Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 19, 1960, Image 13

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WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 19. I960
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE.
B 3
IfEWORDUtTKIBUlfB O
SIPCDIHITS
Upland Game Bird
Season Will ODen
- Portland Pheasants, quail,
md partridge will be high on
he priority list of shotgun de
rotees this Saturday, Oct. 22,
vith that date marking the
ipening of the general upland
lird season, scheduled to run
hrough Nov. 20.
Gunners can begin blasting
it 8 a.m. on the opening morn
ng, and from then on through
.he season, shooting hours are
cheduled from one-half hour
lefore sunrise to sunset.
; The season will be open
or pheasants and quail
ihroughout the entire state,
jut only east of the Cascade
nountains for chukar and
Hungarian partridge. The
tlosure west of the Cascade
s to protect experimental
giants of chukars and gray
tartridge in sections of the
Willamette valley and south-
vestern Oregon.
Bag limit on pheasants is
let at 3 cocks per day, 12 in
jossession. Hunters may take
10 quail per day and have 20
.n possession. The bag limit
.Deludes all species of quail
sither singly or in the ag
gregate. The same holds for
J 'id it XV.. I
VICTIM HANDCUFFED Using a heavy-duty cutter, police
snip handcuffs from a foot of Mrs. Stella Schliessman, 63,
in New York City. She was cuffed hand and foot to a radi
ator by a pair of thugs who fled with $800 in cash after
ransacking her home. (UPI Telephoto)
BRUINS REVIEW
Los Angeles - (IIPB - John
Hermann, assistant (u C L A
coach, played the role of
Stanford's accurate passing
quarterback Dick Norman
Tuesday in Bruin drills to
defense against the Indians.
Coach Bill Barnes also put
his team through a review of
offensive formations. He com
plimented Dave Stout's play
at right guard. The Bruins
meet the Indians Saturday in
the Coliseum.
POPULATION GAIN
Population of the U.S. In
creases 7,000 every 24 hours.
1695
Black or Brown
Open Monday
Evenings Until 9 p.m.
0 The Corner
Main and Central
Hungarian and chukar part
ridge with the bag limit set
at 10 birds per day singly or
in the aggregate, 20 in pos
session. Birds Released
Beside the wild populations
which will carry the burst of
the hunting, gunners will
have an additional 8,000 game
farm roosters to test their
shooting eye. Most of these
birds have already been re
leased in various upland game
bird sections throughout east
ern Oregon. Supplemental
plants of adult birds will be
released in heavily hunted
areas during the season. In
addition, 24,000 young birds
were released throughout the
summer months-
Hunters are reminded that
the game commission releases
birds only on properties
where hunting by permission
is allowed. All nimrods are
urged to request permission
before entering any private
Drooerly to hunt.
A complete synopsis of the
1960 upland game bird regula
tions may be obtained at all
license agencies.
HEAT LIMITS
Baltimore Temperatures
in excess of 140 degrees Fah
renheit cannot be tolerated by
the human body for any ex
tended period of time with
out protection.
CAPITAL CHANGE
Springfield Abraham Lin
coin was instrumental in re
moving the state capital of
Illinois from Vandalia to the
present site of Springfield.
BATH CENTER
London The springs of
Bath, England, were the cen
ter of a Roman resort which
was developed during the first
four centuries A.D.
Shoe Store
Medford
.1J
UO Squad
Headed by
3 Regulars
University of Oregon,
Eugene Coach Steve Bel
ko's Oregon basketball Ducks,
who staged a great rally last
season to reach the western
NCAA final playoff, opened
preparations for the 1960-61
season here Saturday with a
squad of 15 players ready to
sb'oot ' for a repeat of last
season's success.
A half dozen lettermen,
paced by three returning
regulars, led the squad which
also includes six sophomores,
a pair of junior college trans
fers and a non-letterman.
. Denny Strickland, a 6-5
guard who has been a key
man for the Webfoots for two
seasons, and two juniors,
Glenn Moore and Charlie
Warren (6-4), are the return
ing regulars. Moore, a 6-7 vet
eran who can play either cen
ter or forward and has great
speed and agility, led the
club in scoring last season.
