Thursday, November 24, 2016

11/22/1956

EAST FAREWELL NEWS

Thursday, November 22, 1956   Vol. C595

LOCAL NEWS

THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE BRINGS SANTA TO TOWN


East Farewell – The holiday season was ushered into East Farewell with the traditional Thanksgiving Day Parade. Once again led by the Regional High School Pep Band the parade wound down Lake Shore Drive and up Main Street to Boyle’s Department Store where Santa was “delivered” to take his seat of honor in the store surrounded by his elves he was ho-ho-hoing all the way up the stairs. Once again this year Charles Boyle was the Grand Marshall and prime organizer. He is the owner of Boyle’s Department Store and has headed up the overall organization of the parade. This is the ninth year of the parade and its popularity grows every year.  Crowds have been coming to the parade every year and have brought a big boost to the town economy. It also has created a true tradition in town. Everyone looks forward to the Thanksgiving Day Parade is commonly heard when asked for an opinion. This year the crowds were even larger than last year and close to the largest crowd ever which was back in 1952 when the Iron Works announced it was expanding and offered many new jobs. No new job offerings this year but that did not keep the visitors away. They streamed in on Friday and filled the Lakefront Plaza and Main Street Friday night and lined the streets Saturday morning. The Parade kicked off at 9:00AM at the head of Lake Shore Drive with the Pep Band followed by the VFW Vets in full dress uniform, the fabulous, dancing Super Strutters from Central, the always popular Slate Mountain String Band, the crowd cheering Flat Rock Twirlers with their lighted batons, the East Farewell Volunteer Fire Company, the local Scout Troops and the local dogs from the SPCA who were available for adoption after the parade. In a surprise appearance, the Cougars Varsity Football team marched much to the delight of all. The Regional High School Marching Band rounded out the wonderfully diverse group in the position of honor, last before Santa’s sled which was led by reindeer that looked suspiciously like horses with antlers. The sled pulled up to Boyle’s at noon and Santa waved, laughed and headed inside. The RHS Band continued to play for a half hour as has become the standard while folks listened, shopped, visited Santa and dined at any one of the number of restaurants that were open.  The afternoon was turned over to Cougars football as they took the field and celebrated their homecoming. During halftime while the band played popular Christmas hits Santa made a surprise appearance with his “reindeers”, sled and a very fetching Mrs. Claus who was actually local celebrity, Natalie Mallard.

Charles Boyle with ‘Dasher’, Santa, Mrs. Clause and an elf


SPORTS

COUGARS CELEBRATE THANKSGIVING/HOMECOMING WITH A BIG WIN

East Farewell- The Cougars had a big day on Thanksgiving. Having marched earlier in the parade, they made there way over to the field and prepared for their homecoming game with a Sun City team that has been rising in the league standings recently. There was no lack of enthusiasm at kickoff and the crowd would keep it up throughout the whole game. The Cougars gave them lots to cheer about. Their first drive was capped off with a beautiful short screen to halfback, Billy Reilly led to the first score. The Eagles came to play, though and the halftime score was tied at 14 apiece. The third quarter went scoreless but not for lack of action. Both teams drove the length of the field but were unable to score. The Cougars were intercepted on the 5 yard line and the Eagles fumbled on the 9. The fourth quarter saw the Cougars take charge and score twice in eight minutes thanks to a second fumble by the Eagles. The score stood at 28-14 with five minutes left and the Eagles quarterback, Gerald Dunn, was able to unload a forty year bomb to wide receiver, Blake Ferguson, for a score and a threat. The Cougars were able to run out the clock and walk away with a 28-21 homecoming victory.
            The game was very entertaining but the halftime show really got the most attention this year. Being Homecoming the show presented the Homecoming King and Queen (Dave Wallace and Amy Taylor, both seniors) and a huge surprise, Santa rode on the field with his makeshift reindeer and Mrs. Clause who was played by local, Natalie Mallard. A fun time was had by all and after the game the team was able to go home and enjoy a slightly delayed Thanksgiving Day dinner.
            The Cougars go back on the road next week to face the Riverview Wildcats. The game will begin at 2:00PM in the Riverview High School field.

