Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1961)
PyiastBeggCubans To .ftccept BepentencB Tensions Mount Between Factions on Supreme Court Washington -TOP- Tensions Between the Supreme Court'i liberal and conservative blocs ; appeared to be mounting to day as the justices strove to ward adjournment with an unusually heavy load of cases. , Bitterness was evident Mon day,, both in the 5-4 decision announced by the court, and in 3 surprise blast from the bench directed at Justice Felix Frankfurter by Chief Justice Earl Warren. Warren . sug gested that Frankfurter was "degrading" the court. The court handed down a batch of opinions on state re quirements for admissions to the bar- and the conduct of dis barment proceedings. Vi : The liberal bloc, headed by - Warren, was outvoted on. the Issue. In opinions by Justice John M. Harlau, the court held that a state may refuse to admit to the bar an applicant who will hot say whether he is Communist. Justice Hugo L. Black, chief spokesman for the dissenters, dldf not hide his distaste for the-majority's reasoning. The other dissenters were Warren and Justices William C Douglas and .William J. E. .-nnan Jr. : The! Warren - Frankfurter fltreup occurred in a, case were the liberal bloc came out ahead by winning the vote of Justice Potter Stewart. f 11 Ml VyUUVU UlULO, court reversed the conviction of a condemned murderer aft er three juries had found him guilty. Dissenters were Frank furter, Harlan, and Justices Charles E. Whlttaker and Tom C. Clark. Warren Angry '.As Frankfurter finished reading his dissent; Warren appeared incensed. Although the chief Justice had written no opinion in the case, he spoke out, calling the Frank furter dissent "a lecture . . . a closing argument by the prosecution to the jury, prop erly made in the court's pri vate conference room, but not in the courtroom." Warren said Frankfurter had read remarks not includ ed in his formal opinion pre viously circulated to the other justices. The chief justice added that he would have had something to say about the statements if he had seen them earlier. "As I understand, the pur pose of reading an opinion in the courtroom is to inform the public and not for the purpose of degrading this court," he told his Interested audience. Stock Prices Mount n Active Dea I i ngs New York (DPD Stocks re bounded smartly In active dealings today. Advances in the leading groups, including motors, steels, chemicals, aircrafts and oils were predominantly frac tional but electronics, drugs, leisure stocks and other more speculative issues showed a point or higher gains almost from the outset. DOW-JONES AVEBAGE8 : 1 New York-diro-Dow-Jones final stock averages! 30 in dustrials 672.66, off 12.601 Regional Edition ; ; i : : Page 2A tlEDFOTRIBUNE MED FORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1961 '", ' mjZ '- " " .' ; " i i iiiimai "' - m f I ma 41 1 on these SiiEmvm-Spjcms ON A QUART CAVII54t SmrwiH-WiWAMs FCHCE. & FLOOR ENAMEL Long-wearing protection $173 tor wooonoors ana naps. sA QUART SAVE 501 ON A QUART ShHWN. WfitMMS . , . Wash-Away Paint Remover $1 99 QUART . Brush K on-wash off old paint with wattrl MarnoT i&Hve.Mtf" SAVE 704 on a ; V SHfRWN-WltlAMS 2V' BRUSH High quality 100 For trim and panel diMVb D3T ON A QUART MAR-NOT VARNISH $162 all QUART Highest quality clear var nish for . Interior floors, woodwork, furniture. . I n iTpheno SP )J BUDGET TERMS IF DESIRED Open Dally to 5:30 Saturday to 5:00 . Plenty of Convenient, Pre Parking 20 railroads 140.04, off 0.84: 15 utilities 111.22, off 0.94. and 65 stocks 224.95, off 3.09. ' Sales Monday ware about 4.59 million shares compared with 4.34 million shares Friday. "' Monday's prices on' selected tocki: c Allied Chemical .. Alum Co. Am American Airlines .... American can AT&T .. American TODacco Anaconda Copper ...... . S9 :Bit Bendix Coro Bethlhm BUI . .. 72 . 