Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 18, 1963, Image 5

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    Two Area Schools to
$62,000 For Oregon
Southern Oregon schools,
Southern Oregon college and
Medford school district, will
receive $62,000 of the more '
than SI million approved by
the state board of education
this week for operation of
projects under the Oregon
Program, which is committed !
Rockefeller Said
Not Acceptable To
N.Y. Conservatives
By LYLE C. WILSON
The rambunctious Conser
vative Party of the state of
New York has pronounced
Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller !
u n acceptable J
tne iwn !
R e p u b lican I
p res idential
nominee. The j
New York'
conservative s i
profess to see
no real differ
ence between
n d President
WllsOD
Rockefeller
John F. Kennedy in domestic
and foreign policies.
New York's Conservative
Party is a sturdy infant, born
in the 1962 state election. The
party polled 141.877 votes in
1962 for David Jaquith, con
servative candidate for gov
ernor. These votes generally
were cast by Republicans
who believe that Rockefeller
does not represent them or
their party. J. Daniel Ma
honey is chairman of the New
York Conservative Party. If
Rockefeller is nominated for
president next year. Mahoney
plans to enter against him in
a slate of conservative presi
dential electors in New York
State.
Willing to Split GOP
This maneuver probably
would so split the Republican
vote as to assure that Ken
nedy would carry New York
State. So be it, say the con
servatives. That is exactly
what they have in mind to
become a balance of power
element in New York capable j
dential electors to a liberal
Republican. The long-haul
purpose is to persuade the Re
publican Party and its nomi
nating convention to give a
conservative a chance to be
elected president on the Re
publican ticket.
Mahoney explained that he
hoped to compel the Republi
can Party to nominate a con
servative who can appeal to
the growing tide of conserva
tive Republicanism in the
South.
The conservatives drafted
a legislative program for
New York State. One item
demands elimination of state
unemployment benefits to
persons on strike. It has been
estimated that news paper
printers recently striking in
New York City received an
average of S121 a week in lax
free strike benefits and un
employment insurance. This
compared with a top pay
scale for working printers of
S141. The conservatives con
tend that there was insuffi
cient incentive for the print
ers to return to work.
Said the conservatives' Ja
quith: "The New York City news
paper strike unquestionably
was prolonged by the pay
ment of tax-free unemploy
ment compensation benefits
to the striking printers. Since
the seventh week of the
strike, these benefits were
paid from state unemploy
ment compensation funds,
Rainier, Grace
Visit Philadelphia
.,5 Princess Grace of
Rainier and Princess urace oi
m :,j-iU: .ITDIi n- - r
Monaco
spent wcanesoay
niffht ouictlv
at the tormer
actress' home in the East Falls
section ol the city.
r -inH ll
daughter. Princess Caroline.,
arrived after a drive from !
iji..,.;u Airnnri in New York.
i t - unrnrn Prinpp
" . .. Dini.o
uracc aim men u, -
Albert
Tho rm-1 COUOle
travel on sepai.. "" ri
for "security reasons."
it BOM
explained.
The Monacan rulers are
here to open the Philadelphia
Travel and Vacation Show
Friday. The large-scale ex
hibit is headed by her brother,
John B. Kelly Jr.
Hood River Man Dies
In Plunge of Auto
Hond River - ITf -
A car
t I r ft marl anrt OVTHV
turned near here Wednesday,
Miimn Mor-
gan Heffington. 50. of Hood who called in 1946 for a clo
pjvcr ser union between America
The accident occurred on and Britain to stem Soviet ex
S'ate Highwav 33 about cignt pansion. He also named the
miles south of Hood River. post-war era when he said:
A paenger identified as "From Stettin in the Baltic
Bertha Picharci. Hood River, to Trieste in the Adriatic an
was taken to a Hood River i iron curtain has descended
hospital. I cross ,he continent."
to the belief that improved in
struction in the public schools
can be achieved by improving
teacher education.
The Southern Oregon col
lege program, which is closely
unified with the Medford
project, will receive $32,000
which is $4,000 more than was
and ultimately will be
charged to the newspapers
against whom the strike was
waged.
