These Days Or - Behind The News From Washington By - John Chamberlain inniinitM tMiiNtUMM* f* l The sight of two U. S. as tronauts driving a rover on the moon below 14,006-foot mountain peaks fills one with the wonder of America. But this is the culmination of something planntd more than ten years ago, when we still had confidence. We reap as we sow — and what have we sown lately? Let us cherish astronauts Da vid Scott, James Irwin and Ma jor Alfred Worden, for they could be among the last repre sentatives of a vanishing breed. We are a nation in retreat. We fought clumsily in Southeast Asia, taking five years where it should have taken two and wasting many young lives. Still, we were the victors in the field. What is the excuse, then, for throwing it all away by our dissidence on the home front, as we are now doing? After World War II, Presi dent Harry Truman made the decision to contain Com munism. He faced Stalin down in the struggle for Greece and the eastern Mediter ranean; he faltered a bit in Korea, but still he preserved a line between the Communist world and onp own. The pol icy continued to pay divi dends when our responses in South Vietnam encouraged the Indonesians to turn back When you think of prescrip tions, think of VABNER’S. adv. the Maoist attempt to seize Java and Sumatra and the rest of those rich and strate gically placed islands. The canker in the policy was our intellectual inconsistency: our leaders never faced up to the logical necessity of keeping Communism weak enough so that it could be contained. We let Moscow overtake and pass us in atomic armaments; we talked of building bridges to the East; we sought trade with the same enemy that we were opposing on the battlefields in Vietnam. We were brave in Guate mala and in Lebanon, but we might have paved it, and we betrayed the true freedom loving Cubans at the Bay of Pigs. Small wonder that our logical Children rebelled at being drafted to fight against an enemy in Asia that got its guns, its ammunition, its trucks and its anti - aircraft missies from the power we were seeking to placate by our bridge-building in Europe. If Communism was “all right” In Eastern Europe, why was it so terrible in Southeast Asia? And what is wrong with the logic of the American mother who told me that she, thought an anti-Communist, would fight like a tiger to keep her son out of a war in which he might be killed by a Jwliet made in "A Cry Of Players" Is Being Presented At The Playhouse “A Cry of Players,” the Wil liam Gibson play which the Vagabond Players are perform ing at Flat Rock Playhouse, August 17 through 21, is label ed “adult entertainment” by Managing Director Robroy Far quhar, who also appears in the play. “I do not mean that it is X-rated, to use the current phrase of movie classification,” Actor-Manager Farquhar added. “We have never presented a play that is simply dirty at Flat Rock Playhouse and we never will. We value our reputation as a ‘playhouse of family enter a nation with whom we retain ed the friendliest sort of rela tions? Because we have been soft in the head and weak in ;wiH. our retreat is in danger of becoming a rout. We show no real perspective when it comes to dealing with our is sues in Congress. The Lockheed Aircraft Cor poration, threatened with bank ruptcy, was saved in the Sen ate by a single vote. The rea son given was our fear of what the collapse of a great builder of airframes would do to in crease unemployment. This was a craven reason for departing from free enterprise principles. The honorable explanation for helping Lockheed by guaran teeing some bankers’ loans would have been to say that the airframe company was vi tal to our military position in the world. As such, it was something outside the free enterprise economy. It had come up with the U-2 and the supersonic SB-71 spy planes just in time to give us the aerial Trust Pat "s shoe World to know and care Send the kids off-to-school in Jumping - Jack shoes , that lead in top styling and comfort. See us for your assurance of a great fit, and select from tie, slip-on, and Oxford styles. tainment’ and we mean to live up to it. “When I say ‘A Cry of Play erg’ is ‘adult entertainment’ I am saying several things about the play. It is an intelligent and beautiful play. Our products i, costumed by ^ctor Walter Wil liamson and staged by Designer Walter O’Rourke, is stunningly beautiful as a visual treat as well as beautiful in language. “It is also robust in spirit and action. The play tells of the lusty life of the village in which Shakespeare was born and brought up and of the very lusty young Will Shakespeare him self. The spirit of the Eliza bethan age was vigorous, often bowdy and filled with the diver sions of drinking and wenching. The play reflects this agev as it must, but we believe we have kept our production in good taste. “In frankness and fairness to our patrons — an attitude we strive to maintain,” Farquhar continued, “we ask those who prefer lighter fare or less earth ly life styles and language to wait until the following week when we will return to our customary comedy bill — but •A Cry of Players’ is a strong, tender and often funny play which we are proud to present.” Anita Grannis and Tom Campbell directed the spectacu lar production which opens Tuesday at Flat Rock Play house. Ralph Redpath, as young Shakespeare, Margarete Kilness, as his long-suffering wife Anne, and Walter Williamson, as a noble arm of 16th century law, head a cast of 30. reconnaissance that was neces sary to sustain our stands in foreign policy in the days be fore we had the robot spy. It should have been defended as a linchipin of the military - in dustrial complex that is need ed to guarantee our peace. But who is defending the military industrial complex these days? The excuse for our growing retreat from global commit ments is that we must take care of things at home. But where is the guarantee that our enemies will leave us alone to concentrate on an isolationist Eden? As we lose influence, we will lose our economic power. Why should foreigners sustain our dol lar if they get no defense for their pains? We give up the supersonic jet to get mass transit, but then we get no mass transit. The taxes from a shrinking economy won’t be enough to support all those brave welfarist schemes. We got to the moon, but that was because of a decision made in a vanished time. Nixon him self has warned that we may be on the verge of decadence. His new Far Eastern policy, which must end by throwing Japan, Taiwan. South Korea and the Philippines to the wolves, is surely part of the decadent drift. Could it be that the Presi dent, in his heart of hearts, know that we aren’t, up to sustaining the role we accept ed in 1945 and is trying to make the best of a bad situa tion? That is the only logical justification for his portent ous shift. IN APPRECIATION Mere words cannot express our sincere thanks and appreci ation extended to us in the loss of our son Mitchell’s eye. There are so many who re membered us with their pray ers, telephone calls, cards, let ters, visits and expressions of love. We shall indeed be indebted to so many. Please accept our heartf~’* Gratefully, Charles and Pansy Greene Pinto’s regular price is $149* under Chevy Vega. Add year-end clearance • savings, and you’ve got the unbeatable deal! Save on any Ford in stock. 'Comparison based on manufacturers’ suggested retail prices for lowest priced models, comparably equipped. Orlre does not include accent group or white sidewall tires, pictured above; they are oxtra-cost options. LYDA-McCRARY MOTORS, Inc. 314 N. BROADWAY FRANCHISE DEALER NO. 1811 BREVARD. N. C. DONALD DUCK By WALT DISNEY "i r t r T7T 1 Distributed liy King Features Syndicate. I jrJ HENRY By JOHN LINEY a-ig John LiNey BLONDIE By CHIC YOUNG BLONDIE, X WISH WE COULD THINK, ?5s UP SOME WAY KJ7 TO FKSHT" **?{ INFLATION v i I’VE GOT IT/ THIS WILL CUT., MV DRESS BUDSET IN HALF r-^jZ£ THAT ISN'T QUITE WHAT I HAD IN MIND