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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1960)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 18(0 0 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE. Daylight Time Controversial Issue on Oregon Ballot in November Editor's note: There are IS state measure on the Nov. 8 Orecon ceneral election ballot. Thii li the first ot live articles describing their background and effect. By DOUGLAS GRIPP 'Salem - ttlPB - Of the first three issues on the Oregon hallnt rtpvl mnnth nnlv ra daylight saving time, is con troversial. The other two are fixing commencement of terms of legislators, and financing ur ban redevelopment -projects. All were referred by the 19S9 legislature. Proposition No. 1 calls for the terms of Oregon senators and representatives to start on the first day of the legis lative session. As it stands, legislators start their terms the first Monday in January although the legislative ses sion starts a week later. Lawmakers feel the one I week gap could result in con fusion over succession to the governorship should the gov ernor die or resign, since the Senate president is next in line. The measure won unan imous consent of both houses. Daylight time, No. 2, is not new to the Oregon ballot. It was defeated in 1954 by 47,' 702 votes out of a total of , more than. 572,000 votes cast. Labor, traditionally oppos' ed to "fast time," supports it . this year. The Oregon AFL . CIO endorsed the measure by a close margin at its Sea side convention last year. Farmers and other early risers complain of the extra hour of darkness in the morn ing. Outdoor theater interests say the one-hour delay in starting of movies discourages some patrons Proponents say that 154 more hours of outdoor time in the evening would be avail able in the summertime, and electric bills would be cheap er. Confusion over being one hour behind the rest of the nation would be iff----- ' Campaign Quotes By United Press International Vice President Richard M. Nixon (Statement issued at Billings, Mont.): "My opponent (Sen. John F. Kennedy) has endorsed cer tain domestic programs and has subscribed to a foreign policy idea which I am con vinced would be harmful to our people, would weaken America and would endanger peace and freedom in the world. "Hardly a significant area in American life can remain untouched if his (Kennedy's) philosophy of federalism in these foreign and domestic programs were to be adopted. "Freedom weakened ai home, our economic strength undercut by lavish spending that leads to more thinking about the stern demands of the fateful struggle confront ing us - there is the prospect for America revealed in the programs and statements of my opponent. "As a matter of duty to the American people, I must make that prospect clear in the future debates with my op ponent and as I campaign throughout the country." WANTED FIVE LESS POUNDS Actress Jo Morrow, 20, reads a diet book telling how to take w.eight off quickly following court approval of terms in her third year contract option with Columbia JPictures. The contract terms state that the red-haired actress must not weigh more than 132 pounds, have more than a 24-inch waist or 37-inch hips. Her 36-inch bust line will nOthaVe to be changed. The actress now weighs 137 pounds and. is faced with the problem of losing -five pounds immediately. . (UPI Telephoto) What Is The Law? ' This column Is prepared as a public service by the College of Law, Willamette University, Salem, to explain basic legal principles, not to provide legal advice. The reader is cautioned not to apply these cases to his own problems without an attorney's advice, for differing facts may change the outcome. Equity Powers of a Court Prove 'Delicate' Area A court ..in an eastern city eliminated several year's ago, granted an and tourism would be helped, injunction at tne request oi rw v Sklar that enjoined Mulvey it iv. ,m,iri from entering the Sklar home, Be moved forward one hour It also provided that Mulvey ia j I mar, nnf tri "t.nrpaten. commu- beginning on me st ouuubv (hwinah tha I a S T. niCaiC Willi, wuui w c..a f cr,tmhAr T h wise nueriere Willi oumi o ' ",m ;r.n n Pifir. wife, or the two Sklar chil standard time the rest of the aren. me iruuui v.nr - . , the Sklars and Mulvey began Jfvai, , . Tvff.,1,.