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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1963)
9k iltcws-JRcwicw "He Says It Can't Wait!" The Editor's Corner By Charles V. Stanton e 4 The Newt-Review, Roieburg, Ore. Boys Camp Next month DoukIhs County will start some more pioneering work. It will establish the first county ju venile camp in Oregon for boyn who have had , a brush with the law. The camp will be established at Win chester Park about five mifes north of Roseburg- on old Highway 9!). In a pe riod of a few months the number of boys sent there will reach 10. True, it's a pilot program, but few people who have had any knowledge of such boys camps have any doubts of the success of the program. For Circuit Court Judge Charles Woodrich, who has been probably the most active evangelist for the program, it will mean a dream becoming tangible. After oceans of words and many dis appointments, the idea of establishing an intermediate training ground for rehabil itation of boys between M and 18 has become a reality. To the judge, Juvenile officer Julian Helleck and the Juvenile Advisory Committee which supported the effort to secure the camp, this first year won't be one of do-or-die. Rather, they look on it as a project to iron out bugs in the program. They are that sure of its success. , Another advocate who has no doubts is Ken Miller, a young man who has worked as a counselor in the juvenile de partment for the last year. He saw a similar program work in Del Norte Coun ty in California and he saw it first Peter Edson To Hunting WASHINGTON (NEA) - All the sweetness and ever-loving co existence coming out of the Mos cow nuclear lest bun conference preliminaries is in marked con trast to the growing record of Rus sian espionage now being disclosed in ma lor western cupiiuls. There's a belief that the Soviet snv network has been vastly ex minded since the end of World War If. This Is verified by the number of Russian diplomatic per sonnel assigned to tho United States, nearly doubled In the last 10 years. In May 1954 there were 212 Bus. sian officials assigned to the Unit ed Slates. Fivo years later, KB! Director J. Edsar Hoover Dill tho number lit 313 an increase of almost 50 per cent. As of May 1. 1903, however, there were 415 Russians in the United States, assigned to Wash ington and the United Nations head quarters in New York. Moreover, there wore 317 diplomats from the seven Communist satellites in the U.S. The 19 Cuban officials assigned to the United Nations in New York brings the total to 751. They hod 1,118 dependents in this country. This aggregate, fur thorcmore, does not Include an un known number of American Com munists who may bo reporting to Red master spies. Since It has been estimated that 70 to 80 per cent of the Communist country officials asslgrcd to this country arc in Intelligence work, the spy potential is about 500 to 600 operatives, Three years ago tho U.S. State Department estimated that Hus sion and Chinese bloc countries had some 300,000 trained spies serving throughout the world. This year's spy mania opened with tho Soviet's public trial and execution of Us own Col. Olog Pen kovskv. lie had been charged with lictraylng iiusaian socrcis 10 mo West. Hard on tho heels of these dis closures Inst May came the Brit Mi War Minister Profuina-Keeler scandals which alio Involved Itus siun Navy Capt Y. M. lvanov. In Stockholm Col. Slig Wcnnor stiom, a disarmament specialist, was exposed as having given Swe den's secrets to the Rods. The priio booboo In the Inter- national espionage game Is the case of Soviet master spy. Anotoly Dolnyttin, still not fully disclosed. A year and a half ago he surrend ered to American agents in West Berlin, who kept his detection se cret. When lie went to London to help: the British clean up their shat- tcrcd InlellU-nce service, his name was foolishly made public. Moscow claims he is still In Russia. The one new spy plot is the case of the Russian couple real names unknown-caught by the Kill in Obc91ciosncuicw MS 1 t. M.ln SI Roifburg, O' W Telephone e?)