SECTION A —PAGE 2 THE DALLAS POST Established 1889 “More Than A Newspaper, A Community Institution Now In Its 73rd Year” ; A mowpartisan, liberal progressive mewspaper pub- lished every Thursday morning at the Dallas Post plant, Lehman Avenue, Dallas, Pennsylvania. Member Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers Association Member National Editorial Association ont Member Greater Weeklies Associates, Inc. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations @: «lz Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Dallas, Pa. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subcription rates: $4.00 a year; $2.50 six months, No subscriptions accepted for less than six months. Out-of-State subscriptions; $4.50 a year; $3.00 six months or less. Back issues, more than one week old, 15c¢. We will not be responsible for the return of unsolicited manu- scripts, photographs and editorial matter unless self-addressed, stamped envelope is enclosed, and in no case will this material be held for more than 30 days. When requesting a change of address subscribers are asked to give their old as well as new address. Allow two weeks for changes of address or mew subscriptions to be placed on mailing list. : The Post is sent free to all Back Mountain patients in local hospitals. If you are a patient ask your nurse for it. Unless paid for at advertising rates, we can give no assurance that announcements of plays, parties, rummage sales or any affair for raising money will appear in a specific issue. ; Preference will in all instances be given to editorial matter which has not previously appeared in publication. National display advertising rates 84c¢ per column inch. Transient rates 80c. Political advertising $1.10 per inch. Preferred position additional 10c per inch. Advertising deadline Monday 5 P.M. Advertising copy received after Monday 5 P.M. will be charged at 85¢ per column inch. Classified rates 5c per word. Minimum if charged $1.00. Single coples at a rate of 10c can be obtained every Thursday morning at the following newstands: Dallas - - Bert's Drug Store. ionial Restaurant, Daring’s Mark. §, Gosart’s Market, Towne House Restaurant; Shavertown — Evans Drug Store, Halls Drug Store; Trucksville — Gregory's Store, Trucksville Drugs; Idetown — Cave’s Maket; Harveys Lake — Javers Store, Kockers’s Store; Sweet Valley — Adams Grocery; Lehman — Moore's Store; Noxen — $couten’s Store; Shawnese — Puterbaugh’s Store; Fern- brook — Begdon’s Store, Bunney’s Store, Orchard Farm Restaurant; Luzerne — Novak's Confectionary. Editor and Publisher—HOWARD W. RISEEY Associate Publisher—ROBERT F. BACHMAN Associate Editors—MYRA ZEISER RISLEY, MRS. T. M. B. HICKS Sports—JAMES LOHMAN = Advertising—LOUISE C. MARKS Accounting—DORIS MALLIN Circulation—MRS. VELMA DAVIS Photographs—JAMES KOZEMCHAK Editorially Speaking:.. Through Me The Dumb Shall Speak I am the voice of the voiceless Through me, the dumb shall speak; Till the deaf world’s ear be made to hear The cry of the wordless weak. From street, from cage, and from kennel, From jungle and stall, the wail Of my tortured kin proclaims the sin Of thie mighty against the frail. The same force formed the sparrow That fashioned Man, the King; The God of the Whole gave a spark of soul To each furred and feathered thing. AND I AM MY BROTHER'S KEEPER AND I WILL FIGHT HIS FIGHT And speak the word for beast and bird, Till the world shall set things right. Ella Wheeler Wilcox We hope you had an opportunity to read the August Report of the Society For the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, edited by Ruth Schooley for the Luzerne County Society. If you haven't received it, you should write to the SPCA Fox Hill Road, Wilkes-Barre RD 2, for a copy which will tell you graphically what a few dedicated people are doing for the unwanted and neglected creatures of this county . .'. and we might add with a minimum of public appreciation and support. ¢ - Quoting from the Reports “Since its opening April 10, 1960, the SPCA Animal Shelter has given refuge to more than 15,000 animals. Many have been starving, others have been suffering — several have been tortured by so-called human beings. Thousands have been abandoned while others have been un- wanted. All have found good food, loving care and alleviation from suffering while at the shelter. Thou- sands have found new families to love them”. We in the Back Mountain Region should be especially proud of this great institution and its humanitarian work, for it was largely through the love, dedication and finan- cial support of the late Mrs. Z. Platt Bennett that the SPCA came into