'Subsidized Strike'
'The whole concept of col-
lectivc bargaining is nullified
vvil- une ynj iu iauur
dispute is compelled to sub-J
sidize a strike against itself
Furthermore, unemployment
compensation never was in-
tended to support persons
who are unemployed as a re
sult of their own deliberate
choice. Only one other state
in the union. Rhode Island,
follows this palpably unsound
practice."
The conservatives estimate
that Rockefeller has increased
state spending by 57 per cent
over that of Democratic Gov.
Averell Harriman whom he
succeeded. They want some
economy.
What New York needs, the
conservatives assert, is the
kind of leadership, determi
nation and courage shown in
Ohio by economy-minded Re
publican Gov. James A.
Rhodes. Rhodes rapidly is be
coming, next to Sen. Barry
Goldwater (R-Aru.), the No. 2
sweetheart of conservative
Republicans.
Old English
Church May Be
Moved Here
London WPP If all goes
well, plans to move one of
London's most historic
churches to the United States
as a memorial to Sir Winston
Churchill will get under way
by the end of the year.
The church is St. Mary s
Aldermanbury, located in the
City, the heart of London's
financial and trading district.
Today it is a bombed-out
shell. Only the walls, the
tower and the interior pillars
of a German air raid in World
War II.
It still is beautiful.
The simple but powerful
lines given the building in
1670 by Sir C h r i s t o p h e r
Wren, who also .designed
nearby St. Paul's cathedral,
still can be seen.
Experts say that with the
help of contemporary draw
ings St. Mary's could be fully
restored as Wren originally ;
planned it.
Block-by-Block I
The plan is to move the i
cnurcn diock-dy-diock 10
Westminster College, Fulton,
Mo., where Sir Winston made
his famous "Iron Curtain"
speech in 1946.
Parliamentary approval for
the move is needed because
St. Mary Aldermanbury on
the street of that name is
owned by the Church of Eng
land and is therefore state
property.
Bills giving permission for
the project will be filed In
parliament later this year. If
they pass, as seems likely, the
work of moving the estimated
655 tons of masonry by ship
will begin.
Meanwhile. British crafts
men will be put to work on
new masonry and woodwork
to complete restoration of the
church. The new construction
shinned to the!
- smhlv.
; - --
ftiany urnun ptisuiia ,,uvc
1 U nki.-nh Amnno (hum
,. urn.- no
UHJL IKWUHn w.e-""
married his sccona w, e
there at the end of the l,th
! century
Judge George Jeffreys, the
i infamous hanging
juogc
r . h,.. i. ih. i
I W""
hows in the 18th century for
,. . ,ncirfrj
wilfl, -
relatively minor offenses to
day, lies buried in a crypt
where the altar stood.
To Be Chapel
If St. Mary Aldermanbury
does get to Westminster, it
will serve as a chapel for the
school's 650 students.
Part of the proposed res
toration would include a win
dow showing the Churchill
coat of arms.
There it would slana as a
memorial to Anglo-American
friendship and to the man
Receive
Program
recommended by the state ad
visory committee for 1963-64.
The Medford allotment for
1963-64 was $30,000, an in
crease of 59,000 over the ad
visory committee recommen
dation. Under the joint activities,
Southern Oregon college will,
next September, place 20 or
21 associate teachers in the
Medford schools on a one-half
day basis to start training.
The following year they will
be intern teachers, working
full days and receiving the
exact amount earned for the
service rendered.
Paid by District
They will be paid by the
Medford school district. The
Foundation money furnished
to the Oregon Program will
not be spent on these salaries
but in getting extra people
into the teacher training pro-
gram
Thc college will have
seven people working on this
phase of the project. They will
be recruiting for five future
years.
Someone will be checking
all high schools to determine
how many of the upper 40 per
cent of the graduating class
failed to go on to college and
what those people are doing
and what interest they might
have in becoming teachers if
the opportunity was present
ed. The number has been
placed at half of the upper 40
per cent. This recruiting will
be done without exclusive at
tention to Southern Oregon
college's own program but
with it as the primary interest,
according to Dr. Bill A. Samp
son, director of the program
for Southern Oregon college.
This recruitment program
is starting immediately. There
will be someone at every high
school. About 25 students will
be needed for the particular
program. There also will be
recruitment within the col
lege's own freshman class.
Considerable time and
money will be devoted to get
ting the first 21 students, who
are becoming associate teach
ers, ready for the program of
work.
