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'31-42-74
, 7AUBUS
APR. 21
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14 Perwnal
15 L;,
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32 Favor
24 May
25 V
26 Cdih
27 In
26 Mar-f
29 A fid
35 Vour
2 a P;ovjnt
.V 'editan.f
26 A-d
Venues
4 I Te:vi
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44 Don 1
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MAY 22
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ViBCO
AUG. 2
lift SEPT. 23
w Keceptjv
(5 Good (S).Wvenc
Supreme Court To
Hear Challenge To
Immigration Laws
Washington IUPI) The Su
preme Court agreed today to
hear a case challenging wheth
er the McCarran-Walter Im
migration Law unconstitution
ally discriminates between
naturalized and native - born
citizens.
In a brief session on the
third Monday of its fall term,
the court decided to hear the
appeal of Mrs. Angelika
Schneider, fighting to retain
status as a naturalized U. S.
citizen despite extended resi
dence in Germany.
A lower court had ruled
that she must forfeit her U. S.
citizenship because she has
lived more than three years
in Germany, her native coun
try. Born in Bavaria
The McCarran-Walter Im
migration Law of 1952 holds
that a naturalized citizen for
feits his citizenship if he lives
for three years in the country
of his birth or for five years
in any other country.
Mrs. Schneider was born in
Bavaria in 1934, came to this
country at age 5, and became
a citizen at 16 when her moth
er was naturalized. After
graduating from Smith col
lege in 1954, she went to
ENDS
TUESDAY!
BERT Mf
TICMNICOLOM
I Map ;
ASHLAND 482-3321
BOX OFFICE
OPENS 7:30
"CURTAIN
AT EIGHT"
"ONE OF
THEY
CPMMUM . COLOR r o. L.
EAR'S
10 BEST."
V f JtMES N y WORLD -TELEGRAM
-N Y POST. NEWSDA Y.
-MTBOASO of REVIEW
tfm IWh
COFFH SIRVIO
COURTtSY OF THE HOUSE
JACK STONG AT THE CONSOLE OF OUR
MIGHTY HAMMOND ORGAN-7;30 TO 8.03
R. POLLAN :
Ar;,h, r.J- K
LUA
to tn Star. if
OCT. 23 vb-Lvi
1- ft- 0.1.4
SCOtTIO
OCT. 4
62 Peseo!'r
OV.22 VVj
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65 D.iitf.-jicn
67 ley
M3-50-62
Sagittarius
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ft? A.kH
70
7t T0
74 Soon
75 A rood
77 Make
-SOr
79 F it
RO Set
OEC 22 f
23-39-49-56 rfh
166-76-625
62-90
DEC 2i -f
-AN. 20 Vs
IMi.W.iAi'
H3Q4-73 i
81 Cc
AOUAirus
ft - Sv-,1f
84 Pror-toble
SSThoe
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S7 Choices
S3 Connects
fi9 Fawr
52-59-80-86 3..
11 11 tnn m
mcis
FEB. ZOVi.
0 Te.nrqaes
) Neutral
54-57-68.
7 1-77-79-
Europe. In Paris, she met a
German attorney, Dieter
Schneider. Now married, they
live in Cologne with their
three children.
In 1959, the U.S. Consulate
in Dusseldorf asked her to
surrender her naturalization
certificate. She was later serv
ed with a "certificate of loss
of nationality."
Equality Claimed
Mrs. Schneider contends
this treatment is an uncon
stitutional discrimination be
tween naturalized and native
born citizens. Her appeal said
the immigration law "is the
single substantive exception
to the deeply rooted principle
that native-born and natural
ized citizens are equal in sv
ery respect . . ."
She said her case may have
wide application. Of 857,000
U. S. passports issued in 1961,
the appeal said, about 105,000
were given to naturalized cit
izens. In other actions, the court
today:
Denied a hearing to the
Utah and Northern California
Pharmaceuti c a 1 associations
which were found guilty of
conspiring to fix retail drug
prices. They had argued that
the Sherman Antitrust Law,
under which the cases were
brought, does not apply to
"the learned profession of
pharmacy."
Pope Confers With
Cardinal Presidency
Vatican City - (Ml - Pore
John XXIII conferred today
with the 10-cardlnal presiden
cy of the Ecumenical Council
but Vatican sources said he
had no intention of interfer
ing with their handling of the
council's voting procedures.
"The Holy Father wants, to
stay out of it," said one high
Vatican source.
