Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1963)
Year-Round College Gets Top Priority v Budget of Proposal for Sunday Closing Dead in California I, JL ! .bbm " ai OREGON GOVERNOR NAMED At the conclusion of the 1963 Western Governors' conference in Scottsdale, Ariz., California Gov. Edmund G. Brown was elected chair man for next year'i conference. Shown with Governor Brown, left, are Gov. Mark Hatfield of Oregon, who was elected as vice chairman, and Arizona Gov. Paul Fan nin, right. (UPI) Hatfield Vice Chairman Of Western Governors Phoenix CUPD President Kennedy's administration to day had some support from the 1963 Western Governors' conference. But it was in a backhanded sort of way. And there was some implied criticism, too The governors, seven Re publicans and five Democrats, wound up their three-day con ference at nearby Scottsdale Wednesday by: -Rejecting a move by Wash ington Gov. Albert Rosellini, a Democrat and chairman of the National Governors' con ference, to gain support for Kennedy's youth conserva tion corps. -Refusing to accept a re bate of 10 per cent of federal income taxes to states as a substitute for Kennedy's fed eral school aid proposals. This resolution came from Montana Gov. Tim Babcock, a Republican. Hatlield Vic Chairman California Gov. Edmund G. Brown, a Democrat and a Kennedy supporter, was elect cd as conference chairman for the next year and Repub lican Gov. Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon was picked as vice chairman. If the normal succession is followed, this means Hatfield will be chairman of the con ference in 1968, and the meet ing of the western governors would be held in Oregon next year. The resolutions committee, chalrmaned by Hatfield, re fused to report Rosellini's res olution to the conference floor. Then the Washington governor attempted unsuc cessfully to offer it despite the committee action. Can Be Solved a! Horn Although he gained sup port from Alaska Gov. Wil liam Egan, another Democrat, he got no help from Repub licans. Gov. George E. Clyde of Utah, for example, said the problem of youth em ployment could "best be solv ed at home." Another Republican gover nor, John A. Love of Colo rado, said the solution to un employment was "not in the expansion of government but in (he stimulation of the na tion's economy." Babcock's resolution also was defeated by (he resolu tions committee but the Mon tana governor decided against making a floor fight out of it. He said he would make another try at the National Governors' conference In Mi ami Beach, Fla., this sum mer. Charging lhat the tcderal government had "appropriat ed to itself the most lucrative sources of tax revenue." Bab cock proposed that 10 per cent of the Income lax paid by states be returned for use by the states for educational purposes. A resolution by Egan con taining an implied criticism of the administration's de fense policy in Alaska also I failed to pass the resolutions j committee. It pointed to the "relatively few" fighter air craft In Alaska and asked the administration to "re view" its Alaska policy. At the urging of Calilotni.i Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk. the governors adopted a resolu tion "cooperative action among Foreign Briefs SOVIET PHYSICISTS MEETING IN PRAGUE Vienna (UPI) An iniemeiional meeting of Soviet bloc atomic physicists and technicians is being held in Prague this week, the Daily Price reported yesterday. READINESS OF U. S. BERLIN GARRISON TESTED Berlin (UPI) The U. S. Army alerted 1.S00 members of its Berlin garrison at 5 a.m. today in a test of their readi ness to defend the divided city. Trucks and jeeps carrying members of one battle group rolled toward Tempelhof airport in an "Operation Readiness Test" to gauge its ability to deploy quickly to strategic positions. ELIZABETH TAYLOR GETS PAINTING FROM FATHER London lUPIl The father o( actress Elisabeth Taylor has bought her a $257,600 painting by Vincent van Gogh, a spokesman for sotheby s Galleries disclosed today. IRAQI COURT SENTENCES 12 SOLDIERS TO DEATH Cairo 'li'li An Iraqi military court has sentenced 12 soldiers to death in connection with the slaying of the leader of en abortive revolt In 19S9, the Middle East News Agency said today in a Baghdad dispatch. BLM Uses Tracer Element In Paint To Check Thefts As one means of protecting federally managed timber against possible theft, t h e bureau of land management is now employing the aid of chemistry, according to Mod ford District Manager Donald J. Schofield. In timber sales where the trees are individually selected for cutting by professional