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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1958)
4 Friday, September 19, 1958 MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Medfo: BUNE "Everyone In Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 33 North Fir St. Pb . SP 2-6141 ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor HERB GREY, Advertising Manager GtKALU Latham. Business iigr. ERIC W. ALLEN JR.. Managing Editor - IARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, TeJeg. Editor RICHARD JEWETT. Snorts Editor OLIVE STARCHER, Women'i Editor DALE ER1CKSON. Circulation Mgr. An IndeDendent NewsDaDer Entered as second class matter at Medford Oregon under Act of March 3. 1397 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Copy 10c. Daily and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday 6 mos. B.oo Daily and Sunday 3 mos. 4.23 - Sunday Only One year J4.20. By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point. Jacksonville. Gold Hill, Phoenix, Shady Cove. Rogue Riv er. Talent, and on motor routes: Daily and Sunday 1 year $18.00 Daily and Sunday 1 mo. 1.50 Carrier and Dealers copy 10c All Terms Cash in Advance Official Paper of City of Medford - Official Paper of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST-HOLIDAY CO.. INC, Of fices in New York, Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles, Seattle. Portland, St. Louis. At lanta. Vancouver, B.C. NEWSPAPEt k PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION ES2 NATIONAL EDITORIAL asocjtQn Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and 40 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Sept. 19. 1948 (Sunday) A total of more than $22 000 worth of livestock was auctioned Thursday night at the conclusion of the county 4-H club fair. The medical care director of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis has come to consult with execu tives of the foundation's Jack son county chapter. 20 YEARS AGO Sept. 19. 1938 (Monday) Central Point has voted to Install pipes to bring Med ford water to it rather than relav all its own water mains From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "The deer hunting season opens Tues. Several nimrods will be unable to sally forth owing to some work coming up sud den, and their wives making up their minds for them. 30 YEARS AGO Sept. 19. 1928 (Wednesday) The Medford Garden club will send a committee to judge asters today. The Medford and Ashland Chambers of Commerce are launching membership drives. 40 YEARS AGO Sect. 19. 1918 (Thursday) S. S. Bullis has telephoned Mayor Gates of Medford that hp nlans to sell the Medford Jacksonville railroad, and that if the DeoDle of Medford want to preserve it they should offer to buy it. The best school exhibits ever assembled in Jackson county are now on exhibit downtown as part of the school fair. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten correct is superior; seven or eight is excellent; five or six is good. 1. Do you associate the title Rajah with Iran, India, Bur ma, or Indo-china? 2. In Roman mythology, Bacchus was the god of wine; true or false? 3. Six states comprise New England; name them. 4. Lightning never strikes the same object twice; true or" false? 5. Are Hibernians Scots men, Spaniards or Irishmen? 6. In which profession is an instrument known as a theodolite most used? 7. On which large river is the Chinese city of Chung king? 8. What is the present name of he former Danish West Indies? 9. The painter most famous for his paintings of ballet dancers was Murillo, or Degas?. 10. Does the island of Cor sica belong to Spain, France, or Italy? Answers: I. India. 2. True. 3. Main, New Hampshire. Ver mont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. 4. False. 5. Irishmen. 6. Survey ing. 7. Th Yangtze. 8. Ameri can Virgin Islands. 9. Degas. 10. Franc. . Laughter RIP.? Has laughter good old unrestrained laughter at the ridiculous or absurd vanished from Am erica? A man named Corey Ford, writing in the Sat urday Evening Post, mourns the death of laugh ter. And he attributes it to fear fear of the com plications of living in a threatening, atomic age; fear of the reprisals of the laughed-about; fear of being considered non-conf ormists or of being con sidered light-headed as well as light-hearted. Ford may have overstated his case, but he has, it appears, a case, of sorts. AT ANOTHER time, and under other circum " stances, the frothings and mouthings of the late Senator Joseph McCarthy would have been laughed out of the public eye. But, since he capitalized on the fear of Ameri ca of subversion, backed by the threat of inter national communism, McCarthy was taken seri ously, instead of being treated as the ridiculous figure he was at his height. Because of those circumstances, he was looked upon as menacing