v " -V"" !L V v-"
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT - "Please, can I have him?" is the
question asked by 16-months-old
early visitor to the new plush quarters of the Animal Rescue
League in Pittsburgh, Pa. As far as Kimberly was concerned
It was love at first sight and the puppy seems to agree. (UPI)
Quotes From
By UNITED PRESS
' Jackson, Miss. - Gov. Ross
to other states to gain support
itates' rights:
"I think ve'n galling soma good remits. I boliovo
the pendulum is swinging our way."
Rome - Actress Sophia' Loren, commenting on bigamy
charges against her and her husband, producer Carlo Ponti:
"No matter what in law says wa are married . , .
U't a feeling, and I feel married."
Chicago - Richard Morrison,
quoted at the time he revealed
city policemen:
"There are a lot of people
dead."
Honolulu A church leader, commenting on a proposed
"quickie" divorce bill which would bring more tourists to
Hawaii:
"We don't need another Reno One's too many."
School News
Eagle Point High
A new method of semester
testing was instituted at Eagle
Point last semester. All the
major classes in one subject
and grade take their semester
tests simultaneously during
a two-hour period.
The testing schedule is ar
ranged so that students will
not be overloaded with tests,
as they seldom have more
than one major test a day.
A second reason for this
schedule is that it is thought
beneficial to have college
bound students become ac
quainted with large group
testing over a two-hour peri
od. Dennis Ridders, freshman,
and Kay Stephenson, senior,
were chosen as Duke and
Duchess of a dance given to
raise funds for the junior
senior prom in May.
Joan Konopasek was chos
en Girl of the Month by the
- Pep club for December. She
has participated in student
government, Girls' Athletic
association and has been a
cheerleader, meanwhile
maintaining a high grade
point average.
A Pops concert and spa
ghetti feed was held to raise
money for new Pep band uni
forms. About 200 people
turned out.
Kathie Murphy was chosen
Queen of the Sweethearts Ball,
sponsored by the FFA chapter
of Eagle Point, from among
princesses Mary Evans, Mari
Aguiar and Susie Carroll.
According to the admini
stration, four new booths are
planned for the foreign lan
guage department, bringing
the total to 12.
Fifteen students were ad
mitted to the Eagle Point
Chapter of the National Hon
or Society recently. They are:
seniors, Laurie Bruce and
Dan McKeen; juniors, Mike
Evans and Ron Brown; sonh
omores, Vicky Warrick, Sher
yl DcHaven, Mike cnaney,
Gary Newman, Gail Trimble,
Sheri Watson, Cheryl Barlow
Lois Christensen. Skip AIbco,
Charlet Jensen and David
Shelby.
Sandi Wallis received the
Girl of the Month award for
January. Sandi is president
of the Pep club and also serves
In a number of school organi
zations. Cclia Putman received the
Girl of the Month award for
February. She was chosen for
her work on tin ?oor Man's
Prom, and for serving as as
sistant editor of the annual
and being the first vice presi
dent of the Pep club.
St. Mary's High
St. Mary's music depart
ment received new choral
Kimberly Ann Taylor, an
the News
INTERNATIONAL
Barnett, on sending speakers
for Mississippi's position on
recently shot and wounded,
the illegal activities of eight
who would like to see me
robes of royal blue recently.
The robes will add dignity
and uniformity to the Con
cert later in the spring. The
purchase of the robes was en
gineered by Mrs. Dan Hull
and Mrs. R. A. Naumes, mem
bers of the High School Par
ents' club.
Mondays and Wednesdays
during Lent, Mass is offered
for the convenience of the
students in the All Purpose
room at 8 a.m. To enable the
students to view the actions
of the Mass more easily, the
altar has been moved down
to the floor of the room, and
chairs are arranged on, three
sides.
More than half the student
body is coming early to bene
fit by the spiritual advantages
of the Mass.
Allen Strei of the National
School Assemblies presented
a program on the new discov
eries in space exploration re
cently. Using models of mis
siles and diagram panels,
Strei explained the work that
has been accomplished and
some of the projects that have
been scheduled by the U.S.
government. His program
aimed to interest students in
the field of science that offers
so many opportunities.
Twenty-seven juniors took
National Merit Scholarship
tests. The tests provide an
opportunity to gain one of the
more than a thousand scholar
ships offered to students of
the class of 1964. For the ma
jority, the purpose in taking
the test is to help plan the
senior year of high school
and to obtain a rating that
is recognized by every col
lege. On the same morning, 65
freshmen and sophomores
took the National Education
al Development test.
