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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1962)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON UO to Start New I Enrollment Plan J Eugene - (I'Pli - A deferred I enrollment plan lor new ap-' plications from out - of state , undergraduate students will be placed in effect at the Uni-1 versity of Oregon Sept. 1 for ! fall term applicants. ! President Arthur S. Flcm-j ming said the new higher standard for out-of-state stu-' dents will be a 3.0 or B aver-1 ae. The present standard is ! 2.5. Baltimore In a human body the diaphragm is one of the most active muscles. It completes one-half billion movements within an ordi nary lifetime. A Reminder 3r s to all slide and movie makers . . . Does il make qood sense to buy qood equipment and take good pictures only to show them on the wall, bed sheets, or an inefficient screen? Par ticularly when one of the new modern Radiant Screens with the millions of superfine glass beads can make your pic tures look twice as cjood. Don't rake our word for it! Bring in your own slides and movies and Drove it to yourself today! IT'S BETTER SEEN ON A RADIANT SCREEN! ANDER'S PHOTO SHOP 232 E. Ma, i, 772-5646 Communications Expanding With Microwave Use New York - HOT - By the growing number of towers which sprout where clusters of wires once would have drawn their lines across the sky can be marked the growth of another modern industry, a New Jersey man ufacturer -slid today. The structures are for the relay of microwave commu nications, and ihe function they perform need not be earthbound; the new Telstar satellite is a space-age form of microwave relay station. Tiny Radio Waves In simple definition, mi crowaves are tiny radio waves that vibrate more than a million times a second. They are the basis for radar and other military direction surveillance systems. Major communications nel works, notably American Telephone and Telegraph and Western Union, are expand ing microwave networks to add to their present systems; the military is extending its use not only for warning systems but for jam-proof communications to far away bases. "Microwaves are probably the greatest communications medium ever discovered," said Harry A. Aucenblick, president of Microlab. Liv ingston, N.J. He believes the largest growth in microwave communications will come under expanded public and private systems; a Federal Communications commission decision last year opened up new microwave frequencies for private users. Augenblick's firm manu factures and supplies compo nents for microwave systems, primarily to major private concerns; it keeps more than 10,000 items in slock for im mediate delivery. Augenblick said that in a little over two decades "microwaves have grown from the subject of uncertain laboratory, experi ments to the firm and proven basis of a $2 billion industry." WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1962 f It V v. jff'. .;-&. , y NAMESAKE-This is a rare and unusual photo of Soviet Pre mier Nikita Khrushchev's grandson and namesake, Nikita Adzhubei, taken recently at the Premier's "dacha" on the Black Sea. Khrushchev's daughter, Rada. is married to Alexi Adzhubei, editor of the Soviet newspaper "Izvestia." (UPI) Portland Amnesia Victim Identified Pnrllwn I!IPII- A m!ii .-nf- n i uik ii win ftiiini"3ici wim w cin dered into police headquarters here Tuesday has been identi fied. He is Lloyd Raymond Aus tin, 28. of Hialcah, Fla. Austin said his memory slowly returned late Tuesday. He said he could remember his home town, his name and the fact that he is married and the father of two small chil dren. His last clear memory, he said, is vacationing with his family July 1-10. He dimly re calls a train ride. How he got to Portland re mained a mystery to him. He was released from the police emergency hospital and said he planned to contact his wife. Phoenix Driver Is Hurt in Accident; Cited by Officers A 17-year-old Phoenix driv er was slightly injured Mon day afternoon when his car was knocked over on its