10 A
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. ORE.
" , peeled to attend the meetij
Eugene - (UP1) - The Oregon T ,. . . ..., ....... ...P
.Veterinary Medical assocla- '"'""" "-"
lion will meet here Sept. 22- the latest technique In veter-
24. lnary medicine.
On the spot
i
claim service
Allstate claims men have the authority
to write claim checks themselves ...
Your claim is settled "on the spot" in
many cases, with no home oHice red tape.
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Allstate is always as near as the nearest
telephone. Our claims experts are located
throughout the United States, and in
Canada, too. Allstate has the largest staff
of full-time claims expediters in the auto
insurance business.
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Allstate's quality protection for your fam
ily, home and car.
Grange Coop
Meeting Today
The Grange Cooperative
Supply association, Central
Point, is holding its 26th an
nual meeting at the Central
Point Grange hall today.
The expansion plans an
nounced at the annual meet
ing last year have now been
completed and are In full operation.
These consisted of a com
plete new facility located at
421 A St., Ashland, which in
cludes a store and warehouse,
service station, and 60,000 gal
lons underground petroleum
storage. The cost of this facili
ty was approximately $100,-
000.
The other major improve
ment during the year was the
erection of a new warehouse
adjoining the Coop elevator
In Central Point, which per
mitted the use of the basement
of the elevator for bulk stor
age of grain. Due to the loss
of other storage facilities in
the valley by fire a year ago,
the Association was faced with
the problem of providing stor
age for almost the entire grain
crop of the valley.
The addition of the new
facility and some changes in
the elevator resulted in the
association being able to
handle the expected volume
and provide a market for ap
proximately $150,000 of grain
As the result of new Incili-
lies being built and other Im
provemcnls made during the
year, the Coops increase in
facilities and equipment
amount to $152,000.
Members and guests will be
given full reports on the op
eration for the year, which
resulted in a total volume of
business of $1,725,581.
Members will vote for three
directors at the meeting and
will receive their patronage
reports and checks.
For Full Dotaili, See or Call:
AGENTS: JOHN FRANTZ, DOUG HINESLY, BERNII SEARS
and DON DEHAAN
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. BUILDING
101 lilt Jackion Blvd., Medford, Oregon Phono SPiing 3-4722
You're In good hands with
klNSURANOI OOMFANllS
AUTO PROPERTY ACCIDENT .ltd tlCKNIII U.I
H.hh Officii Unfc., ItllMtl.
More Students, More Concerts
About Quality of Education
Marks Start of School Year
By LAWRENCE G.
DERTHICK
U.S. Cammissionar of Educa
tion. Department of Health
Education and Welfare
(Written for United, Prex
International)
This first academic year of
Walsh Appointed as
Member of Committee
Jackson County Shcritf
Joseph D. Wash has been ap
pointed a member of the Ore
gon State Peace Officers' as
sociation training committee,
according to an announce
ment by Forrest Sholcs, asso
ciation president.
The committee is made up
of sheriff's and police chiefs
who organize a basic and ad
vanced in-service police train-ling.
Appling Attacks
Census Figures
Salem-UIPD - Secretary of
State Howell Appling Jr. said
Monday that a "rash of errors"
coming to light in the Fed
eral Census Brueau's prelim
inary figures for Oregon
points up the need for a
change in the Oregon law.
"The attorney general rec
ently advised us," Appling
said, "that we are compelled
under existing Oregon law to
accept the Census Bureau's
preliminary figures as the
guide in such things as alloca
tion of state funds to the coun
ties, establishment of new dis
trict and circuit judgeships,
and the like.",
"If he is right I question
the wisdom of Oregon law ac
cepting preliminary census
announcements from the fed
eral bureau, If the federal
agency doesn't trust their own
figures enough to announce
them as final, I don't know
why we should. If they are
preliminary to the federal ag
ency who collected them they
should be preliminary under
Oregon law."
a new decade opens with em
phasis on the word "more."
