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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1961)
Published by NawsRevltw Co., Inc., 54S I.E. Main St., Roseburg, Or. ;, Charles V. Stanton r Editor Georg Castillo Addye Wright Assistant Editor Buini Manager Member of the Assojiciated Presi, Oregon Newspaper Publisher Association, the Audit Bureau ( Circulation Entered is second class matter M.iv 7, 1920, at the post office at Roseburg, Oregon, v Subscription Rates on EDITORIAL PAGE 4 The Nwi-Review, Roieburg, PROGRESS By Charles If one were to listen to Rome of our politicians, a they describe the terrible plight of Douglas County, and its po sition as a distressed .area, he would become exceedingly downcast. But News-Review reporters, and advertising de partment members are finding an exactly opposite, spirit prevailing throughout me greater pari oi me tuuuy. Admittedly we have a than usual, but the general feeling is tnat tne existing sit uation is temporary only and that economy in this area will be soaring high above the general average uy mm year. , The degree of optimism prevailing throughout the whole county actually is amazing. ' ' . UVrn in a nne-industrv area. The lumber market, on which we depend, is far off mills have been forced to shut down, inose remaining in nnprnfinn Are limninir. We have the usual condition of un employment resulting from the seasonal shutdown in log ging. On top of that we find much unemployment because of slow bell activity in mills. Some of our operations are continuing to supply employment even though actually los ing money. Now that we have our income tax statements to pre pare and taxes to pay, It would be expected that people would be down-in-the-moutn. Special Paper Planned . But we've been planning tion of The News-Review. It is scheduled for publication Feb. 27. In preparation for that extra large publication we've been making contacts, in all sections of the county. We'd expected to be met with utterly amazed at the pptimistic expressions witn which our news reporters and advertising layout men have been greeted. ' ; :. , . ' It is true we've me up with a few pessimists. A few people (and they're surprisingly few) are despondent and dejected. They feefthe situation is hopeless. But such per sons constitute a very small minority a surprisingly small minority we have found. The majority of people contacted, and they've been chiefly employers, heads of departments, agency managers and others in executive capacity people who employ work ers feel that our present depressed situation is only tem porary. The lumber market, they anticipate, will gain strength with the weather and economy will skyrocket, pnee the upward movement slaHs. ' The plywood market is ex pected to be a little slower than lumber in its recovery but will soon be on the upward trend again. A 4'straw-in-lhe-wind" is to be seen in the competition ,-for timber offered for sale by federal agencies. In nearly ;all cases the timber has sold for considerably more than -the appraised price. Would operators be willing to obli T;gale themselves to pay such high prices for stumpage if '.they lacked confidence in the future? 1 We've been extremely pleased by the reception given ur plan for a Progress Edition, the first we've ever pub lished. . 'Excellent For Mailing . We're planning to make this an edition every resident of Douglas County will be pleased to mail to. his relatives land friends in other parts of the country to tell them about ithis locality. t We're, striving to make this edition descriptive of every jphase of our community life. T Sections will cover the lumber and logging industries, ; general industries, agriculture and recreation, the Umpqua Basin in general, business and community activities, includ ing our churches, schools, arts, special events, and other ;such factors of our life in this locality. " In addition there'll b a section devoted to special classified advertising. ; Industrial, business, commercial, promotional concerns ;are assisting in making this an edition that will give a reader unfamiliar with our area a better idea of this place ;in which we live. We hope it will serve to attract many people to the Umpqua Basin, will provide instruction to jthose of us at home who desire to know more about our -own surroundings, and will draw increased industrial and business activities. J In our planning we've been most pleased by the general ;optimistic response, the cooperation and assistance we have ;had. i This Progress Edition will be sold for 25 cents. Regu lar subscribers will receive their paper as usual and at ;:no additional cost. Copies may be purchased from dealers. 