foresters, the trees are spoi led with a special tree-marking paint. A mark is made on the bole of the tree, so the tree fallcrs can readily spot It, and also on the butt, near the ground. The lower mark remains on the stump after the tree Is cut and serves lo show lhat the tree that was cut was the one intended. To discourage unauthorized use Blue paint is generally used to indicate individual trees lhat are to be cut. Orange paint is now used to mark trees that form the encircling boundary of a clear-cutting area in which the trees to be cut are not i n d i v idually marked. If it Is suspected that trees have been illegally marked and cut. It is possible to chip paint from the stumps and have the paint analyzed. If no tracer element is revealed, paint other than that used by the BLM was employed and the theft is revealed, Scho field explained. The tracer element used is inexpensive and the chemical nalysis simple, fa.sl and inex of paint, the Medford district pensive. All of this adds up ot the bureau of land manage- j lo better management and ment now adds a special j protection of the public's (or chemical "(racer clement" to esls by Hie Bureau o( Land all (ree marking palnl. I Management, Schofield said. Finance Shares Weaken as Most Stocks Hold Firm New York - ll'PH - Slocks were firm and narrow today. Finance sharos tended lo weaken on news that the ad ministration is leaking stand by Authority tQ control divi dend rates paid on savings ac counts by savings and loan associations. Weslco, Finan cial Federation and Gibraltar Finnncial were the worst hit, off about a Doint anicce. Chemicals and motors were gJIJj, on1"' narrowly mixed. General Mn- Idaho pown tors heht unchanged despite Coca Loin C B S foluinhiH fin ConUntntal Can Crown Zrllrrbuoh Crucible Staal CurUta Wright now Chtmloai Dll Pont .,; iaitman Kodak nraatona ford General BloCtftc Oilrral Foods itrntrM Motors Otntntl Portland Cement pi-sin raoinc i n m 04 j ml 846' 1 IB SSI record first quarter earnings John Mariviiia and ear sales Steels softened DOW JONES AVERAGES New York-lPI'-Dow Jonas final stock averages: 30 in duitriali 717.74, up 2.76; 20 railroada 163.49, up 0.65; 15 ulUitloa 138.92, up 0.29. and 65 ttocki 253.85. up 0.89. Salai Wadnaiday were about .' 91 milliona iharei compared with 5.22 million ham Tuesday ! Urnnrrott Copper I OOtthtad Aircraft : Martin ! March i Montana Powar I Montgomery Ward , National BUcult i New York Central Northern Natural Gas Northern Taciftc Pac c.m Bite ! Pi J c by Brown calling for j v m o a American Air l ine the states to police subdivision imtriSn Motor, sales. : A T K T American Tot-aero Also adopted by the govcr- Anaconda Copper rfvnlutioii a ilt inn o nors was the federal government not to limit the strength of the Na tional Guard to 400.000 men It was by Rosellini. American Standard Bendix Corp Bethlehem Steel Poemi; Air . Caterpillar Corp Corp e lev ted 133 , in1. IS a .. Nth 33 37' 108. Pann tin Parma Cement Phillips Procter A (.amhle Radio Corporation 1 Rich held Oil Safau a Santa Kc S.'.ll v Shell Oil Socony Mobil on Southern Co. Southern Pacific Sperrv Rand Standard California Standard Indiana Standard N J StOkeb Van Camp Sun Mine Tea Gull Sulfur Texas Pacific Land Trust Thiokol Trana America Trans World Air "n-Conttnental I'non Carbide Union Pacific S4 43 U 39' 7 Higher education Board Presented Salem - lUPIl - A step toward year-round college was giver, top priority here Wednesday as higher education presented its "B" budget for proposed improvements beyond the ex isting level. Chancellor R E. Licuallen told the Ways and Means sub committee on education that eight priority items totaling $2.1 million have been pick ed from the proposed S4.5 million supplemental budget. He said the priorities are: 1-Expanded summer ses sions, $250,000. Rep. John Mosser (R-Beaverton) said he would like the sum increased because "we want to move just as rappidly as we can toward full summer use of buildings." Mora Participation 2- A masters in teaching program at Portland State college, $362,074. 3- Fuller participation for teaching institutions in the Ford Foundations "Oregon program" to develop new teaching methods, $322,820. 4-Extra appropriations of $200,000 for PSC and $50,000 for Southern Oregon College, where the per student amount Is lower than the state aver age, to remove deficiencies. Closed Circuit TV 5-Aetivation of closed cir cuit television at Portland State, $78,300 Mosser object ed it should pay for itself in reduced teacher time, Licual len replied he could not prom ise a saving "at this state of experimentation in television." 