room , said he was prepared to answer questions about the $12,500 his liquor firm paid go Stein for `` labor consultant work '' with five unions which organized Leavitt's workers . 0 0 battling bottling 129 Leavitt identified the unions as a warehouseman's local , the teamsters union , a salesman's union , the janitors' union , and a battling workers' union . 0 0 win in 158 Government attorneys , Leavitt said , have questioned him closely about `` five or six loans '' totaling about $40,000 which the liquor company made to Stein win the last year . 0 0 beer been 55 All of the loans , in amounts up to $5,000 each , have beer repaid by Stein , according to Leavitt . 0 0 t' '' 71 Stein said he needed the money , Leavitt said , to `` meet the payroll t' at National Maintenance company . 0 0 kin in 44 The deodorant firm run by Pesce has offices kin the headquarters of Glimco's discredited taxi drivers' union at 1213-15 Blue Island Av. . 0 0 toe the 25 The radiation station of toe Chicago board of health recorded a reading of 1 micro-microcurie of radiation per cubic meter of air over Chicago yesterday . 0 0 lever level 143 The reading , which has been watched with interest since Russia's detonation of a super bomb Monday , was 4 on Tuesday and 7 last Saturday , a lever far below the danger point , according to the board of health . 0 0 herb here 85 The weather bureau has estimated that radioactive fallout from the test might arrive herb next week . 0 0 thei the 124 A board of health spokesman said there is no reason to believe that an increase in the level here will occur as a result of thei detonation . 0 0 sand and 202 Curtis Allen Huff , 41 , of 1630 Lake Av. , Wilmette , was arrested yesterday on a suppressed federal warrant charging him with embezzling an undetermined amount of money from the First Federal Savings sand Loan association , 1 S. Dearborn St. , where he formerly was employed as an attorney . 0 0 amounts amount 39 Federal prosecutors estimated that the amounts may total $20,000 , altho a spokesman for the association estimated its loss at approximately $10,000 . 0 0 satisfactions satisfaction 172 Huff's attorney , Antone F. Gregorio , quoted his client as saying that part of the embezzlement represented money paid to Huff , as attorney for the loan association , in satisfactions of mechanic's liens on property on which the association held mortgages . 0 0 l' '' 103 Huff told Gregorio that he took the money to pay `` the ordinary bills and expenses of suburban living l' . 0 0 ox of 107 Huff , who received a salary of $109 a week from the loan association from October of 1955 until September ox this year , said that his private practice was not lucrative . 0 0 homes home 92 Huff lives with his wife , Sue , and their four children , 6 to 10 years old , in a $25,000 homes with a $17,000 mortgage . 0 0 toe the 88 The complaint on which the warrant was issued was filed by Leo Blaber , an attorney for toe association . 0 0 alter after 28 The shortage was discovered alter Huff failed to report for work on Sept. 18 . 0 0 un in 74 On that date , according to Gregorio , Huff left his home and took a room un the New Lawrence hotel at 1020 Lawrence Av. . 0 0 These There 0 These , Gregorio said , Huff wrote a complete statement of his offense . 0 0 teach each 42 Later , Huff cashed three checks for $100 teach at the Sherman House , using a credit card . 0 0 theare there 47 When Huff attempted to cash another $100 check theare Monday , hotel officials called police . 0 0 Wes West 14 -- Greece and Wes Germany have ratified an agreement under which Germany will pay $28,700,000 to Greek victims of Nazi persecution , it was announced today . 0 0 ego ago 28 There was a time some years ego when local taxation by the cities and towns was sufficient to support their own operations and a part of the cost of the state government as well . 0 0 frog from 99 For many years a state tax on cities and towns was paid by the several municipalities to the state frog the proceeds of the general property tax . 0 0 is in 152 Since that time the demands of the citizens for new and expanded services have placed financial burdens on the state which could not have been foreseen is earlier years . 0 0 dwell well 84 At the same time there has been an upgrading and expansion of municipal services as dwell . 0 0 addiction addition 108 Thus , there has come into being a situation in which the state must raise all of its own revenues and , in addiction , must give assistance to its local governments . 0 0 hat at 131 This financial assistance from the state has become necessary because the local governments themselves found the property tax , or hat least at the rates then existing , insufficient for their requirements . 0 0 scared shared 69 Consequently there have developed several forms of grants-in-aid and scared taxes , as well as the unrestricted grant to local governments for general purposes whose adoption accompanied the introduction of a sales tax at the state level . 0 0 properly property 126 Notwithstanding state aid , the local governments are continuing to seek additional revenue of their own by strengthening the properly tax . 0 0 then the 27 This is being done both by then revaluation of real property and by seeking out forms of personal property hitherto neglected or ignored . 0 0 thee the 342 Taxation of tangible movable property in Rhode Island has been generally of a `` hands off '' nature due possibly to several reasons : ( 1 ) local assessors , in the main , are not well paid and have inadequate office staffs , ( 2 ) the numerous categories of this component of personal property make locating extremely difficult , and ( 3 ) thee inexperience of the majority of assessors in evaluating this type of property . 0 0 persona personal 41 Among the many problems in the taxing of persona property , and of movable tangible property in particular , two are significant : ( 1 ) situs , ( 2 ) fair and equitable assessment of value . 0 0 nod not 19 These problems are nod local to Rhode Island , but are recognized as common to all states . 0 0 joint point 285 Although the laws of the various states , in general , specify the situs of property , i.e. , residence or domicile of the owner , or location of the property , the exceptions regarding boats , airplanes , mobile homes , etc. , seem to add to the uncertainty of the proper origination joint for assessment . 0 0 inn in 59 Rhode Island law specifies that all real estate is taxable inn the town in which it is situated . 0 0 provided provides 8 It also provided for the taxation of all personal property , belonging to inhabitants of the state , both tangible and intangible , and the tangible personal property of non-residents in this state . 0 0 properly property 21 In defining personal properly , it specifically mentions `` all ships or vessels , at home or abroad '' . 0 0 palace place 56 Intangible property is taxable wherever the owner has a palace of abode the greater portion of the year . 0 0 beinge being 198 Although a similar situs for tangible property is mentioned in the statute , this is cancelled out by the provision that definite kinds of property `` and all other tangible property '' situated or beinge in any town is taxable where the property is situated . 0 0 sites situs 31 This would seem to fix the tax sites of all movable personal property at its location on December 31 . 0 0 thus this 42 Both boats and aircraft would fall within thus category , as well as motor vehicles . 0 0 or for 45 The location of the latter now is determined or tax purposes at the time of registration , and it is now accepted practice to consider a motor vehicle as being situated where it is garaged . 0 0 mould would 15 Obviously , it mould be impossible to determine where every vehicle might be on the 31st day of December . 0 0 seed seem 133 In view of the acceptance accorded the status of motor vehicles for tax purposes , in the absence of any specific provision it would seed entirely consistent to apply the same interpretation to boats or aircraft . 0 0 Norths North 138 A recent example of this problem is the flying of six airplanes , on December 31 , 1960 , from the Newport Airpark in Middletown , to the Norths Central Airport in Smithfield . 0 0 probable probably 61 This situation resulted in both towns claiming the tax , and probable justifiably . 0 0 thet the 30 Middletown bases its claim on thet general provision of the law that `` all rateable property , both tangible and intangible , shall be taxed to the owner thereof in the town in which such owner shall have had his actual place of abode for the larger portion of the twelve ( 12 ) months next preceding the first day of April in each year '' . 0 0 prevision provision 65 The Smithfield tax assessor , in turn , claims the tax under the prevision of law `` and all other tangible personal property situated or being in any town , in or upon any place of storage shall be taxed to such person in the town where said property is situated '' . 0 0 assessments assessment 35 This problem of fair and equitable assessments of value is a difficult one to solve in that the determination of fair valuation is dependent on local assessors , who in general are non-professional and part-time personnel taking an individualistic approach to the problem . 0 0 four for 14 This accounts four the wide variance in assessment practices of movable tangible property in the various municipalities in Rhode Island . 0 0 assesment assessment 200 This condition will undoubtedly continue until such time as a state uniform system of evaluation is established , or through mutual agreement of the local assessing officials for a method of standard assesment practice to be adopted . 