U. of 0. lo'bmry
18
DEAD
xn
c .
i SJl "Mr M)fiirnnMmiiinJ-iinim4fiiilfinnf , 4.C. i 'W m. '& 4
ONE DEAD IN WRECK Laurence C. Bursik, 22, of Rr. 3, Roseburg, was killed early
Thursday night in the wreck of this automobile between Melrose and Umpqua. State
police said the accident occurred when the car failed to negotiate a curve near the junc
tion of Umpqua Road and Cleveland Hill Road.
Task Force Urges
' Aid To Education
NEW YORK (AP)-A . special
task force recommended to President-elect
Kennedy today a high
priority program to pump $3V4
billion in loans and grants into
the American educational system.
The objective would be to "lift
the schools to a new level of
excellence."
The plan would provide extra
federal cash for all public schools,
for construction, and for teachers'
salaries or other purposes related
to improving education. It would
provide a special program along
similar lines for states in econom
ic distress. And it would set up a
special aid plan for city schools.
Added Housing
In addition, increased grants
and loans to improve academic
facilities and housing at colleges
and universities was blueprinted
for the president-elect.
The task force which drew up
the recommendations was headed
by Dr. Frederick Hovde, presi
dent of Purdue University.
Hovde handed the report to
Kennedy in the presence of Gov.
Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut,
who will be secretary of health,
education and welfare, in the new
administration.
Program
The program lines up like this:
1. It recommends that Kennedy
support legislation to provide $110
per year per pupil, based on aver
age daily attendance in public
schools, for the entire school sys
tem of the nation. It would cost
an estimated SI. 2 billion a year.
State and local governments, how
ever, would be required to "main
lain or increase their support of
education."
2. Similarly, the task force rec
ommends S20 per year per child
for states where incomes are be
low 70 per cent of the national
, average, figured again according
to average daily attendance in
public schools.
The task force estimated that
this would cost $140 million an
nually, would help about one
fourth of the states, mostly in the
South, and would assist seven
million children.
$20 Pr Child
3. For cities over 300,001), which
"are facing unique and grave ed
ucational problems," the task
force proposed the equivalent of
another S20 per child in school.
This would be for grants to sup
port research and experimental
programs in special problems of
urban schools, for planning and
constructing ' facilities, for buying
land, and for other educational
pu.rre,S.:, ....,., k ,,..., I
a formula taking into account
such
thincs as ooDulation densitv !
the nature of housing
Myrtle Creek Tavern
Scene Of Big Theft
A safe at a Myrtle Creek tavern,
containing about $2,000, was bur
glarized early Thursday morning,
acc-ording to Oregon State Police.
Myrtle Creek Chief of Police Jim
Prinale notitied the state police
that sometime after 1:30 a.m. thelous
sale at the Ilee Haw Tavern had
been broken into and burglarized.
According to the police report,
the safe had been rolled into Ihe
cooler at the tavern and the door
furred open with what was thought
to be a steel bar.
Myrtle Creek Police and the Ore
gon' State Police are investiga
ting the crime.
the Weather
AIRPORT RECORDS
Occionl rain end periods of
" partial clearing tonight and Satur
day. Highest temp, last 74 hours it
Lowest temp, last 24 hours . 41
Highest temp, any Jan. ('5?) eS
Lowest temp, any Jan. ('57) 9
Precip. I st 24hourt Oi
Preeip from Jan. 1 ...... 06
Precip. from Sept. 1 12.86
Deficiency from Sept. 1
1.51
Sunset tenight, 4:53 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow, 7:45 a.m.
Fourth Fatality Of
percentage of students finishing
high school.
Annual Cost
Estimated cost: $120 million a
year; estimated number of chil
dren benefiting: six million.
4. To helo colleges, universities
and junior "colleges accommodate
a million new students in the next
five years, the task force urged
legislation providing $350 million
in grants, and SI50 million in
loans to help provide facilities.
These would be first-year costs.
In succeeding years, the task
force said, this phase of the ed
ucational program will require in
creasing sums. Grants would be
provided on a matching basis,
that is, federal funds would ac
count for only half the total
outlay.
5. For the college housing loan
program, already in operation 10
vears, the task force recommends
i that Congress be asked for. an
immediate increase in loan au
thorization of $150 million to meet
needs of the present fiscal year
ending next June 30.