' The sources said the Pope
arranged the special audience
today because some of the 10
cardinals, such as Archbiship
Francis Cardinal Spellman nt
New York; had arrived only
a short time before the coun
cil opened last Thursday and
lie had not had time to talk
'0 them privately since then.
TUESDAY
AND
WEDNESDAY
j
'Out of Russia comes a
remarkably fascinating
picture. ..it is unforgettable!"
Croht-, N. r. T-mt
'A picture you will enjoy
without reservation!"
w,i.iif, n. r nil
a Summer
tn
Remember
I "Mrf I Ut
i COMING "
OCTOBER 23-24
"Hirothima . , Mon Amour"
Locals
Driver Cited Mcdlord
city police cited Glenn Virgil
Miller, 61, of 7265 Crater
Lake highway, for not having
an operator's license and for
violation of basic rule after
he backed his car into a ditch
in front of 2681 Merriman rd.
about 2:58 p.m. Saturday.
Garden Club Mrs. Rose
Kendall, Grants Pass, will
give a demonstration on cor
sage making at a meeting of
Rogue River Garden club set
for Tuesday, Oct. 16, at 12:30
p.m. at Barnctt hall, Rogue
River. Dessert will be served.
Store Checked Firemen
checked the Scars store in the
Medford Shopping center
about 5:15 p.m. Sunday after
the automatic alarm sounded.
They found no fire and said
that a short in the wiring ap
parently had occurred.
w
Stov Overheats City
firemen were summoned to
the residence of D. D. More
house, 527 Effie St., at 10:45
p.m. yesterday when a stove
overheated.
Sale - The Travel Study
club of the Oregon Federation
of Women's clubs will hold a
rummage sale Thursday, Oct.
18, in the Fehl building from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For rummage
pickup call Mrs. Jason OttinH
er, 773-6749, or Mrs. Walter
Cummings, 772-5365.
San Juan
historical
By RALPH VILLERS
United Prsst International
San Juan, P. R. -lUPU- Even
a quick glance about-at the
blue sea, palms, luring green
mountains, luxury resort ho
tels, forceful reminders of a
four-centuries-old Spanish cul-ture-and
it's no longer a mys
tery why Puerto Rico has be
come the place to visit in the
Caribbean.
Day or night there is some
thing for everyone in and
about this capital of the only
Commonwealth of the United
States. Beaches, pools, snor
keling, Scuba diving, golf
(with one course winding
through the moat of a 400-year-old
fortress), deep sea
fishing, sailing.
Night presents a spectrum
of entertainment possible only
in a resort so popular that it
now is attracting nearly 350,-
000 visitors annually, mostly
from the mainland United
States.
Casino Gambling
You won't read about it in
the alluring advertisements,
but there is casino gambling
at several of the larger resort
hotels, although it's of a flavor
apart from either the Euro
pean casinos or the more fran
tic variety in Las Vegas.
For those of other minds
about their entertainment
there are night spots ranging
from the big and expensive
with international show s,
down to the intimate little
places like the Ocho Puertas,
Old San Juan. There, in a
Seven-Pound Girl
Born To Woman
Killed in Wreck
Berlin, N.H. - il'Pfi - Sister
Demers, night supervisor of
the St. Louis hospital here,
pressed her ear to the abdo
men of a dead woman Sunday
and thought she detected a
heart beat.
The nun dashed to a tele
phone and summoned a phy
sician. Dr. Loandre Bcaudoin, 62,
raced to the hospital and per
formed a Cacsarcan section
on the body of Mrs. Ccclle
Berthiaume, who had been
dead for more than 30 min
utes. The girl born during the
brief operation did have a
heartbeat but was not breath
ing. Beaudoin applied mouth-to-mouth
respiration as anxious
attendants watched.
The doctor then gave tl
infant oxygen, and
color
crept into its tiny face.
Suddenly the baby cried
and its breathing became nor
mal. "It look. ci. 'jmuR'r.g that
she will urvi.-" Ilcnudoin
said
The 7-poun l, 15-ounrp girl
was placed in r.n incubator
and was rep irteii in Misfac
tory condition t.-Hiy.
Mrs. Berthiaumr, 28. had
been on her way to attend
Mass Sunday morning when
within one block of St. Jo
seph's Roman Catholic church
her car swerved across the
road, jumped a sidewalk -and
crashed into a utility pole.
Staggored From Wreck
The young woman, mother
of four, staggered from the
wrecked car. walked unstead
ily for 10 feet and collapsed
on lawn.