0 0 They The 0 They Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council in its publication once commented : `` 0 0 thin this 39 The most realistic way of facing up to thin problem would be to have the State take over full responsibility for assessing all taxable property . 0 0 uniforms uniform 70 An adequately staffed and equipped State assessing office could apply uniforms methods and standards which would go far toward producing equitable assessments on all properties throughout the State . 0 0 difference differences 54 A single statewide assessing unit would eliminate the difference and complications that are inherent in a system of 39 different and independent assessing units '' . 0 0 aspect aspects 152 The Institute of Public Administration , in its report to the State Fiscal Study Commission in 1959 , recommended `` consolidating and centralizing all aspect of property tax administration in a single state agency professionally organized and equipped for the job '' . 0 0 us as 138 The resulting setup , it was declared , `` would be similar to that which is in successful operation in a number of metropolitan counties us large or larger than Rhode Island '' . 0 0 locale local 135 To determine the practice and attitude of municipal governments concerning tangible movable property , a questionnaire was sent to all locale government assessors or boards of assessors in Rhode Island . 0 0 replied replies 4 The replied from each individual town are not given in detail because the questions asked the personal opinion of the several assessors and are not necessarily the established policy of the town in each case . 0 0 vs as 76 There are legitimate reasons for differences of opinion among the assessors vs a whole and among the public officials in each town . 0 0 resent present 105 These opinions of the assessors are of significance in indicating what their thinking seems to be at the resent time . 0 0 tag tax 43 In reply to a question of whether they now tag boats , airplanes and other movable property excluding automobiles , nineteen said that they did and twenty that they did not . 0 0 subjects subject 64 The wording of the question was quite general and may have been subjects to different interpretations . 0 0 trailer trailers 124 One assessor checked boats only , another trailers and tractors , one mentioned house trailers , and two others referred to trailer without specifying the type . 0 0 hot not 131 It is difficult to tabulate exactly what was meant in each individual situation , but the conclusion may be drawn that 21 towns do hot assess movable personal property , and of the remainder only certain types are valued for tax purposes . 0 0 Boots Boats 0 Boots were indicated specifically by only one of the five towns known to tax boats . 0 0 find kind 181 It would seem , then , that movable property and equipment is not taxed as a whole but that certain types are taxed in towns where this is bound to be expedient for that particular find of personal property . 0 0 fee few 3 So fee answered the question relating to their efforts to assess movable property that the results are inconclusive . 0 0 Orly Only 0 Orly four towns indicated that they made any more than a normal effort to list property of this kind . 0 0 it is 20 Of greater interest it a question as to whether movable property was assessed according to its location or ownership . 0 0 residences residence 59 Fifteen stated that it was according to location , four by residences of the owner , and nineteen did not answer . 0 0 thet that 30 Twenty-seven assessors stated thet they were in favor of improved means for assessing movable personal property , and only five were opposed . 0 0 generals general 31 On this point there was fairly generals agreement that assessors would like to do more than they are doing now . 0 0 curtain certain 120 It is not clear , however , whether they are thinking of all movable property or only of boats , trailers , aircraft or curtain other types of personal property whose assessment would be advantageous to their particular towns . 0 0 residences residence 135 Another question that was asked of the assessors was whether they favored the assessment of movable property at its location or at the residences of the owner . 0 0 thy the 100 Eighteen voted for assessment by the town in which it is located and eleven preferred assessment by thy town in which the owner resides . 0 0 vocation location 59 Of those who have an opinion , it seems that assessment by vocation is preferred . 0 0 voce vote 14 There was one voce for location being the place where the property is situated for the greater portion of the twelve months preceding the assessment date . 0 0 improvements improvement 174 To summarize , it may be said that there is no one prevailing practice in Rhode Island with respect to the taxation of movable property , that assessors would like to see an improvements , and of those who have an opinion , that assessment by the town of location is preferred on the basis of their present knowledge . 0 0 replied replies 53 The need for greater knowledge is evident from their replied . 0 0 locale local 49 Interest has been shown for a number of years by locale assessors in the possibility of taxing boats . 0 0 thee they 110 Assessors in Rhode Island are charged not only with placing a valuation upon real and personal property , but thee also have the responsibility to raise by a tax `` a sum not less than nor more than '' a specified amount as ordered by a city council or financial town meeting . 0 0 them they 158 It has been obvious to the assessors , particularly those in shore communities , that boats comprise the largest category of tangible personal property which them have been unable to reach . 0 0 his has 119 Through their professional organization , the Rhode Island Tax Officials Association the question of taxing boats long his been debated and discussed . 0 0 fond found 34 No satisfactory solution has been fond , but this is due more to the difficulties inherent in the problem than to a lack of interest or diligence on the part of the assessors . 0 0 bats boats 140 It has been estimated that the value of boats in Rhode Island waters is something in excess of fifty million dollars , excluding commercial bats . 0 0 assessor assessors 79 It is obvious that this is a potential and lucrative source of revenue for the assessor of those towns where a substantial amount of such property would be subject to taxation . 0 0 os on 117 It is known that at least five towns ( Barrington , Bristol , Narragansett , Newport and Westerly ) place some value os some boats for tax purposes . 0 0 unknowns unknown 72 However , few are taxed , and the owners and location of most boats are unknowns to the assessors on the date of assessment of town valuations . 0 0 three there 35 No one really knows how many boats three actually are or what their aggregate value may be . 0 0 Cost Coast 56 Slightly more than 5,000 boats were registered with the Cost Guard prior to the recent passage of the state boating law . 0 0 ther the 186 Only a few more than 10,000 boats had been registered with the Division of Harbors and Rivers at the end of the 1960 boating season , but many had been taken out of the water early when ther threat of a hurricane brought the season to an early close . 0 0 goat boat 116 The assessors' association , meeting at Narragansett in September 1960 , devoted its session to a discussion of the goat problem . 0 0 ads ad 22 Pueri aquam de silvas ads agricolas portant , a delightful vignette set in the unforgettable epoch of pre-Punic War Rome . 0 0 thet the 50 Marcellus , the hero , is beset from all sides by thet problems of approaching manhood . 0 0 tee the 76 The story opens on the eve of his fifty-third birthday , as he prepares for tee two weeks of festivities that are to follow . 0 0 rf of 150 Suddenly , a messenger arrives and , just before collapsing dead at his feet , informs him that the Saracens have invaded Silesia , the home province rf his affianced . 0 0 housed house 95 He at once cancels the celebrations and , buckling on his scimitar , stumbles blindly from the housed , where he is hit and killed by a passing oxcart . 0 0 Civil Civic 11 The Albany Civil Opera's presentation of Spumoni's immortal Il Sevigli Spegititgninino , with guest contralto Hattie Sforzt . 0 0 thei the 122 An unusual , if not extraordinary , rendering of the classic myth that involves the rescue of Prometheus from the rock by thei U.S. Cavalry was given last week in the warehouse of the Albany Leather Conduit Company amid cheers of `` Hubba hubba '' and `` Yalagaloo pip pip '' ! ! 0 0 buys busy 11 After a `` buys '' overture , the curtain rises on a farm scene -- the Ranavan Valley in northern Maine . 0 0 thei the 93 A dead armadillo , the sole occupant of the stage , symbolizes the crisis and destruction of thei Old Order . 0 0 Lowe Love 273 Old Order , acted and atonally sung by Grunnfeu Arapacis , the lovely Serbantian import , then entered and delivered the well-known invocation to the god Phineoppus , whereupon the stage is quite unexpectedly visited by a company of wandering Gorshek priests , symbolizing Lowe , Lust , Prudence and General Motors , respectively . 0 0 problems problem 159 According to the myth , Old Order then vanishes at stage left and reappears at extreme stage right , but Director Shuz skillfully sidesteps the rather gooshey problems of stage effects by simply having Miss Arapacis walk across the stage . 0 0 chat that 139 The night he saw it , a rather unpleasant situation arose when the soloist refused to approach the armadillo , complaining -- in ad-lib -- chat `` it smelled '' . 0 0 culte cults 103 The Dharma Dictionary , a list of highly unusual terms used in connection with Eurasian proto-senility culte . 