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16 A MONDAY. FEBRUARY IS. 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON etancourt, Due in Washington Tuesday, Veteran of Political Strife Caracas, Venezuela - IUPH -When President Romulo Bet ancourt of Venezuela lands on the White House lawn in a helicopter ' Tuesday, he will have reached Washington the hard way. En route, he has tamed a political volcano and done it in his own way, in his own time. Few presidents any where have survived the com bination of forces and stress es which have hammered Bet ancourt in four years of strug gle to make democracy work in Venezuela. First Trip Abroad Bctancourt has triumphed largely on the strength of his own wit and will, without succumbing to the temptations of iron-handed rule. Bctancourt's trip to the U.S. the first leg of a state tour that will also take him to Mexico and the Dom inican Republic marks the first time he has strayed bc y 0 n d Venezuela's borders since taking office on Feb. 13, 1959. His visit to Washington re turns one President Kennedy made to Venezuela in Decem ber, 1961. Kennedy received at that time what was up to then the biggest public recep tion of his political career. The simple fact that Bctan court can leave his own coun try, perhaps one of the Unit ed States' most strategic and psychologically important 'cold war' allies, is proof of his confidence in the strength of the democratic foundation he has laid. Bentancourt was elected to office by trade unions and peasant groups. He since has welded them into a potent and militant political force of 1.2-million members. Their support has enabled him time and again to ride out political storms in four years of ef forts by the right and the left to oust him. Not Tool of Military He has governed with the support of the armed forces, but not at any time allowed himself to become a tool of the military. It is for labor and the peas antry, traditionally ignored in 150 years of independence during which Venezuela was ruled almost constantly by dictators, that Bctancourt has done the most. Fortified lately, although not at the start, by nearly $13 million in U.S. alliance for progress program funds, Bentancourt has initiated an A Lo-Fi Fellow Attractive Girl Assemblying Hi-Fi Kit Depresses Dick West By DICK WEST Washington - IUPH - One of the most depressing things that has happened to me re cently w-as meeting an at tractive young gov eminent girl named Sharon Hen derson. Ordi narily, I do not find at tractive young gov ernmcnt girls depress ing. Under certain circum stances I might even find them stimulating. But Miss Henderson is different. Miss Henderson is building her own hi-fi system. Better she should spend her 'ime making opium pipes or in somo other comparatively harmless pursuit. I was introduced to Miss El Weil Henderson by a representa tive of Harman Kardon, Inc., one of those electronics firms that market hi-fi kits for as sembly at home. Hsrman Kardon select ed Miss Henderson to dem onstrate its point that wom en can put together a hi-fi kit as well as men. Mist Henderson told me she is getting along beautifully with her kit. "There's nothing to it," she said. "Just follow the book and you can't miss." I suppose the nearest I ever came to a nervous breakdown was the time I purchased a kit that purported to contain the components of a stereo amplifier. There were about 5,000 loose parts that theoretically fitted inside a metal cabinet scarcely larger than a cigar box. I finally abandoned the The Family Council Krillur'n note: The Family Counrll cunitKts of a Judgr. a nlivrhlilrlsl, Ihree elemymen. tlirpp edltori and a Homeir rillliir. Karh arllcli. la a luminary of a family dtKacrr ement niesentrd lo Hie tmitu-il. ThF Council drali with problems, major and minor, rni-uunlrrrd hv guldam-r counselors and social workers. Edited by Mra. Alma Uanny. (Copyrliht by Ucneral Featuref :orp.) Harry U, I'm finished i through the same post office handing out gifts to that that brought the gift. This bunch. dictum comes whole-hog out Nottie R. Don't be hard of the etiquette books, as well on them. They're thoughtless as out of a normal person's sense oi ncccncy. in uouung project after discovering that I had soldered a rheostat to my 'wristwatch. This experience automatic ally made me resent Miss Hen derson's competence, but that was not what caused my de pression. The broader impli cations of her hobby were what I found disturbing. I am referring to the sin ister ponibility that hi-fi addiction, which already has transistorised a large segment of the male popu lation, will now become prevalent in the previously immune female of the spe cies. If so, civilization as we have known it is dead. Already, It is nearly im possible to attend a party that isn't dominated by a bunch of sound system buffs woofing about their tweeters. This customarily leads to a demonstration of the host's machine, particularly I h c prowess of its volume. The true test seems to be whether it can shatter a flower pot in the adjoining room. For a lo-fi fellow like me, the only refuge is to join in conversation with the ladies. And if Harman Kardon and Miss Henderson establish a trend, even that escape hatch will be closed. ambitious land reform project In his government the num. that so far