42 -ft .mi Comer 6th & Fir Streets Boeing Air nrunswicK . Catorolllar Cora Chrysler Corp Coca Cola C. B S Continental Can .. Crown Zellerbaoh Crucible Steel ...... Curtlu Wright Dow Chemical Du Pont Kaitman Kodak .... Flreatone Ford General Zlectrlo ... General Motors Georsla pacific ...... BHV Graham Paige . 2( Greyhound 339 Qui Oil 38": Homeatake Mining 49 Idaho Power 58 . 40 - 38? S8?i aili 191 7Ul ft ...113; 3 V. ....... 62 48 14 I B. M. Int Paper Johns Manvllle Kennecott Copper Martin Co. ......... Mercx Montana Power Montgomery Ward Nat'l Blicult New York Central Northern pacific .... Pao Gas Bleo Penney J, C Penn Hit .. raiico Plumps ....698 , 31 . 874J , 34 . 87 . 34(i 29. , Wi 18(4 . 4314 . 76 V . 381, . 14 . 31 . 6H . 83 . 87 . 44 . 8814 . 4214 . 4414 . 8914 Proctor and Gamble Radio corporation ...... Safeway Sears Shell C41 ....... Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern Paolfle Sperry Rand 3114 Standard California ................ 99 Standard Indiana ... 6414 Standard N. J. .,. 47 Sun Mines 7T4 Texas Co. 10014 Texai Gulf Sulfur 24 Tevae Pec Land Truat 211& Tranaamerlca - 3314 Train World Air 1914 TrI-Contlnental 41 Union Carbide 132 Union Pacllio 31)4 United Aircraft 4314 United Air Llnea 48 14 U. S, Rubber 9214 U. S, Steel 8934 wait. Bank corp nil Weatlnghouie 41 Youngstown 8 Ac T 10614 Campus Day Slated At SOC in Ashland Ashland - Southern Oregon college Campus Day, consist ing of student body elections and other events and activi ties will be held April 26 on the college campus. Candidates for student body president are Dale Truax, Ashland; Nell Green, Central Point; and Gary Ackley, Med-ford. Those running for sopho more class president are Vern Spiers, Ashland and Don Mc Curdy, Medford. Candidates for junior class president are Joe Luczyckl, Klamath Falls and Larry Nolte, Medford. The candidate for senior class president is Neil Green of Central Point. Campus Day entertainment will include a pig chase, wom en nail driving contest, hula hoop contest, railroad tie roll ing relay, a dunking machine, and weather balloon contest. Other events will be base ball games, tug-o-wars, volley ball, and badminton. Highlights for the late afternoon will be the corona tion of "Betty Coed" and "Joe College," bar-b-que dinner, and a sundown dance. Field Men Listen For Pheasant Cocks Albany, N.Y. (UPD Some times a man's job Is hard to explain to people who aren't in the business. Take state conservation de partment field men, for In. stance. They now are driving along designated routes of about 23 miles. They stop their vehicles for never more than two mlnutes-and listen. Explanation: They're listen, lng for pheasant cocks. Biol ogists have found that the cocks have at least a two-mln ute interval between crows and the field men are trying to find out where hen pheas ants should be released to Broadcast Tells Of Deception by U. 5. Instructors , Miami (UPD Havana tele vision panelists spent nearly an hour today interrogating a purported priest who said Fi del Castro's revolution "Ful. fills the social doctrine of Jesus Christ." The prisoner, who identi fied himself as Roman Catho lic Father Segundo Las Heras Cabo, , said on a radio-TV broadcast he parachuted into Cuba with last week's invad ers only because American in. structors deceived him. He said he was' kept a virtual prisoner in an American-run training camp in Guatemala, "I repent and beg the peo ple of Cuba to accept my re pentance,' 'he said. "All I ask is that they give me an oppor tunity to mend my ways." The prisoner appeared on the third night of -grilling of prisoners on the Cuba-wide radio-TV network. Becomes Show Trial - The pretense that the pris oners were being questioned by a press panel was virtually abandoned, and the program took on more and more of the atmosphere of a Commu nist "show trial." . ; Panelists pumped questions at the prisoners in the manner of