U OP 0HS30N LIBRARY
coap
MWIX
la The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
As this is written, President Eis
enhower is addressing Iowa farm
ers at the national plowing con
test at the little town of Newton
which is located in one of the
most productive agricultural areas
" in the world.
He will tell the Iowa farmers
in substance that American
agriculture is presently out of kil
ter due to the fact that as a whole
it is producing more than can be
sold to consumers. As a result.
surpluses are piling up.
He will add that the objective of
his administration is to reduce
production ' to the point where
these surpluses will begin to
SHRINK instead of growing stead
ily from year to year. His theme
will be that as long as increasing
surpluses hang over the markets
; like a dark thundercloud Ameri
can a g r i c u 1 1 u r e will be DEPRESSED.
Hit appeal for farm votes will
be based on that thesis, y
Tomorrow Adlai Stevenson will
address these same farmers at
the same place.
HIS theme assuming that his
speech will be based on the 1956
platform of the Democratic party
will be that the American farm
er is facing ruin if the policies of
the Eisenhower administration are
continued and that the way to
help the farmer is to pay him
STILL HIGHER subsidies.
He will soft-pedal, of course, the
fairly obvious fact that higher
subsidies will encourage STILL
MORE PRODUCTION and still
more production will add to the
surpluses instead of cutting them
' down.
If he follows meticulously the
text of the Democratic platform
(which I doubt) he will tell his
hearers that the Democrats, if
given control of the Presidency
and the congress, will put into
effect a food stamp system under
which needy people will be able
to get food for free. In this way,
he will contend IF he touches
at all on the food stamp program
that consumption will be in
creased and in that manner the
surpluses will be reduced.
It will be along these lines that
: Mr. Stevenson will appeal for the
votes of farmers at the coming
i, election.
These Iowa farmers, assembled
- at Newton, will listen first to Presi-
dent Eisenhower and then to Mr.
J Stevenson. They -wall ' listen re-'
1 spectfully, because they know that
' President Eisenhower and Mr. Ad
- lai Stevenson are the kind of men
whose views are entitled to a re-
jpeetful hearing. ,
And
Besides
These Middle West farm people
are FINE PEOPLE. They are well
I educated. Large numbers of them
have been to college. All of them,
. over the years, have had the bene
fit of the technical advice that has
been provided for agriculture
through the extension service of
Iowa's fine agricultural college at
Ames located not far from New
ton and the other excellent ag
ricultural colleges of the Middle
West.
They will draw their own con
clusions from what is said and
will arrive at their own judg
ments. What will they conclude?
HOW will they vote?
These questions aren't easily
answered.
The proposals that will be ad
vanced by President Eisenhower
for the solution of agriculture's
admittedly difficult present prob
lems will be based on the HARD
WAY.
. The platform that Mr. Stevenson
will support will be based on do
ing it THE EASY WAY.
Let's put it this way:
When YOU are confronted by a
. choice between the easy way and
the hard way WHICH WAY DO
YOU CHOOSE?
Housing Plans
it, Praised
WASHINGTON (UPI The gov
ernment's four-part action to boost:
home building today drew praise
and abuse Irom housing and mort
gage circles
Some called the federal move to
help the lagging home-building in
dustry meaningless or too small.
Cut others hailed it as an Im
portant sign that the Eisenhower
administration recognues a crisis
it 'would not help them. A private
.nZZ r 'ZZ
.aid the actio; dofi nothing to! Wt Thursday and parts of "linson'Ve earth
make money more available fori" began to crack. mont Vinson said the earth
lending, and'it winot boost any-! Sioux Falls architect Charles 'TLJTSyS
JJ&I!2 P0i1' iS 1! River wTdammeO dpstream
On the other band, a savings and
loan association spokesman and a
congressional housing expert said
the housine market will be ttlmu-l
laled psychologically and its vol-1
urne ooosiea. iney saia ine move
i. imrtom h.,... ii m.rk. .
nv.r..i i.
tions on housing credits.
Federal housing chief Albert M.
Cole said the measures taken!
Thursday "will be very helpful in!
stimulating the mortgage mar-!
kef and should bring immediate
results is boosting building. - - - I
State JC's
Begin Meet
Here Today
The state fall board meeting of
the Oregon Junior Chambers of
Commerce convened in Klamath
Falls Friday for a three day se
ries of sessions through Sunday, re
ported Leo Morstad, Klamath Jay
cee president, today.