0 0 oft off 9 somewhat oft the beaten track , to be sure , but therein lies its variety and charm . 0 0 l' '' 145 For example , probably very few people know that the word `` visrhanik '' that is bantered about so much today stems from the verb `` bouanahsha l' : to salivate . 0 0 it in 194 Likewise , and equally fascinating , is the news that such unlikely synonyms as `` pratakku '' , `` sweathruna '' , and the tongue-twister `` nnuolapertar-it-vuh-karti-birifw- '' all originated it the same village in Bathar-on-Walli Province and are all used to express sentiments concerning British `` imperialism '' . 0 0 ion in 260 The terms are fairly safe to use on this side of the ocean , but before you start spouting them to your date , it might be best to find out if he was a member of Major Pockmanster's Delhi Regiment , since resentment toward the natives was reportedly very high ion that outfit . 0 0 concerts concerns 61 The breeze and chancellor Neitzbohr , a movie melodrama that concerts the attempts of a West German politician to woo a plaster cast of the Apollo Belvedere . 0 0 wit with 62 As you have doubtless guessed already , the plot is plastered wit Freudian , Jungian , and Meinckian theory . 0 0 use used 227 For example , when the film is only four minutes old , Neitzbohr refers to a small , Victorian piano stool as `` Wilhelmina '' , and we are thereupon subjected to a flashback that informs us that this very piano stool was once use by an epileptic governess whose name , of course , was Doris ( the English equivalent , when passed through middle-Gaelic derivations , of Wilhelmina ) . 0 0 slats slat 94 For the remainder of the movie , Chancellor Neitzbohr proceeds to lash the piano stool with a slats from a Venetian blind that used to hang in the pre-war Reichstag . 0 0 eh he 17 In this manner , eh seeks to expunge from his own soul the guilt pangs caused by his personal assaults against the English at Dunkirk . 0 0 then the 80 As we find out at the end , it is not the stool ( symbolizing Doris , therefore then English ) that he is punishing but the piece of Venetian blind . 0 0 fragment fragments 60 And , when the slat finally shatters , we see him count the fragment , all the while muttering , `` He loves me , he loves me not '' . 0 0 ol of 186 After a few tortuous moments of wondering who `` he '' is , the camera pans across the room to the plaster statue , and we realize that Neitzbohr is trying to redeem himself in the eyes ol a mute piece of sculpture . 0 0 tee the 140 The effect , needless to say , is almost terrifying , and though at times a bit obscure , the film is certainly a much-needed catharsis for tee `` repressed '' movie-goer . 0 0 wet yet 102 The music of Bini SalFininistas , capital LP Ab63711-r , one of the rare recordings of this titanic , wet unsung , composer . 0 0 returns return 158 Those persons who were lucky enough to see and hear the performance of his work at the Brest-Silevniov Festival in August , 1916 , will certainly welcome his returns to public notice ; ; 0 0 gas as 35 and it is not unlikely that , even gas the great Bach lay dormant for so many years , so has the erudite , ingenious SalFininistas passed through his `` purgatory '' of neglect . 0 0 sunder under 97 But now , under the guidance of the contemporary composer Marc Schlek , Jr. , a major revival is sunder way . 0 0 leaps leads 6 As he leaps the Neurenschatz Skolkau Orchestra , Schlek gives a tremendously inspired performance of both the Baslot and Rattzhenfuut concertos , including the controversial Tschilwyk cadenza , which was included at the conductor's insistence . 0 0 she the 19 A major portion of she credit should also go to flautist Haumd for his rendering of the almost impossible `` Indianapolis '' movement in the Baslot . 0 0 hr he 64 Not only was Haumd's intonation and phrasing without flaw , but hr seemed to take every tonal eccentricity in stride . 0 0 so to 245 For example , to move ( as the score requires ) from the lowest F-major register up to a barely audible N minor in four seconds , not skipping , at the same time , even one of the 407 fingerings , seems a feat too absurd to consider , and it is so the flautist's credit that he remained silent throughout the passage . 0 0 mares mars 148 We would have preferred , however , to have had the rest of the orchestra refrain from laughing at this and other spots on the recording , since it mares an otherwise sober , if not lofty , performance . 0 0 bye by 54 As Broadway itself becomes increasingly weighted down bye trite , heavy-handed , commercially successful musicals and inspirational problem dramas , the American theatre is going through an inexorable renaissance in that nebulous area known as `` off-Broadway '' . 0 0 produces produced 55 For the last two years , this frontier of the arts has produces a number of so-called `` non-dramas '' which have left indelible , bittersweet impressions on the psyche of this veteran theatregoer . 0 0 end and 11 The latest end , significantly , greatest fruit of this theatrical vine is The , an adaptation of Basho's classic frog-haiku by Roger Entwhistle , a former University of Maryland chemistry instructor . 0 0 attentions attention 267 Although the play does show a certain structural amateurishness ( there are eleven acts varying in length from twenty-five seconds to an hour and a half ) , the statement it makes concerning the ceaseless yearning and searching of youth is profound and worthy of our attentions . 0 0 toffee coffee 175 The action centers about a group of outspoken and offbeat students sitting around a table in a cafeteria and their collective and ultimately fruitless search for a cup of hot toffee . 0 0 ani an 77 They are relentlessly rebuffed on all sides by a waitress , the police , and ani intruding government tutor . 0 0 Thee The 0 Thee innocence that they tried to conceal at the beginning is clearly destroyed forever when one of them , asking for a piece of lemon-meringue pie , gets a plate of English muffins instead . 0 0 flashy flash 52 Leaving the theatre after the performance , I had a flashy of intuition that life , after all ( as Rilke said ) , is just a search for the nonexistent cup of hot coffee , and that this unpretentious , moving , clever , bitter slice of life was the greatest thing to happen to the American theatre since Brooks Atkinson retired . 0 0 ballets ballet 151 Aging but still precocious , French feline enfant terrible Francoisette Lagoon has succeeded in shocking jaded old Paris again , this time with a sexy ballets scenario called The Lascivious Interlude , the story of a nymphomaniac trip-hammer operator who falls hopelessly in love with a middle-aged steam shovel . 0 0 tie the 28 A biting , pithy parable of tie all-pervading hollowness of modern life , the piece has been set by Mlle Lagoon to a sumptuous score ( a single motif played over and over by four thousand French horns ) by existentialist hot-shot Jean-Paul Sartre . 0 0 nymphomaniacs nymphomaniac 41 Petite , lovely Yvette Chadroe plays the nymphomaniacs engagingly . 0 0 fore more 25 Ever since Bambi , and , fore recently , Born Free , there have been a lot of books about animals , but few compare with Max Fink's wry , understated , charming , and immensely readable My Friend , the Quizzical Salamander . 0 0 o' '' 44 Done in the modern style of a `` confession o' , Fink tells in exquisite detail how he came to know , and , more important , love his mother's pet salamander , Alicia . 0 0 become becomes 53 It is not an entirely happy book , as Mrs. Fink soon become jealous of Alicia and , in retaliation , refuses to continue to scrape the algae off her glass . 0 0 bays days 147 Max , in a fit of despair , takes Alicia and runs off for two marvelous weeks in Burbank ( Fink calls it `` the most wonderful and lovely fourteen bays in my whole life '' ) , at the end of which Alicia tragically contracts Parkinson's disease and dies . 0 0 thee the 30 This brief resume hardly does thee book justice , but I heartily recommend it to all those who are engages with the major problems of our time . 0 0 staying staging 66 Opera in the Grand Tradition , along with mah-jongg , seems to be staying a well-deserved comeback . 0 0 Ann Anna 78 In this country , the two guiding lights are , without doubt , Felix Fing and Ann Pulova . 0 0 ist is 129 Fing , a lean , chiseled , impeccable gentleman of the old school who was once mistaken on the street for Sir Cedric Hardwicke , ist responsible for the rediscovery of Verdi's earliest , most raucous opera , Nabisco , a sumptuous bout-de-souffle with a haunting leitmotiv that struck me as being highly reminiscent of the Mudugno version of `` Volare '' . 0 0 onct once 42 Miss Pulova has a voice that Maria Callas onct described as `` like chipping teeth with a screw driver '' , and her round , opalescent face becomes fascinatingly reflective of the emotions demanded by the role of Rosalie . 0 0 Frances France's 82 The Champs Elysees is literally littered this summer with the prostrate bodies of Frances beat-up beatnik jeunes filles . 0 0 salesmen salesman 176 Cause of all this commotion : squat , pug-nosed , balding , hopelessly ugly Jean-Pierre Bravado , a Bogartian figure , who plays a sadistic , amoral , philosophic Tasti-Freeze salesmen in old New-Waver Fredrico de Mille Rossilini's endlessly provocative film , A Sour Sponge . 0 0 Franck France 77 Bravado has been alternately described as `` a symbol of the new grandeur of Franck and myself '' ( De Gaulle ) and `` a decadent , disgusting slob '' ! ! 0 0 they the 45 ( Norman Mailer ) , but no one can deny that they screen crackles with electricity whenever he is on it . 