They are selected first by
the college from the list of
better than average students
with good recommendations.
They are then interviewed by
representatives of the Med
ford school system to see if
they are of the type with
which the Medford system
wishes to be allied for two
years.
Next year there will be 14
teachers working with the 21
associates. There are more stu
dents than teachers since the
associates will be working on
a half-day basis, Dr. Sampsson
exP,' .
Dr. Betty Lou Dunlop of the
Southern Oregon faculty will
spend three-fifths of her time
working with the associates.
This is more professional time
than the college normally de
votes to this training.
Curriculum Study
In the third phase of the
project, the college will make
a curriculum study on the
himh i ,1 rn ItiA rennrt
by tnc slaie board
. erinratinn nf the complete
plans of the elementary and
secondary five-year teacher
training program.
All colleges participating
are asked to "re-think and re
present" their plans for con
sideration of the stale board
of education at its quarterly
meeting in March, 1964.
Two projects for which
funds were approved are new.
In one, Stanford university is
working with Marshall High
school on a new concept of
using IBM equipment for high
school scheduling.
In the other, the state sys
tem of higher education is
working on a program in
volving teacher research.
Participants in the Oregon
Program whose allotments
were approved for 1963-64 are
Beaverton. Bethel, Coos Bay.
Corvallis. Dallas, David Doug-
as, Eastern Oregon College.
i ar.ranrte lake Os-
ri.rk. I.in-
"" "
; field. MCMinnviuc, meuiuiu,
I - ., , ( : 1 ,.,, ,1, tm
...,., ,-,,.,, rr..
lege of Education, Oregon
State university, Pendleton,
Pnrilanri Portland State,
R0seburg, Salem, Southern
orecon college, Spnnglicia.
State-Marshal, Staylon, and
University of Oregon. ! ,
AUTOMATIC
Transmission Exclusively
.ilC TKHNSi..
mm
Minor er Mir Repairs
Factory Units in Stock
100S Financing
MEDFORD
TRANSMISSION
REBUIIDERS
1910 Tablt Rock U. 773-7741
Flit Efficient Ser-ict
Acton From Ikj Y Market
MEDKORD
Shirts Reported
Gone From Store
More than $175 worth of
men's shirts were reported
stolen from the Robinson
Brothers Men's store, 114 East
Main St., sometime Monday
night.
According to Medford po
ller reports, they were con
tacted Monday night when a
glass window in a rear door of
the store was reported to have
been broken. When the store
was checked at that time,
nothing was discovered miss
ing. Shortly after 11 a.m. Tues
day Fred E. Robinson, owner,
notified city police that a bin
of 18 multi - colored cotton
shirts, valued at $4.98 each
and six Pendleton wool shirts,
valued at more than $13.95
each, were missing.
ROBERTS GETS JOB
New York -WPD- Muralist
Morton A. Roberta of New
York has been commissioned
to do the $30,000 murals on
events in the life of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur for the
MacArthur memorial and mu
seum in Norflok, Va it was
announced Wednesday.
Bargains! Bargains! Bargains! Come and get 'em during our big EXPAN
SION SALE. We have a lot of merchandise and we NEED THE SPACE! Our
loss is your gain. Buy now at COST and BELOW COST!
REVERE WARE
2-Qt.
Whistling
Tea
Kettle
lVi-QT. SAUCE PAN
Reg. $6.75
$099
GIRLS!
QUILT PAJAMAS
l m
1 1 il V 5S0
$2"
For Slocp fi mSb
or Lounja V-vJJ
w,,h V ,W
ItfiSfa .jL marTir UfRllFTC (tl
14 J iS 39' as- ffl
PADS B T U Al B -Ma. EA5Y-OFF Reg 91. d I UULd TTl L I 15 111
3 mm Vacuum Cleaner Bags 1 00 39c OVEN ft I lvn 1 v "j Z
i;;;:JL mm chaner 39f S088 I i Xl 1 i
Refular3.9l CAR W I S IV. V T
I $166 I ) STACK wash fl",ie with RaSTTTeids 77S.
STOCLS SsLr, BRUSH GARDEN I "
VAN LEE'S ftZflftC
ooo ib Tea $099 mmm Bfl HMIMi
m.i.i t. Metal M m lOTin sarvnri o MITa7aTfWaaTiiTTlnfl Wf.9 WMWx:wi'iit2iSZlk.
