Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 07, 1963, Image 7

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    THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 7. 1963
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFCRD. OREGON
jf TAUIUS
0 AM. 21
W69.7I -83-901
STAR GAXElC?
19-21-38-5J
y 64-72-85-88
GiMMl
MAY 22
JUNE 22
s iiih s
0.
CANCM
JUNE 21 1
JULY 23
31-48-59-45
7677-84
uo
j JULY 2
L AUG. 23
01 4-1 8-24-29
554-55-66
VIKGO
AUG. 14
SEPT. 22
,16-22-2Wa
'51-67-70
-By CLAY K. POLLAN-
JK yr Doily XdiVity Gvidt M
it According to tha Start.
To develop messoge for Friday,
read word corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth sign.
UWA
SOT.
OCT.
1 Don't
2Good
3 You
4 Your
5 Con
6 Planet
7 Change
8 Be
9 Friend
lOHwie
It And
12 Relative
13 Influential
I Someone t
15 Pcrtner
16 Win
17 Are
18 Got
!9Peo!n
20 Cut
2IAnc)
22Dirw
23 A
24 Terrific
25 Out
26 Keep
27B,o '
28 Then
29 News
30 Cotch
Good
31 Get 61 Friendt
32 Eve 62Soc.ol
33 Unneceiiary 63 Peop.e
34 Are
35 Open
36 Con
37 Favt-robl
38 Speool
39 Up
40 Interested
41 And
42W,lh
43 In
44 For
45 Reclinej
46Mone
47 For
4?. Necessary
49 Payment
50 Event
51 For
52 In
53 Brand
54 To
55 Tell
56 Unworthy
57 Progress
58 New
59 Hum-drum
60 Collections
64 Will
65 Duties
66 You
67 Added
68 Success
69 Middle
70 Rejuvenation
71 Of
72 Bring
73 Fovor
H Opportunity
75 Promoting
76 Out
77 Of
78 And
79 Your
80 You
81 Neccssor
82 Now
83 The
84 Way
65 You
6 Visits
87 Welfare
88 Haopmess
89 First
90 Stream
Adverse jNcutul
SCOkFiO
OCT. 2 (.-!.
2- 9-11-liVvH
SAGITTARIUS
NOV.2J ft
DEC 22 7 -A
26-32-35-47
153-58-74
CAWCOIN
DEC 23
JAN.
3- 5- 8-23
(27 62 68 V
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21 -
FEB. 19 JfcJ,
15-15-T7-dO-
k2-75-79-87VS;
nsefs
MAR 21
B0-
160
i 39-42-49 f I
-7&81-MVJJ
Chrome Producers Schedule Meeting
A general meeting of the
California-Oregon Chrome
Producers association will be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb.
10, in the Legion Hall at
Cave Junction.
TOPS IN QUALITY!
LOW 111 PRICE
Anyone interested in the
over-all development of the
mineral potential of the area
has been invited to attend,
John Welden, chairman
of the organizational commit
tee, noted.
The organizational commit
tee, which has been working
on the type, kind ana rune
tion of a legal body to handle
the development, will make
its report at the meeting. The
proposed plan of operation
will be explained and submit
ted for approval.
The registration committee
plans to announce the num
ber of properties registered to
date, the kinds of ore listed
and the tentative tonnage.
Anyone who has not already
listed his property is asked to
bring the data to the Sunday
meeting. Blanks are available
at the chambers of commerce
in the area. If they are not
available, Welden said, they
can be obtained by writing
the registration committee,
Grants Pass Chamber of Com
merce, Grants Pass.
More than 200 people at
tended the first general meet
ing held Jan. 6.
Executions Occur
With Regularity
Inside Russia
Moscow (CPli The crash of
firing squad executions is
heard with deadly regularity
in Russia today.
Even though Marx and En
gels, spiritual fathers of com.
munism, strongly opposed
capital punishment, the death
sentence now may be im
posed in the Soviet Union
for a number of crimes in
eluding aggravated murder
and rape.
Seldom Publicized
Execution for these crimes
are seldom publicized but
with increasing frequency the
Soviet press is reporting fir
ing squad executions for
bribery, embezzlement and
thievery.
These are economic crimes
against the state.
Just Tuesday it was report
ed a district court in Sverd-
lovsky had sentenced two
men to be shot for cheating
on the amount of fat in meat
pies.
In the past three weeks
executions have been report
ed for men who embezzled or
stole the Soviet equivalent of
sums ranging from $100,000
to $300,000.
A typical case occurred on
Jan. 23 when the supreme
court of Moldavia imposed
the death sentence on the
chief of a sewing shop for
plundering.
A Western expert who has
kept count from the an
nouncements in the Soviet
press said 136 persons were
sentenced to death in 1962.
He estimated the actual total
might be 50 per cent higher.
