Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 13, 1962, Image 9

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    Olympic
By FREDERICK H. TREESH
United Prest International
New York - tint - Raler
Johnson, whose great and
varied athletic prowess car
ina him to the Olympic de
cathlon championship, has set
a new goal for himself: hur
dling the gap of understand
ing between American col
lege students and exchange
students from abroad.
With two Kansas univer
sity students, William Dawson
and Rick Barnes, Johnson is
co-directing the national en
campus People to People cam
paign to promote internation
al understanding among col
legians. "The crux of the thing is
that international students
come here, go to school and
get their degree," Johnson
said. "But they don't meet
Americans and get to know
America.
"It's the fault of both. The
foreign students are more for
mal. They don't just walk up
and introduce themselves.
"T h e American student
often feels there's nothing he
can do to help . . . that there
already are all kinds of pro
grams like meetings, teas and
receptions for the foreign stu
dents." The fact is, Johnson said,
the international students live
together, eat together, go to
the formal meetings and final
ly finish college without real
ly getting to know the Amer
ican students. Often they re
turn to their native lands with
no real knowledge of what
America is really like.
Johnson, a big soft-spoken
California, said much of the
hostility toward America in
foreign countries "is in the
student area."
"Students abroad have their
own political organizations
and have a strong voice in
their countries," Johnson
said.
Promotes Program
With Barnes and Dawson,
who have taken leave from
their studies, Johnson has
traveled widely promoting the
six-point People to People
campus program. He has
helped organize a dozen
statewide conferences on prob
lems of foreign students and
hopes to have held at least
one such meeting of college
and state officials in each of
the 30 states by the end of
this year.
The People to People cam
pus program includes:
Establishment of person
al contacts between foreign
and American students.
Hospitality by the com
munities in which the colleges
are located.
Forums in which Ameri
can and foreign students dis
WHAT
Did the
Little
Dog Ask al
His s
Friend? jfe3
SEE PAGE 3B
Music by Hie KRNR Ranch Hands
c 1
Hit
1M.
llittl He
iiH m
F J'
F$t AUGUST 15-19 ROSEBURG
535-1462
Rock Hudson
Doris Day
Tony Randall
.EDIE ADAMS -JACK
A riotous
?1nI u P9W ,wist
IJM
of gentle
persuasion
Athlete Instrumental In People to People Program
cuss world and national prob-1
lems. i
Job placement for visit- j couraged to write to prospec
ing students. tive foreign students before
Tours to Europe and else-1
where by "student ambassa-1
dors" from American colleges I
ind universities.
In the People to People I
College Girls
Live in Castle
By GENE MEAKINS
United Press International
Redstone, Colo. -IUPH- Cin
derella hardly fared any bet
ter than two pretty Texas co
ed? who came to this scenic
old mountain community to
wash dishes and wound up
living in a real castle.
- Each night, their pumpkin
is transformed into a 42
room Tudor .castle decorated
with Tiffany crystal chande
liers, Persian rugs, Ming vas
es, oil paintings and other
rare works of art. Their bath
water flows through solid
silver fixtures and the library
walls are of hand-tooled ele
phant hide.
Linda Mulcock, 19. and
Sarah Baird, 20, who migra
ted for the summer from
their homes in Tyler, Texas,
to this secluded and spectacu
lar mountain valley, retire
each night as princesses. They
share a room in the servant's
quarters in the castle.
But their pumpkin appears
each morning as they head a
half-mile down a narrow
mountain road to wait on ta
bles, wash dishes and make
up beds for the tourist guests
at Redstone lodge.
Possible Ghosts
"It's exciting living in an
honest to goodness castle,"
exclaimed Miss Mulcock, who
next fall becomes just an or
dinary student again at the
Univers ty of Colorado,
where she is a junior Span
ish major. "We think there
are ghosts in the castle - may
be even Teddy Roosevelt's."
Her roommate, Sarah, "just
can't believe it's true" that
she really is living in the
castle, which overlooks a
lush green valley and has a
9-hole golf course in its front
yard.
I had no idea I was going
to live in a castle until I got
here, the comely junior busi
ness education major at Abi
lene Christian college said. "I
feel just like a princes?. It's
kinda like a dream, it really
is.
Hunting Headquarters
Redstone castle once was a
favorite headquarters for
Teddy Roosevelt's hunting
and fishing forays. Such no
tables as John D. Rockefeller.
