1-s 14 Th N.w-R.vitw, RoMburf, Ore;. Thur., Oct. 26, 1961 Higher Education Board Faces Current Major Money Shortage LIBRARY ARRIVALS Paul Gallico Selects 20 Stories; Tells How He Wrote And Sold Them KLAMATH FALLS (AP) The Oregon State Board of Higher Ed ucation had a major money short Ke on in handa today, and a recommendation before it to ask the itate Emergency Board for between $2.5 and S3 million. But the Emergency Board laid it hai less than SI million to lait it through this year and next for all state fund emergencies. The explosive increase in en rollment at the state's colleges and universities is responsible for the shortage, the Board of Higher Education meeting in commit tee session was told Monday. The number of students totaled 28.951, some 2,000 above expecta tions. And Budget Director Richard L. Collins said that if the number goes up 10 per cent more next year, the system Is going to neea, for the biennium, an extra $2,770. 124 based on current estimates of per student costs approved by the last legislature. The Finance Committee ap proved a request to the Emergen cy Board for that amount assum ing the 10 per cent increase oc curs, and for $329,223 less if the increase is only 7.8 per cent. Uni versity of Oregon President Ar thur S. Flemming said these per rntAffei were conservative. This i year's increase was IS per cent. Board Chairman wiiuam vtaisn offered these four possibilities: in creased fees for out-of-state stu dents; immediate review of the fee structure for all students; re vised administration policies; and an increased ratio of students to teachers in lower division classes. Walsh, speaking at a dinner meeting arranged by the Klamath County Chamber of Commerce, urH that leiislators provide the needed money. "We hope our enrollment prob lem pin be solved so education in Oregon will not be hurt," he said, adding, "If this takes more mon ey, let I have it." The board met in Klamath riu a ot m ftrit-hand look at Oregon Technical Institute, which the last legislature pui unaer uic board's direction, nn i rieveloDine. he said, as a special type of institution: "It will not be the Kino oi scnooi jruu will find anywhere else." New Lookingglass Minister Will Assume Pulpit Sunday y HAZIi. MARSH - The Rev. Gordon Titus, who has accepted the pastorate at the Look ingglass Community Church plans to move his family to the valley this week from thei" former home t Galice, Ore. The Rev. Mr. Tilua will take charge of the work immediately and will conduct the services on Sunday at the customary times, urns Move Mad Mr. and Mrs. Robert Post (Bet ty Jo Pillion), who were married in Lookingglass earlier in the month, re now residing in Burns. Ore., where the former has secured employment. Mrs. Velma Jacoby returned recently from a two-week visit with her sisters and families in Gregg and Payette, Idaho. Mrs. Jacoby's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Elmore of Payette, drove over recently to bring Mrs. Jacoby home. They have returned to their home in Payette. Visitors over a recent weekend In the Charles Green home includ ed their son and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Green, and three daughters of Portland and Dillard-Wintton Church Ha Activsj SchtduU Deputy Sheriff Cail and Mrs. Carnine and son were guests at the Dillard-Winaton Methodist Church Fellowship Dinner following the morning service Sunday. Carnine showed the sound film, "Pioneering Journey to Oregon," depicting the experiences of the centennial wagon train trip made in 1959. He was chief acout during the long trek west. ' Tentative plans are to hold pot luck fellowship dinners once a month at the church, according to Phebe McGuire, Winston corre spondent. Program meeting of the Wom an's Society of Christian Service for the Week of Prayer and Self Denial will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. All ladies are invited. Gift Received New carpeting has been placed in the church sanctuary, a gift from Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Fosback A runner will be placed in the aisle in the near future. Forms were completed Saturday for sidewalks approaching the building. Pouring of cement will take place by vol unteer workers the first part of the week. their son, Melvin of Portland. Daughter III Mrs. Arthur Denny and daughter Marcia went to Portland last week for a medical checkup for Mar cia who has been seriously ill the past few weeks. She is reported to UB maKing aunifltuii j iciuvcij. Mrs. Leslie Hong (Dixie Nay) of Seattle arrived recently to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nay. