Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, September 23, 1971, Page 2, Image 2

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    Page 2
D ay Care Center
Facing Reality
PROJECT OUTREACH
5 3 2 9 N . E. U n io n A v e n u e Room 2 0 4
Port land/O bserver
Thursday, Sept, 23. 1971
The Northwest'* Best Weekly
A Block Owned Publication
T ubhshed every 1 h u r» l*7 b v E x ,e Publishing Company. 2201 N
KUIlngsworth Portland, Oregon 97217.
7
1 N’
>ul«irnptH»ti rate* 40 rent» |» r month hv .a rn e r.t4 .0 0 w r sear
w l.ereper y* * r r "
T r t - Count> area; $5.25 per vaar e ls « .
i none z 8 j -Z 480
» iie r e ,
r'h ta . ^ L VieWi
l he 'k1min‘« ‘ «Uon, s newly announced tw o-
china policy is the only sensible position.
This week, the I nited Nations General Assem bly w ill convene
its m ost c ritic a l session since 1945.
I he issue making this session so im portant is that of China:
whether the w orld organization can num ber among its members
a government in Peking and a government in T aip ei. The
decision is a c ru c ia l one foi the I N .
L ike it o r not. Peking speaks fo r 700,000,000 people. It
" “ " I “ “ 1 pvw* r - Pukln< • ’» n s influence in the w orld and
r e ilis n e * Ign0‘ ed ' F rin g mg ‘ ’eking into the UN is. the rfo re.
ALFRED I Kt: HENDERSON. Puhltaher and Ed,tor
It is equally re a lis tic to keep the N ationalist Chinese in the
Li\t.
Recycling of Waste
f h X
ta lI ,E,4ln? aboUt Whteh ‘s the
80V* rnn,ent of
«o«m r
“ ^ at >eklng £ ° 'e rn s China arxl the nationalists
govern I a,wan.
Poth governments should be represented in
« n s i t’o r L / memt* rsh * wouW
Material Useful
« » luster of common
tT * a l w«h the SP’ <iV Ve a r«un,ents ,nd s Wn* l «he* ■■’tent
to^deal w ith the w o rld not as they would like it to be. hut as
Take a million tons of cow manure
and 2.* billion broken bottles and put them
together and what have you?
A sharp smell? Wrong! You’d have a
” foamed ceram ic material which resembles
styrofoam in weight and appearance, is an
excellent heat and noise insulator, im­
permeable to water and gas, doesn't burn
or sm ell, can be painted, glazed, drilled
or sawed, can be glued or nailed together
and is cheap and easy to produce."
Hard as it may be to believe, a UCLA
engineering professor has done just that.
It all started a few months ago when a
farm er in C alifornia's Imperial Valiev
asked Prof. John D. MacKenzie for help
in tackling a ma jor waste disposal problem.
It seems that the average cow produces
one ton of dried dung every year. This
amounts to 250,000 tons in the Imperial
Valley alone and one million tons in the
state, since each ton takes up 100 million
cubic feet of the stuff each year.
Farm ers don't use it because commercial
fertilizer is more economical and efficent
and it can't be burned because of the a ir
pollution it would create.
Californians also throw out some 50
million glass bottles a week. Putting the
two together, using 5-10 per cent of finely
powdered glass, MacKenzie developed his
basic process.
..
,
The powdered dung can also be used
by itself, without the glass, to produce
a paint pigment as well as black colorant
for rubber tires.
I am confident that we have a very
useful and competitive product here, which
at the same time can greatlv diminish two
serious waste disposal problem s" says
McKenzie modestly.
O.K. doc, now let's see you make some­
thing out of all those sows' ears.
a lone
f * ’4“ 10"
th* 1 nited States. A stand taker, after
a long, hard look at the w o rld . The I > . supports the entry
U lu s io is 18 Pe thC LN ‘* CaUSe P° liCieS C,nnot
bas* 1 on
thinkmo U e ) ’v * i
* * buUt ° n 4 N ^ s a n d of wishful
thinking. We have learned this lesson.
r 1CL l RJ ; i i NLY THE 126 ether "tem b ers of the I N cannot afford
shut th e ir eyes to the im portance of keeping Taiwan a mem ber
288-6361
Have you had experience in any of
the following Building and ConHtruction
r rades?
Auto-mechanics
Machinist
Boilermaker
Molde r f Corem aker
Carpenter
Fainter
Electrician
Plumber
Iron Worker
B ricklayer
Linoleum + Carpet Steam Fitter
40 SLAIN IN PRISON SEIGE;
9 e m p lo y e e s among those
m assacred In w orst p r 1 s o n
r io t in yea rs.