'But, as previously stated, we're striving to make this a -"mailing edition." We have arranged to send a copv of I this paper any place in any of the 60 states to any address '.furnished by our readers at 23 cents per copy. Task Force Urges Land Retirement ; WASHINGTON (AP)-A special jiiri-e rrcommennea to rresl dent Kennedy today that the gov. Jernment attack the farm surplus .problem through a greatly ex 'panded land retirement program. The committee said it believes Jfarmers ara not ready to support rigid supply control programs at 'this time. . During the campaign Kennedy had outlined a rigid control pro gram to bring supplies Into hal .ance with market demands and to raise farm prices. ; Th report was prepared by Lauren K. Soth, editor of the edi torial page of the Des Moines -Register and Tribune: ,J. . Nor ;man Efferson, dean of the. Col .lege of Agriculture of Louisiana State University, and Jess W ,'Tapp, vice president of the Rank i oi America at San Francisco. J Kennedy went over the agricul tural situation today with mem. bers of this task force, as well as 'with heads of special groups as .signed to problems affecting ; wheat, feed grains and cotton. The SothF.feron-Tapp group's -report said that if the grain sur 'plus ii not brought under control : ' of March 2, 1873 I Advertising Ym Org. Wd Feb. 1, 1961 EDITION V. Sranton higher rate of unemployment its normal level. A few saw on a special Progress Edi "The Blues." Instead, we're soon - by means of land retire ment "it will spill rapidly into the livestock industries, resulting in expansion of meat, dairy prod ucts and poultry products and sharply lower prices and net in comes for the producers of these products," Independence Voters Reject Recall Bid INDEPENDENCE (AP) - An attempt to recall Independence councilmen John Werline and Dean Smith was defeated Mon day. Votera barked Werline 418 to 161 and Smith 420 to ltio. I The two were charged with fail ure to carry out their duties prop-1 erly. , I The controversy stemmed from ! the council's firing of Police Chief i (ieorge Utlev in December. To: accomplish this, the council seat ed two new members without I unanimous approval from the) four already in office. Some ob servers claimed this was a viola-1 lion of the city charter and insti-l gated tht recall action. I In The Day's News ly FRANK We listened early this week to a grim young President whose first State of the Union message sound ed much more like Winston Chur chill's, immortal "blood, sweat and tears" speech than the normal first policy message of a President whose party has just returned 10 power. We heard him confess that he has been STAGGERED in the ten days since his inauguration by the narsn enormuy ' ui ine inais through which we must pass in the next four years." We heard him say:' "Each day we draw nearer the hour of maximum dan ger." We heard him add: "I speak today in an hour of national peril and national emer gency. Before my term is ended, we shall have to test anew whether a nation governed and organized such as ours CAN ENDURE. The outcome is by no means certain. The answers are by no means clear." What must we do first? President Kennedy said: "We must re-examine and revise our whole arsenal of tools for dealing with the threat to the free world . . . .We are moving into a period of uncertain risk in which both the military and diplomatic pos sibilities require a free world force SO POWERFUL AS TO MAKE ANY AGGRESSION CLEARLY FUTILE." He proposed an immediate up ping of the Polaris missile pro gram, strengthening of our whole missile program of all kinds, and an overhaul of our facilities for moving troops and equipment swiftly into any "brush war" type of trouble that may arise. Thai is to say: We must be ready to fight at the drop of a hat if we have to. He adds: "In the field of economic aid James Marlow Kennedy's TV Conferences Could Become A Big Lobby WASHINGTON (AP) Presi dent Kennedy's televised news conferences with the second coming today could become a tremendous lobby for him. 1. From coast to coast he will reach various groups affected by his programs and by so doing sUmulale them into pressuring Congress for action. 