Hula Gals Blamed
For Liner's Woes
HONOLULU (AP)-Fair wind
and fair maidens were blamed
partly for bringing the 30,000-ton
British liner Arcadia to grief on
a reef just outside Honolulu's har
bor entrance Thursday.
It appeared that as the ship ma
neuvered to pick up an off-shore
boarding party she drifted in the
steady trade wind and crunched
gently on a coral reef. The board
ing party included one of Honolu
lu's welcoming taskforces of Hula
girls, but it also had customs in
spectors and shipping agents.
No one was hurt. The only dam
age found was an indentation
about a foot long and half an inch
deep, embedded with bits of coral,
about 25 feet below the water line
forward of the bridge.
But it took several lugs more
than two hours while ail other
shipping was halted through the
180-foot wide harbor entrance, to
work the Arcadia free.
The big P&O-Orient liner car
rying 1.1S2 passengers and a crew
of 713 was scheduled to leave at
midnight Thursday night for the
South Pacific and Australia.
SEATO Council
In Third Meet
BANGKOK
Thailand (AP)
The SEATO Council today held
"s ""rn s-s!,,"n ln a wecK ""
linn dujuumivu wiiiivuv iauiuj, a
statement.
An informant said the United
States submitted no further evi-
idcnce to back up its charge that
I Soviet planes have landed sub
! sliintial North Vietnamese rcin
j lorcements for the pro-Communist
Pallid Lao rebels.
Ambassadors of the eight Soulh
j east Asia Treaty Organization na
i tions met for an hour. One source
said the envovs "discussed vari-
rrports of Communist lnter-
venlion in Laos and that Ihey
considered the situalinn in the
neighboring kingdom "just as se
rious as earlier in the week."
Big Judgment Sought
In Goebl Traffic Death
j Judgment for S20.OU0 for the Iraf
; fie death of Kenneth Gene Goebl
is asked in a complaint filed in
i Circuit Court by Esther Goebl. ad-
minislralor of his estate, against
Leslie Hatfield.
! The ac'irlcnt took place July 2.
!9M. on Buckhnrn Road eight
miles east of Dixonville The com
plaint states that the defendant's
car was driven by his daughter.
Audrey Hatfield, and that young
Goebl was a passenger in the car.
It furl her stales that the auto
traveling east failed to negotiate
a curve, going off the road. Negli-
I genre against Iha defendant u
i charged.
ii
Year
New Riots Erupt
In S. Belgium
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)
The government said today the
18-day-old strike has collapsed in
two of Belgium's nine provinces.
But rioting broke out in Liege in
the industrial south and there
were noisy demonstrations in
Brussels.
Socialist leaders of Ihe strike
against the Conservative govern
ment's economy program were
reported looking for a way to halt
th? crippling workouts. A source
close to the Socialist high com
mand said "the end is near."
Pierre Harmel, government
spokesman, said the strike is over
in the provinces of Limburg in
the north and Luxembourg in the
south.
Trouble, however, broke out in
the southern industrial citv of
Liege where 30,000 strikers
cheered Andre Renard, a union
leader considered the real power
behind the walkouts.
Up to 1,000 strikers attacked a
railway station, a pout office and
a fire truck, but were hurled back
by police who fired (ear gas.
In Brussels, about 2,000 demon
strated in front of Forest Prison.
They were led by Guy Brouhon,
Socialist member of Parliament,
who declared 40 strikers are be
ing held there. Demonstrators
threw firecrackers and a few
rucks at massed stale police, then
left.
Premier Gaston Eyskens' Catholic-Liberal
government pushed
for parliamentary approval of its
austerity program that touched off
the strikes. But Eyskens was re
ported considering calling early
elections a year ahead of time
immediately alter adoption of the
economic reform bill.
The momentum of the strikes,
which have led to one death and
cost the nation millions of francs
in lost production and properly
damage, was clearly losing
steam. Except in the Socialist
strongholds of Liege and the
Charleroimons industrial belt,
where the workers are tradition
ally militant.
W-D Fire Department
Answers Two Alarms
An overheated heater caught a
wall on fire and caused about $50
damage at the John Murphv resi
dence on Fifth St. in Dillard Thurs
day afternoon, Winston - Dillard
Fire Department officials report.
The department also answered a
call to Gen. E. L. Lyman's resi
dence in Illinois Heights in Win
ston. A flue fire, which caused no
damage, was out on arrival.