J. P. Morgan and Jay Gould
and European royalty also
vacationed in the luxurious
castle, surrounded by snow
capped peaks. It was built at
the turn of the century by
John C. Osgood, founder of
the steel-producing Colorado
Fuel and Iron corporation,
who crammed the castle with
art objects.
Osgood, who died in 1926,
COUNTRY
and
WESTERN
DANCING
Sunday at 8:30
DOUGLAS
OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN
' brother - sister program
American students are en
they arrive at American cam
puses telling them about
the school, the town and
campus life
"The American 'brother' or
also built a model village
nearbv for his coal miners
and their families. Some of
their Swiss chalet homes still
remain near the "ghost" town
of Redstone, which once was
a booming mining village
and now has a population of
about SO permanent rest
dents.
Now, the castle is open to
ihe public for the first time
for tours - and to anyone
who can afford to pay $100
to $350 a day to live like a
king in a suite in the 23-bed
room, 17-bath edifice. Guests
can recline on Renaissance
furnriture, dine with an 874-
piece silver service designed
for King Alfonso of Spain
and sleep where T. R. once
slept.
Lodge for Tourists
But the average tourist
stays in Redstone lodge,
where Linda and Sarah wait
tables.
The castle and lodge are
part of a 960-acre spread on
the Crystal river high in the
central Colorado Rockies,
between Aspen and Glen
wood Springs, now owned by
the Redstone corporation. In
cluded on the property are a
I glass-e n c 1 o s e d swimming
pool, a ski lift, the golf
course and a portion of the
ghost town.
For Linda and Sarah and
the 18 other college boys and
girls living in the castle and
working in the lodge, it's like
a dream. Cinderella never
had it so good.
Study Shows Three
Religious Ghettos
By CLAIRE COX
United Press International
New York -tUPD- Americans
are sealing themselves into
religious ghettos, a new study
of social frictions and tensions
reports.
The Jewish ghetto, instead
of being wiped out, has been
augmented by Roman Cath
olic and Protestant ghettos.
the study found.
In major cities across the
country, the intermingling of
various groups reaches a
sharp cutoff point al. 5 p.m
with members of each of
these groups retreating to
their separate ghettos, it said.
Published by the Union of
American Hebrew congrega
tions, which represents Re
form Judaism, the report, en
titled "A Talc of Ten Cities,"
charged that "religious bigot
ry is still widespread and
deeply embedded" in Amer
ican life.
Beyond the question of anti-Catholicism,
of anti-Semitism,
or anti-Protestantism, is
the stark fact that we Amer
icans know precious little
about the realities of religi
ous relationships in America,"
the report said.
It was written by Rabbi
Eugene J. Lipman, spiritual
leader of Temple Sinai in
Washington, D.C., and Albert
Vorspan, director of the Com
mission on Social Action of
Reform Judaism of the Union
of American Hebrew congre
gations. Zamboanga in the Philip
pines has one of the greatest
areas of any city. Its area of
1,159 square miles is almost
equal to that of the entire
state of Rhode Island.
Ladies Free Passes
Nor Good
This
Show
ON
AT
10 P.M.
UcfovtOV
L v.m-.:k:!.-'iu!:i1J!;:'a:-
MEDFOHD MAIL THIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
sister' meets the visiting stu -
dent at the airport, helps him
get housing and explains such
. . , ... , ,
things as check writing, tak-
ing care of laundry and reg
istration." Johnson said.
He said students are en
couraged to set up programs
for inviting foreign students
into their homes and churches
and a variety of "everyday
activities."
He said finding vacation
and week end jobs for the
Births
McGATH - To Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Duane. route 1, box
415, Talent, Aug. 10, 1962,
girl, 6 ' pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
HINTON - To Mr. and Mrs.
Erskine J. H., route 2, box
200C, Central Point, Aug. 10.
1962, boy, 6t pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
OLSON - To Mr. and Mrs.
John A., 423 Plum St., Med
ford, Aug. 10, 1962, girl, 5H
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. VANDERM1LLER - To Mr.
and Mrs. Edmund J., Union
Creek Ranger station. Pros
pect, Aug. 10, 1962, boy, 6'a
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. BRADSHAW - To Mr. and
Mrs. Merton C, L.B. Star
route box 170, Eagle Point,
Aug. 11, 1962, boy, 6:!4
pounds, al Rogue Valley hos
pital. Former Eye Doctor
Head 01 Institute
By FREDERCK H. TREESH
United Press International
New York tUPD "Thirty
thousand persons go' blind in
the United States every year.
