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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1957)
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PKG. 5 f" 51.00 EACH 69 Reg. 49e LYNDEN Brand Sliced Turkey or Sliced Chicken 5,X 39' CRAGMONT 12 Sparkling Flavors Plus Deposit f J- And O 32-oz. Mixers Bils. 35 Fine Quality Eastern Lager Beer "Best" Beer 6 ' 95' BEVERLY Brand Chunk or Cream, reg. 41c 12-oz. jar 35c Peanul Buffer 49' Every item Safeway sells is guaranteed 100?o or every cent you paid will be refunded without fuss or quibble. Instant Coffee EDWARDS BRAND Regular $1.37 6-oz. Size AT THIS MONEY SAYING PRICE S -j OF 6-oz. can LL Mixing Bowls SET OF 4 MADE BY ANCHOR HOCKING IVORY COLOR .Set of 4 1.29 You'll Save MORE at SAFEWAY on Everything, Every Day of the Week Reserve School Set For September 10 In Southern Oregon Ashland A Naval Reserve officers school will be estab lished this fall at Southern Ore gon College of Education, it was announced today. Dr. Loren E. Messenger, com mander USNR and professor of psychology, said the school will be staffed with faculty members holding reserve commissions. Dr. Eugene W. Bowman, asso ciate professor of education and mathematics, and Dr. Marshall E. Woodell, professor of political science, will serve as course in structors with Commander Mess enger. Functioning as an extension of the Portland Naval Reserves school, the classes are 40 weeks in length and provide oppor tunities for reserve officers to meet promotional and retire ment requirements without tak ing correspondence courses. Commander Messenger ex planed that officers from other services were eligible to partici pate if they obtained the proper clearances from their corres pondence control officers. He added that the Navy regards this means of promotion as the best yet devised and that participa tion in the program was expect ed to carry considerable weight with selection, or promotional boards. Dr. Woodell will conduct the first class beginning Monday, Sept. 10 at 7:30 p.m., "Interna tional Relations," and Dr. Bow man and Commander Messenger will instruct other classes in cluding "Orientation to Com mand," which will be established to meet the needs of reserve officers in the area. Classes will meet each Monday evening with rooms to be announced at a later date. Interested officer reservists from any of the services are asked to contact Dr. Messenger at Southern Oregon College as soon as possible, especially those desiring to take the classes for regular college credits. Thursday, August 22, 19S7 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN. Calm Descends on Leviffown Home Levittown, Pa. (IP) A peace ful calm descended Wednesday night over this suburban rest dential community which has been the scene of anti-Negro demonstrations for the past eight nights. Only a few scattered groups milled about the home of Wil liam Myers Jr., and family, first Negroes to move into this pre viously all-white section, after police issued a warning they would arrest all who gathered in groups of more than three. The Bristol Township Board of Commissioners Wednesday night turned down a police re quest for a 9 p.m. curfew of all children under 16. A spokes man for the commissioners said "they felt the situation at this time does not warrant action." Bristol Police Chief John R. Stewart said the curfew was necessary in view of the "pres ent emergency." The quiet contrasted with the jeering crowd of more than 300 nightly near the Myer's home since the Negro family first oc cupied the house on Aug. 13. Only a token force oz troopers and local police stand guard in front of the ranch-type home since police issued the anti-assembly warnings. Candidate Refuses City Council Position Cave Junction Larry Musil, who was nominated for a post on the Cave Junction city coun cil last week, has refused the nomination because' of the press of his business enterprises. The Cave Junction theater owner has recently become part owner of the Brookings Ace Drive-in Theater, and must spend part of his time in the coast town, he said. The Peace Bridge, at Buffalo, linking New York's second larg est city and Fort Erie, Ont., marks the uninterrupted peace between the United States and Canada. ' i & APPEARING before Senate committee, Teamster Vice President James R. Hoffa resents implications he was extortionist. (International). J-'WM III V;43IjPj5F v. HUGGING THE TROPHY he won in the twentieth run ning of the All-American Soap Box Derby, at Akron, O., 14-year-old Terry Townsend, of Anderson, Ind., smiles hap pily. A'55,000 scholarship will be his, too. (International) Stanford Professor Listed For Teachers' Convocation Ashland Dr. Alfred H. Grom-1 "Othello." A number of those mon, associate professor of edu- present also will attend the o; ti;i, ,t ct, evening performance of the I com rl University, will be the keynote speaker at the state convocation of the Oregon Chapter of the National Council of Teachers of English in Ashland, August 26, at Southern Oregon College. The topic of Dr. Grommon s address is "The . Professional Preparation of Teachers of English." Language-arts teachers at all levels are invited to attend the convention whether they are members of the NCTE or not, Dr. Arthur Kreisman, chairman of the SOC Humanities division, emphasized. He added that three special interest discussion groups would be conducted also. James Sandoe, associate pro fessor at the University of Colo rado and Ashland Shakespear ean Festival director will speak on "Drama as a Toll in the Language-arts." Dr. Robert Loper, assistant professor from Stan ford University and a Festival director will talk on "Problems of Intelligent Reading." Dr. Kreisman will s p e a k on "Cur ricular Revision in the Language-arts." Registration for the conven tion will be from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. in the lobby of the library building on the SOC campus, with the discussion groups scheduled from 9:30 to 11:00, Dr. Grommon's address at 11:30 a.m., and luncheon at 1:00 p.m. followed by a business meeting. The group will reconvene at 6:00 p.m. for dinner when Dr. Margery Bailey, director of the Institute of Renaissance Studies in connection with the Festival, will address the group on same play at the Shakespearean theater in Ashland. Dr. Bailey is professor emeritus on the drama staff at Stanford and is now spe cializing in Shakespearean and Restoration comedy. Housing facilities will be available at Southern Oregon College for those attending the conference, it was announced, providing that room reserva tions be made by Aug. 21. In quiries should be addressed to Dr. Arthur Kreisman in care of Southern Oregon College. Ash land. Graduate School Sees $428 Billion Product Los Angeles on The year 1957 looks like the best ever, with a gross national product value of $428 billion, $12 billion above last year's record, accord ing to a prediction, of the Uni versity of California's Graduate School of Business Administra tion. ' The school based its predic tion of a record-breaking year on two factors: 1. Current high volume of business expenditure for new plant and equipment. 