 NATIONAL NEWS

IKE HOLDS TALKS ON MIDDLE EAST – NASSAR VOWS INDEPENDENCE – RAIL WORKERS SIGN CONTRACT – AMERICANS ON THE MOVE

President Eisenhower held a series of high-level conferences today to review and coordinate United States policy in the Middle Eastern crisis.

President Gamal Abdel Nasser vowed today he never would become the pawn of any power. He said Egypt was determined to maintain both political and ideological independence.

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen today became the first of four operating unions to settle a prolonged wage dispute with the country's 140 major railroads.

Americans sat behind the wheel of the family car or flew through the air more than they used trains or buses in moving from city to city, last year. Altogether they racked up 664,100,000,000 passenger miles of such travel last year, for a gain of 6.2 per cent over the 1955 mileage, according to the Bureau of Transport Economics and Statistics of the Interstate Commerce Commission.



Thursday, November 17, 2016

11/15/1956

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 15, 1956   Vol. 594


LOCAL NEWS


VETERANS DAY IS CELEBRATED WITH RESPECT



East Farewell- A solemn ceremony took place at the Veteran’s Memorial Sunday as the town remembered its fallen heroes. The service took place on Sunday afternoon at the memorial that was decorated with poppies and greens. High School senior, Steven Sinclair, played Taps on the hill overlooking the site. Town Council President, Tom Conally, gave a short speech that sounded reminiscent of some of the speeches made by World War II and Korean War commander, Douglas MacArthur. Conally touched on honor, commitment, bravery and duty in his speech and declared these to be true ingredients for a soldier. After the speech a list of the fallen in all wars was read by another High School senior, Lynn O’Hara. Many people attended the service and as Sinclair played a wreath was place on the memorial.

Steven Sinclair plays Taps at War Memorial


SPORTS


COUGARS TOP THE DEVILS IN A CLOSE GAME


Corning - Cougar’s defensive end, Pat McKean sealed a 24-21 League win at Corning Friday evening with an interception at his team’s 17-yard line with two minutes remaining in regulation. The Cougars had their hands full against the Devils and the game slipped back and forth until that play sealed the Cougar’s win and sole position of first place in the league standings. On a fourth down in the late going, with Corning needing 3 yards to keep alive a drive in Cougars territory, McKean dumped quarterback Tom Stratford for a 9-yard loss. After the Cougars moved the ball back into Devils territory and short punt gave the ball back to the Devils and Stratford started an impressive drive with time running out. He got the Devils down to the 17 before McKean stepped in front of a sure score pass to Devil’s star end, Bruce Weldon and took the ball away.
        In the first half after Corning responded with Stratford’s 52-yard touchdown pass to Nick Fornacella, Dolan directed a nine-play scoring drive that was capped by ‘Tank’ Brown’s 7-yard scoring rumble. Both teams battled but went scoreless in the second quarter.  The third quarter showed lots of action with two scores by each team.  Cougar’s running back, Davey Wilson scampered for a neatly planned end run and ‘Merc’ McMaster hauled in a 40 yard Dolan bomb for the second score. The Devils answered right back with scores by Weldon and Stratford. The winning points came from beleaguered Cougar’s kicker, David Galloway, when he put a beautiful 25 yard field goal right through the uprights late in the third. That margin was enough to put the Cougars on top.   “They played like they were in a championship game, and we were able to match their intensity,” longtime Cougar’s coach Al Burcowitz said. “I really liked our toughness.”
       The Cougars come home next week to host Sun City on Thanksgiving Day and celebrate Homecoming. The game begins at 3:30 on the High School field.


 NATIONAL NEWS


TITO & HOOVER BLAST RUSSIA OVER HUNGARY – EGYPT PROTESTS SHIP CLEARING – ELVIS & LIBERACE TEAM UP – MANTLE WINS AL BATTING CROWN & AL MVP


President Tito blasts Russia and blames them for the Hungarian revolt and declares it was “a fatal error” to use Soviet Troops to bring Hungary to heel.  Russia is massing armored forces on the Yugoslav border and passing the word to neighboring satellites that President Tito is to blame for the upsurge of anti-Soviet sentiment in East Europe.  Secretary of State Dulles accuses the Soviet rulers of waging war against Hungary with “promiscuous slaughter” and trying to substitute them for the United Nations in the Middle East. Meantime Budapest radio reports Hungarian guerrillas are battling reinforcements Russia is pouring into the revolt-torn country.

