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P A G E TWO SUNDAY, MAY 26, 1968 ADVANCE-NEWS F i n a l P l a n s A r e M a d e F o r N i g h t O f C h a m p i o n s D i n n e r W e d n e s d a y Final plans for the Fourth Annual Night of Champions Din ner, of the Ogdensburg Boy's Club to be held next Wednesday in the Odd Fellows Community Hall a t 6:30 p.m. were announ ced yesterday by Bill Montgom- i l i l ** 'V Dixie of Ottawa will also attend , Entertainment for the evening. --------------------------- — the present the first Boys’ Club will be pro\ ided by the Boys' j ! M l l l l l l l M l l l |f f l l l Silver Cup trophy to the team { Club Choir under the direction '■ from Belmont Courts Boys’ ' of Ted Madore, assisted by Ron Club. The Courts team defeat- { LaVelle and Bill Dinga. These ed the State Street team in a three young men are students day long field day of special ( volunteers from Wadhams Hall, ery. Director of the local Boy’s activities during National Boys’ The Choir will render selections Club. j Club Week last April. {rom f their recent Centennial The Dinner sponsored by the! Msgr. Robert L. Lawler, Di- Concert, \100 Years of Song”. Boy’s Club Mothers Association hector of Catholic Charities will Choir members, Pete Sharrow, wiil honor more than 160 Boy’s (offer the invocation and Rabbi ‘ Tom Hannan and Kike Sharrow Club members who have excell-{David Kozak will give the ben-1 will be soloists, ed in the various activities at j ediction. Special remarks will1 The Dinner is being catered the Boys’ Club during the past be made by our Mayor, Hon. jby Mr. Nick Salvatore, Chef at twelve months. A complete list-John F. Byrnes and Assembly- A. Barton Hepburn Hospital, ing of awards appears at the man Edward J. Keenan. M r.; The menu is a s follows: Roast conclusion of this article. William Walker, President of Beef; baked ham; roast turkey: In his release yesterday Mr. the Board of Education of the macaroni salad: potato salad; Montgomery said, \the Boy’s enlarged Ogdensburg School baked beans: celery: olives & Club is proud to honor these (District will present a special {pickles; hot rolls and butter; 160 members in our Centennial, achievement award to one of j coffee, milk or pepsi cola and year. They deserve high praise,the Champions being honored a t , cherry torte and ice cream. The for their many achievements the dinner. j Dinner will be served by mem- over the past club season” He, George H. Phillips, President I bers of the local Girl Scouts went on to say, \it is gratify-of the Boys’ Club will welcome {and Junior Varsity Cheer lead ing to honor our youth in these,the guests present and Richard {ers from S.M.A, days when we all read of so.E. Winner, Secretary of the. The entire Odd Fellows Hall many adverse activities by our Club’s Board of Directors will j will be decorated in festive col- voung people. Ogdensburg introduce the distinguished ors for the Night of Champions should be proud of these fine (guests on the Dais. 1 Dinner by members of the Boys’ young citizens of tomorrow.\ He j Mayor Byrnes has proclaim- Club Staff, assisted by club concluded by saying, “the ied Wednesday, May 29 as Boys members on the Junior Staff, awards to be received by these Club Champions Day in Ogdens- Tickets for the Dinner are boys will be treasured by them, burg and his urged all local cit- priced at $2.50 and less than 100 but it would be an even greater ,izens to attend the Dinner in are still available at the Boys’ honor to them if our local res-support of the Bovs’ Club's pro- Club office. If any tickets are idents attended the Dinner andigram of Juvenile Decenecy. still left after Saturday, they showed them how much they, Awards will be presented in may be purchased at the Odd are behind them. Our Night of the following areas of the Boys’ Fellows Hall on Sunday, Monday Champions is not to raise money Club program: arts and crafts: and Tuesday afternoon between for the Boys’ Club — far t’rom Boys’ Clubs of America National 2 and 5 p.m. that. Tt is a recognition Dinner Tournaments: remedial read- Persons who have made ad- for our boys’ and we would hope ing: basketball: track- games vance reservations and have not to see many local residents at- room: football: music; eommu- picked up their tickets, may pur- tend.