-Publiihad by Naws-Rvlw Co., Inc., : Charles V. Stanton ; ' , Editor George Castillo Addye Wright Z Atiiitant Editor Buiintil Manogtr tember of the Associated Press, Oregon Newspaper Publisher! Association, the Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered as second class matter May 7, 1920, at the post office at Roseburg, Oregon, under act of March 2, 1873 Z Subscription Rates on Classified Advertising Page EDITORIAL PAGE 8 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, A TOUGH PROGRAM ; By Char!es V. Stanton I President-elect Kennedy, we are told, has been given a feport containing: much criticism of the many federal agen cies, departments, administrations and authorities, and ad vocating a sweeping overhaul. - If he can 'correct the abuses recited in the report, more power to. him! But I'm skeptical! I Kennedy is a youngster, so far as the age of Presidents concerned. It is one of youth's attributes to be a "snake Eiller." The older a man grows, the less he is inclined to light the status quo. The younger man seeks change, re form, improvement. So, it will be interesting to observe whether Kennedy's youthful enthusiasm attempts to "reform" the entrenched bureaucracy, currently costing the American taxpayer a most handsome' sum of money. The President-elect authorized a one-man study by James M. Landis, formerly active in various governmental departments and agencies. As he had personal contact with the Federal Trade Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission, Civil Aeronautics Board, Office of Civilian De fense, and other."!, it might appear that Landis was kicked from "pillar to post" because of some personal tendencies. Delays Reported Perhaps he was impatient with what he says are "in ordinate, interminable delays characterizing the handling of cases before nearly all regulatory agencies." If he ex hibited such impatience, then we may understand the rea son he served in so many places, We had enough federal emp'oyes before Franklin Roose velt became President. But in the relief of the Great Depression, we had. a staggering growth of federal bureaucracies. And each agency, with only minor exception, has continued to flourish and grow under subsequent administrations. Every attempt toward reorganization toward reducing the size of government has failed miserably. Today we have hundreds of eral employes. We have placed them under a Livii bervice Commission. Theoretically they can be discharged for in competence, but proving incompetence is worse than getting litigation into the U. S. Supreme l ourt. Most of those who head federal bureaus are paid on the basis of the number of employes serving under them. Consequently, it is to their personal advantage to make just as much work as possible and hire moiyj clerks and supervisors. Anyone who has had to do paper work with one or more of these commissions, authorities, agencies, adminis trations etc., knows that a more than to have a comma put in another spot. But that keeps more clerks busy! Money Wasted The inefficiency one encounters in dealing with some of these federal organizations, the delays, vacillations, 'pro crastinations, etc., is enough to set one wild. A private business wouldn't tolerate such costly inef ficiency for a moment. But, seemingly, it is encouraged in the federal family. It makes jobs. Those in jobs aren't easily fired and, besides, who wants to fire them? The more the better! And that brings me to another pet peeve! The only place where Landis had a good word for a fed eral agency, according to news accounts, concerned the Na tional Labor Relations Board. But again one is inclined to take a second look at his report. It would seem that he is proposing to put more politics into the NLRB rather than getting it out of politics. That, to me, makes his whole report suspect. If there is one place in which the federal government DOESN'T belong,- in my opinion, it's in the labor relations field. Why should the federal government set itself up as the third man in the ring with Capital and Labor? Why should taxpayers be spending their money for government interference. Capital and Labor are perfectly capable of settling their own disputes without a third party meddling in and making matters worse. We're prolonging and em phasizing labor troubles, paving the way for racketeering, simply because of governmental muddling. We could be saving billions of dollars if we'd get the federal government out of the middle. Kennedy, it is to be hoped, with the enthusiasm of youth, attack the entrenched bureaucratic system and strives to produce a higher degree of efficiency. However, it is my guess thai he'll meet