t
, IV -. . . ; . r, ... F. A
A r I b ' " P J
ARABS PRESENT OWN PLAN A peace plan hammered
out by the Arab nations themselves is expected to win
quick approval of the UN General Assembly. Here Nor
way's Hans Engen (left), and the United Arab Republic's
Mahmoud Fawzi comer off the floor of the General As
sembly. The formula for settlement of the Middle East
crisis has the unanimous backing of all the Arab nations,
including Lebanon, Jordan, and United Arab Republic
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Unpopular Racial Integration
In South Declared Spreading
Editor's not: This is the second
of two dispatches by a veteran
Southern journalist assessing the
school Integration situation in ad
vance of the new school year start
ing in September.
By AL KUETTNER
UPI Correspondent
Atlanta-JEPD-Racial integra
tion of the South's public
schools is spreading. It's slow
and it's not popular, but it's
spreading.
To be sure, there has been
absolutely no break in the
color line in some of our
Southern states. These include
Alabama, Georgia, South Car
olina, Mississippi, and for the
present Virginia.
These states have adopted
in the past four years a
labyrinth of laws and techni
calities to ensnare those who
tamper with segregation pol
icies. When one law is cut
down, two more seem to take
its place.
On the other hand, some
noteworthy cracks have
shown in the dikes of the
solid South since the Supreme
Court's desegregation decision
of May, 1954.
Take Nashville, Tenn. Last
year, the first grades were
integrated. After a rowdy
start, things settled down to
normal. This September the
grade-a-year integration plan
approved by the federal courts
moves to the second grade
and officials estimate 230
Negro children will be eligible
to attend integrated classes.
And there's Clinton, Tenn.,
where two autumns ago Gov.
Frank Clement called out the
National Guard to quell a riot
over the planned integration
of the local high school. No
trouble there . this past year
although seven Negroes at
tended all sessions. The same
number will be back in Sep
tember. Unpleasantness
In North Carolina six
Negroes were admitted to
white schools in Greensboro,
four in Charlotte and one in
Winston-Salem. There was un
pleasantness, but the token in
tegration went with general
smoothness. To date 79 Ne
groes have applied for trans
fer to white schools this fall.
None accepted as yet.
In Virginia, the state's
"massive resistance" program
is still m force and plans are
going ahead under direction
of Gov. Lindsay Almond to
close the first school threat
ened with integration. But
there is mounting pressure in
Virginia for a special legisla
tive session to consider undo
ing the' governor's program
mere s
. -.i.L. 4. sl:.
iiu iaiv.il to una one
ad we will run
UT
CARPETS
We Will Include-
and substituting a local option
plan that would permit indi
vidual communities to make
their own decisions on integra.
tion.
Florida has a different but
highly significant situation
Until now the southernmost
state has been staunchly seg
regated. But the courts have
ruled, and the University of
Florida has agreed, that quali
fied Negroes will be admit
ted for the first time to the
university graduate school
this fall.
Interesting Situation
The attitude on the Florida
campus as a result of the new
open door policy brings into
play an interesting situation-
Here js a university that
draws most of its student body
from the home state and from
neighboring Southern states.
Old South tradition is ivy-and-drawl-deep.
Yet, there
seems to be complete calm
and cooperative acceptance of
the probability, that Negroes
soon will be ofi the campus.
A firm hand on the wheel
seems to be at least part of
the reason.
"I am convinced that, re
gardless of personal opinions
or emotions,' it is the desire of
students and faculty that, in
carrying out the order of the
court, it can be done with
calmness and good taste." says
Florida President J. Wayne
Reitz.
His student leaders echo
the sentiments and seem
nrpttv determined there will
be no incident on the Gaines
ville campus such as hit the
University of Alabama a few
vears ago. When Autherine
Lucy, a Negro, attemoted to
enroll at Alabama following
a similar court order, riots
ensued.
"I cannot believe there will
be any violent resistance from
the university community,"
commented Don Boiling, a law
school student from Jackson
ville. - "Violence is the very
antithesis of education."
Manv Not in Favor
"There are a lot of students
here not in favor of integra
tion," student body president
Tom Biggs, of Georgetown,
Fla., acknowledged. How
ever, their feeing and attach
ment to the university will
prevent them from actively
participating in anything that
might harm the school." (
What makes it possible for
integration to take place
peacefully in one spot and
not in another? It used to be
felt that the main factor was
the proportion of Negroes to
29, 30)
. . .
this
whites in a state or a school
district. That's still a big item,
but it doesn't seem to be the
real answer.
Looking back over the last
four painful years of imple
menting federal court decis
ions on this touchy subject
or resisting them, as the case
may be-it seems clear that
integration has worked
smoothest in areas where two
conditions have been met:
First, where agitation from
"outsiders" has been cut to a
minimum or eliminated; and,
second, where local leaders
really ' want integration to
work.
