Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 07, 1960, Image 5

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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE.
SUNDAY. AUGUST 7. I960
O IP
Candidates Trairi Sights on
California During Past Week
United Prest International
Sacramento - Both candi
dates for the presidency train
ed their sights on California
last week.
Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, a few days after his
nomination as the Republi
can candidate, flew to his
home town of Whittier, put in
a day of campaigning, then
took off by air for Hawaii.
Robert Kennedy, brother of
the Democratic presidential
candidate, arrived ' in San
Francisco at the head of a
campaign task force.
While in southern Califor
nia, Nixon hung the charge
News About Books
From the Library
Following is a list of new
books received recently by the
Public Library of Medford
and Jackson County.
ADULT NON-FICTION
Psychology: A Wonderful
World for Children, Peter
Cardoza; Three To Get Mar
ried, Fulton John Sheen.
Religion: Secrets of Self
Mastery, Lowell R. Ditzen;
Faith Made Them Champions,
Norman Vincent Peale.
Social scionces: On Popula
tion, Thomas Malthus; Politi
cal Life, Robert E. Lane;
Readings for Democrats, Ed
ward Reed; The Show of Vio
lence, Fredric Wertham.
Language: The Story of
Language, Mario Pei.
Pure science; Elements of
Calculus and Analytic Geo
metry, George B. Thomas;
Heredity, Race and Society,
L. C. Dunn; The Mushroom
Hunter's Field Guide, Alexan
der H. Smith; Strange Won
d e r s of the Sea, Henry
Gwynne Vevers; How to
Know the Birds, Roger Tory
Peterson; Born Free, Joy
Adamson.
Technology (applied sci
ence): Thank God for My
Heart Attack, Charles Yale
Harrison; Electricity and Elec
tronics, William B. Steinberg;
Basic Theory and Application
of Transistors, U.S. Dept. of
the Army; The Kentucky Ri
fle, John Dillin; The Plains
Rifle, Charles E. Hanson;
Sixguns by Keith, Elmer
Keith; The Muzzel-Loading
Cap Lock Rifle, Ned H.
Roberts; Colt Firearms,
1836 - 1958, James Edsall
Scrven; Small Arms of the
World, Walter H. Smith;
Rockets Through Space, Les
ter Del Ray; Fruit Growing,
George W. Schneider; The
Complete Dog Book, Ameri
can Kennel Club; Operation
of Common Woodworking ma
chines, Herman Hjorth; Prac
tical Camellia Culture, Robert
J. Halliday; Exotic Plants of
the World, Anthony J. Hux-
Stewart Ave. Load
Limit Taken Off
The Jackson county court
signed an order annulling
load limits on the Myers lane
to Holly st. portion of Stew
art ave. Friday.
Previously load limits had
been lifted from Myers lane
to Riverside ave. Lifting of
the load limits allows heavy
trucks to operate freely on
Stewart ave. in the industrial
section which includes part of
Kogap Lumber company, the
new California Oregon Power
company warehouses and
packing plants.
The county road depart
ment plans to pave out to the
box culvert which will widen
that section of road. Accord
ing to long range city plans,
Stewart ave. eventually will
be a four-lane arterial.
The county planning com
mission has recommended that
South Stage rd. be given ac
cess from Voorhies crossing
across the planned freeway to
Insure an east-west arterial
connecting with the Old Stage
rd. which extends south and
east from Jacksonville. This
would take some of the heavy
traffic off Stewart ave., it was
explained.
Two Are Injured
In Auto Accident
Two persoijs were injured
in a one-car accident Thurs
day night on Highway 298 in
the Applegate area, state) po
lice said.
Gerry Duane Stewart, 21,
of 708V4 West Foevth st.,
was treated for a sprained
neck and bruises at Sacred
Heart hospital and released.
Richard Alvin. White, 22, of
box 654, Jacksonville, is be
ing treated in Sacred Heart
hospital for bruises.