A 13-year-old boy ?aw the
MEDFORD
1 y LU
6?
"4
' K5 ' 't - . r'TI. V, 1 ft..-. r-J- .. At.il
RECEIVES AWARD Douglas F. Gordenier, (left) president
of the United Crusade, presented an award for good citizen
ship to the employees of Medford Corporation Plywood
plant. This is the second time the plant has received the
award. Some 96.8 per cent of all employees gave a "fair
share" one hour's cay per month for 12 months to United
Crusade. Receiving the plaque on behalf of the employees is
Donald Hein (second from right). With them are Elmer John
son (right), assistant plant superintendent, and N. H. Glad
felter, UC plant chapter committee chairman.
s Inexpensive
Vacationiand
dimly lit, brocade-walled Vic -
torian setting in an old Span
ish building, visitors let the
hours race toward dawn amid
the calm ripple of a piano, the
strumming of a guitar or the
soft Spanish crooning of a sol
itary singer.
For those who like to mix
history with their relaxation,
it is all about, but most im
pressively on the little coastal
island that is Old San Juan.
Standing at the entrance to
San Juan harbor, the five
tiered fortifications of El Mor
ro tower above the rocky
shoreline.
Started in 1539, and modi
fied and added to until the
late eighteenth qcntury, the
fortress proved the undoing of
many an invader in Spanish
colonial days. Now, although
part of the U, S. Army's
Fort Brooke, El Morro is a
national historic site
Old World Flavor
Within walking distance is
the heart of Old San Juan
with its typical narrow Old
World streets; Spanish colon
ial buildings; the Casa Blanca,
one-time home of the family
of Juan Ponce de Leon, the ex
plorer who settled Puerto
Rico (open one day a week to
visitors); San Juan cathedral,
dating from the sixteenth cen
tury but given its present ap
pearance in the last century,
in which Ponce de Leon's
tomb is located; San Juan
gate, the only remaining gate
from the seventeenth century
city walls, and La Fortaleza,
Occident and alerted neigh
bors who called police.
Within minutes an ambu
lance was speeding Mrs. Ber
thiaume to the hospital but
she died en route of a skull
fracture.
Surviving are the woman's
husband, Gerard, 29, and their
four children, Richard, 6,
Claire, 5, Claude, 3, and Ray
mond, 2.
Try and Sfop Me
By BENNETT CERF
TTrHILE the Ringling Brothers Circus was packing Modi
' son Square Garden in New York, the bartender of a
rathskeller across the Avenue swears an elephant lumbered
in one day and demanded
a triple vodka on the
! rocks. "And don't look
I so surprised," the ele
phant added when the
bartender gasped. "The
drink won't hurt me. I'm
not doing the high wire
routine today."
Al Bemie, ona of the
beat of the night club en
terUinerc. haa played fort
night atanda in one lush
apot in New York nine
timea in the paat three
yean. "The bo?a tells me.
explains Bcmie, "that he 11 keep bringing me back till I get it
nght."
Bernie estimates that if he had a quarter for every person
who s driving an expensive sports car who can't afford the next
payment, he'd have enough money to afford the next payment on
hu own expensive sports car.
Bern:e also tells of a fat friend who went to his doctor to sen
if he should diet. The doctor checked him against the weight
height chart ajid, told him, "Your weight la O.K. as Is; you'll Just
have to get a little taller."
C t- Burnett Col. biaUilriled It K;n featuiea gyadlcSta
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD.
"
4 t 13
."'.K-t "
, the governor's mansion, 429
years old.
In this area, too. are smart
shops selling art works, na
tive handicrafts, clothes spe
cialities from the island. An
unusual touch is found in
most-a tiny bar in a corner
where hubby can partake of
Puerto Rican rum drinks
while friend wife shops.
And as a final touch, one
of the most unique hotels to
be found anywhere. Housed
in a three-centuries-old former
Carmelite convent, remodeled
and restored at a cost of some
$3 million, El Convento
cently was added to the grow-
ing number of hotels on the
island. The dining room is in
the onetime chapel, and the
cloister, where colonial era
nuns once'walked, now con
tains the swimming pool.
On the subject of hotels, the
present more than 3,000 rooms
will be increased to some
6,000 by the end of next year.
And the government has or
dered the hotel to prevent a
repetition of an unhappy ir
ritation from last winter when
quite a few people arrived
with confirmed reservations to
find no rooms available.
