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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1962)
EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Tuesday, May 1, 1962 Page 11B Eugene Educational Plan Past, Future Discussed Past work and future plans were discussed Monday night at a meeting of the Eugene Project Lay Advisory Committee. The committee is composed of Eugene citizens who are help ing Eugene Public School faculty anl staff members carry out the Eugene Project, an overall educational plan that will intro duce new methods in the classrooms. Mrs. John Stafford, chairman of the group's educational program committee, gave a report on the committee's work and recommendations. Other reports were given by Virgil Cameron, I finance committee; Dick Wil- Meeting Set By Railroad Brotherhood Several national leaders of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen will be in Eugene Wednesday evening to discuss several points of the railroad work rules dispute. The meeting will be at the Eugene Labor Temple, 7:30 p.m. standard, 8:30 daylight, and all interested persons are invited. The BLF and E has invited representatives of all the rail road unions to be present. The BLF and E is an 80,000 member rail union and is one of the five operating unir.ns in volved in a dispute with the na tion's major rail corporations. At issue is so-called "feather bedding." The union has re jected the report of a presiden tial commission that examined the dispute over such things as cutting down the number of firemen on train crews. Financial NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Selected List Reported by Harris, Upham St Co. 5-1-62 Alleghany 10H Corn Prod 56ti All Ludlum 41'4 Crown Zel 521-'. Al Chemical 44i Crucible 18H Al Chalmers 18V, Curt Wrlgh 16'i Alcoa 1H Deere 4Bi Allied Stres 5sm Disney 34H Almnm Ltd 23 Douglas 26V, Amerada 110H Dow 54V, Am Airline 19H Dresser 28'-j Am Can 44", DuPont 235. Am Cynmd 46i Eastrn Alrl 23V, A El Power 67V, ' Eastman 109v AMP 294 El Paso 22H Am M Clmx 32Va Erie 'Vi Am Motors 16-U P'" Chart 46l Am Nat Gas 50, Ford 96Va Am T at T 124 ru'hu' 24,, Am Tobacco 38-", Gen Dynam 3H Am Viscose. 56H Ken Elec 70 Ampex 1414 Gen Food 841,4 Anaconda 44H en ",to" Armco 58,k G,n Tel J3 aZIIv en Tire W Atchison 24i Ga Pac 49J, Avco 24Vi Bal Ohio 2R'-j Beckman 108 Bendlx 63H Beth Steel 39i Boeing 47 Brg Warner 4P Goodyear 41V, Grace 77V, Gt Northrn 41-v, Greyhound 27a, Gulf Oil 401, Homestake 46 How Sound 13V, E...".11. J. Ideal Cem 24 Burnngtor. c , , 40v4 Burroughs 427a t b M 462 Campbell 108' , Hlirv 521jl i .' fn ,;l7 Intl Nickel 761,, Caterpillar 35i , p 33 Celanese 41M, , TeliTel 4,14 r.rr-OeP Johns Manv SIM, 9.i"n! t., l. JonesfcUu 5814 Ches & Ohio 5J Kllsr Alum 32v, yglr 55,. Kennecott 76H Cities Sve 53', Kerr McGee 36', Colo Fuel 12' , Lmon noa, Colum Gas 28'. Lockheed 44'4 ContCan W torlllard 54 Cont Oil 541, The following bid and asked quo tatlona from the National Assn. of Securities Dealers do not represent actual transactions. They are a guide to the range within which these securities could have been bought or fold at the time of com pilation. BID ASK Albertsone 14 lJa Arden Farm, Com 15-H lfi;,4 Bank of Amer 5l-a 54i, Cas. Nat. Gas H'-i l.M, Big "C" Stores 3:1, 4?, Cascade Ply 32 Consol Ftways ll'4 12', Equltahle S i L 41 44 First Natl 60 64'1 Fred Meyer lit 12S Hyster. Com 23V, 15.14 Jantien, Com 29V, 32, i Kaiser Steel 24i, 27'4 I Koehrlng ! lli. j Morrlson-Knud 321, 3414 N. W. Nat. Gal 32i 3' I Oregon Met IV4 Is 1 Psc Intmtn Exp 124 13H PP It L, Com 261, 28', 1 Pope It Talbott 24 26", Port Gen Elec 26" 4 Port Trans Com tH 11 Seattle First Nafl . 