Beginning the program Friday
was the arrival of delegates in the
afternoon and an executive com-
vS:l't i i
JOSEPH C. LONG
mittee meeting at 6:30 p.m. In the
Willard Hotel. A Get-Acquainted-Party
at 7:30 p.m. (also in the
Willard) was planned to begin the
social activities of the three day
session.
Following business meetings Sat
urday morning a noon luncheon
will be held in the Willard Hotel
with Joe C. Long, Oregon supervis
or of the Northern Life Insurance
Co., as the principal speaker. Long
has been active in civic affairs in
been active in civic affairs in
Portland for many years and is
noted as a dinner speaker. His
topic will be "The Spirit that Nev
er Dies." The luncheon will be in
the Pine Grove Room of the hotel.
The luncheon will honor all past
state presidents.
Saturday afternoon will be used
for meetings and business sessions
with a banquet at 7 p.m. in the
Klamath falls Armory. Ira-Kaye,
candidate for world president of
the Jaycees International from
San Pedro, California, will be the
main speaker at the dinner. Kaye,
called the "Jaycees Jaycee," has
come up through the Jaycee ranks
in local, state and national of
fices. He has been California state
president, national vice' president
and is currently international vice
president. A dance at the armory
at 9:30 will end Saturday's events.
A breakfast at 8 a.m. Sunday in
the Willard will begin the last
day's activities with business meet
ings until the 11:15 a.m. adjourn
ment. The Jay-C-Ettes, women's aux
iliary, will have a 10 a.m. Satur
day coffee hour in the Pelican
Cafe party room and a 1 p.m.
luncheon at the Klamath Yacht
Club. Transportation to the Yacht
Club will be provided from the
Willard.
OTI Rifle Range
Opened To Public
In response to numerous re
quests, the Oregon Technical In
stitute rifle range will be avail
able again this year to hunters
for sighting or zeroing in their
rifles before the coming hunting
season. John H. Hobson, dean of
men. announced today.
The range will be open to the
public Saturday and Sunday, Sep
tember 22 and 23, from 8 a.m. to
7 p.m.
Refreshments and targets will
be available at the range on the
Mile High campus. Safety exam
inations and head space checking
will be done by OTI gunshop per
sonnel. For further information, call
Hobson at Oregon Tech, TU 2-3466.
extension 54.
V-
7(7
vi
Officials Study 'Glacial
Drift1 In Dakota Town
ELK POINT, S. D. (UP)-Gov.
Joe Foss and other South Dakota
officials announced they would
travel to Elk Point today to sur
vey a freak "glacial drift" that
was toppling walls and endanger
ing several buildings in this town
;,Jhe n,'8h eho0' '. evacuated
today after four "distinct shocks' !
a ilacial drift, with sand and
gravel running to a deDth of 90
feet. He said strong foundations
h.-. . rn , Ik. un(.
depth to save some buildings.
ciA- tUm .i.;fi:M i i.,i,
. sloan s,"d " h fling and fault-
ln may reach 'disaster propor-
: tions" and that it may be impossi
ble to save the school and St.
JPh' Catholic Church. i
During the past several months had a dozen or more caverns in
the entire outer edge of the his field of alfalfa. The holes
church settled down and awayiwere three to six-feet wide and
from center, ln some places the 1
r
I'm
Htf
Price Fl Cents 2t Paget
18-Nation
Conference
LONDON 11 The 18-nation
Sues conference ended Friday
night with France one of its
sponsors refusing immediate ap
proval of the projected canal
users' association.
Foreign Minister Christian Pi
neau told the conference's final
session France could not sign up
at the moment because of changes
made in a document setting out
the association's aims. These aims
are primarily to seek by peaceful
means to share with Egypt in con
trol of the Suez Canal.
Pineau said if France finally de-
Stockholm
Log Lost
After Crash
NEW YORK (UP)-A record of
orders given on the liner Stock
holm disappeared between the
lime of the ship's collision with
the Andrea Doria and the time it
returned to 'New York with sur
vivors of the tragedy, it was dis
closed today.