If we could learn a cure for
glaucoma, we could save 4,500
of them from blindness. Has
there ever been a greater
challenge?"
The speaker was Jules
Stein, a little known eye doc
tor who made it big in show
business, becoming a million
aire many tines over.
Stein, chairman of Music
corporation of America, put
aside his medical career in
1925 after studying and prac
ticing for 11 years. His inter
est shifted to the entertain
ment field while working his
way through medical school
as a violinist, saxophone
player and dance band
leader.
Though his business suc
cess was legendary. Stein says
he only now is realizing his
greatest satisfaction. Al 65,
when most men think of re
tiring, he is undertaking an
enterprise which logically
combines his medical back
ground and business wizard
ry: Research to Prevent
Blindness, Inc., a charitable
foundation which endows re
search in blindness preven
tion. Established oniy three
years ago, the foundation
raised SI. 2 million to con
struct the Wilmer Opthamo
logical institute at John Hop
kins hospital in Baltimore,
awarded annual grants for
eye research at more than 30
institutions, endowed a num
ber of opthainological pro
fessorships and now has more
than $2 million in the kitty
toward a new eye research
institute in Los Angeles.
Money Taken From
Firm's Coin-Changer
The owner of an automatic
laundry and dry cleaning
establishment reported to city
police Saturday that about
$142.75 had been removed
from his coin-changer ma
chine. Clyde Thomas Ramsey.
owner of the business located
at 602 South Central ave.,
told police that no damage
was done to the coin-changer
and that he was unable to
determine how the money
was removed.
The theft, Ramsey told offi
cers, must have occurred
sometime between 9:30 p.m.
Friday and 7 a.m. Saturday.
FAIR ATTENDANCE OFF
Portland - lUPll - The 10-day
Multnomah County Fair drew
152.346 persons, compared to
171.127 last year. Rainy
weather was blamed for the
decrease.
2 TREMENDOUS
. PARAMOUNT PStStNTS
SPENCER TRACY
ROBERT WAGNER.
A
. foreign student is another un
I portant part of the People
!S.PeTle ueampus activity.
I Without such employment, he
said. manv nf thp ,,.
would be unable to complete
their educations.
"It's fairly easy to place
these students once the Amer
ail Major Element of Rail
Business
By WILLIAM SEXTON
United Press International
Everybody remembers the
heroics of the Pony Express
but you should hear what a
time the U.S. Post Office used
to have just getting the mail
far enough west for the riders
to pick it up.
Back in the 1860's, the mail
had to survive Confederate
raiders and the equally devas
tating behaviour of primitive
railroad track in what now
is considered East.
Out of these early adven
tures came a service we all
take for granted today: the
Railway Post Office. The
Pony Express lasted only 17
months; the RPO still handles
the bulk of mail.
This summer, Missourians
celebrate the 100th anniver
sary of the initial RPO run
from Chicago into St. Joseph,
Mo., the frontier Missouri
river town where the railroad
ended and the West began.
Harvey Mail Clerk
Fred Harvey, the restaurant
and dining car man, you've
heard of. But not William A.
Davis.
Harvey was one of the two
mail clerks on the first rolling
post office run from Hannibal,
Mo., to St. Joseph on July
28. 1862. He went on to estab
lish a fortune and a legend
by feeding rail travelers in
the west.
Davis, who lost his political
job as postmaster at St. Jo-
seph when Abraham Lincoln
installed his new administra
tion, thought up the idea of
sorting mail while en route on
a train, to save time.
During the few months the
Pony Express operated its
2,000-mile dash between St,
Joseph and the Pacific, the
mail came to St. Joe via the
Hannibal and St. Joseph rail
road, which picked it up from
the Chicago, Burlington and
Quincy at the Mississippi
river.
Haiardout Travel
Subsequently, transcontin
ental mail was hauled west
ward from St. Joe by the
Overland Stages (until the
Union Pacific railroad was
completed). But Confederate
guerrilla warfare in Missouri
and the haphazard roadbed
made the arrival of the mail
sacks from the east uppre-
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair to
night. Increasm cloudiness Tues
day. Low tonight 55. High Tues
day 80-85.
Western Oregon: Fair tonight.
Patchy fog and low clouds along
coast early Tuesday mornlnc- nth.
erwise. lair Tuesday. Low tonight
B-ao, mgn luesnay ou-yu.