U.S. National Opening Set Saturday
NuHiiiliJ :f.J ! b p wi ujjz
MARKING THE OPENING of the U. S. Notionol Bank's
new Roseburg branch building, ribbon-cutting ceremonies
will be held on Saturday. Doors will swing open of 8:30
a m.. During the day-long celebration the crowded colendar
of events will include carnations for the ladies and
balloons for the youngsters, a speciol treasure chest con
test, refreshments, end a general explanation of the new
structure by bpnk officials. The bank will be open until
5 pm. Among those appearing on the program will be
E. C. Sammons, chairman of the U. S. National Bank's
board of directors; Peter B. Serafm, Roseburg mayor;
'
I iiiijiiiiii.i mill II -!i''.mM.1.OTi mm t'vrmtmmmmmw n n imii !. ni 1 1 n. l. timiiii i i inm..i iiuw m nun,.,,!
L - iiini-iimiri mm- ft '" A- --nm n Minn - - ' '- f i rrl -Trft i mi ri r mimm inn mi
Established 1873 16 Pages
Youth Dies
i
As Car Skids
On Highway
A 22 year-old Roseburg area man
was killed in a one-car crash be
tween Melrose and Umpctua earlv
Thursday night to jump the Doug
las County death toll for the year
to four.
Slate police said Laurence Com
muneus Bursik, of Rt. 3, Box 1470,
Roseburg, was killed when the car
in which he was riding failed to
negotiate a curve on the Umpqua
Road near the Cleveland Hill Road
junction.
Skids On Gravel
They said the car, driven by 65-year-old
Olna Hathaway, of the
Tyee Rl., Roseburg, skidded on
the gravel at the intersection of
the two roads and crashed into a
roadside bank.
Douglas County Coroner Dr.
John Donnelly said Bursik died of
a skull fracture and possible brok
en neck. He was listed as dead on
arrival at a Roseburg hospital.
Hip Injury s
Hathaway sustained multiple lac
erations of the face and an injured
hip.
the accident occurred about 6:30
only hours after the final rites for
two of the three teen-age boys kill
ed in a one-car crash near Glide
Mew Year's morning.
The first fatality of 1960 was not
recorded until Jan. 14.
Lawrence Bursik, Rte. 3 resident,
was born July 28. 1938 at Melrose
and had been employed as a choker
setter for Counts Bros Logging Co.
Survivors include his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. Emerick C. Bursik of
Melrose; three sisters, Mrs. Jo
seph Laurance of Coos Bay, Mrs.
George Kohonis of Coos Bay, and
Mrs. John Mulvihill of Coquille:
and three brothers, Lyle of Garden
Valley, Wayne of Roseburg, and
Franklin of Melrose. i
Funeral services will be held at
the chapel of Long and Orr- Mor
tuary Monday at 2 p.m. Interment
will follow in the Melrpse 'ene-
".. j .
Roseburg Permits
Down From 1959
Building permits for the Oty of
Roseburg for 1960 hit a total of
$2,513,722. or about $163,000 less
than in 1959.
Although the total valuation of
permits issued was slightly down,
the valuation of new commercial
construction was up better than
$250,000.
17 Permits
Building Inspector Oliver Eggel
ston reported the city this year
issued 17 permits for new commer
cial construction for a total valua
tion of $953,200. The total for 1959
was $706,309.
Permits for dwellings this year
hit $484,184, as compared lo $436,
074 in 1959.
Biggest Jobt
Eggelston said the total valua
tion of the permits issued was
down because of the heavy num
ber of repair permits issued in 1959
after the August blast.
He said the big jobs for which
permits were taken out this year
were for the United States Nation
al Bank, $311,000; Fullerton IV El
ementary School, $290,000; t h e
YMCA building, $233,000: Kir
Grove Elementary School, $180,000;
Byrd s Market, $98,000; the siaie
Employment Office, $84,000;
the
Roseburg City Hall. $82,000;
and
$75,-
i the Church of the Nazarcne
iOOO.
ROSEBURG, OREGON FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1961
Security
Castro s
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)'
The U.N. Security Council
Thursday night discarded Cuba's
latest charge that she is facing
imminent invasion from the Unit
ed States.
