Around About
By Justine Weatlierford ,
Last weekend I enjoyed the world-serleslesa athletic TV
programing very much. Being a Beaver born I usually don't
get too enthusiastic about Duck contests, but when the U. of
0. tied the great Irish of Notre Dame, I was really proud of
those quackerg.
Then oo Sunday, the last of the New York City Marathon
rivited my attention. Oregon's Alberto Salazar spurted
magnificently to outclass Rodulfo Gomez of Mexico
who had run right beside him, even a little ahead of him, for
quite a distance. It was thrilling to also watch three-time
champion, Crete Waitz, break the tape far tthead of other
women competitors.
Since last week's column was written, I've made another
visit to the Port Orchard-Bremerton area where I got
acquainted with Jacob Marlon Weaver during the first week
of his life. I learned again how tiring that first week often Is
for the baby and for his family. I came on home again before
little Jay got anywhere near an established routine. He was
being most erratic about his sleeping and what seemed like
' almost 24 hour snacking. It seems to me there is nothing like
a newborn human" to reaffirm one's belief In miracles.
Now I have promised myself that I shall stay in Heppner
until Thanksgiving week. Events here that should have had
good attendance were the Monday evening A.A.U.W.-ar-
ranged presentation concerning Ballot Measure 5 which
urges a mutual freeze of nuclear weapons development.
Then, this afternoon's Neighborhood Center Halloween Party
and tonight the annual Fall Moonlight Sale should draw
everyone downtown. I didn't get to the Health Fair on
Tuesday, Oct. 26, In lone, but I am sure that was a very
worthwhile event. Because I don't have wood heating and am
not able to go out collecting wood, I also missed the workshop
last night at the fairgrounds which also sounded very
worthwhile.
When I was away visiting up north my dally mail was taken
in from the box on Gllmore Street by my helpful neighbor
Jack Loyd. He really managed to get quite an assortment of
mail together, such as, three tax statements, lots of junk
stuff, a little first class correspondence, too many magazines
to catch up with reading very quickly and, of course, my
last week's G-T, which I promptly arranged on the top of the
to-be-read material.
Some local news was good; some was sad. It has been good
. to bave Gladys Beckett and Zella Prindle as part of this
community which has been their home so long. It is sad that
the poor market for lumber has caused Kinzua to reduce its
employees. That poor timber market was also the basis for
the drop In timber sales receipts to this county which is
leaving the Road Department under-budgeted.
During my second visit in two weeks to the Puget Sound
area, I took more time to read the "Seattle Post-Intelligencer"
and the "Bremerton Sun" and to observe some of the
top stories these two large-circulation papers have been
featuring. The P-I has been running a series on drunk
drivers. One day (Oct. 21), the article told of a man, an
airline pilot, who had been cited three times for drunken
driving but each time he kept his driver's license and stayed
out of Jail. It took a tragedy to finally put him behind bars.
Last summer when driving while drunk he severely injured a
young couple engaged to be married. Now they have lain in a
coma for three months at Haraborview Medical Center.
"After his fourth citation, a recent trial In Aukeen District
Court saw the driver ordered to Jail. He was fired from his
airline pilot Job, according to Northwest Airlines officials,
who apparently were unaware of his previous arrests."
Last week the burning and sinking of a 338-foot fish-processing
ship in the center of Everett Harbor was featured in
every paper and TV news show. The opening of the rebuilt
Hood Canal Bridge was a big story as the dedication
approached on Sunday. People were protesting the $2.50 toll
that was going into effect on Monday, Oct. 23.
A P-I series featuring Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and the
financial empire revolving around him especially interested
me. It carried a large picture of the Bhagwan with this
caption "He attracts disciples from the upper-middle class
who help pay for his new city and agricultural project in
Central Oregon. Many of the disciples have bought him
Rolls-Royces." The story tells that he has a total of 21 luxury
cars, Camargues and Silver Spurs, Rolls models that sell for
over $150,000 each. It stresses that "Unlike many contem
porary religious movements, which attract the disillusioned
dropouts and rejects of modern society, the 250,000
orange-garbed disciples of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh tend to
be professional, upper middle-class and college-educated.
These disciples, called 'sannyaslns' pay for all the medita
tions and therapies they participate in at hundreds of
Rajneesh centers In cities around the world."
The article also states that Rajneesh had already amassed
a huge financial empire by the time his organization made a
$1.5 million cash down payment lat year on the $8 million,
125-square-mile Oregon ranch. It explains that Rajneesh
Services International, based in London, provides financial
management services for 400 loosely connected Rajneesh
meditation and therapy centers around the world. The
Oregon ranch Is actually owned by the Rajneesh Investment
Corp., "a privately held, profit-making corporation with
assets variously estimated from $11.5 million to $25 million.
This organization was granted tax-exempt status by the
Internal Revenue Service in July 178."
So, readers of Seattle's P-I may now be coming to look
around Antelope and to buy coffee, sodas and souvenirs at
the commune's store there. The article which I brought home
is from the Oct. 21 P-I and it was the last of a series of
three articles written by Don Lattin "San Francisco
Examiner religion writer, who spent a month studying
Bhugwan Shree Rajneesh, the guru from India whose
disciples are building a city in rural Oregon."
w i i r s n in
LiOOK ror janw i
M fi'
Ansotegui
at Trish's
County service officer attends conference
The llrppner Gazette-Times, Heppner. Oregon, Thursday, October 28, 1932 THREE
I 1
1
4
.?
applying for State and Federal
veterans' benefits. Areas
covered included housing,
education, counseling, claims,
employment, medical and
pension assistance. ;
Keynote speakers included
Director of the Oregon De
partment of Veterans' Affairs
Staryl C Austin. Jr.. and other
rrpresentafaivesfrom federal
and state veteran service or
ganizations, pation and exchange of valu-
Association President Lor- ab,e information, said a
raine Benson was pleased with Pkesperson from the De-
the well represented partici- Part"entof Veterans' Affairs.
Sharon Biddle, Morrow County service officer converses
with Department of Veterans' Affairs Director Staryl C.
Austin, Jr, at a statewide Veterans Service Officer
Conference in Bend. The conference was held October 20, 21,
and 22.
Sharon Biddle, Morrow
County service officer, atten
ded a semi-annual statewide
County Veterans Service Offi
cer Conference October 20, 21,
and 22 in Bend.
Co-sponsored by the Oregon
Dcparatment of Veterans Af
fairs and the County Service
Officer Association, the ses
sions provided county service
officers with updated informa
tion necessary to assist Ore
gon veterans, their widows or
widowers and dependents in
EVERYBODY NEEDS
PROPERTY TAX
RELIEF
VOTE
YES, YES, YES
on
MEASURE 3
Paid for by the Committee for Responsible Taxation, Gaylord
Madison, Chairman, Buttercreek Hwy.. Echo.
I Would
Appreciate
Your Vote!
Dorothy Krebs
For
Morrow County Commissioner
'Keep Experience On The County Court'
Re-elect Krebs Commissioner Committee
imda LoRue, Treasurer, Box 367, lone, OR 97843
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NABISCO SPOON SIZE m - KRAFT PHILADELPHIA SOFT
SHREDDED WHEAT J1.49 CREAM CHEESE 99c
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COUGH SYRUP
$1.65
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13-a PLAIN
13-a PCWDERED
FRANZ PIES
APPLE, BERRY, CHOCOLATE,
LEMON OR PEACH
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Beauty Shop
676-9282
Heppner
WE RESERVE THE
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RIGHT TO LIMIT
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