Northern California: Fair tonight
and Tuesday.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
70: below normal 2.
Record high this date 108 in 11120.
Record low this date 43 in 1927.
PRECIPITATION: None
Total this month 1.00 in.. .05 In.
above normal.
Total since SeDt. I IS..1R In.. I ai
In. below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
32.. highest this a.m. 93.
High 4:00 24
CITV Ye.ter- a.m. nr.
day Low Prer.
Brookings
73
7(1
83
72
78
Crater Lake
Grants Pass
Howard Pratrle
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD
Portland
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima
Eureka .
Red Bluff
Sacramento
San Francisco .
Los Angeles .
Phoenix "..
Denver
Chicago
Miami Beach
New York
Washington. D C.
37
53
.17
54
47
82
86
101
87
B3
85
FIVK-DAY FURF.CAST (Thrnuih
Au,, Hi:
Western Oregon Western Wssti
Intton Temperatures near nor
mal with a cooling trend. Lows In
30s and highs In western Oregon
74-84. In western Washington 83
75. More than normal precipita
tion western Wash ington and
northwestern Oregon A few
showers In southwestern Oregon,
precipitation occurring Wednesday
and Saturday.
Northern California A chance
of one or two brief periods of
showers In extreme north portion;
otherwise, no rain. Temperatures
near normal.
TONITE ONLY
Show Starts at 7:00
REQUEST HITS!
ELEANOR PARKER
CHARLTON HESTON
I rtiiifsat ft ti t,t$
ican classmates find out they
need jobs, Johnson said,
"Many American students
have fathers who could give
jobs to six or seven students."
Johnson's primary duty is
to explain to state and col
lege officials the need for for
eign student programs along
Even in Jet Age
dictable. Great traffic jams
built up in St. Joe.
It sometimes took three
Jays to sort the mail there
and urgent wartime letters
missed connections.
Davis, demoted to assistant
postmaster under the Lincoln
administration, conceived the
railway post office and sold
the idea to the government
through his new boss, who
had political connections.
The first RPO was an old
baggage car which Davis
equipped with shelves and
tables a design still prevail
ing today.
Because the mail was sorted
while it traveled, it lost no
time sitting in post offices
along the way. The Hannibal
St. Joe operation saved 14
hours on the transcontinental
mail operation.
A century later, the same
system works across the coun
try (although no longer does
the Burlington Route hand the
mail over to stage coaches at
St. Joe).
More Clerks
Even in the jet age, mail is
a major clement of rail busi
ness; the Twentieth Century
Limited, showcase train of the
New York Central between
New York and Chicago, car
ries more mail clerks than
passenger crewmen.
Of the two men who did
the most to bring the RPO
into existence, one was a ca
reer postman from Kentucky
and the other was Pennsyl
vania born farmer who
switched to newspapering and
politics.
In Virginia
Davis was born in Barren
county Ky., in 1809 and went
east before he went west. He
worked in the post office at
Charlottesville, Va and Rich
mond, Va., between 1830 and
1855, then moved to the Mis
souri frontier.
In 1860 Lincoln gave the
St. Joseph postmanshln to a
Republican newspaperman in
St. Joseph. Davis' new boss
Japanese Sailor
Ends Solo Cruise
San Francisco-IUNI-A week
end sailor from Japan sailed
into San Francisco Bay Sun
day and announced he had
just completed a three-month
solo cruise across the Pacific
in a 19-foot boat.
Kenichl Horie, 23. said he
quit his job In his father's
auto parts shop in Osaka and
took to the sea May 12.
Weary but high spirited
after his 5,200-mile nonstop
voyage, Horie waited at an
chor off San Francisco for
four hours awaiting clearance
to come ashore.
He said he ran into bad
storms at five points during
ine crossing, un one occasion,
he said, the sea tore away two
porinoies of his craft and he
had to board them up to keep
the boat afloat.
Over-lhe-Counfer
Western Stocks
By United Press Internstlonal
Hid Asked
50', 331,
23's 25"i
10', U'i
22', 24 ,
37'.j 40',
311'., 81
28 V, 28 's
31', 33'i
3's 4',
28', 30
I's I',
24 J, 28
23', 23
88 71
2D', 31',
IB', n;
23', 28,
Bank of America
Cal Pac Utll
Con Freight
Cyprus Mines
Equitable Sal.
First National Bank .