2. He will, to a degree never achieved by any other president, keep himself in the public mind. He could, of course, manufac ture disaster by pulling some prize boners in national view. He seems confident that he won't. Washington is full of lobbyists paid by pressure groups to work on Congress for or against some thing. Presidents from time to time have done their own lobbying. Presidents Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower took to the airways when they had an explanation to make or sought public support. I But these - were only occasional performances in special situa tions. Triii, TUonhnwtJr'a news con ferences also were televised, but they were shown later and then only in fragments. Kennedy, with live TV appear ances at every news conference, could make his three predeces sors' effort on behalf of them selves look meager. hennedy won t have to make any appeal. His answers to re Hal Boyle 'All I Want To Know Is Why My Friends' Wives Hate Me' NEW YORK (AP) Monologue in a psychiatrist s office: "No, doc, 1 don't need any deep analysis. I just got a problem 1 want to get off my. chest. "Let me just stretch out on this couch and be comfortable while 1 tell you. It won't take long. "My problem is about women or rather wives. I want to know why all my friends' wives hate me. "Maybe I'd better start at the beginning. "My name is Charlie. I am 46 years old and a bachelor. I am a very happy bachelor, too, except for one thing. My friends' wives are all mad at me. "This grieves me very much. It has for years because there doesn't seem to be anything I can do about it. "Doc, you know some bachelors are women haters and blame women for all the trouble In the world. Well, I'm not that kind of bachelor. "I liked the first lady I ever met my mother and I've liked every woman 1 ever met since then. 1 never met a woman I couldn't find a reason for liking. "I have made a lifelong study of women, and have always accord ed them every respect. In their presence I am never fresh or for ward. 1 am ever the soul of gen tility and courtesy and gallantry. "I light their cigarettes for them at cocktail parties. I help them through revolving doors. On mud- Penitentiary Escapee Recaptured By Guards LEBANON. Ore. (AP)-Bernard Otto t hing, 20, Lebanon, who es caped from the Oregon State Pen itentiary annex at Salrm Monday afternoon, was recaptured here early today by guards from the penitentiary. Prison officials said t hing ap parently had headed honia after he walked away from the mini mum security institution. ' t hing had been returned to the prison Oct. 14, I960, as a parole violator after having previously been sentenced to two years in prison for burglary In a dwelling. JENKINS abroad, the problems are tower ing and unprecedented. The re sponse must be towering and un precedented as welt much as lend lease in World War Hand the Marshall Plan of the post war years were." Which is to say: There must be MORE rather than less foreign aid. He indicated that the communist threat in Cuba must be met firmly. He added that there must be spe cial aid for Latin-American coun tries. At a time when incoming Presi dents normally promise that great days and happy days lie ahead, with fewer problems and more satisfactions than ever before. President Kennedy chooses to tell us that these are grave days and that even graver days lie ahead that for the first time in our ex istence our nation and our way of life are threatened. He chooses to tell us that the easy days are PAST and the HARD days lie ahead. Can he carry the people with him? Can he convince us that now is the time when we must GIVE UP EASY LIVING, the chase for the quick buck and . all that goes with it and inspire us with his own conviction, as expressed in his message, that we must learn to live life the hard way in order to toughen our economy to the point where we will be able to re sist a powerful enemy who is bent on our destruction ana our enslave ment? , Let's hope he can for in that way lies freedom. It is a powerful and striking mcs sage. It deals with all the things we didn't expect a new President to say, and with almost none of the platitudes with which incoming Presidents usually choose to deal. It's worth reading. porters' questions will include his ideas, proposals and programs. Since at any one conference he will cover a varied field, his an swers will have special interest to various affected groups. For example, his proposals on a medical care plan for the aged will get the acute attention of old er people. He doesn't have to look at them through the camera and say, "I wish you'd back me." His statement of the proposal and perhaps an indication he is having trouble getting Congress to go along will be impetus enough for a lot of people to get after Congress. From a political standpoint provided Kennedy doesn't make big blunders the live TV news conferences should be of inestim able help to him. He was a great unknown to most Americans when he began the presidential campaign. Vice President Richard M. Nixon was a widely known public figure with eight years to put himself in the public mind. Nothing in the whole campaign did so much to shove Kennedy into the public consciousness as his TV debates with Nixon. This public consciousness of him should increase beyond measure in four years of appearing weekly, more or less, on TV screens from coast to coast. If he wants to run again in 1984, he'll have a firm foundation. dy or snowy days I stand aside for a lady I have never even met, and let her have the taxi that stopped for me. "I have never ridiculed wom en's minds. 