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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1960)
-J u 3 Locals Rummage Sale - Tlic Reese Creek church will sponsor, k rummage sale Thursday. June i , 2, at the Fehl building, 108 .Ir,ADD To Mr- and Mrs North Ivy si.. Medford. Also llllam E" route box 235E- 01, ;. wiil hi iuoU.iR'',?iV"-, M 2 IMft. A and plants. I lr1' 6 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. Reprentative - E. H. Bris coe, owner and operator of Cherry Hill Poultry farm. Ashland, has been namtd to represent the broiler grow ers of the Rogue valley on the Western Fanners associ ation board, he has announ ced. fatierits - Surgery patients today at Sacred Hoait 'hospi tal included Mrs. Vivian Spencer, 294 DeBarr ave., Medford, and Mrs. Faye Mc Caslin, route 1, box (2A, Cen tral Point. Medical patients there included Mildred E. Monia, 47 Laurel St., Central Point. Sale Plantd - The Lincoln school Parent-Teacher associ ation will hold a rummage sale Wednesday, Jun 1, at the Fehl building, 108 North Ivy St., Medford, between 9 a.m. and 4:31) p.m. Persons having rummage to donate may telephone Mrs. Max Weston, SPring 3-4591, or Mrs. Dan Haas, SPring 2 4480. . t.. House Burglary - Burglars broke into a house located at 404 North Riverside ave., cabin No. 10, Friday night and took a radio, an electric raxor and a clock, according to city police. The owner of the stolen items, Elmer James Johnson, told police he was downtown at the time of thc burglary. Theft Trom Cir - Sherman Austin Browning, 1119 East 11th St., told city police that someone ransacked his car while it was parked in his driveway Saturday night and took a tire, wheel, portable j G radio and jack. He told police he observed two juveniles run from the vicinity of the car to an awAKing vehicle and drive off in it with the lights out. The total value of the . eiolen goods is estimated at O 75. . Mil Ends TOW1TEI mum, 1 i,-v,, '' llerfeci ELAINE STRITCH 1 COLOR TmJthVOYACEM ENDS TONITE DOORS OPEN 7:30 .Wrfiael TODD's v") t&m. yoRLD I'M 80 DAYS I1AV1D IITEI mtir itirrol LSH!ILET M.cLAllE " ashlano phone an 9 mi ft uc" . A ,-) ' "Tion ADULTS ONLY Mi Id U : H 1 U tzm Ill; Births CHRISHOLM - To Mr. and Mrs. Collin Jr., 1311 Reddy ave., Medford, May 30, 1960, a girl, 73i lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. PARRISH-To Mr. and Mrs. Nathan, 3543 Old Stage rd., Xr.'dford, May 28, 1980, a girl 734 lbs., at Rogue Valley hospital. EVERS - To Mr. and Mrs. Earl, 748 Siskiyou blvd., Ash land, May 28, 1960, a boy, 6V ! , at Rogue Valley hnjpital. HARPER - To Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D., 3039 Frceland rd., Central Point, May 30, 1960, a girl, 8''i lbs., at Rogue Val ley hospital. THOMSON - To Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey, route 2, box 578, Central Point, May 30, 1960, a boy, 7?-i lbs., at Rogue Val ley hospital. VARNEY To: Mr. and Mrs Richard, 3335 Highway 86, Ashland, May 29, 1960, a boy 8:ii lbs., Ajhland General hospital. Russian Radar Said To Pick Up U.S. Spy Flights Washington (Science Serv- ice) - Russian radar must be able to pick up American flights over the USSH, Army officials here believe. One said, "They could not be that far behind. We can pick up a dime miles away in space." Army Signal Corp officials add that radar has only two limits: the power of the radar facility and the radar waves' inability to bend. In this sec ond limitation, radar waves are like television signals. They cannot follow the curva ture of the earth as do AM radio signals. The officials said that American rader could quickly disclose a Russien plene over U. S. territory. And-a "friend or foe" radio system linked with radar would tell whether the plane were an enemy or not. Similar System The Russians probably have a similar system. Possibly, Russian radarmen might fail to properly inter pret the rader