-,. mnirori into the The urban redevelopment w"" - " " Mn .1 aiirhnri7a same neiKiiuuinuuu. , proposal, -communities to take a new ariDroach in financing then- share of such projects - in effect, to make the projects "nav "their own way ; It does not call for any new , tax on the ' general public. Instead, payment is projected on the basis of increased taxes when projects are finished The method is informally : i; known as the Plan." ' because it was first ; used in the California city: and successfully.. There appears to be no or- . ganized opposition. Tuesday: Prosecution by , information or indictment, authorisation of the legis lature to .propose revising 4 the state constitution, and .. state bonds for higher edu ' cation facilities. immediately started annoy- Morse Says China In UN Inevitable WHAT WILL HAPPEN to the one who gets the short straw? Tiraw straws to see who goes to college? Could be. In ten vpar the number of college applicants may double. Many of our colleges and universi tias are already crowded. And unless we start right now to ovnand our college facilities H .(-tract more and better instructors, many bright youngsters may soon be re fused an education. TSoir future depends on you. Your future depends on them. Help the college of your choice, now! team more about how you can meet ond beat this colltg cruis. Writ, today for your tr. doo"j., OPCN WIDE THE COUEGE POOR," Bo 36, Times Square Station, New York 36, N.Y. PablMed at a pMie tmu in Cownril and Iht Senpaptr M ' trrliiine Ennt" AilKit"- Washington - (UPD S e n, Wayne Morse (D-urej, a member of the U.S. dejegation "Sacramento t0 the united Nations General Assembly, said today that ad mission of Communist China to the world organization was "inavitable." I think Saturday's vote at the United Nations and tne debate showed it," he said in a statement here. As a result. Morse adaea the United States must De willing next year to have the United Nations negotiate con ditions for Communist L-nina s admission. - Morse said he tnougnt tne United Nations should ad vance pledges of good inter national -behavior irom nea China as a conditipn of its entry. . Hunter, Son Safe After Night in Open Dallas. Ore. -IUPD- Cloyce Grant, 45, and his son, Kimm, 7, drove out of .the woods to day after a search had been organized for them when they failed to return trom a Sun day hunting trip. Grant said he and nis son were about two mnes mm their pickup truck when dark ness set in so tney oecioea to I build a fire and spend the nicht. They had gone nunting in the Rickreall river area west of here. Stock Judging Champ Named at PI Exposition Portland -(UPD- Arthur J Schmidt, 21, a Washington State University senior from Spokane, Sunday was named as the intercollegiate stock iudeine champion at the Pa cific International Livestock F.vnosition here. Schmidt was a member of the WSU team which scored the highest number of points in Judging in compeuuuu with other colleges and uni versities. Cal Poly was second and Oregon State third. COLLEGE TRUSTEE DIES Cambridge, Mass. - (UPD - Mrs. Margaret Earhart Smith 58, a trustee of Radcliffe college, died Saturday. ing Mrs. Sklar by trying to persuade her to leave her hus band and run away with him. He entered her home several times in his attempt, to con vince her. He also threatened her with a revolver and said he was going to abduct one of her children. Sklar did not take any - legal action at the time because he wanted to avoid any notoriety. The Sklars finally i moved to an other neighborhood and Mul vey followed them. Later, Sklar moved his family to an other state but Mulvey! still attempted to locate them. At this point the injunction was sought and granted. Injunction Granted - In another case from the same eastern city a few years later, a judge granted an in junction at the request of Mrs Maling that enjoined Miss Moreland from going around with Mrs. Maling's husband. After this decree, Mrs. Mal ing discovered Miss Moreland had been in a restaurant with Maling and had ridden around in an automobile with him She asked the court to pun ish Miss Moreland for con tempt of its decree, which the court did. Because of the difficulty in enforcingtsuch decrees, many courts would not agree with these two cases. There are courts, though, that will' un dertake even more difficult tasks of enforcement. For ex ample, one court issued an injunction against all love af fairs between Mrs. Thomp son and Mr. Beach. She was further ordered to go away with her own husband and forget' all about Beach. The court also decreed that she could not write to. Beach, nor could she enter the city he was in without the court s per mission. Power To Enforce Order All of these cases involve o u r t s exercising "equity1 powers. The equity powers of a court refer to the author ity to order an individual to do or refrain . from doing something specifically. Equi ty also has tne power to en force such an order by pun ishine the individual for Con tempt of the "court if he dis obeys. This area is rather a deli cate one to attempt to regu late bv court decision. There are. however, those courts which freely grant relief that is reouested and tnese courts are nrobably increasing in number. Ike Invites African Nations to Meeting Washington - (UPD - Presi dent Eisenhower Saturday in vited representatives from-16 newly-admitted members to the United Nations - 15 Afri can states .ana Cyprus - to meet with him at the White House next Friday, his 70th birthday anniversary. The White House did not say as much out rresioent Eisenhower is known to be anxious to establish close re lations with the new repub lics in hopes of keeping them out of the Communist camp Soviet Premier Nikita Khru shchev has been making per sonal overtures to nearly all the nations. . The White House announc ed the invitations and guest list for the one-hour meeting short while after the Presi dent conferred with Prime Minister Sir Abubakar lata- wa Balewa of Nigeria, Atti ca's newest and most popu lous nation. , Sen. John F. Kennedy (speech at Youngstown, Ohio): "The time has come to realize that there is a steel crisis in America. And the crisis of our basic industry is an eco nomic headache for the whole nation - not only in 1960 -but in all likelihood for the decade to come. "The decline in steel has had shattering consequences for thousands of Americans . . . a third of all the organized workers in steel are working only part time. And many major communities - Buffalo and Erie and Pittsburgh, as well as Youngstown - have been knocked flat. . "General economic factors account for some of the trou ble. But the Republican ad ministration is not free from blame. It must shoulder the responsibility for the harsh impact of the steel decline on steel workers and on steel towns. By failing to maintain full employment and maxi mum growth in the economy at large, by failing to encour age diversification in the steel towns, by failing to accept the depressed areas bill, the administration has sharpened. not softened, the cutting edge of the steel crisis. Starting Time For Legislators Slated for Vote fix. f . t!m ONLY AN EARTHLING What appears to be a creature from another world is actually an earthling wearing a lunar exploration suit developed by Republic Aviation laboratories at Farmingdale, L.I., N.Y. Designed as "working clothes" for astronauts engaged in surface activities on the moon, the suit has a built-in tripod which would allow the explorer to with draw his legs from trouser-like sections and relax on a seat mounted Inside the aluminum torso. (UPI Telephoto) Revenue of Oregon Cjfies Increases Eugene - (UPD - The Univer sity of Oregon Bureau of Municipal Research said Sat urday a study has revealed that in the past 25 years the general revenue of Oregon cities increased from $10,209, 403 to $53,954,648. The Bureau said the 25-year total increase was 428.5 per cent and the increase in terms of purchasing power was'' 144 per cent. i --p' It was estimated that, the population of Oregon cities increased 63.4 per cent during the same period. - ir1 clean up bills and get ready for winter expenses ' v ask the friendly loan man $25 to $1500 CITY FINANCE COMPANY.. 185 E. Main St. Phone: MU. 9-5421, Ashland life Insurance available on all loans at low group rales Greyhound Proved Safest JVay to Travel Comparing reports of the National Safety Council and records of The Greyhound Corporation proves Grey hound the safest form of transportation ... in fact, 14 times safer ' than driving yourself. "Greyhound's e n v i a blc safety record did not 'just Visitors to College Are Announced Ashland - Important visi tors scheduled for appearances at - Southern Oregon college during the next week include Monroe Sweetland, Democrat ic candidate for secretary of state; Mrs. Maurine Neuberg er Democratic candidate for U. S. Senate; and Robert Co hen, news correspondent and photographer. The political candidates are not scheduled for a regular as sembly hour, but are coming at their own convenience. Sweetland will be on the campus at 10 a.m. Oct. 11 in the auditorium, and Mrs. Neu horeer will sneak at 10 a.m. Oct. 20 in the auditorium, in Churchill hall. "Inside Red China" win oe the subject of Cohen's lecture- film appearance at SjU(J uci, 