has given nearly ber of persons attending four million acres of land to schools hat risen by 44 per 53,000 peasant farmers. cent, the number of teachers Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. WATKINS (Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1963) Nothing Could Look Worse Than Last Year's Bird Nest Few things, or even peo ple, could look much worse for wear than a last year's bird nest. This expression rep resents just about as low a point of decrepitude as could be imagined. Over the years we have coined many expressions that speak poignantly of an un kcpl or run-down-at-thc-heel condition. We say an object, or a person is "coming apart at the scams," coming unglucd or unhinged, or looks like the "breaking up of a hard win ter." But few things, even at their worst, could really look as messy as an unmade bed or a last year's bird nest. The overwhelming majori ty of people probably have never seen a newly built bird nest for these objects are carefully obscured by leaves, or hidden in some oul-of-the way place. Once the nesting season is past, and the con cealing foliage has fallen, the nest becomes visible. Then the analogy between the mos siness of an unmade bed and the abandoned nest becomes glaringly evident. A Little Pathetic There is a great deal that is more than a little pathetic about these now untidy ob jects of grasses, sticks, strips of bark, straw and mud. Once, for a single season, in the golden days of summer, it was the birthplace of a lit tle family: a few tiny bird children that were very dear to a feathered couple were born in that structure. Like a very old house that is now abandoned and in a sorry slate of repair, whose family has long since depart ed, the bird's nest, too, was once inhabited; around it, and in the fabric of its form, arc woven many memories. Like the old house, the bird's nest, too, was where the children were born; joys and troubles were shared there, inside those now crumbling walls. . .. Sadder, too, if possible, is a last year's bird nest, on the bare branch of a tree after a snowfall, its untidiness hid den; it now becomes a small mound of while. That melt ing snow will later cause a sogginess in the old nest. , Reduced to Dust The mud will drip away; the small sticks will detach themselves, fall away and be come lost and brittle on the earth. All the elements of Nature will align themselves against this now useless ob ject. The rain will come, the frosts of last winter and the winds will tug at the loose nest. Time itself will work to reduce this small structure to dust. Like the "breaking up of a hard winter," the nest, or the very old house, will fall to wrack and ruin. Those who were born there, or those who loved it and shared its shelter, arc gone; maybe they have forgotten it, too. The old nest has served its purpose. Last year's bird nest was intended to be a passing thing, a nursery for a single season. The parent birds did not build it for the ages. Man really doesn't build for the ages, either, in spite of the boast that he docs. All his ef forts, too, are in vain. In a relatively short space of lime in Nature's calendar. a few decades at best, his most magnificent structures will fall to wrack and ruin. In but a little time, as time is meas ured by the hand of time, his buildings will look but a lit tle better than a last year's bird nest looks the second year. by 47 per cent. His regime has built 1,322 schools, near ly double the total built in the preceding 54 years. Though the first years of his regime were marked by economic recession unem ployment reached 12 per cent and the nation's economic growth slowed to less than one per cent a year the economy now - is showing signs of recovering. Annual Growth Rate Seen A recently-announced four ycar development plan fore sees an annual growth rate of seven per cent and the re duction of unemployment to four per cent. At the same time, Betan court has taken steps to di versify the economy. During his reign the country's first steel mill Latin America's second largest has been put into operation. Agricultural production is Condemned Slayer Shipley Granted Stay To Appeal Case Salem (UPH Condemned slayer Larry Shipley, 21, Fri day was granted a stay of his Feb. 28 execution date by the Oregon Supreme Court. The stay was granted to allow Shipley's appeal to the U:' S. Supreme Court. Shipley was convicted of slaying a 16-year-old girl. The American Civil Libcr tiosUnion had announced ear lier ' that it was appealing Shipley's case. , .. . A "People are talking about the ' Kiwanis Kapers" 2- up nine per cent from a year ago and is expected shortly to take a larger role in na tional income. All of this is "insurance" against the day, if it ever comes, that Venezuela's oil riches fade away. The coun try is today the free world's No. 1 oil exporter. Survived Four Revolts What Betancourt has done and is doing has been ac complished despite tenacious efforts to unseat him. He has survived four major military revolts in four years. He also has been subjected to heavy pressure from outside. In June, 1960, the late Do minican strongman. General issimo Rafael L. Trujillo, en gineered a plot to assassinate him. Betancourt escaped with his life, but he bears t h e scars of the plot on his face and hands. More recently, Bctancourt has seen Cuban Premier Fi del Castro try repeatedly to topple him through subver sion and even through actual training of anti-Betancourt un derground terrorists. GIVE the Gift you would like to receive from AVAN'S in the Medford Shopping Center Our early morning flight to Portland... AS I iii" -TT7TS,-4 :l now connects to our nonstop jet to Chicago! Fly to Portland where United now oilers a convenient connection with a United jet nonstop to Chicago which then continues on to Wash ingtonBaltimore. And on every United flight you enjoy the atten tion to your individual needs . . . our attitude of Extra Care-for people. For reservations, call us at 77r?.A9.'