Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).

Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard

Show the Page Image

Show the Image Page Text


More Information About this Image

Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard

Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)

Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 20

oo ee ee
a eo or Oe ee aN oe ee
ok
eww
11
December 30, 1965..Nevada County Nugget..
SMALL TOWN : SMALL WORLD
define strategic objectives?
Systems analysis, promises Aerojet, will merely
“present alternatives to the decision-makers," and
responsible goyernment officials at all levels must
help formulate the alternatives in the first place,
Yes, responsible officials at all levels must have
their say, but the Governor and the legislature,
assisted by the State Office of Planning, must take
the ultimate responsibility of laying down basic
policy guides for the space age planners, before they
start developing their alternatives,
Why is this so important? Here is one example, In
their transportation study the North American space
engineers say that “we will have the ability to roll
back and almost eliminate existing restraints on .
habitable space in the next twenty to fifty years,”
In other words, our technology will allow us to go
—
—
virtually anywhere, live anywhere, build slurbs (or
rather, more slurbs) in the wilderness if we want to,
Few engineers, even space engineer-planners, will
be able to resist such a technological challenge,
unless they are limited by firm state policy direction
from the outset, Engineers have a tradition of first
establishing the technical feasibility of all manner of
monstrosities, and then finding economic justifications for building them.
Suppose they find it feasible and for some reason '
"economic" to build a system of aerial tramways
linking all of the highest peaks along the Sierra crest,
Should such an altemative ever be seriously considered?
No, it shouldn't, and probably wouldn't be if state
officials at the highest level see to it that every
alternative for state development is analyzed by the
computers in the light of the broadest possible economic and social considerations,
We don't need any more simplistic “user benefit"
formulas like the one the highway engineers have
used as an excuse to build so many of our freeways
in the most destructive possible locations,
--from Argonaut’s Notebook in the Winter 1965
issue of “Cry California, “ the quarterly journal of
California Tomorrow.
WASHINGTON CALLING
JOHNSON WILL PUT WELFARE
ON A VERY MODEST DIET
WASHINGTON. -For the first time, President
Johnson is squarely in the middle of heavy and opposite pressures from the Left and Right, The issue is
the new Federal Ludget, but the implications rise far
above dollars and cents.
The Left -the very liberal to knee-jerk liberal
Democrats -is attempting to wring from him explicit
vows that, notwithstanding a little thing called the
war in Viet Nam, he wil! not reduce by a dime his
allocations for the domestic Great Society.
The Right -the general run of Republicans plus
conservative and ultra-conservative Democrats -is
putting him under siege to cut back the Great Society
to a shell and to open the Treasury without stint to
every claim conceivably to be made by the action
in Viet Nam.
_ The President himself is digging in his heels against
what amounts to dual efforts to freeze his position in
advance, The two pressure groups have one aim in
common: to force the President here and now to
commit himself to the kind of budget he will put next
y ear before Congress. To each he is, in substance,
replying: “Thanks very much for your great interest
and all that -but I am going to keep my options
open until the last minute; "
The reason for this delay is that he does not and
cannot possibly know right now just how much is
really going to be needed in Viet Nam even, say,
two months, let alone 12 months ahead, Whatever
is actually required is going to be provided; Viet Nam
has>priority No. 1. To that extent the forces interested in butter and honey to the almost total exclusion
of guns have already lost the game, :
Still, those totally preoccupied with guns have not
altogether won, either. Nor will they. For though
VietNam is indeed priority No. 1 and will remain so,
the President has no intention whatever of putting
welfare on starvation rations, At worst, he can keep
it going, though it cannot be kept going at the rate
which otherwise would have been certain, The outlook, in a word, is that welfare will be put on some
diet, but not a crash diet.
What elevates this struggle toweringly above simple
economic considerations isthe root fact that the prize
so urgently sought by each side is nothing less than
effective control of the mind and purposes of the
Administration in the year to come,
The Left sees an opportunity to commit the President
unalterably and now to more and more welfarism.
The Right seeks toclose off now all his choices except
the choice to diminish, if not to discard, the butterand-honey legislation he put through the last Congress,
The weapon of the Left is the implicit threat that
unless it can have its way it will cry out that the
President wasnot, afterall, really “sincere” in asking
Congress for all those bills, The weapon of the Right
istheimplicit threat to denounce the President as not
really “sincere” about Viet Nam,
The President himself, however, is not without
strength, The controlling middle in Congress will
not accept either indictment. For the middle knows
that much of the Left is partly actuated by its wish to
“get out of Viet Nam” and that much of the Right is
partly motivated by a hope torepeal the Great Society,
The more the Left poor-mouths the welfare program,
the more it will endanger the seats of 40 to 50 liberal
Democratic Congressmen whose only claim for reelection in 1966 is their past association with its
enactment. The Right is in no comparable political
danger. Still, its objective to nullify the Great
Society runs against the profound reality that it is
already enacted -even if some who are by no means
right-wingers, including this columnist, would surely
be just as happy if some of it had never reached the
statute books, (Copyright 1965)
--WilliamS, White, substituting for Marquis Childs,
who is on vacation, ©
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
THE SQUAWS PANNED GOLD
To the Editor:
I am sitting here in my apartment. The wind is
blowing and the sun is trying to break through the
clouds, Iam going back now more than seventy years
to a few more things I remember about my old home
town. 3
I wonder how many of the old timers that are still
left up there remember the big ox team that went
be c = eae =
through town on the way to Marcher brothers saw mill,
Some of us kids followed it a long way. When we
came back we had so much red dust on us we looked
like dust balls,
One more little item, I used to watch the Indian
squaws panning on the river while the bucks sat around
town waiting for them to come in with the gold they
panned out, At that time N.C, had what they called
‘a Siwash list in all the saloons but if you went out to
their Campoodie you sure wouid see a lot of singing
and dancing, They didnot get that way from drinking
coffee, I remember too when the bridge on Commercial Street went down after the Union hotel bus
just got over it.
I will never forget when one of our gang drowned in
the Manzanita digging. His body wasneverrecovered,
There was an undercurrent that went underground, I
will tell you this much, his father drove stage up
there a good many years,
Oh yes another thing comes floating through my
mind, Some one stole the tapper out of the school
house bell and that landed in the Manzanita digging.
That was on a hallowe'en night. I think I told you
about the horse some one put in the principal's office
on a Friday night with a half bale of hay and a tub of
water, I never did tell you about stringing a wire
across the Chinese laundry door about a foot high and
giving the door a kick.
It was a lot of fun-then but when I look back and
think about it it was not funny to him,
Some time ago you had a picture of a milk wagon
and horse, It is a funny thing but I used to ride with
the milk man, His name was Joe Ranili. That horse
sure was smart, Joe did not have to get on the wagon
every time he delivered his milk, When the horse
heard Joe coming out of the house he would go to the
next place of delivery, After the cows were milked
then itwas delivered right away. It did not go
through any process like it does today, When we
were on theranch alltpur eggs, butter and spuds went
to J. J. Jackson's store.
I think I will put a blanket on the heater to keep it
warm, It ain't doing nothing for me.
Jack Bassett
Oakland
WHAT IS WY STORM pe
THAT? )/ CLOUD OF <==:
UNPAID BUS
quar oumes 4 .
ONME THE “fh
YiRST OF
gvers Monti
Ws ¢ 4
T opp BODKINS..
“
ps)
—.
AWM 'S TERRIBLE!
Wow DO YOU MAKE
If GO AWAY?
BUT IT
GETS SHAVER
ic you sat
it W\TK HONE --