1 admire their many noble qualities, and encour age their aspirations and their dreams. 1 can even endure listen ing to a woman talk about base ball or politics without yawning. "Yet all my friends' wives de spise me, doc. "It isn't because I don't pay them devoted attention, because 1 do. I send them flowers on their birthdays. I'm always happy to show up and bail them out if they unexpectedly need an extra man at dinner. I've even taken their kids to the dentist so they could go to a matinee. "But still they hate me. You know why, doc? I'll tell you. "Because they think 1 am a bad influence on their hushands. Every time a married man in the circle of my acquaintance takes it into his head to spend a night on the town, his wife says when he comes home, 'So, you've heen nut with good-old Charlie again! What has he been leading you into now'1 "The truth is, of course, I nev er even saw the bum on the night in question or any other night when he was footloose. "No sensible bachelor wants to clutter up his evenings buddying around with a wild eyed married man out on a spree. I'd go to the opera fust. "But these wives invariably greet their returning binge-weary husbands with, 'So. you couldn't say no to kihhI old Charlie, could you? All he has to do is put an idea in your head, and off you go. Don't you think you have at least some responsibility to your own wile and children? "As 1 say doc. 1 have spent my life studying women. But there's one thing 1 still ran t understand. "Where do wives gel this strange, mixed-lip loyalty? Why do they always think someone else is leading their dumb hus band astray? "Why don't Ihev blame him? He's the one. Whv is it no wife will ever face this truth? "Why, doc, why?" Reader Opinions Time Said Running Out For Conservation Moves To The Editor: How right Mr. Stanton was in the editorial "waste disposal ! That Oregon's every trouble would be erased if we had a forest of smoke stacks, each coming from an industrial plant carrying poison ous gases into the air, is far from the truth. Oregon can ill afford any industry that will pollute either the air or our water. Oregon is blessed with many fine streams, a great amount of beautiful as well as valuable tim ber. Is it not terrible to think the utilization of our timber calls for the pollution of our fresh water streams or our coastal salt water? The air pollution from sawmill burners will decrease in the future as the industry learns the antici pated use of waste. That will leave less to burn. It might be possible even today to stack waste against the time it will become more val uable. . It has been proposed by some of our legislators that taxes be re duced by 10 per cent. Our State Sanitary Authority never has had enough money to do a thorough job. Why not pay the full tax and let the Sanitary Authority have the ten per cent? Any industry that will not agree to make its waste harmless to both air and water is an industry Oregon cannot afford. The increase in population neces sary to make an increase in indus try function properly poses prob lems in waste disposal proportion al to the increase. The State Sanitary Authority should be the absolute dictator in the matter of disposal of all harm ful wastes. We, the people, should see that it is that way. Personally, I am glad the major portion of my life has been spent where one could go fishing, catch a fish, shuck one's' clothes and bathe in pure water. I have no envy of the people of the future living in houses protected by air purifiers, donning gas masks be fore emerging from protected homes, putting on rubber suits be fore they bathe in open streams. Of course, the above is overdrawn. but in many parts of our country today the red. watery eyes of peo ple living on the banks of streams, from which they dare not drink or in which they dare not bathe, caus es one to wonder just how long if will be before those conditions causes one to don a gas mask. All of our resources should be conserved, not just part of them. If one doubts that both air and water are necessary resources, just try living ten minutes without air, or stop drinking water or bath ing in it. Mr. Stanton's editorial should ring an alarm bell for each person. Because if we are not care ful of our resources we