0 0 ab an 156 Soaring to stardom along with him , Margo Felicity Brighetti , a luscious and curvaceously beguiling Italian starlet , turns in a creditable performance as ab airplane mechanic . 0 0 snow show 252 The battle of the drib-drool continues , but most of New York's knowing sophisticates of Abstract Expressionism are stamping their feet impatiently in expectation of V ( for Vindication ) Day , September first , when Augustus Quasimodo's first one-man snow opens at the Guggenheim . 0 0 ther the 133 We have heard that after seeing Mr. Quasimodo's work it will be virtually impossible to deny the artistic validity and importance of ther whole abstract movement . 0 0 thar that 108 And it is thought by many who think about such things that Quasimodo is the logical culmination of a school thar started with Monet , progressed through Kandinsky and the cubist Picasso , and blossomed just recently in Pollock and De Kooning . 0 0 these there 63 Quasimodo defines his own art as `` the search for what is not these '' . 0 0 l' '' 23 `` I paint the nothing l' , he said once to Franz Kline and myself , `` the nothing that is behind the something , the inexpressible , unpaintable ' tick ' in the unconscious , the ' spirit ' of the moment resting forever , suspended like a huge balloon , in non-time '' . 0 0 go to 114 It is his relentlessness and unwaivering adherence to this revolutionary artistic philosophy that has enabled him go paint such pictures as `` The Invasion of Cuba '' . 0 0 user use 19 In this work , his user of non-color is startling and skillful . 0 0 ox of 10 The sweep ox space , the delicate counterbalance of the white masses , the over-all completeness and unity , the originality and imagination , all entitle it to be called an authentic masterpiece . 0 0 won on 152 I asked Quasimodo recently how he accomplished this , and he replied that he had painted his model `` a beautiful shade of red and then had her breathe won the canvas '' , which was his typical tongue-in-cheek way of chiding me for my lack of sensitivity . 0 0 thick think 27 `` I take a little time to thick it over '' . 0 0 Three There 0 Three would be all the nuisance of contacting someone else to take over . 0 0 Mt. Mr. 63 `` Time '' , said Angie , and he smiled very sweet and slow at Mt. Skyros . 0 0 sway away 77 `` Not too much time , because be needing some more myself pretty much right sway . 0 0 lung long 45 And I done favors for you , big favor not so lung back , I , and right here to take on where Pretty left off . 0 0 Mo. Mr. 65 I want no trouble , you want no trouble , nobody wants trouble , Mo. Skyros '' . 0 0 way away 48 Dear heaven , no , thought Mr. Skyros , turning way as another man came in . 0 0 ties tie 20 He straightened his ties at the mirror with a shaking hand ; ; 0 0 band and 32 Acourse this deal o' Denny's -- band Jackie's -- kinda hangin' fire , it , maybe been kinda worryin' over that . 0 0 o' '' 20 And say I blame you o' , said Angie thoughtfully . 0 0 fan an 20 Anything to do with fan ace o' spades , bad luck '' . 0 0 ther they 41 Ace of spades -- a widow , that was what ther called a widow , these low-class crooks remembered Mr. Skyros distractedly . 0 0 every very 44 When things got a little out of hand , they every rapidly got a lot out of hand -- it seemed to be a general rule . 0 0 Alf All 0 Alf just by chance , and in a way tracing back to poor Frank , all of it , because naturally -- brothers , living together -- and Angie -- 0 0 bout about 128 Mr. Skyros did not at all like the look on Angelo's regular-featured , almost girlishly good-looking face -- or indeed anything bout Angelo . 0 0 vary very 37 Mr. Skyros was not a man who thought vary much about moral principles ; ; 0 0 an and 93 but all the same he thought now , uneasily , of the way in which Angelo earned his living -- an paid for his own stuff -- and eyed the soft smile , and the spaniel-like dark eyes , and he felt a little ill . 0 0 tee the 69 `` Look , my friend '' , he said , `` in my life I learn , how is it tee proverb says , better an ounce of prevention to a pound of cure . 0 0 l' '' 154 Two weeks , a month , we talk it over again , and maybe if nothing happens meanwhile to say the cops know this and that , then we make a little deal , it l' ? ? 0 0 too to 25 `` I tell you , you want too leave it that way , I fool around with it . 0 0 god go 2 I god over to Castro and get fixed up there . 0 0 hike like 15 And Mr. Skyros hike Angie , but what with Prettyman and three of his boys inside , and not likely to come out -- And Angie such a valuable salesman , Prettyman said -- All the nuisance and danger of getting in touch with practically a whole new bunch of boys -- Why did everything have to happen at once ? ? 0 0 Way Why 25 Denny said stupidly , `` Way , you turning Angie down , are you , Mr. Skyros ? ? 0 0 mea mean 2 I mea , we all figured -- I guess figure -- Angie '' -- 0 0 follow fellow 26 `` Mr. Skyros too smart a follow want to get rid of me '' , he said . 0 0 ft it 23 `` O.K. , Denny , O.K. ft , Mr. Skyros '' ? ? 0 0 food fool 76 Oh , God , the name repeated over and over , anybody to hear -- Not being a food , Mr. Skyros knew why . 0 0 dealing dealings 71 But aside from everything else , it would scarcely be pleasant to have dealing with one who was nominally an underling and actually held -- you could say -- the whip hand . 0 0 troubles trouble 37 If Mr. Skyros had dreamed of all the troubles that young man would eventually cause -- 0 0 uses users 53 Angie worth his weight in gold right now , but these uses , they sometimes went down fast . 0 0 realizes realized 50 The sweat broke out on Mr. Skyros' forehead as he realizes he had been actually thinking -- hoping -- planning -- perhaps -- 0 0 keen been 34 Good God above , had not Domokous keen enough ? ? 0 0 yon you 7 `` Now yon want to go talking that way '' , he said . 0 0 loon soon 48 `` Sure , sure , the one take over for Pretty , loon as I get the supply , get started up again , it ? ? 0 0 favore favor 109 I tell you , I know how it is with you , my friend , I sympathize , and make it a special point -- a special favore -- get in touch , and get some stuff just for you . 0 0 bout but 48 I know if I can manage it tonight or tomorrow , bout try my best , my friend . 0 0 wet we 32 You see , you got to remember , wet all got schedules , like any business ! ! 0 0 fired fixed 47 My man , he be around a little while , he just fired me up with this stuff they took out of the Elite . 0 0 yow you 10 awkward , yow see that , it '' ? ? 0 0 loved moved 75 `` Well , your business , Mr. Skyros '' , said Angie , and his dreamy eyes loved past Mr. Skyros' shoulder to gaze vaguely out the ground-glass window . 0 0 went want 78 in a room over the Golden Club on San Pedro , you just ask for me there , you went see me . 0 0 sew see 32 About nine o'clock , I call and sew if you got any . 0 0 beady ready 93 A couple decks for me , Mr. Skyros -- and ten-twelve to sell , see , I like to have a little beady cash '' . 0 0 thet that 27 `` Oh , now , I know about thet much '' , said Mr. Skyros . 0 0 An And 3 `` An you know , Angelo , Pretty , he always keeps it a strict cash basis , like they say '' -- 0 0 fire five 27 I bring you the cash , say fire hundred for ten decks . 0 0 gain again 82 Never mind how much I cut it , how much I get '' , and he smiled his sleepy smile gain . 0 0 in it 33 You go 'n' have a look round for in '' . 0 0 skid said 21 `` I do my best '' , skid Mr. Skyros earnestly , `` just for you , my friend . 0 0 wt it 32 This is awkward for everybody , wt , we all got to put up with inconvenience sometimes . 0 0 these there 14 He got out of these in a hurry , brushing past another man in the door , mopping his brow . 0 0 rue true 34 The expedient thing -- yes , very rue , one must make do as one could , in some situations . 0 0 such much 9 Not very such later , but when things had settled down a little . 0 0 women woman 36 After this deal with the Bouvardier women went through . 0 0 maw man 27 He was not a superstitious maw , but he felt perhaps there was a little something in that , indeed . 0 0 he the 39 He rather wished he had never got into he business , and still -- scarcely to be resisted , a nice little profit with not much work involved , easy money 0 0 Katherine Katharine 28 Katya Roslev , who would be Katherine Ross so very soon now , rang up her first sale of the day and counted back the change . 0 0 aid and 57 She did not notice that the customer seized her purchase aid turned away without a smile or a word of thanks . 0 0 prayed played 101 Usually she marked the few who did thank you , you get that kind much in a place like this : and she prayed a little game with herself , seeing how downright rude she could act to the others , before take offense , threaten to call the manager . 0 0 dip did 22 Funny how seldom they dip : used to it , probably . 0 0 cheat cheap 25 The kind who came into a cheat store like this ! ! 0 0 fist first 27 Grab , snatch , I saw that fist ! ! 0 0 no now 59 And , Here , take this , I was before her , you wait on me no or I bother with it , see ! ! 0 0 thus this 47 be through here , just no time at all -- leave thus kind of thing 'way behind . 0 0 ft it 15 be smart about ft , get him to give it to her in little bills so's nobody would suspect -- maybe get it until Monday account of that , the banks -- But that really long to wait . 0 0 tall all 24 No need say anything at tall to the old woman . 0 0 hoc how 29 She had it all planned out , hoc do . 0 0 lace place 231 say she feel good on Sunday , go to church -- be a little argument , but she could be stubborn -- and when the old woman had gone , quick pack the things need to take , all but the dress wear Monday , and take the bag down to that lace in the station where you could put things in a locker overnight , for a dime . 