a stubborn, solidly entrenched system that "will give him plenty of headaches before, and if, he succeeds. Hal Bovle Unknown Lassitude Virus Hits All After Christmas NEW YORK (AP) Whatever rusty bugle, happened to "Jingle Bells'" I Who wants to lie up and doing? There was a I line that was! At home the housewife takes a sweeping the country from coast loncor atternoon nap on the couch to coast last week. But it seems ! than usual. In the evening she tn have died out in the last couple i sits and stares at (he winking, of days. Maybe too much over I blinking Christmas tree, which exposure. "Have a nice Christmas?" asks llie pretty secretary, returning to work a day late from the holidays. "No thanks!" grumbles the of fice grouch. "Just had one." An unknown virus of lassitude sweeps the nation between the de parture of Santa Clnus and (lie ar rival of the New Year. II is the week of "the great leinown. r.veryoody rests on nisi oars in the doldrums of desire. J No one wants to sing carol. No one yearns (o throw a snow-j ball. Life settles down into a vast! aluggishness of -mind and body! and spirit. It becomes a big fat yawn. tveryonc Is seasonally worn ut from welcomes and wassail and turkey and pudding and good will and shopping and mailing pack- ages and opening packages. Everyone secretly wants tn ; riawl into a cocoon and dwell ( there and dream there tint il the i first robin of spring blows his ! 545 S.E. Main St.. lUMDurf, Oi.. Ore. Wed., Dec. 28, 1960 under Roosevelt, and as a step thousands of entrenched fed paper conies back for nothing nns mi only begun to shed Us needles. She knows she should he scribbling Happy New Year cards to the people she forgot to send Christinas cards lo, but somehow she doesn't feel quite up to it. At the olficc you'd have to fire a 2lgun salute throughout the dav lo keep the stnfl awake. The task's Ihey now spend all week noslmm ing they'd ordinarily romp through in half a morning any other time uf the vear Yep, 'the hired hand knows he ought lo buckle down and wind up his ycaiend report. Hill instead he puts his feet on his desk and stares vacantly mlo snace. robbed of all will to performance. I ne noss rs m the same fix. He knows he ought to he planning the firm's progress in the year ahead, but he doesn't want to. He knows that at least he ought to go out and bawl out the hired hand for doing nothing, But is it worth the trouble? No not now. So the boss puts hn feet In The Day's News Br FRANK In this space yesterday we ask ed HOW MUCH IS A BILLION DOLLARS? The generalized, broadly inclusive answer is that it is a LOT OF MONEY. So, today, it might be interest ing to ask another question? WHAT IS MONEY. The commonest definition of money is that it is a MEDIUM OK EXCHANGE. Primitive men had no use for money. Nor did he do much trad ing. He ate the meat of the ani mals he killed. He clothed him self in their skins. He dwelt in a cave. In other words, he was a rugged individualist. He lived by his own efforts. But, as time passed, primitive man began to discover that he could improve his standard of liv ing by swapping what he possess ed in surplus for what his neigh bor possessed in surplus. It was thus that TRADE arose. , At first, trade in. the world was all swap and barter. But, as trade grew, swapping and bartering be came bulgesome and burdensome. It wasted too much time. Even tually, it occurred to some primi tive cave man with a Phi Beta Kappa tyoe of brain that a MED IUM OK EXCHANGE would come in mighty handy. How he got the idea is lost in t'.ie mists of antiquity. He may have noted that his neighbors were fond of stringing shells around (heir necks as ornaments. And . . . he mav have known where j there was quite a shell beach. I Anvway, shells were among the earliest "media of exchange. Our own Indians, who came along eons after the earliest cave men, used shells as a medium of ex change. They strung them on threads and called them wampum. It was thus that MONEY came into being. All kinds of things have been used as media of exchange. For centuries, CATTLE were used. The use of cattle as money is still shown in our Language. The word "pecuniary" (mean ing having to do with money trans actions! is derived from the Latin word "pecus," meaning "cattle." Edmond LeBreton J FK's Texas Team To Have Chance To Show Its Mettle WASHINGTON (AP) John F. Kennedy's Texas team should have an early chance to show whether it can line up Southern lawmakers for the president elect's program as effectively as it kept Southern political leaders behind his candidacy. When Kennedy talked about his legislative program, with the vice president-elect, Sen. Lyndon jonn- son, D-Tex., and