Sta'e police said the acci
dent occurred in front of the
Minnie Offenbacher home
when the car faQed to make a
curve. The two boys told state
police that a third unidenti
fied person was driving the
car.
of "low road" campaigning on
his Democratic opponent, and
went on to say that Kennedy
had paid the price for sup
port of big labor leaders
through the Democratic plat
form enacted in Los Angeles.
Vies President Honored
The vice president was hon
ored at a mammoth rally in
the football stadium of Whit
tier college, his alma mater.
An estimated 20,000 per
sons jammed the playing field
of the staid little Quaker col
lege to roar cheers for the
home town boy who left an
obscure Whittier law prac
tice 14 years ago for Wash-
ley; Home Craftsman's book
of Garden Furniture, Barbe
cues and Fences, Home Crafts
man Magazine.
The arts and recreation
The Music of Spain, Gilbert
Chase; Magic House of Num
bers, Irving Adler; Al Roth on
Bridge, Alvin Roth; How to
Box, Joe Louis.
Literature: A Literary
Uhronicle: 1920-1950, Edmund
Wilson; A Raisin in the Sun,
Lorraine Hansberry; Six
Great Modern Plays; The Sa
tyricon, Petronius; Aristotle's
Theory of Poetry and Fine
Art, Aristotle; The Ramayana
and the Mahabharata, Val
miki. Geography, travels: Family
Safari, William E. Caldwell;
Italy, 1960, Eugene Fodor;
Northern Italy From the Alps
to Florence, Litellus R. Muir
head; I Was A Slave in Rus
sia, John H. Noble; Tribes of
the Sahara, Lloyd Cabot
Briggs; San Francisco Bay,
Harold Gilliam.
Biography: The Saga of
Pappy Gunn, George C. Ken
n e y; Jawaharlal Nehru,
Frank R. Moraes, Forbidden
Childhood, Ruth Slenczynska;
He Opened the West, Don M.
Chase; Tin Cans, Theodore
Roscoe; Crossing the Plains,
Doris H. Chase; The Cowboy
Reader, Lon Tinkle; A Cen
tury of Life and Faith in Del
Norte County, Don M. Chase;
They Pushed Back the Forest,
Doris H. Chase.
ADULT FICTION
Eight Days, Alan Barnsley;
The Numbered Account, Ann
Bridge; Mi Amigo, William R.
Burnett; The Actor, Niven
Busch; The Melody of Sex,
Max Catto; The African, Wil
liam Conton; Comanche Moon,
William R. Cox; The Disin
herited, Michel Del Castillo;
The Cunning of the Dove, Al
fred L. Duggan; Love and
Like, Herbert Gold; Free Fall,
William G. Golding; The Men
From the Bush, Ronald Har
dy; Next Stop P a r a d i s e,
Marek Hlasko; The Sundial,
Shirley Jackson; The Citadel
Is Yours, Brigid Knight;
Change of Love, Vivienne
Koch; Tippy Locklin, Joseph
W. Meagher; A Canticle for
Leibowitz, Walter M. Miller;
Venetian Red, Pier Maria Pa
sinetti; We the Living, Ayn
Rand; The Three Days, Don
Robertson; Son of the Gam
blin'man, Mark Sandoz; The
Fell of Dark, James Norman
Schmidt; The Ardent Years,
Janet Stevenson; The Seven:
Navy Subchaser, William Ed
ward Syers; Act of Mercy,
Arthur L. Thompson; Doctor
Thome, Anthony Trollope;
Log Jam, Leslie Turner
White.
YOUNG PEOPLE'S FICTION
Enchanted Caravan, Doro
thy G. Butters; The Real
Thing, Rosamond DuJardin;
The Brave and the Fair, Helen
Josephine Ferris; Stadium Be
yond the Stars, Milton Lesser.
JUVENILE NON-FICTION
Moose Country, Samuel Ar
ther Campbell; True Bear
Stories, Joaquin Miller; Moles
and Shrews, Charles L. Rip
per; The Posy Ring, Kate D.
Wiggin; The Children's Shake
speare, Edith Nesbit; On the
Trail with Freckles and Don,
Ruth Wheeler.