KRUSHCHEV DIES! fo rm e r
supreme Soviet ru le r is buried
in o b scu rity.
L T . W IL L IA M G A LLE Y RE­
FUSES TO TESTIFY; w ill not
appear at c o u rt m a rtia l of his
fo rm e r com m ander, C a p t .
E rn e st M edina.
V O ttk
A
Educational play at Bethel C hild Development C enter.
FED ER AL
ENFORCEMENT
OF W AGE-PRICE CONTROLS
I RGED; big b u s in e s s te lls
N ixon c o n tro ls should be long
range.
M ILE S
W.
CHAIRM AN
KIRKPA TRICK.
o F FEDERAL
trade C ommission ; de­
c lin e s to quit post; w ill Stay
despite ru m o rs a d m in istra ­
tion is unhappv w ith tough
reg ulatory posuire.
Indians
protest
School Plan
If so Project Outreach is recruiting
skilled craftsmen who heretofore were
unable to secure Journeymen status and
sem i-skilled craftsm en mechanics who
were unable to meet apprenticeship
requirements, who with additional training
can achieve Journeyman status.
(cont. fro m page I)
scribed Is that tlw centers try
to develop the " Total C h ild ,”
a n l to develop w ithin the child
tlw feeling " I ’ m proud of m e ."
T rouble has fla re d anew in
Robeson County, N . C „ where
a Departm ent of Health. Edu­
member
6X65 ‘ ° ‘ *7
* k^P *n g Taiwan a
cation a i l l W elfare school de­
£
' 1‘ ls a " u t te r of principle, a fundamental p rincip le
segregation plan has been put
by which the UN m ust live o r accept the fact of its fa ilu re
SA LK ACCORIIS ' GNED; U.S.
into effect. The plan has been
1 he goal of the UN is to include every nation in order to
and Russia agr.
jo in t hand­
b itte rly resisted by many
lin g of nuclear i idents.
the 28,000 Lumbee Indians
b e f o ll y ^
J
D rum m ing the nationalists out would
who liv e in the county, and
BRITISH BANK
RUBBERS
when school opened th is year
w i ^ ^ w n ru " SanCtUar> from re a h t>-.
« means of dealing STYMIE SCOTLAND YARD:
the pro te st teetered on tie
u n iv e rw l i a t 3 p
hope of attaining
make o ff w ith $125 m illio n
alge of Violence. The chief
w
Pa>lng P ekl"8 s Pr > « be denying Taiwan a
w h ile broadcasting what they
trouble spot was Prospect
a s“ g
Sm,Ck t0° mUCh ° f
* H m g f t s sou, fo r
w ere doing.
High School in the heart of
Robeson's
Italian C ountry,
And dance.
poor
A mericans ; v ic e
where 35 Lumbee students had
P resident Agnew te lls gover­
sat in on classes a ll last year
nors.
in d ire c t vio la tio n of the HEW
o rd e r.
CIG ARETTE TAX INCREASE;
This year, Danford D ia l, the
By C hief Justice W arren E . B urg er, in urging special pro­
to be on November ba llo t.
L u m b e e p r i n c i p a l of t ie
cedures
to
speed tr ia ls of the nation’ s n o to rio u s " or
school, confirm ed that t ie 35
"s p e c ta c u la r" federal c rim in a l cases:
JU L IA N BOND; recommended
students would receive no of­
" T o a large extent, what people think (o f the courts) is
campaign to elect Black dele­
fic ia l c re d it o r grade advance­
shaped by what we do o r fa il to do w ith less than two per cent
gates to the D em ocratic and
m ent.
F ollow ing D ia l’ s an­
of the c rim in a l cases in the federal system .
Republican National Conven­
nouncement. a group of 30 to
"W h a t is desperately needed is to have . . . the serious cases
tion s.