-U7l Entered at tetand clan metier May I, !Wv, at the Don el'lce at Ro,ebgr. Ore Bon. under atl ol March , II7J. Published Oelly Cttepl Sunday hv NEWS REVieW PUBLISHING CO i. V. Brenner Publither The Newt-Kavlew It a member e the United Frets Inlernellenal, NEA Service. Audit Bureau ol circulation and tha Oregon Newtoepor Publishers Association. National Aave-isine, Representative Is Newspaper Advertising Service Co. Russ BuiUing, tan Francisco. Catft. SUBSCRIPTION RAT PI Carrier and Rosehurg p. o. Boes month. It.ISi 4 months, 110 SO; 1 yeer. ill 1 By Mall 111 Oreoon: I month, t.Jj; 3 monms. ta.Wi I months, ss.oo I ear H.0O Outside M Oregon: I month. II Hi 1 iiim"" U mo"",fc ttojoi I year j 00 Important Pioneering Job 600 Red Spies D.S. Secrets Washington. They had assumed the identities of two innocent and un suspecting American citizens, the Rev. Robert K. Bultch. an Amster dam. N.Y.. nriest and a Norwalk. Conn., housewife whose maiden name was Jov Ann Garbor. The phony "Mr. and Mrs, Robert Baile r were caiiuhl red-handed passing U.S. military information to lvnn li'.uorov. a Russian United Nations official in New York, and ids wile. Ail tour nave now ueen arraigned for trial But this case of stolen identities is one Hint not even the mystery I id ion Winers Had dreamed up. Federal Power Not A Panacea BOISK (llPI)-An Idaho Power Company official says southern Idaho has made greater economic progress than areas where Bon neville Power Administration dom inates the electric power supply. IC. A. Olson, assistant central division manager for the company, told a meeting of the Capital City Kiwanis Club in Boise Friday the economic progress in the south demonstrates "conclusively that so-called 'cheap' government pow er Is not a guarantee of Indus trial and economic growth." Olson said claims that the Idaho economy Is decadent and that "the only cure is federal power" are "misinformation." The private utility official said southern Idaho's economy com pares favorably with tho BPA area stales of Oregon and Wash ington by such "yard slicks" as unemployment, value added by manufacturing, debt and tax lev els and new Industries gained. "Certainly, a eomparotivc rec ord of this kind provides no war rant for downgrading or holding up to scorn the economic and industrial growth of Idaho com pared with Oregon and Washing ton, Olson said. "lo the con Irury. Idaho's economic growth record fur exceeds that of the neighboring states." Olson said 116 new industries employing some 5.500 persons lo cated In southern Idaho and hast ern Oregon between 1955 and IDfil. i i In contrast, he said, tho industrial ,, , .u.. i, ..,1,1 I cd a nel of exactly' two industrial customers." , . ' Tenn. (CPU Thci amy ideas I NASHVILLE following notice appeared in the eiassinea section of the Nashville j a dlclotor ot Italy, in ibiu. ; Thursday, the count was M2 ar Tennrssean and the Nashville Ban- On this day in history: tresis for the week, record not ner recently. I In 1588. Queen Elitahcth I, fear-! matched in manv places in the "$10.000 penniless, hairbrained, ful of a Spanish Invasion of Eng-i South, spendthrift wishes to borrow SlO.-lland. traveled to Tilbury to spur Demonstrators lie down before 000 without collateral for ridieu- on her troops. muvini! traffic on Lenox Road. ;luut scneme. Write Box 19tV2 ! 1 llti,,...T.nn...... ! ....v i T.-.-'i-Hii. :mclim a fellow ho just COn't think vry (cut gets if rgputotioo lor thougbtruliiesj. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1963 hand. He was a supervisor in the t'ali- ', fornia camp for six months. If Miller was uncertain of the success ! of the project, he certainly wouldn't j have volunteered for the job of director, j It won't be an easy job. It calls for his j attention practically 21 hours a day. He i will live right in the camp. The hopes for the success of the pro gram are high, and no doubt the main reason for these high hopes is the prom ise of the good which can be achieved. The main purpose of the camp, of course, is to put certain carefully screen ed boys in an environment which will guide them to a law-abiding life. It will be a life of hard work and considerable regimentation, carefully mixed with un derstanding and guidance. It will serve the boy who is probably too spirited for a foster home, but cer tainly not hardened enough to be sent to a reform school. He is certain to benefit. The community, too, will benefit by recovering a young citizen. It will also benefit from the physical projects of re forestation, improving parks, building trails, perhaps even fighting fires, the boys will do. Douglas County has been a leader in many fields. Among the most important were its pioneering in park development and water resources. But none of the pioneering jobs was as important as this one. The future of a lot of boys is at stake. They are worth our support. Tjktn from tht flits of the Newt Review "f "iSSViVAVVtrVI)Vo 40 YEARS AGO July If, 1923 Mack Scnnctt's bathing beauties had nothing on the "flock" of young Americans who took a dip in the cooling waters of the South Umpqun without the customary swimming apparel yesterday after- noon. Tho officers wero on the "go" when word reached their oars that a "bevy of boys ' at tired like the well-known Adam of Biblical days had plunged into the river near (he Island above the Alexander dam. When authorities approached the scone, the young- sters scampered to the "tall and uncut" lo don their overalls. 25 YEARS AGO July 2f, 1931 The present high price of gold has had a stimulating ctfoct on mining activities in the upper 01 alla district. John Jantzen who owns and operates two large hy draulic mines on Ilogan Creek will begin the installation of machinery immediately. 1' our hundred tins of narcotics were seized this morning aboard the Norwegian, docked at Port land. Value of the narcotics was estimated to be between $80,000 and $100,000. 10 YEARS AGO July 29, 19S3 A county park located on the North Umpqua River, two miles upstream from the Lone Rock Bridge was dedicated last nignt to the lute Richard G. Baker. All but two of the events will be free of charite at the county fair. An admission charge is being made on the finals of the loggers con tests and on the Chltwood Auto Thrill show. Otherwise everything including tho barbecue Is free to the public. The Almanac By United Prttt International Todav is Mondnv, July 29. Ihe 210th day of 11X13 with 155 to follow. The moon is approaching its '"!,' P,,!,c . , . . ,,,... 1,10 mrnlng stars are Jupiter ami oaiurn. The evening stars are Saturn and Mars. Those born today Include Benito Mussolini, founder of fascism and in 1754. tne tirst international K.i... n,.lrih S.ik- nl.M Th. :.,.,, iimiu, ,.xx. ov British champion kmn-ked out the fi-p.sh concrete to Ihe new build- cations for apprenticeships and Anne Keniston , Corvallii, chair French contender. ing which has its steel girders up. journeymen (advanced) jobs. man of registration, said today. In 1914. a successful telephone : Some have narrowly escaped The barriers are invisible and. Some 40 youths from most conversation between New York being run over it will lake time to remove areas of Oregon will attend the and San Francisco heralded the: Libtral Votino, Area ;thom," Rockefeller said. camp, she said, building of the firnt American In the tree-shaded Brooklyn ! The arrested pickets included State legislators, office holders, transcontinental telephone line. : neighborhood, a mixture of frame ministers who broke into the political scientists and newsmen In 194S. an armada of Amrrl-1 private dwelling and large apart-1 strains of "We Shall not bet'" participate in the program, ran bombers dropped 3..VX) tons of i ment buildings, the chain-ins 1 Moved." an often-heard hvmn at' bombs on six Japanese cities. The, bombings followed a warning broadcast A thought for Ihe day Colonial statesman and President John Adams said: "Fear is the founda- tion of most