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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1963)
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 10. 1963 It A - USSbfaST IWear Flowered, Frilled The Buckles and Bows Square Dance club annual "hardtime" dance is set for SatnrHav Anri 13 In thn fniinlrv Snuare hall. Cnlver ladies follow some male ad- MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Easter Hats, Is Advice Los Angeles- OJPli -If the road, Talent. Calling will be Lou Cook, Richmond, Calif., who holds fourth place among the top 10 square dance call ers in northern California. This will b his first visil to an Oregon club. Mr. Cook is the caller for one of the Bay area's largest dance groups, The Domino Squares. Portluck refreshments will be served and all interested dancers and callers are In vited. Dancing will begin at 8:30 p.m. Muscle, nerve and heart ac tion need calcium for proper functioning. Milk being an im portant source of calcium should be included in the dal ly diet of everyone. vice on choosing their Easter bonnets, they'll be wearing hats decked with flowers and frills this year. It seems men really like Ihose picturesque creations that appear to be a miniature gurden in bloom. They think these floral chapeaus accent uate femininity. Jack McCloskey, president of the California Fashion Cre ators organization, is one of those who votes for blossoms and bows atop a woman's head, lie summarized his fel low admirers' views. "I like the look of flowers and ribbons for Easter. I think women's hats should be ex tremely feminine. I'd like to see more of them." CTADV'C "YOU VACUUM CUIANIR J I Him J HIAPQUARTiRS" "POSITIVE A rTIA Kill nv i i vii SALE! uj (By "Poiilive Action" we mean everything en This Sale as of TUESDAY, APRIL 9.) VACUUM CLEANERS ELECTRIC POLISHERS SEWING MACHINES (Now and Reconditioned) on Display it of Lair TUESDAY, APRIL 9 REDUCED 10 EACH DAY UNTIL SOLD! ML i WJ'IrW This li now branch of STARK'S of PORTLAND and we ar clearing out all old ttock to mike room tor rre.hl DON T OIL AY ... ACT TODAY! Ho Money Down taiy Term. a OPEN TONITE TO 9 n i Jam,H a .-'.'."(1 :i van; m i i V rrFn a - ip-aiBiBiBiBiniHiiHaak, - I Diplomatically, McCloskey added that he was not against cloches or other varieties. "But I definitely think the flowery hats are more fem inine, he said "When I look at a woman when she is in a gay hat, I think it fun. I like women to look like women," he said. Singer Tony Martin sec onds this view. "I especially like to see my wife, Cyd, actress-dancer Cyd Charissc in one of them," Martin said. "It is a reminder that femininity, which some times seems to go out of style, is still with us." Silhouettes run the gamut from fedoras and the tailored types to the lightest and froth iest of organza touqucs. Colorful turbans w hie h would delight t lie most jaded Maharajah are the latest word in the millinery world this season. Marvelous creations of straw and ribbon and net are trimmed with giant jewel ed baubles. The floral crea tions are so abundant millin ery departments resemble a floriculturist's paradise. And for the woman who likes the floral idea but is adverse to resembling a portable flower shop, there's turban. 6B11I Centralia Among the reading material we brought along on our spring vacation was a long-very-article from The New York Times which gives a blow-by-blow account of the negotiations which finally brought to an end the New York City newspaper strike. It takes up more than two full pages of The Times with no advertising--and after reading the entire article we marveled not that the strike was so long but that it ended as quickly as it did. A. H. Raskin, who wrote the article, should have a star for his crown. To make a readable, understandable story out of the involved, intricate day-in-and-out gotiations, must have been a herculean task. In addition to the duly appointed representatives of the publishers and the unions, dozens of well-meaning citizens and officials put in an oar from time to time until even those in the very middle hardly knew what was being done. We were particularly interested in descriptions of the personalities of the two top representatives of the opposing sides. Bertram A. Powers, president of the Big Six, the New York local of the International Typographical union has been described as "honest, clean, democratic and im possible." Another of the men involved said of Powers that "he is serious, dedicated, sincere and wrong.'' Amory H. Bradford, vice president of The New York Times and chief negotiator for the publishers, was described as "handsome, articulate and aloof." The Times reporter re called the words of one top negotiator who said Mr. Bradford "brought an attitude of such icy disdain into the conference floral print rooms lhat the mediator often felt he ought to ask the hotel . to send up more heat." Another praised Mr. Bradford, but Lincoln PTA Schedules Students From Africa Africa's school system and customs will be the topic of interest at the Lincoln School Parent Teacher association meeting, Thursday, April 