The other lettermen are
Bill Simmons, a 6-4 forward
who played a major role in
Oregon's stretch drive last
winter, Wally Knecht, a rap
idly, improving 6-6 center,
and Butch Kimpton, a 6-1
guard who has been a top re
serve for the past two s
sons. The other veteran
Leon Hayes, a non-letterman
guard for two years.
Up From Frosh
Two. of the sophomores,
Tom Tuttle. a 5-11 guard, and
Ralph Rittenour, a 5-9 back-
court man, move up from the
frosh team of last year while
the other four first year men
are hold overs from the 1958
59 team who did not play last
winter. This quartet includes
forwards Jack Mack (6-3):
Dave Robinson (6-5) and Ro
man Jones (6-5) along with
center John Stevens (6-7).
The two junior college
transfers are junior center
Howard Clark (6-6) of Diablo
JC and guard Vince Hayes, a
6-3 sophomore from Centralia
PC.
Belko's major problem will
be replacing Capt. Chuck
Rask, the brilliant team lead
er for the past three seasons,
at guard along with starter
Dale Herron and reserve btu
Robertson at forward.
The veteran Oregon coach
said he may experiment with
Knecht at center and Moore
at forward early in the prac
tice to take further advan
tage of Moore's speed.
Oregon opens its 1960-61
season Dec. 3 against Port
land at home, moves to Colo
rado and Wyoming the fol
lowing weekend and then re
turns here for Arizona State.
Decoding Scheme
For Messages
From Stars Told
Washington (Science Serv
ice) - A universal decoding
scheme for revealing possible
messages in radio waves de
tected from stars near the
solar system was reported
here by Dr. Philip Morrison
of Cornell university, Ithaca,
N. Y.
He told the Philosophical
Society of Washington that
signals containing intelligent
information could be incor
ported in the radio waves
without the use of language.
Dr. Morrison said the search
made at the National Radio
Astronomy observatory,
Green Bank, W. Va., for ra
dio signals from intelligent
life forms on other planets
of relatively nearby stars, at
best, had only one chance in
20 of detecting such signals,
because the radio antenna
used was too small. Another
try, with improved electronic
equipment, will be made soon
at this observatory, the Na
tional Science Foundation re
ported, but Dr. Morrison be
lieves a bigger receiving an
tenna would give much bet
ter chances of success.
Lara Radio Dishes
He suggested the best
chance would be from about
half a dozen non-steerable,
but very large radio dishes.
such as the 500 foot antenna
now under construction in
Puerto Rico. Dr. Morrison
said that only after several
years of unsuccessful listen
ing to outer space signals with
several of such large reflec
tors would he be convinced
there were no such signa's.
Dr. Otto Struve, director uf
the National Radio Astronomy
observatory, agrees with Dr.
Morrison that the chances are
good of eventually achieving
positive results from Project
Ozma, when the largest pos
sible sample of solar type
stars has been examined over
a period of time.
PEDESTRIAN TOLL
Washington About 10,000
pedestrians are killed in the
United States in traffic acci
dents every calendar year.
FLEET PROTECTED' .
London England's fishing
fleet in 1850 needed warships
4m Hriva nff mraloc.
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LAVER
IN
1 PONE ON AN AUK)- NEED NO KONimmmTmA I
AWC SPRINKLER Tr THAT N6EP NO ,3
TURNS ITSELF ON WHEN A PRUNINfi JE POSSIBILITIES Ml
THE 6BOUN0 6ETS . SW SCIENTISTS WHO ARE AJflJ
too PBv, 'f?r working wmni- j mJAa
Black Tornado Will Face
Single Wing
Reno, Nev., High school
will send a single wing of
fensive against the Black
Tornado Friday night when
they meet Medford on the
local stadium.
' This game will be the last
on the regular season sched
ule at home for the Tornado.
Another home game or two
is possible should the Med-
Cave in Iraq May
Be Fruitful Source
In Study of Man
Washington - (Science Serv
ice) - Shanidar Cave about
2,500 feet up the side of one
of the Zagros Mountains in
Iraq, may be the most fruitful
source of remains of ancient
man known to science, Dr. T.
Dale Stewart, Smithsonian
anthropologist, told Science
Service here.