being. ~ Today a very few dedicated people at considerable personal sacrifice and inconvenience are carrying on the work which she started. Without them the Animal Shel- ter would fold. Although there is not a municipality in Luzerne County that has not benefited through the Society’s work of picking up lost, strayed, sick and injured dogs, the financial response of the governing bodies has been apathetic. If you personally feel that this endeavor is worth- while, you should appoint yourself a committee of one to see to it that your township officials are acquainted with the work the Society is doing, with its need and that your municipality contributes annually to its support. If you are not yourself a member, send in a contri- bution of $2 or more today. You will never regret it and you will never miss it. Quoting again from The Report: “Although we have shocked you with true stories about children setting cats on fire and children throwing kittens into the river, our belief that children love animals is borne out by the following: “Four ten-year-old boys recently came trudging up to the shelter with a little blind kitten. They had been hiking in the woods when they found it about two miles away. They walked all the way to the shel- ter to bring us the kitten”. The SPCA has movies and slides available for Scout kotings, Sunday Schools, and other organizations who h to show them. Not many people know about this, it would be of benefit both to your child and his or organizations leaders if you would let them know of » availability. Youth leaders are always looking for | material to make up their programs. All they need call the Animal Shelter VA 5-4111 and ask for Mise = Only Yesterday Ten, Twenty and Thirty Years Ago In The Dallas Post IT HAPPENED 30 YEARS AGO: Dallas Postmaster Ruth Waters recommended changes in the mail schedule to speed mail from the area. : Frank Lauderbach, manager of Orchard Farms, died at 45 following an operation. Burglar alarm on First National Bank, sounded off at 4 am. fol- lowed in close timing by the Dallas fire siren. Police, officials, and | alarmed citizenry gathered in pa- jamag veiled by raincoats. . False alarm. Everybody went back to bed after the burglar alarm had been throttled. 5 Jane Herdman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cragg Herdman, was bad- ly shocked when she tried to turn off the electric meter after it had been broken by a falling limb dur- ing a severe thunder storm. A big barn on St. Nicholas Ceme- tery property was completely des- troyed by fire, but custodian Metzger was able to save all the livestock. The condition of Toby's Creek was the subject of an editorial. Deplor- able. Just like now. Still deplor- able. Why don’t the State fathers roof it over, confine it to a con- ‘| duit, and forget it, is what every- body wants to know. Make a fine level stretch for a new highway, with all the smells buried deep. It hasn’t changed a bit in thirty years except to smell a little higher as more sewage is added. John A. McSparran, secretary of agriculture, urged farm families to take in urban dwellers who were on the lookout for a quiet rural vacation. Dallas Water Company moved from quarters in the Dallas Dairy to the Himmler Theatre. Sliced bread ‘was 5 cents a loaf, ham 14 cents a pound; potatoes 17 cents a peck; veal chops 15 cents a pound. IT HAPPENED 20 YEARS AGO: Third set of twins in the Alder- son area within a month. Mr. and Mrs. John Denman followed the example get by Mr. and Mrs. Russell Newell and Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Beam. Dr. Charles A. Perkins of Trucks- ville was the first local medical man to join the service. He left on Labor Day for training at Car- lisle Barracks. William Moran, - Latin instructor in Dallas, got his call to the serv- ice, the second faculty member to be inducted. Clarence LaBar was’ the first, A. N. Garinger's racing pigeons came in first in a 100 mile race from Harrisburg. John Snyder, while working on the Nesbitt Farm, broke his back in fall from a hay wagon. Leo George broke a stranglehold and saved a frantic swimmer from certain drowning in Harveys Lake. The other swimmer in difficulty was also saved. Jack Roberts spotted 89 aban- doned auditorium chairs outside a school building in Arcade, N. Y., and arranged through Dallas schools to have them purchased and de- livered for extra seats at basket- ball games. Elwood Ide marines, i Olivers garage was new head- quarters for the ration board. Fred Kiefer, Gordon Mathers, and James R. Oliver comprised the board. Heard from in the Qutpost: Glenn Kitchen, Camp Wheeler; Joseph Hu- dak, Fort