Charles S. Haight, attorney for
the Swedish American Line, stated
at a pretrial hearing that the im
portant item of evidence "had not
been found preserved" when the
Stockholm returned here to go
into drydock July 27, two days aft
er the collision that sank the Ital
ian liner off the Massachusetts
coast.
FIRST WITNESS
Third Mate Ernest Carstens
Johansen, first witness called in
pretrial testimony, described the
record as the nightorder book, a
pad on which the officer in charge
keeps a record of orders during
the night watch. . .
The 'witness -wis m charge oh
the Stockholm at the time of the
collision.
"The captain gave the book to
me before he went down to his
cabin for the night," Carstens-
Johansen testified. "He didn't!
give me any written night orders
that night, however, because he
hadn't gone to bed.
But Haight said no officer of
the ship or any employe of the
Swedish American Line had seen
the notebook since. The attorney
did not explain what had hap
pened to it.
OTHERS AVAILABLE
Haight indicated that all other
records of the Stockholm were
available to be placed in evidence.
He submitted several at the morn
ing hearing.
The 26-year-old third mate testi
fied Thursday that fog temporarily
obscured the Andrea Doria until
it was 1.8 or 1.9 miles off the
port side of the Stockholm. He
testified today that the Andrea
Doria was apparently hidden by
a "fog patch" rather than a gen
eral fog condition.
Spud Committee
Meets Tonight
PORTLAND m The Washing
ton state potato marketing agree
ment committee will meet here
r relay night in the first of a
series of meetings on regulations
lor the coming ycar.
The members are expected to
recommend grade and size regu
lations, set up budgets for the
coming year and recommend
assessment rates.
The Eastern Oregon-Idaho com
mittee will take up the same
matters Saturday and the South
ern Oregon-Northern California
group will meet Sunday.
outer wall pulled to four to eight
inches away from the floor.
But panic was not evident
among townspeople.
Mayor J. J. Murphy said "I
can't say people are alarmed. Na
turally they arc concerned. There
is a solution. I hope. But any ans
wer right now will be a guess."
lnrM conimuniiy leaoers. won-
at Gavins Point and Fort Randall.
'jJ ,Th.
dammed UP ln
"Our troubles began when they
river, Gurney
said.
They thought that two consecu
tive dry years, coupled with the
low river stage, had caused the
dry ground to slip.
Cevlon Carman, a farmer who
lives northwest of here, said he
18-inches deep.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON,
cides to take membership in the
association it will make a reser
vation that the existing document
gives too large a degree of lati
tude" in payment of canal tolls
The United States which with
Britain and France sponsored the
original scheme for a users
sociation announced it would
adopt the scheme. It was the first
power to do so.
As the conference ended, a high
American source said it had been
"reasonably successful."
Pineau made clear the latitude
to which he objected principally
was concerned with methods of
paying canal dues. France and
Britain have refused to pay dues
to the Egyptian Canal Authority
set up after Egypt's July 26 na
tionalization of the international
waterway.
The association project apparent
ly would allow members to pay
dues to Egypt if they wished. The
Americans and West Germans
have in fact been paying transit
dues to Egypt.
Pakistan, long a holdout, hinted
that it might join.
Italy and Britain announced for
mal adherence.
Conference officials said the
first meeting of the users associa
tion will be in London Oct. 1.
They said they expected the Suez
dispute will be put to the United
Nations almost immediately after
that meeting.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Sir
Firoz Khan Noon, who had com
plained the users plan, as orig
inally outlined by U.S. Secretary
of State Dulles, was too much like
an ultimatum to Egypt, told dele
gates that as now presented it em
phasizes cooperation with Egypt.
Therefore, he said, it will be
laid before his government for a
decision as to whether Pakistan
would join. He made clear the
sponsors were not asking dele
gates for immediate decisions,
though a dozen nations, including
the Western Big Three, have gone
on record in favorf of thf plan. '
The association scheme as it
has now emerged is quite dif
ferent from the original draft,"
he said.
Government
Studies Potatoes
WASHINGTON (UP) The
Agriculture Department said to
day it is considering a proposal
to set minimum size and grade
standards for imports of potatoes.
Under the proposed regulation,
which becomes effective Oct. 22,
if it is approved, imports of round
white or red-skinned Irish pota
toes would be limited to U.S. No.
1 or better grade of 2Yt inches
minimum diameter and four inch
es maximum diameter.