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Marsh have returned home following a five-day outing at Yachats. They attend ed a meeting of the board of di rectors of the WCTU Children's Farm Home in Corvallis en route to the coast. Mrs. Marsh reports that excellent progress is being made in the rebuilding of the Farm Home Chapel which was complete ly destroyed by fire early in July. Church Of Rome Is Now Ally Of Others LONDON (APV-The Church of Rome has become an ally instead of an enemy, and has begun to say "sorry" to other denomina tions, the former Archbishop of Canterbury aaid Tuesday. Lord Fisher of Lambeth, for mer primate of the Church of England, told the British Council of Churches: "That is a most stupendous change, a complete new chapter tn world history as well as in Christian history." Lord Fisher ssid the trouble with politicians was thst by their calling they were incapable of saying they were sorry. "They have to prove they are right all the time. But salvation begins for groups of people only when they are able to say they are sorry, and that they were part ly wrong," he said. "The Church of Rome has begun to say that, and so have we all. CARD PARTY SIT The Lookingglasa Grange will hold a card party at the Grange hall at S p.m. Friday. There will be prises and refreshments. The public is invited. . Glide Student Capptd Mr. and Mra. G. W. McClure of Idleyld Park, accompanied by their son, Lauren, a atudent at Oregon State University, attended the cap ping ceremonies of their daughter. Marijean, at the University of Ore gon Nursing School at Portland re cently, reports Mrs. Arthur Selby, Glide correspondent. Miss McCiure. a 1960 grsduate of Glide High School, Is in her sec ond year at the nursing school. There were 99 student nurses capped at the ceremony, many of them from other states. At an elec tion of class officers following the ceremony, Marijean was elected treasurer. "Further Confessions of Story Writer" might be called Paul Gal ileo's triple-threat book, for it is really three books in one. First, the author has made a selection of 20 of his favorite stor ies, old and new, which is sure to contain some of your favorites, too. Then, he tells how he wrote each story and how he sold it a wealth of biographical material, plus the shared wisdom and writ ing experience of one of America's most successful writers. "Further Confessions of a Story Writer" is a book to be read and reread by everyone interested in the short story, whether he is the appreciative reader or the striving craftsman. Norah Lofts comes to us once more with her book, "The House at Old Vine." Readers who thrilled to the high drama of "Bless This House" and "The Town House" know her extraordinary gift of bringing to vibrant life the whole pageant of life and death in old England; this magnificent novel should win her many new readers as well. "The House at Old Vine" is an historical novel of 16th-century England, set in a time of great religious, political and econ omic ferment. It tells of the de- cendants of Martin Reed, a serf who rose from bondage to become a man of property, and of chang ing fortunes in violent times. Homesteaders' Story "The Desert Was Home , the adventures and tribulations of a desert homesteader is written by Elirabetn W. Crorer Campbell. The author, an accredited and trained archaeologist, turns away from the vanished ages of man to tell her own personal experiences on the desert. The result is a warm and human document that will delight the reader. This is the story of the suthor and her desperately ill husband, who as a last hope, pitched their tent at Twenty-nine Palms on the California desert when it was only, unnneand-oasIS. in spue ui uie heat, discomfort and appalling lonliness. they found healing in the I land. They filed on a desert home 1 stead, built their home with their two hands, and were among some I of the first discoverers of a new and satisfying way