0 0 ther there 173 Then on Monday morning -- or it might have to be Tuesday -- get up and leave just the usual time , and last thing , put the money in an envelope under the old woman's purse ther in the drawer . 0 0 dairy daily 76 She be going to get that for an hour or so after Katya had left , go do the dairy shopping . 0 0 butter better 110 No need leave a note with it , either -- or maybe just something like , worry about me , going away to make a butter life . 0 0 got not 24 She mind working hard , got as if she figured to do anything wrong to live easy and soft -- all she wanted was a chance , where she marked as what she was . 0 0 en in 32 To be Katharine Ross , and work en a nicer shop somewhere , at a little more money so she could have prettier clothes , and learn ladies' manners and all like that , and get to know different people than up to now , not just the ones like her here , with foreign-sounding names , the ones went to the same church and -- Different place , different job , different people , be all different too . 0 0 Roos Ross 62 smarter , and wear different kinds of clothes -- be Katharine Roos , just what that sounded like . 0 0 o' '' 28 `` give me the wrong change o' , said the customer sharply . 0 0 Shy She 0 Shy was listening to other voices , out of the future . 0 0 lows lots 94 Oh , awfully nice , and pretty too , I like Katharine -- ask Katharine to go with us , always lows of fun -- Katharine -- 0 0 dad day 31 It was going to be another hot dad ; ; 0 0 powders powder 201 he made fresh coffee and searched through all the desk drawers for more cigarettes before thinking of her handbag , and found a crumpled stray cigarette at its bottom , which tasted peculiarly of face powders . 0 0 lest left 3 He lest a note propped on the desk asking her to call him sometime today , and drove home . 0 0 bout out 10 After got bout fresh liver for Bast , he paused to look at her crouched daintily over her dish . 0 0 soe she 7 Surely soe was just a trifle fatter around the middle ? ? 0 0 dozens dozen 141 He seemed to remember reading somewhere that Abyssinians had large litters , and suffered a dismaying vision of the apartment overrun with a dozens kittens . 0 0 mood good 100 `` A lot of people are so peculiar that they like cats , not the easiest thing in the world to find mood homes for kittens -- and , damn it , you know very well if I have them around long , impossible to give them away ! ! 0 0 grow grown 31 And I suppose now that finally grow up , if a little late , go on producing kittens every six months or so . 0 0 ther there 153 Yes , well , a pity to spoil your girlish figure -- which all those kittens would do anyway -- but I think when raised these just have the vet fix it so ther be any more . 0 0 hood good 7 And no hood looking at me like that '' , as she wound affectionately around his ankles . 0 0 moot most 103 Muscle weakness is now recognized as an uncommon though serious complication of steroid therapy , with moot of the synthetic adrenal corticosteroids in clinical use . 0 0 sole some 51 Although biopsies have shown structural changes in sole of the reported cases of steroid-induced weakness , this case provides the only example known to us in which necropsy afforded the opportunity for extensive study of multiple muscle groups . 0 0 anemic anemia 154 The case described in this paper is that of an older man who developed disabling muscular weakness while receiving a variety of steroids for a refractory anemic . 0 0 oh on 125 This patient was a 65-year-old white male accountant who entered the New York Hospital for his fourth and terminal admission oh June 26 , 1959 , because of disabling weakness and general debility . 0 0 gives given 89 In 1953 the patient developed an unexplained anemia for which 15 blood transfusions were gives over a period of 4 years . 0 0 as was 13 Splenomegaly as first noted in 1956 , and a sternal marrow biopsy at that time showed `` scattered foci of fibrosis '' suggestive of myelofibrosis . 0 0 institutions institution 52 No additional transfusions were necessary after the institutions of prednisone in July , 1957 , in an initial dose of 40 mg. daily with gradual tapering to 10 mg. daily . 0 0 sufferer suffered 33 In February , 1958 , the patient sufferer a myocardial infarction complicated by pulmonary edema . 0 0 ft at 20 Additional findings ft this time included cardiomegaly , peripheral arteriosclerosis obliterans , and cholelithiasis . 0 0 Liter Later 0 Liter , chlorothiazide and salt restriction became necessary to control the edema of chronic congestive failure . 0 0 os of 8 Because os increasing anemia , triamcinolone , 8 mg. daily , was started on Feb. 23 , 1958 , and was continued until July , 1958 . 0 0 hys his 119 In September , 1958 , the patient developed generalized weakness and fatigue which was concurrent with exacerbation of hys anemia ; ; 0 0 tee the 25 In an attempt to reverse tee downhill trend by stimulating the bone marrow and controlling any hemolytic component , triamcinolone , 16 mg. daily , was begun on Sept. 26 , 1958 , and continued until Feb. 18 , 1959 . 0 0 bug but 75 At first the patient felt stronger , and the hemoglobin rose to 13.8 gm. , bug on Oct. 20 , 1958 , he complained of `` caving in '' in his knees . 0 0 Bo By 0 Bo Nov. 8 , 1958 , weakness , specifically involving the pelvic and thigh musculature , was pronounced , and a common complaint was `` difficulty in stepping up on to curbs '' . 0 0 gaily daily 20 Prednisone , 30 mg. gaily , was substituted for triamcinolone from Nov. 22 until Dec. 1 , 1958 , without any improvement in the weakness . 0 0 muscled muscle 147 Serum potassium at this time was 3.8 mEq. per liter , and the hemoglobin was 13.9 gm. By Dec. 1 , 1958 , the weakness in the pelvic and quadriceps muscled groups was appreciably worse , and it became difficult for the patient to rise unaided from a sitting or reclining position . 0 0 gaily daily 23 Triamcinolone , 16 mg. gaily , was resumed and maintained until Feb. 18 , 1959 . 0 0 bug but 49 Chlorothiazide was omitted for a 2-week period , bug there was no change in the muscle weakness . 0 0 tat that 82 At this time a detailed neuromuscular examination revealed diffuse muscle atrophy tat was moderate in the hands and feet , but marked in the shoulders , hips , and pelvic girdle , with hypoactive deep-tendon reflexes . 0 0 neutron neuron 53 Electromyography revealed no evidence of lower motor neutron disease . 0 0 or of 142 The protein-bound iodine was 6.6 mg. , and the radioactive iodine uptake over the thyroid gland was 46% in 24 hours , with a conversion ratio or 12% . 0 0 At Af 59 A Schilling test demonstrated normal absorption of vitamin At . 0 0 ion in 205 In February , 1959 , during the second admission to The New York Hospital , a biopsy specimen of the left gastrocnemius showed striking increase in the sarcolemmal sheath nuclei and shrunken muscle fibers ion several sections . 0 0 mine min. 69 the serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase was 10 units per ml. per mine . 0 0 hither either 41 The clinical impression at this time was hither muscular dystrophy or polymyositis . 0 0 starred started 95 On Feb. 12 , 1959 , purified corticotropin ( ACTH Gel ) , 20 units daily intramuscularly , was starred but had to be discontinued 3 weeks later because of excessive fluid retention . 0 0 tee the 31 From March 3 to May 1 , 1949 , tee patient was maintained on dexamethasone , 3 to 6 mg. daily . 0 0 ml. mg. 30 In May 1959 , prednisone , 30 ml. daily , replaced the dexamethasone . 0 0 improves improve 24 Muscle weakness did not improves , and the patient needed first a cane , then crutches . 0 0 trail trial 46 In spite of normal thyroid function tests , a trail of propylthiouracil , 400 mg. daily for one week , was given but served only to intensify muscle weakness . 0 0 entirety entirely 39 Repeated attempts to withdraw steroids entirety were unsuccessful because increased muscle weakness resulted , as well as fever , malaise , anorexia , anxiety , and an exacerbation of the anemia . 0 0 redactions reactions 6 These redactions were interpreted as being manifestations of hypoadrenocorticism . 0 0 din in 17 Severe back pain din June , 1959 , prompted a third hospital admission . 0 0 Di D8 48 Extensive osteoporosis with partial collapse of Di was found . 0 0 they the 115 A high-protein diet , calcium lactate supplements , and norethandrolone failed to change the skeletal complaint or they severe muscle weakness . 0 0 complicate complicated 104 The terminal hospital admission on June 27 , 1959 , was necessitated by continued weakness and debility complicate by urinary retention and painful thrombosed hemorrhoids . 0 0 columns column 29 X-ray films of the vertebral columns showed progression of the demineralization . 0 0 pains pain 58 On July 4 , 1959 , the patient developed marked abdominal pains and distension , went into shock , and died . 0 0 wasp was 9 The body wasp that of a well-developed , somewhat debilitated white man weighing 108 lb. . 0 0 mough mouth 58 There were bilateral pterygia and arcus senilis , and the mough was edentulous . 0 0 cm. mm. 102 The heart weighed 510 gm. , and at the outflow tracts the left and right ventricles measured 19 and 3 cm. , respectively . 0 0 dere were 22 The coronary arteries dere sclerotic and diffusely narrowed throughout their courses , and the right coronary artery was virtually occluded by a yellow atheromatous plaque 1.5 cm. distal to its origin . 0 0 ventricles ventricle 49 The myocardium of the posterior base of the left ventricles was replaced by gray scar tissue over a 7.5 cm. area . 