anal Library
it all
of a mass
half million
and six
region was
COunties
are copies
different
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ent
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When the
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the books
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I
The Mason County Juvenile
Probation Office handled 48 cases
during April, Probation Officer
Gary Wood reported.
These included 36
delinquency cases, 10 dependency
referrals and two traffic referrals.
The delinquency referrals
included four for auto theft, four
for burglary, 11 for other thefts,
eight for use of liquor and 10 for
other offenses.
The delinquency cases
i n c I u d e d one dach for
abandonment, incorrigible,
truancy and other reasons, four
for marriage waivers and two as
runaways.
The dispositions included six
handled with informal
adjustment, four placed on
informal supervision, seven placed
on official probation, one made a
ward of the court, 15 remanded
to their county of residence, one
committed to the Department of
Institutions, seven returned to the
Department of Institutions and
lnarriage waivers signed for four.
/
/
Shelton,
graduates to
Irnencement
Lutheran
~elor of arts
to Classify .......
to
n i m u m
for
to
With
In the
Must
Using
Years
Y at
STUDENTS IN Walter Johnston's fifth grade class at Bordeaux School hold
up some of the newspapers they received in a project in which they wrote to
newspapers all over the U• S. asking for copies of the newspapers. They
received replies from 48 cities.
~Unitv
apito
:losing
P.FTI.
ZRTy.
miles,
Phone
Collie.
Ryan
Boys'
fter 8
$100
1281.
ler,
eels,
n.
lie 5
$75.
COurt
in,
ency
road
ing
g2
horse
Gent
' Pinto,
6 P.m.
most
Our
le
re
in
613
Gorton Tells Views
On Legislature
Attorney (;encral Slade
(;orton this week spelled out a
seven-point p r()~!l-Hln fOl
reforming the st:lie legislature, the
1¢)71 session of which hc scored
as "short-sighted'" and
"unproductive.'"
In a speech to the
Seattle-King County Bar
Association. GoTten stressed the
need for reform of the entire legal
system, but added that "our
legislature is more archaic than
the court system.'"
"Much as 1 have in the past
supported the concept of a citizen
legislature, it is increasingly clear
that our legislalurc, organized as
it is now, is incapable of acting in
• AIRMAN o HOMAS G.
Boiling, son Mr. and Mrs.
the best interests of the citizens
often enough," he stated.
(ioIton's tHOposals, seine Of
which wmdd require changes in
the State's constitution, are:
1.
Create a much smaller
legislature with a considerably
larger professional staff as an
independent source of
information.
Limit the time any person can
consecutively serve to 12
years.
3. Establish precise reporting of
campaign contributions and
expenditures with effective
enforcement mechanisms.
4. Provide for specific lobbyist
registration and expenditure
reporting, to include
campaign contributions and
any other gifts.
5. Require open meetings with
recorded votes•
6. Provide for redistricting to be
accomplished outside the
legislature, by a non-partisan
body.
7. Restrict the right of the
legislature arbitrarily to set its
own rules.
"Our problem," the Attorney
General commented, "is that so
many have been talking about
reform so long ond so few have
been doing anything about it."
Gorton also lauded a recent
U. S• Supreme Court decision
which upheld the right of a labor
union to assist its members in
finding legal services at reasonable
fees.
Richard M. Boiling of 2236 "1 sincerely hope that the
Callanan St, Shelton, Wash.,decision will end litigation on the
• ub:ect of group legal services,
has completed basic training ~n~lJ that we can move forwardto
at Lackland AFB, Tex. He find solutions to the very real
has been assigned to problems of availability of legal
Sheppard AFB, Tex., for services to the
people of this
training in the wire nation."
maintenance field• Airman
Boiling is a 1969 graduate of
Shelton High School.
Has
Museu
ms In
by MORLEY KRAMER ( Single copies can also be
[ h c " ' o I tl d a \S'' In ~,btaincd frcc b) x~,i•ilhL'.t the
Washington. fronl fire engines, lhe [)OCllillClil-; ~CC[It)II tJi lhc State
Gold Rush, and steam railroads to Library, ()lympia 08501 .) The
artifacts of pioneer life, musical directory, the first detailed
instruments and architecture, can coinpilation evel made of the
be "re-lived" in 1(19 lnuseuilrs state's nlusculns, was compiled by
M rs. Nancy Prbor, a research
which are scattered in 67
consultant in the Washington-
locations about the state,
Northwest Room of the Stale
A directory of the muscunls
has been added to the collection Library. II is intended to scrve as
of the Shelton Public Library. a guide to the general art, history
a n d n a t u r a ] h i s t o r y o f
Washinglon. It includes such
infollllatlon as the 113 nits,
UGN Board o,
museums, hours and days tire?.' are
H Meeting