1 4 at 1 p.m. The puouc is in vited to attend all of the pro grams. Smith, Neuberger Against Billboards Portland Maurine Neu berger and Elmo Smith agree billboard control in Ore gon. The are Dotn tor it. Last week, the two canal dates for the. U.S. Senate ex pressed their unqualified en dorsement of billboard con trol measure 15 on the Nov 8 state ballot, in letters to Rudie Wilhelm Jr., chairman of the Highway Protection committee. Mrs. Nugberger wrote to Wilhelm on Sept. 30 that "I wholeheartedly support ballot measure 15 ... so that we can eventually eliminate the signboard clutter, in Oregon, Smith wrote, on tne same date, that "I support the bill board measure on this year Oreffon ballot." "We are pleased at the de gree of bi-partisan support this measure is receiving, Wilhelm said. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch Relieves Pain N T.rk, N. T. (SpMiilt For the first time science has found new healing- substance with the aston ishing ability to shrink hemor rhoids, stop itching, and relieri pain without surgery. In case after ease, while gently reliering pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Most amaiing of all-reaulta were so thoroogh that sufferers madi astonishing statements like "Pile hare ceased to be a problem! The secret is a new healing sub' stance (Bio-Dyne) discovery of a world-famous research institute. This substance is now available fn suppository or OMifmenf form under the namt preparorw", n, At all drug counUij happen,' but was achieved by a well-planned, well-or ganized and well-carried-out program of safe driver train ing," according to Mr. S. A. Ossman, Director of Safely, Western Greyhound Lines. "Unlike private car driv ers who travel the highways without giving much thought to the task of driving, driv ing is a profession with Greyhound. A Greyhound driver is on the job and working at this highly skill ed profession, for which he was rigidly trained, when he is at the wheel. He de pends on his job for a living and drives accordingly." "Before qualifying f o r training, an applicant must successfully pass a series of mental, physical and psycho logical tests to determine his suitability. An a n p 1 1 cant mav be physically fit and have a good scholastic back ground but be emotionally unsuitcd to cope with to day's highway traffic." CREDIT CARDS FOR BUS TRAVEL American Express Com pany and Diners' club credit cards will be accepted for the purchase of transports over the entire Greyhound bus system, eliminating the necessity of carrying large amounts of cash. Credit cards of both organizations may be presented at the ticket windows ot Grey hound bus stations located anywhere in the United States and Canada, and tick ets charged from a mini mum of $5.00 to a maximum of S500.00. Mimncv millll.Wai as safe Chartered Greyhound JOij Buses Available '' For Group Travel ;L'- The same Greyhound buses that are seen on the highways and byways of '' tlie nation are available for , chartering by clubs, student '' groups, teams and other'-" groups. With a chartered Greyhound, groups can piclci their own routes, make special stops, be picked up anywnere selected ana oe )s llvcred to the door of their.':. destination. Greyhound also. , helps with hotel reserva- "' tions. Information and rates are available at the Greyhound Terminal. '-;'-- ' ,) " . . i'r. THE SAFEST WHEEP OF ALL . . . in the safest " hands of aI. They're theft hands of a Greyhound j driver, a skillful, careful I man, physically fit, thorV ! oughly experienced. HVs one of thousands of Grey- hound professionals who a guide Greyhound buses A over a million miles a day ? with an unmatched safety-1 record. IT'S A FACT:; A',', comparison of National--Safety Council reports and, 'f Greyhound records proves Greyhound is safer than any other public transportation,;? ... 14 times safer than driv; ing yourself. Next time; pickj a safe trip from hundreds;; like these: - :t!r as G rey hound! Safety records prove Greyhound is 14 times safer than driving yourself Next trip have fun. play safe. v. and leave the driving to us! LOS ANGELES .0. W. R. T. L. Angeles 13.95 ' 25.15 PORTLAND Portland 7.45 13.45 SAN FRANCISCO S. Francisco 8.40 ' 15.15 SALT LAKE CITY Sah lake C. 26.65 48.00 CHICAGO Chicago ...55.50 88.75 PHOENIX Phoenix 25.05 . 45.10 RENO Reno 10.20 18.40 NEW YORK CITY N. Y. City.. 80.05 133.56 All priest plus r? 15 lit no I-; .-. li :rf -od O O THERE'S A GREYHOUND AGENT NEAR YOU 111 r : " tya-ssa smssms i ' , BVsaSBSSWaSMiSBBSMSSlHSSSSMSaMSlllllllHSaHBSMHHSHaBBSMHBHHiaMBM