Oregon Farmers
Reminded of Law
San Francisco ,With the
opening of schools close at
hand in Oregon, farmers were
reminded today that the Fair
Labor Standards Act prohibits
the employment of children
under 16 years of age on farms
during school hours.
The ' reminder came from
John R. Dille, Western Re
gional Director of the U.S.
Labor Department's Wage and
Hour Division, the agency
which administers the law.
"The Federal child - labor
law is designed to keep chil
dren under 16 off the farm
and thereby permit them to
continue their schooling,"
Dille said. He pointed out that
the law applies to both local
youngsters and children of
migratory workers.
"The only exception to the
law," Dille said, "is for the
farmer's own child working
on his parents' farm. .
"Children under 16 may
lawfully work on farms be
fore and after school hours
and on weekends or holidays,"
Dille added, "but stiff penal
ties for willful violations can
make the employment of chil
dren during school hours ex
pensive." '
Melerfeeders Get
Fines in New York
Syracuse, N.Y. (DPI) City
Court Judge Walter J. Reli-
han is at war with the so
called meter-feeders.
A $5 fine is the penalty
for motorists who insist on
slipping additional coins in
parking meters here to per
mit the use of the same space
for long periods. ,
Offenders are issued yellow
tags which require their ap
pearance in court. However,
they are not compelled to
face Judge Relihan and fines
may be paid to court clerks.
According to the judge, the
"parking meters are designed
to keep motorists moving, and
to give everyone a chance to
park and shop.".
S CULPTOR DIES
Langhorne; Pa.-dlPll-George
J. Kreier, 73, a decorative
sculptor, died Monday.
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EMERGENCY SESSION Arkansas Governor Orval Fau
bus meets with legislative delegations in the Governor's
Mansion in Little Rock, Ark., to draft a school-closing bill
he hopes will block integration at Central High School.
Faubus is in a race for time against the U. S. Supreme
Court, which has scheduled a special session for Thursday,
Aug. 28, to hear arguments regarding the 2-year delay
in integration ordered by an Arkansas judge. In the mean
time, Little Rock school superintendent Virgil Blossom
bodily ejected a newspaper reporter he found talking to
Negroes in his waiting room.
BUTTE FALLS
Schools Set
BY MARY JO HARRIS
Butte Falls Butte Falls
schools will open Wednesday,
Sept. 3, and classes are sched
uled all day from 8:45 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. Buses will run the
same schedule and routes as
last year. Bus drivers are
Bruce Pingle, upper run, and
Ray Chambers, lower run. The
cafeteria will be open the first
day and prices' will remain the
same as last year. Mrs. Ray
Sheppard is .cook, and in
charge of cafeteria.
Grade school teachers are
Miss Barlow, first; Mrs. Roger
Harris, second; Mrs. Claude
Curtis, third; Miss Sheldon,
fourth and fifth; Mr. Pepple,
sixth and seventh; Leonard
Stratton, eighth. Stratton will
be the grade school principal
and Pepple will act as coach
for the grade school. Mr. Do
herty will teach part time for
Stratton.
The school faculty include:
Bob Cupples, industrial arts,
math and science; Mrs. Bob
Cupples, physical education
and health, homemaking, typ
ing and shorthand; Dean Bog
gan, world geography, Amer
ican problems, band, orches
tra, high school and grade
school chorus; Mr. Doherty,
Englisn, speech, physical edu
cation and first aid; George
Bray, math, physical educa
tion. Mr. Bray also is high
school coach and superintend
ent of Butte Falls schools. Mr.
Boggan will be acting librar
ian. School custodians are Keith
Scott, high school,- and Ray
Chambers, grade school.
School board members are
Earl Remson, chairman, Doug
Finch, Duane Burton, Mrs.
Harry Dalton, Mannie Poole,
board members; and Mrs. Bill
Edmondson, clerk .
First grade students are re
quested to be accompanied by
parent or parents. Children
eligible for the first grade
LADIES S 39
SUITS ' U
SWEATERS
THIS OFFER GOOD
THRU SATURDAY,
AUGUST 30 ONLY!
to Open
must be six years of age by
Nov. 15. Parents of first
graders are asked to bring
birth certificates and health
certificates upon entry.
The Ted Reddell family re
cently had visitors from Kan
sas and Arkansas. They were
Mrs. John Verlie and sons,
Quinton and Denton, and Tom
Dillinger of Harrison, Ark.,
Mrs. Coyan Gregory and girls
Eudore, Kan. They visited for
a week and then motored on
to Eureka. and Marysville to
visit other members of the
family. From California the
group planned to return to
their homes in Kansas and Ar
kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Blair of
Muncie, Ind., were recent
overnight guests in the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Scott.
