Tuesday. March 26, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
cans in the 19:i6-39 Spanish Civil
War but it was not until recent
years that Spaniards heard talk
of restoring the crown.
Don Juan, six feet three
inches, youthlul looking at 44,
lives with his family in a two
story home at the Portuguese
resort of Estoril. He speaks flaw
less English and receives a
steady stream of visitors, news
men who ask him questions and
Spanish monarchists who ad
dress him as "your majesty." He
suffered an acute personal trag
edy last year when his younger
son, Alfonso, was killed acci
dentally while cleaning a gun
Don Juan, navy trained and
archy, refused to let this delay
the training of his elder son,
Juan Carlos, at the Spanish
Zaragoza Military Academy. Af
ter the funeial of his brother,
Juan Carlos went back to his
military duties.
Son Quiet, Bookish
Tall like his father, fair haired
and good looking, Juan Carlos
takes extra lessons at the acad
emy in statesmanship and polit
ical history. He has made no ma
jor public appearances in Spain
so far but last year toured fac
tories and met a cross section of
people. He spends all of his
holidays with his family and
generally is rpgarded as a quiet
youth whom the tutors keep
grooved in his books.
Franco has preached publicly
in the past that a monarchy is
the form of government best
suited to Spain, but has warned
that it must be a modern mon
archy, dissociated from the
courts of the past and respectful
of the plans of the Falangist po
litical party. '
Observers believe that if Fran
co had to make a quick decision,
Don Juan would get the nod be
cause of his .on's youth. But if
the decision, as seems likely, is
drawn out, Juan Carlos, care
fully trained and remote from
association with past courts, is
the kind of "new look" monarch
Franco might choose.
As Spain Believed
Heading for Monarchy
Madrid, Spain (U.R) A father
ernment shakeup was a step in
this direction.
and son are waiting in the wings
for a call which wiuld make
one of them King of Spain.
o
The names of both Don Juan
and his 19-year-old son, Juan
Many responsible Spaniards
Carlos, figures in any restora
tion of the throne which was
abolished by the Republican gov
ernment in 1953 with the ban
are convinced that oenerans
simo Francisco Franco, 20 years
O
Spain's chief of state, is steer
ing the nation gradually toward
ishment of King Alfonso XIII,
restoration of the monarchy.
None predicts that' the procla
now dead.
Monarchy Rumor New
mation is imminent but many
believe that Franco's recent gov-
Franco defeated the Republi-
I steeped in the traditions of mon
Father and Son Wait
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WAX. Oti AVALANOHES (J. S. Forest Service avalanche expert Montgomery At
atar (teft) and John Mortizia, head of the Squaw Valley Ski Patrol, get set to fire
.TSmm reeoilless rifle into the slopes surrounding Squaw Valley, Calif. The demon
striikm, conducted by the Forest Service in co-operation with the Army and Olympic
Games officials, determined that the danger of avalanches during the upcoming 1960
Wiair Olympic events would be held to a minimum.
Quotes From the News
St vi n rn. d press
New Delhi Jr1m Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, on the concept
of the big private ixjint to till any "political vacuum" in the Mid
dle East:
"Such &a approach la dajijarous and unreal."
PcrUanA. Oto-- Harrf fedarspiel, a member ef Local 162 of
IsfenaiiBal Brolhrhocd ef Taamsters and a leader of a peti-
ti 4tin& removal from office of aay Teamster official found
uilty i rnce tee ring or misase of vaioa funds:
"We ear going lo throw out Beck. Hoffa, Brewster. Crosby and
Mslly. And if our delegate to neat year's convention betray us,
we'll kick them out. and I mesa out ia lias street."
"Washington Robert C. Hill, assistant secretary of state, in
urin CoriRTesj) to grant statehood to Hawaii and Alaska:
'Statehood for Alaska and Hawaii would seem to constitute a
tUtte etampla of gelf-govemment referred to in the charter of the
beited Nations, end aa such, should be viewed in a favorable
lijfrt bt U gnat majority of U.N. members."