House Speaker Sum Rayburn, u-Tex., at his side, lie mentioned first a Social Security-based health care program for the aged. This is the legislation killed this year in the House Ways and Means Committee headed by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., and the Senate Finance Committee head ed by Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D-Va. Southern voles figured heavily in the committee decisions. Backers of the kind of bill Ken nedv favors contended and many sideliners agreed with them that if such legislation had ever reached the floor of the House and Senate with commitlee ap proval both chambers would have passed it. To redeem its campaign pledg es, the incoming administration must lead another try. The com ing struggle affords a second test of Kennedy's major strategic de cisionto offer the vire presiden tial nomination to Johnson, his great convention rival for the presidency, and not to write the South out of his calculations. In terms of the election, the de cision has been proven inspired. Johnson, and Johnson's redoubt able manager, Speaker Rayburn. certainly helped keep Texas and the majority of the South in the regular Democratic fold. The vole turned out so close, even elector ally, that if Kennedy had lost just two states rated in advance as most doubtful, Texas and North Carolina, he would have lacked an electoral majority, Rut the chances are that Ken nedy, a long-range planner, was looking beyond the election when j he made his dramatic bid to the aenaie majority leader. Suppose he had offered Johnson no luilm afler beating him for the presidential nommalion, hut had been elected anyhow. He would then have had to deal wi!h a Congress whose two lop Demo crats, loyal parly men lo be sure, might still be nursing private wounds. Instead, he has given Johnson, and, through Johnson. Rayburn, a substantial personal slake in the new administration's aticcess I or failure in Congress. The struggle will open soon. ; presumably in the Ways and I Means commitlee, which this year : met for months behind closed ! doors before irrevocably turning i down the Social Security' approach to health care for the aged. No ! variation of the Social Security ; plan ever mustered more than 9 voles in the 2.i-nian rommiUee. The 10 Republicans voled solidly I againstit. Chairman Mills auth- !on his desk, too, and stare n jseeingly at the puturcs on his ! wall. Ennui holds the race of man kind from its usual promise. It i is easier lo postpone everything ; than to do an thing. ' The virus will pass. The great I letdown will end. In another few days the world will hum as busily ' and shout as stridently as ' usual-; ; ly does. ' But in the week between Christ ! mas and New Year's, personal ! j chancier plus a few' teaspoon-1 I fuls of bicarbonate of soda-are i about all that keep the human ' , race going. i JENKINS Cattle were perfectly good monev. They had INTRINSIC value. If you didn't want to use 'em as a medium of exchange, you could EAT 'em. You could make leather out of their hides. Their horns made pretty good drinking cups. For quite a period of our own West, beaver skins were used as money. They too had intrinsic value. You could make hats of their fur. In early colonial Vir ginia tobacco was used for money. It also had intrinsic value. If you didn't need it for money, you could smoke it or chew it. One of the principles of GOOD money is that it must have intrin sic value which is to say that it must be capable of being used for some purpose other than as a medium of exchange. Also it must be reasonably scarce, be cause if it becomes too ABUND ANT it depreciated in value. But it mustn't be TOO scarce. That brines us around to eold which for centuries has been the world's basic medium of exchange. Gold has INTRINSIC value. It is beautiful, which gives it value as ornaments, it is capable ot neing worked easily, so that almost ANYTHING can be made of it. It doesn't rust away. It resists acids. It can be beaten out fabu lously thin for use as gold leaf. It is durable. And, since the beginnings of trade and commerce, it so hap pens that gold production over the world has tended to increase about as last as the volume of world trade and commerce has increas ed. Thus it has tended to be neith er too scarce nor ' too abundant. For all these reasons, gold has tended to become the IDEAL med ium of exchange, the ideal basis of value for other things that are used as money (including paper with PROMISES written on it), the ideal medium for the settle ment of international balances. So, in these days, we have come to think of gold as MONEY. We have confidence in gold as