by some, and as a savior by others; and by none as the ridiculous, gravel voiced, over-inflated symbol he appears to be in retrospect. VES, perhaps Ford has a point. . One seldom, in polite society, anyway, or upon the stage, hears the ancient jokes about Pat and Mike (the Irish might protest) ; or the Negro jokes (many of that race object, understandably, to racial stereotypes of an unfavorable charac ter) ; or the Scotch jokes (Scots might protest) ; or Jewish jokes (the same), and so on and so on. Catholics object to jokes about priests; mor ticians object to jokes about undertakers; plaster ers object to jokes about people being "plas tered"; traveling salesmen object to jokes in volving them with farmers daughters; police officers object to jokes about "cops" and so on down the line. A whole vein of humor, some of it innocent fun, some of it rather more vicious, is prohibited. "llHERE, nowdays, is the Will Rogers who can comment lightly on the shortcomings of a president while spinning a loop with his lariat? There is none, and probably will be none as long as a serious public takes seriously the habits of the man in the White House. , (We have heard animated even heated arguments about whether golf is a necessary re laxation and exercise for presidents, or only evi dence of a lack of application and attention to the job; seldom have comedians, had the termerity to see anything funny in the golf, or even in the dead-serious discussions of it.) A nation which cannot take unimportant things lightly, or even the amusing side of serious things, is the loser. MOT all humor has vanished from the American scene even though George Gobel reports that he repeatedly teases his TV wife because it isn t safe to tease anything else any more. Not all wit is dead runs the danger of being Not all comedians have died even though comedy today is mostly that of the "situation," rather than of pungent crous m the passing scene. Not all laughter is gone although the often acid and even more often hilarious cartoons of such expert practitioners as Herblock are fre ouentlv bemoaned as being in "bad taste." Maybe what America fat bellv-laugh at itseli. pompous, energetic and idealistic. It also is tunny, if we can regain sufficient perspective to see our selves as we are. E.A. River Land Withdrawal We are in hearty accord with the decision of the bureau of land management to withdraw riverbank areas of the recreational planning, scenic values. The Rogue river is a and its value does not lie or power or domestic and industrial water use po tential. Much of its value lies in its recreational value. It is the right thing as is possible, this resource. A LARGE acreage is involved. It totals 23,096 acres, and the withdrawal extends, generally, for a half-mile on each side of the river from about McLeod to Agness, forest service land protect Rogue. But if we read the sufficient protection for other interests. The-land is not going to be "locked up" so that no one can use the Rogue in any way. areas on the lower Kogue mineral entry, and other special circumstances, will But the values which are most important to he largest number of people will be preserved. THE time may come when we will have to de nlAr, -.t-1 A i 1 1.. ll iue vmcuiei we want iu nave our cane in me orm of a natural river open to all for recreation and spiritual refreshment), or eat our cake (by using the river for little but industrial, irrigation, power ana domestic purposes). a or a while longer, however, we do not have o make that decision. For a while, anvwav. we can have our cake and even though the satirist taken seriously. commentary on the ludi needs today is a Dig, Our nation is serious. Rogue river for future and for preservation of major asset to this valley, entirely in its irrigation to do to protect, insofar Other withdrawals in other stretches of the order correctly, there is Certain mineral-heavyj will still be subject to types of entry, under be allowed. eat it too. E.A. Dennis the Menace ' I WAS PgETENDlM' THE 6UY W MB HAVE IT -W I GUESS I Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view-to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the aaper; in fact the contrary is often the case. First TV Station To the Editor: For some time now KBES-TV has an nounced they are the oldest operating station in Oregon, According to Bill Moyes' B Mike Column, quote: "KPTU (12) was first TV station in Oregon." It used to be UHF and now is VHF. Melvin Bedient, Box 149, Rogue River, Ore. Coverage Liked , To the Editor: The Eagle Point Lions club would like to express its appreciation to you and your staff for the excellent coverage which was accorded the Woman's State Softball Tournament held Au gust 7, 8, 9, 10, 1958. We would like you to know that except for the untiring efforts of Mr. Dick Jewett of your