prosecuting attorneys and even called "witnesses.1; They regularly embarked on long speeches extolling Castro and Fussia and lambasting the United States. Castro Mocks "Pleas . The program, with the par ticipants including a hyster ical woman, a ranting man, and another man who threat ened to stab a prisoner before the cameras, contributed to the ominous atmosphere hi Cuba. Castro himself, in a speech Sunday punctuated by cries of al naredon" (to the wanj. mocked pleas for mercy for thev 634 prisoners Havana claims to have captured In last week's invasion. . Havana Radio Monday also made the most savage attack yet on President Kennedy, saying he had planned to wit ness the invasion of Cuba from an American warship. Students at University of Oregon Firing of Student Counselor WOW YOU KNOW United Press International Nobody knows who de signed, the flag of the United States. 1ST IN SALESi '. i Mora feople Buy WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIAS Than Any Other Encyclopedia . Phone MUrdeck J-4771 Eugene -WtjP Pickets show- ed up at the University of Oregon Monday to protest firing of a 20-year-old girl student counselor who object ed to rating other girls on such questions as their ag gressiveness toward the oppo site sex. Gayle Osburn, of Salem, a reddish blonde with freckles, refused to resign after her protest about the counselor Increase in School Support,Community College Fund Voted Salem - (UPD A S20-a-child hike In state school support and $1.7 million for commu. nity. colleges have been ap Droved by the Ways and Means Education subcommit tee. The $20 per child increase, double what Gov. Mark Hat field ordered, won 3-1 endorse ment today. , Sen. Ward Cook (D-Port- lahd) who supported it, ad- mltted the figure may get "butchered" by the full committee. The hike would cost $21 million over the next two ap- Bills Approved By Legislature Salem (UPD- Measures proved by the Senate: SJK36-Fermlts legislature to be represented at national legislative conferences in 1961 and 1062. SB6B-Reclprocal authority of circuit and district judges. SB66-Companlon to SB6B. SB177-Provides compensa tion for property owners when highway commission relocates roads. HB1018-S4 million In bonds for Highway 42. HB1082-Business names. HB1135-Boats. HB1136-Mining leases. HB1157-Judgments. HB1168 - Juvenile delin quents. ; HB11 77-Teachers contracts. HB1309-Out patients clin ics at state hospitals HB1452 - Approriatlon of water from Columbia tributaries. HB1482-Judges. HB1B18-Assessment of land by irrigation districts. HB1609-Return of fugitives. HB1616 - Domestic water supply corporations. By the Housei HB2029, 2095, 2110-Budg- ets for Racing Commission, planning for state buildings, tuberculosis hospital. HBISIO-Release of mental patients. - ' , HB161S-Insurance. HB1737-New health depart ment. HB1742-NW mental health division. HB1747-County School dis-, trlcts. . HR7-House rule change. SB26-Hlghway fund depos it. SB63-Legal records. SBBl-Vagrancy. SB90-Llvlng in or about a house of ill-fame. SB 1 42-Agriculture. HB263-Llvestock slaughter. SB399-Osteopathy. SB40S-Practlce of medicine. SB539 - State scholarship commission. Signed by the Govainort HB1358-School boards. Least Effective State Men Picked Salem -OIPD- A poll of the legislative press . corps . has picked the least effective sen ator and representative in the 1961 session of the legislature, as well as the most promising f reshmen. v Named the' least effective senator was William Grenfell Jr. (D-Portland), with Alice Corbett (D-Portland) second. .' Least effective representa tive was Ray Dooley (D-Portland) and Tom McClellan (D Neotsu) second. Most promising freshman honors went to Rep. John Del lenback (R-Medford) and Rep. Edward Fadeley (D-Eugene) second. Most quotable: Senator Wal ter J. Pearson, with Sen. Tom Mahoney (D-Portland) second. 