Long potatoes would be required
to meet the standards of U.S. No.
2A grade with a minimum diame
ter of two inches and a minimum
weight of four ounces.
The regulation would not apply
to certified seed potatoes, the de
partment said.
Most U.S. potato Imports come
from Canada. A similar sie and
grade import regulation was in
effect last season.
Canal
Ends
r if &tvt
p ;
mi .,,-.
amviMrti,niiii iiiiiiM ni jtnmf.w mm J
IT'S TRULY AN EXCEPTIONAL CASE BUT THE ? o'clock
photographer stood on hit head and succeeded in getting
two truckers to laugh, no lots, while changing tires on t
heavy duty rig. Kneeling is Harold Blehn, 4274 Clinton.
Brother Martin Bithn, 4671 South Sixth Street, takes hold
of the lua bar and prepares to apply the beef on one of
1 the trueki of th Beehive Trucking firm.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER tl, J 956
Estas Kefauver , . ,
Brinks Clan Returns
To Fame; In Lockup
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP) -
The Brink family, headline mak
ers in California a few years back
with their troubles, were back in
the state again today, and in a
familiar place, the Sacramento
County jail.
James Pirle Brink. - his wife.
Jess Pearly mother , af lC, and!
tneir 2H-year-oM son, uuaay, were
booked in jail less than 24 hours
after they arrived here from Eu
gene, Ore. For papa, it was parole
violation: for mama, forging some
$500 in bad checks; and for son,
Buddy, it was for passing same.
Sacramento authorities learned
of the relurn of the Brinks when
Mrs. Brink telephoned from here
to the Lane County, Ore., sher
iff's office about a fire which de
stroyed their home ln Eugene two
weeks ago.
MARRIED DAUGHTER
The Brinks, with one married
daughter, her four children, and
the two youngest Brink children,
were spotted in a North Sacramen
to service station Thursday, at
tempting to pay for gas with an
unacceptable check.
"I don't know why they'd want
to arrest us. We haven't done any
thing," said Mrs. Brink. "Pa
there isn't any parole violator.
Why, his parole was up on June
21.
"Of course there's that arson
thing, but Billy (another sonl set
that fire, and he's a minor, only
17. Imagine saying that the fire
was set so we could collect the
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 3.S87
Klamath Falls Visitor
Insurance on the furniture. That
just isn't true.
Mrs. Brink said she had tele
phoned Deputy Sheriff Harry Mar
lowe in Lane County to tell him
who d set fire to their house, if
he would promise immunity to
Billy. -
ARRESTED. '- ' J - v
i' -"And then he had the Sacra
mento sheriff arrest us," she said.
Marlowe said Mrs. Brink is
charged with writing more than
$500 in bad checks and Buddy is
charged with cashing them.
The family came to Sacramento
from Los Angeles in 1948.
A local church staged a charity!
drive, raising enough money to
buy a lot on which the Brinks
could build a home. However, the
family sold the lot.
Brink was arrested on a theft
charge, then jailed for traffic ci
tations. Mrs. Brink slapped a
county Welfare Department direc
tor during a battle with that agen
cy. Their Uth child was killed
when it was backed over by Brink
in his truck.
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity: Fair through Saturday.
Local frost Friday night with low
28-36; high Snlurday 70-75,
High yesterday .....
Low last night
- 28
Precip. last 24 hours T
Since Oct. 1 22.79
Same period last year 7.S2
Normal for period 13.14
NEWSBOY ON TRIAL
ANKARA. Turkey. W - A 15 -
year-old newsboy went on trial
, .. """"" "' "
snoung a neaaiine ineooy, ian-
sin Vedat Mutlu, Is the first to.
uc inuu unut-r me iiu-anuuiing
clause of Turkeys strict new
press law. It was adopted in early
June to stop what Premier Ad-
nan Menderea called "journal-
istic sabotage of his policies.
-L
GOP Issues Anti-Morse Book
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (of the Northwest and a frlendlyididate for governor, told an Agate
Sen. Estes Kefauver. Demo- hearing is assured on any problem Beach audience that a full Demo
cratic nominee for vice president,!
took the limelight in his tour of
Oregon Friday, but there was
much activity on other political'
fronts.