staff, we feel that our crowds would not have been nearly as large. Mr. Jewett was in attendance at most of the games and his wonderful reporting of the games added color to the tournament which encpuraged fans to attend. The advance publicity and pictures which were published were of the highest order and aided materially in promoting the tournament. The Tournament was a fi nancial success for the club as weU as furnishing enter tainment for the members of the Camp White Domiciliary and we hope to be able to again invite the Softball as sociation to hold the state tournament at the Camp White stadium. Eagle Point Lions club, For the Members, Stewart Hopper, Secretary . Conference on Chemicals Slated Corvallis A special all-day conference on safe handling and use of toxic agricultural chemicals will be held at Ore gon State college Oct. 7. The meeting is being spon sored by the State Industrial Accident commission in coop eration with the Oregon state board of health, Oregon State college extension service, and the Governor's Farm Safety committee. The importance of such a meeting has been brought to the attention of various groups and state agencies by the increased number of chem icals to control insects on farms and home owners' gardens. Improper handling of the pesticides has resulted in ill ness and several fatalities in the state, officials noted. The conference is designed to stim ulate interest in the safe han dling of the toxic agricultural chemicals. Texas Pilots Plan To Continue Flight Dallas, Tex. (DPD Two Tex as pilots who already have set a record for continuous flight in a small plane are trying to stay up three more days. Jim Heth, 25, and BiU Burk- hart. 33, reached 1,124 hours or 47 days in the air Thursday, passing the record set by Woody Jongeward and Bob Woodhouse of Yuma, Ariz. "We're jumping up and down in spirit because that's all we can do in this crowded cabin," Heth said. He said the plane's engine, operating be yond normal limits, was work ing well. Gasoline and provisions have been delivered" to the plane from a speeding pickup truck. THE AllRpOR WAS GONNA LET GZXAIlXgDUPt " Old-Time Tales To the Editor: The histori cal photos and data recently presented by your newspaper were most interesting, and as well, have been much help to me in locating points and per sons of interest in this area . . ior purpose of preparing stories for magazines. Our true 'old timers' are disappearing so rapidly, and regretably, many pass on without having their stories authentically and completely recorded. There is a reading audience growing by leaps and bounds for these true stories from our past, parti cularly the period from about 1830 to the early 1900's. In case readers of this area have not become acquainted with some of the quality mag azines covering such material, they will find True West and Frontier Times magazines, (P.O. Box 5008, Austin, Texas), good reading. These publications are comparative ly new, but they are quality magazines, and our own sec tion of Oregon is written of in almost every issue. The stories are factual and well written by such authors as J. Frank Dobie, (who has a story in the current issue, Schieffehn's Gold" whose mam Characters are south western Oregonians). I have found so much en joyment in my own subscrip tion that I wanted to ac quaint your readers with the publication as it is not on the stands as. yet. In forthcoming issues I have several stories, one of which is written about a Medfordite, Mrs. Owen Williams, (Central Point, ac tually), and her experiences in the oil boom days of Okla homa. Another story of Thomas Barney Kendall's ex perience as a U.S. Marshal in Indian Territory. Mr. Ken dall lives now at Klamath Falls and is partially para. lized from a bullet wound re ceived from Cherokee Bill when he went out to bring in the notorious killer.In fu ture issues I hope to have much of the Rogue Valley history, provided I contine to receive in the future such co- operation from the remaining old-timers as I have received to date, and they have all been most gracious. We do enjoy the Mail Tribune, and hope to see more and more of such pic tures and perhaps articles as our 100th year approaches. Mrs. Virginia Card P.O. Box 145 Medford Try and -By BENNETT CERF- AWOE-BEGONE fellow told an analyst, "My sense of humor has destroyed my happy home. My wife is walking out on me because she says she can't stand listening to me tell my funny stones any longer. "A sad case," mused the analyst. "Tell me a few of your funny stories." The patient reeled off three or four, leaving the analyst prostrate on the floor with laughter. Finally he stag gered to the outer office, : and said, "If I laugh any more, Til split my sides." "Why don't you stay in side with your patient and laugh with him?'1 asked the nurse. "Are you crazy, too?" de manded the analyst. 