governments." By ROBERT C. RUARK I1E1RA, Mozambique, Portuguese East Africa You really have to know this country, to meet its peo ple, sec its back-brush areas, un derstand its problems, observe its progress, applaud its aims in edu cation nnd public health, its land and game conservation, us crop control and housing - agricultural schemes, to appreciate the crime that the Afro-Asian bloc in the United Nations is attempting to nernetrate in the misnomer of im mediate "freedom" for Portugal's overseas possessions. The trouble is that the people who read the papers, and most of the people who write them, nev er get out into another hemisphere. V:.. .. r""i.."l.,V.."r .,......... uu onialism" and "brutal policy" and "tolalitariansim," while avoiding the mention of the fact that a state like Ghana is a pure dictatorship, ruthless and corrupt and subject to momentary remake of law. ac cording to Emperor Nkrumnh's whim. Polk. Needed They seem to force! that the Congo on the Belgian side has been a highbinder state which needs an international police force to protect another international po lice force from the local police force, and that the whole damned pestilential area would starve to death without outside help nnd the cynical lii.incKing ot the only state. Katanga, which carried its own weight. They forget that the current about-to-be government of Kenya was built on murder and horrible oath-takings, and that Jomn Ken yatla, Jhe Prime Minister-elect. WHAT IT MEANS NY 'Chain-In' Movement Shows New Negro Strife By AL KUETTNER United Pratt International At the corner of Clarkson Ave. and Lenox Road in Brooklyn, New York City, one of tho mo.st dramatic skirmishes in the civil rights battle is being waged. The immediate issue at stake is the alleged discrimination against Negroes in the employment of conslruclion workers. The crux ot the mailer appears, however, to j bo part of a long standing nod simmering bitterness against, what Negroes call the mums "segregation in tact." Thursday saw "chain-ins" in troduced to the New York racial struggle. Negroes locked them- selves together at the Brooklyn i ,vl,m" " ncw h"s!;i,"1 ' T' iUt construction next door to the ! oasic sciences ouiiiunK Ol me downstair medical center. Police separated the demon stratum with holt cutters and hauled them off to jail. Al 2 p.m ihev have lulled a number of ! S. ; MUKC VVMM-III MlICTS S.AI I J IMK have provided a strange rommen - i tary on the race issue. It is an area apparently picked for this; reason where there is a large , liberal vote in every election. t The National Association for the Advancement of Colored Pro- pie iNA.UTl ami the Congress . Afro-Asian Bloc Perpetuating Lie would rank roughly with Jack the; agitating for the freedom of Ka- Kipper in the Legion of Decency, zakhstan from Russia. Wo do not And that the No. 1 national hero, I have to mention Hungary or Bui- "Field Marshall Sir" Dedan Ke-jgaria or the other Soviet-gobbled matlii was a syphilitic sadist who territories here. strangled over 2.000 (two thous- Man Is Slave and) of his own tribesmen for fun. The ouimcic- oninion of Portugal's "Vaiinnaiicm" ic a oi-nni nvnK. ' or. They speak now of a few self-i seeking arclulccts ol vile murucr and torture, SUCH as I.OKten KO- herlo of the inlamous March 15 mass murders in Angola, as head of "a govcrnment-in-cxile." Ro- berto is no more a representative ol "govcrnincnt-in-cxue man Jotin Dillinger was an exiled member of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- (ion State Status Given ... CXIIC . "llM'.e K.no governmcni-in-e.iic nom Angola, i-oriugucse i.uinea, or Mozambique. The government is in Lisbon, in Portugal, and its Am- can possessions are Portuguese s ates. At least hey arc i accorded the status of state which is better: than we did with. Haw'aii and Alas-1 , ,' i Z1Z .n.miii Tfin.libout tlle blls" maternity hospitals ally pressured into being. They would not know here, gen erally, that in New York, that r l.Va '"."V,.. mKniai rciierciiMi. missm s .milieu IMIUUIB UeiBKUlK, !. II ! MR lM blockades and boycotts and U.N expulsion for Portugal on account of what the U.N. Afro-Asian bloc is pleased to call "colonial posses- Mcrenko. who seems as loose with truth as that consummately lying predecessor. Valerian Zorin, is demanding "freedom" for the Portuguese "colonies" by the end of 1963 as complete an inter ference in Internal administration as if Adlai Stevenson were to be of Racial Equality (CORE) have , heavy membership in that section ! "'rrUrJSL- .....I ,ti-w, urn. &uai is mm.