MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON
MONDAY, JANUARY 21. 1963
ANIMAL PAINTINGS Jeannette Orel is
having a little trouble trying to tell the
monkey from the burro. The painting at left '
was done by Betsy, a chimpanzee at the
Baltimore zoo, about a year ago. The one
at the right was "finished" two weeks ago
when a burro named Jack got into the act
at the same zoo. Betsy used her fingers
for her effort, valued at $bu, while Jack,
evened things up, getting the same price
for swishing his paint-loaded tail at the
canvas. Both paintings are on display at
the Hatfield Galleries at Los Angeles. (UPI)
Dennis the Menace
'Well, winter's heps, i just sawmyfirst snowball'
Local Men To
Attend Assembly
Two Medford businessmen
will be among those attending
the Pacific Northwest assem
bly next month at the Village
Green near Cottage Grove.
Attending from Medford
will be Eric W. Allen Jr.,
managing editor of the Med
ford Mail Tribune, and Wil
liam J. Williams, president of
the Medford Chamber of Com
merce, who is with Harry and
David corporation.
National leaders in the field
of automation will be speak
ers for the assembly Feb. 7
through 10. The event is co
sponsored by the University
of Oregon and is being held in
cooperation with the Ameri
can assembly at Columbia uni
versity, which was founded
in 1950 by Dwight D. Eisen
hower when he was president
of Columbia. It is a notional,
nonpartisan, educational or
ganization which regularly
holds national and local meet
ings and publishes books on
vital current topics.
The topic of the assembly
will be "The Impact of Auto
nation and Technological
Change." About 65 commu
nity opinion formers from
business, education, labor,
government, and the profes
sions from five states will at
tend. The participants will be
from Oregon, Washington,
Idaho, Montana and Utah.
Alice Thompson
Receives Honors
Alice A. Thompson, route
1, box 548, Central Point, is
one of 59 juniors at Oregon
State university selected for
junior honors on the basis of
outstanding scholarship.
To qualify, students must
have a grade point average of
B plus or better for their first
two years of work. Junior
honors are awarded by the
campus chapter of Phi Kappa
Phi. national scholastic honor
society.
Miss Thompson is majoring
in the school of science.
Man no Attends Board
Of Directors Session
Anthony R. Manno, owner
of Acme Hardware company
attended the annual four day
meeting of the board of direc
tors of the National Retail
Hardware association in In
dianapolis, Ind.
Manno has been a member
of the board of directors since
1954. Having served as presi
dent, he is currently on the
advisory committee.
Rep. Green Needles
Hatfield, Others on
Education Spending
Committee Urged
To Balance Budget
Washington - (UPI) - Chair
man Clarence Cannon (D-Mo.)
in effect asked his House Ap
propriations Committee today
to trim President Kennedy's
record $98.8 billion budget by
$12 billion.
As the committee began the
first of its session-long money
hearings, Cannon declined to
pinpoint possible cuts or pick
a specific dollar objective for
savings. But he told a reporter
the committee's goal should
be "at least" to balance the
budget.
Kennedy's spending plans,
the highest on record for
peacetime or war, contem
plate a deficit of SI 1.9 billion
in the 12 months starting next
July 1.
Cannon conceded "it would
be a miracle" if Congress ac
tually succeeded in imposing
budget cuts of this magnitude.
Rep. Ben F. Jensen (R
Iowa), the committee's lop Re
publican member, recom
mended specific possible sav
ings totalling $8 billion, in
cluding a 5 per cent cut in
civilian federal payrolls.
Sfofe Police Check
Accident Sunday
A car driven by Robert
Leo Scvcik Jr., 2B of 1054
South Grape St., struck a car
driven by Herbert Donald !
Bradley, 33, of 361 O'Gara
St., Sunday on the South Pa- j
cific highway just south of
Medford. state police said.
The Bradley car !,ud stop-
ped for a car ahead making i
a left turn and the Sevcik
car was unable to stop.
James Meredith
Not Expected To
Return to School
Washington - (UPD - Ally.
Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said
today the chances at the pres
ent time are that James Mere
dith will leave the University
of Mississippi.
Kennedy said he did not
think Meredith made a mis
take in integrating the university.
I think that's a difficult
area, but Meredith decided he
wanted to do it and these de
cisions are up to the individ
ual," he said.