'Tm trying to cure him!" "We're down to our last $20 bill," wailed a famous burglar's wife. "You'll have to produce some money fast" "All right, all right," grumbled the husband, "but you'll have to wait till the bank closes." 19M. by Swnttt Cert. SisUibuttd by Kiss fMturM SyadicaU. Higher Farm Income Works Political 'Miracle'; Support Payments High By LYLE C. WILSON UPI Correspondent Washington - (BPD - Tucked away among this week's cor porate financial reports was i 1 5T Ml could be more & I n a r c ii a civa a than any sta tistics compil ed in Wash ington to show that there is no recess ion on the Ameri can farms. The item reported Lyle C. Wilson that in nine July 31, the months ended J. I. Case Co. earned $2,988,861 compared to a loss of $993,805 in the comparable months a year ago. Case manufactures farm implements. There probably are Ameri can farmers who are losing money to the cost - price squeeze, but J. I. Case cus tomers evidently are not among them. During this week, also, the Agriculture Department happily reported that farm income for the first nine months of 1958 will be 19 per cent greater than in the first nine months of 1957. Benson More Popular Such indicators of the meas- fit I m Matter of Fact WHAT NEXT? Taipei, Formosa If one knew the answers to three questions, it would Be easy T" to rjredirt the future de velopment of this baffling, i m m e n s ely dangerous off shore islands crisis. Quest ion number one is whether t h lostpb Alsop -nmese com "ii- munist representatives at Warsaw will agree to an in formal cease-fire in the For mosa Strait. The American policy-makers faintly, palely hope for cease-fire at War saw, if the hope is realized, the artillery blockade of Que- moy will be automatically lifted: and the immediate problem will be solved The crisis will then subside into another interminable probably fruitless round of ambassadorial talks, as hap pened in 1955. But the Chin ese Communists could have got this much without creat ing the crisis. Hence the odds against Warsaw - arranged cease-fire would seem to be pretty heavy. . QUESTION number two is how much longer the American government can persuade Chiang Kai-shek to hold his hand. The President- Generalissimo has indicated to this reporter that the effort to supply Quemoy by convoy over open beaches under heavy fire was a very poor stopgap at best which is a charitable judgment. Chiang further revealed his determin ation to strike rather soon at the heart of the trouble, by sending his crack air squad rons against the Communist gun positions and lines of communications. Chiang has not yet ordered air attacks on mainland tar gets, solely because of Ameri can pleas to wait and see whether the Warsaw talks would produce a cease-fire If a cease-fire is not soon pro duced, Chiang will be very hard to hold any longer. And if his air squadrons begin to operate over the mainland, the fat will be in the fire whether the American Gov ernment likes it or not. A S FOR question number "three, it is whether the American policy-makers will come round to Chiang Kai- shek's view of the problem if their Warsaw hopes are dis appointed. Another way of phrasing : the question is to ask whether President Eisen hower and Secretary of State Stop Me havg yfcj HEARD THIS ONE? r ure of farm prosperity already had accomplished one poltical miracle. This miracle was the changed status of Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson Benson not only licked the farm bloc on the issue of farm legislation in the House of Representatives this year. He was transmuted, politically from a liability to an asset on the books of the Republi can Party. Stranger things have hap pened, but not often. Ameri can farmers made up their minds about Benson soon after he joined the cabinet in 1953. He opposed high and rigid farm price subsidies which seemed to the farmers to provide easy and desirable money and which were urged by the bi-partisan farm bloc and by the Democratic Party as essential to the welfare of U.S. agriculture. Benson called that a lot of nonsense. He was able to break down the high and rigid support system which had been installed by preceding Democratic administr a t o r s Whether improved prices for farm products actually can achieve another miracle for which Republicans are pray ing remains to be seen. It is By Joseph Alsop Dulles really meant anything, by all their big bold talk about defending the Matsus and Quemoy against Com munist aggression. The present orders of the American command out here are to try all imaginable de vices, and to use all possible resources, to supply blockad ed Quemoy without getting into a fight. By a costly com bination of air and sea supply, it is theoretically possible to get enough tonnage into Que moy to feed the garrison and civilian