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The Evening Review from East Liverpool, Ohio • Page 4

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East Liverpool, Ohio
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4
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EAST LIVERPOOL REVIEW A Dependable Newspaper Serving the Tri-State District Who yecfls ohi ins? Published Daily Except Sunday By Brush'Moore Newspapers, Inc. Established Oct. 25. Member Associated Press Saturday, October 28, 1961 Page 4 Have You Done Your Part? Despite the efforts of volunteer workers and campaign leaders, are lagging toward the goal of $77,000 in the annual Community Fund drive. The story is not new.

Only once has the fund gone over the top. It had been hoped that this would be the second time arxl still quite possible the goal will be reached, or topped, if all ccmcemed get behind the drive in a final push. And we all are concerned! almost inconceivable that any one with an ounce of community pnde aixl spirit would shirk his or her duty when approached to give. Since figures lie, there must be many who are doing just that. The agencies which will benefit from the money raised have the community and immediate area well for years and are ready to continue to serve providing the people come through with the helping hand that is vital to their full operation.

There are few groups more deserving of your financial support than the YMC.A, Girl and Boy Scouts, Recreation Council, Salvation and the United Service Organizations. But, at this moment, the necessary support is lagging. As the name Community Fund suggests, this is a community affair, not just a matter for a small percentage to he concerned about. Eveirone benefits at one time or another from the services provided by the organizations mentioned above. As pointed out before, it would be a shocking step back- w'ard if they part of our everyday lives.

This is an opportunity to demonstrate that East Liverpool as a commimity is progressive, wide awake and ready to meet its responsibilities. up to you and you and you! If you contributed, do so at once. If you have given already, check your budget and see if you give more. get the drive over the top in a hurry! Switching To The Big Ones The National Aeronautics and Space Agency is taking a cautious point of view on its Saturn rocket. The first firing Friday was more successful than N.ASA had dared to hope it might be.

If the rocket does this well in 5 out of 10 firings, everybody will be happy. But look for much until look for too much then. In the meantime, this is only a preliminary step, Saturn is not the rocket that will send the first U.S. spacecraft to the moon but only the rocket that will make it possible to learn moro about the moon. The moon rocket wnll be Neptune, Furthermore, all that was tested Friday at Cape Canaveral was the booster stage of the Saturn.

The second and third stages ready; their weight was represented by water ballast. We get the idea. BELATEDLY, government rocketeers have switched from a policy of inspiring too much hope to a policy of playing down good news and prepanng the popular mind for disappointment. But the significance of the Saturn rocket cannot be overestimated. The United States finally has nwved up out of the Little League of rocketry into the majors.

As far as it knows, its Saturn rocket is larger than anything the Russians have kult so far. But the Russians have put up Spacecraft capsules weighing five tons, and there is no reason to believe they will rest on their launching pads arrf wait for the United States to catch up. NO ONE CAN be sure about the significance irf the rocket race and the promise to land an expedition on the moon. But no one in either the United States or Russia can doubt that the race is in prog- rees. It long ago passed the point of a mi.ssile contest; both countries now have the capacity to destroy each other with missiles carrying nuclear warheads.

The race is for the moon. The United States, with its Saturn booster, finally has qualified. All we can hope for now is that the race be over before our entry gets to the starting line. Easier To Believe Every Time Richard M. Nixon will be peidered every time he appears in public by people wanting to know whether he will be available for another presidential bid in 1964.

It happened again in San Diego this w-eek. His an.swers will be the same every time -No. The same doubt will be rai.sed by his opponents eveiy time: Does he really mean it? This is the most hurtful thing Mr. Democratic opponents can do to him in Ids bid for the nomination for raising the doubt that he would serve out a four-year term if nominated and elected in 1962. But every time Mr.

Nixon says he would not be available for another presidential in 1964 if he had been elected governor of California in 1962 easier to believe he means it from the bottom of his heart and the soles of his feet. The latest light on the 1964 presidential prospect has been shed by Sen. Barry Goldwater, the forthright Republican from Arizona. Speaking as one of the likelie.st The Once Over Commies have denounced Mickey Miwse as a foe of peace. For his own protection Mickey may have to demand a seat in the United Nations.