6-Research In new teachi ng and administration meth ods, including computer use, $200,000. 7-Strengthened graduate programs, $500,000. 8-Research "seed money that would attract federal grants. $185,000. Non-State Money In a separate presentation, the committee discussed an es timated $16 to $20 million In non-state research money the system expects to get in the 1083-65 biennium. Committee members object ed that research expenditures are not budgeted in enough detail. Sen. Alfred Corbctt (D-Port-land) said he was concerned about a "backdoor approach." He said he felt research was good business for Oregon." "I think identifying this would provide support," he said. "I'm convinced this is one of the best bargains Ore gon has." Sacramento (UFD Support ers of a Sunday closing law announced today that they had not given up their fight for the measure, although it was dead for this session of the legislature. Philip Corrin, spokesman for "Californians Against Coinmcrcilizing Sunday." said that his group - composed largely of retail merchants would hold meetings within the next several months lo discuss possible action. Saw No Chance Corrin's statement followed Wednesday's announccm e n t from Sen. Joseph Rattigan D- Santa Rosa) who said that he was dropping his proposed Sunday closing law because he saw no chance for passage "at this time." Rattigans bill, which was surrounded with religious and retailing controversy, would have prohibited Sunday sales of "non-essential" items like automobiles, appliances clothing, furniture and hard- Director of OTI Denies Criticism Of Scholarships Boeing, Union Officials Seek To Avoid Strike Seattle - OJpn - Talks con- tinned today between officials Of the Boeing Co, and the In ternational Association of Ma chinists in an effort to head off a threatened strike against the missile and aircraft man ufacturer. Union Leader) Wednesday pledged "every effort to ob tain a settlement without strike action.'' Talks among 32 union leaders from Boeing installations throughout 1 lie country lasted 3l2 hours. Strike Postponed At Cape Canaveral. Fla., Al Duff, president of District Lodge No. 166 IAM. an. nouncced a strike of Boeing installations there had been postponed 24 hours. "We will continue to post pone the strike on a 24-hour basis until leaders decide which way they are going to go," he said. The strike had been sel for today. Boeing and union ncgotia j tors reached an agreement on j a new contract April 15. The I union negotiators recommend I ed acceptance but the offer I was defeated in a vote of the ' union membership last week. Klamath Falls -0JPI)- Oregon Technical Institute Director Dr. Winston Purvine denied Wednesday he had been crit ical of the Stale Board of Higher Education for a plan to set up scholarships for out-of-state students with tuition paid by other non-resident students. He had been quoted as say ing he did not like the idea of asking one outside student to subsidize another outside student. The board voted to ask the legislature to authorize setting aside 10 per cent of non-resident tuition for scholarships. Grateful for Help "Members of the board of higher education were ex tremely considerate of Oregon Tech and our non-resident students in the Portland meet ing," Dr. Purvine said Wednes day. "For this reason, I was not critical in any sense of the board action, but am grateful for the board's help." "A suggestion had come from Salem sources," he con tinued, "that Oregon Tech's out-of-state students pay tui tion and fees of $900 per year. The board acted to recom mend the percentage of in crease be the same as for the universities, which would make the fee $690 instead of $900. "This reduction of $200 pel year is greatly appreciated by students and staff alike at OTI." Civil Service Exams Announced To Fill Five Federal Posts The Civil Service commis 1 sion has announced new ex aminations to fill five federal I civil service positions. The positions include inter- nal revenue agent, treasury ; enforcement agent, range aid, j range technician, and supervi t sory production controller. Anyone in this area inter ested in the positions is ad vised to contact L. B. Nelson, examiner for the commission, Medford post office. Additional information and applications may be obtained from the ,post office or from the Seattle Region, U.S. Civil Service commission, Federal Office building, Seattle 4, Washington. 