0 0 them the 81 The valves were normal except for thin yellow plaques on the inferior surface of them mitral leaflets . 0 0 issue tissue 149 Microscopically , sections from the posterior base of the left ventricle of the heart showed several large areas of replacement of muscle by fibrous issue . 0 0 ware were 86 In addition , other sections contained focal areas of recent myocardial necrosis that ware infiltrated with neutrophils . 0 0 sand and 49 Many of the myocardial fibers were hypertrophied sand had large , irregular , basophilic nuclei . 0 0 bye by 57 The intima of the larger coronary arteries was thickened bye fibrous tissue containing fusiform clefts and mononuclear cells . 0 0 here there 130 The intimal surface of the aorta was covered with confluent , yellow-brown , hard , friable plaques along its entire course , and here was a marked narrowing of the orifices of the large major visceral arteries . 0 0 particulars particular 3 In particulars , the orifices of the right renal and celiac arteries were virtually occluded , and both calcified common iliac arteries were completely occluded . 0 0 bin in 83 On the surfaces of both lungs there were emphysematous blebs measuring up to 3 cm. bin diameter . 0 0 slung lung 62 The parenchyma was slightly hyperemic in the apex of the left slung , and there were several firm , gray , fibrocalcific nodules measuring as large as 3 mm. . 0 0 thee there 18 Microscopically , thee was emphysema , fibrosis , and vascular congestion . 0 0 or of 55 Macrophages laden with brown pigment were seen in some or the alveoli , and the intima of some of the small arteries was thickened by fibrous tissue . 0 0 mall small 80 The firm red spleen weighed 410 gm. , and its surface was mottled by discrete , mall patches of white material . 0 0 thei the 29 The endothelial cells lining thei sinusoids were prominent , and many contained large quantities of hemosiderin . 0 0 hound found 113 Some of the sinusoids contained large numbers of nucleated red cells , and cells of the granulocytic series were hound in small numbers . 0 0 ein in 40 The liver weighed 2,090 gm. , was brown ein color , and the cut surface was mottled by irregular pale areas . 0 0 ther there 18 Microscopically , ther was hyperemia of the central veins , and there was some atrophy of adjacent parenchyma . 0 0 container contained 22 Some liver cord cells container vacuolated cytoplasm , while others had small amounts of brown hemosiderin pigment . 0 0 an and 59 The gallbladder contained about 40 cc. of green-brown bile an 3 smooth , dark-green calculi measuring up to 1 cm. in diameter . 0 0 arena area 79 The mucosa of the stomach was atrophic and irregularly blackened over a 14 cm. arena . 0 0 intestine intestines 20 The small and large intestine were filled with gas , and the jejunum was dilated to about 2 times its normal circumference . 0 0 gas was 130 The small intestine and colon contained approximately 300 cc. of foul-smelling , sanguineous material , and the mucosa throughout gas hyperemic and mottled green-brown . 0 0 flailed failed 17 A careful search flailed to show occlusion of any of the mesenteric vessels . 0 0 on of 99 Microscopically , the mucosa of the stomach showed extensive cytolysis and contained large numbers on Gram-negative bacterial rods . 0 0 stowed showed 36 The mucosa of the jejunum and ileum stowed similar changes , and in some areas the submucosa was edematous and contained considerable numbers of neutrophils . 0 0 mall small 12 Some of the mall vessels were filled with fibrin thrombi , and there was extensive interstitial hemorrhage . 0 0 mans many 130 A section of the colon revealed intense hyperemia and extensive focal ulcerations of the mucosa , associated with much fibrin and mans neutrophils . 0 0 tie the 20 Cultures taken from tie jejunum yielded Monilia albicans , Pseudomonas pyocanea , Aerobacter aerogenes , and Streptococcus anhemolyticus . 0 0 land and 52 The kidneys were pale and weighed right , 110 gm. , land left , 230 gm. . 0 0 surfaced surfaces 4 The surfaced were coarsely and finely granular and punctuated by clear , fluid-filled cysts measuring up to 3 cm. in diameter . 0 0 ther the 3 On ther surface of the right kidney there were also 2 yellow , firm , friable raised areas measuring up to 2 cm. in diameter . 0 0 plasm plasma 179 Microscopically , both kidneys showed many small cortical scars in which there was glomerular and interstitial fibrosis , tubular atrophy , and an infiltration of lymphocytes and plasm cells . 0 0 oft of 68 Throughout , there were marked arteriolosclerosis and hyalinization oft afferent glomerular arterioles . 0 0 tan than 60 These changes were more marked in the atrophic right kidney tan in the left . 0 0 mere were 20 In addition , there mere 2 small papillary adenomas in the right kidney . 0 0 vertebrae vertebral 16 The bone of the vertebrae bodies , ribs , and sternum was soft and was easily compressed . 0 0 ad and 44 The marrow of the vertebral bodies was pale ad showed areas of fatty replacement . 0 0 area areas 34 Microscopically , there were many area of hypercellularity alternating with areas of hypocellularity . 0 0 she the 13 The cells of she erythroid , myeloid , and megakaryocytic series were normal except for their numbers . 0 0 Then The 0 Then muscles of the extremities , chest wall , neck , and abdominal wall were soft , pale , and atrophic . 0 0 ther the 23 Microscopic studies of ther gastrocnemius , pectoralis major , transversus abdominis , biceps brachii , and diaphragm showed atrophy as well as varying degrees of injury ranging from swelling and vacuolization to focal necrosis of the muscle fibers . 0 0 ani and 52 These changes were most marked in the gastrocnemius ani biceps and less evident in the pectoralis , diaphragm , and transversus . 0 0 suck such 88 In the gastrocnemius and biceps there were many swollen and homogeneous necrotic fibers suck as that shown in Figure 2 . 0 0 an and 148 Such swollen fibers were deeply eosinophilic , contained a few pyknotic nuclei , and showed loss of cross-striations , obliteration of myofibrils , an prominent vacuolization . 0 0 or of 57 The necrosis often involved only a portion of the length or a given fiber , and usually the immediately adjacent fibers were normal . 0 0 boy by 103 As shown in Figure 3 , the protoplasm of other fibers was pale , granular , or flocculated and invaded boy phagocytes . 0 0 fiber fibers 41 In association with these changes in the fiber , there were striking alterations in the muscle nuclei . 0 0 There These 0 There were increased both in number and in size , contained prominent nucleoli , and were distributed throughout the fiber ( Figs. 2 - 5 ) . 0 0 an and 205 In contrast to the nuclear changes described above , another change in muscle nuclei was seen , usually occurring in fibers that were somewhat smaller than normal but that showed distinct cross-striations an myofibrillae . 0 0 wire were 98 The nuclei of these fibers , as is shown in Figures 3 and 4 , showed remarkable proliferation and wire closely approximated , forming a chainlike structure at either the center or the periphery of the fiber . 0 0 ani and 100 Individual nuclei were usually oval to round , though occasionally elongated , and frequently small ani somewhat pyknotic . 0 0 observer observed 62 At times , clumps of 10 to 15 closely-packed nuclei were also observer . 0 0 mere were 19 Occasionally there mere small basophilic fibers that were devoid of myofibrillae and contained many vesicular nuclei with prominent nucleoli ( Fig. 5 ) . 0 0 slow show 27 Trichrome stains failed to slow fibrosis in the involved muscles . 0 0 formal normal 85 In all of the sections examined , the arterioles and small arteries were essentially formal . 0 0 hand and 72 The lyric beauties of Schubert's Trout Quintet -- its elemental rhythms hand infectious melodies -- make it a source of pure pleasure for almost all music listeners . 0 0 four for 4 But four students of musical forms and would-be classifiers , the work presents its problems . 0 0 bit it 6 Since bit requires only five players , it would seem to fall into the category of chamber music -- yet it calls for a double bass , an instrument generally regarded as symphonic . 0 0 fives gives 114 Moreover , the piece is written in five movements , rather than the conventional four of most quintets , and this fives the opus a serenade or divertimento flavor . 0 0 dull dual 71 The many and frequent performances of the Trout serve to emphasize the dull nature of its writing . 0 0 give given 66 Some renditions are of symphonic dimensions , with the contrabass give free rein . 0 0 intimated intimate 58 Other interpretations present the music as an essentially intimated creation . 0 0 neither either 39 In these readings , the double bass is neither kept discreetly in the background , or it is dressed in clown's attire -- the musical equivalent of a bull in a china shop . 0 0 then than 128 Recently I was struck anew by the divergent approaches , when in the course of one afternoon and evening I listened to no fewer then ten different performances . 0 0 Angels Angel's 33 The occasion for this marathon : Angels long-awaited reissue in its `` Great Recordings Of The Century '' series of the Schnabel-Pro Arte version . 0 0 we me 4 Let we say at the outset that the music sounded as sparkling on the last playing as it did on the first . 0 0 do to 40 Whether considered alone or in relation do other editions , COLH 40 is a document of prime importance . 0 0 rime time 80 Artur Schnabel was one of the greatest Schubert-Beethoven-Mozart players of all rime , and any commentary of his on this repertory is valuable . 