He has done more for humanity than Outer Mongolia, and, after stu- dymg the actions of numerous members of the U.N., he declared there are many mice in the membership. If Outer Mongolia can win a seat, why not Outer have been following those U.N. sessions and no mouse has ever behaved as some delegates do in a declared Mickey Mouse today. have you contributed to the we asked, and it is more important than any contributions of the replied Mickey. think I ever made a ha- man being fearful, sad or unhappy.

Naturally I am poison to Reds Can you imagine me filling the air with the deadly fall-out from monster megaton Iwmbs? Not evai Donald Duck would do you get into the U.N,?’* wt asked. wouid probably be held too peaceful. But if could show that I never pay and abstained crisis I have a was his reply. MICKEY DOESN NEED any financial relief or help Ixit will demarxl a big slice of foroign aid if it is necessary to qualify. Moscow is definitely anti-Mickey and so is Red China.

Castro is even anti- Minnie Mouse. As for Donald Duck he sure of the attitude Russia will take on him. but expressed I grove fear the U.S.S.R. is preparing a blast against him and may have already perfected an anti-Donald Duck missile. chance for peaceful coexistence between Khrushchev, the megaton bomb and me look he said.

The birthday of the U.N. was chosen by the Soviets to explode 30 to 50 megaton bomb. This is the first time arjj'body ever dreamed of using 30 million ton.s of TNT to blow out wax candles on a birthday cake. Guns and ammunition were stolen from a police locker in New York. Can it be our police ataUons are no longer safe? The Sheltered Life By David Lawrence Sandburg Analysis Of Ike Criticized Missile Lalior ield Needs Czai conterolers for a Republican presidential nomination, in addition to Mr.

Nixon, Sen. Croldwater says bluntly he think chances would be good for defeating John F. bid for a second term; that he want to tackle. Gov. Nelson Roskefeller of New York, the other Republican being talked about for a presidential nomination, is noncommital.

But he probably wll be running for governor again in 1962 too and will be expected to tell what he intends to do in 1964. No one expects him to be as strong in his promise to stick to the governorship if he gels it again as Mr. Nixon has been. In 1980, Gov. Rockefeller went hunting for potential delegates and finding none went home to Albany.

At that time his four-year term was half over. In 1962, with a potential second term half over, Republicans would be expecting another sounding out. Gov. Rockefeller would be entitled to his diance, and he apparently could count on the blessing of both the senator from Arizona and the former vice president. By H.

I. Phillips James Hoffa has sued George Meany for libel. Can tills mean Jimmy is against any rough talk anyvriierc anytime? HUGH who has played the fearlese frontier marshal in a western, for ax years, will play lead in a Broadway play called about as far from frontier days as its possible to hope the critics dwi't turn out to he badmen. After all these years in cowtnwn violence. Hugh should be excused if, from force of habit, he busts into big love scene with a six-rfiooter and tells Cupki to out of town by FRLTTFUL INTERLUDE Have you come out unhurt, save for bruises quite wide, A deep cut in your head and a strip off your hide? Was the other guy gashed, with one arm in a sling And both black and blue from a haymaking swing? To this simple announcement dev'oted- Iv cling: WAS Have the missus and you fought an hour or two Using language decidedly bitter arri blue? Are you both on your backs feeling barely alive; Not to mention some fractures amounting to five? Remember to say as the doctors arrive W.AS Ill Has your nrighbor blitzed you and blitzed in return With no sign of a peace bid that you can discern? Are you bleeding profusely and on your And the fXher guy calling the cop on the beat? Bear in nund to proclaim in tones ever so sweet WAS 6 PHOENDC After more hedgehopping.

I want to report that what this country needs is a good 5-cent- a-year to run our mast- 0 missile site construction operation. Otherwise this nation is in trouble. At the moment the Pentagon is letting the Air Force The Air Force has Victor Riesei zeroed in wi all unions in the missile making plants as well as the launching sites. Local unions are wiring their national chiefs in Washington charging they are being strafed by Air Force brass which knows nothmg about labor relations. The regional chiefs want permission to strike everything from Cape Canaveral now to big rocket factories next year.