\ nity service: ice hockey; Happy chase them at the Dinner where Highlight of the Night of Hour. Map Your Fun: Junior a special advance reservation Champions Dinner wdl be the Toastmaster. Achieve m e n t : table will be set up. presentation of the Golden Boy leadership: camping, art: .Jun- The general public is most Award to the Club's 1988 Boy iro Staff and Physical Education welcome to attend the Night nf of the Year. The Bov of the activities Champions Dinner For those year is the highest honor any A total of Son awards will be unable to attend, they may Bovs' Club may award a club presented during the -vening in- listen to the program which will member. It is based upon the eluding 194 Trophies. Medals be broadcast, live, starting at following: attendance at the and Piacques. p.m. by station WSLB, club, participation in activities: T* V, i i i l H e le n e M o n troy, C it y ’s O n ly P e a c e Corps V o lu n te e r , H a s M u c h T o T e ll A b o u t M a la y s ia ; C h a n g e s In U.S.A. By MERIIL NORTON DOREN while in Maylasia and on her wm ? Ye# AWARDED FELLOWSHIP — Dennis Wayne Slater, son of Mrs. Wilma I. Slater of 614 Jay St., this city, and Nor man Slater of Cortland, received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics from Central Missouri State Col lege, Warrensburg, Mo., at Commencement Exercises Sunday evening, May 19. The exercises were held at 7:30 p.m. in Vernon Kennedy Field, at the college. Mr, Slater has been awarded a Fellowship to Kansas University, Lawrence, Kansas, to continue studies in Geology this September. He is a 1960 graduate of Ogdensburg Free Academy, and attended Harpur College, Binghamton. Pie served for three years in the U.S. Marine Corps and was discharged with the rate of corporal. “Two roads diverged in a wood and I, / I took the one less traveled by. / And that has made all the dif ference.” And that has made all the difference to a remarkable Ogdensburg girl. She is Helene Montroy, the older daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Montroy of 1009 Greexie St. A Special Dream Nearly everyone has a special dream when they are very young. And Helene had hers. But, unlike most folks, she, while stiH in her early twenties, achieved hers. The dream? To go around the world. Helene saw her opportun ity in the Peace Corps. So, in August 1965, sihe joined the Corps and served two years in Maylasia. When she finish ed her stint last December, she came home the long way around — and her \impos sible” dream became a reality. trip home “Everything is interest ing,” says this very alert young woman. “On any street, at any time, you can take a picture and it is interesting.” Since returning, she has shown her slides and given an accompanying commen tary to a great many groups. Helene was a Peace Corps teacher in the S'tait-e of Sabah in northern Borneo. She taught English and mathe matics in a number of differ ent schools, from a large city school with 2000 students to a jungle school with few pupils — and no water and no electricity. Active for years in Girl Scout work, Helene became a Girl Guide Leader in Sabah, traveling throughout the state inspecting Girl Guide camps and schools. And, in the near by State of Brunei, she learn ed Mandarin and Malaysian dialects. Borneo is ultra-nationalis* they slither along.” tic, she says, noting that the ' She never appreciated Og-{British are there only as ad- ! densburg more than when she visors. The Malays in the !finally arrived home in {cities are in control, polifcical- 'February. \This city is loca-jly, but the minority Chinese ted in such a beautiful spot,” {have complete control of the she savs. \I’ve seen the Economy. The natives com- Rhine and the Danube and j prise 90 percent of the popu- they can’t begin to compare iation and most of them live with the beautiful St. Law-1n i the jungle, rence River. They are nothing i compared to it.” And\ thej drinking water here No Religious Tension , . , . , . In Sabah, Helene reports, good drinking water he r e ;there are many religious seems a mira-cle and luxury j Hindu, Shinto, Chris to her aftei her two yeaisjtjan, pagan. But no group lias where no such sample luxury |a ^ j o r i t y and there is no community service: scholar ship. church acrvities assist ance at the Boy?' Club, atii- vsie; sportsmanship: and abil- ir *o get s':one well with his Hi low dub