Jantzen
Morrison Knudsen
Mult Kennels
N W Natural Gas
Oregon Metallurgical
t ' r at L ..
POE
I U S National Bank
untied utll
West Coast Tel
Weyerhaeuser
Portland Produce
Portland i UPI i Dairy market:
Esss To retailers: AA extra
large. 4:t-4c; AA large 40-43c A
large 311.42c; AA medium 34-38c
AA small 24-30C. cartons l-3c
hieher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 87c; cartons 1c higher; B
prints SHc
Cheese imedlum cured i To re
tailers: 47.4B',c; processed Ameri
can 3-10 lb. loaf. 45-48', c.
Portland 1UPI1 Dressed
chickens No I grade dressed to
retailers: Fryers, whole drawn 32
3e lb ; cut-up. 38-42c lb.: hens,
light type, whole drawn l-2flc lb.;
light type hens, cut-up 2I-34C Ih.;
heavy whole 38-30C lb.
Between 3.000 and 4,000
pastenger trains enter or
leave the Chicago railroad
terminals each 24 hours one
of the world's great rail hubs.
During the period It has ,
been a possession of the Unit- !
ed States, the state of Mon- j
tana has been a part nf six
national sub-division.
Bars tow, Calif. Death
valley in California is six to
20 miles in width and about
ISO miles In length. It aver
ages about 279 feet below sea
level
. the lines of People to People
and to help establsh them at
schools which are interested.
So far, Johnson has made at
least a dozen coast to coast
trips promoting the program
and at least part of the over
all plan has been adopted on
600 campuses.
was John L. Bittinger, who
was born near Chambersburg,
Pa., in 1833, later moved to
faniis at Rowsburg, Ohio, and
Green County, Wish.
Bittinger joined the Free
port, 111., Journal in 1852 and
two years later was a delegate
to Illinois', first Republican
convention, at Rockword. He
went on to St. Louis where
he became publisher of the
Evening Bulletin, and then to
St. Joseph to become post
master, part owner of the
Herald, delegate to Missouri's
first Republican convention
and member of the legislature.
He helped found the Missouri
Press Association in 1867.
On the first westbound run,
206 miles from the Mississippi
river to the Missouri river,
the mall car derailed at
least once but it got through.
Engineer Addison Clark re
called on the return trip:
"The track . . . was very
rough, and the cars, being
short, got off the tracks quite
often. Mr. H. W. Farley, the
master mechanic, put two iron
rods along the top of the car
for the postal clerks to hang
onto while the car was off
the track and It proved to be
an excellent safety appliance."
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on leliottd
.Ineks:
Fund Did Asked
Bullock .. 11 53 12.04
Chemical Fund 9 '27 in na
Colonial Ener ... to.80 11.80 i
Eaton Howard Stk ... . 1 1 .84 12 80 1
Fidelity . ... 13.85 14.97
Fundamental Investors R.:tR 0 tfl
Croup Sec-Avia-Elcc 8.42 7.04
uroup sec-Lom.&m 11.411 12.8
Group Sec-Pctr 10.42 11.41
Keystone B-3 14.75 111. 10
Keystone B-4 0.03 0.88
Keystone K-2 4.52 4.04
Keystone S-t .. 10 24 21.00
Keystone S-2 . 10.00 1 1 .09
Keystone S-3 12.17 13.28
Keystone S-4 3.85 4.00
Mass Inv Growth Stk 8.87 7.31
Nafl Growth . . 8.04 . 7.5B
Stocks 15 84 17.12
TV . Elec 8.81 7.42
United Accum 12.30 13.54
United Canada .. . 18.18 17.39
United Continental 8.13 8.70
United Income 10.70 11.70
United Science 5.80 8.22
Value Line Inc 4.70 5.23
Variable 5.87 : 8.13
Wellington 13.48 14.70
Portland Livestock
Portland fUPIl USDA
Cattle 1300. Choice steers 1025 lb
27.75: near 1.000 lb. choice 27.50;
mostly good 1375 lb. Holstelns
24.30: high goud-cholce heifers 840
835 lb. 25.75-28 25; canner-cutter
cows mostly 11-14.
Calves 250. Good-chnlce vealers
27; good-choice steer feeder calves
23-27.
Hogs 500. U.S. I and 2 butchers
20-20.50: few to 20.75: 2 and 3
irane 24U-2HO ID. 18.50-10: 230-300
b. 18-18.30: sows 1 and 2 at 23li Ih.