1 Best news source: Split be tween seven legislators and the Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee, with Rep. Robert Duncan (D-Medford) getting two votes and all oth ers one. Most intestinal fortitude: Sen. Robert F. White (R-Sa-lem) with Mahoney second. Most statesmanlike: Sen. Al fred Corbett (D-Portland) with Rep. George Layman (R-New-berg) second. 'Gun' Used in Cancer Detection Miami, Fla. (Science Serv ice) A cancer detecting "gun" that permits earlier di agnosis of throat and lung cancer has been perfected by a Florida physician, Dr. J. Ernest Ayre, medical and sci entific director of the Cancer Cytology Foundation of Amer ica In New York arid Miami. Finger-pressure on the gun trigger fires a brush out of the tube into the oral cavity where it can be rotated: Lar yngeal cells from the vocal cords and bronchogenic cells In the mucous stream from the lungs are caught by the revolving brush. The cell samples are ex amined under the microscope to determine the presence or absence of malignant cells. Cytology tests, using the new gun device, are compara tively painless, . require less than five minutes to complete, and can result in the discov ery of unsuspected cancer, Mail Being Collected In City at 5 p.m. All mail collection boxes within the city of Medford are now collected at the S p.m. collection, the post office has announced. , Previously, some boxes , in the outlying areas, within the city, were not collected after 3. p.m. All mail deposited in the collection boxes prior to S p.m. will be processed and dis patched the same evening. The added collection Is part of a program to improve mail service to the entire area, postal officials said. years. Rep. Stafford Hansen (R-Hermiston) said tax com. mission estimates indicated the state lacked the money. . Hansell called the $20 fig ure "financially irresponsible" and said he deplored the idea of deficit financing. Cook declared the tax com mission has consistently un derestimated revenues, and predicted the state will have plenty of money for the $20 increase. Co-chairman of the full com mittee, Rep. Clarence Barton, said new revenue .estimates will be available before a final decision is made on the $20 a child figure. The subcommittee Monday night endorsed $830,000 for state support of community colleges and , post-high school courses on a two-thirds state- financed basis. The same-figure was ap proved for the state's share in building community college facilities.. ! The figure is about $1 mil lion less than had been asked. but it would let the 1 state shoulder considerably more than at present in community college financing. ' Under the plan, local com munities would pick up about one-third of operating costs, and about one-fourth of build ing costs. rating system. So she was fired from the job which is worth about $225 a term in board and room. ....... From 10 to 15 pickets showed up variously In front of the Student Affairs Office to protest the firing. About half were male students. Miss Osburn, a junior ma joring in education, said she felt that neither she nor other student counselors were quali fied to rate girl students as required. She also objected to secrecy of the ratings. Among the 12 items on which counselors, as well as housemothers, rate the girls is tne attitude toward the op posite sex. They have five points from among which to mark Over-aggressive, ag gressive, easy and natural, somewhat shy and antagonis tic." Miss Osburn said she was told the girls should not see the forms biA that they would be made available to employ ers who seek information about it. Donald DuShane, dean of student affairs, defending the firing, said the - forms were held, in strictest confidence and used only when a stu dent's problems make it use ful and helpful. . The student newspaper, Daily Emerald, quoted Du Shane as saying information was made available to em ployers onlyf if it would be used for the