Acting Secretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr. warns the Soviet Union to keep its “volunteers” out of the Middle East or face U.N. opposition backed by U.S. power.

Egypt protests against a British-French plan to begin clearing sunken ships from the blocked Suez Canal. The new objections were raised soon after Dag Hammarskjöld, U.N. Secretary General, opened his talks with President Nasser on how the U.N. police force may be deployed.  The U.N. Middle East police force flies its first units to the Suez Canal zone. They were sped on their way from Italy by a mounting threat of intervention by Soviet “volunteers” in invaded Egypt.

Liberace and Elvis Presley stage an impromptu act after Liberace’s nightclub appearance at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas. Presley was in the audience as Liberace went through his performance. After the show, Elvis went to Liberace’s dressing room where the latter exchanged his gold-sequined jacket for Presley’s striped sports coat. Elvis sat down at the piano Liberace picked up a guitar and in no time at all a rock ‘n’ roll session was underway.

New York Yankee Mickey Mantle, who won the American League’s triple batting crown, is unanimously named the most valuable player in the league. He led with a .353 batting average, 52 home runs and 130 RBI’s.




11/15/1956

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 15, 1956   Vol. 594


LOCAL NEWS


VETERANS DAY IS CELEBRATED WITH RESPECT



East Farewell- A solemn ceremony took place at the Veteran’s Memorial Sunday as the town remembered its fallen heroes. The service took place on Sunday afternoon at the memorial that was decorated with poppies and greens. High School senior, Steven Sinclair, played Taps on the hill overlooking the site. Town Council President, Tom Conally, gave a short speech that sounded reminiscent of some of the speeches made by World War II and Korean War commander, Douglas MacArthur. Conally touched on honor, commitment, bravery and duty in his speech and declared these to be true ingredients for a soldier. After the speech a list of the fallen in all wars was read by another High School senior, Lynn O’Hara. Many people attended the service and as Sinclair played a wreath was place on the memorial.

Steven Sinclair plays Taps at War Memorial


SPORTS


COUGARS TOP THE DEVILS IN A CLOSE GAME


Corning - Cougar’s defensive end, Pat McKean sealed a 24-21 League win at Corning Friday evening with an interception at his team’s 17-yard line with two minutes remaining in regulation. The Cougars had their hands full against the Devils and the game slipped back and forth until that play sealed the Cougar’s win and sole position of first place in the league standings. On a fourth down in the late going, with Corning needing 3 yards to keep alive a drive in Cougars territory, McKean dumped quarterback Tom Stratford for a 9-yard loss. After the Cougars moved the ball back into Devils territory and short punt gave the ball back to the Devils and Stratford started an impressive drive with time running out. He got the Devils down to the 17 before McKean stepped in front of a sure score pass to Devil’s star end, Bruce Weldon and took the ball away.
            In the first half after Corning responded with Stratford’s 52-yard touchdown pass to Nick Fornacella, Dolan directed a nine-play scoring drive that was capped by ‘Tank’ Brown’s 7-yard scoring rumble. Both teams battled but went scoreless in the second quarter.  The third quarter showed lots of action with two scores by each team.  Cougar’s running back, Davey Wilson scampered for a neatly planned end run and ‘Merc’ McMaster hauled in a 40 yard Dolan bomb for the second score. The Devils answered right back with scores by Weldon and Stratford. The winning points came from beleaguered Cougar’s kicker, David Galloway, when he put a beautiful 25 yard field goal right through the uprights late in the third. That margin was enough to put the Cougars on top.   “They played like they were in a championship game, and we were able to match their intensity,” longtime Cougar’s coach Al Burcowitz said. “I really liked our toughness.”
            The Cougars come home next week to host Sun City on Thanksgiving Day and celebrate Homecoming. The game begins at 3:30 on the High School field.


 NATIONAL NEWS


TITO & HOOVER BLAST RUSSIA OVER HUNGARY – EGYPT PROTESTS SHIP CLEARING – ELVIS & LIBERACE TEAM UP – MANTLE WINS AL BATTING CROWN & AL MVP


President Tito blasts Russia and blames them for the Hungarian revolt and declares it was “a fatal error” to use Soviet Troops to bring Hungary to heel.  Russia is massing armored forces on the Yugoslav border and passing the word to neighboring satellites that President Tito is to blame for the upsurge of anti-Soviet sentiment in East Europe.  Secretary of State Dulles accuses the Soviet rulers of waging war against Hungary with “promiscuous slaughter” and trying to substitute them for the United Nations in the Middle East. Meantime Budapest radio reports Hungarian guerrillas are battling reinforcements Russia is pouring into the revolt-torn country.