Soviet authorities attempt
to justify the current execu
tions this way: These are
economic, anti-social acts,
crimes which fall outside the
fabric of normal criminal ac
tivity and which undermine
the existence of the slate.
FORMER DEAN DIES
Eugene - IUP1) - Albert L.
Keeney, 62, former dean of
men at the University of
Wyoming, died Monday.
JFK's Education Measure Meeting Mixed Reactions
By Congressional Quarterly
Washington - After its fail
ure to get through Congress a
number of separate education
bills during the last session,
the Kennedy Administration
is trying a new approach in
1963-an omnibus bill, cover
ing colleges, elementary and
secondary schools, adult illit
eracy, teacher training and
federally "impacted" school
districts all in one stroke.
In explaining the omnibus
approach, President Kennedy
said ". . . education cannot
easily or wisely be divided
into separate parts. Each part
is linked to the other . . ."
Behind the new approach is
apparently a desire of the Ad
ministration to focus on a sin
gle bill the support of all
groups Interested in the suc
cess of any part of education
legislation.
The bill has already met
lack of enthusiasm-if not out
right disaporoval-on the part
of key legislators. Sen. Lister
Hill (D-Ala.), chairman of the
Senate Labor and Public Wel
fare Committee, failed to take
the customary step of intro
ducing the bill himself.
Referring to recent Justice
Department suits in four
Southern slates to desegregate
schools now receiving federal
aid because they serve gov
ernment installations, Hill ex
Bend Accountant
Receives 60 Days
Portland - IUPD - Bend ac
countant Richard J. Sullivan,
38, was sentenced to 60 days
in prison and fined $1,000 by
Federal Judge John F. Kil
kenny Wednesday for failing
to file tax returns in 1958 and
1959 on $37,523 gross income.
"What points up the serious
ness of this case is the posi
tion the defendant held in
Bend as one of its outstanding
citizens and accountants," the
judge said. He said he took
Sullivan's "fine service record
and his record in the com
munity" into consideration in
determining the sentence.
Sullivan is scheduled to
beRin his prison term Feb. 25.
OGUE
ef WW K S ffis. Bl RJ frTUa 4f? 4?J Bf"S B5 I!
f . e. w tCK'4 n fa n n el bl bl isw ia nf k n
"WATERLESS" COOKWARE ' ?P
IKIVST- V 1 ?A i I PARENTS')
ECIAL
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OFFER
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2nd
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Excitingly beautiful and different Wonderful new Vogue
cookwaie adds glamour to your kitchen . . . makes cook
ing eus.cr and tastior , . , cleans with amazing ease,
foods may be prepared the "waterless" way over "low"
heat. Ihis method saves fuel helps to preserve min
erals, vitamins and rich, natural flavors. Each matching
piece is superbly styled in brilliant stainless steel with
heat-resistant bakelite handles that won't turn r. loosen
Hang-up rings savo storage space. It's the ultimate in
cookware mako s favorite recipes even mof delicious.
5 3 WEEK I J
r xt&T iff i ion-
I 1 qt. Open Sauce Pon , , - , r, Doul! Ooiifsr lnhd
t (Co.. i Iron 3 Ml. lilt Mil. et,) '1" ''rCi' ' (fill 3 qt p,-.rii
tK a v. -- wwsiK a a.
I ' " j v ' ... v -
t 10 in. Open f.-v r'.r. i . ,.
I i.ouW.O. ,.... ..N.t.i.p,,.) c' I'- lX' h 0v-" 16 U x iu in. Rooslma Pan
,V!SLJL t,WHK n ? rv 5 Ice
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3 qt. Covorfld ' ,1 1 rt, ,rKJ:n;,
Soutt ?00 K.A,r..j rt.w, b. i Ion K.-ttlc
BBtfflL 'TUCK-AWAY"
pT r' COVERS
th pant. Knobl arm
proltttd , , . pant may be ilockecl
to lava ipott.
GUARANTEED
by tKa manutoclor ogainit
d(cli In maltriolt or work
maniKip.
I W i-w
pressed the view, probably
held by many Southerners,
that "if a small federal aid
program can be used to speed
desegregation, in spile of the
intent of Congress to the con
trary, it is clear that a general
school aid program could be
used in the same way."
Height of Cynicism
Rep. Peter Frelinghuysen
(R-N.J.), ranking Republican
member of the House Educa
tion and Labor Committee,
said the "catch-all proposal is
the height of political cyni
cism." He had previously an
nounced that Republican Com
mittee members had planned
their own education program
which would be divided into
separate bills.
House Minority Leader
Charles A. Halleck (R-Ind.)
said the President would get
"nothing'1 if he insisted on his
omnibus bill.