Benning; Henry Miller, Camp Livingstone; Paul Mainwaring, formerly of Dallas, died in Philadelphia. Ruth Gould joined the Army Nursing Corps, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hoover were treated to an old fashioned skimel- ton, rr HAPPENED ]() YEARS Aco: Kingston Township supervisors condemned the frame bungalow where a family of a mother and two children stepped off the porch into a raging torrent during a flash flood along Trout Run. Rev. William McClelland was elected rector of Prince of Peace, succeeding Rev. William Williams. Married: Virginia . Stroud to Daniel Steadle. Rosalie Hoyt to Leo Anthony. Barbara Peters to Donald MacGowan. Rev. and Mrs. David Morgan were enlisted in the given a farewell party, on leaving Alderson Charge. Died: Fred Boote, 96, Trucksville. Mrs. Catherine Wilson, 67, East Dallas, Mrs. Elizabeth Miller, 82, Noxen. Mrs. Emmeline Bodle, 93, Franklin Township. Emory Klieg- leng, 49, Trucksville, Big Labor Day storm. Dallas Five and Ten changed hands, from Eugene (Sick to his cousin James Sick. Fall Festival (Continued from 1—A) ficers to explain the set-up. Mary Lou Casterline was chosen Queen of the festival for selling the most tickets. Runners-up were .| Elaine Boyce, Donna Parrish, Donna Cole, and Ann Moehn. The officers of the Jonathan R. Davis Fire Company cordially thank everyone who helped make the event the great success that it was. THE DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1962 EE la Rambling Around By The Oldtimer—D. A. Waters Arne TTI SITS TTT Te THe HITT e TNT HHT STS ITT I HHT S HTH TS : 5 I, CITE Now is the time for all good tax- of the courthouse offices was upset payers to come to the aid of the school district. And if the said taxpayers have not already faced up to the collector for borough, township, county, and institution district taxes, they will find the collector in the on deck circle ready to go to bat against them. It is a very one-sided and frus- trating baseball game that the tax- payer has to play annually with the tax collectors. He knows in ad- vance there is no such thing as a called strike retiring the side. His side can never get at bat. It makes no difference whether the balls he has provided , entirely at his own expense, are soft or hard, small, average, or oversize. [Like- wise the result is the same whether he throws with the right or left hand, with an overhand, under- hand, or sidewinder delivery. The batter will latch on to the ball on the first pitch and with one wallop drive it completely out of the park, so that to all practical purposes it is a lost ball. Taxing authorities prefer that the taxpayer appear in ‘the mood of the Light Brigade in the charge at Balaklava, as described by Tennyson, one word being changed: ! “Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and PAY”. Reading of the preceding lines in the same stanza is not recommended “Was there a man dismayed ? Not though the soldiers knew Someone had blundered’”. No politician will admit a blunder in levying a tax. As youngsters, we were taught that you cannot escape death and taxes. This is as old in this country as Benjamin Franklin, who wrote in 1789, “In ‘this world nothing is cer- tain but death and taxes’. He probably copied it from the ancients. But. as we grew up, we found this is not literally true as to taxes. In this country only, property taxes were allowed to accumulate, inter- mittently, for thirty or forty years. It was a lucrative racket for lawyers, filing the endless liens, and gearch- ing and clearing titles. And the pro- ceedings in courts, as reported in the daily press, covering delinquent taxes in astronomical sums, make us wonder why the little fellow is pursued so relentlessly. Every politician out of office criticizes those in office for the taxes levied. He makes a loud outcry about the existing taxes, or larger taxes he claims are threat- ened by those presently in office. Only a few years ago the control by a campaign against the new as- sessment. Now various municipali- ties, and others, are actually re- questing the county authorities to go ahead and put out the new as- sessment. A In 1884, the Democratic Platform carried the resounding battlecry, “Unnecessary taxation is unjust tax- ation”. velt campaigned on a platform of reducing government expenses 25%: Then he proceeded to inaugurate the greatest spending spree in all his- tory, which is still going with in- creased momentum after nearly thirty years. One of his advisors openly said, “We will spend and spend, tax and tax and elect and elect” (some of the words may be interchanged, but this is the sense of it). A