The Republican Stale Central
Committee issued anolher bookletland if they had fully presented
aimed at drawing away voles Oregon's case in a manner whichj legislation," he said. He said that
from Sen. Wayne Morse, the could be believed, we could have!(j0v. Elmo Smith, his Republican
Democralic senatorial nomince.ihad this helpful action long ago.":innnni horf vniil inr the men..
The book, entitled. "The Record
nayne morse vvuuiu i.me 10 ror -
HO, guinea a l,ulliK- Ul livvrft-
paper articles Intended to prove
the Republican contention that
Morse bus no( been consistent.
Douglas McKay, Morse's Hepub-
lican opponent, told a Newport
audience that liberalization of
terms by the Federal Housing
Administration for home construc
tion was the result of pleas made
to the White House by Oregon
lumbering and construction industries.
This administration is kernlyihe said.
interested In the economic welfare!
Ike Administration
Rapped At KF Stop
By LYLE DOWNING
Senator Estes Kefauver, Demo
cratic vice presidential candidate,
hopscotching by chartered plane
around Oregon in quest of votes,
landed at Klamath Falls airport at
12:35 p.m. Friday on a United Air
Lines four-engine DC-6.
The Tennessean had a big smile
on his face as he disembarked from
the plane and was greeted by 500
cheering persons who had waited
45 minutes for his arrival.
Senator Wayne L. Morse and con
gressional candidate Al Ullman ar
rived with him, as well as 25 news
paper correspondents and photog
raphers. Senator Kefauver walked slowly
from the plane to a platform in
front of the airport lounge, while
Atoms Plan
Centers On
Red China
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 11-
The conference to create an Inter
national atoms-for-peace agency
settled down to details of organ
izing today after getting past its
first huddle on the inevitable ques
tion of admitting Communist
China. The Red Chinese question
was expected to be raised again,
however, before the five-week
meeting ends. - ., .
The Conference Coordination
Committee met Friday morning
and approved a. chairman and
deputy . chairman unanimously se
lected at the opening meeting
Thursday. It also recommended a
conference time table. The com
mittee is made up of the 12 coun
tries which drafted the proposed
constitution for the atomic agency
in Washington earlier this year.
The committee Is made up of the
12 countries that drafted the pro
posed constitution for the atomic
agency in ashington earlier this
year; " t- - -
The debate on China took place
shortly after the conference began
yesterday. Georgi Zarubin, Sov
iet ambassador to Washington,
argued that the Communist Chi
nese government should be present
lor the conference and in the agen
cy as representative of "600 mil
lion peaceful people."
SUPPORT DRAWN
Zarubin drew support from 11 of
the 80 nations on hand India,
Syria, Czechoslovakia, Indonesia,
Ceylon, Afghanistan, the Ukraine,
Hungary,
Poland, - Romania and
White Russia.
The Soviet Union, India and oth
er nations already had expressed
dissatisfaction with a provision of
the proposed constitution for the
uranium-sharing agency that bars
(he Chinese Communists by limit
ing membership to the 87 countries
in the U.N, and its specialized
agencies.
Nationalist 'Chinese Delegate T.
F. Tsiang opposed Zarubin, saying,
"My government is the only legit
imate government of China."
South Korea and Paraguay backed
him up.
A Czechoslovak suggest that
Communist North Viet Nam be
invited to join the conference and
the agency drew objection from
South Viet Nam.
Police Alerted
For Race Riot
ASBURY PARK, N.J. I A
dozen policemen patrolled the cor-
iridors of Asbury Park High School
and nearby streets Friday to pre
vent interracial t e n s i on from
erupting into violence.
! ,J. ! 'ru "e ,,7:1"" " ..V ".' .
I (n0lDall players Tuesday and
burgeoned with small incidents.
whcn sUldenl, cama t0 ,chooi
Friday lhey found t,ree of(lcerll
patrolling the school corridors
The police searched several stu-
dontn and arrested four white
youths and one Negro after they
found a switch blade, a rawhide
Heather braided rope and a chisel
when the facts are fully andicratic slate should be elected and
honestly presented, McKay said,
adding
"If Oregon senators had been
i less Interested in bitter partisan
fighting with the administration-
i Morse, speaking in Portland,
jinanKea nixon ior ine mousanosiigjjigty,.