mon ey. We have confidence in paper money that is hacked by gold. We have little confidence in paper money that isn't backed by gold. orcd the quite different and sharp ly restricted grant-in-aid plan for needy aged which finally emerged. So Rayburn's work, if ho in tends to back Kennedy all (he way on this issue, is cut out for him. It begins when the House Democrats caucus Monday, since there are two Democratic vacan cies to fill on Ways and Moans The two who left the committee are the author ot the Social Secur ity health plan, Rep. Aime J. J or and of Rhode Island, and one of its strongest supporters. Rep. Lee Metcalf of Montana. Forand did not seek re-election. Metcalf was elected to the Senate. There is a Republican vacancy on the committee, too, but it is hardly likely the opposition parly will name to this blue ribbon tax writing committee anyone who might waver in opposition lo the Democratic program. Backers of the Kennedy plan, however, think that if they can get their measure to the floor they will have support from some GOP colleagues, since there will no longer be in the White House a Republican president publicly and! strongly opposing any link of So- via, kji-vumjr uiu C lll'llllll care. South Korea Cuts Army SEOUL, South Korea (AP) The South Korean army today re tired 1.534 officers and noncom missioned officers as part of its plan to cut 30,000 men from the army., Each was given two years' salary. The Cartoonist PORT ECONOMY Coos Bay World We heartily concur in the view expressed during Congressman elect Edwin Durno's local-problem conferences at Reedsport and else where that public works appropri ations and projects could do some thing to alleviate the distress of un employment which has hit lumber industry areas with a sickening wallop. But while the lines of ap plicants for unemployment compen sation checks each week may rep resent stimulus for pushing such projects, we believe that the pub lic works needs are justified on their own merit, and that harbor improvements such as the Siuslaw, Umpqua, and Coos jetty projects merit priority consideration under the economic and social philosphy advanced by the Kennedy Admin istration in November. This paper has long urged these harbor repair and improvement needs, nor have we ever felt that support for one was inconsistent with support for the others. We believe that the economy of South western Oregon is weakened by the unsolved problems of th-i Umpqua, Siuslaw, Coos or other harbor en trances, we believe that the cor rection of the harbor problems of any community will enhance the security and prosperity ot every citizen or every other community At no ooint is our national secur ity more surely served than at the basic community level of our in dustry and commerce. As a nation, we can hurl billions into a frantic race for supremacy in outer snace: we can pour other billions into our frenzied effort to concoct the latest and must lethal nuclear weapon; we can pour other Billions into maintaining an cin cient military and naval system, to the end that as a nation we will be invincible. We can do all of this, and meet disastrous defeat in a crumbling economy at home in the port com munities of our nation, in the mills and factories of our lumber and other industries. We hope that the forthcoming federal budget will have substan tial items for the Southwestern har bor projects, and that the Oregon delegation of Democratic and Re publican senators and congressmen will work together for the appropri ation of funds for the early start of construction of these first-line-of-de-fense projects. THE GOOD GUY The Sun, Edmond, Okla. What would happen if this nation turned her microscopes away from studying the selfish, the lazy, the crafty and the confused and focus ed them instead on the industrious, the able, the honest and the mor ally strong? What would happen if we stopped psychoanalyzing the chicken-chested punk who knows only to sneer, and paid some gen uine attention to the squares who have never stabbed a teacher or mugged an elderly woman? Think of the millions of dollars we've spent trying to find out what makes the delinquent. Think of the time our sociologists have spent trying to analyze the alcoholic, be lay the broken home, and compre hend the criminal. Breeders of ani mals are smarter than this. No body develops winning racehorses by an intensive study of the losers. Nobody breeds prize pigs by re searching the runts. We ve taken the good guy for granted for so long in this country that we apparently know nothing whatever about him. Is he reli gious? Sometimes hut quite oft en not. Was he properly whaled by his parents when he