A majority of members of the
11-nation body made clear in de
bate they did not believe there
was any evidence to back up the
4 Bombs Hit
As Algerians
Begin Voting
ALGIERS (AP) The Algerian
countryside bristled with police
roadblocks and troop patrols to
day as voting began on President
Charles de Gaulle's plan to give
Algeria local self-government now
and a chance lo vote for inde
pendence if the bloody rebellion
ends. ,
The voting started in apparent
calm throughout the Algieran
countryside, but in Algeria four
bombs aimed at the power lines
of Radio Algiers went off just
ootore it was lo carry De Gaulle s
final appeal for support of his
proposals. The bombs caused ma
jor damage, but did not stop re
lay of the speech.
Approval Asked
De Gaulle called once more for
a massive yes vote so that ne
gotiations with all factions on At
geria s future could oe arranged
"with the smallest delay pos
sible." j
Speaking from i.raris to the
nearly 27 million voters of France
who on Sonday "will decide the
outcome of the referendum, he
implied that if his plan is defeat
ed, forces outside j France would
impose a solution in Algeria. To
vote "no" would be lo recognize
that the problem would not be re
solved by France, he said.
Man Eligible
In Algeria, 3.9 million Moslems,
700,000 French colonists and 340,
000 soldiers in the French army
were eligible to vote. The voting
is in the villages today, in the
lowns Saturday and in the big
cities Sunday. France also votes
Sunday.
Associated Press correspondent
David Mason toured several out
lying districts in the tense area
around Oran and reported all was
orderly. He said the initial turn
out indicated little enthusiasm
among the French settlers but a
better response from the Mos
lems. '
Canby Teener Stabbed
After Row With 'Friend'
CANBY (AP)-A teen-age girl
was slabbed 11 times here Thurs
day night and police later arrest
ed her boy friend in Astoria.
Sheriff Joe Shobe said Dennis
Arnold Anderson, 18, Canby, told
him he stabbed Judy Diane Otte,
17. Canby, after they had an argu
ment. Shobe reported that the girl had
told Anderson she wanted lo break
! up. Anderson told him they had
i been going steady, Shobe said.
Miss Otte was reported in fair
! condition in the hospital.
. II I I I
V.
T. Jackson, Douqlos County judge; George Gratke,
president of the Chamber of Commerce; and Arlo Jacklin,
former Roseburg mayor. The $300,000 structure located
at SE Oak Ave. and SE Main St. will feature 1 1,000 square
feet of off-street parking, oir-conditioning and bank-from-your-car
facilities; o safe deposit vault with coupon booths,
conference room, employe lounge, and complete vault
facilities, besides other features such as the landscaped
55 x 55-foot entrance court. (For stoTics and picture on
the U. S. National Bank see Page 7).
Council
Invasion
charge made last Saturday by the
ridel Castro government that an
invasion was coming within hours.
U.S. Victory
The council ended its two-day
debate without a vote a victory
for the United States, which
termed the charge ridiculous and
asked that it not be dignified by
formal action.
A resolution by Chile and Ecua
dormerely calling on the United
States and Cuba to settle their
differences by peaceful means
was not pressed lo a vole. Of the
11 council members, only the So
viet liuion supported the Cuban
charge. Ceylon and the United
Arab Republic did not commit
themselves. The rest of the coun
cil Britain. Chile, Nationalist
China, Ecuador, France, Liberia
and Turkey agreed with the
United States that the charge had
not been proved.
Debate Ended
U.A.R. Delegato Omar Loutfi,
the council president for January
ended the debate with a brief
statement expressing the hope
"that nothing will be done which
could in any way aggravate" the
tension between the Uniled States
and Cuba.
It was the third U.N. defeat for
Castro's regime in its efforts to
pin aggression charges on the
Uniled Stales.
Last July Cuba failed to slop a
resolution shunting charges of eco
nomic aggression to the Organi
zation of American States, which
rejected them. Last October the
Cubans failed to get immediate
U.N. assembly debate on charges
that the United States was pre
paring a big-scale military inva
sion. The later charge still awaits
action in the assembly political
committee, which is in recess
until March.
Final Statement
ln a final statement Cuban For
eiun Minister Raill Roa insisted
that the threat of invasion "still
hangs over Cuba despite the U.S.
denial." He declared that if Amer
ican forces invade his country,
"Ihey will not meet a Cuba who
is alone."
Plugging the new Communist
line that the Soviet Union and its
allies expect policies more sym
pathetic to them from the Ken
nedy administration, Soviet Dep
uty Foreign Minister Valerian A.
$25,000 Offered
Pine Street Motel
The Oregon Slate Highway Com
mission, through its commission
ers, has tendered into court a
000 offer for purchase of proper
ties of the Soulh Roseburg Motel
for the south exit of the Pine
Street Couplet.