6714 70", Thrifty Drug 39", 4214 Tollvcraft SV, 6 United Pacific 3614 39'4 V. S. Nafl Bank 681, 73'4 Warren Bros 23 2514 Wash. Nat. Gas 3514 37H West Coast Tel 394 42'4 West Nat. Gas 14 1S'4 Weyerhaeuser 311 33Mi Sub Ceremony Set WASHINGTON (ITD Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy will chris ten the new nuclear submarine Lafayette at the Electric Boat Co. shipyard in Groton, Conn., on May 8. P flt" 1 ii i i in i inun i in s mt pna - Lsafe- liams legislative committee, and Mrs. Carl Webb, public informa tion committee. Lee P. Bishop, chairman of the Eugene School Board, gave a report on a recent trip to Chi cago and St. Louis, to inspect schools there. Several members of the Lay Advisory Committee made the trip. Millard Z. Pond, superinten dent of Eugene Public Schools, said visits to schools that are carrying out recent develop ments in education was an im portant aspect of the Eugene Project. Officals of the Fund for the Advancement of Educa tion, in making a grant to the school system, stressed this point, he said. Lloyd F. Millhollen, assistant superintendent, discussed work shops scheduled for this sum mer, to plan for the Eugene Project. About 50 per cent of the teachers in the system will take part in the workshops, he said. Mrs. Webb showed a slide presentation, "Teaching Re sources." The slides show scenes from the Eugene Public Schools, including a number of new tech niques recently developed. Reports f ' DOW JONES CLOSING AVERAGES 30 Industrials 671.24, up 5:91 20 Ralls 140.16, up 1.68 15 Utilities 125.19, down 1.77 Volume 5,100,000 Mack 39f, Sand Imp 12V, Magnavox 43'4 Schenley 2134 Martin 21", Sears 8114 McDcrmott 261, Shell T 4T 1714 MOM 41V, Sinclair 36V, Minn Mfg 6314 Socony SUt Monsanto 43Vj South Co. 52V, Mont Ward 33'4 So Pacific 2614 Natl Blsclt 85 Sperry 18', Natl Cash 100'4 Std Oil Cal 58'4 Natl Dlst 28' StdOUInd 50", Natl Gypsm 49H Std Oil NJ 54i Natl Lead 81'-, Studebaker 814 NY Central 16'4 Sub Gaa 24V, No Am Av 60V, Sunray 2614 Nor Pacific 38'4 Swift 42ij NW Airline 29 Tenn Gas 24 Olln Math 36V, Texaco 54'4 Outboard 19 Texas Gulf 1714 Owens III 864 Texas Inst 85 Pacific Gas 321, Textron 27H Pan Amer 20V, Thlokol 31H Penney 45 Thorn Ramo 56'4 Penn RR 15H Tidewater 19i, Pepsi 4614 Tranramer 43V, Pflier 53'4 UnCarbdo 114V, Phillips 5.T4 Un Oil 58H Polaroid 1B9V, Un Pacific 31V, Proc&Gam 8014 United Aire 454 Pure Oil 3414 Untd Alrl 30Vi Radio 58ij Untd Fruit 264 Rayonler 22V, US Borax 32Mi Raytheon 3714 US Plywood 47H Relchhold 14 US Rubber 5074 Rep Steel 50 US Steel 39V, Rexall 364 UN Match 2H4 Rynlds Met 32 Upjohn 43V4 Rvnlds Tob 61 Varlan 3i, Rchdsn Mrl 8214 Wes Union 36H Richfield 38 Westlnghse 33H Roy Dutch 3814 Woolworth 7514 Safeway 48' 4 Youngstwn 92V, St. Regis 331, Zenith 671, CLOSING QUOTATIONS AS OF 4-30-62 MUTUAL FUNDS (Last available prices as reported by Zllka, Smlther St Co., Eugene Office. BID ASK Aberdeen 1 24 2 45 Aff. Fund 7 87 8.52 Boston Fund - NA Bullock 13.30 15.58 Canadian Fund NA Century Shs. 13.77 1S.05 Chemical Fund 11.04 12 01 Clnlal Grwth It Energy 13 51 13 67 Colonial Fund 11.26 12J1 Com lnv. Co. NA Diver Growth t 42 10 80 Dividend Shs 3 31 3 63 Drevfus Fund 16 43 17.86 Fidelity Cap 8 76 9 52 Flnan. Indust 4 54 4 97 Fund lnv 9 64 10 56 Group Sees. 7.49 7.91 Inc. Of Boston 7 46 1 48 Incorp. lnv. 7.54 8,24 Keystone S-3 14 03 13 31 Mass lnv Growth 8 19 8 95 Mass lnv Trust 14.22 15 54 Nafl lnv 15 32 16 57 Nafl Stock 7.92 8.66 One Wm. St 13.11 14 33 Pioneer 9.S9 10.48 Putnam 15 62 1698 Putnam Growth 9.17 B.98 Telev It Elec NA United Accum 14 29 15 62 United Inc 12.46 13.62 Value Line Inc 5 23 5.72 Wellington 14.62 1593 Wellington F.q 15.94 16.24 Eugene Markets OREGON EGO PRODUCERS Extra Large AA 46c Large AA ... 43c Small AA J2c Jumbo A 51c Extra Large A 45c Large A 41c Medium A A .- . 