Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1975)
Page I THE GAZETTE-TIMES, Heppner, OR, Thursday, Oct. J, 1975 Mayor ofHardman Horse sense !? "hi y ERNEST V.JOIVF.R lb I issasssss'-'' "The only way to make sure that crime doesn't pay is to ha ve the government take it over and run it." Ernest Bevin Rehabilitation programs for criminals are a failure. They should all be scrapped. Those engaged in the programs should be encouraged to engage in honest work. The reason is clear: criminals are seldom, if ever, rehabilitated. I would be pleased to have the name of one who has been rehabilitated through the programs of social scientists who infest the criminal justice institutions of this country. On the other hand, I have heard of criminals who, through their own decision and hard work, have become self-rehabilitated and who have become useful members of society. But I have never heard of a person who became rehabilitated (and stayed that way) through the parole and probation system or through the multiplicity of social programs geared to rescue the lawbreaker from his folly. I have never heard of a criminal who was "rehabilitated" because he got 18 months in prison instead of the 20 years he deserved. If the rehabilitation programs work, why is it that nearly 70 per cent of those arrested for serious crime in this country have been previously convicted or are on parole or probation for serious crime? The statistics are from the U.S. Dept. of Justice. Well, you might ask, what about the other 30 per cent? Not all criminals are apprehended. Probably half the crimes in the nation are never solved. Some of the 30 per cent will be arrested somewhere down the line. The rest are new criminals. All of which means that our courts are recycling criminals like we recycle beer cans and pop bottles. We are arresting the same criminals, over and over. The courts, through probation, parole, plea bargaining and light sentences, are making it impossible to keep those already convicted of crime off our streets. By all means let us set up a rehabilitation program for James Reece. 32. On Monday. Sept. IS, this man, a convict patroled in July as a model prisoner, went on a rampage that included kidnapping, murder and attempted rape. He has a history of violent behavior, yet he was certified "rehabilitated" and paroled 52 days before from state prison at VacaviUe. He bad served only S years of a life sentence. Before that he served 3 years in a state hospital for the criminally insane at Atascadero. His criminal record dates tack to 1964. Unless he dies of the 8 bullets pumped into him in a shootout with police before his capture, the odds are he will be back on the streets again. Mathematicians at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have projected that murder is increasing so fast that from 2 to 5 per cent of all babies born today will be murdered. If so. an urban American boy born in 1974 is more likely to be murdered than an American Soldier in World War II was likely to die in combat ! Some believe that a man who sells hard drugs has no business in prison. Many Americans agree. In Turkey, a person found guilty of selling drugs is shot by a firing squad within minutes of his conviction. There aren't many drug pushers in Turkey. It will be the same anywhere when human beings learn they must suffer the consequences of their own misdeeds. - I am not interested in arguing whether capital punishment or harsh prison sentences are deterrents to a crime. But I am favorably impressed with the fact that once a convicted murderer is executed he won't kill again. And the criminal doing 20 to life isn't going to be on the streets robbing and killing people our judicial and penal authorities are sworn to protect. I believe prisons exist for two purposes : for punishment and as a means of separating criminals from society. Never for rehabilitation. Prisons can't be all bad. The great Jawaharlal Nehru spent a lot of time there. "All my major works have been written in prison. I would recommend prison not only to aspiring writers but to aspiring politicians, too." he said. Others see prison as sources of crime; which, if true, is reason enough to avoid them at all cost. A few days ago in Sacramento a young woman tried to gun down the President of the United States. In spite of complex security precautions, this member of the Manson murder gang was in the crowd with a gun. If there were a dea!h penalty meted out swiftly and certainly for assassination attempts on public officials, would Lynette From me have been there? Probably not. But she knows our judicial system, as most criminals do. She knew the worst she could suffer would be a few years in prison the least, parole or probation. But look what she gets in return! She becomes an overnight celebrity, somebody, a public figure. She makes the front page. She looks great on television. She is permitted to hold press conferences