of life. I Now Arrivals I Other new arrivals at the library ; are: ( Adult Non-Fiction: Storm Over .Laos, Sisouk Champassak; Trigo- nometry, Norman Crowder; 100 Years and Millions of Boys, Wil liam Edwin Hall; Mathematics in I the Making, Lancelot Hogben; The Horizon Book of the Renaissance (Stewart Collection), Horizen (Per.); Strategic Air Command, Mel Hunter; The Sea Was Kind, Albert Klestadt; Man and Dolphin. John C. Lilly; The Road Past Mandalay, John Masters; I Found God in Soviet Russia, John Noble; Hope for South America, Alan Pa- ton: The French Revolution, Georges Pernoud: The Complete Book of Lilies, Frederick Rock well; You Can Trust the Com munists (. . .to do Exactly What They Say!). Dr. Fred Sen wan; Mirror of Canada, (Stewart Col lection), Sylvia Seeley; Sam Sneed on Golf, Sam Snead; Science and Government, Sir Charles Snow; Project Vanguard, Kurt Stehling;' : Assault on tne unknown, waiter Sullivaa; The Lightning Book, Pe ter ViemeUter. I Adult Fiction: Across the Water, i Michael Campbell; Voltalr! Vol- tair!. Guy Endore: More Damn, Tourists. Steve Frazee; Wait for) ilhe Wedding, Celia Fremlin; Spare Time for Murder, John Gale; Pilgrimage: The Book of the People, Zcnna Henderson; The Last of the Southern Winds, David Loovis; Journey Into the Blue, Gustav Rab; The Small Room, May Sarton; The Single Secret, j Ted Savory; Chairman of the Bor ed, Edward Streeter; The Court ship of Eddie's Father, Mark Toby. Young Moderns Hon Fiction: My Life in Baseball, Tyrus Cobb. Juvenile Non-Fiction: Let's Visit Brazil, John Caldwell: Fur Junior Doctors Only, Helen Fletcher; Wild Ways, Ross liutchins: Chemistry for Children, Virginia Mullin: Men at Work in the Great Plains States. Harry Rubicam; The Red Schoendienst Story, Gene Schoor. Juvenile Fiction: Theras and his Town, Caroline Snedeker; Andy Finds a Way, Jesse Stuart. Easy Books: Let's Go to- the Circus, Tony Palazzo; Find Out by Touching, Paul Showers; Timmy Needs a Thinking Cap. Charlotte ' Steiner; Belling the Tiger, Mary (S.) Stolz. Mark Says Railroad1 Boxcars Are Short SALEM (AP) There is a criti cal shortage of railroad boxcars in Western lumber areas. Gov. Mark O. Hatfield said in a tele gram recently to the Interstate Commerce Commission. I He blamed Eastern railroads for the shortage. ; The governor's message to Ev erett Hutchinson, ICC chairman,! said the shortage is causing hard-! ships. I He said the major need is for wide and double door boxcars. Those cars owned by Western rail roads, the governor said he had been advised, are being held in tho East in violation of ICC rules. One of the reasons, he said, is thst this enables Eastern roads to put off repairing their own cars. He said the ICC ought to investi gate misuse of Western equipment i and order return of care needed in the West. Forester Meet To Hear Panel On Fire Control A panel discussion on modern fire control procedures will high light a meeting of the Umpqua chapter of the Society of Ameri can Foresters Thursday night in the Umpqua Hotel. Forest Service, Douglas Forest Protective Association and indus try representatives will participate in the panel. Don Smith, Steamboat, assistant ranger for the North Umpqua Dis trict of the Umpqua National For est, will serve as moderator. Dis cussion will center on the use of borate in fire control but will also -include other features of fire fight-1 ing, cnapier umccrs aaiu. The evening's activities Include a social hour at 6:30 p.m., dinner at 7:30 p.m. and the panel discus sion following the dinner. Births Forest Clon Hospital BROWN To Mr. and Mrs. Rob ert Brown, Glendale, Oct. 16, a daughter, Debra Kay; weight 8 pounds S ounces. WHITE To Mr. and Mrs. Wil bur White, Myrtle Creek, Oct. 18. a daughter, Sylvia Lee; weight 8. pounds 4l4 ounces. i HUFFMAN To Mr. and Mrs. Barney Huffman, Mrytle Creek, Oct. 21. a son. Henry Ray; weight 7 pounds 10 ounces. KLEN'KE To Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Klenke, Canyonville, Oct. 22, a daughter, Katherine Ellen; weight 4 pounds 9 ounces. WE FEATURE SWIFT'S BEEF 3 SAVE THIS ADC ROSEBURC MEAT CO. 316 N. E. Winchester . OR 3-5433 . At the Triangle Hunter Attention! Lot Us Cut Up Your Elk! Swift's Lockor BEEF Youaf Stoen), Hoiforottes. 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