Hatfield Requests
$1 Million Grant
Salem - IUPD - Gov. Mark
Hatfield today asked Presi
dent Kennedy for an initial
federal grant of $1 million to
help restore key state and lo
c a 1 governmental facilities
knocked out by Friday's
storm.
The money would come
from a presidential disaster
fund, and be allocated
through civil defense officials.
This would be separate
from federal loans that would
be available if the president
declares Western Oregon a
major disaster area. To qual
ify for this, the state has to
show it is spending SI million
of its own funds to repair
damage to government prop
erty. Raymond Willman of Ever
ett, Wash., assistant director
of the Northwest regional
office of civil defense, met
with Hatfield here today.
7 3 v, J i
- ; sy',v i : 4 q
s - . -iff
I
I
I
OREGON
OBITUARIES
WALTER A. JAMES
Walter A. James died Sun
day at his home at Shady
Cove. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Conger
Morris funeral directors.
CARLOS G. OWSLEY
Carlos G. Owsley, 73, ef
Portland, died there last
Thursday. Graveside services
will be held at 3 p.m. Tuesday
in Hillcrest Memorial park,
on the North Phoenix rd..
with Conger - Morris funeral
directors in charge of arrange
ments. Mr. Owsley was born Sept.
20, 1889, in Hermitage, Mo.,
and had lived for 30 years in
Portland.
Survivors include a sister,
Mrs. Ivy Pyle, Medford; and a
niece, Mrs. Helen Ceglar,
Portland.
GEORGE C. ATTEBERRY
George Charles Atteberry,
78. of 1478 Spring st., died
this morning in a local hos
pital. Funeral services will
be held Wednesday at 1:30
p.m., with Conger-Morris fu
neral directors in charge of
arrangements.
TERRY W. TOD
Funeral services for Tcrrv
W. Tod. 18, of 1525 Grand
ave., who died Saturday, will
be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday
at Perl Funeral home. Dr.
George Roseberry, pastor of
the First Methodist church,
will officiate. Private inter
ment will be at Siskiyou Me
morial park.
Mr. Tod' was born Sept. 8.
1944 at Long Beach, Calif.
He came to Medford in 1955
from Columbus, Ohio, and
was graduated from Medford
High school in 1962. He was
freshman at Oregon State
university at the time of his
death.
Survivors include his moth
er and step-father, Mr. and
Mrs. Jonathan Middleton,
Medford; one sister, Darcy J.
Middleton, Medford; his
grandmother, Mrs. Hudson T.
Davis, Grants Pass; and two
uncles, Robert E. Mclntyre,
Medford and Ted Sprague,
Long Beach, Calif.
Pallbearers will be Donald
L. Wood, Robert Root, Myron
Andrews. George Monroe,
Donald Weeder and Wayne
Maxson.
CLAUDE M. MORGAN
Claude M. Morgan, 75, of
937 South Ivy st., died at his
home Sunday. Perl Funeral
home is in charge of local ar
rangements.
JOHN NEWMAN
Funeral services for John
Newman, a resident of the
Veterans Administration dom
iciliary, While City, for the
past seven months, who died
Friday, will be held al 9:30
a.m. Tuesday at the White
City chapel. Chaplan John
Frazee will officiate. Inttr
ment will be in the V.A. cem
etery at Eagle Point. Perl
Funeral home is in charge of
arrangements.
Mr, Newman wai born on
February 16, 1895, at Ash
land, Wise. He entered service
with the U.S. Army on May
4, 1918 and was dischargef on
February 6. 1919. He spent
much of his life as a profes
sional baseball player.
He is survived by one sister
Mrs. A. Jorgcnsen. Portland.
'ERNE H. PENDLETON
Verne H. Pendleton, 74. of
825 East Pine St., Central
Point, died Sunday in a local
hospital. Funeral sci vices will
be held at 11 a.m. Thursday
in Conger-Morris downtown
chapel.
MARIE E. HARDY
The body of Mrs. Marie
Elizabeth Hardy, of Seal
Beach, Calif., who died in a
Weather
FOKECAJiTS
Medford and vicinity: Fair
through Tuetdav. exceot mttchci nf
valley fog or low cloudiness carlv
Tuesday morning. Low tonight 32
3d. High Tuesday (12-08.
Western Oregon: Fair tonight and
Tuesday except fog In some valleys
late tonight and Tuesday mnmlna.