members Pre’anus weiners of the Boy of the Year award were 1985-Tom Brui ert-- 1968-Billy Powers and 1967 -Tommv Harnan. Council Favors Repairs To City Dock; Project ■ Estimate Is $148,000 Journal-American Gives Library And Reference Co^e^on To University One young man, a Negro, who was also in the Peace Corps, and whom Helene knew, tried to help the natives with their meat shortage. He carefully raised chickens and took them out to one of the villages, think ing they would supply the na tives with fresh eggs — and eventually more chickens. But it was all in vain. There was a chicken in every pot that night — or soon afterward. “The na tives ate them all, almost im mediately.” Helene had trained for the Peace Corps in the midwest and had left for Maylasia from the West Coast. Outward bound, she visited Hawaii, Wake Island, Tokyo, Macao, Hongkong. Homeward bound, she visited Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Bru nei, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thai land, Nepal, Iran, Lebanon, Tur key, the Greek Island of Crete, the Greek mainland, Austria, London, Wales. She had pur chased her flight ticket home, from Maylasia to Ottawa, with the privilege of stopovers. In some places, naturally, she stayed longer than in others. {But her daily expenses averaged a mere four dollars a day She stayed only in inexpensive na tive hotels and ate native food. This she much preferred, an- how, “because the rich tourists are disgusting — they stay in expensive hotels, go out to shop and on a few tours, then back to their plush hotels. That way, they never learn about the real conditions in the countries they visit.” Reality In India Austin, Texas racial or religious tension. ! As an example of “real” con- Things Are Different Now : In that Far Eastern coun-iditions in India, Helene tells of However, the \bad things” try. as aH over Asia, the pace {the starving men, women and Helene is Keenly aware of is much slower than here, {children she saw in Calcutta. now her disillusionment^\There I learned to relax, ’; At night they were sleeping in with tridensbiire and Ameri- - Helene savs, \There if you the street. The sleeping bodies c a t e elude: first \It’s s o v e r y 1 ai’en’t doing something for .extended “as far as from quiet in Ogdensburg. And five minutes, you’re not'Greenblatt’s store to the State there are no people here m y wasting time! (Hospital. The sacred cows and age.\ And second, \There1 ' p w - *•„„„« i P ^ e were starving together, were no hippies . t e n I left; Z ' 5 « c £ f a n “ ' T her toW o flistem n g toRadio K s £ 5 The library the University campus or other- |bousing P pr0biems, dissent ™n.L°n .mistake. We just can’t afford to and reference collection of the wise disposed of. It will be es- over the war. etc.” on. It was terribly funny. Notjbe ignorant of that other half. New York Journal-American t tablished as a memorial in per-|uvcl lllL ”a1' CLV\ at all subtle. And their music jn jncjja> Helene ran into a have been given to The Uni-. petuity to the New York Jour- Something else that has was military marches. professor of Ancient Civilization There can be no question Alderman Shoen suggested ' versity of Texas, The Hearst,nal-American and its owner, {impressed Helene since her \However Radio Moscow is at tbe Sorbonne, who was hik- Another leature of're-evening about ,t. the City Dock must be that the heavy concrete slabs Corporation announced this {The Hearst Corporation. {return is the huge middle good. And we could hear Voice i^g through southeast Aria. She wi pr C G- Co be the tntatmn of the 1968 Bovs’ ■' M.m of the Year This !c-r< Man and Boy award, m unction with Boy?' Club of Am., -.,-d honors a Fcei person v.7 -1 hjs been outstanding in his sup/port of the Buys' Club move s' on a local level Previous iw-rs of this covet’d trophy ■e 1963 - G. urge H. “ Bud” 'lips: r-*K6 - W,ivn_- Lowe a-'d 1967- J. ten G Ward. These fiv r.-e gentlemen oomnrise the M .ii of year selection commit tee Member? ot 'he Order-riwr? L on? flub and the i -cai unit nt ‘he Odd Fellows will be hnn- * w-d ior tbe r ion? and out;,and- ' hr . 2 record of Community Serv ice Accepting for the Lions *' C'-.h will be A, Walter Reed '■ arn for the Odd Fellows. Ben .V.