Dr. Stewart has recently
returned from an expedition
to Iraq, undertaken jointly by
Columbia University and the
Smithsonian Institute under a
grant from the National Sci
ence Foundation.
The expedition was led by
Dr. Ralph Solecki of Coluhi-
bia University. Associated
with him in exploring Shani
dar Cave were Dr. Stewart,
Dr. Dexter Perkins Jr., Phila
delphia Academy of Sciences,
Dr. Rose L. Solecki, also of
Columbia and the leader's
wife, and Jacques Bordaz,
graduate student at Columbia.
Knowledge Added
Three new skeletons found
in Shanidar this past summer,
in addition to three others
found in 1957 and an ancient
infant found in 1953, made
it possible to add much to
man's knowledge of early evo
lution.
One of this year's finds,
known to the scientists as
Skeleton No. 2, has been re
constructed and studied by
Dr. Stewart. A difficult task
faced him for this skull was
crushed completely flat and
the head was rolled back so
that the neck bones were par
allel to and behind the jaw
bone. Dr. Stewart restored
the neck bones so that they
now constitute what is prob
ably the finest set of neck
vertebrae of Neanderthal
Man known to science.
Comparison of No. 2's leg
bones with those of No. 1,
found last year in a layer of
the cave floor laid down
some 15,000 years later,
showed that the earlier
form, No. 2, stood in life
about 5 feet, 3 inches tall -five
or six inches shorter than
his successor, No. 1.
More Primitive
No, 2 was therefore possib
ly more primitive than No. 1.
But there is also a possibility,
Dr. Stewart warns, that No. 1
was an unusually tall indi
vidual and No. 2 was just a
runt. Skulls of the two were
equally primitive. The finds
at Shanidar will help scientists
settle such questions as wheth
er a skelton is typical of its
group or is exceptional. The
three skeletons discovered in
1957 were all found at about
the same depth, 14V4-feet,
representing an age of about
45,000 years. The three found
this summer were some 27
feet under the cave floor -about
60,000 to 70,000 years
old.
Measurement of these two
sets of three skeltons will help
show which individuals were
about average for their time
and which were unusual cases.
What scientists would like
to find now is the remains of
aiOindividual who was defi
nitely a woman.
HORTICULTURAL NOTES
HOPE FOR ARID LANDS
VEGETABLES ARE SPROUTING
THROUGH A LAVER OP A30HALT m
A NEW JERSEY LABORATORY WHERE
SCIENTISTS HAVE SHOWN THAT A THIN
OP ASPHALT CAN HOLD MOISTURE
THE toKOUNP, ET ALUM'S XXJN6
SHOOTS TO OW THROU5H ir.
ANST EGi
if jo MEsr
Offensive
ford crew successfully defend
its district banner.
Reno attacks from the
single wing with unbalanced
line spinners and reverses
and tailback opition plays.
No. 1 tailback on the club is
Dave Ricks, 160-pound senior.
He's been laid up with in
juries, and, if he is still side
lined this week end, Ray
Handley, 165 junior is prob
able starter at the position.
Has Won Two
The Nevada team will come
here with a season record of
two victories and two defeats,
Its wins were over two Cali
fornia teams, Shasta of Red
ding, Calif., 21 to 6, and El
dorado of Placerville, Calif.,
for which no score is avail
able.
Setbacks were at the hands
of Chico, Calif., Las Vegas,
Nev., and Nevada Union
Grass Valley.
Reno does not posses
great amount of heft. Top
weight among the regulars is
carried by the tackles, who
weigh 190 pounds,
Prison Inmate
Refuses to Testify
Salem -(CPU- A 49-year-old
state prisor inmate refused to
testify in circuit court Tues
day against a fellow inmate
who allegedly stabbed him
and a charge of assault with
intent to kill ag-atnst the ac
cused inmate was dismissed.
William Harry Eckels, who
was knifed Aug. 11. 1959, in
the pentitentiary, ri'fused to
testify against Earl Louis
l'ricken, 18, the inmate who
was charged with the stab
bing. Fricken is serving four
years for larceny from Clack
amas county and Eckels is
serving life for robbery and
kidnaping.