Cooler tonight. Warmer Tuesday
afternoon. Low tonight 34-44. High
Tuesday flO-08.
Northern California: Fair through
Tuesday. Warmer Tuesday.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPKRATURE: Mean yesterday
31; below normal S.
Record high this date 81 In 1M2.
Record low this date 27 In IBIIO,
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours In
midnight .02 in. Midnight to 10
a.m. 0.
Total this month 8.2Q In . S S2 In.
above normnl
Total since Scot. 1 7 02 n.. 3 63
in ahove normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowe it VAfcterdov
74',., highest this a.m. 100.
Illfh " 4:00 24-
CITY Tester.
day
Brookings
Crater Lake
Grants Pass
M
32
S(l
4.1
4 A
.17
Howard prairie .
Klamath Falls ...
MEDFORD
Portlanrl
Seattle
. 4t
10
Eureka M
RM Bluff til.
Sacramento Hfl
San Franrisco 12
Los Angeles f,4
Phoenix 41
Denver .. HS
42
7
Chicago
Miami Beach
Now York
Washington. D C.
87
BIS
74
81
FIVE-DAY FORK! AST (Through
Ort. 20:
Western Oregon - Western Vah
Inrton Warmer wi'h ivinoerturs
averaging above norma' Run like
Iv western Wmhing'on .ind north
western Oregon about Wednesday
and Frtrfav. Amo-inta modeiat
with totals generally 25 in 50 of
inch. High temperatures In vstrrn
Washing'on 13-61 and western Ore
fon ff-T2 Lov-i tn 4ftv
Northern Csllfornli Nl rain.
Temperatures above normal.
:ocal hospital Saturday, ha'c
been returned by Conger-Mor-
is iuiura directors to Lonv;
Feacli, Calif., for services and
interment.
Mrs. Hardy was born Maith
-6, 1003, in Washington.
DC. She and her husband
were on a visit in soutnern
Oregon at the time of nr
death.
Survivors include hir
husband, John H. Hardy; a
.tep-son, Harold B. Hardy,
San Fernanda Valley, Calif..
I and four sisters, Mrs Eleanor
I Mitchell, Los Angeles. Calif-
Mrs. Alma Allen and Mrs.
Doris Underwood. Maryland;
;.nd Mrs. Louise Bailey, Vir
ginia.
53,000 Phones in
State Out of Order
Portland - (UPII - Paciric
iorthwcst Bell reported today
that as of 10 a.m. it estimated
some 53,000 Oregon tele
phones were out of service in
cluding about 30,000 in the
Portland area.
Twenty-eight communities,
including McMinnville, New
berg and Molalla, were with
out long distance service.
The firm said 1,400 men
were on the job. It expected
to have about 300 out of state
workers on hand by Tuesday
morning.
Long distance calls reached
record highs over the week
end.
Investment Funds
selected
Bid Asked
11 :i! 12 An
ID.U7 11 HI
1 1 .01 1255
1352 I4.G2
831 9.11
6 29 S.!)0
11.20 12 27
10.52 1152
15 08 ltl.-IS
8 04 0.70
4.40 4 01
18.20 10.02
10.82 11.11
ll.lili 1273
358 3.01
677 7.40
685 740
8 70 7 30
12.27 13.41
15.8(1 1724
5 82 03(1
10 04 11.03
5.58 0.10
4.78 5.22
13.40 14.07
Murks:
Kiincl
Bullock
Colonial Ener
EiHon Howard Stk
Fidelity
Fundamental Investors
Group See Avia-F.lec
Group Sec Com Stk..
Group Sec Petr
Keystone B-3
Keystone B-4
Keystone K-2
Keystone S-l
Keystone S-2
Keystone S-3
Keystone S-4
Mass Inv Growth Stk
Nat'l Growth
TV-Elec
United Aeclnn
United Canada
United Continental ....
United Income
United Science
Value Line Inc
Wellington
Over-the-Counter
Western Stocks
By United Press International
. . . , 11,rt Akkcd
Rnnk of America 2'4
V.H1 I'HC uin , aou
Con Freight toi
Cyprus Minos 25
Equitable S & L 40
First National Bonk ....
.Inntzcn .. 2S'
Morrison Knudsen 2flT'B
Mult Kennels a7-
N.W. Naturiil Gas 27i
Oregon Metallurgicai
PIMrL ' 2.13i
PfiE 24
U.S, National Bank flflJi
United Utll ana:
West Coast Tel 18
Weyerhaeuser 2.1
Portland Produce
Portland (UPD Dairy market:
Ek9 To retailers: A A extra
larse 4fl-4c; AA large 43-47e; A
larue 42-43c: AA medium 37-40c;
a medium 31 -34c; AA small 21
3Uc; cartons l-:.c higher.
