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- , . t>,erhaps up to $4 billion, many of its people are poor.And
WOE-ld be earmarked for the because many of its people are
re~on' in years to come.
poor, the region in turn is poor.
-.Ap~achia, of course, would Thus, the Administration!.s bil
s~re
- and Frances
L ew ine, whom I think are p ra ctica lly twins; M a rie Smith of the Post; Isabelle
Shelton of the Star; Eleanor P o llock of the Philadelphia Bulletin; and Nan
Robertson, who w rote such good color s to rie s in the New Y o rk T im es about
- .
But, now we can se e equally bold p ioneers of today l earning to
work the forests of the Cumberland area -- learning to process
your timber and turn it into many wood products to i mp rove
the daily life of the people of. your state and the nation.
Timber
- and
no youngster to go unschooled.
There are those of you here today who remember
Franklin Roosevelt's sad recounting of the one-third of our
nation who were ill-clad, ill-housed, and ill-fed. Today, we
are still shamed by the one-fifth of our citiz ens who live
- was dedicated in this ve r y t own by one of the e reat women of our
nation -- M rs . Eleanor R oosevelt. On January 28, 1938 -- twenty-fi ve
years a go - - M rs . Roosevelt stood near this very spot to be introduced
by a bri 3ht young hi3h school s t udent