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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1961)
3l THURSDAY. 11" '2, -HA. I I 8 A A ,, 0 f - " f xVt 4 Krf ! " ' ""' . .iiimiiihihm 3 . I imrnmiT Tr1lrJ'' fe. gM",,","",,, "l",J",''''i"'1 . f , ; - -1 ' , , , A w . ' ' 1 ; 'Wii. J," .-'.'' J :'. ' -mmm, mm mi -n -inr v-n iWT "Tl ' ' ! t-:;Z -r' I r"" ;.r v i.'i ..i muni (i ii n ij f ' ""'""""""'l'"''"''"'"''''i"' "'"jiixj I , t (.' ' J f - ' f ' f JT" i ,f.llliilil li)iiiiWJi;l,'py'':' !W' i'l.'V y iyil)Wiiily;' I , , '1 WU'lSMIIIIMIirlll 1 WMWMI'II I , ' X n ii-ii ii .nil mj Mi- n I w..,.. . . n yfMfiwvqfmmi$ f J t V , J npttrttot"' " tut" pTf.r'rrr! H r ' y.jjiW.y M.,....ii.iiW,,.i . y , ; prrnr ii , -rn i iiiiiy. .tT-ij.y my..mlnm, , y,, j IGNORES DEPUTIES Lnrold Hunnol, 27, Is shown sitting on a window sill at the Holladay Park hospital in Portland, apparently ignoring firemen and sher iff's5 deputies who are trying to coax him Air Force Cadets To Conduct Space Test oh a Corvaliis -'Air Force cadets ' at Oregon . State college will put their own "astronaut into simulated space" during Dads Week End Feb. 25 in a special ; project designed to implement . their training lor me space age. A full-sized model of the Air " Force's Mercury space capsule ; has been built by the ROTC students, and a cadet will be selected to spend 72 straight hours in the stationary test vehicle. The cone-shaped capsule is only 6 feet across at the base and 10 feet high. The cadet will recline In the capsule on a couch" in the same manner as the American astronauts now undergoing tests In prep aration for the first man-shot into space. .He will' subsist on special ' concentrated food rations and the water supply contained - entirely within the capsule ' replica. His physical activity will be limited to simple manual dexterity tests and medical and psychological tests will be conducted on the space cadet with special equip, ment loaned to the project. Cadeit on Duty A group of cadets will be nn dutv outside the space cap sule throughout the entire week end to make observa tions on the astronaut and to assist the cadet should he have to come out of the capsule be fore the test is completed. The capsule is located In an , Air Force ROTC detachment room in the coliseum and will be onen to public view. De signed to train junior class cadets In project administra tion and to increase ;'spacc- mindedness" on campus and In Oregon, the capsule test was the Idea of Air Force om cers stationed at OSC. It is believed to be the first lest of its kind outside the formal studies being made by the military and the national space research agencies. The cadet selected for the test will undergo Intensive physical - .Bhackg, in -advance . ZTfiSlTiir Base more of Applegato was among lets v frou.Qriioii. State collect- Ibkiaf6rl4Td' iKrtrMnto'Cnf.i'-Tast iWek The cadets made the trip w'yWWBry''nli "trtraiipert , plane. During their week end the 5f!ji!?osf ccnerancl T force fe?mi&S!es'ia ncT' a i r icraft,"llltWBIllj' ITIU1 lllull'llv-- FEBRUARY 23. 1961 i i -ft -J " I r it "'W T i i. $4J L down. Earlier, Hunnel, who had apparently gone berserk, battled deputies at his home for nearly four hours before they could get him to the hospital for an examination. : . (UPI Telephoto) Bargain Shoppers Shove, Gouge, Kick At Birthday Sales Washington (UPTi Hundreds of thousands of feverish shop pers celebrated Washington's birthday Wednesday by kick ing, shoving and gouging each other in hopes of buying an automobile for 99 cents. The Better Business Bureau grumbled and the Federal Trade Commission snickered as a horde of bargain-hunters took part in the annual ritual. Extra Policemen Called More than ISO extra police men were on duty to quell the usual d 1 s turbances brought about by city-wide sales which offer cars for 90 cents - "as Is!' - typewriters for 90 cents, also "as is," and hose a penny a pair. - , Many shoppers enthusiasm becomes so great that they. fall upon each other In anger when they miss getting some Quotes From the Hews BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Moscow Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, dismayed when an agriculture secretary announced at a conference plans for the experimental sowing of sugar beet: "Think of what you are saying. Do not the Russian people know how to sow beet? . . . don't slander yourself." New York Businessman from Los Angeles to New Copenhagen to avoid the airline strike: "I was determined to get I got home by crook. New York Rep. James Roosevelt (D-Calif.), urging the abolition of the House Committee on Un-American Activities: "Barriers to froe dobate are genuinely subversive oi the national security. Lcopoldville, The Congo Premier Joseph Ilco, referring to U.N. troops which now have the world body's authority 10 use torce in me Congo il necessary: "We will fight them to the death." BISHOP DIES Vatican City - OIPD - Msgr. Fcrcnc Rogacs, 81, Roman Catholic bishop of Pecs, Hun gary, died Monday, the Vati can announced. thing for nearly nothing. ; i The Better Business Bureau took a dim view of the 42- year-old custom. An official said many merchants will be taking advantage of - the crowd enthusiasm to palm off shoddy merchandise." -. nave Only Few Stores which offer the1 99 cent items only have a few of them. Therefore the line forms long and early, tempers, grow short, and the jockeying would give track fans heart. Some shoppers waited ' all night long, and it was a cold night..' , . '.' . i: The Federal Trade Commis sion doesn't worry about it. Chairman Earl W. Klntner said bait advertising on Wash ington's birthday has become so traditional that he doesn't think anyone Is fooled. . i George Neuwirth. who flew York via the North Pole and home by hook or crook and , NOT MUCH PRIVACY London - (UPB - An adver tisement in