40c Medium A 39c Chex - 38c Sound Conservative for 72 Years Heme Peace Corps Goals Told By Student One of the greatest achieve ments of the Peace Corps is the opportunity it gives to Ameri cans to understand the people of other countries, a University of Oregon student said Monday. James Cloutier, University of Oregon senior, spoke at a meet ing of the Emerald Empire Ki wanis Club. He explained the goals of the Peace Corps, and the Corps training program. Cloutier is past vice-president of the university student body. Cloutier will spend the sum mer in Ethiopia, working in a village as a volunteer in a pri vate group. This group, he ex plained, like the Peace Corps, is devoted to helping the people in underdeveloped countries. But more important, Cloutier added, is the opportunity volun teers have to meet the people, and to become familiar with their customs and ideas. The Peace Corps, created on the basis of an executive order signed by President Kennedy, promises to be an extremely ef fective force in creating good will throughout the world, Clou tier said. And, he added, "The cost of the Peace Corps is less than that of firing one Atlas mis sile." Straub and Kennedy To Address YDs Robert Straub, candidate for the Democratic nomination to Congress, and Richard Kennedy, candidate for Democratic nomi nation to the Oregon House, will speak to Springfield Young Democrats Wednesday evening. The YDs' meeting will start at 7:30 p.m., standard, 8:30 day light, in the Springfield Munici pal Power Bldg., 346 Main St. The candidates will arrive 'it 9 p.m., standard, 10 p.m., day light. The public is invited. It Isn't Anti-Business Uphill Task Looming for Administration By SAM DAWSON Of the Associated Tress NEW YORK President Kennedy's pains to assure indus trialists he isn't anti-business seems sure to become an uphill task. That is because of govern ment's expanding role in the monitoring of business deci sions whether on wages or prices or profits. It has been growing for some time but took a big step forward in the ad ministration's pressure to get steel companies to rescind their price increase. A large portion of business men think that anyone cham pioning further invasion of what they regard as their right to make their own decisions is bound to be anti-business, no matter what he may say about acting only in the public inter est. And when the government's policy Involves labor, as in cam paigns against inflationary wage increases or labor practices, the President may have a hard 'ime with many union leaders. The turmoil was dramatized by President Kennedy's appear ance before the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. That group nat urally stands for industry's tra ditional rights. The President appeared as a champion of a New Industrial Frontier. But behind all the current furor, some economists in and Portland Livestock PORTLAND (AP-USDAI Cattle salable 250: no early sales slaugh ter steers and heifers; early aales cowa fairly active, steady: other classes poorly tested; slaughter cows, few cutter and uulity dairy. bred 13 00-16 00; cutters 15.00 and down. Calves salable 75; slow; slaughter offerings under pressure, not estab lished; feeders not established. Hogs salable 400; barrowa, Bllta and sows not fully established; bar rows and gilts, small lot No. 1 and 1 200 lb 18 25; few scattered sslea No. 1 and 2, 170 I9O lb 16.5017.75. Sheep salable 600: few early ssles spring slsughter lambs about steady; other classes not established; slaugh ter lambs, small lot choice and prime 94 lb spring lsmba 20.00; in dividual food 95 lb 17.00. Portland Grain PORTLAND m White wheat 1 13. Soft white hard applicable 2 13. White club 2.13. Hard red winter 2 23. Hard white Raart, ordinary 2.18. Oats no bid. Barley 52.50. SAVINGS t IOAN ASSOCIATION 1 Tserh Av. Wit, lofam Olanwnd S-SSU Offio: Prtlan4, Oregen Sahara Club Remodeling, To Become Cafe, Restaurant The Sahara Club, a restaurant