There will be more tu-
dents in our nation's schools
and colleges - the largest en
rollment in history.
More has to be learned,
and there is more concern
about the quality of education
offered than ever before.
Over the country as a whole
there is a revitalized interest
in education as a lifelong
process. More schools are ex
perimenting with a longer
school day, and there is an in
creasing tendency to more
completely utilize public
school facilities. Larger num
befs of students are being glv-
Kennedy Appoints
Disarmament Aide
Los Angeles - IUP1I - Demo
cratic presidential candidate
John F. Kennedy Sunday
night announced appointment
of Benjamin V. Cohen, a ma
jor New Deal figure, as his
special assistant on disarmament.
Portland, Ore. - tUPl) - Piero
Bellugi, conductor of the
Portland Symphony Orches
tra, has been invited to con
duct the opening premiere of
the music season in Naples,
Italy, Sept. 29.
Attorneys, Judges
Schedule Meeting
Gearhart - IUPD - Attorneys
and judges from throughout
Oregon are scheduled to meet
here Sept. 21-24 for the 26th
annual Oregon State Bar as
sociation meeting.
Main speakers planned for
the session are Chief Justice
John R. Dethmers of the
Michigan Supreme Court;
Charles S. Rhyne, Washing
ton, D.C., former American
Bar association president and
present chairman of the
ABA's Committee on World
Peace Through Law; and Carl
M. Marcy, chief of staff for
the U.S. Senate Committee on
Foreign Relations.
Youth Bound Oyer
On Slaying Charge'
Oregon City - IUPII - Jeffrey
Edward German, 17, was
bound over to adult court
Monday in connection with
the slaying of his grandfather.
District Attorney Winston
Bradshaw said he planned to
take the case before the grand
jury Wednesday.
German was charged with
the slaying of his grandfather,
Vcotta R. Matters, at a home
near Kelso, Ore., Saturday
might.
YEAR-END
mKBia
CLEARANCE
ii n
m m m. 7 . .
WVHS ......
V. K. fcr m
i rm wm wr J
fER MONTH
!ave hundreds on a new Rambler
Now's the time shrewd car buyers get the best deals, as Rambler dealers clear out this
year's Ramblers to make room for '61 models. Come in today and get the buy of
your life on a I960 Rambler of your choice. Rambler dealers sell more compact cars
per dealer than any other dealer group. Thanks to this record volume, dcalerVsales
costs per car are lower and they can pass these extra savings on to you, too.
HOW! Get hundreds more for your present car
The bottom is fast dropping out of used car prices for big carj. So your Rambler dealer
can give you more in trade now than ever again. Trade now and save yourself !
hundreds of dollars. Get a new qiialily-built, gas-saving Rambler NOW I Hurry
there's still a wide range of colors and models.
HOU! Get the buy of your life at your Rambler dealer's!
LEA MOTORS, Bart left at 5 th
f;i .i, juYoir'
t
a
en an opportunity to take ad
vanced or enriched courses
not included in the customary
program of studies. Schools
are being used more and more
for adult courses and for
other community and recrea
tional programs.
Trend Changing Facilities
The trend toward year
round use of educational fa
cilities is gradually changing
their nature and location as
well as their planned pro
grams. Many school and col
lege plants are now designed
with the educational and rec
reational needs of citizens
from childhood through adult
hood in mind. Added to tradi
tional classrooms are commu
nity activity areas such as
workshops, libraries, theaters,
and health and recreation
centers.
Educational programs au
thorized by the National De
fense Education act two years
ago this fall will have their
greatest impact this year on
many aspects of American ed
ucation.
About 130,000 deserving
students will receive loans
totaling about $65 million to
help them pay for college
university undergraduate and
graduate study. And 1,500
graduate students will receive
three-year fellowships begin
ning this year. Another 1,000
who received three-year fel
lowships last year will con
tinue their studies this aca
demic year.