Acting Secretary of State Herbert Hoover Jr. warns the Soviet Union to keep its “volunteers” out of the Middle East or face U.N. opposition backed by U.S. power.

Egypt protests against a British-French plan to begin clearing sunken ships from the blocked Suez Canal. The new objections were raised soon after Dag Hammarskjöld, U.N. Secretary General, opened his talks with President Nasser on how the U.N. police force may be deployed.  The U.N. Middle East police force flies its first units to the Suez Canal zone. They were sped on their way from Italy by a mounting threat of intervention by Soviet “volunteers” in invaded Egypt.

Liberace and Elvis Presley stage an impromptu act after Liberace’s nightclub appearance at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas. Presley was in the audience as Liberace went through his performance. After the show, Elvis went to Liberace’s dressing room where the latter exchanged his gold-sequined jacket for Presley’s striped sports coat. Elvis sat down at the piano Liberace picked up a guitar and in no time at all a rock ‘n’ roll session was underway.

New York Yankee Mickey Mantle, who won the American League’s triple batting crown, is unanimously named the most valuable player in the league. He led with a .353 batting average, 52 home runs and 130 RBI’s.




Thursday, November 10, 2016

11/8/1956

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 8, 1956   Vol. C593


LOCAL NEWS


BAXTER THE DOG SAVES THE DAY



East Farewell – It is not too unusual to see bears in the woods outside town and occasionally they have wandered into town. There have never been any accounts of them attacking humans and the most mischievous behavior they have been guilty of is raiding the garbage cans of folks on the out edges of town.  Last August a black bear wandered close to the public beach but it seemed more interested in cooling off and catching a fish for dinner than bothering anyone and wandered off after about fifteen minutes. Things became interesting on Tuesday when a black bear and her cubs ended up behind Mrs. Mallard’s boarding house foraging for food. Normally a call to the police would brought enough attention to the scene to drive the intruders away, but one of Mrs. Mallards boarders, Kimberly Kane, and her toddler son, Jake, were in the back yard. The mother bear and the human mother were head to head in a protective standoff. Jake was moving close to the cubs and the mother bear started to move towards Jake.  Mrs. Kane was terrified and started to scream. The bear stood up but before it could do anything Baxter a terrier from next door jumped the fence and started snarling and barking at the mother bear. Baxter was ferocious. He would not let the mother bear get close to Jake or Mrs. Clark. The bear was at least five times the size of Baxter but she apparently did not realize the size inequity. She gathered up her cubs and made a hasty retreat leaving Baxter, Jake and Mrs. Kane very relieved. All the commotion brought Mrs. Mallard and her daughter, Natalie out of the house along with neighbors and even some people walking down Lake Shore drive. One of the visitors, Bill Strong, had his camera and was able to snap some pictures of the whole incident. Luckily everyone was safe and the bears ran off to the woods. Baxter was the celebrity for the day and got a special steak dinner for his heroics.

Baxter chasing the bear’s away (photo by Bill Strong)