will have little to leave to our children. The decline of our fishery "re source is partly caused by the pol lution of our streams. It could be a money crop ten times as great as it is today had we been more care ful in past years. It is not too late to save what we have left, but time is running out. , Joseph B. Hulse Star Rt., Box 14 Winston, Ore. Israeli Leader j Resigns Post JERVSALEM. Israeli Sector (AP) Prime Minister David Ben Gurion resigned Tuesday night, indicating the end of his govern ment representing a coalition of six parties. The underlying issue Is the Lavon affair, in which members of his Ben-Gurion's government have opposed him. This involves the conduct of Pinhas Lavon, for mer defense minister. Ben-Gurion refused to accept the verdict of an official inquiry which cleared him in connection with a contro versy over Israeli-Egyptian rela tions. Resignations by Ben-Gurlon, or the threat of them, have been one of , his most powerful political weapons as premier. He resigned in July 1959. but was prevailed upon to continue as head of a caretaker government until new elections were held that fall, when the present coalition was formed. Police Car Wins Race With Death TOPPEN1SH, Wash. (AP) -Minutes before a deadline, a po lice car rushed into Toppcnish on the last leg of a mercy run from Portland with a serum for a man suffering from deadly botulism poisoning. The Central Memorial Hospital later said that the ill man, Jose Agibisit, 26, was in critical condi tion. He was admitted to the hos pital Monday night. Serum was located at a Port land laboratory, but sheriff's dep uties said it had to arrive within five hours to do the patient any good. Bad weather grounded the C47 the. Air Force had planned to use. The Air Force then took the se rum by truck to Bonneville Dam. where state police transferred it to the Washington Stato Patrol at the Bridge of the Gods. That car took the serum to the Yakima County line, and deputies picked it up there and made it to the j hospital 10 minutes before the five ' hour deadline expired. Stadium Sitt Sought FORTI.ANO (AD - City Com missioner Mark Grayson and ' County Commissioner Jack Rain wer named Monday by the city , and county governments to look into aspects of proposed new Portland sports stadium. Thev are exoecled to rrnorl i back on suggested sites and sues i tor a stadium. i Hill Urges Solons To End Competition Between Public And Private Utilities SALEM (AP) Public Utility i Commissioner Jonel C. Hill has urged the legislature to prevent extended competition involving : private and public power, -gas and j telephone utilities. He said his bill, endorsed hy Gov. Mark O. Hatfield, would be! a spur to economic development and save consumers money in the long run. j As Hill testified before the Sen ate Commerce and Utilities Com-! mitfpp hiphlv rnntrnvttrvial tonic. ' lation was introduced to reduce income taxes 10 per cent, abolish the slate Board of Control, and consolidate the Fish and Game commissions. The legislature opened its fourth week today. Hill was questioned sharply by Sen. Andrew J. Naterlin, D-New-port, a committee member who has been active in the Central Lincoln Peoples' Utility District. Naterlin pointed to cases in Springfield and in Tillamook coun ty where private power companies charge lower rates, which he as cribed to competition with public power agencies. mil replied tnat such benefits are only short-term, and that in evitably one utility will shallow up the other and increase rates. The bill would not remedy pres ent duplication. It would only pre vent more of it by providing that no private or public utility could extend its service area without permission from the public utility commissioner. Aeronautics Chief Has Penchant For Planning And Organization OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. (AP) James Webb, the new chief of the ' National Aeronautics and Space Administration, is an attor ney with a penchant for planning and organization. He goes at it with a pace that is breathtaking. "Very able and very dynamic," says Dean McGce, president of Kerr-McGee Oil Industries, Inc., of his former assistant. Webb, 54, a native of Granville County, North Carolina, joined Kerr-McGee as a director and as sistant to the president in 1958. He has been responsible for planning and organization inside the firm which has holdings in oil and uranium. Sen. Robert Kerr, D-Okla., is a partner in the Kerr-McGee firm and chairman of the Senate Space Committee. Webb's activities outside Kerr McGee have reflected what Mc Gee terms "a real zeal for train ing people for public service." Webb was an organizer and trustee of the Frontiers of Science