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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1950)
Kimbrell, Carr 4 Named Chcirmen At OEA Meeting PORT.'-AND, April 6-t.?-Wal-lac MeC'rae, superintendent of the Pendleton schools, was elected president of the Oregon Education association at the close of the an nual convention here. Mrs. Mabel Winston. Ashland, registrar at Southern Oreson Col lege of Education, was elected vice . president. New trustees are: Margaret Per ry, Hillsboro; Irwin Juilfs. Eugene; Wilfred Burgess. Pnneville; Gil bert Shearer, West Linn. Henry Teti, lleppner, was reelected. Chairman of OEA sub-divisions and affiliates are: Foreign language section D. M. Dougherty. University of Oregon, and May McLellan, Portland; 411 clubs Pauline Saufeldt. Vt. An gel; Oregon Arts association Leonard Kimbrell and Margaret Carr, Roscburg, Oregon Council of Geography Teachers Mrs. Irene Rabbal, Silverton; county unit pres idents Glen Linn, Mcdiord; social studies Mrs. Fern Terrill. Grants Pass: Oregon Business Education association Joe Updegraff, Baker; Library Section Jane Olson. Cor vallis; Oregon Association of Child hood Education Miss Vera Coul ter, Oregon City; journalism sec tionMrs. Mercedes Paul, New berg; language arts Mrs. Ellen Wiishire. Lebanon; science sec lion Arthur Fryer, McMinnville. Regional directors for classroom teacher groups are: Elsie Tucker, Corvallis; Eve Burkhalter, Klam ath Falls; Mae Butler. John Day; Mrs. J. J. Simmons. Wheeler coun ty; Willis Williams, Portland. , . ... " "y-Fa mill I ill " sin 11 SPOKANE, April & -JJP) The United States needs the moral .strength of England more than that country needs our money, the dean of New York University's School of Education told an audience of educators here. Dr. Ernest 0. Melby addressed the first session of the Inland Em pire Education association, it tended by S.OuO teachers. He said America couldn t have a strong roreign policy until the American people have the informa tion, sympathy and insight to un derstand prohlems of other nations. Communism is an idea, he said, and cannot be fought with witch INK4 Trlrphott) nriTU OF A HIPPO HFRD When nature's cycle it weather la dlwuptsd. man builds dam, constructa "ritttun projecu and calls on scientists tor rsio-matlna experiment. But lower creatures are helplea. oelore the whims o( clouds and wind and neat In me Rift Valley of Tanganyika Territory. Africa, lie Lake Rukwa. where lite became a desperat atruggli for a herd of hippopotami when. lor two years, the rains didn't fall and the lake a 1 feet o water gradually dried. Here, trapped In muddy ooae. the living hippos huddle with dead mates, too weak to struggl; trom the muddy trap. The ram came una winter and covered the skeletons of the beaau. Easter, Thanksgiving Both Set Next Sunday MADRAS, April 6 -P It j riding, calf roping, bulldogging and will be Easter at the Warm Springs Indian reservation near here next Sunday, and Thanks giving, too. The warm Springs Indians will hold their annual spring root fes tival the time of Thanksgiving to the Great Spirit for natural bounties. Christian rites will ac company the tribal ceremonies. Spnrt events invlucing bronco boxing will be held Friday and Saturday. The festival proper comes Sunday. Tribal leaders will offers pray ers, some in Christian form, af ter which the tribal drums will start and the Indians will repeat ancient chants. The root feast, to which scores of w hite friends have been. invited, will follow. U. S. Needs England's Moral Strength, Dean Says hunts, money or war. "You can't kill an idea with I gun," ha aaid. "It is the job of education to make democracy work." The need for improved methods of teaching children to read was stressed by Pr. Paul Witty, dean of education at Northwestern uni versity. "We need more teaching of read ing after the first, and second grades," he said. "It seems to be a rather hope less undertaking to try to teach people to enjoy the great books when the people do not have the ability to read," he said. Thur., April 6, 1950 The Nawi-Ravltw, Ketaburg, Ore. 13 Decision On Killing Elk Reversed By Jury Navy's 'Flying Pancake' No Mystery To Them BRIDGEPORT, Conn., April . (.pi No stranger to hundreds of plane watchers here, is the plane claimed by the United States News and World magazine report this week as the link between conven tional aircraft and the mysterious flying saucers. The Bridgeport Post today identified it as one designed. constructed and test flown during the war by the Chance Vought aircraft division of the United Air craft Corp., in Stratford, now located in Dallas, Texas. Called the XF5U-1 and referred to by its constructors as the "Flying Pan jcake." The plane, the only one i built, was the result of efforts by Charles H. Zimmerman, I designer I for the Chance Vought company. I It has been reported that the . model developed in Stratford is inow in storage at Langley Field, Va. ! Zimmerman originally designed jthe plane in 1933, built it in 1842 land revealed it to the Bridgeport public in 1H47. LA GRANDE, April .-)-Two I. add canyon ranchers, who re fused to yield to a justice court conviction on killing elk out of sea son, won vindication Wednesday. A circuit court jury made up mostly of farmera upheld Gene Stockhoff and Heber Glenn in their appeal. It took the jury only 20 minutea to reach agreement. The men were fined $100 each In justice court last September on charges they killed elk out of lea son. In their defense then they argued the elk had been damaging their crops and that they had been unable to get adequate protection from the state game commission. The fines were suspended pend ing their appeal to circuit court. There, they introduced a surprise defense, arguing that the elk on which the case was based was killed Inside the limits of a permit area approved by the game com mission for Stockhoff. But beyond that. Defense Attor ney David Silven of Baker argued the ranchers were justified in kill, ing elk in defense of their crops. OSC DEAN UO STUDENT EUGENE, April S. (.It Tha dean of men of Oregon State col lege is a student at the University of Oregon. Dean Dan Poling registered for nn.hnur ! Ihioa H u.k -Monday, Wednesday and Friday ; )0e J PqqJ Cq.-, n itiiHit, fnr hi, Anrtnrmtm in : ww wwn VI III tVVI education. AdvrtlMmnt The first ice plant in th U.S. was at New Orleans. Explosion, Fire Destroy Navy's Big Flying Boat HONOLULU, April The navy's big flying boat the Marshall Mars exploded Wednesday and burned a mile off Pearl Harbor but seven crewmen aboard escaped un- I hurt There were no passengers. The flying boat, smoking as it turned hack toward Keehi lagoon 'of the Honolulu airport, blew up shortly after it made a forced land-1 gine caught fire soon after the ing. ! takeoff on a three-hour test flight. Watchers said one engine was 'The Plane then was about 1.000 feet afire as the big boat setlled down, j'" " Lt. Cmdr. Glenn E. Simmons.! Dallas, Tex., the pilot, said he and the six crew members jumped clear in Mae Wests and two life rafts immediately after the landing. They were clear when the flying boat exploded and vanished into the sea. The explosion came about 10 minutes after the landing. Simmons reported the No. 3 en- HEATILATORS for efficient, smokeless fireplaces PAGE LUMBER & FUEL 164 E. 2nd Ave. S. Phone 242 BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE On North Umpquo Averoge 1 ocrti. Fine soil, dear ond Itvtl. Ntor Lone Rock 560' pro posed bridge. 5-minute walk to Lone Rock Super Morktt, Ideal fishing and hunting stream. 1 milt to school , , . but accommodations. 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