SPORTS


COUGARS SLASH HAWKS


Cougar’s junior quarterback Bill Dolan hasn’t made too many mistakes this season.    But he proved Saturday that when the rare misstep heads his way, he still remembers how to handle it. The Cougars toppled the Southport Hawks, 28-14, to move into first place at 4-1.   The mistakes didn’t come in bunches for Dolan’s squad against Southport. Instead, they were peppered throughout the afternoon.   A run for a loss of 3 yards on the Cougar’s first drive. A 13-yard loss on a sack in the second quarter. It didn’t happen often, but when the Cougars erred, Dolan was quick with an answer for the Cougars.   After the loss of 3, he launched a 56-yard pass to wide-out Mitch ‘Merc’ McMaster, which set up a 3-yard touchdown run by ‘Tank’ Brown, the first of his two scores.   Dolan responded to the sack with back-to-back 19-yard completions, and then capped the drive off with a 22-yard strike to Davey Wilson. But the most significant cleanup, the one that set the tone for the rest of the afternoon, didn’t come on a subsequent play. It came on the following drive. On the Cougar’s second drive of the evening, Richie McGee fumbled a catch deep in Southport territory.   Rather than get frustrated, Dolan and McGee talked it over on the sideline. And in a minute, it was behind them. “We just wiped the slate clean,” Dolan indicated. “It was on to the next one.”
   Dolan said he told McGee he liked the effort on the play, but that he could have made a smarter play and secured the ball. So on the very next drive, who did Dolan look for in the end zone? None other than No. 9 McGee. Dolan hit the tight end from 10 yards out to put the Cougars up, 14-0, early in the second half.   “He can run, he can pass, and you know that, if you’re running a route, the pass is going to be dead on, right to you,” McGee explained.   
Dolan finished the evening 13 for 18 for 224 yards, with three touchdowns and one interception. Even Dolan wasn’t perfect. He threw that interception, his one mistake of the night. But he sure knows how to fix a problem.
The Cougars meet Corning for the second time this season as they travel up to Corning next week. Their first meeting was a fairly one sided affair in the Cougars favor but the Devils have come on strong recently and have won their last two games by more the 20 points. The game is an evening game that begins at 7:30 on the Corning High Field.


 NATIONAL NEWS


IKE WINS REELECTION EASILY – DEMS CONTROL HOUSE – ELVIS IN THE MOVIES AND ON TV


Dwight D. Eisenhower wins re-election to the Presidency by the overwhelming vote of a nation. He’s the first Republican to win a second term since William McKinley in his 1900 re-election.  In Chicago - Adlai Stevenson concedes his defeat for the Presidency:
       "You have won not only the election, but also an expression of the great confidence of the American people. I send you my warm congratulations. Tonight we are not republicans and democrats, but Americans. We appreciate the grave difficulties your administration faces and as Americans, join in wishing you all success in the years that lie ahead.” 
        Interestingly - Democrats cling tenaciously to their control of the House and wage a nip-and-tuck battle with Republicans for continued leadership of the Senate.

Elvis Presley did just fine in his new movie “Love Me Tender” where’s he’s paired with Debra Paget. The studio says it’s a mistake to call the movie an Elvis movie, since the story was planned before Elvis was considered. The movie is a post Civil war drama about four brothers, the eldest of whom is Richard Egan, returns home to find his sweetheart (Debra Paget) married to the youngest brother (played by Elvis). In the movie Egan and Paget are starred and Elvis is introduced.  So, what about Elvis? According the producer David Weisbart,- Elvis “is extroverted, gregarious on a young person’s level, terribly energetic, seems to be having fun. He was co-operative with us, never late and very serious about acting. This was another kind of career for him, a big challenge after all those one-night stands, with screaming teenagers following him around. I don’t think Elvis is in the same class with Jimmy Dean as an actor. His biggest asset is his own natural ability like Gary Cooper’s. If he acquires any kind of obvious acting skills, they might hurt him.”

Television news - Ed Sullivan had lower ratings with Elvis Presley’s second appearance - lower than his first time on the show last September. He is scheduled for another appearance in January. At this conference, Elvis Presley gave his reaction the charge by many adults that he is a detriment to the youth of the land, to which he replied, “I just wish I had a chance to try to change the minds of those adults. If I thought that I was leading anyone astray, I’d quit this business and go back to driving a truck. I’ve searched my heart about this thing and I don’t think I am a detriment. You know, there’s verse in the Bible that says you will reap what you sow, I believe it, and I try to be careful about what I sow”

Thursday, November 3, 2016

11/1/1956

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 1, 1956   Vol. C592


LOCAL NEWS


HALLOWEEN BRINGS OUT THE GHOSTS



 East Farewell- A chilly night did not discourage the ghosts and gremlins who came out to haunt the town last night. Main Street was alive or better said dead, with all sorts of creepy, ghoulish characters wandering along with no particular place to go. Many of the stores stayed open late and welcomed the zombies, mummies and witches in as long as they behaved and did not cast any spells. The rest of town had its share of trick or treaters too.  In an interesting development many people dressed their pets and paraded them through town. This was an unplanned spontaneous occurrence that seemed to come about by a lot of people having the same idea at the same time. People greeted each other and commented on their pets’ costumes. Lots of people gather on the Lakefront Plaza around 9:00 and there was whole group that held a completely unofficial, unsanctioned and unauthorized ‘Best Pet Costume” Contest. The general consensus was that there were many winners and no losers. Everyone had fun and there was talk of making the contest official next year. That would be worth seeing.