was a kid Again sometimes - but quite often not. Was he a sheer joy to his teachers? Not always oflen he I was the lad who turned their hair scheduled to make Us first flight prematurely gray. But do we know! late in 1962. will be the father of about the bad guy? You bet we a series of supersonic civilian jet do. We know he is misunderstood, j liners that in another decade will misguided, misdirected, and miser-! be taking passengers coast to coast able. a victim of his environ-; in little more than one hour. So ment. We know we must pity him I inevitable is this development that and pamper him and pay for his I airlines executives already are pon rehabilitation. dering arrangements for financ- We must at all cosls and the ling their 1970-model Mach 3 trans costs are becoming outrageous j ports. The thermal barrier can't be nice to him. I say nuts to him halt the progress of aviation, mili- Says: Editing the Message iditoricsl and to our national fetish of the overwrought and discontended the neurotic personality . . .the upset physyche . . . and the complex com- Dlex. Couldn t our grade schools, give at least as much extra time to developing the brilliant, the gift ed, and tne natural leaders as they give to those who haven't yet ad justed to group play? Must our high schools continue to flood our colleges with the well off, the show-off and goof-off. . . along with the talented ... the able . . . and the devoted? I be lieve it is high time for our edu cators, our ministers, our business men, and our journalists to launch a mammoth talent hunt. Shouldn't we ensure that every gifted boy and girl gets at least as much attention as we give our classier criminals? SECOND BARRIER Portland Oregonian Two years ago the X-15 rocket plane was a high-priority, highly classified space age project. A per son needed lop security clearance even to get a peek at it. Only now are the manufacturer's tests com plete and the X-15 ready to be turned over to the National Aero natics and Space Administration. But so swift is the progress of aerospace research that the X-15 is obsolete even before it has had an opportunity to reach its goal of taking a man 100 miles into the sky. It no longer has any de sign secrets wortb keeping. The X-15 will be remembered, however, as the plane which allow ed the U. S. aviation industry to hurdle another "barrier" and move into a new field. Only a few years ago it was widely believed that airplanes could not fly faster than the speed of sound. Planes that did approach the "sound barrier" in high speed dives were subject to severe, de structive buffeting. But as design ers learned more about high speed airflow they found they could build planes that would fly faster than Mach 1 with no ill effects. For ail practical purposes the borderline between subsonic and supersonic flight no longer exists. Now we must deal wilh a new ob stacle, the "thermal barrier". We know that when an object moves through the air at high speed it heats up through friction. A 2.500 m.p.h. airplane will build up a skin temperature in the neighborhood of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. If built of conventional aluminum, it literally will melt. So ways must be found to design wings, fuselages, electronic gear and even rubber tires for landing wheels that will withstand intense heat over long periods. Many of the lessons rearnea Dy engineers for North American Avi ation. Inc.. in building the X-15 have helped in the design of the 2,000 m.p.h. B-70 bomber the firm now is building tor tne strategic Air Command. The problems of avoiding heat damage and dissi pating excess heat are much the same in-bolh "aircraft. The X-15 is built of heavy plates of nickel alloy to resist the extreme temperatures it will encounter at its designed top speed. But this little plane weighs 15 tons, and a B-70 built tn a similar fashion would be too heavy to get of the ground. The desired light weight and heat resistance will be achiev ed in the B-70 through the use of stainless steel, honeycomb con struction. Thousands of gallons of jet fuel carried in the hollow wings will absorb much of the heat, and refrigerated air circulating through the cellular fuselage walls will keep the outer skin below the melt ing point while letting the crew in side work in a shirtsleeve environ ment. No one doubts that the B-70. Comment tary or civilian. But the airport ramp operator, when he moves up to the cabin door of an arriving airliner, may need asbestos gloves NO SUBSTITUTE FOR STEAK " Band Bulletin When the State Board of Edu cation last week decided to seek legislation calling for five years of couege preparation lor uregon