population, even with the beaches and landing strips under heavy fire. Each land ing of supplies will involve some causualties for the Chin ese who do the nasty part of the job, but in theory, the job can be done in this manner. Yet this will most emphat ically not "defend Quemoy," as the American , government has promised to do. The off shore islands position are dif ficult enough already. If every ounce of supplies has to be landed under fire which can never be returned, the Quemoy position will become absolutely untenable for the long run. Already, the Na tionalist guns on Quemoy can not be used for serious count er-battery fire, because the garrison commander has no prospect of replenishing his ammunition. TN SHORT, the offshore is- lands are not Berlin. It may put off the evil day of final choice, but it will not solve the problem to push a trickle of supplies through the Com munist artillery blockade of Quemoy. No one in his senses can suppose that such a posi tion can be indefinitely held in such a manner, without a military or political or psy chological crackup some where. The attempt, if pro longed, will be nothing more or less than an invitation to a crackup; and there are plenty of signs here in Taiwan thet a crackup will result. In other words, if the Presi dent and Secretary Dulles really mean what they have said, the only way to defend Quemoy is in the classical manner, by meeting force with force. If the firm inten tion to do this is revealed, for instance there will then be some chance that the Chinese Communists will agree to a cease-fire. F F PEKING will not agree to a cease-fire after the U.S. has manifested a firm in tention to meet force with force, then it will be abund antly clear that Peking is ready to run all risks in order to gain a smashing victory here. Futhermore, if the American government is not willing to meet force with force, the Chinese Commun ists will quite surely gain their victory in the end. In this event, the impact of the victory, so well forecast by both the President and Sec retary Dulles, will become vastly more shattering, just because the President and Secretary Dulles have sworn to prevent such a victory. It looks well, of course, to be patient and meek and eager to negotiate. But readiness to meet force with Jbrce is the only card the United States can play to bring the Chinese Communists to rea son. ' Patience and meekness no doubt make a good impres sion in London but they, are bound to confirm Peking's conviction that the American government is a paper tiger. And if we are not ready to use force as a last resort, the President and Secretary of, State ought never to have talked so big and bold. c) 1958. New York Herald Tribune Inc. not likely. This other miracle would be the establishment of a Republican trend among farm state voters who will be choosing state and federal officers in November. Darker Side American farmers may pre fer to look on the darker side of their prosperity. While it is true that farm income will be up 19 per cent in nine months this year against the 1957 figure, it also is true that farm income has slipped about three per cent in the past three months. The department calculated farm income dur ing the first six months of 1958 to have been 22 per cent Washington Report By William Washington - The Demo cratic party's ablest minds are occupied only on the surface now with the Congress ional campaign - which the Democrats be lieve at this point they have as eood sTZf 1 These minds Lk I mainly turned wuiiam s. wute instead to ward a less obvious but an incomparably more important matter: the racial crisis. which raises the greatest long- term danger . to - the party since the Civil War. Only par tial, but nevertheless chilling, parallels with the destruction a century ago of both the old Democratic and Whig parties are now being seen. The basic cause of dissolu tion then was the inability of the moderates in either party to prevent the extremists from violently exploiting the issue of slavery. rpHE Whigs broke apart in 1856. The Northern Whigs went over largely to the Re publican party, which for the first time became a truly na tional power thereby. . The Southern Whigs went over principally to the Democratic party. But that party, in turn. was cut right down the mid dle on the same issue in 1860. One of the results was the election to the Presidency of Abraham Lincoln. Thus, the present Demo cratic problem is very similar to that of a hundred years ago - this time to accommo date the schoof integration issue as between Northern liberals and Southern resis ters. A further complicating factor, moreover, is clearly present now. This is the prob ability that November will bring heavy Democratic vic tories in both Senate and House from the North .and West. Such victories would enlarge the influence - and