JUVENILE FICTION
Watergate, Herbert Best;
Chariot in the Sky, Arna Bon
temps; Ruggy the Mountain
Buck, Mabel Earp C a s o n;
Towhead in Mexico, May Carr
Hanley; The Secret of the
Cave, Arthur M. Maxwell;
Sam Bass, Beverly H. Treu
hardt; Adventures of Kado,
Alice M. Underhill.
Easy books: Grasslands,
Delia Goetz.
Look
AND WATCH
Ges:ar:si
ington and returned js a nom
inee for the natiqns highest
office. o
While Nixon was returning
from his Hawaiian campaign
swing, Robert Kennedy sat
down with newsmen in San
Francisco. He said his broth
er must win the West if he is
to win the presidency in No
vember. Robert Kennedy, campaign
manager for the senator, and
a third brother, Ted, were in
San Francisco for the offi
cial opening of the western
John F. Kennedy headquar
ters. Ted is in charge of the
Western campaign.
Wage Tough Fight
At a press conference, Rob
ert Kennedy said the Demo
crats will wage a "tough and
vigorous fight" in this region
- beginning with a high-powered
drive to register citizens
who are eligible to vote but
are unregistered.
He said he was confident
his brother would win even
though Vice President Nixon
"obviously starts out with an
advantage" gained through
GOP victories in 1952 and
1956.
Elsewhere, there were these
developments:
Climbers: Two California
climbers triumphed over the
Diamond, a cliff in E s t e s
Park, Colo. They reached the
top of 14,256 foot Longs
Peak after scaling the' pre
viously unclimbed 1,000-foot
sheer granite cliff on the east
face of the mountain.
Robert F. Kamps, 27, a
school teacher from North
Hollywood,, and David Rear
ick, 28, a Pasadena mathema
tician, reached the top of the
mountain 20 minutes after
completing the rugged two
and a half day ascent
of the Diamond. The last
250 feet to the top of the
mountain was an easy hike
compared to the 1,000-foot
tension climb with ropes and
pitons. Their conquest of the
Diamond was a victory over
the last unclimbed approach
to a major mountain in the
United States.
Hoax: A San Francisco fed
eral jury, split 9-3 in favor
of conviction, was unable to
reach a verdict in the case
of Las Vegas businessman, Ar
chibald Dewar, accused of a
bomb hoax aboard a Trans
World Airlines plane last
May 23. The jury was out
for more than 3V4 hours be
fore it announced it could
reach no decision. The gov
ernment indicated it would
seek a new trial. Dewar's de
fense was that his remark
about a bomb was a joke.
Gutowski: Pole vaulter Bob
Gutowski, official holder of
the outdoor world record,
was Instantly killed in a head
on collision at Camp Pendle
ton Marine base near San Di
ego. One occupant of the sec
ond car - a marine - also
was killed. Gutowski, a ma
rine first lieutenant, was
alone on his way home when
another car headed in the
opposite direction entered the
wrong lane and smashed into
the track star's auto, investi
gators reported.
Adland: In Los Angeles,
Mrs. Florence Adland waived
a jury trial on charges she
contributed to the delinquen
cy of her teen-age daughter,
insisting she was confident of
acquittal. Mrs. Adland agreed
to submit her case on the
transcript of her preliminary
hearing, which Superior
Judge Lewis Drucker said he
would study before ruling.
Cohen: Mickey Cohen, ques.
tioned in Santa Ana about an
h o n orary deputy sheriff's
badge allegedly issued him,
declined to give any informa
tion other than his name to
an Orange county grand jury.
Cohen cited various articles
of the State Constitution and
the fifth amendment of the
U.S. Constituion for his re
fusal. Cohen, an ex-convict,
was reported to have been is
sued the special badge about
15 years ago.
REJECT PAYMENTS
Jackson, Miss. - WD - State
Reps. Clarence Pierce and
James Walker Thursday turn
ed down the $100 monthly
expense payments the 1960
Mississippi Legislature voted
for its memberw Pierce said
he had not earned It. Walker
said he -was opposed to th e
whole business on principle.
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