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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1956)
it ROSEBURG LUMBER CO. PLYWUUU uiy. Proposed Teacher Salary Scale Discussed By Board Alt h ttory n pego 1. ration job compared to a class District rales well up in the? stair in I H.r. hno i.m. R.w.huro 1 roon li'her' responsibility. lop salaries paid, but is in the mid- classroom teacher might win a The salary differentials, (or ex- ,"" '"Ung salaries. S52S raise in a year ample, would range from 2 peri The figures led Irooch to corn- He hat had IS years' rxoerienre- ' cenl ",r 'or heild ''"rier over ; fnenl that some of the proposed .!. .. IL iik l.Vr t. hff two other teachers to 180 per increases miSht be applied to some S. mas'er. deVr lie, now "s,"rt "P.n.endent. of the lower stations. -I cant see earamiSSMa vea7' 'h'r upervisors. principals. ! the- top guy. getting ill the $22,- I ITr: ! . . " - " between those two." he said Lr.L ,.J!nLy.-.'V PrnU!e ,n h" h" '"H The board requested Deller to pre- SliTf- f- .7fle, . urrd ,0 " r"1,,v ""Ponwt of pe actual salaries which admin i years ago . he wTe.rnmf 975 , p0""0,, '"""" ou,d " "d hould U,e I The increment of Vl2S annJallv for d'(f,'red wilh he;nt?w schedule be put into effect, u.. nh h .H Vh v.,V. 7 committee. He said that a specific and the discussion ended there. annual raise to the nreseni time b shuld command a specific The board also viewed a pro brought hinf ud to his oresent sTl' s"'r' and the man should be, posed salary schedule for seer, ar? of 950 found wh0 can fl" lhe Jb. He was lanes hired in the district. The i. , , , - ..backed bv Wavne Crooch. but 'discussion lasled only a few mm- The new salary schedule would chairman Harold Hovt said the dif-1 utes. with no decision reached. The grant increments of a flat S150 a ferentials figured on extras prob-1 schedule would put school Kecre year alter 4 years experience, in My would prove workable. Itaries on salaries comparable to to put this teacher on the 15th rung The main argument over admin- those in private business as relal of the proposed salary ladder would , i5lralors' salaner was that a rela-1 ed to work being done, l!" ne would cntUled to,tlvev mexpenenced administrator! Eugent Man To Head Goodwill Industries ELGENK if Ira Stewart of Fugene will head the Kugene Branch of the Goodwill Industries of Oregon which has been organ ized here. The organization, which pro vides employment tor handi capped persons, plans to collect repairable clothing and household Hems here and ship them to Fort land for repair. The items then will be returned for sale at a examined snow in the northern Kugene Goodwill store operated district Tuesday morning and Dy the organization s workers. found the radioactive count to Eugene residents may eventual- have increased greatly, from 180 ly sponsor a workshop here so re- counts per liter per minute to pairs can be made localb'. 1.237. Fri.t Dec. 21. 1956 Th. Ntwi-Rtviw. Rotcburg, Ort. 3 Report Says Russians : Exploded Nuclear Bomb M1GATA. Japan iiP A pro-i fessor of Nugata I niversilv, in northern Japan, said Thursday Kussia may have exploded a nu clear bomb about Dec. 14 in some part of the Soviet I'nion. Dr. Hironobu Watanage said he PATRONIZE NEWS HSVIIW ADVERTISERS Roseburg Stores 'J TONITE Tell Your Store You Saw It In The Newspaper ,so. mis year, wun a iw raise miBh. k. drawin about the same next school year. 1 pay as a classroom teacher under : WINNERS Employees of Roseburg Lumber Co. are con gratulated after winning a company safety slogan contest. Left to right ore: John Anderson, foreman ond safety director of plywood plant number one; Olen Jones ond John Buie, the two winners; and Cliff Pearson, production manager of the company. (Photo-Lob). Top Hungarian Labor Head Said Released From Jail Klamath Indians Don't Want End To Control SAI.KM i A group of Klam-I ath Indians Wednesday told the governor's natural resources com-' miltee it would be wrong to end abruptly federal control over the By ENORE BUDAPEST i MARTON I transfer workers to One of Buda- mines. Nepszabadsag. the the That would give him a salary of him. S6.45, as high as the committees, Supt. M. C. Deller pointed out! scneauie goes, ine S24 is the dil- that teachers normally work Sl terence between the salary he months a vear, while principals would be getting under the new ; work U months. A high-paid teach schedule and the one he's actually er might actually be drawing as geuing now under the old one. i much per working month Thursday night. School Director principal. Dudley Walton commented: "It! Lroocn took issue wilh the report i Klamath Reservation. would be an increase on an in-1 in one respect. The committee ( Boyd Jackson, principal spokes-1 crease." The statement was made Quoted "The Atlantic." a maga-man for Ihe Indians, said the at a school board meeting. zine. saying that skilled laborers I scheduled August, 1958, termina- Walton contended in the discus-1 take home larger pay checks than t,0n date was too soon. ; sion that there are only two "jusli- teachers. I e said that termination too fications" for such raises as are I Crooch said that a teacher aver-1 early would endanger tha re contemplated by an eight-member ' ages 70 less working days a year i sources of the area, Indians, he, committee of the Roseburg Educa-'than does a laborer, although Del-Uaid. might have to sell their tion Assn. , ler pointed out that young teach-1 lands and timber at too low a One, he said, would be proof that era are required to attend summer . price. Cutting might menace the the cost of living has risen so fast school for the first few years of I Klamath Basin watershed, he that the raises would be needed ! teaching. i