If Meredith does quit, Ken-
nedy said, it would make fu
ture integration efforts in
such states as Alabama or
South Carolina more difficult.
Taxpayers Contribute
Kennedy said he hoped the
29-year-old Negro student
would continue his studies at
"Ole Miss" because a great
deal of Meredith's own efforts
and government action to en
force the law went into his
admittance to the school.
"Everybody in the United
States has contributed some
thing, because the taxpayer's
money has been used," he
added.
Kennedy gave these views
and others about the first two
years of his brother's admin
istration in a copyrighted in
terview with "U.S. News and
World Report."
Asked about the attempted
invasion of Cuba by refugees,
the attorney general said he
wanted to clear up reports
that the President withdrew
air cover from the operation.
Air Cover Not Planned
Some have blamed the fail
ure of the Bay of Pigs in
vasion on the lack of protec
tive air cover when the force
was on the Cuban beach being
attacked by Castro s small air
force.
Kennedy said the President
"never withdrew U.S. air
cover. There was never any
plan to have U.S. air cover."
Although planning for the
invasion was primarily the re
sponsibility of the Central In
telligence Agency, Kennedy
said, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and the President approved
the plan.
However, he said "the plans
and the recommendations ob
viously were not adequate."
Docfors To Attend
Podiatry Seminar
Drs. Arnold M. Depner and
Robert D. Gallagher of Med
ford will be in Portland Fri
day and Saturday attending a
post-graduate seminar on
podiatry.
Foot specialists from ten
cities will attend the meet
ings. Dr. Henri L. DuVries,
California surgeon, will con
duct three four-hour work
shops on X-ray techniques,
general diagnostics and sur
gical or non-surgical therapy.
By YVONNE FRANKLIN
Mail Tribune Washington
Bureau
Washington (Special)
Rep. Edith Green has oblique
ly needled Gov. Mark Hat
field and other Oregon lead
ers for their reluctance in
spending more money for edu
cational facilities which she
believes provide magnets that
will attract new space age in
dustry to Oregon.
"Oregon is better off than
a great many of the states,"
she said last week, "and yet
there is a financial crisis in
education. So the Governor
this year recommended about
50 per cent of the money that
people in higher education say
they must have to carry on
their programs. This is not the
time to cut back, but rather
the time to expand."
In commenting on Gov. Ed
mund Brown's boast that it
wasn't so much political pull
that brought the flood of in
dustry to California, but the
excellence of its institutions
of higher learning which pro
vided the research that indus
try wanted and needed, Mrs.
Green said:
"New industries have lo
cated around Cal Tech and
they are there for one reason
the research facilities avail
able. The area around Berke
ley is fast building up. Why?
Because of the graduate re
search facilities
"There is great urgency for
Portland to get on with the
task of providing the Gradu
ate Research Center, and I
know other cities are talking
about the same thing now."
Legislation Offered
Mrs. Green has introduced
legislation which she said
could be of benefit to the Re
search center. It will author
ize spending $75 million for
the first and $150 million dur
ing the second year in federal
funds to construct cooperative
educational centers in 15 areas
throughout the country.
She thinks that the colleges
in Oregon in close proximity
could share specialized facili
ties and develop programs
that are beyond the financial
resources of single institu
tions. She said that through
cooperative efforts the curri
cula of all colleges participa
ting in an educational center
might be broadened and en
riched through the offering of
courses which no single insti.
tution could afford or could
justify
She suggested that it could
possibly offer the facilities
and attract the learned facul
ty for instruction in the lan
guages, culture and history of
some of the newly emerging
countries of the world; or
provide an engineering labor
atory with its expensive
equipment. She thinks such
institutions might raise the
quality of education by enab
ling outstanding scholars to
devote their full teaching
time to the specialized field
of their choice.
Warns on Enrollment
Speaking at Harvard col
lege last week, Mrs. Green
warned that the projection of
figures for the 1970s indicate
that in Communist Europe
and China there will be far
more students enrolled in
their colleges and universities
than in the United States and
Western Europe.
". . . there is now new ur
gency because not just our
way of life but our life
our very survival may depend
on the degree of excellence (of
our educational system)," she
said at Harvard and reiter
ated in an interview.
She noted that in the days
of the industrial revolution
skilled workers were needed
and the demand for intellec
tuals was not as great as it is
in the space age. Experts say
the need for masses of intel
lectuals isn't being met.