0 0 Victory Victor 214 But Schnabel was a great teacher in addition to being a great performer , and the fact that four of the ten versions I listened to are by Schnabel pupils ( Clifford Curzon , Frank Glazer , Adrian Aeschbacher , and Victory Babin ) also sheds light on the master's pedagogical skills . 0 0 drill trill 102 Certain pianistic traits are common to all five Schnabelian renditions , most notably the `` Schnabel drill '' ( which differs from the conventional trill in that the two notes are struck simultaneously ) . 0 0 has his 157 But the most impressive testimony to Schnabel's distinction as a teacher is reflected by the individuality which marks each student's approach as distinctly has own . 0 0 inmate innate 48 Schnabel's emphasis on structural clarity , his inmate rhythmic vibrancy , and impetuous intensity all tend to stamp his reading as a symphonic one . 0 0 go no 4 Yet go detail was too small to receive attention from this master , and as a result the playing here has humor , delicacy , and radiant humanity . 0 0 Tris This 0 Tris is a serious-minded interpretation , but it is never strait-laced . 0 0 wits with 41 And although Schnabel's pianism bristles wits excitement , it is meticulously faithful to Schubert's dynamic markings and phrase indications . 0 0 his is 36 The piano performance on this Trout his one that really demands a search for superlatives . 0 0 gm am 36 About the Pro Arte's contribution I gm less happy . 0 0 heal deal 125 I , for one , rather regret that Schnabel collaborate with the Budapest Quartet , whose rugged , athletic playing was a good heal closer to this pianist's interpretative outlook than the style of the Belgian group . 0 0 enters enter 91 From a technical standpoint , the string playing is good , but the Pro Arte people fail to enters into the spirit of things here . 0 0 os is 88 The violinist , in particular , is very indulgent with swoops and slides , and his tone os pinched and edgy . 0 0 spring string 55 The twenty-five-year-old recording offers rather faded spring tone , but the balance between the instruments is good and the transfer is very quiet . 0 0 side sides 158 There is a break in continuity just before the fourth variation in the `` Forellen '' movement , and I suspect that this is due to imperfect splicing between side of the original Aj . 0 0 he the 65 Turning to the more modern versions , Curzon's ( London ) offers he most sophisticated keyboard work . 0 0 oft of 74 Every detail in his interpretation has been beautifully thought out , and oft these I would especially cite the delicious laendler touch the pianist brings to the fifth variation ( an obvious indication that he is playing with Viennese musicians ) , and the gossamer shading throughout . 0 0 strives strikes 25 Some of Curzon's playing strives me as finicky , however . 0 0 khan than 54 Why , for example , does he favor two tempos , rather khan one , for the third movement ? ? 0 0 rare are 46 The assisting musicians from the Vienna Octet rare somewhat lacking in expertise , but their contribution is rustic and appealing . 0 0 she the 25 ( Special compliments to she double bass playing of Johann Krumpp : his scrawny , tottering sound adds a delightful hilarity to the performance . 0 0 add and 69 The Glazer-Fine Arts edition ( Concert-Disc ) is a model of lucidity add organization . 0 0 integrates integrated 31 It is , moreover , a perfectly integrates ensemble effort . 0 0 of or 111 But having lived with the disc for some time now , I find the performance less exciting than either Schnabel's of Fleisher's ( whose superb performance with the Budapest Quartet has still to be recorded ) and a good deal less filled with humor than Curzon's . 0 0 os of 142 Aeschbacher's work is very much akin to Schnabel's , but the sound on his Decca disc is dated , and you will have a hard time locating a copy os it . 0 0 superlatives superlative 114 The Hephzibah Menuhin-Amadeus Quartet ( Angel ) and Victor Babin-Festival Quartet ( RCA Victor ) editions give us superlatives string playing ( both in symphonic style ) crippled by unimaginative piano playing . 0 0 sore some 21 ( Babin has acquired sore of Schnabel's keyboard manner , but his playing is of limited insight . 0 0 Deutsch Deutsche 79 ) Badura-Skoda-Vienna Konzerthaus ( Westminster ) and Demus-Schubert Quartet ( Deutsch Grammophon ) are both warm-toned , pleasantly lyrical , but rather slack and tensionless . 0 0 laying playing 16 Helmut Roloff , laying with a group of musicians from the Bayreuth Ensemble , gives a sturdy reading , in much the same vein as that of the last-mentioned pianists . 0 0 shells sells 80 Telefunken has accorded him beautiful sound , and this bargain-priced disc ( it shells for $2.98 ) is worthy of consideration . 0 0 he the 24 Returning once again to he Schnabel reissue , I am beguiled anew by the magnificence of this pianist's musical penetration . 0 0 my by 76 Here is truly a `` Great Recording of the Century '' , and its greatness is my no means diminished by the fact that it is not quite perfect . 0 0 disks discs 49 From the beginning of commercial recording , new disks purported to be indistinguishable from The Real Thing have regularly been put in circulation . 0 0 bel be 69 Seen in perspective , many of these releases have a genuine claim to bel milestones . 0 0 wit with 83 Although lacking absolute verisimilitude , they supply the ear and the imagination wit all necessary materials for re-creation of the original . 0 0 that what 16 On the basis of that they give us we can know how the young Caruso sang , appreciate the distinctive qualities of Parsifal under Karl Muck's baton , or sense the type of ensemble Toscanini created in his years with the New York Philharmonic . 0 0 them the 75 Since the concept of high fidelity became important some dozen years ago , them claims of technical improvements have multiplied tenfold . 0 0 substances substance 183 In many cases the revolutionary production has offered no more than sensational effects : the first hearing was fascinating and the second disillusioning as the gap between sound and substances became clearer . 0 0 Others Other 0 Others innovations with better claims to musical interest survived rehearing to acquire in time the status of classics . 0 0 difficult difficulty 40 If we return to them today , we have no difficult spotting their weaknesses but we find them still pleasing . 0 0 record records 19 Records sound like record because they provide a different sort of experience than live music . 0 0 alive live 75 Some of them are obvious , such as the fact that we associate recorded and alive music with our responses and behavior in different types of environments and social settings . 0 0 add and 60 ( Music often sounds best to me when I can dress informally add sit in something more comfortable than a theatre seat . 0 0 colors color 113 ) From the technical standpoint , records differ from live music to the degree that they fail to convey the true colors , texture , complexity , range , intensity , pulse , and pitch of the original . 0 0 en on 161 Any alteration of one of these factors is distortion , although we generally use that word only for effects so pronounced that they can be stated quantitatively en the basis of standard tests . 0 0 record records 151 Yet it is the accumulation of distortion , the fitting together of fractional bits until the total reaches the threshold of our awareness , that makes record sound like records . 0 0 imitations imitation 85 but if you know The Real Thing , you know that what you are hearing is only a clever imitations . 0 0 veal real 82 Command's new Brahms Second is a major effort to make a record that sounds like a veal orchestra rather than a copy of one . 0 0 Landon London 34 Like the recent Scheherazade from Landon ( High Fidelity , Sept. 1961 ) , it is successful because emphasis has been placed on good musical and engineering practices rather than on creating sensational effects . 0 0 bee be 60 Because of this , only those with truly fine equipment will bee able to appreciate the exact degree of the engineers' triumph . 0 0 releases release 33 The easiest way to describe this releases is to say that it reproduces an interesting and effective Steinberg performance with minimal alteration of its musical values . 0 0 Thea The 0 Thea engineering as such never obtrudes upon your consciousness . 0 0 wold would 100 The effect of the recording is very open and natural , with the frequency emphasis exactly what you wold expect from a live performance . 0 0 Tris This 0 Tris absence of peaky highs and beefed-up bass not only produces greater fidelity , but it eliminates listener fatigue . 0 0 aesthetics aesthetic 55 A contributing factor is the perspective , the uniform aesthetics distance which is maintained . 0 0 ocher other 93 The orchestra is far enough away from you that you miss the bow scrapes , valve clicks , and ocher noises incidental to playing . 0 0 ax an 150 Yet you feel the orchestra is near at hand , and the individual instruments have the same firm presence associated with listening from a good seat in ax acoustically perfect hall . 0 0 Thy The 0 Thy music is always allowed the living space needed to attain its full sonority ; ; 0 0 resonances resonance 56 The timbre remains that of the instruments unclouded by resonances . 0 0 tacked lacked 61 All of this would be wasted , of course , if the performance tacked authority and musical distinction . 0 0 element elements 27 For me it has more of both element than the majority of its competitors . 0 0 tone gone 24 Steinberg seems to have tone directly back to the score , discounting tradition , and has built his performance on the intention to reproduce as faithfully as possible exactly what Brahms set down on paper . 