added. to keep teachers at their former Crooch also said that the entire Other SDokesmen reviewed the roal level of living. The other would be I $22.0j6 increase for teachers would often-discussed nlan for govern- Hun- "competition" wilh other school ! Ro to those with more experience. ; ment purchase of the land and re- VBISHEID'S fflfflM pest's top labor leaders, arrested ganan Communist Party organ. I districts in hiring competent teach- Later, Deller read statistics which payment to the Indians over last week by the government of said three provincial factories had Premier Janot Kadar, was report-1 returned 170 former miners to the ed Friday to have been released ! pits. from jail. But the No. 1 . man in I Both newspapers published a the Central Workers' Council ap- number of police reports announc-1 fair today. parently still was held by the Ka- ing the arrests of civilians for j living and dar regime. ; hiding firearms. One report said But in referring to the present salary schedule, he added that "if it was fair three years ago, it is provided the cost ol competition factors showed that the Roseburg School long period of time. A reliable informant said San- five youths 14 to 17 years old had dor Ban, vice chairman of the t been arrested in Feher, western council, bad been freed and turned to his job in the Bejolannis electrical equipment plant. The source said Bari was promptly elected chairman of the plant workers' council when he went bark to work. The arrest of Bari and Sandor Racz. council chairman, touched off several days of strikes by Budapest factory workers. The two officials were seized by Hun garian police after they agreed to meet with representatives of the Kadar government to discuss a two-day general strike called by the council. After their arrests thousands of Budapest workers staged new sit down strikes and declared they 'would remain idle until the two were released. Most workers now have returned to their jobs but factory production has been cut drastically by coal and power shortages. To ease the fuel shortage, some industrial plants have started to Christian Church Choir Schedules Christmas Concert The choir of the Roseburg First Christian Church if presenting its annual Christmas concert Sunday evening, Dec. 23, at 7:30 p.m. It will be under the direction of Clar ence Trued. The program it ai follows: Pteludc, "T Dtum Laudtmus" . . CliuMmann Huth Tnwd Proe4Hdnl O Cnmr All Yt Faithful Choir Invocation Th B. Newell Mnrfan Today, TYrm to Hi tiling: ChrUliantcn Lnotr Chmtma Morn Lna Pool Glorr To Cod In Th Htgheal Pergoleai Choir O Holy Nifht Adam Pii- Noit PrveiAua Child, So Sweetly Bteepinf Trued Choir Glona In aUrelaU Old En ft Melody The Youtn cnoir Bethlehem Beverly Baxter Silent Nifht (iruber - Swift The Youth Choir Mnrrli Kelley and Beverly Baxter fltar Candle Monk Kellv Sweet Little Ju Roy MarGimaey Kirk Wirick Ontr a Child in a Manirr Oeibel Jeanne una rrn Moort Wonderful Tiding. Hallelujah Hungary, and accused of hiding two submachineguns, two rifles and ammunition. & -l) A bbvhbhbV 4MK Sot ATTENDS SCHOOL Charlie Schick, Co. D, 186th Infantry, 4 1st Division, Rose burg National Guard unit, will take over duties as re connaissance ond training sergeant with the unit. Sgt. Schick recently returned from a four-month service school ot Ft. Benning, Go. Six Persons Die In Home Blaze DLXUTH, Minn. Six per- Wiu j sons a mother and five of her six small daughters died early Friday in a residence fire which started when a space healer ex ploded, spreading !1 a m i n g oil throughout the dining room. The mother died in a futile at- Bowkr ! tpmpt to rescue her daughters. ; ine latner ana me couple s oldest daughter. b. escaped along wilh the children's paternal grand- mother, who was seriously ! burned. I Victims were Mrs. Txila Clark, i 33. and her daughters Ruth, 6; Trued , Claudia. 9: Lorraine 10; Mary. l- r. . '12; and Shirley, 14. Beautiful Saviour Old Cruadr Hymn conn., carol and Sharon ! William Clark, a railroad work Frmarki and Off.rtorv pr. was taken to a hospital in KSSr,TW"r .d.W shock. Hi, mother Mrs. Choir i Bessie Kadunce. 65. also nospit- Following the concert the mem-'allied, suffered serious burns hers of the Kum-Join-U Bible 'about her face and arms, as well class will be hosts at a coffee hour. ' as shock. All those attending the concert are i Glorida. the daughter who invited to this. The evening concert 1 escaped in her night. clothing, was is open to the general public. not burned. can't be proven, the present sal ary schedule was adopted three years ago, although modified some since then. Director Darlev Ware pointed out that the district already has a heavy tax burden and to put the new schedule into effect would mean additional taxation. The provisions for new adminis trators' salaries arte tied in with the schedule in relation to what the committee apparently believes to be importance of the adminis- ALL BARBER SHOPS WILL BE OPEN MONDAY, DECEMBER 24 Local 902 ILZ T&nerson V ; CONSOLE MODEL M MEASURE w 00 adaa ! $ V New Aluminiaed glare-free Picture Tube: Filter gloss prevent oil glare r & i i i , y W rranr sjiasa is rcmavooie ror easy J cleoning. ' J 0 Static-free sound System J 9 Built-in Antenna with provision for one outside. y Revolutionary Now "Futuro" Chastis coils ot V little oi holt ot much to oporato. Thit cabinet y it deiianed to blend wit mohogany, blondo ond w walnut furniture. 9 ; i V '- '-w K - s .2 Only $3.50 a Week Buy Now . Pay in '57 . . . whtn you purchase this POLISHED BRASS CURTAIN SCREEN .PIECE FIREPLACE ENSEMBLE COMPLfTF WITH HtARTH BRUSH AND POKf I ' II afT . .iirMlfaW H nWl It fM L i'H . i Jim rv--"-- lrrIi'ea!nJllalf , . 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