Friday, January 10, 1958
MEDfORD (OREQOm MAIL TRIBTJWB fTT
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NEW IN EXPANDED LINE The new
Packard two-door hardtop (above) is the
latest addition to the line of 1958 Packards.
The new models are designed in the classic
Packard tradition and feature a foreward-
sloping hood. Standard equipment items in
clude power brakes, finned-drum brakes
and flightomatic automatic . transmission.
The car can be seen locally at De Leigh
Motors, 134 South Riverside ave.
EAGLE POINT
Gen. Hicks Plans Talk
By LAURA A. McFALL
Eagle Point Maj. Gen.
Joseph H. Hicks, county di
rector of Civil Defense, will
discuss what can be done in
case of an emergency, and
what should be done about
radioactive fallout Saturday,
Jan. 11, at 8 p.m., at the
Eagle Point Grange hall.
Gen. Hicks attended the
city council meeting at Eagle
Point Jan. 7. A portable radio
was purchased to use for Civil
Defense and other emer
gencies. Word has been received
here that Archie Nelson, New
burg, Ore., son-in-law of Mr.
and Mrs. L. M. Stonebraker,
was killed in a car accident
Dec. 20. Mr. and Mrs. Stone
braker went to Newburg to
be with their daughter and
two granddaughters who sur
vive. Stonebraker returned
on Dec. 27 and Mrs. Stone
braker returned to her home
on Jan. 5, 1958.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Frei
and family have returned
from a three-week visit with
relatives at LaCrosse and
Camp Douglas, Wis.
ily, former residents of Eagle
Point.
Pfc. and Mrs. Bob Kimmel
of Ft. Lewis, Wash., were
home over the holidays to
visit his mother, 'Mrs. Vera
Kimmel, and her folks, Mr
and Mrs. Bill Zimmerlee, of
Shady Cove.
The Kimmels held a family
reunion at Mrs. Vera Kim
mel's home on New Year's
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Kimmel, Mr. and Mrs. Char
les E. Kimmel, Mr. and Mrs
Bob Kimmel and their fam
ilies,, and Mrs. Charles E.
Kimmel' father, Ed Holman,
Seattle, Wash., attending.
The Eagle Point Commun
ity Bible church will hold its
January missionary meeting
Jan. 16 at the home of Mrs.
Oscar Frei with Mrs. Darrel
Stanley as co-hostesses. The
Eagle Point Community Bible
church will hold an all!
church potluck fellowship
dinner Friday, Jan. 10, at
6:30 p.m. It is suggested each
family attending bring a main
dish and salad or a main dish
and dessert. Table service
should be brought.
Postmaster J i m Wallis,
Eagle Point, announced that
Ralph L. Keesler is taking
over Eagle Point route 1 to
replace Hans Rammin, who
retired Oct. 1. Mrs. Dick
Spain has been the temporary
carrier since then.
Charles Johnson,' Denver,
Colo., a disabled veteran, is
transferring from the Denver
post office to replace Kees
ler as clerk on March 3.
Vernon Ragsdale has been
assisting his father during the
recent illness of his mother,
Mrs. John Ragsdale, on the
Little Butte route, Eagle
Point. Mrs. Ragsdale is re
ported improved.
Larry Clement and Paul
McLean went to San Fran
cisco to attend the East-West
game. Then they went to La
Harba, Calif., to visit Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Wagner and fam-
Mr. and Mrs. Jake E. Ol
son went to Vancouver,
Wash., Jan. 3 to visit at the
home of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Lacey, and daughter,
Cindy. Olsen's other son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Girts, and daugh
ters, Dixie and Debbie, of
Spokane were visiting the
Lacey's at the same time.
The first session of the U.S.
Supreme Court was held in
1790 with Chief Justice Jay
presiding.
27 01. FT.
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JOHNSTON STORES
112 South Riverside
Ford Foundation
Plans Educational
Facilities Group
New York The Ford
Foundation announced today
an appropriation of $4.5 mil
lion to establish the Educa
tional Facilities Laboratories,
an independent, nonprofit or
ganization concerned with re-
search and experimentation
leading to improvements in
the construction of school and
college buildings.
The new agency also will
serve as an information clear
ing house. Its data on school
design, building, and equip
ment will be available to
architects, local school sys
tems, college j trustees, and
others involved in the nation
wide expansion of educational
facilities anticipated through
out the country in the next
decade.
Members Listed
Members of the board of di
rectors of Educational Facil
ities Laboratories are Henry
Dreyfuss, industrial designer,
New York and ' Pasadena;
James C. Downs, president,
Real Estate Research Corpor
ation, Chicago; Morris Duane,
attorney, Duane, Morris and
Heckscher, Philadelphia; Al-
vin C. Eurich, vice president
and director, Fund for the Ad
vancement of Education; Fred
erick L. Hovde, president,
Purdue university; Devereux
C. Josephs, chairman of the
board, New York Life Insur
ance company; James L. Mor
rill, president, University of
Minnesota; Milton C. Mum
ford, executive vice president,
Lever Brothers company;
Frank Stanton, president, Co
lumbia Broadcasting System;
Thomas J. Watson Jr., presi
dent, International Business
Machines; and Benjamin C.
Willis, superintendent of
schools, Chicago.
The $4.5 million appropria
tion from the Ford Foundation
will finance the organization
for the next five years. More
than half of EFL's funds will
be used for experimentation
in the field of school con
struction and equipment
through grants to educational
institutions.
They will also support sev
eral cooperating experimental
centers that will serve as re
search laboratories and dem
onstrations pf efficient con
struction and furnishing of
educational facilities. The pro
jects may be in elementary
and secondary schools, col
leges and universities, both
public and private.
Morse Says Race
To Lead To War
Washington !W Sen.
Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) said
Thursday "I am convinced
that the stress that is being
placed on the armament race
will lead to war."
Morse said "I am strong for
adequate defense so that
Russia will understand she
has everything to lose and
nothing to gain from war, but
I am also strong for American
leadership that will strive to
lead the world toward the
only hope for peace, which Is
the beating of armaments Into
plowshares."
The Oregon senator issued
his statement after attending
a briefing Thursday by Secre
tary of State John Foster
Dulles with the Foreign Re
lations Committee. He said
"The Foreign Relations Com
mittee and the American peo
ple are entitled to know the
facts about the disarmament
issue."
Morse said the briefing
"convinced me all the more
of the bankruptcy of the ad
ministration's foreign policy.
There was not a word in it
that showed that the adminis
tration recognizes that the
greatest need in worldwide
foreign policy on the part of
all nations today is worldwide
disarmament."
-By BENNETT CERF-
rpHERE ARE COUNTLESS stories about Joe Frisco, the stut-
T
tering individualist who made a fortune starring in night
clubs, and lost it an at various race tracKs. une oi inem con
cems the day Bing Crosby
found Frisco sadly staring
into space at a coffee stand
in Palm Springs. "What's
the matter now?" inquired
Bing.
"It's that t-t-third race
Tm t-t-thinking about,"
said Frisco. "I only put $10
on Royal Tiger. I s-s-shoulda
put down f-f -fifty."
"Did it win by much?"
Crosby asked. "It didnt
w-w-win at all," admitted
Frisco. "B-b-but it almost
didT
tm glad you're going oat with WilEe," a T7.CXJL aenior toM
her roommate. TouH find him a gentleman from the word go
The roommate returned some hoars later, somewhat peet. "Ton
had WilHe just a bit wrong." she reported. "He tamed out to be a
gentleman from the word atop."
e 1SS8, by Bennett Cert. Distributed by King Feature gjrodieat r
1
Eisenhower Wows
House and Senate
In Spite of Slips
Washington (ffl It's true
President Eisenhower blew
some of his lines. By one
count he goofed a word or
so on 23 seperate occasions.
But the consenus of those
who heard his State of the
Union address was that this
wasn't bad for a 5,000 word
speech and in any event no
worse than Ike would have
done one, two or five years
ago.
If everybody hadn't known
Eisenhower had suffered a
Message Disturbs
Sen. Neuberger
Washington (IP) Sen. Rich
ard L. Neuberger (D-Ore.) said
today of President Eisenhow
er's State of the Union mess
age that the President's
"lengthy references to pro
posed cutbacks in non-mili
tary federal functions are disturbing."
Neuberger said the Ameri
can people were willing to as
sume increased burdens "but
not if these are to be used by
the administration as a screen
behind which to carry out its
long-standing desires for gut
ting, delaying and abandon
ing federal responsibilities in
the nation's economic and so
cial welfare."
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.)
said of the message: "It was a
sermon of apology delivered
at the wake of a dead admin
istration. Between its lines
was a confession of five years
of failure to meet America's
foreign policy needs."
BLM Schedules
Meeting Tuesday
Portland A public meet
ing will be held in the Jack
son county courthouse Tues
day, Jan. 14, at 1 p.m. by the
bureau of land management
to advise the public on 1958
timber sales and road build
ing programs.
Other open meetings will
be held in Roseburg Jan. 13,
Coos Bay Jan. 15, Eugene Jan.
16 and in Salem Jan. 17. All
meetings are scheduled to
start at 1 p.m. to allow inter
ested parties travel time be
tween the meeting sites.
Purposes of the road proj
ects and questions from the
public on the roads and sales
will be answered at the meet
ings, according to Virgil T.
Heath, state supervisor of the
BLM. He said the meetings
are informal and should not
be considered as hearings.
mild stroke Nov. 25, with
a temporary impairment of
speech, nobody would have
thought a thing of such slips
as Thursday's "citilians" for
"civilians," or his back-up
and - start - again on such
tongue - twisters as "among
our assets, let us first briefly
glance . . ."
Hardly a Cicero
Better orators than Eisen
hower have stumbled in pub
lic on phrases like that. After
all Eisenhower was hardly
a Cicero even back in 1952
when he was wowing audi
ences from New . York to
California with his grin, his
charm and his manifest sin
cerity. .
Some of those same quali
ties showed through Thurs
day, more; than five years
and three major illnesses
later. For this or some other
reason his jampacked audi
ence in the big house cham
ber loved him right from the
start.
They not only stood and
applauded. They cheered and
roared, more maybe from the
Republican than the Demo
cratic side but enough from
both to warm the old sol
dier's heart.
Ike grinned and beamed
When the first ovation finally
was quieted he touched off
a couple more by tossing
verbal bouquets toward his
wife in the gallery (she want
ed to join in best wishes for
the new year, he said) and to
Speaker Sam Rayburn and
Vice President Richard M
Nixon behind him (they both
were celebrating birthdays
this week, their 76th and
45th, respectively).
Then he settled down to
tha business at hand. He
fished his pla stic - rimmed
glasses out of his outer breast
pocket, pulled a clip from
his manuscript and slipped
a sheet at a time off to the
left, gradually unstacking one
pile of paper and neatly
building another.
The speech was a long
one, intended to run about 35
minutes. With 39 interrup
tions for applause it ran to
43 minutes.
DEATH TAKES PIANIST
Helsinki, Finland OP)
Martti Simila, 59, pianist and
conductor, died Thursday at
his home in Lahti. He made
his debut as a pianist at the
age of five and at 14 was
male conductor of the orches
tra at the Oulu Theater. He
was conductor of the Finnish
Opera at Helsinki for 17 years
and then became conductor of
the Helsinki City Orchestra,
specializing in the music of
Jean Sibelius.
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