signals, officials here said, adding that "this is unlikely." Thus, if the U.S. has been regularly sending survey planes over the USSR, failure to destroy the planes probably would not be the fault ol ra dar. Russia's failure to destroy American planes most logi cally would be caused by a decision to leave the survey planes alone, the officials in dicated, or by a lack of wea pons to do the job. Nevada Governor i Gets Honorary Degree j McMinnville - IUP1I - Nevada I Gov. Grant Sawyer received j an honorary doctor of lews ' degree here at commence I mcnt exercises of Linfield ' college the past week end. He gave the commencement address. A total of 111 degrees, ! 109 of them bachelors, were awarded. Apartment Building Damaged in Portland Portland - (UPD - A two alarm fire in the Park Manor apartments on southeast Stark caused 812,000 damage Mon day night. Firemen said a de fective wire may have caused the blaze. No one was hurt. WEDNESDAY ONIY 30" the Baldwin Orfja an if) o -i ?aeWL toVi idil RATTLE SNAKE HUNTERS - mond Leehy hold up one of the few rattlers caught near Sherman Oaks, Calif., in a one-day drive by vigilantes to rid the area of the dangerous reptiles. Residents of the area have been pestered for the past month with an unusual in flux of rattlers. (UPI Telephoto) OBITUARIES FRANCIS E. BOWMAN Francis Ernest Bowman, 53, of 29 Summit ave., Med ford, died in a local hospital yesterday. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. MRS. ALICE HANSEN Mrs. Alice Emma Hansen, 92, of 5'03 Hamilton st., Med ford, died at her home Sun day evening. Funeral arrange ments will be announceo by Perl Funeral home. MRS. JESSIE D. BLEW Mrs. Jessie D. Blew, 833 West Jackson St., died at her home Monday night. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Siskiyou Funeral Service, directors of Chapel in the Trees. o ROGER CARL TIMMERMAH Funeral services for Roger Carl Timmerman, 10, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Timmerman, 909 Wabash evenue, who died Sunday in a drowning accident, wiii be held Wednesday at 11 a.m at the Chapel of the Trees, in Siskiyou Memorial park. The Rev. Thomas O. Satterfield of the Church of God will offi ciate, rrmatirtn will follow in the Siskiyou Crematory. Roger was born Dec. l, 1949. in Stockton, Calif., and moved to Medford with his family nine years ago. He was a fourth grade student at the Roosevelt school. He was also a member of Cub Scout Pack 3, Den 5. Survivors, besides his par ents, are his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Timmer man of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, and several aunts and uncles. Honorary pallbearers will be members of Cub Scout Pack 3, Den 5. Siskiyou Funeral service, directors of Chapel in the Trees, are in charge of ar rangements. Servicemen SUPPLY OFFICER Marine 1st Lt. James L. Mc Daniel, husband of the for mer Miss Keacy D. Sweeney, 714 Beekman st., Medford, is serving as logistics and sup ply officer for the third rec onnaissance battalion, Third Marine division, Camp Schwab, Okinawa. o Before entering the service in September, 1957, he was graduated from Southern Ore gon college. PROMOTED Llewellyn W. Witte, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Witte, 2914 South Pacific highway, Medford, is sched uled to be promoted to avia tion electronics technician third class, June 16, while serving with the Combat In telligence Center school at the Glynco Naval Air station, Brunswick, Ga. Investment Funds Noon quolAUoru on i funds: Fun Bid Bullock 12 42 Chem Fund 1140 Colonial Ener . . ll.fia Asked 13 81 12 33 12 73 1202 16 40 10 33 12 97 9 35 9 TJ I Eaton Howard Stk .. 1 1 80 Fidelity 15.23 Group Sec Avia-Elec 9 43 Group Sec Com Stk 1184 Group Sec Petr .... 8 53 Group Sec Steel .... 