- '
hopping Cemiter
New Structure in
Center Will House
Newberry Firm
' Merchants in th MaAtn
Shopping Center this week
ore ODserving the first anni
versary of the center with
special values on merchan
dise. I Sears, Roebuck and com
pany was the first nf th
stores in the center to open
a year ago, and Manager R.
E. Jacobson reconfirmed his
confidence in the growing po
tential of southern Oregon
ana northern California.
. Medford, he said he be
lieves, will be the shopping
( center for the increasing num
ber of people in this area.
He said the Sears store has
Increased in line of products
since the store opened here.
It offers a wide variety of
merchandise, and what is not
available in the store can
be ordered quickly, he said.
Other Stores Open
. After Sear's opened In the
center, other stores, including
a large Safeway store, open
ed before the end of the year.
Other stores include Pay Less
Drug, LaPointe's, Gallen
kamp's shoe, Local Loan com
pany, DeNa Beauty shop, Co
lumbia Optical, a barber shop,
and a cafe.
:' The second unit of the cen
ter, with the groundbreaking
ceremonies already held, will
be a building to house anoth
er J. J. Newberry store in
.Medford.
' Harley M. Williams, man
ager of the downtown Med
ford store, said the new store
i will be about three times as
i big as the present store, and
will handle merchandise such
I' as furniture, clothing and ap
I pliances.
Good Location
I Williams said the company
;, decided on the second Med-
ford store because, the com
: Danv believes Medford is a
good business location. He in
dicated the company'had con
fidence in the area's 'growth.
The new store will cost an
estimated $500,000; he said.
It will be located just north
of the restaurant and will
center on a 30-foot mall.
The store is scheduled for
completion next Juney
Other units in the Shopping
. Center, which is being devel
oped by Buttress and McClel
lan, Inc., of Los Angeles, will
be constructed as the area
increases and the demand
warrants.
Future units are planned
between the Sears store and
structure in which other busi
nesses are located, and to the
north of the present build
ings Khrushchev's Knife
Surprises Scribes
New York - (UPD-- Nikita
Khrushchev flourished a
gleaming knife Wednesday
like some two-bit Shakespear
ean actor and garbled the
bard by asking: "Can you
puncture such a sack as Wads
worth with a little thing like
that?"
'The Falstaffian scene took
place outside the Soviet Krem
lin on Park ave. where Khru
shchev oft is wont to trade
banter with the press or in
dulge in an occasional solilo
quy. Today he singled out
James J. Wads worth, U.S
Ambassador to the U.N., for
his barbs.
"This is my only arma
ment,," he said cackling, as
he drew the pen knife on sur
prised reporters. He waved
the knife in broad arcs so that
it caught the bright sun, took
his crack at Wadsworth, then
pulled back the right flap of
his jacket to reveal a packet
of papers in his jacket pocket.
"These are my only weap
ons my speeches," he said
i "If I were to disarm every
estry are now down, the south-
armed except for my glasses.".
A POPULAR SPORT
.4 1 Cleveland More people
watch basketball games than
i any other sport, including
basebal.
We've Been Here One Year!
... We appreciate your patronage which
has made it possible to have
4 Chairs to Serve You-
Cauablv manned by the
Following Friendly Barbers:
' m
CLOSED
MONDAYS
SEARS Part of the large Sears, Roebuck an auto accessory shop, and a mail order
and company store in the Medford Shopping section for items which are not stocked
Center is shown above. The store carries a locally. '
large selection of merchandise, and includes
Medford
SECTION B MEDFORD, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1960 PAGES 1 to 10
Education,
At American Antarctic Bases
Washington-CScience Serv
ice) - Intelligence, education
and age have proved import
ant factors in the emotional
stresses encountered in life at
an Australian Antarctic sta
tion. But these have not
proved similarly significant in
American bases.
In the Australian experi
ence, they are a vital factor
in stressful situations that
Britain Shocked
By Bribe Reports
In Soccer Pools
T.nnrlrm (IfPIl "Rritons are
chokine on one of their pet
phrases - the phrase they used
an emucrl, - anfi riffhteoUslV
when betting scandals broke
in baseball ana oasKeiDau in
the United States:
"It can't happen-here. '.- -L
: Well, it has happened here
n sntrv tnl of lived games
in the national sport,' soccer
football. And this nation
which likes to think of itself
as the homeland of sports
manship will never be quite
the same.
Bribes Admitted
Tha mpcc huhhlerl to the
oiirfnco this week as football
league off icials were congratu
lating themselves on 4U years
l.frpo nlav A form
er idol of the game, Rox Paul,
admitted in a newspaper ar
ticle that he had taken bribes
to throw matches.
This shock was bad enough
.hut it rlirl not ston there. One
by one players came forward
to admit they had been ap
proached to fix matches, and
one of them, Johnny rluDDara
of the Bury Football Club,
said today that he had been
offered 6,000 sterling ($6,800)
if his team would lose to me
Harnslev club bv a 4-0 score.
Hoping for Killing
Hubbard said the big Drme
was offered h i m because
cfnmhlprs were honlne for a
killing on the football pools
and, needed tne exact; -u
score. This is the first time
there has ever been any sug
gestion gamblers Denevea
they might force a favorable
nnnl rpsillt.
Each week during the soc
cer season tax -tree toriunes
are won for picking results
pnrrpptiv the record is a
win of over $728,000 for one
penny.
ARBITRATION VOTED
Portland ttTPD The Street
carmen's Union voted here
Tuesday night to give its ex
ecutive committee authority
to ask for arbitration in a con
troversy over jurisdiction of
the Rose City Co. dispatcher.
