Article clipped from Lubbock Avalanche Journal

Texas politicians who - think they have a date with destiny better check with their young people first,Texas youth of college and high school age generally are pretty unhappy with the way old line Democratic and RepublicanThey may not he old enough to vote, according to Texas law, but the 1968 Presidential election proved they can provide plenty of campaign power if they support a candidate.“We feel left out,”, says a campus leader, “Like a storeployes then loudly proclaims it is integrated,“The youth of Texas need to be integrated into the major political parlies.”Numerous college age youths paid their own way or hitchhiked to other states to help theFORMER TEXAN PREDICTSpitoaixtlitoVItoleslt;1 . | ' ! ' ' •• • * • 4 •Organized Crime4BreakingYearsMay RequireWASHINGTON (UPI1 -Assistant Attorney General Will R. Wilson, chief of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, predicted Wednesday the nation could break the back” of organized crime in five to 10 years.“If we are able to keep the public support and the budgetary support that we now have and ,if ive don’t have some national emergency to divert attention, vve can break the rackets—and we will break tbem,” Wilson said.. Wilson told a meeting of the National Association of Attorneys General that “strike forces,” nowcessfully in 11 cities against the atafia, were the vehicle to break the back of the rackets , J. . in a minimum of five and a*miximum of 10 years.”‘ Infiltrate Government . ?Of the members of the Cosathe FBI, Internal Revenue i ized bv the 1968 vSafe Streetswfort\vh%•elt;ti1!hiirService and the Narcotics Bureau. Recent indictments in the Newark, N.J., area resulted from investigations by a strike force there.William S. Lynch, chief of the Justice Department's Organized Crime Section, said wire tapping and “bugging,” author-Act, were valuable tools of strike forces.As state attorneys general.” said Lynch, “Those of you who already have similar wire tap tools, I’d say already have a leg up on the problem. Those who don’t, I’d say, you should work for these tools.”TO GARBAGE WOESAlcohol May Be AnswerBy PALL B. CAMPBELL jby hydrolizing cellulose, a LONDON (UPll -- Garbage, major constituent of domes!i • now being used sue- garbage everywhere and thelwastes, which, with additionaltinoKisosissbS’S't:tlhIIRostra, Wilson said, They aredefiance ofan open aenance or ourgovernment, our l$ws, ourprinciples, our values. Wecannot allow them to continue. l£ is up to all of us to speed the day when we can rid our cities o( this problem.”Wilson, a onetime attorney general of Texas, said Mafia members infiltrate government aod u:e their positions to try to nullify law enforcement efforts afcainst organized crime./‘Part of your fight, always, isf to clean out the government you’re working with,” saidproblem facing municipal authorities and governments the world over is what to do with it.A British researcher says he believes he has the answer. Turn the garbage into alcohol.Nowhere more than in Britain is the problem of wasteprocessing, will produce ethyl alcohol.Kthyl alcohol has many us^sboth in manufacturing processes ami in their end products.Ollulosp To SugarCellulose is found chiefly intlatiflt;ttl8(paper and vegetable wastes.I ,Boiled with hydroeholoric acid ^ it is converted fairly simply1disposal viewed with deepconcern by authorities. The [into sugar, which again can hej average British town-dwelling I processed by fermentation tofamily produces up to two tons of garbage each year.produce ethyl alcohol. The process wasused innao.Some is dumped, but refuse America during Die war years,grounds up and down the to provide alcohol for warcountry are already overflow-ing. Some is incinerated, but at a cost of about $16 per ton - aDoindustries. But not as simply as by Porteous’ process. 3 n ■ al peacetime conditions, the con-heavy burden on the taxpayer version was not economicallyfor a non-productive process. More Economical MethodDr. Andrew Porteous,vj.U1rl nil A baa L n Jrt 3 ll* Afeasible.However, Porteous said his;L !process promises to double thelecturer at the University of j alcohol output, and reduce the *
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Lubbock Avalanche Journal

Lubbock, Texas, US

Thu, Feb 05, 1970

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Madison H.

NA, 25 May 2023

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