4-H NEWS Crazy Stitchers The April meeting of the Eight Crazy Stitchers 4-H 1 club was held at the home! of Kathy Vandergrift with I Martheanne Goodwin, presid ing. Karen Hugdahl gave a re port of the March style re view held at the 4-H audi-! torium and conducted by representatives of the Sim plicity Pattern company. Margaret Goodwin gave a demonstration on wearing j clothes to flatter the figure. The meeting was adjourned j and refreshments were serv-1 ed by Kaihy Vandergrift. The next meeting will be held May 20 al the home of Barbara Woods. Suzi Lind, Reporter New Aerosol Formula Said To Be Odorless Racine. Wis.-'UrH-The new ; est wrinkle in household in secticides won't be in the nose Entomologists at the John son's Wax agricultural Exper iment station here say they've found a new way to kill bugs quickly Without leaving a typ ; ical insecticide odor in the ! air. They said the secret lies in a new aerosol formula that eliminates much of the odor from the Insecticide carrier This means actual effective ingredients can be masked easily with a light fragrance United Aircmd 48'i l'mtd Air Llnfi 39' II, S Plvwood Aili4 V S, Rubber 47 : If S Slwl so . I'mtetf t'ttlttlps Jrt', ! vt Batik Corp . 384 tinjhous . 37i Snappy Cooks A Mothers' tea was given by Snappy Cooks 4-H club along with a newspaper fash ion show for entertainment of the mothers. The girls' cos tumes were made of news papers. Refreshments were served by Sally McKay and Cindy Ryerson. The refreshments were prepared by Kathy Ross and Judy DeBerry with Co rinne Florey acting as host ess. Winners m the fashion show were Jeri Parrish, first; Gail Glass, second, and Co rinne Florey. third. Corinne Florey, Reporter Advertisement My dentures were killing me... I irifd all Ihc petttl ind powders and pads Same old trouble' Rov-King and slipping mad my moulh vre and made mc Irritable, Then I spofce io my denlisl he lold me about CUSHION, the soft-flowing plasiii ihat molds to the sums. Now I eat what I want enjoy what I eat anil mv gums feel so gosxl CUSHION slays soft that's its ses-ret . and that was my relief. Mildly medicated to heal gum soreness, pleasant minty flavor guards sour breath Ask your druggist for CUSHION. You must be satisfied or sou get vour mones bask long-lasting supplv only Jl i ware. It would have applied generally in urban areas and not affected drugs, gasoline, food, real estate, newspapers, or souvenirs sold in recrea tional places. The measure drew opposi tion from Seventh Day Ad ventist church and the Amer ican Jewish Congress, both of which celebrate their Sab bath on Saturday. The two groups had scheduled a mass meeting here next Sunday to present "the timeless princi ples of religious liberty which have made America great." In other developments: Consumers - Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh (D-Ingle-wood) introduced seven bills "to clarify and extend the state's laws shielding unwary customers from unscrupulous business practices." Among other things, the measures af fect retail credit, credit serv ice charges and referral sales. Education - The Senate ed ucation committee sent to in terim study a bill to modify the current law requiring school districts to spend fixed percentages of income on teachers' salaries. The meas ure, by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R-Watsonville) would have increased t h e percentages while putting non-salary op erating costs outside the formula. The greatest name in bourbon...historic Regional Edition Medford? Page 2A Tribune MEDFORD. OREGON, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1963 1 Enjoy its finer tastetonight ?5 TH( 010 CIO OISIILUI) CO. im-WOHt. . UMUOI SIIH-.H IOIIIBM HHSM' 86 PROOF SUPER MARKET -LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED - FREE DELIVERY- f ft mo niil f m 11 taaaaaaaaaaekV I I L C King Size PREMS 2 , 89 NESTLES 6 Ox. GH0C0LATE CHIPS 2 for 39c Sunshine 2-lb. Box GRAHAM CRACKERS 65c nu-mar w inn MARGARINE Olbs. KRUSTEAZ 0 HQ PANCAKE MIX 2 lbs. 1 18 1 LB. 53 2 LBS. 1 05 BONNIE oG. (cats like it too) lS'i-oz. Can i OOsi-C Vv'o Besf Bet for any Pat 8 for l 100 Trend Liquid Detergent m. 45' Pineapple Juice Del Monte-46-oz.. 3 or 93 SWANSON PIES Apple, Cherry. Blueberry It Peach 5-oz 2 Pack 4 Pk9 1 00 FLAY-R-PAC FROZEN PEAS or CORN 10 OZ. PKG. "6 f' red GRAPEFRU.T 12 for T I ASPARAGUS ... 2 E 25c GREEN ONIONS AND RADISHES ...h 5 Strawberries 4cuP, I00 1 potatoes" u 10 ibs. 29 RUMP -T An ROAST Jlit A M CHOICE A Mam PORK LOIN ROAST 45 to 5 Ibs. COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE 3 Ibs. I00 PORK CHOPS Center Cuts lb 69 POLISH RINGS TASTY BRAND SftfleV 3 . 89c GROUND BEEF Sconemy Pk 3 100 WIENERS 2 Ibs. 89( NEBERGAUS ALL MEAT ROUND STEAK U.S.D.A. CHOICE (J, M 350 East Pine St. 'A Good Place To Trade' Central Point