at which eager reporters record every warped thought of hers for the anxious world of readers. Her memoirs, which could be assembled in a short prison stint, might sell for tl million. She wilt receive at least one proposal of marriage from a bleeding heart millionaire with a rehabilitation program of his own. She might become famous enough to run for public office, like Tom Hayden. Angela Davis and other notable rehabilitates of our time. The public yearns to clasp its incorrigible to its breast comfort. As Robert Lynd once wrote. "We welcome almost any break in the monotony of things, and a man has only to murder a series of wives in a new way to become known to millions of people who have never heard of Homer." Now let us all stand and sing the first two and last verses of that great old hymn. "Crime Never Pays." IB The mail pouch EDITOR : I would like to "thank" Mr. W W. Weatherford of Heppner. for his letter of Sept. 18. 1975. where he informed me of something that I will admit I've missed and that was. an opinion by the Gazette editor stating that the people of Morrow County are ignorant and lazy, and he. Mr. Weatherford for this cancelled his subscripion to the Gazette-Times. That is way beyond my understanding. In my opinion, this editor deserves a great big pat on his back, for I want the editor to completely express his opinions if he will let me express mine. If we're ever to survive, it's going to lake a free press and free speech, without reprisals. I find one fault, not big. but I feel to the ignorant and lazy he should have added incompetent, gutless, vicious, an if I give it some more thought, there would be at least a dozen don't and do's in this same category. I'm not gunning for the people of Morrow County, for they fall neatly in the category of the national 85 per cent of this U.S.A. If it weren't for that 15 per cent that are fighting tooth and nail to keep the "Good Ship' U S A afloat, you can bet your bottom dollar this "Good Ship" would be at the bottom of Boston Bay and we would be getting our orders straight from "Moscow & Company." Who is laying the red carpet for Communism in this U.S.A.? If you don't know. I would be happy to inform you through a personal appearance. When I use the term viciousness referring to the John Citizen category is when I see the grandstands filled at the Chamber of Commerce commercialized torture called the "Heppner Rodeo" I can say one thing, "yes" Mr. Editor, you were right. 100 per cent, but you should of added to your ignorance and laziness, incompetence, gutlessness. and viciousness. and you would have hit a great big bulls eye in my opinion. In the meantime, say it like it is. "the truth" and you will have my blessings. EDITOR: 1 want to tell you how much we enjoyed your news items of "55 Years" and "25 Years ago," As an old time resident of Morrow County these memories bring back many happy recollections. Also can you give me the days and hours that the museum is open, i hear that it has a fine collection. HKtl.AH t.l NDKI.L. Portland Editor Note: The museum is open Saturday 10 a in. -12 p m.. 1-5 p.m.: Sundays I -3 p m . : Monday and Wednesday 12 5 p m, and Thursday 7 9 p m. Bicentennial Forum A shrinking frontier ? OTTO H. JORGENSEN. JK. Srappoose EDITOR: The central issue of today's economic crisis is money power and those who control this money power over America. It is a real crime that we have so many in high places that can be bought off when important decisions are being made for the good of our stale and nation. Many Americans can well remember being caught in the squeeze of rising living costs and disappearing jobs preceding the crash of 1929. Then, as now. the people were confronted by a shrinking dollar, leaping interest rates, a skidding market and. in the final days, evaporating business capital with resulting unemployment. Then, as now. the people are assured by elected officials and by financial "experts", that the economy was sound. Our free enterprise system can't possibly stand another depression like we had in the early thirties. The book, "The Business End of Government" is a real eye opener in point ing out dangers to our free enterprise system caused by our misguided leaders of government. These booms and busts and wars have caused the money bags of the super rich to overflow continually, while the middle class Americans' bank account has decreased by paying all the nation's debts which these money controllers have planned that way. It is well to note that the catastrophic collapse of 1929 was not relieved until the onset of "war prosperity" beginning in 1939. The American tax-payer, who bears the brunt of economic decline, has the right to know who decides whether or not the United States will be prosperous or if we are to be plunged into a new depression in 1976 or 19??. For facts behind the crisis write for a free copy of "Another ! Depression for America?" from The Committee to Restore the Constitution, 990 Savings Bldg., Ft. Collins, CO. 80521. IRA OWEN Lexington. Mmtwxmu9nmnmmmaaut THE GAZETTE-TIMES MOKKOM fm ATI ' NEWSPAPER Box XV, Heppner. Ore. 17836 Subscription rate: U per year In Oregon. 