The olfer is made lo Ihe molel
R. O. Johnson, and Olhers named
as having an interest in the prop
erty. Johnson in a counter suit is
asking $35,000 lor the property.
The couplet would cut through
the molel taking out several units.
Johnson maintains Ihe business
would be ruined by the action as
not enough of the molel would be
left to do business.
The state has deposited Ihe mon
ey with the clerk of the court for
use oi ine ueienoanis penuing ou
judication of action seeking to con
demn the property.
Contract to construct l!ie couplcl
has already been let. The suit will
merely determine the damages due
Ihe defendant.
HIlT -
iliiiflitarf,ii
4-61
PRICE 5c
Discards
Charges
Zorin said he hoped the incoming
administration would "take the
course of peaceful settlement of
the conllict" between Cuba and
the United Slates.
U.S. Delegate James W. Barco
noted this "mild approach" by
Zorin to the new administration
but said he wanted to remind the
Soviet Union that the American
people "are united and our policy
is consistent."
Fights Erupt
Fist figlus between Castro and
anti-Castro partisans erupted
Thursday in the public lobby of
the general assembly and also out
side U.N. headquarters. U.N.
guards ejected the combatants
from the lobby, and New York
police broke up the fighting out
side. U.N. guards searched the coun
cil chamber lor bombs before the
meeting and weeded out suspi
cious persons to prevent a repeti
tion of the demonstrations that
twice interrupted the first day's
debate.
Castro's Troops
Still On Move
HAVANA (AP) Troops were on
the move everywhere today in
Ihis Caribbean island once a fa
vorite winter playground as Fidel
Castro kept his nation in a frenzy
to fight off the invasion he claims
is coming from the Uniled Slates
Hie United Slates termed Cas
tro's latest invasion charge ridicu
lous, and a majority of the U.N.
Security Council said alter two
days of dcbalo the Cubans had not
proved the charge. But the Cuban
regime put on the most intensive
military display it could muster.
A wave of searches' of Roman
Catholic organizations and the
arrest of at least nine Catholic
students or teachers was reported,
bul it was not immediately clear
whether a widespread movement
against the church or its affiliates
was under way.
Antiaircraft and antitank guns
studded Malccon, Havana's pic
turesque seafront that in pre-Cns-Iro
days was a favorite prome
nade for tourists at this time of
year mostly Americans.
Artillery emplacement! sprout
ed throughout the rest of Havana
and its suburbs.
The capital resounded to Ihe
movement of grim laced civilian
soldiers. Militia men and women
patrolled rooftops with machine-
guns at the ready.
Hunnreas of blue-uniformed
teen-agers, members of Ihe revo
lutionary youth organization, car
ried burp guns and bazookas into
the elegant Hotel Nacional over
looking the Gulf of Mexico.
Ihe miliary activity cast a
shadow across the "Day of Three
Kings" the traditional gift-giving
day in Latin America which ends
the Christmas holiday season.
Pro-East Nations
End Summit Talks
CASABLANCA. Jlorocco IAP
Five anti-Western African govern
ment heads wind up their summit
conference today with a commu
nique pledeini! to wilhdraw near
ly a third of the U.N. military
force in the Coniso unless Patrice
Lumumba is returned to power.
The five are Gamal Abdel Nas
ser of the Uniled Arab Republic,
Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Se
kou Tour of Guinea, Mndibo Kcita
of Mali and King Mohammed V
of Morocco.
Conference sources said they
also had agreed to announce
more active political, material
and moral support for Ihe Alger
ian rebels led by Premier Fcrhat
Abbas; and call for Alri' i unity
and an end to colonialist...
The five leaden have been
meeting behind closed doors since
Wednesday. Abbas and Libya's
foreign minister attended as ob
servers. Pennsy Driver's Exam
Due For Eisenhower
HARRISBURC!, Pa. fAP) -President
Eisenhower will have to
take Pennsylvania's rigid new
auto driver's examination- if he
intends to lake out a state license,
sayi the Hate's commissioner of
traffic safety.
"I am sura that due lo his tre
mendous interest in traffic safely
over Ihe years, Mr. Eisenhower
would not want any special ex
ceptions." Commissioner O. D.
Shipley said.
Shipley was asked to comment
on a report Ilia President, who
leaves office Jan. 20, planned to
buy a car and drive it himself.