Ul VUIC9 IIC II1UUC IUI t MIC III Ills
speech at Eugene Wednesday
night." Morse said Nixon "proved
Iwhat I have told the people of
Oregon in this campaign and that
lis that McKay is the hand-picked
candidate of the Eisenhower ad
ministration In a desperate at
tempt to try to beat me."
"What the Eisenhower adminis
tration really doesn't like about
me is It couldn't control me and
make a rubber stamp out of me,"
Robert Holmes, Democralic can
an electric organ played "The Ten
nessee Waltz."
After a short introduction by Sen
ator Morse, Kefauver launched in
to an attack on the Eisenhower ad
ministration.
"President Eisenhower and Vice
President Nixon have been talking
about something they call 'New
Republicanism,' " he said. "I don't
know exactly what it ii. I doubt
if they know what it is. Whatever
it is, I am doubtful that it has tak
en root very deeply among Repub
lican ranks.
'I wonder whether George Hum
phrey and 'Birddog' Charley Wil
son, Ezra Taft Benson and Douglas
McKay qualify as New Republi
cans, i wonaer u rresment Eisen
hower thinks he has converted Sin
clair Weeks?
If General Eisenhower gets to
be president again and takes a
Republican Congress into office
with him, he would have Joe Mar
tin as speaker of the House. Do
you suppose President Eisenhower
believes that he has converted that
distinguished reactionary into an
a p o s 1 1 e of New Republicanism?
And what kind of New Republican
is Senator Knowland, the party's
leader of the senate?
Kefauver then praised the rec
ord of Senator Morse, who is seek-
i ,i
uig reeiecuun. -
Just the other day Mr. Nixon
told the voters of Oregon to de
feat Wayne Morse," he continued.
"Wayne Morse is the conscience of
the Senate. His presence on the
Democratic side of the aisle is a
living rebuke to those Republicans
who would like to forget that there
was once a national Republican
tradition."
Continuing his praise for Morse,
Kefauver said, ' Wayne Morse la
a great power for good in this na
tion. He speaks his conscience. He
speaks for progress. He speaks for
peace and freedom. The sacrifice
of Wayne Morse on the altar of
Republican revenge, as Richard
Nixon asked you to do, would be
the sorriest day ln history for the
people of Oregon. -
Immediately after his talk, Ke
fauver boarded the plane for
Salem.
The Tennessee candidate was of
ficially welcomed at the. airport
by officers of the Klamath County
Liemocraiio. venirai i;ommniee ana
the" Klamath County Democratic
Club: Before the campaign plane
set down at the airport, all county
Democratic candidates were intro
duced to the crowd.
With the departure of Senator
Kefauver and his party, Morse and
Ullman went to Bing's Cafe where
they were to be guests of honor at
a luncheon arranged by Klamath
County Democratic patty leaders.
Morse and Ullman are due at a
rally Friday night in Lakeview.
Living Costs
Decline Told
WASHINGTON (UP)-The cost
of living declined in August for
the first time in seven months,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics re
ported today.
Factory workers take home pay
rose to a new record high level
during the month, the bureau said.
The price index for August was
116.8, using average 1947-49 prices
as a comparison base of 100. The
August figure was 0.2 per cent
below July which was the highest
in history.
A decline in fresh fruit and vege
tables prices more than offset the
rising prices of other foods and
most goods and services.
The average factory worner,
with a wife and two children, had
take home pay of 573.08 per week
in August. Ills pay check could
buy more goods and services than
in any previous August, the bu
reau said.
Bureau Director Ewan Clague
told newsmen It is hard to esti
mate how average prices are
moving this month. He said they
might drop slightly, hold at the
present level, or return to the
peak level of July.
that state ballot measure No. t
should be defeated. This measure,
which would bar a referendum on
tax measures, calls for Oregon
residents "to give away their right
to act as final authorities on
... . '.i,. i.,, ie.,0n of the
Sen. Richard Neuberger urged
election of Al Ullman to Congress
from the Eastern Oregon congrcs-
ional district in a speech at
IPrineville. He said mat Kepuon
can Incumbent Sam Coon "Is cam
paigning as a coat-tall rider ... to
cover up a reactionary record,
running the gamut from opposi
tion to public power to opposition
to the President's foreign policy."
Neuberger accused Coon of claim
ing credit for Democratic accom
plishments in the district,'