great politician issue about the same time was “The Forgotten Man” a title stolen or borrowed from William = Graham = Sumner (1840-1910. What Sumner said was not. the same as that used in, the campaign. “The Forgotten Man is delving away in patient industry, supporting his family, paying his taxes, casting his vote, supporting the church and school, reading his newspaper, and cheering for the politician of his admiration, but he is the only one for whom there is no provision in the great scramble and the big divide. Such is the Forgotten Man. He works, he votes, generally he prays—but he always pays —yes, above all, he pays”. Ever since, the Forgotten Man has looked for something for nothing. The late Henry L. Mencken sum- marized the situation: “Unquestionably, there is pro- gress. The average American now pays out twice as much in taxes as he formerly got in wages”. { State politicians, being a little far- ther off, display the most brass in handling taxes with the most in- nocent explanations to be swallowed by the gemeral public. They make us pay two years auto drivers license fees at once, supposedly to save a few pennies. The real object was to get a whole additional years license revenue to spend in advance. Then, the present summer, the sales tax normally remitted in the month following the end of a quarter was stepped up so that a remittance had to be made during the last part of the quarter, which gave them a nice balance to campaign on, noth- ing being said that the next admin- istration would automatically lose about three months revenue. Safety Valve TROUBLE ON POWDER HORN September 3, 1962. Dear Editor: As a resident and taxpayer in Dallas Borough, I would like through your reader’s column, to express my feelings and those of my neighbors, to the disgusting job that our Bor- ough is doing on Powder Horn Drive. This street has been torn up all summer and now is in a deplorable state. With our children going to and from school, they must walk through fields of high grass and weeds to get to and from home. * Early this summer they put in a drain pipe to carry off the surface water from the hill above us, this trench was open for at least five weeks, due to the tractor shovel breaking down. Then along comes the gas company and opened the other side of the road and laid gas lines, this’ was a one-day job, they filled their trench and were gone. Now along comes the Borough truck with loads and loads of field stone and dump it all over the street. Now comes two or three or four Borough men with sledge hammers to crack up this stone. this kind of labour was done away with over fifty years ago. Does our Council know that crushed stone can be obtained at a quarry less than five miles from Powder Horn Drive? Does our Council know that the Borough trucks could haul this tone from the quarry cheaper than they can haul in an old stone wall? Now when this street is paved and our driveways are a foot or more below grade, what do we do about that? We were given no grade at the time we put our driveways in. I am wondering how many of our Council have seen this job going on and what steps they are taking to correct it. Something has got to be done without delay. It would mot be possible for an ambulance or fire truck to get to us in case of an emergency. This would be of inter- est to fire insurance companies. I am not frying to knock any man out of a job, but for the sake of the people of Powder Horn Drive get rid of the sledge hammers and get this street finished. Respectfully submitted, Elmer Daley, 48 Powder Horn Drive. “This month, a miracle kitchen knife that cuts frozen foods is being advertised. We'd prefer one that cuts frozen prices.” “This is the season when anglers of all weight categories are trying to land a hook to the jaw.” “Vacations aren’t so hard ta plan. Your boss tells you when and your wife tells you where.” Looking at T-V With GEORGE A. and EDITH ANN BURKE THE AUDIENCE — The important part of any television show is the audience. The new season opens and the metworks are all ready with their greatest shows balanced against each other, each hoping to win the largest viewing audience for their advisers. In some cases it will be western, comedy against comedy. Within a month the viewers will have decided the success and failure of most shows. The biggest battle will take place on Wednesday night. It will be between the ABC network and NBC. ABC this season will be carrying the highly prized ‘Wagon Train,” a former NBC property. Last sea- son this show was No. 1 throughout the country. 