17 elsewhere Ernest V. Joiner. Publisher ; Published every Thursday and entered is a wrond-rlau matter at ' the post office it Heppner. Oregon, under the act of March 1, 1171. Second-class postage paid at Heppner, Oregon. 1 "J. 4 "Go west. young man. and grow up wilh the country." Horace Greeley "Come all ye yankee farm ers who wish to change your oi Who've spunk to travel beyond your native spot . . ." Folk song, circa IKno "Where today are the Pc quol? Where are the Narra gansetl. the Mohican, the Po kanoket. and many other once powerful tribes of our people? They have vanished before the avarice and the oppression of the White Man. as snow before a summer sun." Tecumseh of the Shawnees. The horad land beckoned and the early settlers look up its invitation. Even before the East was conquered and cleared, pioneers were push ing west of the Alleghenies into the Midwest, spanning the Mississippi to cross the Great plains, then struggling across the Continental Divide and surmounting the high Sierras to reach the Pacific, In Washington's lime America was the "new found land," a virgin continent that offered rich possibilities for settle ment. Farms, ranches, plan tations, towns and trading posts were carved out from the wilderness. Each kind of settlement supported a quite different way of life: the life of the Southern planter, sustain ed by a slave economy, the New England townsman, the Midwestern wheal farmer, the Western rancher, the Pacific, fur trapper. How did each area affect them, and how did they change each place they settled? The frontier molded resilient men and women -or It drained Ihem and destroyed (hem! Is the whole colonizing, pioneering, prospecting spirit still a significant element in our character? Did a propen sity for violenre grow out of it . a wanderlust ... a sense 6f community ... or of Intolerance? Does a frontier spirit still spur us on? Pioneer Profiles S.mi liii.ii itni.in was an mil standing pioneer atler whom the last growing community nl Ibiardman is named. In I'KU, the Sam lioardinan family moved from the east and scliled along the bank of the Columbia River, when Sam was about 28 years old History says that Sam lioardinan and his f at her dug 17 wells all over their home sieail The water was used to irrigate their crops and the near -desert sagcland w as soon turned into a garden spot. Sam and his w ifc Annahcllf . waited through many dry years for irrigation water which finally came to the area in cement diii lies in I 'i If. S.i m lioardinan sold 40 acres to the lioardinan Town site Company and E P. Dodd ol Heriniston. organizer of the company who platted the new town, in 1918 lioardinan existed there until it was relocated with the building of the John Day Dam down stream. Sam lioardinan worked for the Stale Highway Depart ment for years and then for the Stale Parks Department. There he rose to become the first siiermlendenl. Mrs. lioardinan started the first community Sunday School with an enrollment of 5. When the attendance reached 13, the group moved from her home to the little schoulhouse. Telephones came lo the community in 1919, the same year the Greenfield Grange was chartered. The railroad depot was built In 1322. lioardinan operated without a charter until 1927. Sam lioardinan died in 1953 al the age of 78; his wife survived until 1963. They reared five children, sons Kenneth and Albert and dau ghters Dorothy, Helen and Emma. DEAR MISTER EDITOR: None of the fellers that gather around the country store is what vou could call a fashion plate, but Zeke Grubb allowed during the session Saturday night that ever stitch he's got is in st vie right now. Zeke said he'd been telling his old lady fer years that his double breasted wool suit would swing back In favor soon or late, but he didn'l expeel to see his overalls git to be what ever up lo date college girl is wearing these days. Zeke had saw where dressing up means dressing down, and the same age children that use lo be ashamed to go to school in faded cotton shirts and frocks now won't be caught hanging around the water cooler in nothing new. They do everlhing from sew patches on brand new Jeans to bleach out their new colored shirts to git that wore out look. Zeke declared. General, Mister Editor, the fellers was more up on styles that I would of give em credit. Ed Doolittle reported where he had read a piece In one of his old lady's magazines where "prole clothes" was the hottest thing In the fashion trade, Ed said that word worried him til he final looked it up. He said the best he can figger that comes from "proletariat." which means the working class. Ed said the styles include coveralls fer the girls and everthing from welder helmets