National labor leaders are telephoning w'arnings to their people not to walk out, but there is muttering all along the line in to-hell-with-Washmgton tones. Some weeks ago, a vice president of the International Association of Machinists told 200 delegates at a U.S. and Canadian and aircraft conference San Diego that the Force is unable to read, interpret or labor problems. A FEW D.4YS LATER Cape Canaveral workers members of more than 20 national umons quietly a.sked their national leaders for the right to walk off the entire base protest against the Air Force decisions. It does matter, of course, who is right and wrong.

But who has the time to stop now? That wall in Berlin is growing higher and higher. 'This missile and testing site construction is the most cfimplex undertaken by man It is, in addition, basically an underground operation. Virtually all of it is concealed from view on tiie missile sites. The big nestle in underground silos which, when finished, if put end to end would have a combined depth of some 25 miles into the earth. As the Pentagon explains it.

the gargantuan task will include moving 26 million cubic yards of earth and rock. This is enough to build a levee 5 feet high and 10 feet wide the entire length of the Mis.sissippi River, EVENTl ALLY there will be more than 3 million cubic yards of concrete placements enough to build another Hoover Dam. Enough steel to build one million passCTiger cars or about 764,000 tom will go into the underground launching sites. The budget for the construction job alone is close to $1 billion, spent on 19 locations in 15 states. When the construction end.s, the headaches of maintenance begin to throb.

Those million-dollar must be kept in concrete nests so pure that not a single drop of oil or dirt can get into the innards. Otherwise malfunction. Even this is nothing compared to the electronic mysteries of the testing such as A giant gantiy for the Saturn space ship recently delivered to Canaveral was a 310-foot steel tower It has its owTi power station; its own air condiUorung and heating systems, water supplies, intercom system; lighting facilities and three It propels it- lakes hundreds of men of By Victor Riesei different trades to maintain this monster. Add these to tlie thousands working on other satellite launchings across the nation and add all these to the 21.000 building and construction workers on the missile sites. THESE ARE STRUNG OUT from northern New York to areas near Boi.se, Idaho, to the desert.s of Nevada and New Mexico and the lower end of California and Florida.

There you have too much for even Arthur Goldberg, let alone unknowing Air Force men. There are di.sputes over such details as which members will dig a trench for underground cables, which members will tug the cables off the rier trucks; which members will cover the trench and who will pull the cables through and connect them. Each decision requires time. Each incident could ulcerate our defense program for a bit, as well as the insides of those trying to meet a deadline which the Russians reallly are setting. Why not appoint a missile and space construction chief a man so distinguished he is trusted by both sides.

Why not let him and a small staff troubleshoot the land? Why not take all this out of the hands of amateurs and those who have many other tasks? This is a full-time job for someone who has full time on his hands and love of his land in his heart. 350 Million Ncetlles By Truman Twill The great good government has admitted it. It lost the 350 million copper needles it lofted into Space. up there somewhere, that we know because the government strapped them on the tail end of a Midas IV up there, all right. Before our great good government finishes lofting things into Space there will a lot of things up Instead of just sitting around batting our gums wondering where the money went, where the stuff went.

It will have gone up in smoke, and there are possibilities here that are more than casually intriguing. Few of us are equipped by education to calculate the mathematical possibilities of getting nd of stuff by firing it into Space, but hep enough to know vast, man, vast. Like Space. We could put all the used cars up there and the surplus wheat and the eggs and butter and lard and what have you. And to get down to the possibility most intriguing, we could turn Space into a kind of hereafter, to solve the problem of keeping graveyards from getting into the way of superhighways.

a rare week any more during construction season when there one stoiy of a graveyard Ix-ing moved because it was located carelessly the path of one of the mulU-billion-dollar projects for giving the automobile the right of way over death as well as life. Instead of guaranteeing the deceased so many square feet of the earth, then reneging on the deal, guarantee them a permanent place up yowler, as om Tliroiigh The ears Froin The Review Files THIRTY AGO Halfback Matt Ordich continued his outstanding offensive play when Rusty powerful Midland football team defeated East Liverpool, 34-0. Mrs. Hazel Roberts received the trophy for the best costume when members of the Twin-City Club met in the home of Mrs Kathryn Fiber of Arthur Wellsville. TWENTY YE.ARS A(iO Charles Peters, president of W'ellsviiic Council and Republican nominee for the mayoralty race, died suddenly of a heart attack.