Foundation of Oklahoma an or ganization to promote scientific study and research. Since he moved to Washington a year ago, Webb has served as president of Educational Services Inc., of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This organization promotes the study of physics. As if these tasks wouldn't tie a man down, Webb has served as a director of the McDonnell Aircraft Co. of St. Louis and as a member of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's foreign aid advisory committee. Went) claims no "great expen- encs in the space field," but his experience m government Began WZe$$ is the place to buy BATTERIES f HIGH QUALITY 12 MONTH tlMIMW 4 VOIT GKOUP 1 I ft REGULAR 9.95 mmt SALE PRICE! M NO IXCHANCI I NO IXCHANOI WL NICI5SAHY I NICISIAIT PAY LESS BATTERY -GUARANTEE- 1 mil I PAY LESS SHOPPERS AT AOAIR'S.-On Surr-Ur-Stlf Aid Cltrk H Validate Your Ticktt OPEN SUNDAY i',jijjvjiuurr3 Hill said duplication is threat ened at the Boardman Space Age Development Site, and at Pendle ton and Hood River. He estimated that "20 per cent of the people of Oregon right now could change their electric serv; ice just bv making a phone call. The duplication, he said, wastes millions of dollars a year. ; He called the Eugene-Sprmgfield area as the worst in the state, although he said officials of the several utilities serving that area now are getting it stabilized. "The trouble," Hill said, "is that in areas where there is dup lication of servjee. neither system is able to earn in proportion to its capacity. And John Q. Public pays the bill." Naterlin asked Hill if he would have power to enforce the pro visions if the bill became law. He pointed out that the public utility commissioner was helpless in pre venting Idaho Power Co. from building its middle Snake River dams, and from preventing Port land Traction Co. from abandoning its passangcr service. Hill replied that he would have enough authority. The 10 per cent income tax reduction Bill was introduced by Sens. Walter Pearson, D-Portland, and Boyd R. Overhulse, D-Mad-ras. There is some question, how ever, whether it would be consti tutional. The Constitution says that rev enue bills must be introduced in the House. There is legal doubt after graduation from the Univer sity of North Carolina. He served as a Marine Corps aviator in the early 1930s and then as secretary to North Carolina Congressman Erward Pou. After eight years as an official with the Sperry Gyroscope Co., he returned to Washington as executive assistant to the under secretary of the Treasury. Former President Harry S. Tru man promoted Webb to be his budget director in 1946. and Webb wound up his tour with the Tru man administration as an under secretary of state. Webb, a Presbyterian, is mar ried to the former Patsy Doug las. They have two children, Sarah and James. Hiker Reaches Boise Monday BOISE (AP) Harry Johnson, 45, hiked into Boise Monday, 23 days out of Florence, Ore. Johnson, who intends to hike on to New York City, had expected to make it to Boise in 20 days. He said a snowstorm in the McKenzie Pass in Oregon's Cas cade Range held him back. He has hopes now of picking up the lost time as he heads east. He is making the long walk to try to attract enough attention to win a job with a company oper ating overseas or with a foreign government. He said he worked in Arabia for an oil company eight years ago. He would like to go back there. He hopes the overseas work will bring him enough money to buy a farm. BATTERIES AT LOW PayLess PRICES iUMMIU VOU IXTKA HIAVY OUT REGULAR 15.95 SALE PRICE! $077 .iiiiimiiiiiiiinuiif tiiurmiiiiMiiiinimiMi , , .,m- PARK FREE Lots j las to whether a "revenue bill" is 'one to reduce taxes. , At any rate, the Pearson-Over- hulse bill throws further fuel into j the boiling controversy over what should be done about taxes. The House Taxation Committee opened hearings today on its bills to shift the tax burden, but o hold 'revenues at current levels. The j House program calls for a one j per cent tax on gross income, (eliminating alt deductions, and ' reducing tax rates. I The measure to abolish the I Board of Control was spnsorcd i bv Rep. W. O. Kelsay. D-Rose-j biirg. It is part of Hatfield's re organization plan. The state institutions, now run hv the boardj would be trans ferred to other divisions directly under the governor. The House Fish and Game Com mittee sponsored the bill to con solidate the Fish and Game com missions. The Fish Commission regulates commercial fishing, while the Game Commission handles sports fishing and hunt ing. There is much opposition to the bill on the part of sportsmen. Sen. 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