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MEMORIAL DEDICATION - The USS Arizona, built atop
the remains o the battleship Arizona which was sunk at
her berth Dec. 7, 1941. at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, is shown
in a photo released by the U. S. Navy. Constructed mostly
from public funds and finished with federal funds, the
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memorial was dedicated yesterday. The bodies of many
of her crew members are still entombed in the sunken hulk
and the Arizona is carried on navy records as being still in
commission. (UPI)
Two Area Teachers
Eugene Thirty-eight ele
mentary school teachers from
throughout the United States
and one from Brazil have been
selected to participate in the
Summer Institute in Science
and Mathematics for Elemen
tary School Teachers at the
University of Oregon.
The program is financed by
the National Science Founda
tion. The Foundation is spon
soring 21 summer institutes
for elementary teachers. Five
of them are west of the Rock
ies. Each participant will re
ceive a stipend of $75 per
week for the eight week insti
tute, which will begin June
18.
Purpose of the institute is
to improve the subject matter
background in physical sci
ence of elementary school
i 4 '
ANSWER TO MR. MEANY AND MR. SLIGH
The rigid clinging to obsolete viewpoints and the igno
rance of today's economic realities disclosed at the White
House Conference on National Economic Issues last week by
many of the top labor and business leaders of this nation
are frightening to any informed observer of the world in
which the United States exists
It was the same old stuff
er wages, businessmen calling for bigger profits, public
representatives calling for lower prices and scarcely any
one digging beneath the superficialities and down to the
basic solutions to the problems of accelerating production,
increasing employment and tackling fierce world competition
which our country now faces.
At one point during the session, George Meany, presi
dent of the AFL-CIO, arose and angrily shouted at Charles
Sligh, Jr., executive vice president of the National Assn.
of Manufacturers, "I am all for the profits you need if you
can make the jobs. I challenge the NAM to tell us how
much profits they need and how it is going to be translated
into jobs, not how it is going to be translated into fatter
salaries for some executives . . ."
To this blockbuster, Sligh's weak answer was, "We'll
give you a detailed . plan how job opportunities can be
created," and he added that the consumer, of all people,
should be the judge of how high business profits should be.
This it just a sample of how it was at this conference
of 2S0 of America's key labor, management and public
figures. When the current railroad dispute came up during
a session of labor-management disagreements, the chair
man reported the group's only "helpful" recommendation
was to "play it by ear."
When the question of the administrations guideposts for
wage-price increases came up
chairman reported many in
what the guideposts are. (The
should not exceed the overall
meaning in industry's efficiency, per year, and prices should
be geared to productivity,
3 per cent a year.)
At a time when the U.S. must work out ways to speed
up its growth and compete more successfully in the world's
markets, the performance at this conference was dis
couraging indeed. Meany's
Sligh's answer wasn't one.
(1) The U.S. economy of the 1960s is far different and is
up against far different challenges than the U.S. economy
of the 1950s and 1940s. We are no longer the supreme pro
ducer of the globe, with the world's only truly sound cur
rency, great gold reserves, enormous financial know-how.
Rather, today, largely because of unparalleled generosity
with our money and knowledge, Europe's nations also have
rebuilt themselves into powerful producers, with increasingly
strong currencies, gold reserves, financial know-how. They
have many plants which are more modern than ours. They
are growing at a pace which is exhilarating to watch. They
are unifying, competing both with each other and with us,
challenging us on every front.
(2) This means we are into a competive situation which
is entirely new to this generation. We're trading with equals
and. while we're still ahead in the trade race S20 billion'
of exports a year versus SI 5 billion of imports we're losing
our edge in more and more lines.
(3) One way to make jobs is to increase our sales of ,
goods at home and abroad, of course. One way to achieve
this is to modernize our plants so we can turn out improved
goods at lower unit costs. One way to modernize our plants
is to permit industry the profits and give it Uie tax incen
tives to invest in the plants. The profits arcn t big enough
and the tax incentives aren't impelling enough as of now
to spur businessmen into the modernization-expansion pro
grams which are e-ssential to our prosperity. That's the an
swer. Mr.' Meany and Mr0Sligh. o
What the U S. doesn't nc today is tired talk a ut wage
hikes and old cliches about profits. What we need is a sense
of the economic realities and a detcrminat' to cooperate
on the programs which will set us strongly and solidly on
the long road up. Or, as President Kennedy said in opening
the conference, what we need "are very sophisticaled judg
ment," untarnishfd by the labels "Republican or Demo-
cratic, liberal, conservative
out' of this pajley.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD, OREGON
WW '
i '
To Attend Institute
teachers. Participants will
register in a course in geol
ogy, physical geography, me
terology and climatology, and
elementary mathematics.