-rnIs A special presentation \.'ill be a • urded to Wadhams Hull lor f':-voptional volunteer *er ce to thr- local Boys' Llun Msgr, F uvd J. Brown. Rector and President v*.ill accept on oehaif ■v- .he students from Wadhams Hall . (class in America. \There is of America over the Singapore jfjrst encountered him in Thai- announcem.Tif and repaired.\ Mayor John F. Byr- that make up the walk on the week. . . , unhaDOV fi ne; told members of the City dock should be removed at once The gift includes a vast num- ie to witness the death nfin0 such elass at a11 in Malay*stafion- At night, we could getjjand- He was\ in his late 50’s. Council at Tour-day nisht’v by c.tv workmen, and he added, ber of clippings, more than two j a fine and venerable newspaper sia- There are the ver>’ rich Australia from 10 to 11 o’clock. {was wearing an old shirt, a pack spec;a! meeting •immediately million glossy photographic but we take eomfort in the fact “ not many of these — and It was very good. AU classical ;on his back - and carrying a T.vi? came a m r a report tr >m A.derman Curtis Kennedy fa- prints, a considerable number tbat nn f its , ai,mhle tile rest are ver-v poor, music. “gorgeous” camera, the diver. Merte Cmvvser. who voted the plan for repairs as 0f Film negatives, a complete a w t s will he nrewved oir,a My family is certainly middle Helene has high praise for the | had made an underwater ms- offered by Sargent. Webster, set of microfilms of all editions ,.,:n /., k „ .» „„ class and yet we have two ethics of the natives in Borneo. Cambodia Her Favorite Country But before reaching India, by Sargent. Webster, set of microfilms of all editions A, enr,timie t0 be used as an clas: p.-c-non was submitted and read. Crenshaw and Folley and said, of the Journal-American and its 'educational tool and as a means .radios, two TV’ sets and my \They don’t lie nor steal, and! He aiso provided sketches m the 'In the future «et fees should predecessor publications, and a furtherine the nrineiDles of mother, my sister and I each they keep their word. Doors are J area concerned. He said the be charged boats for the use of library of research and refer-1 .i ______ ... ?_ j t.2. . ;hnvA n.nr own oWtrio ra7nr ” 'alwav<! nnWlrAH Thov nrp a'i dock is pushing out and ?ugees- the dock ' ence books. t~o !haf the concrete waik? that Alderman William Herzog had Eight large vans were re- : which the New York Journal- cover the top of the dock should .another angle. He said. \There quired to transport the 250.000! dedicated •• a Hearst spokes-iL'Tor ' ’“ T - * ' turned to America! It is a be romoved. 3;-o some at 'he is no doubt that the City Dock pounds of material from New :color and m black and white man said. Chancellor Harry Ransom of- pound. uoo-r -epicure ea-e the is an asset but what will we get York Citv to Austin. v./,obt. and that ?teel piling be m return for the 5148.000 ex- Considered to be one of the u^em itv^of T ^ S v ^ i Y p O n i a n P p f P f T nst PYfpnsivp enlipftinns n f its ■e , m em p h asizg d that ^ j ^ . I * 1 C I C 1 J . American gentle people. tile famous ancient ruins ot Ang- 1 American was so completely' Helene took hundreds o ---vphat a contrast when I r e - 'kor Watt. She could hardly : •> K H— ^ .Li,™ icol slldt’s> and Plcturety in turner! fn America! Tt is a cHfJbear to leave this, her very lav- ti $ d tiv- • I tace tne river side of penditnre?\ He added that the most extensive collections of its . sal(H . r l l S a - -ea wnrzrP; Kind’ the J ournal-American's li-: nal‘ ^ r ^ A ^ r ic a n m a teria ls P o l k r d I s A b o a r d - Pern-Reported that AhU,man \^a!'a^ Hmzog brary and research files span will forra an invaluable adjunct i L lb / ^ U U d i y ate by Sargent. Webs- aPPd 1 ? Lbe,PLrI<:a r,m f . tn . pr, to the research sources already USS Gu&OSICSRRI , h a and Fukey mr he prqect plan, said Don t 24. 1966. the Journal-American s ; established on the campus for r 1 , Br ferent country than I left two arite. country. “The people are years ago. There is now such clean, they own their own land, fantastic violence — on TV and4he economy is good, and they movies, too, such as \Bonnie 'have beautiful parks.\ and Clyde • ! in Turkey, she spent a num- Wounded on the Runway iber of visit^ hcv , . f ... . . . Asked hmv she feeJs about the! Master Sergeant Raymond M.m- 7' f\ LK'rVcr.n count Mo much on the sales | a?t dav of publication There I m i camPa? .