4 Opposite this NBC will present “The Virginians.” - This will be a 90-minute series and will go on the air the same time (7:30) as “Wagon Train.” NBC is hoping that “The Virginians’ will be good and that the audience will be tired of “Wagon Train,” which is five years old. Programmers believe that if they can capture an audience early in the evening, for the 8 or 8:30 p.m. shows that they will continue watch- most ing that channel for the rest of the | evening. Ratings seems to prove this theory true. CBS is not competing on Wed- nesday. “CBS Reports” will be their program for 7:30 p.m. ; CBS is putting more hopes on Monday night when Lucille Ball returns with a new show at 8:30 pm. If Lucy can win back her old audience CBS will be very happy. Her competition is the tired old program “Rifleman on ABC and a new NBC program called “Saint and Sinners.” This wil] star Nick Adams in a series of newspaper stories. Following Lucy will be Danny Thomas, who did all right rating- wise last season; Andy Griffith and the new Loretta Young show. Loretta Young may run into trouble on the second half of her show when ‘Ben Casey’ comes on at 10 pm. On NBC at the same hour will be “The Eleventh Hour,” which deals with a psychiatrist. Saturday night Jackie Gleason returns at 7:30 p.m. with a number of beautiful ginls, a new singer and Frank Fontaine. His opposition will be “Sam Benedict,” a new hour long series about a lawyer and “The Roy Rodgers variety show. Seems logical that Jackie will be the winner on that night. | Following Jackie Gleason will be “The Defenders,” which successfully | took on all comers last season; ‘Have Gun, Will Travel’ and finally In 1932, Franklin D. Roose- Better Leighton Never by Leighton ‘Scott I was sitting in a local cabaret the other night, waiting for the band, to arrive. The place is packed with dancers on certain nights. It seemed funny, the place deserted, the waitresses sitting around gos- siping, and the house record player grinding out the old songs from the thirties and forties while the help sang along. Generally, the walls of this place rattle with live rock 'n roll, but I was early. ‘They don’t make songs like that any more”, murmured one of the women to the bartender. “You said it”, he returned dole- fully. The owner finished putting some checks .in order, and joined me at the bar, “It's go shame”, he reflected, “when a few kids mess it up for others who have a right to a good time. Young people have it tougher and tougher, trying to enjoy them- selves.” : “Oh, I don’t know”, seems to me that with increased wages, less demanding school work, and all that, kids have more time to enjoy life, such as it is.” “I mean. young people over 21”, he explained. “I presume you know we had a raid here not too far back, and several under-age kids were caught. : “Well, I take every precaution for checking age-cards that the State inspectors require, In fact, my standards of checking are the same as theirs. “Unfortunately, you’re not elected.” “Exactly”, he nodded. “Another thing. The State inspector told one of the kids who was caught that I, as bar-owmer, was responsible, and that it wasn’t the kid's fault at all, even though he lied about his age and signed an affidavit saying that he was 21.” About these affidavits: I know the state inspectors permit the use of them, if, in the bar-owner’s discre- tion, the person in question looks old enough to drink, but doesn’t have an age-card. This invites the owner to take chances, because I'm pretty sure they're not, strictly speaking, legal. If, according to old Common Law, the kid can tell “right from wrong”, and signs an untrue gtatement — then the kid assumes responsibility for his misrepresentation over and above the innkeeper’s illegal act of serving a minor. On the other hand, there is a statute which says: ‘““An innkeeper cannot serve alcoholic beverages to somebody under 21”. Now which is law — the plain meaning of the statute or this age- old ‘right and wrong” business. ‘Well, every time two lawyers fight out a case the same question comes up. And the judge decides which law is more important, i.e. which | one he happens to like. But it seems stupid to expect a kid to respect the law, if he doesn’t know what it is. And it seems equally stupid to expect the bar- owner to know better than to serve minors, when he is not perfectly certain just when his responsibility ends, and the perjuring minor's re- sponsibility begins. All business in- volves taking some chances. : About the only thing that doesn’t seem stupid about such a deal is being a lawyer for either the inn- keeper or the lying minor, since the more confusion, the more money he'll get paid in fees. 4 Well, the only