DONKEY SPILLS MILK
Marston Moreteyne, Eng
land - (UPI - Milkman William
Fraddlcy got so many com
plaints about milk disappear
ing from doorsteps that he
called in police. Constable
John Bradding hid behind a
fence and saw a donkey
named Needy bite off the
caps, knock over the bottles
and drink the spilled milk.
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Phony Smugglers Drive Established
Contraband Peddlers Out of Business
By H. DENNY DAVIS
Uniitd Prost International
Belem, Brazil -(UPD- Phony
smugglers are driving the old
established contraband ped
dlers out of business in this
Amazon river port, a center
of shady trading for decades.
A dead-earnest crackdown
by Brazilian authorities,
launched by former President
Janio Quardros in 1961, start
ed the decline of smuggling.
As a result a new industry is
thriving here: An increasing
number of Brazilians make
their own "Scots whisky" and
"French perfume" and sell it
as "genuine" smuggled goods.
"They get old whisky bot
tles from bars and make the
booze at home, right on the
edges of Belem," a legitimate
businessman told UPI. "But
the perfume is made and pack
aged in Rio, then brought
1,600 miles to Belem and sold
to unsuspecting tourists and
small-scale free-lance contra
band dealers."
The blue and white per
fume boxes, factory-sealed in
cellophane, look genuine
enough.
Real smugglers still meet
and dicker with "distributors"
on the mosaic stone sidewalk
in front of an airline ticket
office on Belem's main street.
They still close deals with
emissaries from the Guineas
in the bar of the city's leading
hotel. But their usually in
scrutable faces are sagging
with gloom.
Even if they succeed in un
loading a boat at some .un
mapped beach on the Amazon
river, their contraband is li
able to be seized before it
reaches the Rio and Sao Paulo
markets. A joint army-navv-
air force commission often
searches baggage of passen
gers taking domestic flights
out of Belem. Passengers may
face another baggage search
on arrival in Rio or Sao
Paulo. Sea shipments face
similar controls.
The final death blow has
been dealt by the counterfeit
ers. They have undercut the
prices of the smugglers and
glutted the market with pho
ny whisky and perfume.
Legitimate Brazilian indus
try also cut into the smug
gler's market. American and
European cars, made in Sao
Paulo have become relatively
cneaper as the value of Bra
zilian currency has declined.
Brazilian manufacturers can
now sell for less than it costs
to smuggle In a foreign car.
The same is true of whisky
made in Brazil under license
from British and American
distillers. A British-controlled
firm in Bahia state is making
filter-tip cigarettes that look,
smell and taste almost like
certain famous American
brands.
Smuggling Is Old
No one has ever pinned a
rap on Columbus, but smug
gling in Latin America is al
most that old. It reached its
heyday when the British tried
to stamp out slave trading in
the 19th century. Clever Bra
zilian captains built false bot
toms in their holds, put slaves
underneath and a thin layer
of wheat above. The phrase,
Something for the British
to see," has become a common
term in Brazil to describe
anything set up merely to fool
inspectors such as a set
of books kept especially to
show tax collectors, or the
cigars in the display windows
of a bookie joint.
Wildlife Lab Asked
By Senator Morse
Washington - (UPD - Sen.
Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) urged
Wednesday that funds be ap
propriated for a range and
wildlife habitat laboratory at
La Grande, Ore.
The request was made in
prepared testimony submit
ted to the Senate Appropria
tions committee while Morse
was in Costa Rica.
Research which could be
carried out at the laboratory
would be "of importance to
the whole Pacific Northwest,"
Morse said in the statement.
He said the LaGrande lab
oratory had been program
med for some time and that
four acres of land had been
set aside for leasing to the
government for $1 a year.
GLASSES
ON CREDIT!
it$C Green Stamps
COLUMBIAN
OPTICAL CO.
MEDFORD
SHOPPING CENTER
MEDFOHD
Modern day smugglers came
to prefer Belem instead of
other ports because the Ama
zon jungle is the last region
where civilization has not
penetrated. The navigable
Amazon river offers innumer
able coves where ships can
load and unload by moonlight,
safe from civilized eyes.