-,. Negroes and Puerto Ricans, oflen in. competition for jobs, have jo ned forces in a . battle for more jobs ,n the bu.ld.ng trades. The Broklyn hospital project was sel - ected because of periodic i lnc c;)st of ine anr cigarettes charges of discrimination there, land increased real estate taxes ti,c demonstrators are demand-1 in key cities. jng ihc-v be hired under a foimu-' The' department said its' con- ja 0f jj per cent Negro, 25 perl sinner price index increased by Cpt Puerto Rican and 50 er cein other races on jobs financed J ry f"ms in Male or cn mnus. d.is. c ...i. Gov Nelson KocKclellcr. wnose Nelson Rockefeller, Ncw York City office has In-en regularly picketed over the issue, holds that the demanded formula is unworkable. "Wp pnnnut abanilon the con- eept of giving equal opportumiv T .Ul'll.. J on the austere aide. 1 heir furnisn- bomb stops traffic to all bv giving special privilege i I een-AOerS VVIII AITeng i ings ore designed normally for ex to a tow." the governor .aid of B.miLj" P-,-.,,. - tlu'iv'-v MASCtUNE use Thrtr r;ct ;U the proposal. KepUDIICan tnCaitipmeni normal occupancy is purclv tern- ,,.,; as in,erruptpd ,or ,is As for the city's 122-umon porary. hours Sunday when a bomb ex building trades council, a spokes-1 CORVALLIS (CPU Both Re-, ploded and toppled a power line. man insisted there is no discrim- j publican and Democratic teen-1 This suite at Otis Ua-e is 1)1 1TE, There was no explanation for the nation in hiring. But the council i recently has proposed a new cen . l . x ,: irai OOaiTI IO rPS'lCW irXTO aiMI- : the integration rallies in Dixie Negro churches. The fisht of the Negroes was for more of the good jobs. A top grade construction worker can earn almost $11,500 a year in Ncw York for 40 hours i'f oik a week. extraterritorial possessions is that the administrators begin the day ms " ui uic uuuui wiui uiu uuiiuuuiiu, u muu of perforated ping-pong paddle, and that every man is a slave. It s about as .'ar from the truth as the allegation that all Southerners con-1 me m; iui wmium a i.u-1 mg, or that all white Southerners arc patterned after Erskine Cald- j well's clay-eaters. ... ' aC ,,PJ .."T. . " f. ' wouldn t know about the Limpopo Gitlipmp In which u-hitn anri hl.iplc scheme, in which white and black ,-,..,. .. eiri. llv .i-ip iiv. 1 side by sj(lc an( jn which ' ,or ic : ii,i , n, or- ,al)01. and vice versa Th ,,,, not know about the eooperatives which )rovi,ie bulldozers and sell nrotluco: tlcv would not know and medical centers. They would not know that one area with 90, OOO cuiaa ic nHminictpi-r.l hv nno paramount chief, whose subordin- -, is Portuguese administra - , ........ nniman .,1 , tor. one white policeman, and 13 native policemen. They would not know about Mozambique - island, which holds 12,000 people of as sorled coloration, and which has ' ! " 15 po""u.tore.!.h,elot Mytht Spoken All the outside people know is a lot of moldy myths which go hack to the early days of "coloni zation," when the Germans and the Belgians and the Portuguese and English carved up countries with gun and sjambok and plow, and the savages resisted the carv ing. I suppose most of the U.N. so fresh come to gorgeous n, have even managed to that Hip Amprieanc! infpptprt types frpixtnm f,Mnrt that Ihn Amnripnnc infaMcr! the blankets of the local Redskins. and still haven't managed to set our own savages tree. (Copyright. 