Mrs. Green is also con
cerned about the explosion in
the cities caused by dropouts
from school of deprived and
discontented youth. The Na
tion's Capital has just wit
nessed a fearful explosion by
young Negroes In an attack
by 3000 youths, injuring
nearly 500 white people, af
ter a Thanksgiving-day foot
ball game. The outburst has
shocked many in Washington,
but not those who have seen
Southern Democrats in com
mittees which control the
Capital's money, deny the city
money to upgrade its schools
integrated in 1955.
"This (the racial outburst)
is a good example of our
penurious way of treating our
schools and teachers," declar
ed Mrs. Green. "We have al
ways considered the cost, and
we should think of education
in terms of values."
She agreed that the explos
ive minorities problem, now
so overwhelming in Washing-ton-83
per cent of the school
enrollment is Negro-can hap
pen anywhere in major cities
where the educationally de
prived have migrated from
the South in search of better
opportunity.
Welter Stetiitict
"With the mobility of our
population, the persons who
have been deprived of educa
tion in one state may be
come a welfare statistic in an
other state a year hence," she
said, explaining her sense of
urgency about a federal aid to
education bill.
". , . there are a great many
students who are not academ
ically inclined," she contin
ued. "This doesn't mean that
education isn't for them, but
it will require a different
Three Oregonians
Perish in Crashes
By United Press International
Three persons lost their
lives in traffic accidents in
Oregon during the week end.
Otis Huffman, 36, Hermis-
ton, was killed when his pick
up truck went off State High
way 32 and overturned near
Hermiston Saturday.
A 56-year-old woman died
in a one-car accident on the
Redwood Highway near
Grants Pass Saturday. The
victim was Mrs. Gertrude
Gliddcn of Selma.
Rodney Morrison, 22, Bcav
erton, was killed when his
sports car overturned and
crushed him near Beaverton
early Saturday.
In addition, Mrs. Florence
Nelson, 59, Portland, died at
a hospital Sunday where she
had been under treatment for
injuries suffered when she
was hit by a car in Portland
Dec. 30.
B 5
Guy Marks Image 01 Starved Poet, Television Mimic
kind of education otherwise
they will become the unem
ployables who will end up on
the welfare rolls, or collect
ing unemployment Insur
ance." Statistics show that the
hardcore of the unemployed
are Negroes, who have been
denied adequate education
and opportunity to acquire
skills and jobs. The Nation's
Capital has roughly 33,000
functional illiterates and stag'
gering welfare costs. Chicago,
with similar problems has in.
stituted an enforced educa
tional program to enable the
illiterates to read and write
to enable them to qualify for
jobs.
By VERNON SCOTT
United Press International
Hollywood - (ITU - The
ability to imitate a housefly
on a slippery oil cloth is a
tenuous hold on show business
immortality, but comedian
Guy Marks has parlayed this
talent into a regular job on
the Joey Bishop television
series.
Ascetic in appearance, tall
and loose-jointed, Marks has
the look of a chronic loser at
the race track precisely the
case with him.
In addition to the housefly,
he imitates neon signs, alliga
tors, driftwood furniture, rub
ber bands, frozen chickens
and a praying mantis. He is
particularly proud of his im
pression of an ostrich.
When pressed he will do
Boris Karloff and Humphrey
Bogart as well.
Melancholy
From his choice of subjects
it doesn't take a trained psy
chologist to detect a note of
melancholy in Marks who
would make an excellent mod.
el for a starving poet.
But beneath his austere ex
terior beats a lively sense of
humor.
Doubtless he inherited his
wit from his parents, Ernie
Undo and Alelina Scarpa of
Abruzzi, Italy, and, more re
cently, Philadelphia, Pa.
"They both were blessed
with a good sense of humor,"
Marks said, coughing heav
ily. "I am the youngest of
their nine living children. My
real name is Mario, after the
hero in the opera 'La Tosca
which my mother admired
when she was carrying me,
I heir humor cropped up
in naming some of my broth
ers and sisters. I have two
brothers named Thenis
tocles and Aristides.
"Among the girls there is
Mafalda, Yolanda, Melba, and
Gioconda. I guess I got off
easy with the name bit."