James C. Stovall, associate
professor of geology at the
University of Oregon, is di
rector of the institute.
Participants include Charles
Bornamann, Grants Pass, and
Barbara Robinson, Jackson
ville. EXPECTS LONG SESSION
Washington - IUPD - Senate
Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield said today he ex
pects Congress will have to
come back after the Novem
ber elections to finish its
work. He said that the target
date for adjournment is Sept.
15, "but I do not think that
we will be able to finish our
work by that time."
Your Money's
Worth
By SYLVIA PORTER
Copyright, Hall Syndicate, In
in 1962.
labor leaders calling for high
at a session on this issue, the
the group didn't even know
idea is that wage increases
rate of increase in productivity
too. This rate has been around
blockbuster missed the point;
Here are soma facts.
or moderate.'
They didn't come
i31 Area Students
To Receive OSll
Degrees Sunday
Corvallis Thirty-one stu-
dents from the Medfnrd area
I will receive degrees June 3 at
the 93rd annual commence
ment program at Oregon
State university.
Oregon State will confer
approximately 1.820 degrees
this year, including about
1.360 bachelor's degrees, 389
master's degrees, 4 profes
sional engineer degrees, and
66 doctor's degrees. The num
ber of advanced degrees is the
largest in history.
Commencement exercises
will be held at 1 p.m. (PST) in
the 10.000-seat coliseum to
provide maximum seating for
parents, relatives and the pub
lic. OSU'S commencement
program has extended over
two days in the past, but was
changed to a one-day program
this year.
The commencement pro
gram will be telecast by both
KOAP, Channel 10, Portland,
and KOAC, Channel 7, Cor
vallis. It will be carried also
by KOAC radio.
Graduates Listed
Graduates in the various
schools include:
Education: Sheryl Owen
Greene, Eagle Point.
Engineering: Bruce Merl
Burnette, Gold Hill; John
Fredrick Hansen, Allen Kent
Hawley, Bryan Kent Schroe
der, Thomas Francis Wies
kamp. Stephen Edward Hoag,
Medford.
Humanities and social sci
ence: Darrell Lee Ross, Glyn
don Ruth Hunter, Sheila Gay
Couey, Karen Johnson, Med
ford. Science: Sandra Kay Bus
ton, Charles Edward Coyle,
David Lee Gifford, Medford.
Agriculture: James Culver
Miller III, Medford.
Business and technology:
' Equitable Elects Three
To Board of Directors
Portland - Wit - Three men,
including Secretary of State
Howard Appling Jr., were
elected to the board of direc
tors of Equitabie Savings and
Loan association Tuesday.
Others were Victor Atiyeh,
president of Atiyeh Bros.,
Inc., Portland, and William
Love, partner in the Portland
law firm of Cake, Jaureguy,
Hardy. Butler and McEwen.
President of the board .is
Ralph H. Cake. Harry Haw
kins, president of Common
wealth. Inc., retired.
Edward Loren Cantrall,
Nancy Adams, Rick Ray
mond Colver, Medford; Fred
Wilbur Greene, Eagle Point;
Larry Neil Plumley, George
Berry Reed, Medford.
Forestry Lawrence Jean
Wright, Medford.
Home economics: Sonya
Ann Lea, Marilyn Jean Par
sons, Aileen Deanna Weber,
Medford.
Pharmacy Robert Phil
Gates, Howard Stanley Har
per, Medford.
Miss Johnson and Miss
Adams are two of 114 seniors
graduating with honors, and
Hoag. Cantrall and Greene
arc three of 131 seniors who
will be commissioned in the
military services. Hoag and
Cantrall will be commissioned
ensigns In the Navy, Green, a
second lieutenant in the
Army.
Those receiving master's
degrees include: William Lee
Ryan, Gerald Loren Young of
Central Point, science; Lillian
Margaret Harrang, Jarold
Arthur Keith, Medford,
education.
ON MISSILE SHIP
James N. de Place, serving
on the guided missile ship
USS Farragut, recently was
advanced to the rating of fire
control technician, second
class. He is a son of Mr. and
Mrs. Eric de Place, 1392 Pop
lar dr., Medford.
LOWER IIMSl RATES
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Auto Loan you pay a lower rate of interest and deal with your car
dealer on a cash basis, At The Oregon Bank, your loan is arranged
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Your direct bank loan payments are $90.88 per month.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System
Woman Treks
Through Woods lofdaf Oregon
Eueene Three workshot
Train Her Hounds
By ISABELLE McCAIG
United Preit International
West Brattleboro, Vt. - (UPH
Mrs. Fannie Doyle, a 58-year-old
grandmother, thinks noth
ing of an all-day trek through
wooded mountains or facing
a trapped criminal.