8 86 droup bee looac .. i.ii Keystone B-3 15.74 8.46 17.17 Keystone B-4 9 46 10 33 Keystone K-2 Keystone S-l Kevstone S-2 Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 Mass Inv Grth St.. TV-Elcc 15 "3 18 97 11 37 13.27 13 17 14 78 16 40 20 70 12 41 14 It) 14 39 15 96 8 98 5 69 15 JO 8 24 . 5.J1 1394 Value Line Inc WeJUnston Portland Produce Portland (UPIl Dtiry mirku: Etfgs To retailers: Grade AA sirs Iftrsc. 41-47c; AA large. 4.1 44c; A Urs. 41-4;ic; AA medium H-41C A A (mall 31-aSc; otnona 1-V- Adtttan!. Butter To r'ileri A A Snit SrtcW A prints. STc lb.; rsloru le igher: B prints. Sir. ChctM. meoium cured To rt tllin A grad cheldir ilngi MM 44-Slc: prollMi Amtfi n tKNll, S-ib irsf. 41'.ii-412C. Portland (trPIi irwvrd tttffe r No. 1 sra dra4 f'. rt tajkart: irara, riia dra-a, s4ie lb ; cut-tip. J-.- IV; Mrs, ltcavy-tpa ajttoia tirawn, Sfeftfe; lifbt-typa Kent cuvup, 3i-d3 ib hole, SS-3t It). Ted Wilkins, left, and Ray HAL YOUNG Hal Young, 45, of Smith River, Calif., stepfather of Alva Doty, Medford, died in Crescent City, Calif., Sunday, it was announced. Mr. Young was born in St. Paul, Ark. on May 1, 1915. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Marie Young, Smith River; his mother, Mrs. Mar tha Young, Tuskahoma, Okla .; sisters, Mrs. Ruby Dyer Houston, Tex.; Mrs. Marie Houghton, Durant, Okla., Mrs. Gertrude Austin, Dierks, Ark.; and brothers, James Young, Boiceville, N. Y., and Tom Young, Tuskahoma, Okla.; step-sons, Alva Doty, Medford, and Lyle Doty, Smith River. Services will be held Wed nesday in Roter's Colonial chapel at Crescent City with the Rev. Tom Mills, of the Federated Community Church Crescent City, officiating. Burial will be in the Smith River cemetery. CARL M. PITTS Carl Melbourne Pitts, 49, died in Redwood City, Calif. The body will be forewarded lu "leuiura ior services, ana uueiiiiem in gacKSonviue cemetery. Funeral services will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home downtown chapel Thurs day at 1 p.m. Committal will be in Jacksonville cemetery. ROBERT HACK Ashland Robert Weams Hach, 89, of Ashland, died yesterday following an ill ness. He was born Nov. 3, 1870, in Hastings, Minn., and had lived in this area since 1914. He was a retired railroad em ployee. Mr. Hach's wife, Elizabeth, died in 1944. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Stephen Var ka, Ashland, and Mrs. Ruby N. Antrobus, Portland; a son, Lloyd Hach, Eugene; two sis ters, Miss Esther Hach, Has tings, Minn., and Mrs. Lydia Knowles, Hastings, Minn.; two brothers, Charles Hach, Has tings, Minn., and Ben Hach, St. Troy Falls, Minn.; and two grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Wednusday in Litwillor's Mt. View chapel. The Rev. Cecil Goins will of ficiate. Interment will be in Mt. View cemetery. FRANK G. HANSEN Ashland - Frank George -Hansen, 66, of route 1, box 510, Talent, died Saturday at his home. He -had lived in the area for the past four years. He was born Dec. 10, 1893, in Mt. Jewett, Pa., and was employed by Timber Prod-, ucts, Medford, before his re tirement. He is survived by his wid- ow Catherine; a son, Frank Hansen Jr., Coquille; a sister, Mrs. Minnie Beatty, Muske- 1 gon, Mich.; three brothers, 1 Harry Hansen, Keego Harbor, i Mich., Ted Hansen, White Hall, Mich., and Peter Han- i sen, Flint Mich., and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Li twlller's Mt. View chapel. The Ashland Elks lodge will officiate. Inter ment will be in Mt. View cemetery. MRS. EMMA WHEELER Ashland - Mrs. Emma Wheeler died In Ashland yes terday. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. at Lit willer's Mt. View chapel. MAUDE GOOD Ashland - Msude Good died in Salem Sunday. Funeral ar rangements will be announced by Litwiller's Funeral home, A."Miad. Prepackaged meats are popular in Israel for the first time. Property Could Decrease m (Continued from Page 1) StiauU t:-.c city, tM4 valuation increase by SI mil lion, the total property tax levy would decrease from this year's 28 6 mills to a lew of 27.9 mills for the 1960-61 fis cal year. Other general fund revenue comes from licenses, permits, fines, forfeitures, penalties, utilities and others, most of which will show a slight in crease next year. But these increases, coupled with the S21.K66 increase in city property tax revenue, are not nearly enough to cov er the higher cost of city serv ices and the proposed pay raise for next year. Total cost of the one-step pay hike alone ! is estimated at S43.000. This will give each of the 165 city employees a pay increase of S10-S20 a month. New Sources Because of this the city has had to come up with several new sources of revenue in order to keep the quality of its services from declining. A good example of new sources can be found in Judge Alan B. Holmes' municipal court. The court has been in dire need of a full-time clerk for some time as it has outgrown the use of a part-time police department secretary. No money is in the general fund for this, so Judge Holmes ad ded a $1 court cost fee onto each fine imposed by the court and presto - money for a new court clerk. Some $16,000 a year was being budgeted from the gen eral fund for use by the sew ane treatment division. In stead of budgeting money from the fund for sewage treatment this year, the city Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: Tnir to. nigiu ana Wednesday. vanau:o cloudiness Wednesday afternoon and evenina. Low to:iight 50. i!:;!-. Wednesday 85. Western Orejjon: Fair sou,h in terior and partly eloudv coasl and North interior tonirht and Wednes day. A Utile cooler over interior toniKhl. warming Wednesday. Low tonight 44-50. HiRh Wednes day 70-80, except fiO-05 on coast. Northern California: Fair tonight and Wednesday, except some coast, tal fog and low clouds tonight and morning. Little temperature change. l.lirAl, DATA TEMPER ATUKE: Mean veilnr- day 65; ahovc normal 3. Record high this date 85 In 1924. Record low tilts date 32 in 1010. iMifcuii'iTvl'iem: 24 hours midnight, none. Midnight to a.m., none. TotHl this month J.97 inchr, ,70 incn aoove normal. Total since Sept. 1. 15 85 inchea, 1.01 inches hclow normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday uc, nignesi mis a.m. yi',.. Iligt A:0 24 C1TY Venter- a.m. hr. d.lV Low I'ree. BrooKings t,7 Crater Lake (12 36 51 Grams Pass 87 Klamath KaUl 7ti MKUFORD 84 52 Portland 72 Seattle ea Spokane La 72 48 52 49 52 66 .0 Yakima 77 Eureka 50 Red Bluff 98 Sacramento 96 San rrancisco 07 Los Angeles ...r... 73 Phoenix 09 Denver Bl Chicago 74 Miami Ucaith 81 New York 66 Washington. D. C. 71 IO Medical School Gets Gifts, Grants Portland - (UPD - Gifts and grants totaling more than ?3.5 million, have been received by the University of Oregon medical school during j he 1959-00 year, Business Man ager W. A. Zimmerman said today. YOU I FREE Cake, Coffee & Donuts DANCING Every Friday and Saturday Nit Opan 10 a.m. till 2 a.m. Phone Tax Levy heads decided to increase the ir,rivu!.&! sewer oc c(ure (which customers pay with their water bill) and release this money for other general fund expenditures. Building Department The building department was also able to cash in on the idea of developing new sources of income by charging a smell fie for "plan-checking" - formerly a free serv ice. Other than the court clerk, new eipendituies for the city nest year include a police woman in the police depart ment, part-time secretary in the finance department and increased insurance coverage for the city. Several cuts were made. which Include the elimination of one plumbing inspector in the building department and a reduction of secretarial man-hours in the city man ager's department. In February when Duff asked the department heads to submit their requested budgets to him, he cautioned Grange News Phoenix Grange Melvin Lattie reported a "Buckat'oo Breakfast" will be held at Phoenix Grange Sun day, June 32, from t) a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The men ate putting on the breakfast as a means of raising funds for the Grange. The public is inviUd and tickets are available. Chaplain Mrs. Raymond Cyr presented a memorial service at the Grange May 23. A floral wreath was placed on the altar during the cere mony and hymns were sung by members. Participatina in the me morial were Master Lloyd Lacy, Chaplain Mrs. Cyr, Flora Mrs. Sol Cox, Secre tary Mrs. Lloyd Whiteside and Mrs. Amos McDaniels, acting musician. The service was in memory of Mrs. Hazel Fish and John Perl, who died during the past vear. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hock- ersmith were elected as alter nate delegates and will attend the Oregon State Grange to be held in Roseburg, June 13 to 17. The serving committee was made up of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Baker. Ramon Novarre, Silenf Screen Star, Arrested Van Nuys, Calif.- (UPD -Ramon Novarro, idol of the sil ent screen in the roaring '20s, was arrested Sunday night on a drunk driving charge and released on bail pending a court appearance today. Novarro, 61, failed a so briety test after his car skid ded on a curve and rammed a parked car in North Holly wood. Portland Livestock i Portland (UPD USDA Oil tie 1250. Choice 1030 ll. fed steers ! UH; 1 0l( lh. 27.75; mixed guod cboice KlfiO lb. 27; tfood under 1100 lb 2f-2 50; utility-standard 029 lb. Holsteins 21 ,50; mixed -Rood -choice around n.r0 Jb. fed heifers 20.50; Rood 670-BUO lb. 24.50-25.50; stand aid i!! so 5b; ut::;:? sows 17 50; canner-cutter mostly 12.50 14; utility bulls 21-22. Calves 200. Good-choice vcalers early 25-27, some hiRher. Hogs 1100. U.S. 1 and 3 butchert 18.50-18.75; some 10; No. 2 and a nivi 1 "1-1 n- dnn.'inri lh in.i i Sheep 1000. Choice prime ft2-t0A lb. spring lambs 22; some 22.25; mostly choice 21 .50- good 20-2 1 ; Rood-choice 08-108 lb. shorn old crop lambs 1017; cull-choice ewes 2.50-5.50. ARE INVITED TO 7 NO 4-2485 for for City 1980-61 them that there would be no lui'icy i' "vixt'.'u;," ;ie.st yi. Nearly all of the 21 depart ment and division heads did submit what Duff calls "real istic" budgets and few cuts had to bo made in these. Uses for Money fc'ach of these heads could been taken home. These in have found many uses for ; fi.nt carriers may also infert additional money and prob- their parents and brothers ably justifiably so. For in-'and sisters, stance, the city would like, j These are the conclusions and needs, to employ a full-f Drs. Valerie Hurst and time city attorney instead of Moses Grossman, faculty a part-time one as it is now members at the University of doing. Hut, it was a foregone California Medical Center, conclusion that there would s.m Francisco, who n port oe no money ior tins, a.m me ; ,neir work in ie Npw F,ng. legal department did not even jland .Tollrnn.i f Medicine pub bother to request it. Ilished here However, one or two of the department heads did go a little overboard in their re quests, one of them even ask- ing for a relatively large sum for capital improvements. which tire "taboo" in next year's budget. But this department head, after a meeting or two with Duff and Administrative As sistant - Gil Gutjahr, found his btidgi't reduced from a re quested S223.247 to a more realistic S 15.1129, a cut of some $178,218. Most of the departments had only a few thousand dol lars knocked off their re quests and the total reduction from all department requests was some $190,000. None of the city's depart ments will be able to notice ably expand their services to the city's citizens next year ovr tli i x year, but because cost and demand of city serv ices are increasing at a faster ration than city revenue, the city administration has done well just to hold the line. Over-fhe-Counter Western Stocks The following bid and ash ed quotations, from the Na tional Association of Securl ties Dealers, inc., do not rep resent actual transactions They are a guide to the range within which these, securities could have been sold (indi cated by the "bid") or bought (indicated by the "asked") at the time of compilation. Common Stork' Hid Asked uank ol America 42'ru Calif. -Pacific Utilities .. Illti Cascades Plywood 30 Cons. Freiglitwayi 17 fa Copco 35 Cyprus Mines Corp aa:'i First National Hank 82 Morrison-Knuclsen 20'a Northwest Nat. Can .... gpt Pacific Pwr. tc Lt ae-la Pcrmnnente Cement .... 