a London news paper today said: "Wonderful honeymoons afloat - excellent craft sleeping two to six." 1 H'li'iH'Hill ,- ' IIM'.M.'H'IHH ' iir. Survey Shows Opportunities in Corvaliis - A student's ca reer in agriculture is shaped primarily by home back ground with high school train ing and advising accounting for the remaining 20 per cent who choose agriculture and all its phases as a vocation, according an to Oregon State college survey. The survey showed too that opportunities in agriculture, part icularly "agribusiness," are considered brighter than ever before. ; Agribusiness is defined as the sum total of all of the operations involved in produc ing a farm commodity and getting it to the ultimate con sumer in its final form. This involves farm supplies, farm ing and processing - distribu tion. . All available agriculture graduates from OSC since 1935 and a sizeable segment of U.S. agricultural leaders were included in the survey involving some 3,200 individ uals engaged .in agriculture, Wilbur T. Cooney, associate dean of agriculture reported. Of the 1,895 persons re plying, 254 were engaged in agricultural college teaching and research, 247 agricultural extension (county agents), 205 agricultural research, 168 farming or ranching, 134 sales and service, 115 process ing or manufacturing, and 572 banking, communications and other vocations. The jobs of the 1,695 point see our new Si i wt'mk time means nothing . ., TO MICHAELS-STERNS COURIER CLOTH - . to the varied opportunities in agriculture today, Cooney noted. From an earlier na tional survey, it was found that some 15,000 new posi tions open in agribusiness for college graduates each year, he said, but a qualified- col lege graduate can't be found for about two-thirds of the new jobs. ' : . , English Most Useful' Based on needs within their present occupation, , thpse an swering the survey rated Eng lish as the most useful col lege course. Other courses in the top 10 were mathematics, statistics, botany, entomology, Officers Elected By - Ashland-New officers were elected at the recent Southern Oregon college Dad's club meeting. Robert Pittam', North Bend, was elected president; Louis A. Elevens, Roseburg, vice president; and Dr. Loren: E. Messenger, SOC professor of psychology,' reelected secretary-treasurer. Eston Humph rey, Medford, is the' retiring president, ' and Jack Sutton, Grants Pass, retiring vice president. Last week end's meeting marked the 10th anniversary of the organization. The club is sponsored by Theta Delta Phi, the oldest student organi zation on campus. A series of MICHAELS - STERN SUITS . . . Courier Cloth, in our opinion the finest pure wool worsted ever woven - is the suit that i& timeless in the places you can wear it with pride. In a wide vaiiety of colors and patterns for Spring. buy for Easter on one of our liberal plans MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. - .. - . . . . physics, journalism, industrial arts and engineering, bac teriology and zoology. Farming and ranching grad uates found introductory courses in agricultural engi neering, farm crops, and an imal husbandry most useful. In other categories, those with advanced degrees favored spe cializing and those self-cm-ployed stressed training in "breadth." Most all occupa tion groups felt that ag stu dents should devote more at tention to fundamentals in the physical and biological sci ences. Mathematics is a must for everyone, the graduates SOC Dad's Club tours were held, athletic events, entertainment, a busi ness meeting, dinner in the Commons, and a tea for ac companying mothers. SOC President Dr. Elmo N. Stevenson delivered a short address at the business meet ing. Larry Barleen, TDP presi dent, thanked the members oti the Robes, upper class wom en's servicn honorary, for con ducting the registration and tea, the members of Alpha Phi Omega, SOC scouting or ganization, for dance arrange ments, and all participating students and faculty members who worked on the program, 75.00 ,. ..... Agribusiness Are Brighter stressed in the survey. This survey was one of a number of "tools" used to make an intensive two-year study on education in agricul ture. From this, Cooney said, an OSC faculty committee has developed and prepared for acceptance a new curricula that will incorporate all of Portland - (UPD - Ex -Gov. Elmo Smith has been named chairman of the 1961 Cancer Crusade in Oregon. The cru sade will be under way in April. for the most ENCHANTING EASTER . . you are so smart FOREVER YOUNG THIS EASTER A. it's smart, it's new THREE-WAY HANDBAG A new Black color , the valid suggestions as a means of providing graduates with the background needed in today's changing agricul ture. SATURN TESTS END Huntsville, Ala. -0JP1I The current scries of static test fir ings of the largest known rocket booster in the world the 1.5 million pound thrust Saturn-has been completed. Karl Heimburg, test division director at the Marshall Space Flight Center, said the four firings already conducted showed no more were neces sary.. to wear . Fashion High Star Cotton Knit in movable Bolero reveals a solid contrasting top with two-piece effect. Regular and half sizes. Grey, B. Three-piece ensemble in rayonsilkdacron blend. The tal ented blouse can be tucked in or out of the sheath skirt for more ways to wear! Regular and half sizes. Lilac, Navy, Green, Cocoa. i MB concept in handbag fashion. Three bags in one. Whitt, Patent and Faille. Tapestry, Black Patent or Faille. A to coordinate with every Spring costume. i( The average size of farm holdings in India is about five acres. HELP US! We need clothing, shoes, diihei, furniture, and bedding. We Pick Up. . HELP OTHERS! The Salvation Army -30 N. Holly SPring 3-7335 the manner of Chanel. Re Mint, blue, Lilac. 10.95 14.95 1 I 8.98 and 11.98 Ing U.-2-a.na tlie.. supersonic I f plus tax Iz r