1963 bv United Feature Synd. Inc.) e f raM UlLoe JUgar, Ugareiie IIIKeS Raise Cast Of Livina " --""3 ..?,x,, ,,,, -u AS (W) - The ,tv l,ut the cn?t of UWng iw ?"'" Lriii;), KLnth 1 ,a ,v because of increases in j hhu-iciiuis m sine per ecru hi ; -"me. me oisscm onc-iiionin in - ' or,as(' in ninc mon,"s Tmi 'n' sw) average -1957-59 trices, meaninc it t o o Tk tO RH l.inn Ip l,,v Ik. ..me , ,. .,.:,. ,h : ive ',., a60 i A department spokesman said jt ,s likelv thr index will rise again this month. ' agers win anena me Oregon Teen - ' age KepuDiican summer camp ..... a.l.l.. T..I.. no .. . ,-- ..ini'icu,! w tti o- nil.. , SMALL CONSOLATION DAGr.NliA.M. Encland i I PI - John Cross recened $ this weekend from the Ford Motor Co. as a bonus for an idea which helped eliminate four screws used on auto glose compartments. He was fired by the firm ear iicr this year. Some People Don't Care What Government Does ! I was visited recently by an angry woman. Her anger ! was directed at a form of bureaucracy that for some time ! has brought about considerable controversy. It was her opinion that the property rights of her husband and herself Ihad been invaded by Bureau of Land Management de i mands ; that, as "little people" they would be forced into !a legal defense they couldn't afford in order to protect what she contended were private landowner rights. The case she recited seemed quite similar to the one that a few months ago caused the Whipples at Drain to ! close their large mill and withdraw from the sawmill and logging business rather than permit tneir rancn to oe ruin ed by making a private road public as demanded by BLM. Without entering into the morns i of this argument, concerning which I am not fully informed, I find worthy of further comment one ' statement made by my irate call er. "People simply don't know , what's going on," she asserted. I She was speaking of the fact ' that little by little people arc sur rendering rights and privileges; 1 that the federal government is taking over properties, activities and responsibilities once left to in dividuals. 1 To the fact that a good many . people "don't know," I'd like to add that a still greater number ! don't care. And some who are : fully aware of what is going on , are willing to accept a bad situa : tion because they're bribed into j acquiescence with their own mon ey. Recovery Never Made ' If we'll give just one moment's thought to the economics of our ' federal government, we'll realize ! that we've never yet recovered from the Great Depression. That may sound paradoxical as j we look at what we call prosper ity. But prosperity is being achiev ed only at the cost of continued borrowing. Who couldn't live high on the hog if he could borrow all the money he wanted and he never had to pay back any if his debt? Our federal government is able to produce so-called prosperity onlv by investing huge sums of money m pi-uuucuun ui military materiel, -In The Day's News- By FRANK Questions: What of this test ban agreement that has been initialed by our Av- ercll Harriman, Britain's Lord Hailsham and Russia's Andrei Gromyko and presumably will be signed this week by our Sec retary of State Rusk, Britain's For eign Secretary Lord Home and I n li " ' ' ..... ,.TT . nai uoes ii uo. What does it do? It agrees to test nuclear bombs ergency that could be faced by an only UNDERGROUND not inofficer on transient dutv, vou sec the air, in the water or out in has been provided for. space. j Ah me! How good it it? j How the military world has It's as good as the word of theithanged! men who have signed it and the i in the older, ruggeder world an nations they represent AND NO j officer on transient duty was lucky BETTER. i if he found in the temporary quar- ; ters assigned to hiin a folding col. What about this "non-aggros-1 a couple of chairs (usually of the sion pact" between the Atlantic Al-1 folding variety), a wash basin and liancc lour sicici ana iu commun 'ist equivalent the Warsaw Pact I powers, that Old Kroosh wants? I HOW good It iS? i IlOW KOOd It, too, is as good as the word ' of the nations involved and no i ucitcr. i What should we do about it? How about this: siRn it i h00? 