and night club at 159 E. Broad way Ave., Eugene, is undergo ing major changes in both phys ical appearance and operation. Owner Sidney I. Fredrickson said this week that from $30,000 to $60,000 is being spent on the remodeling job, which will re sult in the elimination of the night-club operation, and even the name, Sahara Club. It is being replaced by a cafe and a restaurant. Eugenean Hurt In Rock Slide A 42-year-old Eugene man, in jured in a rock slide accident about 11 miles southeast of Cot tage Grove Monday, was report ed in "fair" condition Tuesday at Sacred Heart Hospital. Raymond Raney, 770 E. 37th Ave., an employe of the Fall Creek Sand and Gravel Co., was injuid while operating a heavy tractor in a rock pit near Wil son Creek. He was brought to Eugene by Cottage Grove am bulance. Company officials, who were still investigating details of the mishap Tuesday, said Raney was struck by falling rocks about 2 p.m., daylight. Dairy Development Topic of Meeting Stall-type loafing barns, the newest development in dairy housing, will be discussed at Harris Hall, Lane County Court house in Eugene tonight at 8 p.m. standard, 9 p.m. daylight. This also will be the subject of a meeting in the Central Lincoln Peoples' Utility Dist. Bldg., Florence, Wednesday at 8 p.m. standard, 9 p.m. daylight. out of business circles see a new trend emerging or at least sol idifying. They say the public interest, whatever that is interpreted to mean from time to time, is like ly to play an ever larger role. They see the problem for busi ness as one of keeping such in tervention in bounds, rather than trying to reverse it. Politics plays a role, they eon cede. But they argue that re gardless of party, government's role is changing from that it played in the early postwar years, and even through the 1950s. And the change is tied in with the way you as a consumer act ed then and act now. Portland Markets PORTLAND urt Butterfat Tenta. live, subject to immediate change Premium quality delivered in Port ' land, 64 centa lb.; first quality 61; aecond quality 56. Butter Prints per lb. to retailers Orada AA, 93 score, 66; A grade, . 92 acore, 66; B grade, 90 score, 65. Cheese To retailers Single dai sies 47-48; processed American, 44-45Vs. Egga To retailers Grade AA, ex tra large, 39-42; AA mediums, 35-40; AA small, 25-32. Carton! 2-3 centa additional. Egge To producers, at farm AA extra large, 3336; AA large, 3.344; j A large, 2931; AA mediums, 25-304; AA m-ll. 1820Vi. Live poultry Quoted to growers f.o.b. ranch No. 1 quality fryers, 2V4 lbs., l'.vJ0; light hens, 6-6; hesvy hens, 12-14. Rabbits Average to growers Live whites, 3-H-4t-j lbs., 24-26, some down to 20; colored pelts, 4-5 cents less; fresh killed fryers to retallera, 58 62, few to 65; cut up, 60-65. Wholesale Dressed Meests Beef cuts choice ateers Hind quarters, 53.00-54.00; rounds, 51.00 5.100; full loins, trimmed, 75.00-77 00; forequarters, 38 50-38. 50; chucks, 41.00-43 00; ribs, 55.00-57.00. Lambs Choice-prime, old crop, 60 lbs. down, 33.50-35.5O; spring lambs, 4l.DfMJ.Ofl. Veal Choice, 90-150 lbs., 56 00 66 00; good, 54.00-56.00; standard, 48.00-53.00. Produce - Onions West. Ore. Dsnvtrs, No. 1 med., 50 lb. sks., 3.75-4.50; Ige. No. la, 4.73. Wash. Yellows, med., 3 00. Potstoes Ore. locsl Russeta, No. 1A, 100 lbs., 3.25 3 50; Deschutes Rus sets, No. 1A, 3 .80-4.00; bakera 4.00 4 50. New: Florida Round Reda, 50 , Iba. No. 1A, I.00-3.2J. i DON'T MOVE Phone DI 4-3682 (or FREE Estimates 100 FHA or Conventional Financing Room Addition Specialists' Room Additions Kitchen Remodeling Patioi Painting Papering Aluminum Siding " NO I TOO f LARGE I or TOO J SMALL All work done by local contractors Eugene 450 W. Broadway The cafe, to be called "The Coffee House," will have its entrance at the present location, 159 