£oi{| USS Guadalcanal ( L P H - 7 ) ) iefna/ n ,^ ar' Helene admitted troy b j jtb NATO there. : p,m, nf tne JACK r.x.n- “ ua> w puuncduon. incie ilterary, social and political1, . - v . tthtmpi V aa lhat she is a little contused. “In 1 m w.-i? 5143.000 but that !ax ., is hardly a subject or person istudies includinc the Lvndon Noi£olk' Va- 'FHINLi — Yeo- R th and an fhp And she visited Izmir, formerly T r i m b e saved bv us m s Alderman J. Leo Austin said. 0f news value during the 70- ) T I h n - i n P r i L n H a i t f ' m a i1 T h i r d Class Pe'er J. Pol- Baineo> Chmese and a ‘ 0 1 '(Smyrna, a seaport in westi m Thai tirrn also something done about year period jbat is not covered ibrarv novv being built The LBj\:lard’ lS N ' snn of Mr' ;md Mrs' ,Turkey. She also, en route, vis- a'-t<-h!te.-K and this problem, we have fooled,jn this file. Clippings were tak - T * v a ] K a /merited bv tbp'Archie Pollard of ‘221 Adams think_ the United Sta es should jted Epjlesus one 0f tPe ^ jlin. m .fe J - around with it ton long now.\ en not only from the Journal-;K S A f c Bu 5 ian cities, where St. Paul Next Alderman Clifford Mon- American but also from other :ppriprai gorrices Administra- aboard the amphibious as-110™6^ 618 an aPPa n° slShf preached. Treasurer Robert YU troy made the motion that the newspapers and some maga-Y:_n \ jsault ship USS Guadalcanal in sbe encountered when s ie was a m / :rritd or; to explain -ne prnpo.^l bv Sarsrent. Webster, Zines : {fhp Atlantic Fleet Amnhibious at the Clark Air Force base! _ Crete Was A Must H-p?d? ,,f the plan. Crm.-haw and Foliev to engm- i cniun? w w o t attam Force as the US observes its haspitsil. 50 mUes north of Man-| By then, this vitally alive, in- '!.-?• nn’.menT on this -h.-. /-,h fm-m anh hf occcm The Hearst Corporation offici-; SOME CONSOLATION ,„L .j „ _____ r.‘,„ ilia — the largest Air Force trepid girl was getting closer .mg jif i ?a;o The i;r?' payment on this eer -he job for S3.ate be accsp- The Hearst Corporation offici-; - ;igtb Armed Forces Dav aporox mate project ted It Aas sec rded by Shoen. a£s said The University of Tex- / aa I? f1 . . ’ ’ hospital outside the United:and closer to home. But there wmid rm! bo due until 1969 and Alderman William Herzog as was r-‘hosen as the permanent M. McElyea, who was in the Air The Guadalcanal is one of 87 States. Helpne was there for a .was one further stop that she by tea’ time we will have an- thought that the Coast Guard repository of^ the collection be- Corps at Pear Harbor when the commands jn the Amphibious time for treatment of a broken {absolutely had to make. As announced earlier. Russ otii.m ?2'/,wi0 b-md paid up \ rioted be encouraged to eontin- cause the University has be- Japanese struck Dec. 7 1941, ForCe which has units deployed arm. \The big planes kept flying! She had received a letter from J a Mrson. Quarterback of 1 he Of- -Receipt? from the sales ‘ax ue the u?c of the dock. come an important center for I wrote the Pentagon recently to jn flje Mediterranean and Car-'in from Vietnam with the .her 15-year-old sister, Lecia, fa va Rough Riders will be the shoo'd help.'’ he added. Alderman Konm-ri, said there fhe ?tudy of 29th Century see whethei he had e,rer re- jbbean Seas, as well as off the wounded. I saw hundreds of {saying, “Don't you dare come r.mncipal speaker Jacks/on wiil Then the Mayor took over is no guarantee that the Coa-ri thnugnt. largely through the ex- .ceived his lecommended promo- na{|on's eas; coast and .n South-’boys on litters, lined lip on the'home unless you visit Crete!” h- introduced by John 'Red\ as a.r.. a-king each C .urcil Guard will pay any of the costs pansmn *tf it? library facilities . tion to sergeant. ^ asj. Asia. runway. And when f was in! Lecia is a sophomore at St. O Quinn, General Manager of menib-r. 'Does rhi- body fee-1 r ,f the repairs. during the past 10 years. Eventually lv- c-‘ ’ “ Saigon, at the beginning of mylMary’s Academy, but remark- re- Finally after several other The Lmversity of Texas has of four medals he had been The Guada canal homcported trip home fit was a week be-!ably, she has developed a pas- sugge't’on.? Alderman Mon- agreed to preserve the Journal- awarded but haa nev.r r .. t Norfolk. Va is designed to f the Tel o£fensive), the-sion for archeology and the his- troy’s resolution came up for -American collection as an ins-'before his discharge m 943. transport and load troops and s h Vietnamese soldiers look-dory of ancient civilizations, sirnnlTP.c hv mpflnc hr flssfll/ir , ... , , ) , ■ „ , ed like toy soldiers. Bui. they re;which are, of course, not m the not!” high school curriculum Bui; Le the Rider? Miss Gre’ Cup of 1963 thal Tie dock Julie pari.