?3. or your Travel Agent. "Effective Jan. 13 Jt I : 1(1 1 l I I 1 1 UMTED J "l J ' l TH IXTRA CARB AIRLINf kids. Harry U. This docs It. Here II is February and not a word of thanks from my Connecticut cousin for the Christmas present I sent. Out of the 30 out of town friends and relations I mailed pack ages to, he and his wife arc tile only ones who haven't bothered to acknowledge theirs. I know they received it, because I have the return receipt. And this isn't the first lime they've shown no appreciation for my pains. They Ignored my wedding gift to them and a birthday token for Mai. Now that a baby is due I've decided to show them how I feci about their carelessness. There'll be no contribution from nic, even though this will be the first baby in the next generation. Too bad its parents have no manners. Nettie R, I know my brother is particularly hurl by Mai's silence, because he and Mai were great friends as kids and he still feels the old affection for him. Maybe it's because I don't feel so close that I don't mind getting the same treatment. 1 figure that's their way. They're real ly nice kids. But either they don't follow the rules of eti quelle, or else each one thinks the other sent the card. I know that sometimes happens with me and my husband. We wouldn't want anyone to drop tis because of that. 1 won't let Mai's oversight stop me from giving them a baby present. I'm sure there's a good explanation. Eventual ly we'll hear from them. The Council: As Nettie says, there's surely a good explana tion for such cavalier beha vior on the part of tills young couple. A blunt, if cynical, one would be that this Is their way of saying, "Go ahead and give, if you want to be a sucker. But if you insist on a thank-you, wed rather not have you give us anything " Since there seem to be no occasions when these cousins can meet face-to-face for a verbal acknowledgement, a written note from Mr. and Mrs. Mai is a must. It can be as brief as one word: thanks. But it should go off promptly It, Mai and his wife (particu larly the latter, since social correspondence is a tradition al duty of the distaff side) are making their feelings elo quently clear. Their silence speaks loud. It says, "Dear cousins, Please gel lost!" In sending this pair pres ents repeatedly, despite their failure to notify him of their receipt of or reaction to same, Harry has given them "over time" benefit of the doubt. His next, and filial, package should be a big gift-wrapped box of nothing. He won t mind getting no thanks for Hint! Strangely, however, it may evoke his first thank-you note from Mai. It will read, "Thank you fur nothing!" It's true that one doesn't bestow presents for the sake of thanks. A gift is a symbol of friendship. One uses it to say I like you and I hope this brings you some pleas ure. But if there's no re sponse at tlic other end, where is the friendship? It takes two, Just like in a tennis game. Mere Hurry kept on serving, long after Mai walk ed off the court. HOW COME Fluhrer's Holsum BREAD NOW TASTES BETTER THAN EVER? BECAUSE PREMIUM QUALITY HOLSUM it 4 hours fresher! ! 40 tts. - . chSce aiUI3i) i- I&SSS TOn. ..i "a I Phy (( Ji! J: f r iJ A jShfh-l H II L Mart MM Z-j fM HJ?. Ill), . rrMTFpW USDA r , r f Fresh L Ai M"-& ' I ll2-0VtiP JTS a.. Ita? gcssi fc 69 tad Beef Gr7d 3 98 nry I I Fisher's I I Heinz TOMATO SCUP 0c 10-oz. Tin T. V Shasta Orange, Grape, Apple OR' i !M 1 46-oi. Tin CMESSE LOAF 2-lb. Pkg. Standby SHSTAM1 6-oz Jar Swifts Brookfield Creamery Mb. Pkg. We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities We Give and Redeem SILVER DOLLAR STAMPS White Bread Beck's Jt 15-oz. Ranch 4 loaf loaves 99 Jam & Jelly IS ifcs. 69 C9 BIG'V ijr v -g.- v -, i- -1 M " 1 BAKERY Everything Bjkfd Right in the Store ... Not Fresh Daily . . . Fresh Hourly Honey Bran Muffins 7-MINUTE FROSTING COCOANUT CAKE WHOLE WHEAT DONUTS CAI R . 1 1 " Doi. u CARAWAY OR PLAIN . n ft rM 1 V , rm n .7 .s i ' l.i .-ill. K Dot. A M y. OH: 15-Ot. lof A' GOUEKO'S-FROZEII FOODS TORTILLAS , t. Package 39c CHEESE ENCHILADAS ,Wi 39c BEEF ENCHILADAS ,taH49e MEXICAN DINNERS 49c BEEF TACOS .., . 49c m. , 1 1 a I- i ' v i 3M STORE HOURS : Q A.M. o 9 P.M. Free Parking PHONE 772-7175 Mushrooms .MI": 4 $1 SOFLIN WHITE OR COLORED TOILET TISSUE .Rolm, 35c DEL MONTE TG';!AT0 CATSUP ,4,0.. bh. 5' SIX' CJ.H OR WHITE SATIN SUGAR 25.u b1s S2.1S MJB FOLGERS HILLS COFFEE V.Lb 49c V.Lb- 97c $1.45 1 . x (. . i -. i ; -v Golden p. U. ; ; . ' r " Ripe " ! AVOCADOS Futrtt Bund 10c each TOMATOES Ript TuB. 19c LETTUCE Fr.,h0,..n Held 1C. CAULIFLOWER CtMe WpP,d Hod 19C "OIL TO BURN" Mebilheaf S I H Green Stimpt MEDFORD FUEL CO. 772-2111 1 i