22 Portland Gen. Flee 29 ; V. S. National Bank .... 66 4iV. at1' 32 "i 18', .if 34 -H 5 It 31 '5 a.'t". 38 'a 23", ei Ik United Plillllcs 39'i 42 West Coast Tel 24 26 it. Weyerhaeuser 35 Vk 37 The Required PUBLIC HEARING On The Petition Calling for a West Side Zoning District Will B Held at tha West Side School Wednesday, June 1st at S P.M. Ross Lane and Old Stage Read By The JACKSON COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION 1 THE Downtown Central Point Completely Remodeled With Our Baauriful Naw Western Room Thursday, June 2 Serving Yvr Favorite Dishes anal leveraeei. Families With Children Welcome- Parly or Group Reservation Staph Believed Taken Home by New-Born Babies B.I5t.iii,'K.i. t'ocii lu e 3f-("v. i ice) - Infants In a hospital nursery during an outbreak of staphylococcal disease may not immediately fall sick but have a strong chance of be coming ill after they have Families Studied The study was made 16 months after impetigo, caused In a type of staph that resis- u',d antibiotics, broke out in the Center's nursery, firs. Hurst and Crewman studied 94 families with infants that had been exposed (o the impe tigo outbreak. They found that 65 per cent of the fam ilies had members who had become carrier of staph or had experienced the disease itself. Only about half of the babies found to be carriers at the time of the home visit were known to have had the disease while in the nursery. Forty-four percent of them had developed staph weeks even months after dis charge from the hospital. Of their 1(14 brothers and sisters, 12 per cent oontracted some form of the disease. (Nineteen had boils). Ten of the fathers had contracted carbuncles, abscesses or recurrent boils that appeared to 1)0 caused by the nursery infection. Twenty of the mothers had similar ex periences. Vacationer finds House Ransacked Portland-IUPH-Attorney Dan Hartley returned home from a Memorial week end trip to find his house ransacked by Vrtiicmls with heavy damage to furnishings. Hartley told police intrud ers smashed a television set, ripped upholstered furniture with a knife, plugged the drains In the bathtub and wash basin and opened the water taps, and poured acid over clothing in two closets and on the floors. CHESSMAN MODEL MADE London (UPD Madame Tus- saud's Wax Museum offieials Sunday announced that work began the day Caryl Chess man was executed to con struct a model of him in a rep lica of the San Quentin gas chamber in the museum. .tw7,a. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Tuciday, Mar 31, 1960 Moscow TPIl- Boris Paster nak, 70. Nobel prize-winning Soviet author, received a sec. ond blood transfusion Monday . in his fight against cancer. 1 TILL MiSXIGHT CANDLE ROOM HOTEL Medfortf Open Daily 5:30 P.M. to MidttitV Sundays 4 P.M. Till 11 P.M. NOW SHOWING BURT LANCASTER AUDREY HEPBURN fXTS4 .i;:e TECHNICOLOR C0S1IKR1NS AU01E MURPHY JOHN SAXON . tUAio un tin rati THtATtE INFORMATION SEtVICl CALL SP 3-7323 FOR FULL INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR THEATER I j f7SSFIVS MUHMT COLOR CRATER LAKE HISHrW oft ENDS TONITE emeus of :oRom itardat A d'Ffhing crika TVUNNt MUfllAUR. Ul tailllCAN.INIERNATION P1CIWSI end "DATE WITH DIATW NEW SHOW STARTS TONITI COLOR t Oe lux JANE IUSSEU RICHARD SCAN 1 r La L LIFE pi ' - WAS i y cheap re ! I' . ""I THIS ill YW !fl PKIYC'IN ENDS TONITE r JC w hokth ratine imm j 2e&l I TONY CURTIS T lorn ,8 I -'00 & 'vj 0 0 o 0 CD 0 n