A Windham county deputy
sheriff and parttime practical
nurse, she raises, trains and
tracks with a brood of crack
bloodhounds that have gai.ied
her fame in police circles intern Oregon college, Ashland,
Maine, New Hampshire and will direct the first workshop.
Vermont
"It's both a hobby and a
job." she said.
Her current pack of eight
bloodhounds includes 12-year
-old Henry, who began his ca
reer tracking down two es
caped criminals from Windsor
State Prison when he was just
a pup.
Henry also was on the end
of a leash when Mrs. Doyle
tracked a murder fugitive
last year.
Could See Him
"I tracked him through rug
ged country, mountains and
swamp. I was so close I saw
him in a pond at one point
and he could see me and the
dog," she recalled.
The fugitive, an expert
woodsman, eluded about 50
police for 18 hours before sur
rendering. Mrs. Doyle says she doesn't
fear a fugitive whether he is
armed or. not, although she
carries no firearms and her
dogs are not trained to protect
her.
"I'm always flanked by
armed police officers," she
said.
Mrs. Doyle is believed to be
the only woman in the coun
try who trains bloodhounds
for detective woork. She also
Acny
- I jv 1
THURSDAY. MAY
I Business Workshop
Eugene Three workshops
! dealing with different phases
l of business education will be
offered this summer at the
University of Oregon.
Sponsored by the school of
business administration, the
workshops are Development
of Business Education Pro
gram for the Academically
Talented, June 18-29; Basic
Business and Economic Edu
cation, July 23-29; and Secre
tarial Science, July 30-Aug.
10.
Dr. E. C. McGill, assistant
to the president and director
of academic affairs at South-
Director of the basic work
shop will be Dr. John C. Gil
liam, assistant professor of
secretarial science at the Uni
versity of Wyoming. Dr. Mar
ion M. Lamb, professor of
business at Sacramento State
college, will direct the final
workshop.
Chain Stores Purchase
14,000 Trucks Yearly
New York - (UPD - Chain
store companies purchase
nearly 14,000 new trucks a
year and operate almost 75,
000, according to a survey by
Chain Store age.
The survey also revealed 90
per cent of the vehicles are
owned and operated by the
chains. The others are leased.
is called in to find lost hunt
ers and children who go as
tray in the Northern New
England woods.
"I ruptured a disc four
years ago and the doctors told
me I couldn't go tracking in
the -woods anymore," she said,
"but I'm still doing it."
She began training dogs for
the sheriff of Keene, N. H.,
and started breeding them
herself 15 years ago.
with xh down, 24-months loan
K93S3SII)
Onniversaro;
EAST MEDFORD BRANCH
701 bit Jackson St.
ROGUE VALLEY BRANCH
1109 Court Stmt
MEDFORD
Othtr branchoi In Milton-Frtowattr,
Ptno'Uton, Portland and The Dalles.
31.
1962
-
A 5
Commencement
At Pacific Slated
This Week End
Forest Grove Activities
for the 1962 commencement
at Pacific university here
will begin Saturday, June 2.
Slated to receive degrees are
194 students.
The first official function
of the week end will be Satur
day at 6:30 p.m. at Forest
Grove Union High school
when "Higher Education in
the Air Age" will be the
theme of the annual com
mencement dinner.
Hung Wai Shing. Honolulu,
Hawaii, businessman will de
liver the principal address.
Alumi of the University and
members of the Class of 1962
are guests of honor for the
banquet.
Baccalaureate will be held
at 11 a.m. Sunday at the First
Congregational church of For
est Grove. Speaker for the
service will be The Rev. Ru
dolph S. Allrich, Lodl, Calif.,
president of the Northern
California Synod of the Evan
gelical and Reformed church
(United Church of Christ).
Commencement will begin
at 2:30 p.m. Sunday when the
graduates, faculty and guests
assemble in Birch Grove Out
door Theater on the campus.
Speaker for the exercises
will be Dr. Harold R. W. Ben
jamin, a native of Oregon
and a 1912 graduate of Tuala
tin Academy," forerunner of
Pacific university.
The Class of 1912 will hold
a reunion at noon in the Uni
versity Commons.
New York - (UPD Across
the nation, the death rate
from accidents hit an all-time
low during 1961, statistician
at the Metropolitan Life In
surance company report. The
rate: 50 per 100,000 population.
Gross charge per year