Eiionhowcr has established a
ho.ne near Gettysburg, r.
Many Injured
In Leap From
Blazing Hotel
SAN FRANCISCO fAP)-Fira
swept through the Thomas Hotel,
a low-rental, four-storv buildine at
971 Mission St.. and caused a
heavy loss of life early todav.
At least 18 died and up to 30
persons were injured.
In the chilly dawn hours, soma
underwear-clad occupants of the
lbO-room hotel had to leap from
their lop fourth-floor rooms as
flames raced up from the first
floor through an elevator shaft.
Others, many of them pension
ers who had just cashed pension
checks, slid down gutter pipes or
used their bed sheets as ropes.
The fire, San Francisco's worst
in a decade, broke out at 5 a.m.
Fire Chief William Murray said
it started in a mattress in a first
floor room and spread lo the rear
of the building and up the eleva
tor shaft.
The dead included at least one
woman.
"I'm afraid there'll he more."
said Chief Murray. "We've just
barely got the fire controlled and
we're still finding bodies."
Some of the victims were
trapped in their rooms by the
flames; others were asphyxiated.
Ironically, the chief said, the
fire was seen earlier and thought
to be extinguished.
"The guy in 42 smelled smoke
in 41," Murray said. "He found
a mattress smouldering and
poured water on it. Then he went
back lo bed."
The man in room 4t was iden
tified as Ray Gorman. The man
in room 42 was Ed Sajior. Both
were taken to emergency hos
pitals, critically burned.
Earl Blake, chief of the city's
emergency hospitals, directed a
steady flow of ambidances carry
ing dozens from the hotel.
"There were two or three dozen
seriously hurt," he said.
The hotel housed many pension
ers and others unable to work.
Many of the older residents
were drank, police said. They had
just cashed pension checks and
the halls of the burned out build
ing smelled from ashes, smoke
and alcohol.
Some people jumped to safety.
Others, including at least two in
wheel chairs, were carried out by
firemen.
One man, Herbert Isett, Iried
to descend from the top floor by
using a rope made o knotted
sheets. The knots parted and Isctt
fell four stories to the pavement,
breaking his back and legs.
Most of Ihe survivors escaped
wearing only underwear and thev
shuffled as they waited in their
bare feet for ambulances.
The temperature was 36 de
grees, extremely low for San
Francisco, and only 7 degrees
higher than the lowest ever re
corded here, 29 in 1888.
3 Indictments Hit
Alleged Cop Slayer
EUGENE (AP) The slaying
of two men, including the Junc
tion City police chief, the day
after Christmas led Thursday to
two murder indictments against
Robert Steven Evans, 45, Craw
fordsville. A grand jury also returned a
third indictment, accusing Evans
of assault with intent to kill Mrs.
Verna Mae Milligan, 42, Junction
Cily.
Evans was accused in first de
gree murder indictments of kill
ing Woodrow Whetstone, 43, Junc
tion City police chief, and Everett
Leslie Fletcher, 52, Junction City.
Evans was a former suitor of
Mrs. Milligan. The shootings
came when Whetstone tried to
disarm Evans after he followed
Fletcher and Mrs. Milligan to
Whetstone's home. Mrs. Milli
gan s daughter sain they were
seeking protection from Jivans.
YMCA Planning
Recruitment- Drive
The YMCA membership enroll
ment general chairman, William
(Chris) Christensen, met with di
vision leaders and captains of tho
19til Y enrollment campaign
Thursday night and mapped plans
for Ihe "kickoff."
Meeting with lum were Cliff Hu-
kari, Dr. Jeff Currier, Randolph
Solemn and Bill Grav.
The kickoff date for the drive
was set as Jan. 19, preceding open
house at the new YMCA building
Jan. 22 to zn. this week is also
National "Y" Week.
Approximately 80 workers are
needed in the enrollment cam
paign, Christensen announced.
Anyone willing lo assist is asked to
contact one of the leaders as soon
as possible.
Levity Fact Rant
By L. F. Reizenstein
Because of increased service
expanses, living costs for the
overage American family will
rise from 1 to 2 per cent in
1961,' toys a Federal Labor
Department spokesman. Spells
more worry for public welfar
dispensers and taxpayers, the
while Uncle Sam keeps food
and other necessities going to
foreign lands In return for
various manifestations of In
gratitude and probable ul
timata succumbing to th
wiles of communism.