Qu.ck R.I.m. S.t rUIOIIU RIUULLO V.u.,,o 1 49-You, Ch.. 'I WWgfgggggggfggggggggg
MAIL TRIBUNE, MfcDFOHD,
Court Invited To Forest Meeting
The Jackson county court,
as a member of the Associa
tion of Oregon Counties, has
been invited to attend the
annual meeting of the West
ern Forest Industries associa
tion April 26 and 27 in San
Francisco.
Arthur Greeley, deputy
chief of the forest service,
Washington, D. C, will dis
cuss the whole range of forest
service-lumber industry rela
tions, according to a letter
from Joseph McCracken, as
sociation executive secretary.
This will include the newly
proposed forest service timber
sale contracts, policies on ex
port of logs from forest serv
ice land to Japan and Canada,
timber sale plans and allow
able cut.
Rep. Al Ullman (D-Orc.)
will speak on capital gains
taxes on timber. Robert Dun
can (D-Ore.) will speak on
the problem on administering
O and C lands. Mrs. Julia
Carrying 30 pounds at 19.
000 feet elevation is as diffi
cult as bearing 210 pounds
at sea level because of the
rarified air.
Mosaic Snack Tables
Set of Three
$9.95 VALUE
LADIES'
BLOUSES
59
EACH
Broadcloth
All Shade
Short Sleeves
er V Slaave
A
r
Aluminum Kordite Plastic
PIZZA PANS CLOTHESLINE
Girls' Rayon Colgate
,fis PANTIES S! TOOTHBRUSHES
4f 59 IB 39
7
am Kind, . - Mm M m kw " II
I 0 Iroaing Board CoYer,, 79c .. 27c rilL. N f SL
OHfcGON
Butler Hanson (D-Wash.) will
speak on water transportation
of lumber.
Free Lecture on
100 Windsor Ave.
CAR WASH MITTS
Regular 1.00 ONLY
GILLETTE RAZORS
$4
Reg.
$1.00.
Set
I Electric Heaters
Radiant, Ul Approved I
Look at these
SHOPPER STOPPERS!
Open House Scheduled
Ashland-Onen house at the i
-,.. non kj
i iergarten will
(April 30, from
be Tuesday,
7 to 9 p.m.,
Entitled
"How Christian Science
Destroys Fear"
by
Otto G. Ziegenhagen, C.S.B., of Chicago, Illinois
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
TONIGHT --APRIL 18-8:00 P.M.
First Church of Christ, Scientist
One Block South of East Main Street
Nursery Facilities Provided
49
4
49
Flexible
OooM Mack
LAMP
Fiberglass ahade
In bright brau
finish. Ul ap
proved. Ideal far
desk. A.I.,
"
uiunauAl, APH1L
At SOC Kindergarten
Miss Karen O'Connor, kin-
Lerearten iiutruelnr h,. an.
1 nounced.
I Parents and teachers are in
Christian
More Whopping
In Our Mammoth
EXPANSION
BUY AT COST &
4k
Reg.
5.95
Save
Mora
Than
Half
DRAIN TRAY
Dur.blt Pllltll
I Pasted
TIDY RACK
Stem icourlnf
(Itinera, etc
OAKE COVER
Uck Lift Lie. X -
L.r, . Siie
CAKE COVER
Smaller
Site
Kitchen Tool Tray
lsi.',"r.'"k,,,,,,w..
Silverware Tray
lair, (lean way te
Mere IKanrare RIO. If c
$
Plastic Dish Pan
The seat n Ilia market
at ttile price
A. 5
vited to attend and observe
the facilities so that they may
understand the procedures'
and purposes of the school.
The kindergarten li located
at 382 Wlghtman it., Ashland.
Science
Medford
BIG Values
BELOW COST!
1. 1M3
Quality Plastic Housewares
by SALLY SMARTl
KITCHEN SINK SET
1 Drain Tray
Wafc Dralear
77'
59
RIO. 11,10
pad
RIO. S1.00
$ 77
Tra
RIG. S2.ti
77
RIG. SI. SO
69
49
69
RIG. I 25
Chrome Top
Step-on Cant
3-Oal Capacity
White, Yellow,
Turquoiie