Ybiladelphis Sen. Harry P. Byrd (D.-Va.) urging President
Xietmhower to adopt Hoover commission recommendations aimed
"to aaviig"t
1 believs that taxes are so kmrdenaems thai if continued at
f)rmt and proposed levels they will take the money this nation's
steeds for growth: they will cause a downturn in business
a personal incomes; they will unleash a tremendous inflationary
f '
WajMngton Sen. John 7. Williams (Del.) after writing to the
Interstate Commerce commission complaining about a Delaware
p tkrener who was told he would have to submit 66 copies of his let-
er If he wanted his objections to a railroad increase to be heard:
1 hope they will not sand me 66 copies of their reply."
Laughs of
'? Madison, Wis. CU R) A Uni
versity of "Wisconsin applicant
rrotsj on bis scholarship request:
Will try to be a good egsj and
peeoxoa aa ln.tegrai part oi the
jiacvixda omelette." The schol-
eruBip committee promptly dis
carded the appJicstion.
p rtb Varaon. Xnd-UU.V-A
jsoal Batomobils dealex with a
sssm. V'c Ready Trade."
tt)s asoo&ey as part pay
it S caa.
NthU, Tenn. Mor
ris 'fhurmnn caufht a one-pound
catfish in the Cumberland fiiver,
put it on his string and dropped
it back into the water. When he
Dulled ud his strin he found
O he had to catfish. A second
one had tried to swallow the
first but just got stuck since
each weighed one pound.
a
Waterburv. Conn. (U.R) A
man who accidentally was lock
ed in a billiard parlor was fraed
after police called Police man
ager Louis Solics.
Oswego, N. Y. (U.R) Sam
Ciappa thought tie ought to have
his auto brakes tested. He was
sure of it when his car went
through the service station door.
IJimage was estimated at $300
plus a fee for adjusting the
.brakes.
: Melford. ConnU.P.) A thief
; lL. ..?irL..i. ..... sA
EASXIXG S723 BY SALES of finger paintings which
were exhibited in various galleries, Betsy, pride of Bal
timore ' Zoo runs afoul Internal Revenue Service which
assigned Richard Edelen (left), to investigate. Helping
Betsy :- Ben Gary (canter), Zoo keeper and Arthur
Jt tefetor of Zoo. . (International Soundphoto)
the Day . , .
rippea out several pages from a
library book on atomic energy
and left this note: "I could have
stelea the whole book."
Tort Dix, N. J. (U.R) The
Army hospital .here reported an
accident as caused by "a soldier
leaning too far out of the win
dow on the ground floor of his
barracks, waving at his girl fri
end sitting in her car in a near
by parking lot; the arm was
broken when he fell out."
Telecast for Doctors
Scheduled Wedensday
Physicians in this area will
continue their post-g ra d u a t e
medical education through the
fourth in the "Grand Rounds
series of live, closed-circuit tele
cast on Wednesday, March 27,
at 6 p.m.
Discussion will concern the
borderlines of cancer. The pro
gram will be seen on station
KBES-TV at 6 p.m. It originates
in the hospital and school of
medicine of the University of
Pennsylvania. More than 45,000
physicians in 55 cities are ex
pected to witness the telecast.
Nearly 10 million trucks
serve the nation by traveling
102 billion miles annually. The
trucks haul more than 11 billion
tons of freight a year.
Around
Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
Hollywood U.R) Oscar
time in Hollywood means a
crisis a day, and today's is the
"wardrobe worry" keeping
those beautiful
actress n o m-
inees out of
plunging neck
lines and hoop
skirts.
M o v ietown
is in a general
flurry over
W e d n e s day
night's 29th an.
Aiin Mosby nual Academy
Awards. The Academy of Mo
tion Picture Arts and Sciences
even assigned designer Edith
Head, a six-time Oscar winner
and double nominee this year
herself, to ride herd on the
movie stars' gowns.
Miss Head must see to it that
the female nominees and pre
senters look presentable on the
big televised event. One rule
No plunging necklines. NBC will
have a wardrobe girl backstage
with lace to fill in any wide
open spaces.
Faces. Not Anatomies
"We must be sure the audi
ence looks at the girl's face and
not her anatomy," Miss Head
explained today in her Para
mount Studio office.
"I also ask the stars not to
wear costumes that look like a
revival of 'Gone With The
Wind.' Some actresses figure the
bigger the dress, the better. One
year a star wore a hoop skirt
and she had to be helped up the
steps to the stage!