solution I can see is to forget about those affidavits, and accept age-cards or nothing. Let's face it: There isn't a kid in the state who knows he looks younger than 21, or might be border-line in looks, and still for- gets his age-card when he steps out at night. He'd rather forget his shoes than his card. So, if you accept such an ex- planation as “I left it in my other pants”, you're asking for whatever trouble you get when you serve a minor. the hour long “Gunsmoke.” MEDIC BLOUSES have been sell- ing like mad in variety stores which only proves that Ben Casey can sell the shirt off his back. THE VERDICT IS YOURS received the death sentence. This has been a good daytime television series for five years. It did very well in the afternoon time slot but moving it up to the morning didn't suit the housewives. Replacing it will be reruns of ‘The Real McCoys.” To avoid confusion with first runs on the evening show the daytime re- runs will just be called “The McCoy.” Jack BENNY. who is now 68 years old has no idea of quitting working. He will return for another television season on Sept. 25. Formerly pre- sented on. Sunday evenings, his show will be scheduled on Tuesdays from 9:30 to 10 p.m. Jack, who has been working without a network contract for several years, has made a new two-year pact with CBS. NEW TREND — Television studio lots which formerly were jammed with cowboys now are teeming with actors in military uniforms This is because of the new trend to mili- tary shows, both serious and comic, among which are “The Gallant Men,” “Combat” and ‘McHale's Navy”, “McKeever and, the Colonel,” “Ensign O'Toole” and ‘Don't Call Me Charlie.” THIS OLD HOUSE ~— One of the most watched programs in England these last few weeks is the reno- nation of an old house’ The program, “Bucknell’s House” is an/ enormously popular do-it | yourself series, Farly this Bpring X said I. “It. ___ DALLAS, PENNSYLVANIA OPENER RR ENE ANNE AEE Barnyard Notes San NA NASA REE Blan King ‘Defends’ Suburban Living Exposes on suburban living, describing wild orgies, nude swim- ming parties and mad drinking sprees, annoy comedian Alan King. The sage of suburbia says he’d “like to know where this wicked, immoral community is supposed to be. I want to move there.” In “defending” suburbia in the current (September) issue of McCall's magazine, King insists “middle-class suburbanites are just as moral as the folks who live in big cities. Get involved with lawn mulch, Cub Scouts, storm windows, fund drives, car pools and the PTA, and see how much orgy time you have left.” King also makes the following points about the advantages of suburbiat Ha 1. HEALTH: “No chalky complexions or city pallor here, From May through September, the kids are brown as berries. Sunburn? No, it’s charcoal. There's so much smoke in the-air that if my wife wants to make a clear soup, she has to cook it in the fallout shelter.” 2. MODERN CONVENIENCES: “There are radios that turn on . the radio, and remote-control windows that open and shut no mat- ter whose head is sticking out of them.” 3. ECONOMY: “In 35 years, Tll own my house free and clear. When I'm 75 years old, it won't cost me a penny — with a few exceptions. Like $10 a month for insurance, $30 a month for main- tenance, and $650 a month for taxes.” King invites doubters to see the wonders of suburbia for them- selves, before they start criticizing. “Come in the fall,” he suggests, “after the hay fever plague.” PA L lL] Nu u ua Hu = | N oe © it to me, and it was worn down to a frazzle. From i Pillar To Post... by Hix Picking up the pieces after the vacation was about like picking up the pieces after a .hurricane. It involved cadging taxi service from the kids around the plant, borrowing the decrepit station wagon on occasion, and finally an overnight jaunt to Richmond, Virginia, by bus, followed by a trip up over the road after picking up the car from the car hospital in Richmond. - » “You been riding that clutch,” announced the mechanic sternly. “I have NOT been riding that clutch. I don’t ride clutches.” “Then you've been going into gear too slowly instead of all in a ump.” Y : 3 “Come on, now, the thing leaps like a jackrabbit unless I ease it into gear.” “Well, you better cut it out, unless clutch.” . With the receipted bill for one clutch, installed in one English Austin in my hand, I reflected that an English Austin ig a lovely thing to drive, stick shift and all, but that there are drawbacks. Buy a Chevvie, or a Plymouth, or a Ford, and you can find re- placements in any garage, and a mechanic who can install the stuff. Drive an English Austin, and you're apt to get stuck