BEST WORKOUT
Berkeley, Calif. - IHTD - Cali
fornia went through a 40
minute scrimmage Tuesday
and coach Marv Levy called
the workout the best of year
even though the fourth team,
running Oregon plays, made
some solid gains against the
first three teams. Levy pro
moted George Pierovich back
to first string fullback and
moved second string right haif
Bob Wills to left half and
second string left half Jim
Burress to right.
TO GO AHEAD
Salem-IUPD-Salcm Senators
Inc. decided Tuesday night to
go ahead with plans for a
1961 Northwest league base
ball team provided a working
agreement can be arranged
with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Walter Zosel, vice president
of the board of directors, said
"we're still faced with a lot
of problems most of them
finanical but we'll worry
about them when we get to
them."
TUESDAY BOUT
Seattle-UP1) - Rugged Ger
man heavyweight Willi Bes-
manoff relied on ring savy
gained in more than 60 pro
fessional bouts to hammer out
a lop-sided 10-round decision
over young Jim McCarter at
Civic Audittorium here Tues
day night.
CLQGSTOH'S
Metal
Wealher Stripping
and Screens
Citlmitcl Glldly
Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings
Bruised SO
Club Preps
For Jaunt
Ashland Battered and
bruised Southern Oregon col
lege is slowly preparing for a
Saturday battle at Monmouth.
It tangles with Oregon College
of Education that afternoon.
Both teams have had their
incups riddled with injuries
from last week's games. SOC
has eight on the Injured list
and OCE's list begins with
standout fullback Bob Pennel.
Al Barnes, Doyle Bransom,
Gordy Carrigan, Willie Gar
ner, Ray Nolte, Dave Hughes,
Jess Munyon, and Ron Mulla-
nix all will probably miss ac
tion this week. Injuries range
from hip pointers to twisted
ankles and dislocated shoul
ders.
If this is the case, Raider
chief Al Akins will have the
job of replacing five of his
starting offensive unit. Possi
ble starters in the ailing spots
are Al McKinnis al fullback,
John Buck or Kcrm Bennett
at slotback, Harold Haugen at
end, and Merv Newell at
guard. The big problem is in
filling Munyon's tackle spot
if it can be termed any more
of a problem than any of the
others.
Headaches
Nolte, Mullanix and Hughes
have been playing defense
and filling their roles will also
lead to headaches according
to the Raider mentor.
Barnes continues to domi
nate the rushing lead for the
Raiders in the five games
played to date. The Crater
sophomore has 285 net yards
on 52 carries. Second is Buck
with 131 followed by Bran
som with 108.
Olsen is moving up in the
passing with 182 yards in two
games which have carried for
two touchdowns. He has hit
18 of 32 attempts with only
one being intercepted.
Howard Hartman continues
to dominate the Raider and
Oregon Collegiate conference
pass receiving statistics with
17 snares for 224 yards and a
trio of touchdowns.
Trailing Hartman is Carri
gan with 11 for 140 yards
while Bransom has caught
seven for 173 yards.
Bransom has taken over
the lead in the scoring with
24 points on four tallies,
Barnes and Hartman share
second place with three each
for 18. Lynn Knight has con
verted eight of 16 conversion
attempts.
Teamwise the Raiders are
averaging 288.8 yards per
game to the opponents 354
Republicans Lead
In Marion County
Salem (UPD Marion county
voter registrations for next
month's election show the Re
publicans still holding a com
manding lead but the Demo
crats made gains of three to
one over the GOP since 1956.
The GOP has 31.909 regis
tered voters for thisi year's
general election and the Demo
crats 24,161. More than 600
independents and miscellane
ous registrations pushed the
county's total to 56,758, a new
record..
In the 1956 general election,
the Republicans had 30,885
registered voters and the
Democrats 20,913.
In Fine Whiskey...
FLEISCHMANN'S
is the BIG buy!
90 PROOF is why!
BLENOEO WHISKEY W PROOF 85 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
THE FLEISCHMANN DISTIIUNQ. CORPORATION. NEW YORK CITY
Metallic Seeds
Promise Hope for
Cancer Victims
Los Angeles - (Science Ser
vice) - Hope for victims of
rapidly spreading breast can
cer is promised from experi
ments in which tiny, radio-active
metallic seeds are planted
in the pituitary gland.