"The stars must wear dresses
that are navigable. They must
be able to walk gracefully with
out cumbersome trains or too
tight skirts. One year an actress
slithered onto the stage in
tight dress and got a laugh. We
can't have that happen again.
Deborah Kerr, Dorothy Ma
lone, Mercedes McCambridge,
Carroll Baker and other nom
inees also are warned by Miss
Head not to bare their backs
to the world. A covered back
the designer rules, looks better
when the nominee is hurrying
down the aisle of the Pantages
theater to collect her Oscar.
"The backward view is as im
portant as the front view," she
explained.
Last year a star click-clacked
her way across the stage in back
less pumps, sounding, as Miss
Head says, "like the charge of
the light brigade." Now the nom
inees are asked to wear shoes
that stay on their feet.
No Morticians' Wear
They're also told not to wear
black, or, with the men in black
the event would look like a mor
ticians' convention. The gowns
must be full length (a new rule
this year) and minus glitter or
two-tone colors that make them
appear gaudy on television. A
full-skirted gown in a pastel
color is ideal. Miss Head says.
Some stars break the rules
and create a sensation.
One year the actresses dutiful
ly showed up in fluffy pastels
But Marlene Dietrich, not even
a nominee but a presentor, stole
the show in a slinky black tight
dress slit to the knee. Another
year Bette Davis won the most
notice in an "illegal" black
sheath dress plus a strange tur
ban to hide her head,- shaved
for a movie role.
"Well, they are great stars
who can make their own rules,"
admitted Miss Head. '
THE D.A. SWOONED
Los Angeles (U.R) The dis
trict attorney giggled, blushed
and swooned all at the same
time Tuesday -upon meeting
Frank Sinatra when the crooner
appeared to testify before the
county grand jury about the cele
brated "wrong door" raid. "Oh,
gee, gosh!" squealed the district
attorney high school student
Carol McQuown, who was hon
orary D.A. in observance of
Girls Day.
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Women Shouldn't
Drink in Excess,
Doctor Contends
Los Angeles (U.R) Women
shouldn't drink to excess if for
no other reason than because
they can't stand the effects of
alcohol as well as men.
That's the contention of Dr.
Albert M. Snell of the Palto
Alto, Calif., Medical Clinic and
Dr. Cecil J. Watson of the
University of Minnesota.
Although women withstand
most diseases better than men,
the doctors said in an interview
here, females Bet cirrohosis of
the liver earlier than men, and
have less chance of being saved,
from the disease.
Still a Mystery '
Just why that is so is still as
much of a mystery as why non
drinking women suffer from cir
rhosis more than non-drinking
men, the doctors said.
They said that cirrhosis, a har
dening and shrinking of the
liver, is increasing in the United
States with California leading
the nation in the numbers of
deaths from the "disease.
"The rate is low in rural pop
ulations where people have to
work hard to make a living and
have less time and opportunity
to drink," Dr. Watson said.
San Francisco leads all the
cities in California in the number
of deaths attributed to cirrhosis
and alcoholism, the doctors said.
Standard Elects
Kendrick to Oliice
K. W. Kendrick, formerly of
Medford and now residing in
southern California, has been
elected regional vice preseident
of Standard Oill Company of
California, Inc., western opera
tions, it was announced today.
Kendrick will work in the
southern California area and
will continue as Los Angeles reg
ional manager of wholesale sales,
according to E. J. McClannahan,
president of the company. As
regional vice president, he will
direct activities in the fields of
stockhlders, community and in
dustry relations.
Kendrick joined Standard in
1919. He became Los Angeles
district manager in 1943 and was
wholesale manager in 1954. Be
fore moving to Los Angeles, he
directed Standard's district
marketing organizations in Med
ford, Fresno and Sacramento.
Weed Control Topic
Of Ail-Day Meeting
Weed Control will be discuss
ed at an all-day meeting Wed
nesday, March 27, starting at
10: a. m. at Bigham hall.
Bill Kosesan of the state high
way department, Jackson Ross
of the Oregon State college ex
tension service, and Ray Kelse,
state agriculture . department
will discuss the problem of weed
control.
Also on the program for the
meeting will be a panel of local
farmers.
All interested persons are in
vited to attend, according to W.
B. (Ben) Tucker, county agricul
ture agent.
. Masa4
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