somewhere out in the sticks. Hereabouts, it’s simple enough. Danny Meeker is at the other end of the line, and he can diagnose the situation . . , . and do something about it. Unfortunately there was no Danny Meeker down below Rich- mond. ‘Back in Dallas, I consulted John Kupstas. “Johnnie,” I inquired, “How do you get a car with a stick shift into gear without wear and tear on the clutch? [Isn't that what a clutch is for?” “What procedure are you using?” “Depress the clutch all the way, shift the lever, and let up on the clutch, slowly enough not to jerk.” “Sounds all right,” says Johnnie. : : “Well, something happened to that clutch. The mechanic showed And that didn’t just happen overnight. Could be I better switch to another car with an automatic transmission.” It was quite a clambake Wednesday night. Richmond by bus, engulfed in a black tidal wave at five a.m., a soldier boy and I and one other, the only white folks on the bus. And I was ashamed of the one other. He became very vocal along about Fredericksburg, announcing how he would change the world if he had his druthers, and wondering how soon the bars opened in Richmond. y The colored woman three seats back, hushed her wailing child. The other dark men and women sat quietly, resting their heads on their hands, paying no attention to the vocal one. The bus driver looked around briefly and hissed, “Let it rest now, huh? You can't get anything in ‘a bar in Richmond anyhow, nothing but beer.” The wounded one moaned and subsided. Came the dawn, and a stirring of the passengers. Fifty minutes later, I was in the Austin and on my way back you want to pay for another to Dallas after the longest week on record. The fresh morning breeze ‘turned to a breath from a furnace. Never has Dallas looked quite so beautiful. It was cool that night, coo! erough for a small fire in the Frank- lin stove. And that bed. After a night sitting up in a bus, and a broiling day of driving north over route 301 and route 111 and route 11 and route something or other through Benton, and through Ricketts Glen, and Lehman, and finally Dallas, it was heaven to peel off the sodden clothing, plunge briefly into the tub, and fall into bed. Nothing like sitting up all night and driving all day to make you appreciate small comforts. v the ation searched for a house in the my tached structure. British Broadcasting Corpor- Exchange Students Meet With Teachers (Continued from 1—A) ost miserable cordition. It found an eleven-room, semi de- The house had enough problems to satisfy everyone. The roof and floors sagged, the walls were cracked, it needed work in the gutters, door frames, floors, staircases, ceilings, bathrooms and entrances. The wiring and plumb- ing was bad. The outside paint was only a memory. And to top it all off it had dry rot. It was a real “you name it and we have it” place. The response has been as tre- mendous as the rebuilding job. In the first three weeks 30,000 viewers asked for information. Barry Bucknell, the handy-man broadcaster who is responsible for the show provides the explanations by writing a weekly leaflet and a column in the widely-read Radio Times. / BBC Expects to sell the house in the winter. Already at legst six offers are received daily. It would be impossible to do all the work on television time so Mr. Busknell rebuilds all week, some- times with out-side help, and saves the critical moments for the viewers. The series is intended for people who want to improve or rebuild their homes without professional help. } Sounds like a very good program. Would enjoy seeing a similar show on one of our metworks. © other people thought of Americans. The standard answer was: Once they got to know me @s an in- dividual, we got along fine. But they tend to believe Americans are crass and materialistic. A four- year-old asked Lynn Jordan if all Americans have color TV in their cars. America as a general image is not good, even in the eyes of our “friends”. : All told, the meeting and the panel discussion served to illus- trate Dr. Robert Mellman’s opening remarks as being very true. ‘Tt would be a good thing”, he thought, “if such an exchange program oy open to our teachers, as well as our students.” The audience was in favor of the idea Chief Updyke Has Busman’s Holiday Kingston Township Chief of Police Herbert Updyke had a busman’s holiday in ‘Chicago Police Head- quarters to get a look at the newly installed IBM machine, a multi-’ million dollar job for sorting out criminals by means of their cards. Chicago headquarters, says Herb, has 7,000 calls a day, and the IBM machine saves a tremendous amount of work, . 13 § = 8%, Tm