-d ’\ should be A C . -,-otf. and n was approved 7-1. trument of higher education. No • He aiso found out he’d never supplies by means of assault with Alderman Wallace Herzog Parl r'f >1 will be removed from (made sergeant. transport helicopters, abstaining. “ „ L Z . . . „ 7 „ ^7 * Now the contract with Sar- ^ gert. Webster, Crenshaw and Folley will have to be approved by Corporation Counsel James R. Ingram. In the final act of the meeting Mayor Byrnes named Daniel C. . J Cunningham and Eugene Fred erick? to be members of the Citv Charter Commission % BATTLE OF THE BOTTLES — If you find a bottle float ing on Lake Ontario with a post-card rolled up inside and some sand for ballast, don’t throw it away, Chances are it’s p art o f a surface currents experiment by two State University College at Oswego students, Rand Rienzo ol Rome, and Hank Phillips of Williamstown. They've set 75 bottles afloat at the mouth of the Oswego River and have five returns to date from communities to the north and east of them. Another 75 bottles will be set adrift soon to send back data which, when compared wilh wind and other meteorological data, will help the Oswego students hypothesize about lake currents. Five-Yea/ Old Boy Knocked Down By Truck On Friday : Late Friday morning a young ster, John Boyette. 5. son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Beyette of 619 New York avenue was ' struck by a Goodyear truck op erated by Terry McKee in the 590 block of the Crescent. According tn reports .he truck was proeedding north i Crescent when \the boy between two parked c into its path and was kn down. A passing motorist tr to the Hepburn Hospita he was treated by Dr Berwyn Woodman for minor injuries and then released. There were 100 Peace Corps.eia reads everything she can volunteers in the State ot Sabah (find on these subjects. Thus, her {when Helene was there. It is a j appreciation of Crete. {state the size of Georgia: popu-. So Helene stopped over tor laiion 500,000. It is a coastal {two days and visited the ruins society, she says, with lew riv-lof Knossos. She says, “I would ers and no roads. jhave liked to stay much, much The State of Sarawak is half longer. Crete is so beautiful!” again as big and it also had And, Finally Home! about 100 Peace Corps workers. Then, on to Austria, London, “This is an up-river society. On {Wales. And, at long last on the the coast there is nothing but j doorstep of 1009 Greene St and mangrove swamps. the wide-open arms of her fam- In Sabah, there was no meatjily. — that is no meat as we know | What does one do — after he, il. There are wild pigs, but they teas gone around the world? Usu- have become infected with dis- 1 ally he (she) starts all over ease. The natives eat mostly'again, along entirely different rice and fish. “There was lots roadways of the sea and sky, for VISIT ALBANY — Left to right — Daniel Herzog, Democratic Party Representative from Waddington, /Assemblyman Edward J, Keenan and Mayor Bruce Pemberton of Waddington — discussing legislative mat ters at the Capitol. of shrimp. But I don’t like shrimp,” Helene says. Strange Diet So, this girl, who made her impossible dream come true, late, besides the rice and fish, water buffalo, dog, cat, rat, snake, and frog legs. This last, so far as her taste is concerned, fall into the shrimp category. She tells of the many monkies and the enormous lizards. “Tbe Lizards are four to five feet no matter how many times one goes ‘round, there are always new places to see. And no one’s lifetime is long enough to see it all, such is the nature of our great wide, wonderful world. As for Helene, having come home from the East, she hopes to start out for the West again. She has applied for a teaching position among the Navajos in New Mexico. “When I was a little girl ” long with tongues five to six'she says. “1 wanted to grow \p I inches long. They are harmless, j to be an Indian!” And. she amis Ijusl: eat grasses. They hiss as I very simply, \I want lo help”