E. Broadway, and will fea ture breakfasts, lunches and din ners. The restaurant "The Carriage Trade" will have a Gay 90s theme, with its en trance at 160 Park St. There will be a doorway be tween the cafe and the restau rant, Fredrickson said, but the two operations will remain en tirely separate, each with its own kitchen and serving facili ties. The Coffee House is sched uled to open in about three weeks, The Carriage Trade in six. Eugene Contractor Gerald Dunagan is in charge of the remodeling. The Coffee House, to contain about 1,000 square feet of floor space, will seat 40 persons. All food preparation will take place behind a window fronting on Stocks Close Higher After Rally From Selling Climax NEW YORK m The stock market closed higher Tuesday after rallying from a typical selling climax. Trading was heavy. The action had all the ear marks of a typical climax to a succession of declines, The shakeout was the kind of thing Wall Street analysts have been praying for to "clear the air." Volume for the day was esti mated at 4.7 million shares com pared with 4.15 million Monday. Gains and losses of fractions to a point abounded among key stocks. Steels, motors and rails were higher as the market staged a recovery drive after being bat tered severely in the morning. IBM halved a loss of two dozen points. Rohm 4t Haas was up about 3. In the earlier years, labor and management could slug .it out, raise wages and then hike prices. You paid the higher prices because your postwar de mand for goods was great and you tried to counter the higher prices by hitting the boss for a raise. But now many sectors of in dustry have more capacity to produce than your demand for goods can keep busy. Foreign production has increased at even a faster rate and if you don't like American prices you often have a chance to buy foreign goods for less. That's why the wage-price plus the excise taxes any business pays in its normal day-to-day operations. THIS IS A "SUBSIDY? Lane County.' if OtmW fry litote H terr-f Serving Rural Lane County for 23 Years ADD ON! I JOB f- mm Pacific Construction Call DI 4 Broadway. Menus will feature low-calorie diets. The Carriage Trade will con tain about 6,000 square feet of space and will seat 140 persons at individual tables, or up to 250 in banquet style, Fredrick son said. It will specialize in seafood dinners and buffet luncheon service during the midday hours. The existing cocktail lounge will be main tained, but entertainment will be limited to a "honky-tonk" piano and banjo, to provide background music for dinners in keeping with the Gay 90's theme. The restaurant's decor will include red flocked wall paper, black leather upholstery and walnut paneling. Menus will in clude standard dishes as well as seafood. Both restaurant and cafe will employ between 15 and 18 persons on each of three shifts per day. Gains of around a point or better were made by Jones & LauRhlin, Ford, Boeing, Bruns wick, Polaroid, Du Pont, Gen eral Electric, U.S. Gypsum and Schering. Utilities were battered badly in early trading but trimmed some of the worst losses. Public Service Electric & Gas halved a 4 point loss. International Tel ephone moved up a fraction. AT&T remained about 2 points lower. Fractional gains were posted for U.S. Steel, Bethlehem, Gen eral Motors, Chrysler, American Motors and Goodrich. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange in moderate trading. U.S. government bonds edged higher; corporates were mixed. spiral doesn't work so well these days, many economists point out. The businessman's reply to this argument is that supply and demand will sot the prices if government keeps hands off, and that in any caso it's better for labor and management to fight it out than for the fed eral government to set up any kind of price and wage controls, however informal. Labor's reply to the public interest argument is that its wage demands are within rea son and needn't mean higher prices if management isn't too greedy for profits. Last year we paid . . . $27f528.64 in state taxes. II $&0t9ttik Cooperative fir w ill!! - 3682 Any Day or Evening IV" Role of Law Explained inis is Law Day. Many Lane County attorneys began visiting high schools to explain the role ot law in a free society, while at district and circuit courts simple observ ances in honor ot the day were held. In Salem, University of Ore gon President Arthur S. Flem ming was principal speaker at ceremonies in the Oregon Su preme Court. In Portland, high school edi torial writers received awards for articles written to commem orate law day. Winner was Lynn Minneman of Parkrose. Jean Marie Young of Harris burg placed second. Visitor at UO Lectures Tonight A lecture tonight on "Color a Magic Power," will start at 7 p.m. standard, 3 p.m. daylight time, in 150 Science Bldg. on the University of Oregon cam pus. The lecture will be presented by Josef Albers, a visiting critic at the university's School of Architecture. Mrs. Albers, also an art critic, will lecture Thursday in the same room at 7 p.m. standard, 8 p.m. daylight on "Designing as Visual Organization." YOU CAN USE OUR won vtX W INTO BEAUTIFUL DENTURES We have been making and servicing dentures since 1935 No Appointment Necessary UAPEX DENTAL 5th and Lawrence (NO PARKING METERS) STATE OF OREGON VEHICLE SALE 'SPOT BID' AUCTION P. I. BLDG., PORTLAND North Portland Boad (Near Ilwy. 99 it Interstate Bridie) BIDDING STARTS AT 11:30 a.m. P.S.T. MAY 12, SATURDAY 101 Units (1946-61 Models) Cars Wagons Trucks B9 Pan. can: 6'i & V8's, 2 & A dn.. Rambler. Ford, Chev. Lark Dart, Ply. 1953-1961 models; 3 Station Wagoni, 1961 Mercury Commuter 1998 Ford it 1957 Chev. 34 Trucki: 0 pickups 2-4x4 '), 3 Suburbans & Paneli (1 Is 4 x 4); Jeep; Dumps; Stake beds, 4x4 and 6 x 6; 3 Scoopmobllea 1946 1960 models 1 Outboard Boat; S-10H.P. Motors; 1-14 ft. Trailer Inspection: P. 1. Bldg., Portland May 10-11-12 Only Complete payment must be made by May 15, 1962 REX U. KESSINGER THE EQUITABLE SOCIETY of the 72 West Broadway Eugeno rrj,.:,-,r -r ,. 2f f Why spend it getting there? Go Greyhound, and use the money you save to sightsee the first U. S. World's Fair in over 20 years! Greyhound fares are lower than those of ony other form of public transporta tion. ROUND TRIP FARE TO SEATTLE NOW ONLY HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS ALSO AVAILABLE 987 Pearl St. aisptpij) 00 ORIYHOUND 10 SUTRt WORLD Hearing Set On Ordinance A public hearing on the re vised county subdivision ordi nance will be conducted by the Lane County Commissioners at the courthouse at 1 p.m. stand ard, 2 p.m. daylight, Wednes day. The ordinance has been ap proved by the county planning commission. The commissioners must approve it before it be comes law. The new ordinance updates the first county subdivision or dinance, adopted in 1949, and amendments that have been made since then. It sets out regulations and standards for subdivision development out side of incorporated areas In the county. ., NOW Our Prices Are t our Lowest Ever for MATTRESSES and 4J BOXSPR1NGS! t American Bedding Co. V 60 llth Ave. K. Ill 5-6035 t f o JUST A GOOD FRIENDLY SPOT To Bu Good Printing Valley Printing Co. "in Valley Alley" 1049 Willamette 01 M12S TO RECONSTRUCT YOUR OLD PLATES LABORATORY DI 5-6153 Specialists in Servicing Living Insurance Business and Group Insurance Disability Income Protection Estate Planning Retirement Plans Insurance-Saving Programs II. E. (HANK) NILSEN LIFE ASSURANCE UNITED STATES DI 5-8556 m , S4A50 IU (plus lax) DI 4-6265 f AIR... WO li'Ml IHt DRIVINQ 10 II! npaMMMaasssMMMp- : . .. . Bw-..-. - - ' 111 i:i