teachers, members overlooked a few of the problems. In the first place, no mention was made of upgrading the salary along with the professional stand ards. And, in the second place, it looks as if little consideration was given to elementary school teachers. Nobody will argue with raising standards in any profession, es pecially the teaching profession. Oregon, with an excellent school program, still has more than its share of marginal teachers. And perhaps upgrading of stand ards will have to come before sal aries are upgraded. But, they should go hand in hand. The problem is pretty basic. Why should a young man, or woman, spend five years in an institution of higher learning for peanuts? A four-year graduate in almost any thing else can do better financial ly. We know, teaching shouldn't be measured by a financial yard stick. But soup and sandwiches are no substitute for steak, either in the stomach or in raising the prestige of a profession. The problem of a five year col lege course is serious for elemen tary teachers. Elementary teachers, as we un derstand it, are mostly concerned with the methods and the psycho logy of children. Perhaps a five year course could teach more sub stance, but couldn't a four-year course do the same thing? And the five year course will probably mean fewer elementary teachers when we really need more. 1 Most young women, for example, look more to marriage and a fam ily than a lifetime of teaching. They take education because they like the profession and because it gives them a job after college and before marriage. A teaching certificate is also a pretty good insurance policy for a young woman, who might someday have, or want to go back to teach ing. V When these young potential teachers see what a girl can do financially with a business college education, and weigh that against five years in college, the dropout rate could be pretty high. There's no doubt that teaching standards should be continually screened and probably raised, es pecially in the secondary schools. But so should pay and prestige. which go hand in hand. We -don I know which will have to come first, the carl or the horse. The State Board of Education has put itself but on a long limb, one which the legislature will prob ably cut off.. . SEA WATER FOR SALE dragon Statesman, Salem Now that the State Land Board! has been told by Attorney General Thornton that it can't sell the oilj under the ocean (which mav not; be there anyway), it has bounced right back by selling the ocean it self (which is in plentiful supply). It would be interesting to know by what process the board arrived at a price of S60 for 60,000 gal lons. Even more interesting would be its reasons for charging a per gallon royalty for anything over that figure. Do they want to dis courage the man from taking too much? After all, we may get a complaint from the Siberians 'if we lower the water level. It's their ocean, too, you know. The Land Board showed rare de termination in selling the ocean water. Surely they could see they are heading into a jurisdictional dispute of the first water oops, magnitude. The State Water Con trol Board surely isn't going to take this invasion of its domain floating on its back. As long as someone is willing to buy it, ocean water must be a re source. So, the matter may be come a three-way struggle with the State Committee on Natural Resources joining in. Obviously, this is all a matter which Attorney General Thornton wilt need to settle with another opinion. While he's about it, he had best consider the possible claim of Ihe State Highway De partment. The man who would be pumping water from the ocean would be using the beach to park his truck. As every fan of Os West knows, the hearh is a public high way and the Highway Department long has had jurisdiction over what borders the highways. Thornton will find another com- filication in that the permittee ives on federal land at Chemawa Indian School. Doesn't this lift him nut of state jurisdiction? Like Portland General Electric, perhaps he should have gone over the heads of state authorities and ap-. plied directly to the Federal Pow er Commission. The FPC doesn't have control of ocean water, nor mally. They have assumed juris diction over Oregon's rivers, how ever, so perhaps they are ready to grab off a little more. On second thought, the man would have been better off if he had just taken his truck down to the ocean and started sucking up sea water without asking anyone. Then he would hive saved the Land Board. Water Board. Re sources Board. Highway Commis sion and Attorney General Thorn ton all this trouble. GOLDBERG IN CABINET Capital Journal, Saltm President-elect John F. Kennedy has selected Arthur Joseph Gold berg of Chicago. 