top after it collided with another vehicle at the intersection of Sherman and Genesee sts. Treated as an out-patient at Rogue Valley hospital was Fletcher David Fish. Investi gating city police officers cited Fish for not having an operator's license in his pos session and for failure to yield the right of way. Driver of the other car in volved was James Dayton Wheeler, 18, of 1503 Prune St. The accident occurred about 4:10 p.m. Three Other Accidents Police investigated three non-injury vehicle accidents Monday. No citations were is sued. Vehicles operated by Kath ryn Louise Davidson, 58, of 1708 Lonora St., and Raymond Shirley Wise, SIS, of 1600 Stratford ave.. collided about 9:40 a.m. at North Keeneway dr. and Lenora dr. A truck driven by Richard Gaylord Kacgi. 37, Ashland, struck and damaged a city owned sign on North Bartlelt st. about 100 feet south of Fourth st. A car driven by William J. Scott, 21, of 836 Taylor St., ran off the road on Gore st. about 12:01 a.m., crashed through the guardrail of a footbridge owned by Medford Corpora lion, and plunged upside down in an irrigation ditch. The owner of the car, Monte Hooper Kaiser, 21, of 719 South Central ave., was riding in the car at the time of the accident. WHO'S KIDDING WHOM St. Louis, Mo. -IUP1I- The speeding motorist identified himself as "James Klein" and produced a driver's license to prove il. "You're under ar rest," patrolman James Kcn na replied. "James Klein is my cousin." The motorist later admitted he was Willie Lee Graham. Sentence Meted In Traffic Death San Diego - IUPII - An air craft assembler was sentenced to one year in the county road camp Tuesday on a conviction of manslaughter in the traffic death of Nat-key Elizabeth Meanley, 18, great grand daughter of the late E. W. S c r i p p s. founder of the Scripps - Howard newspaper group. Superior Judge Ronald Abernathy sentenced Daniel C. Smith, 22, Chula Vista. Calif., to the one-year term as a condition of five years probation. Smith pleaded guilty to charges of hitting the rear of Miss Meanley's parked car last May 18. He was cited for speeding, gross negligence, reckless driving, driving under the in- uuence of alcohol, and failing to hall at an officer's com mand. Submariner Reports U.S. Readiness To Wage Arctic Undersea Warfare B 3 Female Wolves Said to Reverse Human Pattern Corvallis, Ore. -IITD- Ladies may howl about two-footed wolves, but the real four-footed "wolf" is a female. So says Benson Ginsburg, professor of biology at the University of Chicago. "It is the female who docs the choosing and the chasing among real wolves," he said. And she isn't too choosy, he added. , The eternal triangle appears among wolves, he told a meet ing nt tile American Institute of Biological Science conven tion here. Dominant Male In studies at Chicago's Brookfiold Zoo Colony, h e said the dominant female made a series of advances to the dominant male, but each time was rebuffed. She turned her attentions to the second male, but al though he was interested, the first male would attack him each lime he began to re spond. Finally, when the first male had turned his attention else-1 where, the romance proceeded. ' Ginsburg said the female then vigorously chased the other females away from her , chosen mate whenever they came near. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiw iwnimiiiiiii iiiwMBwawMWWBMMBMBWwwwwwww SIDEWALK DAYS THURSDAY AND FRIDAY AUGUST 30 AND 31 Full '2 lb. Cake All Water Soap Gives a Frothy Lather in Any Kind of Water Choose From Assorted Colon and Scents 1 0 mm Large Economy Size Keeps You in Tissues for a Long Time Low, Low Price KLEENEX TISSUES 4 boxes JET BOMBER Reproduction of a Super Sonic Bomber Jumbo Size 12" Long U" Wingspread 39 BABY TURTLES All Kids Want One of These Makes Interesting Pets 7 FILLED SOFA PILLOWS Values lo 1.98 Kapok Filled Satin Rayon Solid Colors and Prints GO CANDY FEATURE BUTTERNUT BRITTLE Tops in Taste Kandy Kitchen Quality SPECIAL-lb. Bakery Special 6" 2-Layer CAKE us fj$t Baked Fresh in Our Kitchen 'j.S'j 1 German Chocolate "J J j . sr or Banana Nut Ea YOUR MONEYS WORTH MORE AT WOOL WORTH'S Corner of 6th and Central Store Hours: 9:30 tp 5:30 FREE PARKING THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Friejay 9:30 to 9 P.M. JUST TOO MUCH Minneapolis, Minn. - UIPI1 -It was bad enough that the wrestler hypnotized her, but when he stood on her stomach that was going too far. The hypnosis subject, Delores Swanson, filed suit against a wrestling promoter for $50, 000 damages, claiming back injuries. Seattle - WPU - American capability to wage undersea warfare beneath the Arctic icecap as well as in any other ocean was the report Cmdr. Charles D. Summitt brought back Tuesday with the nu clear USS Seadragon. The Seadragon glided into the Navy's Pier 91 under grey, misty skies the same day her sistership, the USS Skate, docked in New London, Conn. The two surfaced together in a historic rendezvous Aug. 2 at the North Pole during the first joint submarine exercise under the ice. Enemy Submarines Asked if the exercise show ed the United States has the capability to seek out and destroy enemy subma- 'ncs. Summit t, the Seadragon's commanding officer, said "1 feel we can battle in that ocean as well as in any other." The still-tanned commander said the exercise indicated it would be feasible for three or four subs to carry out exer cises under the ice, although he declined to comment on whether such an exercise, is on the drawing board. In the August operation, the Skate and Seadragon "felt Arctic waters and attacked i with dummy torpedoes. Underwater Channel! Summitt also said the exer cise expanded the possibility of nuclear subs using the un derwater channels across the top of the world for passage if the Panama Canal should He added that although the Polaris missile-carrying sub marines are larger than the 268-foot Seadragon attack sub, he feels there is room for them to operate under the polar ice also. Summitt described the first contact with the Skate at the pole as a "surprise." He said the Seadragon arrived first, and not delecting Ihe Skate in the area he took his ship up to the Skate's "safety level," Come in Strong But he said, "All at once it came in so strong" on his de tection equipment "that I thought it was on top of me." The Skate is commanded by Cmdr. Joseph L. Skoog Jr. of Seattle. Summitt, of Nashville. Tenn., was met by his attrac tive wife who flew to Seattle from the vessel's home port, each other out" in the dark Pearl Harbor, for Ihe occasion. , continent. Mrs. Skoog and her daughter Mrs. Summitt said her hus also were dockside when the band had "written everyone Seadragon arrived. Her hus- we know" from the North band and the Skale had al- Pole, telling one friend, "I've ready received a cheering wel- got the ice if you've got the come on the olher side of the I drinks." SIDEWALK SALE Thursday Through Friday Nite FIREPLACE SCREEN Curtain Style E-Z Mount Solid Brass Installs in minutes Reg. $21.95 17 40 Boenton Melmac DINNER-WARE 45 Pieces Serves 8 Guaranteed t A .CO 19s Beautiful Dish Washer. SAVE-$61.55 Value QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICESI SPfCMlfSTS IN NOMIWAIIII Tenth and Central- Phone 772-5201 It's Here! Medford's Great Outdoor Bazaar! 2 BIG DAYS! W si Thursday and Friday Only! SLASHED TO ROCK BOTTOM! ALL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR 29 29 E29 Don't Miss These Values! Selected Group of Wool Dresses FABULOUS BUYS HERE! Values to 35.98 Values to 52.95 Values to 79.95 1 US00 200 38 Sidewalk Specials From The Shoe Dept. Fuzzie Wuzzies The Big Hi Boot Fur Slippers 88 3 10 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! Price Good Thursday and Friday Only! 1A U SUMMER DRESSES What's left $ 5 00 Broken Sizes but from 5 to 22V Free Parking Both Days! All Parking Meters Will Be Covered! Use Your Charge Account . - ? ? 7 7 7 7 i. .. SURPRISE! SURPRISE! Burelson's Famous DOLLAR K TABLE A New Fall FUR TRIMMED COATS Reg. $89.95 Value 8S00 Main and Bartlett Streets SHOP EVERY FRIDAY EVEN Downtown ING UNTIL 9 P.M. Medford Phone 772-6428