0lir t!n.ao,r:,cl,'os.'iC'1- , rccp our powaer ury. i It might work. It will all depend - the GOOD FAITH of .he n. - llons represented. - . . Hanky-Panky in. the news: There's that suite at Otis Air Force base in Massachusetts, Somehow the reporters got the idea that it was prepared for Mrs. Jac queline Kennedy when she has a oaoy next monin. nicy were as 1 jurcd, nowever. ny rierre anng- er. of the White House staff, that i s..ch was not ,h(. casP He describ 1 lKlc 1. f..f "f,?. " s a resmence ior visuuib iniAir rorcc omcers - wnai in uic lAir Force otficcrs what in the parlance of the armed services is known as "transient officers quar- ters. Ihcse miartcrs lor onirers on transient duty are normally bit - ' oiiiereni, uepariinK snarpij iimim Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Relieves Pain Tt, m t. l.plel - For tk' s tWooth that lurTereri nn-le frst time scirnre has fnnnd near atnn:sh:nr ala-errerm like """ kealins u5crK with 'he astoo- I have feared to be a problem!" Ilhiac abilitjr t Ihriak tiemnr- Tke aerret is Best heal r.f sub- nioida, imp subi. -.ilieTa nance I Hio-Drnel d'.scovery ol pain - without lurfery. a srnrid-famoul resetrrh insntuta. la ease after Mse, while rP"J This subnante is naw availia felievna: pain, nrtnal teduclion i peeiler or aiatsnrnt fe"m (earmkam) took plare. the name repar.l.e H. Meat muinaefa.l-reaulu were ' A: all dnn toantert. ...... ,,,,, , h. ,,,, with little opposition from the gen eral public. The public has been educated to believe such waste is essential to our defense. We find employers increasingly vigorous in their fight against featlierbedding and make - work. They 'ask why they should have to pay workers to do nothing. Yet organized labor points to increas ing automation, a high rate of un employment, and similar factors as reasons for shorter hours at higher pay and employment of men regardless of their importance to production or service. According lo that theory we'd still be paying the makers of buggy whips. Theory Held But that seemingly is the theory of economics employed by our fed eral government which spends huge sums of money, imposes de structive taxes, increases its debt year by year, but succeeds in lull ing voters into acceptance through tile prosperity so created. Thus, it is my feeling that a good many people, satisfied with the status quo, are unwilling to risk a change. Others are too enrap tured with the TV western to both er themselves with the intricacies of politics. They arc too concern ed with the "flickers" to give thought to the weightier problems of good government and the cur tailment of federal power and ex- travagancies. Or even the rights jot "little people JENKINS .the accepted norms. It contains: I Two elaborately furnished sitting rooms: a reception sittine room- oi uuu rooms ; a nursery; a re cently modernized kitchen; t w o workrooms for NURSES; two areas for stationing secret service agents. And A simple room with a hospital '. " . i :.'.. "ev""i i, oxy i ? . uul;u B'ucose containers, an - ,an.1 mcu?al0I- bassinet and ; a oaoy scale, bvcry possible em- - ; water pitcher, a cake of soap, a couple of towels and a basin (with a handle on the side) designed to be OUshed under tile hod be pushed under the bed. This is indeed a posh world we arc living in. Burneburg Will Attend Conference In Salem . ... .- ... , v,ZS Brn.h . i .ph.H. i ift? ARU cr members of the Committee to Implement Senate Bill 409. The committee was appointed by the state Association of Coun- ty School Superintendents, Senate Bill 409 is one which cs- tahlihes intermediate district ed ucalion boards in place of Rural - - ..,; j.-u u ; or """"'".",' " suggested forms and resolutions e f?r ""n,w boards to provide them with outlines for their own ..:,.:.,, ,, .,:, Th ' , mm,in', Th, All, . -.,.. -.ni i,v the s,nundwoik for a Sept. 23 meet- jng of ihe state association where lnc report of the committee will oe made. rnasi.