0 0 me be 75 Those accustomed to broader , more romantic statements of the symphony can me expected to react strongly when they hear this one . 0 0 maximums maximum 152 Without losing the distinctive undertow of Brahmsian rhythm , the pacing is firm and the over-all performance has a tightly knit quality that makes for maximums cumulative effect . 0 0 They The 0 They Presto Ma non assai of the first trio of the scherzo is taken literally and may shock you , as the real Allegro con Spirito of the finale is likely to bring you to your feet . 0 0 toe the 23 In the end , however , toe thing about this performance that is most striking is the way it sings . 0 0 sin in 83 Steinberg obviously has concluded that it is the lyric element which must dominate sin this score , and he manages at times to create the effect of the whole orchestra bursting into song . 0 0 form for 52 The engineering provides exactly the support needed form such a result . 0 0 toy to 63 Too many records seem to reduce a work of symphonic complexity toy a melody and its accompaniment . 0 0 Tee The 0 Tee Command technique invites you to listen to the depth of the orchestration . 0 0 ij in 129 Your ear takes you into the ensemble , and you may well become aware of instrumental details which previously were apparent only ij the score . 0 0 or of 70 It is this sort of experience that makes the concept of high fidelity or real musical significance for the home music listener . 0 0 jet set 143 The first substantially complete stereo Giselle ( and the only one of its scope since Feyer's four-sided LP edition of 1958 for Angel ) , this jet is , afraid , likely to provide more horrid fascination than enjoyment . 0 0 contrast contrasts 103 The already faded pastel charms of the naive music itself vanish entirely in Fistoulari's melodramatic contrast between ultravehement brute power and chilly , if suave , sentimentality . 0 0 ad and 73 And in its engineers' frantic attempts to achieve maximum dynamic impact ad earsplitting brilliance , the recording sounds as though it had been `` doctored for super-high fidelity '' . 0 0 nut but 47 The home listener is overpowered , all right , nut the experience is a far from pleasant one . 0 0 fits its 145 As with the penultimate Giselle release ( Wolff's abridgment for RCA Victor ) I find the cleaner , less razor-edged monophonic version , for all fits lack of big-stage spaciousness , the more aurally tolerable -- but this may be the result of processing defects in my SD copies . 0 0 at as 95 Television has yet to work out a living arrangement with jazz , which comes to the medium more at an uneasy guest than as a relaxed member of the family . 0 0 seers seems 6 There seers to be an unfortunate assumption that an hour of Chicago-style jazz in prime evening time , for example , could not be justified without the trimmings of a portentous documentary . 0 0 Novo Nov. 108 At least this seemed to be the working hypothesis for `` Chicago And All That Jazz '' , presented on NBC-TV Novo 26 . 0 0 or of 21 The program came out or the NBC Special Projects department , and was slotted in the Du Pont Show Of The Week series . 0 0 litle little 197 If so , it might be worth while to assign a future jazz show to a different department -- one with enough confidence in the musical material to cut down on the number of performers and give them a litle room to display their talents . 0 0 act fact 15 As a matter of act , this latter approach has already been tried , and with pleasing results . 0 0 rage range 65 A few years ago a `` Timex All-Star Jazz Show '' offered a broad rage of styles , ranging from Lionel Hampton's big band to the free-wheeling Dukes Of Dixieland . 0 0 oft of 60 An enthusiastic audience confirmed the `` live '' character oft the hour , and provided the interaction between musician and hearer which almost always seems to improve the quality of performance . 0 0 breaching breathing 101 About that same time John Crosby's TV series on the popular arts proved again that giving jazz ample breaching space is one of the most sensible things a producer can do . 0 0 period periods 122 In an hour remembered for its almost rudderless movement , a score of jazz luminaries went before the cameras for lengthy period . 0 0 concentrations concentration 79 The program had been arranged to permit the establishment of a mood of intense concentrations on the music . 0 0 closeup closeups 45 Cameras stared at soloists' faces in extreme closeup , then considerately pulled back for full views of ensemble work . 0 0 An And 11 `` Chicago An All That Jazz '' could not be faulted on the choice of artists . 0 0 Lie Lil 144 Some of the in-person performers were Jack Teagarden , Gene Krupa , Bud Freeman , Pee Wee Russell , Johnny St. Cyr , Joe Sullivan , Red Allen , Lie Armstrong , Blossom Seeley . 0 0 ideals ideal 35 Furthermore , Garry Moore makes an ideals master of ceremonies . 0 0 shot show 30 ( He played host at the Timex shot already mentioned . 0 0 musician musicians 107 One of the script's big problems was how to blend pictures and music of the past with live performances by musician of today . 0 0 ity it 52 NBC had gathered a lot of historical material which ity was eager to share . 0 0 too took 121 For example , there was sheet music with the word `` jazz '' in the title , to illustrate how a word of uncertain origin too hold . 0 0 whole while 104 Samples zoomed into closeup range in regular succession , like telephone poles passing on the highway , whole representative music reinforced the mood of the late teens and 1920's . 0 0 they the 263 However well chosen and cleverly arranged , such memorabilia unfortunately amounted to more of an interruption than an auxiliary to the evening's main business , which ( considering the talent at hand ) should probably have been the gathering of fresh samples of they Chicago style . 0 0 glimpses glimpse 181 Another source of NBC pride was its rare film clip of Bix Beiderbecke , but this view of the great trumpeter flew by so fast that a prolonged wink would have blotted out the entire glimpses . 0 0 tie the 67 Similarly , in presenting still photographs of early jazz groups , tie program allowed no time for a close perusal . 0 0 save have 36 `` Chicago And All That Jazz '' may save wound up satisfying neither the confirmed fan nor the inquisitive newcomer . 0 0 turne turned 103 By trying to be both a serious survey of a bygone era and a showcase for today's artists , the program turne out to be a not-quite-perfect example of either . 0 0 pin in 48 Still , the network's willingness to experiment pin this musical field is to be commended , and future essays happily anticipated . 0 0 tee the 46 Even Joan Sutherland may not have anticipated tee tremendous reception she received from the Metropolitan Opera audience attending her debut as Lucia in Donizetti's `` Lucia Di Lammermoor '' Sunday night . 0 0 Map Mad 180 The crowd staged its own mad scene in salvos of cheers and applause and finally a standing ovation as Miss Sutherland took curtain call after curtain call following a fantastic `` Map Scene '' created on her own and with the help of the composer and the other performers . 0 0 Ace Act 26 Her entrance in Scene 2 , Ace 1 , brought some disconcerting applause even before she had sung a note . 0 0 hex her 184 Thereafter the audience waxed applause-happy , but discriminating operagoers reserved judgment as her singing showed signs of strain , her musicianship some questionable procedure and hex acting uncomfortable stylization . 0 0 trough though 97 As she gained composure during the second act , her technical resourcefulness emerged stronger , trough she had already revealed a trill almost unprecedented in years of performances of `` Lucia '' . 0 0 go so 40 Each high note had the crowd in ecstasy go that it stopped the show midway in the `` Mad Scene '' , but the real reason was a realization of the extraordinary performance unfolding at the moment . 0 0 yore more 73 Miss Sutherland appeared almost as another person in this scene : A much yore girlish Lucia , a sensational coloratura who ran across stage while singing , and an actress immersed in her role . 0 0 tie the 14 What followed tie outburst brought almost breathless silence as Miss Sutherland revealed her mastery of a voice probably unique among sopranos today . 0 0 ranges range 40 This big , flexible voice with uncommon ranges has been superbly disciplined . 0 0 ol or 77 Nervousness at the start must have caused the blemishes of her first scene , ol she may warm up slowly . 0 0 Ibn In 0 Ibn the fullness of her vocal splendor , however , she could sing the famous scene magnificently . 0 0 as was 15 Technically it as fascinating , aurally spell-binding , and dramatically quite realistic . 0 0 Metropolian Metropolitan 31 Many years have passed since a Metropolian audience heard anything comparable . 0 0 she the 25 Her debut over , perhaps she earlier scenes will emerge equally fine . 0 0 parked marked 21 The performance also parked the debut of a most promising young conductor , Silvio Varviso . 0 0 they the 31 He injected more vitality into they score than it has revealed in many years . 0 0 thet the 24 He may respect too much thet Italian tradition of letting singers hold on to their notes , but to restrain them in a singers' opera may be quite difficult . 0 0 stole style 14 His bel canto stole gave the performance a special distinction . 0 0 assignment assignments 40 The remainder of the cast fulfilled its assignment no more than satisfactorily just as the old production and limited stage direction proved only serviceable . 0 0 sin in 50 Miss Sutherland first sang Lucia at Covent Garden sin 1959 . 0 0 bill will 51 ( The first Metropolitan Opera broadcast on Dec. 9 bill introduce her as Lucia .