17 30; 1-3 at 300-400 lb. 15-16 30.
Sheen 1700. Chnice-nrlme 73-tnn
Ih. spring lambs 19-20.50. Including
shorn with 2 and 3 Delia at 10:
ulility-good ewea 3.30-5.
Court Records
MKDFOni) MUNICIPAL COURT
Robert Myhrwold, duobeyed
traffic i final, SH).
Beverly Jo Hurl, failure lo oh-
tain Oregon opcrtor'i licence, $!.;
witched licenne plates. $2 50; no
vi.iihle registration In vehicle,
2 M.
Julius Frank Meiplie, no regis
tration. V
Sam Hoyt Van Dyke, disobeyed
stop la;n, $r
Frank Loyd Malln. disobeyed
stop sign, $10.
PIZZA PARLOR
TRY OUR FAMOUS
PIZZA SUPREME
MADE WITH 7 KINDS
OF CHEESE, BAKED
IN 750 OVENS
FRIENDLY FAMILY ,
ATMOSPHERE
Urge or Small Parties
ALWAYS WELCOME
OPEN NOON
DAILY
ORDERS TO GO
773-7721
BETWEEN RIVERSIDE AND
CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON
215 E. JACKSON
MEDFORD
ii 11 i
SHAKFY't : i WMPwm
i JiiniiLi J 1 MenoN y. I
I c LL I Joni rentuM tttsmcis.it- v
.1 Jt&j i tMHMMmtwm,mmMmrJWmM)iif!ims,
y
MONDAY. AUGUST
Festival
Plays
Tonight: "Coriolanui"
Tuesday: "Comedy of
Errors" and "A Thieves'
Ballad."
Wednesday: "Henry IV.
Part II."
Thursday: "As You Yike
It."
Curtain time: 8:30 p.m.
Annual Reunion - The an
nual Myrtle Creek reunion
will be held at Skinner's Butte
park, Eugene, Sunday, Aug.
19. There will be a noon pot
luck with families taking
their own table service. Coffee
and punch will be furnished.
Anyone who has ever lived in
Myrtle Creek has been in
vited to attend.
Black Hills of South Dakota
are reputed to be the richest
100 square miles in the world,
producing about one-twelfth
of the total known gold out
put of the U.S.
The University of Wiscon
sin is the only American in
stitution offering a doctorate
In Buddhist studies.
VVI
772-6424
Locals
Bsk2J
GARY DORIS
H lsal'.i
lav;' 1 n 1. ti "I t t . t- ,
fe's'W-W i -r
MMM.S
GIG YOUNG AUDRKV MLD0WS
i!
XOJUAN, EMIR, QUI TE LIKE ELCID!
Ihe irwmipaiable slory of m ol the miltfs fl(wc he-oes! 8.g ii J !...,' il not twf
says Los Angelns !im. "Colossal "-Tiiiw Magatne. ' Oneolhegicalf0fntir(ces '-Redbcwk;
NO PICTURE, II ER, QUITE LIKE THIS!
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KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER
JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON
PETER USTINOV JOHN
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PLUS
THE IDEAL
CO-FEATURE
13, 1962
Obituaries
FRED OWEN
Fred Owen. 88, of 335',i
West Second St., died in a lo
cal hospital Sunday after
noon. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Perl
Funeral home.
GENE QUINN
Wilderville-Gene Quinn of
Wilderville died Friday night.
Funeral services will be con
ducted Wednesday at 10 a.m.
at Hull and Hull chapel.
Grants Pass. Mr. Quinn had
lived in this area seven yean.
He is survived by his wife.
GEORGE N. FISK
George Norman Fisk died
Sunday evening at his home,
604 South Ivy st. Funeral ar
rangements will be announc
ed by Conger - Morris funeral
directors.
Junior College Study
Committee To Meet
A meeting of the Junior col
lege study committee will be
held Aug. 30 at the county
school office, according to
County School Superinten
dent Alf B. Mekvold.
Elmo Stevenson, president
of Southern Oregon college,
will present his views regard
ing junior colleges or area
technical vocational schools.
He will also talk on the vari
ous problems and financing
plans and relate the history
of the Junior college move
ment. PLEASE DON'T MISS THIS
LAST 2 NITES
2 SHOWS 7:00-9:15
var t-ii.-.i-
ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT
STARTS WEDNESDAY
LAST
2
NITES!
REX
IUY
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