the demands of the all-out integrationists. The all -Texas Democratic Congressional lea d e r s h i p caused the last Congress to break materially, if not quite mortally, with the Old South and to pass the first major civil rights bill in eight dec ades. It was even then touch-and-go as to whether these leaders-Speaker of the House Sam. Rayburn and Senator Lyndon B. Johnson. could fend off a fatal party breach. ... THEY did so, indeed, only by taking great personal risks and by a virtuoso per suasion. There is the gravest doubt that such a compromise will be possible in the new Con gress convening in January And this is so even apart from the basic fact that this new Congress will be more impatient for quick integra tion than was the old. For the old-guard Southern position against any kind of integration and the advanced Northern liberal position against any kmd of delay Local Deafer Wins Trip io New York Maynard Hadley, Medford, has won a trip to New York and Newark, N.J., for being a winner of a sales contest conducted in this area among Chevron dealers. Mr. and Mrs. Hadley plan to attend a dinner in San Francisco Monday for contest winners from the seven west ern states. He is a member of the Jackson County Cham ber of Commerce. CHRYSANTHEMUMS In Bloom Select Now for Spring Plants! Early Hardy, Early English, Cushions and Buttons Chenault's ahead of 1957. This wrong way trend could cost Repub lican candidates some votes, perhaps too many. The Eisenhower Adminis tration cannot be charged, however, with being chinchy with U.S. farmers. President Eisenhower budgeted to spend in the current fiscal year $4,601,000,000 on agriculture, and agricultural resources. Of this sum, $3,253,000,000 was to go for stabilization of farm prices and of farm income. In the last full fiscal year of the Truman Administration, total agricultural spending was $1,045,000,000. S. White have both hardened In the meantime. So, the Democrats are in one of the oddest positions in history. Fortune smiles broad ly and brightly upon them -for 1958. But there could well be a frightening look on for tune's face for the Presiden tial year 1960 and perhaps far beyond that. The new Congress could so rub up and inflame the civil rights issue as to make the Democratic national conven tion of 1960 hardly less des tructive than that of 1860. Of this the Republicans are fully aware. Already, they are maneuvering to drive every possible civil rights wedge into their Democratic opposi tion - and the more so be cause the tide has been so running against them as to make it highly uncertain that the prospective Republican Presidential nominee, Vice President Richard M. Nixon, could win in 1960 unless there was a Democratic breakup. WHAT are the Democratic leaders to do about all this? This is the question that engrosses them, at this very moment, far more even than the already consolidated Democratic gain In Maine and the prospect of many other gains in November. Here are some of the tenta tive answers worked out by powerful Democrats: They will be compelled next year to give more ground on civil rights; they can only hope not to have to give up so much as to repeat the intra Democratic civil war of 1860. They will be compelled -and indeed they will not at all mind this - to take up a much more critical attitude toward President Eisenhower. But it well may- be that, apart from civil rights, the great running issue will be foreign policy and peace or war. On this issue the Demo cratic leaders cannot, in tem perament or in conviction, adopt a merely partisan line against the President, 1960 or no 1960. And this they will not do. A rare and bitter dilemma may await them, and they know it. (Copyright, 1958, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) Trail Man Named President of Group D. H. Barber, Trail, was elected president of the Pre serve the Rogue association at a meeting of the group at the Elk-Trail school early this week. Other officers elected are R. D. Chamberlain, Trail, vice president; Richard G. Eastin, Prospect, secretary-treasurer; and Directors Ranald Axtell, Trail; Merle Griffin, Grants Pass;. Kenneth G. Denman, Medford; and James Hoey, Medford. Attending the meeting were Col. Walter L. Winegar, dis trict engineer; Lt. Col. Kew ton Cox, assistant district en gineer; and Henry Stewart, chief of the flood control sec tion, all of the Portland office of Army Engineers; and Mal colm Karr, investigations en gineer of the Oregon state wa ter resources board. Col. Winegar and Karr re viewed work done by their groups, and Stewart explained the work of Army Engineers. He said a preliminary report on the engineer's study should be available later this year, and that public hearings would be held after those in terested have had a chance to study the report. 1735 Orchard Horn Ct. Phone SP 2-21 83