lo logger boots fer the boys. The feller that runs the store slin ks work gloves, and he's got a rack full of caps and hats that somebody is alius spinning around fer no reason. He said the salesman that keeps up his clothing department said the other day that we have gone from permanent press to permanent wrinkle in three years One company that makes men's pants now is selling as many to wimmen. he said, and the funny part is they got to make new stuff old, As soon as the pants made thev are took by the hundreds of dozen lo a outfit that rents work uniforms and they are run through them big commercial washing machines. This way new pants come out looking like they've been wore a couple of year and they're snapped up as soon as they git dry. the salesman said. Practical speaking, the fellers couldn't decide whulhcr the st It- is good, bad or indifferunt. They was agreed, though, that the man still has to make the clothes, not the other way around, and they noted that "prole clothes" is wore by young folks that general know as much about the working world as FDR kiiowed alMiut dealing wilh the Russians. If folks paid much attention lo clothes styles, it would mean trouble fer cverbody A feller that carries his lunch to work in a bucket is going to feel silly when he sees his old lady paint his lunch pail, stick some pictures on it and start carrying it let a handbag. And poor folks won't feel right working alt day in clothes the well oft wear to country club dances. I figger It s best to cover up with whatever we got and let the style lake care of itself Yours trulv. MAYOR ROY. W) X INHrKCTIU cLjcn W sl(.TnV.S MOST I.OIIHY Bv I KM HI KINSOI MM, Oregon's liberal Republican Sen Mark Hatfield is as lev mil and active a church member i Baptist i as anyone in ('ingress Hence he "was a natural choice for speaker at the recent animal convention of the Religious Public Relations Council -which he proceeded to electrify or possibly electrocute! wnh the following statements. "The National Council of Churches is the most ineffective lobby know of on Capitol Hill " "They come up with resolutions (hat we know probably couldn't even Ret a majority vole in their local congregations " Every one of these people who come up to Ihe hill to we me. olten from ihe religious establishment, never once look iiH.n me. I have a feeling, as other than an object lo be manipulated, jusl like any other lobby dties." Retorted ihe National Council of Churches' t.NCCi man in Washington, Dr James Hamilton Hamilton went on lo note: "Each of the member denominations of the NCC selects its own representative to the NCC Governing Board and H is this body which determines NCC policies and positions . . . Surely a .nominal ion docs not seek lo have Us positions on issues misrepresented In such cases it can change ils representative." True But the NCC Governing Board is heavily dominated by the large delegations of a few big denominations-parti-cularly Ihe United Methodists-where Ihe denominational high commands are heavily infiltrated by far left wing and black militant bureaucrats, who are considerably adept at the skill of ecclesiastical power politics As an example, several of these NCC member denominations support a related agency of Ihe NCC called the Corporate Information Center. This organization, which say it has an annual budget of $195,000. is quite skilled at demanding public exposure of Ihe financial transactions of large business corporations But it has not. apparently, yet seen fit lo demand that Ihe United Church of Christ stop concealing Ihe salaries of top executives like the Rev. Larold .Vhullz Moreover IheCorporale Information Center appears to be similarly selective about I'S corporations who do business in Africa IBM. for example, has for the past three years been asked by this organization lo stop or inhibit Its trade with South Africa. But no such concern has ever been expressed by this group about IBM's doing business anywhere else In Afr,ca-no matter how oppressive the black dictatorships where this corporation doe business may be At this year s stockholders' meet.ng. the "Committee on I S Investment,, ,n South Africa." which is part of Ihe Corporate Informal, on Center. Introduced for the third straight year ils anti South African rcsnlution-which was JErS? " 1 Tins NCC effort therefore. ap,ers lo be even more tTST ,he e",H', or ,hp Ncc lobh" b" It is also significant that, during the past three years when this conglomeration of denominational IBM stakhotoVrt a. . orm.nd.nR that IBM stop or inhibit buslnes. wKu h Africa, hese same church sin. kholder, (54 000 shares" pocketed ... estimate,! ,r,7,ooo In IBM dividend. Ihu, Sg business however Indirectly, with South Africa ' I ossibly these assorted IBM stockholding hierarch. find a nrm of financial p-nance in paying Ihe Co porat! ninallon people , cnducl their aimual Zr.ZZ 2 IBM for doing successful business In South Africa