student's benefit. Miss Osburn retorted in the paper that if employers knew the only information they would receive would be bene ficial to the student, they wouldn't write for references." Walter Freauff, assistant di rector of dormitories, said that since Miss Osburn . was "not in sympathy with the use of this form ... as a coun selor she has no course but to resign," 'i -v ' lltnitlMiriMinMllUfflltlWIIrnintMMIHIMIIIIIUIIHUIIIIIIHIIHtHMltlllltWIItlltlWltHlletJtntinilllMllllia Behind the Market Now. 20 STOCKS WITH RECOVERY POSSIBILITIES . The Dow-Jones Industrial .Average recently soared to brand-new heights ... but . there are still many securities -. of proven quality that are lagging behind, well below their 1959-60 highs. Harris, Upham's latest Pocket Guide fob Today's Investor highlights 20 such stocks, now selling at 17 to SO less than their highs of last year or the year before . . . with particularly attractive possibili ties for recovery if the widely anticipated general busi ness upturn materializes.. We believe they're stocks well worth consideration now. . Pocket Guide also features: : 9 Bonds for Investment 12 Convertible Bonds ' 10 Preferred Stocks with 31 Investment Caliber Yields up to 5.0 , Stocks for Income 27 Stocks with Growth 38 Selected Trading Possibilities Issues - For your complimentary copy of this convenient in vestment guide, mail coupon today. (pocket -1 Wide; i SijnniiiHMtiiifitiiJiiittiiniiittiiHMiiMiEiinMiiimMMinMrifiininiiHrmtHinimiMitiiniiuiiiiNiiiMiiii IfimHARIlIS, UPHAM & (J2 . Mnfar Nw York Stock Exchong . 25 and offctr loading ueurltf and commodity exchanges . Formerly FOSTER & MARSHALL :j m 44 S. Central Avenue, Medford, Oregon SPring 3-7377 Gentlemen; Fleeee lend FOCKBT Gmoa described above. City Zme -State. 3 5 millflllllllallirmitllllllltflltlllMlllIfllllUltlllf Mlllfllllllllllllllltillllllllfillllllilltlllellltllffflllf IlllellltlllfeS Patroniie This PARK t SHOP MEMBER "DON'T FORGET TO USE PARK & SHOP WHEN YOU SHOP AT . . . VAN LEE'S 88c STORE 127 North Central Phone SP 3-6345 Mure Trade-ins Wanted as Our Big Trade m CONTINUES THIS WEEK! We Pay You To Buy! OPEN THIS WEEK 8 3.m.-9 p.m. Yes, we'll pay you $50 Trade-in allowance on your present WASHER DRYER REFRIGERATOR FREEZER or RANGE, regardless of condition or age on any NEW NORGE or KELVINATOR. PRICES ALREADY CUT on many of these items before this event. IK YOU HAVE NO TRADE-IN, we will give you a 10 DISCOUNT on any purchase Lots of Trade-ins Have Come In- Yet we have decided1 to extend this offer until everyone has had an opportunity to take advantage of this event. So bring your present furniture, if you with, and get the highest trade-in allowance possible! In addition to our other offer We Will Pay You SfS TRADE"IN ALLOWANCE . 1 1 1 1 11 on your present box spring II II II and mattress regardless of ff II II age or condition on any . US NEW Box Spring & Mattress ASK ANYONE WHO CAME IN SATURDAY OR SUNDAY! We Will Give You the Followina Allowances: Trade-in for your Present Dinette on any New DINETTE SET Trade-in. Allowance for your present Living Room Set re gardless of condition on any NEW LIVING ROOM SET. 50 50 $ 50 Trade-in for your Present Stereo Console Record Player on a New STEREO and Many, Many Other Comparable Allowances FOR FAST DELIVERY BRING TRUCK OR TRAILER No Cash Down That's Right NOTHING DOWN. Your present Dav eno, Dinette, Range, Refrigerator or what have you will make a Substantial Down Payment as shown on this page. FOR EXAMPLE: If you have an Electric Range you will be allowed $50 for it on a New Range regard less or age or condition ot your present range. We Will Deliver and Pickup FREE! This event-is subject to stock on hand only so hurry. ALL SALES FINAL Supply !s Limited So Shop Early for Choice! M OF ASHLAND-MU 2-4351 1640 Hiway 66 Ashland, Ore. "You'll Find Us Easy to Deal With' meet the most male pheasants.