Guidance and counseling
services will be strengthened
to more nearly approach the
democratic ideals of develop
ing each child to his greatest
ability.
To Extend Research
Teaching of mathematics,
science and modern foreign
languages will be improved,
through the use of new equip
ment, better laboratories and
new techniques. Research and
practice in the use of new
teaching-learning aids such as
television, motion pictures,
radio, tape recordings and
other communication equip
ment will be extended. Auto
mated devices for teaching
and learning that stress audio
and visual education and in
dividual pupil progress are
rapidly changing the tools of
education and are effecting
radical changes in classrooms
across the country.
I do not wish to give the
impression that machines will
curtail the responsibility of
the teacher. Indeed they will
accentuate the teacher's role.
Through educational re
search we are now beginning
to know more about the
learning process than ever be
fore. We are spending all too
little on research. It is still
less than one-tenth of 1 per
cent of the money we invest
in American education, but
the results are already prom
ising.
Influence on Process
Studies are under way that
will exert profound influence
on the whole educational pro
cess. We are getting new in
sights, for example, into the
adequacy of the traditional
I.Q. tests for measuring all
levels and aspects of intelli
gence. We have discovered
that children are capable of
learning much more at a far
earlier age than had been be
lieved possible. We are find
ing ways to greatly enrich
educational opportunity not
only for those who are gifted
but also for children who are
retarded, blind or otherwise
handicapped.
So much for the promise of
this, and future academic
years. But the promise must
not blind us to the problems.
As we begin another school
year:
-We shall again be critically-
short of well qualified
teachers.
-We shall again have thou
sands of children attending
"double session" schools be
cause of the classroom short
age.
-We still have many one-
room schools and school dis
tricts too small to offer the
programs children need to
prepare them for living in the
world of today and tomorrow.
Greatest Effort
The best schools in this
country are making the great
est effort to improve and we
can be proud of the quality of
education they offer. Our task
is to bring all of our schools
up to the standards of the
best. To do this will call for
twice the money and effort
we are now investing In our
nation's educational enter
prise. Since education, as
never before, is basic to our
national security and the gen
eral welfare of mankind, we
must not delay in making this
investment in trained man
power and In the moral and
spiritual values that are In-
Sawdust
SIH GRIEN STAMPS
Medford Fuel Go.
Tat SP 2-21 11 Court t McAl.
c
3
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 13. 1980
Q ., tunohnnt the us to achieve our goal of giv
herent In education, for edu- eMcation routfioin in. "ng every American all the
cation that doesn't end in country a. we move into education he can use, for h.i
goodness is not good educa- new decade. I hope happiness and progress,
" mterest wi" ,u0. m over- and for the continued ad-
I am encouraged by the into a concern tol w tdnent of human welfare,
greatly increased interest in come the problems and enaoie vane
IT'S TIME FOR SCHOOL AGAIN!
Yon start off on the right foot when
you step out in Keds! For sharp
styles, for shock-cushioning com
fort and runability for gym, for
everyday fun step into new Keds!
l' k.
BOYS' AND GIRLS'
CHAMPION. Everyone's
favorite for appearance
and serviceability. Venti
lated uppers with pull
proof eyelets. Crepe soles.
4.99 & 6.49
THE BIG LEAGUER. Buih for ragged
action and foot protection, with greater
gripping power, arch-cushioned comfort.
5.75 to 6.45
It' Time For School Again
Girl's Gym Suits For
Medford, Phoenix and Talent
shirt
shorts
1.98
2.49
OPEN MONDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9:00
OFFICIAL GYM SUITS
For Boys
regulation color for
Medford school system
GREY BOXER SHORTS
1.29
GREY T-SHIRTS
part wool
SWEAT SOX
grey
SWEAT SHIRTS
boys' 1.39
men's 1.98
r . .' r nJ iLk''. . I