UKfltt riS WTtSHATItMAt.lHC
: 7 : ; ; :
i ft-y. B R A Z I L mjl ,
- L : , 1 ( .. v v iN i
TRADING CENTER This United Press decades. The inset at the lower left shows
International newsmap shows the location Brazil's geographic relationship to the
of Belem, near Amazon river in Brazil. South American continent. (UPI)
It has been a center of "shady trading" for . '
Delegates Conclude
Merger Discussions
Oberlin, Ohio (UPD Dele
gates of six Protestant denom
inations end their discussions
today on a proposal to merge
their 21 million members into
one church. Major obstacles
still loomed large against a
possible union.
Primary among the hurdles
was a way to unify the six
forms of worship practiced by
the Episcopalians, United
Presbyterians, Methodists, Dis
ciples of Christ, United
Church of Christ and the
Evangelical United Brethren.
The Rev. William Jackson
Jarman, chairman of the con'
sultation study committee on
worship, said that until a way
can be found to a unified wor
ship service "there will be no
Christian Unity.';
"Unity in worship is the ul
timate achievement of church
unity," Dr. Jarman said. He
is president of the council of
Christian unity of the Disci
ples of Christ.
The Rev. Dr. Massey H.
Shepherd, professor oi liturgy
at the Divinity School of the
Pacific at Berkeley, Calif.,
said the chief obstacle is the
reluctance of the laity to give
up familiar forms of worship.
Moon Being Studied
For Landing Place
Washlngton-OJPD-A scientist
told a House space subcom
mitte Wednesday that a study
is being made to find the best
place to land a manned rocket
ship on the moon.
John A. Hornbeck, presi
dent of Bellcomm, Inc., a
subsidiary of the American
Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
said a preliminary study indi
cated "a good site for early
exploration might be on a
lunar sea, 10 miles from a
continent, and 10 miles from
a post-marial crater."
Friday,
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL-Wa'll give you
dozen en any Item purchased in our new
Eictpt pfo-packofoo1 goods.
Willer's Model Bakery
243 E. PINE, CENTRAL POINT
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD.
Just before Quadros order
ed the crackdown, Belem bus
inessmen say, traffic was so
intense that smugglers were
chartering cargo planes to
shuttle between Belem and
the British, Dutch and French
coastal cities just north of
Brazil.
Smugglers today real
Ml l W, Jw.;
15th Conference
For Parents of
Deaf Is Slated
The 15th annual conference
of parents ot preschool age
deaf and hard of hearing chil
dren will be held at the Ore
gon state school for the deaf
in Salem April 7, 8 and 9,
according to Dr. A. Erin Mer
kel, Jackson county public
health officer.
Purpose of the conference
is to assist parents in work'
ing with deaf or hard of hear
ing children and to acquaint
them with agencies in t h e
state which offer services to
this type of handicapped
child.
, Parents may observe class
es from the kindergarten lev
el through high school work,
Dr. Merkel said. Discussion
periods will be held with au
dlologists, psychologists, em
ployment counselors and edu
cators to help parents.
Parents will spend one day
in Portland visiting the Hos-
ford Day School for the Deaf,
the Tucker Maxon oral
school, and the Portland Cen
ter for Hearing and Speech.
Parents are asked to bring
their deaf or hard of hearing
children with them and liv
ing accommodations will be
provided by the Oregon state
school during the conference
without cost.
Parents should arrive Sun
day afternoon, April 7, Dr.
Merkel advised. They should
notify M. B. Clatterbuck, su
perintendent of the Oregon
State School for the Deaf, Sa
lem, that they plan to at
tend. A number of cooperat
ing agencies are sponsoring
the conference.
Mar. 22
OREGON
smuggling, that is, not the
fake variety has been re
duced to a quaint reminder
of the past, of diminishing
importance in Brazil's foreign
trade. The firms that exist
are ones that became well
established many years ago.
The best known one has been
in smuggling for 20 years.
'ia, J. U'k. J
New Saturn Launch
Slated Next Week
New York -(UPD- Dr. Wern-
her von Braun, developer of
the United States Redstone
missile, announced Wednes
day that the fourth giant
Saturn I missile will be hurled
into space next week at Cape
Canaveral.
The rocket is an experi
mental vehicle preliminary to
the Saturn C5 missile which
is designed to put two Ameri
can astronauts on the moon
before 1970.
Von Braun said the missile
is on the launch pad at Ca
naveral undergoing checkouts,
Only the first stage will be
tested next week as was done
in the three previous launches.
The other stages of the rocket
will be inert and filled with
about 100 tons of water for
ballast.
The moon mission, dubbed
Project Apollo, will cost about
$20 billion, about 10 times the
cost of the Manhattan project
which produced the first
atomic bomb during World
War II.
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