2. Rising trends in govern mental spending. The UCLA business forecast has had a good record since it was begun by faculty members five years ago. It correctly pre dicted business expansion in 1953, 1955 and 1956. It also pegged right on the recession of 1954. Among other forecasts for the year, the UCLA predictors see: Continued high consumer spend ing; a 12 per cent increase in automobile production, with the total output reaching 6.5 million units; increased production in all other industries with the ex ception of housing. Mothballing Material Could Be Used in Houses Chicago (IP) A shelter expert reported recently that plastic covering used to "mothball" ships could be employed in building better and cheaper housing. Richard E. Baringer, head of shelter design . at the Illinois Institute of Technology, said the plastic, a quick-drying vinyl, had Been sprayed on tubular steel frames to create experimental shelters at IIT. The results indicated the new covering was cheaper, could be applied faster and did not re quire a rigid framework. It also was moisture-proof, Baringer said. f He said the technique was used also to make sculptures, furnitue and lighting fixtures, . Defect in Knee Likened To Vixen Chicago (IB A blood ves sel defect in the back of the knee was likened to a vixen by a New York doctor. Dr. Jere W. Lord Jr., said a popliteal aneurym, actually a blister-like swelling of the popli teal artery is "sly in its appar ent benignity" and is often over looked by the patient and physi cian until it suddenly causes some serious complication. Writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Lord said the defect frequently is overlooked because of its lo cation, a place not routinely ex amined by the doctor and rarely seen by the patient. While the popliteal aneurysm is a "sinister harbinger of sudden catastrophe ... to life and limb?' Lord said,, "results of surgical treatment are startlingly good even in the fact of complica tions." Lord, who is with the surgery department of the New York University Post-Graduate Medi cal School, said popliteal aneur ysms may develop in the course of several diseases. These diseases include usual hardening of the arteries and oc casionally syphilitic and bacter ial infections. They may also re sult from fractures and disloca tions of the knee joint, and bullet and knife wounds. Several major complications causing severe pain, gangrene in the lower leg, or even death, may occur if the aneurysm is not treated as soon as it is found, Lord said. There are a variety of opera tive techniques which can be fit ted to the particular case, he said. He cited 13 patients he treated successfully for he de fect in a seven-year period. Motion to Dismiss River Suit Filed By California By VERNON BAKER United Press Correspondent San Francisco (IP) Special Supreme Court Master Simon H- Rifkindhas scheduled argu ments today on California's mo tion to dismiss Arizona's Colo rado river suit. California filed the motion last week, alleging Arizona has changed its pleadings in mid trial which were grounds for dismissal. , California, named defendant in the complex suit filed by Ari zona in 1951, based its motion on an announcement early this month by Arizona that it now seeks nearly double the supply of water from the Colorado it had originally asked for. Arizona originally asked the courts to quiet title to some 3, 800,000 acre-feet of water an nually. It now takes the posi tion it is entitled to en addition al amount equal to what it or iginally agreed to take from the Colorado tributaries within its borders. ' Government Witness ' In testimony yesterday a gov ernment witness asknowledged that only 40 per cent of Colorado river water allotted to reserva tion Indians was used effective ly for'irrgiatlon. The witness, Wayne D. Crid dle, Salt Lake City irrigation engineer, testified on crossex amination by Arizona the waste of valuable water was not due to inefficiency but due to the fact the water "came in spurts and is difficult to control." The government holds the po sition in the case that its re quirements must be met ahead ' of those of the states. And in surance of adequate water sup plies for reservation Indians is chief among these requirements. Good Average Criddle, however, pointed out that the 40 per cent average on Indian lands was a "good aver age" throughout all farm areas in northern Arizona. He said he expected the Indians "to do as good a job in the future in irri gation as is done by farms off the reservations." Criddle also supported Calif ornia's method of calculating "consumptive use of water" that had been termed unworkable by previous witnesses. Criddle said he had checked the California method of compu tation with his own and found the results to be the same. Missiles May Replace Manned Aircraft San Francisco (IP) . Army Secretary Wilber M. Brucker predicts missiles will eventually replace manned aircraft in war fare; Brucker made this prediction Wednesday in a speech to the West Coast Electronics Manufac turers association. He praised the electronics industry for giv ing the nation's armed forces new weapons with which to meet "the challenge of the Soviet threat." Brucker also said the United States is ahead of Russia in development of the 1,500-mile range ballistics missile. But he said the Russians are working "night and day" to perfect theirs. He refused to discuss the sub ject further because of security reasons. He said the United States Is also working on an "anti-missile missile." "We're in the midst of devel oping such a defensive weapon. And again, because of security, that's all I can say," he said. THE RIGHT JOB Waukesha, Wis. Iff) Ken neth "C. Jump, of the Wauksha Jump family graduated from the 82nd Airborne Division "jump" school, Fort Bragg, N.C. without J j' filling K (f v feX BOTTU CARTON (PlwDtpodl) PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF MEDFORD Under appointment from Pepsi-Cola Company, New York