Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 26, 1960, Image 5

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FRIDAY. AUGUST 26. 1960
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OW
GOP, Demos Slate
Portland Picnics
Portland - (DPI) - Democrats
and Republicans stage picnics
a few miles apart Sunday and
both parties expressed hope
today that good weather
would help bring out large
crowds as the big drive for
votes in the 1960 campaign
approached.
Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arizona, spokesman for the
conservatives in the Republi
can party, will be featured
speaker at the GOP picnic at
Viking park east of Troutdale.
Democrats will offer as the
main speaker Mrs. Maurine
Keuberger, who is seeking the
U.S. Senate seat held by her
late husband. Sen. Richard L.
Keuberger. The Democratic
picnic will be at Laurelhurst
park.
Both picnics will feature
entertainment, food and fun.
Other GOP speakers will
Include Elmo Smith, Mrs.
Neuberger's rival for the Sen
ate; Gov. Mark Hatfield, Sec
retary of Slate Howell App
ling Jr., and Stale Treasurer
Howard Belton.
Labor Recruitment
Needed For Farms
Salem -IUPII- Employment
service workers in areas
where no farm labor recruit
ment program has been estab
lished haye been asked to
spearhead such efforts by the
newly formed governor's com
mittee to aid in agricultural
harvests.
The committee voiced its
support of local programs
such as are now presently be
ing conducted in Salem and
Eugene.
On the long range view, the
group called for a subcommit
tee made up of agriculture,
education and employment
service personnel to prepare
a paper setting forth the prob
lem of getting farm workers
in the state.
New Fire Truck
Flunks First Test
Galesburg. 111.-IUPII - Gales
burg's new S25.000 fire truck
flunked its first test Thursday.
The truck broke down when
a coupling popped during a
trial run and it had to be
towed back to the fire station
by the 24-year-old engine it
was supposed to replace.
I VST V l. , j i v '
KIDNAP-SHOOTING VICTIMS Shown
here in a recent snapshot are the kidnap
shooting victims who were victimized in
a lover's lane near Carbondale, 111., early
Thursday morning. At right is Mary Lilly
Roberts, 17, of Cobden, 111., who was drag
ged off from the car screaming by the as
sailant. The boy is John Bryant, 20, of
Murphysboro, 111., who was siioi and wounu
ed in the head. The FBI has been brought
into the case and a search parly was to
have set out at dawn this morning.
(UPI Telcphoto)
Action On Bills
Urged By Morse
Washington IUPII Sen.
Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) said
Thursday Congress should not
adjourn without acting on at
least one of several pending
housing bills to help end the
housing and lumber industry
slump.
Morse said in a statement
that "bottom has fallen out
of the lumber industry in
Oregon," largely because of
the decline in new housing
starts.
Two omnibus housing bills
are held up in the House,
Morse noted, while the Sen
ate housing subcommittee has
an emergency housing bill be
fore it.
Two Pals in Pokey,
Thanks To Friendship
Tulare, Calif. - IUPII - When
Robert J. Leveton, 18, was
sentenced to five days in jail
Thursday for driving 100
miles an hour his companion,
Neilan Weinstein, 19, of Port
land, Ore., was given the same
sentence at his own request.
Weinstein told the judge he
would rather spend his time
with Leveton in jail than wait
around town for him to get
out.
EDUCATOR DIES
New York - I1IP1I - Dr. Laura
Hibbard Loomis, 77, who
until her retirement in 1943
held the Katharine Lee Bates
professorship in English liter
ature at Wellesley college,
died Thursday at a hospital.
Firm Has No Plans
To Buy Tree Cones
Tacoma -IUPII- Weyerhaeuser
company is making no plans
to buy seed cones this year be
cause of a poor seed crop,
Royce O. Cornelius, managing
forester, announced Thursday.
Cornelius said a bumper
crop in 1959 probably reduced
tree vigor to a level insuffi
cient to permit development of
cones this year.
In good years the company
buys cones from spare-time
collectors for use in reforesta
tion. Cornelius said the company
would use seeds kept in cold
storage from the 1959 crop for
reforestation this year. About
20,000 acres will be seeded
from the air in Washington
and Oregon.
-gpis
VALIANT V-200
4-D00R SEDAN "6'
PLYMOUTH FURY
4-D00R HARDTOP "6"
YES, WE'VE SLASHED PRICES IN OUR PLYMOUTH-VALIANT
1
DO WE HAVE wide choice of colors and models- YES!
DO WE MAKE the hottest deals in town-KfS
WILL WE GIVE high trade-in allowances-KS
WILL WE MAKE on-the-spot, no-red-tape deals-KS
SHOULD YOU SEE your Plymouth-Valiant dealer today- YES, YES, YES!
Prices shown are the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Prices for the models indicated,
equipped as illustrated, exclusive of transportation charges.
Hurry In for a YES deal while present stocks last!
SEE YOUR PLYMOUTH-VALIANT
i
YES-
MAN
NOW
Try and Stop
-By BENNETT CERF-
V of the Grand Canyon. Evidently the Indies had boon
driving all night. Full of pep, however, they piled out and
iu wit: iiun kiii. 1 1 n .niv.
woke up a dozen guests
of the hotel across the
road by shrilling, "It's all
they say it is, girls. Come
quick and look. It's
open!"