Members also gave the com
mittee authority to call a
strike if arbitration is refused
by the firm.
KEN PHILLIPS PAUL EDWARDS
MELVIN KELLY CLAUDE RAY
It'i Pleaiura To Scrv You
SHOPPING CENTER
BARBER
SHOP
Age Not Signif icant
may arise in the frozen con
tinent, Philip Law, director
of the Antarctic Division of
External Affairs in Australia,
reported.
"All our experience under
lines the basic importance of
intelligence and education,
and much trouble at a station
is avoided if men can be chos
en who have a reasonable
measure of both," Law said.
Not Easily Bored
Such men are more flexible
and are not easily bored. Con
sequently, they are more self
sufficient, and, in Law's ex
perience, "they have the sense
to analyze situations and to
use their minds to control
their reactions." Although he
did hot draw a line regarding
age, he observed that it is un
usual for a man past 40 to
possess the necessary physical
drive and energy.
The Australian Antarctic
authority also made the point
that in his experience serious
breakdowns in the Antarctic
occur mostly in young men
less than 25 years of age. The
worst cases of mental disturb
ance apparently o c c u r r ed
within from two to eight
weeks of the departure of the
relief ship which landed the
men. .
""Apparently the impact of
the environment is immedi
ate and severe," Law noted, in
Discovery, a British scientific
journal. .
Impact Immediate
American Antaractic au
thorities agree that the im
pact of the environment tends
to be immediate. A lower ebb
in general morale occurs up
on arrival in Antarctica and
often continues while the re
lief ship still is at the base.
Morale tends to improve,
however, when the Antarctic
worker begins to take on his
assigned repsonsibility after
the ship leaves, Dr. Albert P,
Crary, chief scientists for the
U. S. Antarctic Research Pro
gram, told Science Service.
There have been no break-
Exclusive
creations in
newest
fashion
for the
well dressed
woman
insDired
by j.
casual shopping with convenient parking
i
Tribune
downs in the American ex
perience in Antarctic. Dr.'
Crary discounted both age, in
telligence and experience in
themselves as significant in
ability to withstand stress of
a remote, cold and harsh en
vironment.
"Maturity cannot always be
measured by age," Dr. Crary
said. "Nor is experience nec
essarily an assurance of good
adjustment," Dr. Crary said,
warning against generaliza
tions.
He noted that some of his
most proved colleagues in the
Antaractic have been young
men, recent college graduates,
with no experience.
"However, some men of ex
perience always are desir
able," 'he said. '.
Most Men Past 40
It happens that most of
the "experienced men" in the
U.S. Antarctic program are
well past the age 40. Soviet
Antarctic scientists and work
ers may range in age from
later 20s to well past 40; so
age, apparently, is not a factor
in their choice of Antarctic
personnel.
"It is more important to
have the man and job well
matched than choose men of
certain age, training or ex
perience," Dr. Crary declared.
After selection on the basis
of job needs and require
ments, U.S. Antarctic candi
dates are sent to the National
Institutes of Health for a com
plete physical and psycho
logical examination. Dr. Crary
attributes the absence of men
tal breakdowns among U.S.
Antarctic personel to this
careful screening.
Also, men on U.S. bases are
not as isolated as those on
Australian bases. Planesi can
make contact from October to
March; and during the few
months of wintering over,
there is frequent and regular
radio communication with
family and friends in the
United States through "ham"
radio operators and the Red
Cross.
iwi 55tA. year
COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO.
MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER
Phone SP 2-9990 .
. - o o
bseirves Fiirsft Year
Pierre, S.D. - Blackout
lights, familiar to combat
soldiers of World War II and
Korea, are finding a new pur
pose in South Dakota.
Game wardens are using
them to increase the safety
factor in chasing down per
sons poaching game by night.
The strite service began in
stalling the blackout lights on
patrol cars after two wardens
were injured when their ve
hicles collided headon as they
were attempting to trap a deer
poacher.
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Photosynthesis Solution Helped By Live Bacteria
Washington-(Science Serv-ice)-Two
substances that show
up as erie, blue fluorescent
lights inside living bacteria are
involved in helping these tiny
plants change carbon dioxide
to food. The discovery brings
researchers one step closer to
solving the mystery of photo
synthesis. Dr. John M. Olson of
Brandcis University, Walt
ham, Mass., reported here at
Medford
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the Symposium on Recent De
velopments in Research Meth
ods and Instrumentation that
in certain bacteria the two
chemicals which help "drive
photosynthesis" are pyridine
nucleotides known - as DPN
TPN. DPN is diphosphopyri
dine nucleotide and TPN is
triphosphorypridine nucleo
tide. Contains Chlorophyll
The purple bacteria contain
Shopping Center Anniversary Sale!
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a chlorophyll which is active
in the presence of far-red
light of 8,000 to 9,000 ang
stroms wavelength, invisible
to the human eye. When the
bacteria are receiving none
of this red light, the DPN
and TPN show a blue fluor
escence of relatively weak in
tensity. When the red light is
beamed at the bacteria, the
intensity of the blue flour
escence increases. Gradually,
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1954
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STRANGE ANIMAL
, Cheyenne The American
wapiti or elk has the ears of
a mule, the gait of a camel,
and a body that resembles a
cow.
after a red light is switched
off, the brightness of the blue
dims again.
The changes in intensity,
Dr. Olson believes, indicate
that the carbon dioxide is be
ing "fixed" or reduced to food
by the chemicals, which are
enzymes.
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44