50 adult Luinbees disrupted
brought on fo r t r ia l in 60 days a fte r indictm ent and the appeal
the opening of the school, and
disposed of in another 60 days. I t can be done.
housing authority of
six were arrested on charges
PO RTLAND; accused P re ­
ranging fro m d is o rd e rly con­
E very large d is tr ic t co u rt should have a procedure by which
sident Nixon of withholding
duct to c a rry in g dangerous
the chief judge, o r possibly a com m ittee designated by the chief
funds appropriated fo r public
weapons. In addition. D ia l
judge, w ill have the power to identify cases in which delays
housing by Congress.
told the W inston-Salem J o u r­
should not be tolerated — the two pe r cent group — and then
nal that he received numerous
make certain that these cases are not allowed to take the pace
D R . BEN H . H IL L ; e d ito r of
" d i r e " threats on his life , and
that the law yers want . . .
t ie A J 4 £ , Review (oldest
he resigned. Two black tea­
" N o t a ll of the two per cent are newsworthy, but w ith in that
B lack magazine in A m erica)
chers at the school said they
two percent are those few cases that drag on fo r two, three,
and State Senator of Oklahoma
were also t h r e a t e n e d by
o u r and m ore years and are often the ‘ notorious’ and the ‘ spec­
d ie s. . . . He was one of A m e r­
Indians, a n l they have refused
ta c u la r cases because of the c rim e fa c to r involved, the identity
ica’ s great Black preachers.
to re p o rt back fo r w o rk. The
of^jhe accused o r his counsel, o r a ll three fa cto rs.
LhS. D is tr ic t C o u rt has given
A lso w ithin the two percent are the cases In which delay gives
nu indication when it w ill hear
rise to public anxiety and concern and even anger. These are
a Lumbee su it seeking to block
the cases that underm ine public confidence in the syste m ."
im plem entation of the HEW
plan. The suit was file d s lig h t­
.\5U
ly m ore than a year ago, and it
took HEW ne arly a year to
re p ly. Tension lias continued
to mount during the delay, and
many blacks, whites and L u m -
bees fear there may he v io­
lence at some point durin g the
fa ll.
Guest Editorial
Citizen
Committees
To M eet
• pvovremot
* * tofthe
The three citize n s advisory
com m ittees of the P o rtia n i
P ublic Schools w ill meet at
7:30 p jn . on M onday,Septem­
ber 20, 1971 In a continued
e ffo rt to bring the schools
clo se r to the citize n s and
students they serve . Each
meeting la open to the public
and scheduled at an elemen­
ta ry school in the a d m in is tra ­
tive area represented by the
com m ittee.
Area 1 c itiz e n ad viso ry com ­
m ittee w ill meet at O ckley
Green
elem entary school,
820 N J r, T illa m o o k . T heA rea
3 com m ittee w ill c a ll to ord e r
at M t. T a b o r elem entary
school, 5800 S Jr. Ash.
ASS?"«
cont.. p a g e
O ffe r lim ite d to O re g o n residents only
and w hile q u a n titie s last. The W ig w a m s
o ffe r com plete selections o f a ll H unting
needs— in clu d in g licenses, tags and in fo rm a tio n .
OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY — 10 to 6 SUNDAYS
USE OUR LAYAWAY FLAN t
USE TOUR BANKAMERICARD er MASTER CMARCf
AMO M W . . . A SIC WICWAMS TO SI AVI Y0«
(cont. page 3 c o l. 3)
7
Candiotes N ot Pictured
Oregon H eart
session*
(cont. fro m page 1)
"W hat’ s new in C ardiovas­
cu la r N u rs in g " is the topic
chosen fo r the two day N urs­
ing Symposium (re g o n H eart
Association w ill present Sep­
tem ber 23 and 24 at the Thun-
d e rb ird Inn, Jantzen Beach.
Being arranged by the as­
sociation’ s nursing education
com m ittee, the two day meet­
ings w ill feature D r . Robert
Chesne, D ire c to r of C oronary
Care at Good Samaritan Medi­
cal C enter, Los Angeles.
Other key speakers w ill be:
D r . J . Davkl B ristow , C h a ir­
0
'
man, Departm ent of M edicine,
U n iv e rs ity of Oregon M edical
School, and D r . H e rbe rt J .
Sem ler, C ardio vascu lar and
Internal M edicine, P ortland.
Robert M o r r is , Research In­
strum ent S ervice, U n ive rsity
of
Oregon M edical School,
M rs . S h irle y Brow n, heart
patient,
and
M rs . Carol
O’Connor, RJ9.
N urses pa rticip a tio n w ill be
highlighted at F ire s id e Ses­
sions Thursday evening and a
panel discussion "B rid g in g
the Gap between the Hospital
and H o m e", F rid a y m orning.
N tw
HAIRSTYLES
E n fo rc e m e n t; R a y m o n d
. Baxger, the C om m lssion 's as­
sistant staff d ire c to r; and by
D r . Robert A le x a n d e r,d ire c ­
to r, offende Rehabilitation
P rog ram , Cleveland, Ohio.
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