52 year-o!d lead ing attorney for labor unions for appointmeni as Secretary of La bor in the President's Cabinet He was chief counsel and strategist for Ihe Sleelworkcrs Union in its record nationwide strike last year; chief counsel for the oM C I O.. a key man in merging the CIO and Al l. into the world's biggest labor organization. Mr. Goldber U chief enonivl to Ihe A.F.L-C.I.O. Industrial Union Department headed by Walter Reuther, about as ruthless and un scrupulous a labor czar as the U.S.A. has produced. Mr. Goldberg has however often expressed other sentiments which associates insist he really means such as "Labor must recognize that automation fs necessary and indispensable." "The labor move-' ment," he is quoted as saying, "should be prepared lo stimulate rapid replacement of obsolete plants and equipment. Economic in jury can occur when too great bar gaining power exists on either side, labor or management." Mr. Goldberg declares that he will break his relations with the A.F.L.-C.I.O., the Steelworkcrs and other unions he represents and that he will never return to his la bor organization career, even when his government service ends. "You have to consider that one career is over," he states. Senator Barry Goldwater of Ariz ona, leading Republican conserva tive, anathema to most labor boss es, is quoted as having privately said that Mr. Goldberg is the man he' trusts the most and finds it easier to talk to throughout the la bor movement. Many . of the labor bosses are cool towards Goldberg's appoint ment. They insist Ihe cabinet job should go to a "union man," and they don't consider Goldberg fits the description. Goldberg's name was not on the list of five candi dates submitted to Kennedy by the AFL-CIO by its president, George Meany, earlier this week all the five were elective officials of fed eration affiliates. Mr. Goldberg is reported to have told President-elect Kennedy that he did not want to run the labor department but greatly preferred to become Attorney General so the decision was Mr, Kennedy's own. G. P. TO CLEAR STREAMS Capital Journal, Salem The Public Health Service esti mates that $10,600,000,000 would be required in the next decade to clean up the nation's streams of pollution. About half the expendi tures would come from public funds, federal, state and local, for construction or improvement of municipal waste-treatment plants. The other half would be spent by industry for construction of treat ment facilities. The estimates are taken from a Public Health Service study report entitled "Clean Water" prepared" lor the National Conference on Wa ter Pollution. The three-day confer ence at Washington concluded this week. It was attended bv loOO rep resentatives of about 300 national organizations. The. ennfprenpp wai pallpH hv Surgeon General Leroy E. Burney at the request of President Eisen hower to review the water pollu tion problem' and to make recom mendations for solving it. n a foreword to the report Dr. Burney noled "water pollution has become one of the pressing social and economic problems of our time. It is most importantly a pub lic health problem, also a problem in water management, for without pollution control our country can never have, enough water for its needs, in addition it is a problem in conservation and esthetics." The study found that pollution of the water sources in the nation had shown a six-fold increase in the last 60 years and was still rising because of rising population, ex panding industry and inadequate waste treatment by cities and in dustries. In the next decade the study re port estimates cities will have to spend $5,280,000,000 or about 3 per cent of the total municipal budgets for the period, if they are to meet for -waste treatment facilities a 60 per cent increase over the past level of such expenditures. In the 1950s, an iggregate of $3,200,000,000 was spent on muni cipal sewage-treatment facilities against an estimaled need of $5, 100.000,000. Besides the funds re quired to wipe out the $1,900,000, 000 deficiency, the report savs $2, 250.000.000 will be needed in the coming decade for new plants and $1,130,000,000 for replacement of obsolescent plants. The report says the money being spent for research in sewage treat ment is "entirely inadequate." G.P. 1961 Calendars You or cordially invited to stop in of our office of 775 S. E. Host Street for your fret calendar, UMPQUA Insurance Agency TOM PARGETER VIC LEWIS DAVE GEDDES, Jr. RICHARD MANN SECURITY BUILDING Corntr Raw 1 Lint Sll. PHONE OR 2 3348 FREE PARKING IN REAR OF BUILDING OUR 43rd YEAR IN ROSEBURG t