Leopold Godowsky, tho
late composer, was subject
to insomnia. His son, who
lived with him until his
marriage, was a sound,
heavy sleeper. When the
father was having a par
ticularly bad night, it was
his amiable practice to enter his son's room, shake him vigorously,
and exclaim, "What's the matter, my poor boy? Can't you sleep
either?"
A housewife, preparing1 dinner in tho kitchen, heard her hus
band enter the apartment a full hour ahead of his usual time.
What she did not know was that he had persuaded his boss to
come with him for a "taste of home cooking." Cheerily she called
out, "Hi, Snoogie, I see old drizzle puss let you sneak off early
this evening!"
1960, by Bennett Cei f. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Columnist Eric Sevareid
Has Annoyed Readers,
But Rarely Bored Them
I may occasionally annoy
some readers, but 1 rarely
bore anybody," claims Eric
Sevareid.
And few will deny cither
ability to the sophisticated,
amusing and mildly cynical
news analyst who has been
newspaper reporter, author,
radio, TV commentator, and
now syndicated columnist for
the Mail Tribune.
His column on internation
al, national, economic and mil
itary affairs - which he has
been covering distinguishedly
for about two dozen years
will appear each Sunday on
the editorial page.
Sevareid began as a copy
boy on the Minneapolis Jour
nal in 1931 before getting his
A.B. degree at the University
of Minnesota. Later he served
as a reporter on the Journal,
then on the Minneapolis Star.
In 1036 he expanded his
horizons, joining the Paris
Edition of the N.Y. Herald
Tribune, first as a reporter,
then as city editor. After
short trick as night editor ot
the United Press ;n Paris, h
joined the Columbia Broad
casting System in August of
1939 as a European corres
pondent
His voice became familiar
to listeners throughout the
U. S. during the war. He was
with the French Army and
Air Force in France and Bel
gium, then broadcast news of
the French capitulation from
Tours and Bordcau. His voice
has since been heard from
many parts of the world, in
eluding England (where he is
currently), Holland, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Mexico, Brazil.
So effective were his news
analyses that many were eol-
r.
Jin' W
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lected and published as
book, ''In One Ear."
Eric Sevareid claims no
expertise except perhaps in
lie political and diplomatic
areas, but he has gone from
the small town of Velva,
North Dakota, his birthplace.
to the groat capitals and news
centers of the world, from a
dirt farm to acquaintance with
the world's great, from cov
ering baby snatching and Min
neapolis meetings to comment
ing on world war and world
conferences.
Married and the father of
twin teenagers, Sevareid has
fairly recent "passion for
hunting and fishing- with loo
little time to indulge it." He
is past president of the Radio
Correspondents association.
In addition to "In One Ear,"
he wrote the juvenile "Ca
noeing with the ' Cree." the
best selling "Nut So Wild a
Dream" and, more recently,
"Small Sounds in the Night."
He has written for such mag
azines as the Saturday Eve
ning Post, Look, Reader's Di
gest, Harper's, The Reporter,
The New Republic This Week,
American Legion Magazine.
Boys' Life, St. Nicholas and
Harper's Bazaar.
From a viewpoint shaped by
contact with many of the news
makers of this era and a life
spent nearly half of it over
seas, Eric Sevareid comments
on the passing and crucial
news with wit and bile.
"I'm deeply interested in
the whole current develop
ment of western society," he
observes, "in all its manifes
tations from its preoccupation
with gadgets to its philosoph
ical phase of mind."
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-s3i lis
Selective Service Puts
New Procedure in Effect
New procedures to identify
men who would be qualified
for military service in an
emergency, but who are not
accepted under current Armed
Forces standards, have been
put into effect by Oregon Se
lective Service local boards,
Sprague H. Carter, Oregon se
lective service director, has
announced. The new proce
dures have been adopted on a
national basis.
The men will no longer be
placed in Class 1V-F, Carter
said. It is expected that selec
tive service regulations will
be amended to provide in the
near future, a new selective
service classification for men
not accepted under current
standards, but who arc avail
able and who would be quali
fied in an emergency, he
added.
Until the contemplated
changes in the regulations are
adopted, those men the local
boards find would qualify in
an emergency will keep their
current classification. Local
boards will continue to place
in Class IV-F those men the
Armed Forces are unlikely to
need even in an emergency,
Carter said.
Armed Forces Examining
stations will adapt their pro
cedures to report to local
boards after examination
whether a man is currently
qualified, may be qualified in
an emergency, or is unlikely
to be needed for military serv
ice even in an emergency, Car
ter added.
The state director pointed
out that current standards of
acceptability have resulted in
high rejection rates. Many of
those men not being accepted
today and who are now classi
fied IV-F would have to serve
in an emergency under altered
standards.
Identification in advance of
men qualified in an emer
gency will permit the local
boards to save time in meet
ing mobilization requirements
in an emergency.
The new procedures, Carter
said, provide a more realistic
picture of tile manpower re
sources for an emergency.
They will, he added, also em
phasize that rejection is tem
porary and that a IV-F classi
fication does not mean a man
is unable at any time 1o con
tribute by military service, or
to pursue vital civilian activi
les as circumstances may re
quire. Approximately 23,339 men
are classified IV-F in Oregon
as of June .10, out of 211,5(i5
men classified by local boards
since 1948. Fewer will be put
in this class in the future
under the new procedures.
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