Blair is a former resident of
Butte Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Arval Cox and
family of Smithland, Iowa,
were recent visitors in the
Leonard Stratton home. The
Coxes were visitors in Butte
Falls for a week. Mrs. Cox is
a sister of Mrs. Stratton.
Miss Pamela Harris cele
brated her sixth birthday at
a party given in her honor
Friday, Aug. 15, in the city'
park. Pam is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Harris.
Hostess for the birthday party
was Mrs. Roger Harris, Pam's
grandmother.
Children attending were
Tommy and Barbie Jo Finch,
Gary, Billy Jess and Debbie
Rodgers, Greg Jolliffe, David
Ferguson, David Ellefson,
Jackie Ellis, Jimmy and Doris
Burton, Sherry and Steve Ty
gart, Paul and Jerry Conley,
Terry, Susie and David Mc
Reddell, Nancy and Jesse
Smith, Vanessa Facey, Jean
nie Clymer, Jenny and Judy
Bowen, Steve and Mike Lind-
ley, Steve Barlow and Roger
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O
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Wednesday; August 27, 1958 JA
Even Insects Have More
Sense Than To Travel Fast
Chicago - That fable about
flies streaking 820 m.p.h. is
for the birds. Top speed for
insects is about 35 m.p.h. in
short sprints, according to a
British professor of entomol
ogy. And you'll never catch a
horsefly going faster than 15
m.p.h., he says.
Even if insects could travel
faster, they'd have horse sense
enough not to, insect lovers
claim. Too many dangers
from traveling fast, they point
out.
The same Is true on the
Hurricane Daisy
May By-pass Coast
Miami (UPD Hurricane
Daisy and, its well defined
center bearing 100-mile-an-hour
winds today advanced
slowly northward, away from
the Florida coast.
But swells from the storm
stirred up rough seas close to
shore from northern Florida
to Cape Hatteras, N. C. All
interests in that area were
cautioned to be on the alert.
At 11 p.m. (EST) the Miami
Weather Bureau centered the
storm 240 miles east of Day
tona Beach, Fla. It was mov
ing northward at five miles an
hour, but forecasters said it
would pick up forward speed
some time today.
Daisy is a small storm com
pared with most hurricanes
but it has an unusually well
defined center of about 10
miles in diameter, forecasters
said.
Harris.
Games were played, favors
given, gifts opened, cup cakes,
ice cream and koel aid served.
Helping with the supervision
of the children and serving
were the Misses Linda Haw
kins and Shirley Russin. '
. Mothers' attending were
Mrs. William (Doc) Bowen
and Mrs. Bruce McDonald.
TUC fi
CHANGE
I no.
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SPECIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER 1
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Other wonderful REVERE WARE values! Y
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S-iiKli Covered Skillet . .". $ 7.7S I O-Qt. Covered Dutch Oven . $13.95(i
Covered Sauce Pot . . $10.50 I up Percolator ...... $10.50 .
Shop Where It's Air
UCSM
SPECIALISTS IN
245 S. Central at 10th
highway - traveling fast is
pretty dangerous there, too.
But a lot of humans, apparent
ly, don't have the sense of in
sects when it comes to driving
a car.
Speeding is a factor in about
four out of 10 fatal motor
vehicle accidents, according
to the National Safety Coun
cil. You don't necessarily har
to exceed the posted limit to
be speeding, the Council
points out. Observe the limit
in a 25 m.p.h. zone during a
blizzard and you may end up
with a ticket.
"Speeding,' the Council
says, "increases the likelihood
of an accident. The greater the
speed the less time you have
to react in emergencies. It
takes longer, naturally, to stop
a speeding auto than one mov
ing slowly.
"Besides, speeding is costly.
It can cost you money and
maybe your life."
FARM
MACHINERY
Complete liquidation
SALE
FRONT and PINE SIS.
CENTRAL POINT
KRUPP'S FLYING "A"
1 HD 5 dozer, angle blade, can
opy, new rollers and rails,
late model, total time, 320
hrs. $3,500.
t Allis Chalmers W.D. tractors
with hydraulic from $R50.
t John Deere corn chopper,
nearly new. SI, 800.
1 A.C. pump nnit 10" Fairbanks
Morse $995.
3 Plows from $25.
2 Wagons at $125.
1 A.C. Combine $400.
1 Corn Planter $225.
2 Levelers.
1 Ferguson rake $121.
2 Barrows from $20.
1 John Deere mower $111.
1 Field sprayer.
1 Burk rake $21.
1 Drill $300.
Many other tiems. come and
look, make as an offer.
When yen shop ar Acme yim'H
find thrifty buys in every depart
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most value for your dollar AesM
Hardware.
18" Talisman
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