A spokesman for the Na
tional Education Association
said the NEA would seek the
"widest possible civic and pro
fessional cooperation" to se
cure enactment of the pro
gram "as a whole."
However, a National Cath
olic Welfare Conference
spokesman said "the message
contains something for every
body, everybody except the
children whose parents have
elected to send them to pri
vate schools. . ." He said his
group would "stand firm" on
its request for "equal treat
ment of all children."
Public School Aid
Within the bill is one par
ticularly controversial 1962
proposal, to which the Cath
olic spokesman was referring
a program of aid to public
(but not private) elementary
and secondary schools. But
the approach to public school
aid is different this year.
The new bill replaces the
1962 across-the-board plan for
aid to public schools with a
selective program designed
to "assist the states in under
taking under their own state
plans selective and urgent im
provements."
The President asked for a
$1.5 billion program of public
school aid, including (1) funds
to help school districts in
crease their starting and max
imum teacher salaries, and
funds to raise average teach
ers salaries in economically
poor areas, with the federal
share of the increases phasing
out over a three-year period;
(2) funds for construction of
classrooms in "areas of criti
cal and dangerous shortage;"
and (3) funds for pilot and
demonstration projects to
meet special educational
problems, particularly in
slums and depressed rural
and urban areas."
Other New Requests
In addition to his renewal'
and expansion of the earlier
public school aid request, the
President made the following
major new proposals:
Replacing an earlier contro
versial request tor scholar
ships, the President asked for
federal insurance of private
loans fur higher education,
along the lines of housing in
surance, lie also asked that
the need for direct federal
scholarships be givei. further
study.
The President proposed a
"work-study program" for
needy college students, pro
viding federal funds to cover
up to half the pay for students
eiv.ploycd by the colleges in
work of an educational character-.
i tor example, labora
tory, library ot research as
sistants. M' Kennedy requested a
scries ot grants tor two-year
community colleges, two-year
technical education programs,
college library construction
and materials, and graduate
centers -noting ill requesting
the Wilier that "new imtust
increasingly gravitate lo or
aiv iiiuov aleii by strong cen
ters of learning and researcn.
Tile distressed area of the fu
ture may well be one wlueli
lacks centers of graduate edu
cation and research."
Special Education
I Carryitiii out ins view that
i "wr need a new stamiard ot
j es.e!!e:ue ill t-illl ta I 1 u u.
I sible aeees to educational op
I poitunities. enabling each cil
I i.-cn lo develop his talents lo
j tile maximum poM'ole ex
tent." the Pnsident called for
' t" f e :yv!
fjjrft ;t i i jwal!,iiSStS "Jill.'.!, jww msMmt ''"", gglSS f-l
Seems to be everyone's year for Cadillac. And why not? It's the
most wanted Cadillac ever built. And with twelve different models, who couldn't
find one to fall in love with? Your dealer may just have that one for you right now.
, -A--.77V DFAIER
VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED
SKINNER BUICK-CADILLAC
143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE
!T OH 1 v
DISPLAY IN
OUR STORE
yJSyrV H"""!'1 'ffiw Wf imii-.i.Ui.. i ii i ii i mill I, i hihuihiuii inn
Wi'liy "'" '"" ' ' " ii itlirtiifliUllnii ililiiltli irtiiti itm ,f ' -rt-.i. -a.
j expansion or creation of inn
elous special coiuallott 1
grams including;
A new ptviiit.iin of aul
l!;e states lev -oe;t;ie:i.i! e
canon. Allotment would i
j !mm-i1 on tlie anoiis
iioups wuiim tue Mate in
! nig vocational euueation, ,
; pe- e.ipi'.a i;;ee-;tie
SMi iiMttn ot a.;d ineie.iM .l
Iniuls (or programs for ediiea-'
lion ot the h.iiuiieai Ped.
I ederal grants to states for
1 expanding university exten
i stoit I. I.U! scs" in land lii .int col-
j leges and slate universities.
i Funds tor stale pnvrur.is ;
tor basic education of adults
up to the eighth grade.
Kxpansion vi the public i
community library program i
to include urban, as well as!
nil al liluanes.
The cost ot the total paek
.ikC was estimated at S.) bil
lion (Copyright 19S3.
Congriionl Quarlerly Inc!'
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Advertising helped it happen
i By stimulating mass demand, advertisins helped .
mass market for electric light bulbs. As dcaiatd grew
more and more were msde. The more of them made, the
less each one cost. Result: new and better electric light
bulbs mass produced for more people at lower prices by
America's remarkable and competitive economic system.
h this worthwhile? Then, so is advertising worthwhile.
Pttrirrd b ihr XJifrtisins FfdfnluM ot Amtvicj Jrd the AJrriing sj,Kutun o( ihf Wm PuNrd Ihrouch the rourirs) ol this publtcjttoiv
Medford Mail Tribune