Marks comes by his dour
appearance honestly, having
worked as a florist, busboy,
drill press operator, truck
driver, merchant seaman, cab
driver, ham picklcr and oth
er difficult assignments.
During most of his life he
has been an avid gambler,
finally settling on the ponies
after years at dice and cards.
"For years I only worked
night clubs that were close
to a race track," he said,
coughing again and running
his hand through a shock of
black hair.
Real People
When you get to know
real horse people you realize
how fine humanity can be,
They're good hearted. I
mean the ones who enjoy
the track, the horses and the
surroundings, not just the
gambling aspects of the
races."
Marks considers himself an
educated horse player but ad.
mils dolefully, Im still a
loser."
After spending most of his
life traveling across the coun
try with his night club act
and at assorted odd jobs, the
comedian is delighted to be
working steadily in a popu
lar television scries.
"But it has drawbacks,
too," he 'complained.
"Out here in California 1
miss the falling leaves of aU'
tumn, the swirl of snow past
street lights at night, birds
singing in the springtime and
the good eastern sea food in
the summer. I've been In Cali
fornia for a year and a half
and I'm beginning to see red
rats."
Impressed with his own
vivid observations, Marks left
the small commissary on the,
Desilu lot to return to work.
It was evident he was think
ing of red rats.
Mrs. Bos Appointed
To GOP Committee
Grants Pass - Mrs. John
Boc, Grants Pass, r as been ap
pointed vice chairman of the
Josephine County Republican
Central committee, succeed
ing Mrs. Forest Hedges.
Mrs. Hedges, who is moving;
to Portland, will continue in
her post as secretary of the
State Republican central committee.
GIRL KILLED
Redmond - (UPD - Nancy
Robertson, 9, Redmond, was
fatally injured when she was
struck by a logging truest
here Thursday.
rjnsftWrai.H'JK'l.l
Mene 772-4114
3
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch Relieves Pain
tn York. !. T. (pll - For th
flrt time science h found new
hralink substance with the aston
lining ability to ahrink hemor
rhoid!, itop itching, end relieve
pun - without surgery.
in ease after ease, while trrntlr
feliering pain, actual reduction
tahrinkagel took place.
Moat email ns of all-reeulta were
io thorough that sufferers made
astonishing statements like "Pile!
have ceased to be a probleml"
The aecret it a new healing sub
stance ( Bio-Dyne)-dlscovery of
a world-famous research institute.
This substance is now available
in suppository or einlmewl form
under the name Preporelioe H
At all drug counters.
,f TAUtUI
i S? may ai
l38-47-51-5fl
STAR GAZER
6-19-24-4(1
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JUNC 22
4-18-29-341
46 30-68
CANCia
JUNI 2-1
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52-7477
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AUG 24
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30-55-6
-Br CLAY R. POLLAN-
Your Daily Activity Guida
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reod wordi corresponding to number
of your Zodiac birth sign.
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anailfi'ritirt'n-Msi,
I
The halflnch -"insurance
policy
that pirotecfi
your Savings Bonds
Although & $25 U.S. Savings Bond is a prom
ise from the governmcnt to pay you $25 for
$18.75, the Bond itself is. only paper. Which
means it can be burned; stolen, washed away
in a flood, tattered by termites, or thrown
away with the garbage by mistake (all of
which have happened).
In no case do you lose your money. For the
U.S. Treasury has a microfilm record of your
Bond, hidden away in a secret vault, and has
registered your name as its owner.
This kind of safely is one of the reasons wliy
tens of millions of American families own $15
Quick fads about U.S, Savings Bonds
You get 34 interest to maturity
You can get your money anytime
You can save automatically on Payroll Savings
billion worth of Savings Bonds part of the
reserve of savings which makes these families
so strong and Independent. And their strength
is the strength of the nation. What's more,
the dollars you put into Bonds help your coun
try stand up for the cause of freedom at
time when freedom's enemies are more tietor
mined than ever to have their way.
You can buy Savings Bonds at any bank, or
on Payroll Savings where you work. Why not
start today, and see If you don't feel pretty
good about it
II. mine.' i-.--
mrt Trims
Keep freedom in your future with
US. SAVINGS (BOND!
Tht V. H. Government dote not pay for (Ait advtrlUing, Tht Triasury Dtptrlmtni
thank Tht Advtrtuing Council and thit newspaper for thtir patriotic lupporL ,
1