Uutter To retailers: AA and A
prints (f7c; cartons 1c higher; B
prints fific.
Cheese (medium cured) To re
tailers: 4fl'jC - 47'3c: processed
American 5-10 lb. loaf, 43-45c.
Portland (UPIi Dressed chick-
No. 1 oracle dressed to retail
ers: Fryers, whole drawn, 31-3c
lb.; cut-up. 35-43c lb.; hens II a lit
type, whole drawn 2l-2flc lb.; hsht
type hens, cut-up 23-34c lb.; heavy
whole 20-3 l)e lb.
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI) IISDA
Cattle 1400. Choice 1031 lb. steers
2Sc lower at 27.73; good 925 lb.
steers 2H; good heifers 23-24; utility-commercial
cows 13-17; cutter
cows 12-14.
Calves 230 Not established on
vealers and slaughter calves: feed
er calves good-choice 200-400 lb.
Hogs 300. U S. 1 and 3 butchers
18 75. most 1. 2 and 3 grade lfi.V
235 II) 18-18 .30: 2 and 3 grade 202
lb. 17.30; sows 320-300 lb. 13-16.30.
Sheeo tiUO. Choicc-nrime 80-116
lb. wooled 10-20; choice - prime
shorn Iambi 80-103 lb. 10-19.50.
Comedy
VocU
Impressions
Music
An evening
of pleasure
that costs no
more than the
price of your
favorite
Beverage
jp?! j
5J B R
MONDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1962
Lobby Planned By
University Senate
By JAMES J. DOYLE
United Preii International
Eugene, Ore. -Wr-Students
at the University of Oregon
want more attention from
state legislators. And they
plan to get it the way any ! gon-Oregon State university
other special interest does-by I to s,art tl,e ball rolling.
lobbying
Representatives of the
school's senate-an all-student
body-have made plans for ex-
tensive lobbying at the 1963
session of the Oregon legisla
ture in Salem.
It will be a case of senator
lobbying senator, and the stu
dents are dead serious about
getting legislation to further
their aims. They have laid the
groundwork already. In the
outcome, they may teach the
professionals something about
lobbying in a businesslike
fashion.
The University of Oregon
Senate, with the cooperation
of other state - supported
schools, plans to send four
representatives to the state as
sembly. Since they are stu
dents, and because the eyes of
the faculty, parents and others
will be on them, there will be
no lobbying in the traditional
sense-that is, no handouts, no
drinks, no dinners-just busi
ness. The students intend to
achieve their ends by explain
ing, and by working with leg
lsiators and education com
mittees.
Board Backing
In this they have the back
nng of the State Board of
Higher Education. Among
aims of the school body are:
getting the best faculty possi
ble; more money to operate a
four-term year, more class
rooms and lower tuitions.
The school senate feels this
is the first time Oregon legis
lators have been lobbied by
students of a state-supported
institution. It may be the first
time that any state legislature
has been lobbied by students
I POSITIVELY LAST 2 NITES
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Winner of 10
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S$r Bar of Music
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All you DEAR women art invited to an evening of
entertainment and fun by the ART KAY COMEDAIRES.
Make up a party of DOES while your husbands are
hunting to we can also get a BUCK.
Hotel Medford
CANDLE ROOM - Always the Samt-Alwayi Goodl
Chairman of the school's
senate committee on lobbying,
Phil Sherburne, says he has
met several times with the
chairmen of the Higher Edu
cation committee at the uni
versity's rival school in Orc-
Me saia trat during the 1961
session of the legislature, oth
er rnllr-PPe anrl llniirafcitifis
gave their recommendations
to the OSU committee and
the U. of O. senate. The stu
dents are busy gathering back
ground in all areas of educa
tion that might come before
the legislature next year.
One of the most important
objectives of the plan, Sher
burne says, will be lobbying
for suppotr of community col
leges in Oregon. If a proposal
for support of community col
leges is passed, he says, the
larger schools among the
state - supported institutions,
will be able to raise their en
trance requirements.
For
STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Outstanding Freshmin
Legislator 1961 Session
Pd. Pol. Adv. S. V. McQueen,
2136 Hillcrest
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