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Page: of 24

mes emN REA EL
EDITORIAL
NEVADA CITY FACED TWO
CRITICAL DECISIONS AND DID
WELL ON BOTH OCCASIONS
Nevada City Council in the past few
weeks has been faced with two decisions whichcould have wide effects on
the future development of the city. We
feel the city fathers did well in their
choice on both occasions.
The first critical decision was made
when the council picked Carole Friedrich to fill out the unexpired term of
former Mayor Bob Carr.
We saidat that time that the council
had made a wise choice and the vigor
with which Mrs. Friedrich has jumped
into her new role and her attention to
detail indicates that our confidence
was well placed.
The second big decision was made
Monday night when the council chose
Henry Roese to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of City Manager Charles Smith.
The council had several candidates
from which to choose a new manager
and the variety of experience of the
candidates was wide.
We think the choice of Roese, who
holds -a civil engineering degree, 4
mechanical engineering license anda
general engineering contractor's license in the state, was a wise one.
The city manager's job is a peculiar
one in that the man in the manager's
chair must be ane xecutive who can
bring all the loose ends of government
together and present the various problems ina that will be easily understandable to the part-time councilmen.
To dothis he must have a large backlog of knowledge ona variety of subjects in order to understand and cope
with the problems ofrunning a city. We
think Roese has this kind of background.
The city can now look forward toa
period of energetic management of its
affairs.
September 5, 1964 IN THE FOOTHILLS VEIN
COUNTY HAS GOOD BASE FOR
DEVELOPMENT OF RECREATION
WE WENT through the progress edition sections of last
week and counted more than 11 headlines with the word
recreation in them. This sort of thing is usually not done,
but we were trying to make‘a point which we feel cannot be stressed too often or too strongly. The thing we
showed is thatthe county has a fine base for a recreation
industry and that industry is developing slowly on its own.
If wenow take a look at recreation as an industry and try
to promote it as such, the entire county population can
be benefitted.
Se eS ee ere Feet
{. POPAWAY & BANG,
GUNSMITHS.
APPROVED SHOOTING IRONS
AND ALL
SPORTING ACCESSORIES.
FBI DIRECTOR J. Edgar Hoover came up with séfe
interesting statistics this week in an effort to back up his
plea that the best way to cut down the high cost of crime
is to make a bigger investment in law enforcement. He
notes the annual crime bill has reached a figure of $27
billion yet the starting police salary in some cities of
500,000 population is $90 per week. Average monthly
earnings of full-time police employees in local governments are about $483 while firemen get $508, public
utilities workers $512, school teachers $555 and public
transit employees $560.
ee eete terete tet rt
With planning and looking to the future being treated
as subversive activities in Nevada County, it is refreshing
to hear that neighboring Placer County is looking eight
years ahead now and planning to handle the problems and
to reap the benefits to be generated by construction of
the massive Auburn Dam on the American River.
A group of 150 r esidents of Placer and El Dorado
Counties met last week at the request of the Placer
Supervisors to consider actions necessary by the community to grow and prosper from the dam project.
Among the other things that came out of the session it
was announced that the boards of supervisors in both
counties would be requested to create a bi-county planning authority to work on the project; that the project
would develop enough domestic and irrigation water to
serve a 1,320 mile square area in the Sacramento and
San Joaquin Valleys and would supply outdoor recreation
facilities to provide for approximately five million visitor
days annually within the next 20 years.
The project will bring an additional 4,000 skilled and
semi-skilled workers into the area creating a new popu~
lation increase that would equal two cities the present
size of Auburn. This will put an extra burden on school,
health and welfare services and it is estimated that 40
new classrooms will be needed to take care of this load
in the schools. ---Don Hoagland
CALIFORNIA
WANTS ARE CHANGING BUT
50 ARE SOURCES OF SUPPLY
The consumer today is an entirely different person than
hewas 20, 30 or 40 years ago, Without doubt, the consumer of the future will be different tian he is today,
and his outlook may very well change with the abundance or lack of abundance of food. It appears to me
that as population increases the time may come when
California, andthe United States too, will not be surplus
food-producing areas. The anticipation of such a possibility is not the most pleasant thought in the world,
Without doubt we can increase production efficiency
in agriculture but this will require funds for research that
should be under way soon--in fact, right now. Most of
the , developments that show the way for increased agricultural production come out of agricultural experiment
stations.
We cannot expect research developments to continue
to come out of these agencies at the favorable rate of
the past because the problems we face now are much
more complicated. In fact, I believe they will decrease
and this.can only adversely affect food production and
processing. This will be felt most by the consumer in relation to cost, quality and even availability of certain
items.
A already stated, the average consumer today does
not worry about his needs so he can and does turn his
thoughts to his fickle wants. There is an abundance of
food and a variety such as the people have never known.
before. I would expect both volume and variety to increase for a number of years to come, I'm afraid, however, thetime will come in the not too distant’ future as
the history of man goes when we will not be able to live
in such glorious environment.
---Emil M. Mrak, chancellor of the Davis
campus, University of California, from an
address delivered in Sacramento onJan. 27.
WASHINGTON CALLING
JOHNSON USED POLITICAL SKILL
IN VICE PRESIDENTIAL CHOICE
ATLANTIC CITY ---An embarrassment of riches complicated President Johnson's task of selecting a VicePresidential candidate. On his initial list were the names
of 14 men who by a reasonably objective standard could
have filled the bill, both as political partner in the
campaign and as President should fate decree it.
None of the possible selections could be entirely divorced from party factionalism -pro-South, anti-South,
pro-Kennedy, anti-Kennedy, All the factors of religion,
race and record were weighed by the President again and
again and again in reaching what could be the most important single decision of his entire career.
Ifhe actually employed his great political skill to insure a consensus for Sen, Hubert H. Humphrey, which
he could then appear to be ratifying, this was done with
the private sleight-of-hand that is part of the President's —
artistry. Whether this‘was merely a piece of the mystification ora fact, White House staffers down to within a
few hours of the announcement were saying that the
choice was still between three or four names,
One of the four was Clark Kerr of the University o
California. In the public guessing game, he was the
mythical “university president" whokept coming up on
the Veep tote board.
Except for the Mississippi-Alabama squabbles, fac~tionalism has been little in evidence at this convention.
In the New England delegations there has been a dour,
almost bitter regret for the fallen leader, John F. Kennedy. In private sessions in the dark of the night, this
has taken the form of a reproach to Lyndon Johnson for
standing in the place of the fallen leader,
That emotionalism_points up the wisdom of the President in moving four weeks ago to eli minateAttomey
General Robert F. Kennedy, A Johnson-Kennedy ticket
would have been, for the President, intolerable. There
was arealconcern that the dedicated Kennedyites would
ina great burst of emotion in Convention Halt force the
choice of the reigning member of the family dynasty.
With a cooling-off period following the Attorney General's elimination, that could not happen.
Mark Twain once said of his mother that she was so
kind-hearted that when she had to drown a litter of unwanted kittens, she, always warmed the water, This was
President Johnson's technique in the great Kennedy elimination, With the Attorney General he blanketed everyone in the Cabinet and these who sit regularly with the
Cabinet, by way of softening the blow.
Some of the ablest potential candidates for second
place on the ticket went down with the Attorney General, Adlai Stevenson would have brought a wealth of
experience in both foreign and domestic policy out of a
3988nN Aitmop epeagn’** bab
POET ‘Eg Joquieides’**
a
.
. Nevada County Nugget.
September 3, 1964.