James Stewart was named president of Delta Fraternity of the Chester Masonic Temple lodge. East Liverpool Mothers Club of Amenca was organued, we used to say when we sang the good old songs of comfort. That IS, it W'ould be permanent insofar as permanency could be assured by our missileers. And any event, if something fouled up and the burial capsules all fell out of their orbital path there would be nothing awkward about the consequences, thanks to the all-consuming heat of friction generated on the re-entry course. This would go far toward re- stonng a concept that has intrigued all of us who learned to think of Heaven as geography, instead of a condition of the spirit.

As children we routinely scanned the heavens, secure in the behef that beyond our vision the dear ones were holding firmly to orbital courses that had been predetermined and were immutable. Even our pel dogs, cats and horses once were entitled to share this immortality, and perhaps they may share it again w'hen wo have mastered the rocket technique that in our time ha.s taken the place of the my.sliques that formerly gov- ened what w-ent to Heaven. Meanwhile, the great good government has admitted we lost our 3.50 million copper needles, which should entitle all of us to a deduction on our 1961 federal income taxes, along with else lofted into Space at our expense with notlung to show for it afterward The Space everybody assures us, IS going to be wonderful, and we are beginning to get the hang of it when told that firKhng one little bitty needle in a haystack was no harder than it is now to find 350 million needles Heaven with Mrs Devon acting chairman. TEN EARS AGO Mrs Ed ward Stivason was named vice- president of the Newell Club to fill an unexpired term Mr and Mrs. John D.

Dallis of 6th St. returned home after three months in Greece, their native land. Carl Sandburg, poet ard biographer of Lincoln, probably will be sorry he ever brought it up because many people will differ sharply with him when he says an army man like Gen. Eisenhower has lived a sheltered life in a of his owTi. Officers in the armed services will disagree David Lawrence vehemently.

True, when they choose a military career, they are offered a certain secunty in their jobs but not the many benefits available in private employment today, particularly under union contracts. In traimng and commanding men from all walks of life, the officers actually come into contact more with individuals and deal more with human relations than do most civilians. To prepare and lead men in battle may seem to a poet a sheltered existence, but he will get little agreement on this from the soldiers who happen now, for instance, to be standing guard at the West Berlin border. Mr. Sandburg had just visited President Kennedy at the House and was surrounded afterward by reporters and cameras at the Library of Congress W'hen he gave vent to the following comment, as quoted by United Press International: (Eisenhower) has yet to know the people of the United States.

With him the words and are dirty words nearly as dirty as But ever since he left the creamery at Abilene, he never bought a suit of clothes or a meal. He never was out of work for a day. All the anxieties that go with the free Miterpnse he known them. lived in a welfare state ever since he left Abilene and went to West MR. S.A.NDBURG has a strange by many other each of the armed services provides all the needs of its men and (rfficers, The fact is that a commissioned officer buys all his uniforms as well as the dv'ilian clothes he wears when off-duty.

His and only partially cove the cost of meals and rental w'hen the officer must provide a home for himself and family. Mr, Sandburg might ask a few lieutenants up to the generals and the difficulties are in raising their families on service pay as they move from post to post and how they manage to give a college education to their children He will fmd that many cannot afford this for all their diildren. He might also ask the wives of some officers whether they live in a whai it comes to providing for the education of their families, for the care of sick or dependent relatives, for tiie Letter To Editor There has been so much in the paper lately about the super-bomb Many are so worried. And that is just exactly what Mr. Khrushchev wants all of us to be beyond reason.

When the automobile was new there were those who thought it an it frightened those using horse ami buggies! When the airplane came out there were those who saw nothing but doom for the world, and then they thought the bombs meant the end of the world But you know we even found good in atomic energy, we? I suppose if we have a couple of super bombs ourself, the people would think nothing of it that is, if it were on our side. But you know our side has always been concerned about saving life and improving living conditions and keeping peace rather than creating things for destruction It always has been the right way before and now is. The Russians alone make the bomb Thev just put together things that God put in the world for men when it was created. When Christian people take gifts and put them together we come up with a product worth while and a benefit tc mankind. I looked up and saw a beautiful full arch double rainbow.