Dogs on Parade at Lakefront Plaza


SPORTS


COUGARS MAUL THE BEARS


East Farewell - The Cougars got back on track as they met a surprisingly good Central Bears team on Saturday. The Cougars were able to come away with a win, 28-17. The game started with the Cougars’ Billy Reilly running the kickoff back to the Bears forty. Dolan was able to work the opening drive down the field and turn it into a score with an end of the end zone pass to Mitch ‘Merc’ Mc Master. Freshman kicker, David Galloway, booted the extra point. Both teams traded possessions for the rest of the quarter with no further scoring.  Early in the second quarter, Wilson found daylight near the sideline and raced to a 66-yard score that put the quick-starting Cougars ahead, 14-0.
"Our left tackle, Jimmy Joe, pushed a guy down and created an opening for me," said Wilson, who carried six times for 82 yards. "Our line made it easy for me all day."
The Cougars (3-1 overall) allowed Central to rally by committing three turnovers. The Bears (2-2) turned two of them directly into scores and closed the once-sizable gap to 21-17 on Ed Wilson's 36-yard field goal midway through the third quarter.
"It's uncharacteristic of us," Cougars coach Al Burcowitz said of the miscues. "But we're still inexperienced. We have some young guys playing key roles for us."
In the final seconds of the third quarter, Wilson grabbed a left-side screen toss from Bill Dolan, found space along the same sideline, and left a pack of defenders in his wake en route to a 68-yard tally. The Cougars’ Billy Reilly carried 12 times for 105 yards and a fourth-quarter touchdown.
             Junior tailback Sam Madden sparked the Central Bears comeback with touchdown bursts of 10 and 7 yards. It wasn’t enough to catch the Cougars, though. The Bears fall to 2-3 while the Cougars advanced to 4-1 and a tie for first place in the league.  The Cougars stay at home next week to host the Southport Hawks. The game starts at 1:30 on the High School Field.


 NATIONAL NEWS


MIDDLE EAST IN CRISIS – HUNGARY REVOLT IS CRUSHED – IKE WANTS PEACE


Israel claims capture of the Sinai Peninsula after a four-day campaign. An Egyptian force of about 20,000 had been committed to defense of the peninsula. British and French warplanes smashed at nine Egyptian airfields. President Eisenhower promises “there will be no United States involvement in these present hostilities.” “I therefore have no plan to call the Congress into special session.”
More Suez Canal News- British and French troops are poised to jump into Egypt. It is expected that British and French troops will occupy the Suez Canal zone until the United Nations established an International police force to keep peace in the Middle East. Meantime - Israel announces capture of Gaza and claims control of all Sinai Peninsula to points within 10 miles of the Suez Canal. President Nasser of Egypt vows to fight to the end against Britain and France and their “ally” Israel.  British and French paratroopers land on Egyptian soil, launching an invasion to take over the Suez Canal Zone.

The Russians launch a massive early morning attack against Hungary and apparently succeeded in ousting the government of Premier Imre Nagy. Soviet military might smashes Hungary’s freedom movement.  The Russians installed a Communist government patterned after the new Polish regime. Communist radio stations assert the anti-Communist revolt was crushed under the weight of Soviet tanks, guns and planes. President Eisenhower urges Soviet Premier Bulganin to withdraw Russian troops from bleeding Hungary and let the Hungarians choose their own government.  Soviet Russia serves notice it is prepared to use force to bring about an end to British and French actions against Egypt.  Premier Nikolai Bulganin warned the two powers invading Egypt that they face the risk of attack by a stronger power capable of launching rocket weapons if they do not end the hostilities.

Speaking from Washington on a closed-circuit TV hookup to Boston, President Eisenhower said: “The great objective of all Americans remains true peace.  There must be one law for all - not just for us. Our hearts go out for the people of Hungary and the Middle East. We will keep working for the kind of peace the whole world can participate in.