11, 7:30 p.m. Guest speakers will be Clifford Somkence and i The invocation will be given by the Rev. Fred O. Sapp Jr., minister of the Ad vent Christian church. Boy Scouts of Troop 2 will pre sent the colors. The special open house for Miss Prlscilla Mbuvi, students those attending this meeting from the Continent of Africa j will be held in the cymna now studying at Southern sium for viewing of the art Oregon college. A question ! exhibit by students of the ele and answer period will fol-, mentary schools of District low. 549C, now in progress. Mrs. Thomas Cox is in Ham ilorey, nnance omcer, charge of child care in Room in charge. He demonstrated a short wave radio mobile unit ' with a broadcast between "Outer Space" was theme Crants Pass and Roxy Ann for a recent carnival spon- units. Mort Gossett and John sored by the unit in the rjnie from the Southern Ore school gymnasium. Costume ! gorl gy Divers club were in prizes were awarded Bill ; charge of the club's exhibit Weber and Krista Hord. an(j explained uses of their In keeping with the theme, I equipment. Parachutes were the Civil Air Patrol unit fur- hung from the ceiling and nished an exhibit with Wil-' draped about the booths. The colors encompass the rainbow and just about every other siiade as well. Black and white also are important. With this abundance of riches to choose from, this year's Easter parade should be lively indeed. County Agent To Speak for Club Phoenix - Jonn mcuaugn- lln, Jackson county urban agent, will show slides' and present a program for Phoe nix Garden club members Friday, April 12 at 2 p.m. Members are to take plants nd shrubs to the meeting for ale to be held Saturday, April 13 from 9 a.m. to 3 m., In the Norton Food mar ket parking lot, Phoenix. Mrs. Charles Johnson, chairman for the twenty-fifth nniversary tea and program tn be held May 7 will out- ine final plans for that event. Hostess will be Mrs. George Bourne and Mrs. Andy Stevens. 622 N. Riverside To Meet "Diseases of the Chest" will I be the topic lor Dr. James W. Qulnn, who will be guest sponKcr lor Jackson County Medical assistants when they meet Thursday, April 11 at 8 in Girls Community If P.m., 1 1 club. 117 SOUTH CENTRAL PHONE 773-7301 FREE PARKING 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday nites 'til 9 Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back I 3 DAYS ONLY thru SATURDAY, APRIL 13 OUR PORTRAITS ARE said he operates with a "short fuse Why. with so much at stake, did fate have to bring to gether these two men in a situation which needed the utmost in patience, understanding and restraint? Pal Peg, who first read the article and then marked excerpts for Potpourri who ended by spending an hour reading the entire thing had red penciled this paragraph. "the employers arc plagued by problems of both cost and precedent. Most of the New York newspapers do not make ends meet on circulation and advertising. Only the New York Times and The News arc consistent money makers; the others operate on subsidies from chains or individual owners." Other marked paragraphs "The official mediation talks with Big Six became so ineffectual that the publishers began referring to the Federal, state and city peacemakers as 'Winken, Blinken and Nod.' Some of the men involved complained because Mr. Powers changed his mind so often and Theodore W. Kheel, chairman of the New York transit company, and a chairman of Mayor Wagner's mediation panel, described Mr. Powers as 'a jitterbug bargainer he givelh and ho taketh away.' Even other unionists com plained that Mr. Powers changed his mind so often that no valid assessment of his goals ever could be made." However, toward the end of the nerve-wracking ordeal one of the Unity committee colleagues of Mr. Powers said It was the first time in three months that Powers showed any ability to differentiate between what was important and What was trivial. Perhaps it is a hopeful augury especially since he switched, he became the fellow who almost single handed put this agreement across." Toward the end of his article Mr. Raskin wrote that two developments arc likely to determine whether more har monious industry-union relations grow out of his excursion into what one management lawyer terms 'collective bargain ing reduced to the absurd.' (The idea that collective bar gaining as known now is becoming cutmoded has been ad vanced Irom many quarters.) The two developments, he said, are "how speedily the two sides move to set up a joint industry board to deal with vexing problems of new technology in a field in which the traditional dividing lines between the printing crafts are fast being erased" and "how successful the unions are in submerging their internal wrangles and creating a new bargaining council." From the Dramatists' Guild Bulletin of "Quotable Quotes" -"Horsepower was wonderful when only horses had it." O.S. Dress up salads with low-calorie shrimp & by "$ ( PARENTS MA0AI1NI a big 11x14 PICTURE, BUST VIGNETTE, SUITABLE FOR FRAMING AN EXCEPTIONAL WARDS SAVING... 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