When the Russians can make one of those then I shall think about getting afraid, W'e should never fear those who can destroy our body but guard well against those who destroy our soul. SWARTZ Wellsville Dr Martin Schwarzschild of Princeton University reported recently that gravitational studies indicate there is far more matter in the universe than can be accounted for by visible stars. He believes the unseen matter may consist of stars whose light is too dim to penetrate the atmosphere. William the Conqueror appointed commissioners to make a survey of the estates and possessions of every landholder. The book which findings were recorded gave William the needed to tax land.

It was called the because individuals could not appeal the findings. kind of clothes many other women wear. Also, does Mr. Sandburg think that only a man who has had to earn money to buy his ow'n food and clothing is eligible for the presidency? It will surely be disputed that a man who had tc earn money necessarily leads a sheltered life and know anything about the tnals and tribulations of his fellow men. Certainly the affluence of Messrs.

Rockefeller, Harriman and have not had to work for a not made a single one of them insensitive to the importance of social-welfare legislation. Incidentally, Dwight while president, was criticized severely by some members of his own party when he be came champion of social welfare projects of various kinds. Mr. Sandburg was not well informed either in refernng to Mr Eisenhower as an president, as if fluency of speech were a criterion of a achievements. The truth is, there are few persons who, when talking extemporaneously, speak with grammatical precision A look at some of the transcripts of the Kennedy press conference will reveal more than one slip on this score.

MR. EISENHOWER docs express himself well in writing. In fact, former members of his staff at die WTiite House say he was something of a purist. His longhand manuscnpts would prove this point. Also, he often corrected what seemed to him ungrammatical English on the part of others who submitted memoranda to him Army officers have told this writer that Dwight Eisenhower in his younger days wrote many speeches for his superiors in the army.

It IS most unfortunate that Mr Sandburg, who probably has read a good deal of history, familiarized him.self with the ways of American politics. He says Mr. Eisenhower was unfair in his criticism of the and that verv' good for the former president to on this subject before the idea has to have a Maybe if Mr. Sandburg will reread some of the speeches during last presidential campaign about the he will recognize the art of political combat. Army life as easy as Mr Sandburg has been led to believe, and, if he is interested good sportsman.ship, he will apologize to the men in the Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force.

To say that any one of the officers in our military services has yet know the people of the United is to fail to understand the very men who devote themselves to a career in which they nsk their lives so that the rest of us may continue to stay alive to television and even to read Mr. Sandburg's fine literary works. Odd Fads Probably the deadliest of games in history was played by the Huns of time. The Huns had learned the game of dice from the Romaas, who played with cubes fashioned from knuck- lelxines of goats and sheep. Thus, the term But the Huns added an innovation all their own They wagercxi their lives on a throw of the bones the loser often being slam with a spear plunged through his throat President John Kennedy is the fourth man by the name of John to occupy the VChite House.

Preceding him were John John Quincy and John Tyler. Most popular first name among presidents has been James Madison. Monroe, Polk, Buchanan and Garfield. The 5 400.f)00 people of the Malagasy Republic lielong to more than 20 tribes. believe the original settlers came across the Indian Ocean, perhaps from Melanesia and Indone.sia Africans were imported as slaves in the 18th and 19th Centuries.

The molian age at which American women marry today is about 20 years. The average married woman has 2.03 children, and the number of women with three or more children hag doubled wUhin the past 20 years. East Liverpool Review 4tb Exit Liverpool Ohio Phone: 185-4S45 Suhserlptlon retee. copy, I centa. Heme dciivered.

42 per liy mail, payable In advance, within Columbiana County, Ohio. Hancock County, Va.J Beaver County, and all points vithm 25 mliCs of East Liverpool, year $10.00: six months, $6.00: three months, $3 50. one month, $1.50. Outside rates given upon request. No mad in localities served bv carrier delivery The Associated Press la entiUed to the use for cation of all the ea in imt newspaper as well aa AP news dispatches Second class paid at £ist Livtrpiwl, Onio Adverusicg rcpfesentaUve: John W.

CuUee Co..

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About The Evening Review Archive

Pages Available:
381,489
Years Available:
1885-1977