An evaluation of a new
and relatively safe procedure
as a means of controlling this
form of breast cancer is be
ing carried out by a surgeon
endocrinologist - radiologist
team at the University of Cal
ifornia at Los Angeles Med
ical Center.
The team' consists of Dr.
Robert W. Rand, Paul H.
Crandall, David Solomon, Ai
red M. Dashc, Joseph L. West-
over and w. Eugene Mem.
The project is being support
ed by the U. S. Public
Health Service.
Breast cancer, which
spreads to the lymph glands
and other parts of the body,
requires certain hormones
whose production is triggered
by the pituitary in several
glands, including the adrenals
and ovaries.
Removal of Gland
The standard means of de
nying these hormones to the
cancer is actual surgical re
moval of the pituitary gland,
which has brought relief to
some victims. The new meth
od is being compared with
the standard method in the
current study.
Radioactive yttrium seeds
can be placed in the pituitary
with the help of precise in
strumentation and techniques
developed at UCLA.
The tiny metallic seeds are
planted via a hollow needle
that is inserted through tne
nose and sinus into the gland.
The radioactivity of the seed
detroys the gland.
The new technique has
been used with 17 cases to
date and continues to show
promise.
Students Provided
Anual Cruise
For Sciecne Study
Washington -(Science Ser
vice) - The Navy Science
Cruisers have gone "down to
the seas again" for the third
consecutive annual cruise ar
ranged by the U. S. Navy to
show science-ln-action to high
school juniors and seniors.
Each spring the Cruisers
are chosen for their outstand
ing science projects exhibited
at the National Science Fair-
International and at regional
science fairs affiliated with
this international program
which is coordinated by Sci
ence Service."
In the fall, Navy planes
fly the boys from bases near
their homes on farms and
plains, in manufacturing
towns, mountain villages and
metropolitan centers to East
and West Coast embarking
points.
The West Coast cruise .for
73 students were based at San
Diego, Calif., from Sept. 24
to Oct. 1. On the East Coast,
six Cruisers sailed from May
port, Fla., 73 from Norfolk,
$435
45 Qt.
Va., and from Charleston,
S. C.
Afloat and ashore, these 179
students experienced several
of the most privileged days of
their young lives in seminars,
tours and informal discus
sions with Navy scientists and
specialists i n laboratories
where they were guests. They
gained firsthand information
mm
IPENING
Hew Medford Store
12th and So. Central
LAST 3 DAYS!
SAVE
SPECIAL
Premium quality, trimmed
etle throughout for luxurious beauty
and long wear in your choice of
gorgeous saran plastic or cool fiber.
Includes tailored installation by
Sure-Fit specialists. Budget terms.
jlMMBMieilllliyi
New convertible top of sturdy,
long wearing materials with
king-size rear window. (Late
models add $15.00.) Budget
terms. ;
Now available! Vinyl pintle tops electronlcelly wiled
for exceptional durability. Alto top repairs and rear win
dow replicement byipetlillstsl "
f ilent-type mufflers. Guarsnteed,
heavier steel construction built to
last longer. Zinc-coated for rust
resistance. Only minutes for Instal
lationno waiting. Buy with con
fidence at Jura-Fit Stores.
Pick-up Truck
AUTO INTERIOR SPECIALISTS
8:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M.
8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. OTHER DAYS - CLOSED SUNDAYS
12th and
SPring
on such subjects as submar
ines, air operations, nuclear
physics, astronautics, radar,
sonar, computers and many
other aspects of current re
search and development.
Many of the young Cruisers
received ideas and guidance
toward their future profes
sional training and careers.
35 .,
In leather-1
JOSS
I M , fill! SET
Moit Ciri
39
43
lad.
Ulloud
Inttillilkw
743
f Ford Md
U Chvrolelt
. thru 'S3.
Shock Absorbers $6.79 ea. Incl. installation
Covers 17.95
Mufflers Convertible
Tops Shock Absorbers
Safety Belts Cushions
Carpets Headliners
Rubber Mats Station .
Wagon Mattresses
Heavy Duty Truck
Seat Covers
- Layaway Terms.
MONDAY & FRIDAY
So. Central
3-6450