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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1963)
BSCS SOC Buildings Included in List Given Tentative Approval by Subcommittee Salem -OTS- Higher educa tion buildings worth $25 mil lion were given tentative ap proval Thursday by the Way and Meant Education subcom mittee. The priority buildings in the Instructional and utility cate gory were chosen from a $48 million list proposed by the State Board of Higher Educa tion. In addition, the subcommit tee will act on buildings in the dormitory-student center category. The committee ia considering a list worth f 17.8 million, pared down from $29 million requested by the board. The committee stressed that its decisions were subject to change, depending in part on "hdw much money we have." If the Instructional building list gets final approval, some of the buildings would be fi nanced with general funds or a general bond issue. Others libraries and athletic build ing! - would be financed un der the self-liquidating pro gram at dormitories are now: With bonds paid for out of earmarked student fees Of the general fund build ings, the committee gave top priority to the Oregon Tech nical Institute campus and to replacement of Campbell hall at Oregon College of Educa tion. Next in order were utility tunnel extensions at Oregon State, a boiler at the Medical school, a classroom - labora tory building at Southern Ore gon college, a classroom-laboratory at OCE and a science math building at Eastern Ore gon college. SUPER Kern Tone and Kern Glo PAINT 50 OFF A Good Selection of Discontinued Colors From Our Stock DON'T WAITI HUMYI Ooed quantities now but won't last long at that prices. FamT Na H JB il, y Many Spectacular Values on Odd Lot of Misc. Paints ACME-DEVOSE - ETC. Rounding out the list were an addition to Cordley hall at OSU, a science building ad dition addition at the Univer sity of Oregon, and a phar macy building addition at the University of Oregon, and a pharmacy building addition at OSU. Another SOC Building In the self-liquidating cate gory, the committee tentative ly approved a heating plant at UO, a physical education building at Portland State, a library addition to the science building at UO, a physical education building at SOC, a medical school library addi tion and a library addition at PSC, plus a library and physi cal education building at OTT. The committee changed the beard's priority order in some cases. It stayed, however, with the first part of the board's priority list except for passing over three items: Al terations to the OSU library, an addition to the UO library, and an addition to the OCE library. The subcommittee d i s cussed requested funds for campus expansion. Higher ed ucation said it often is less costly to buy the land before it Is needed. Catch-Mi Money Dellenback To Speed Constitution Measure Debated In U.S. Senate U-136 6'2 "Utility SAW! Ttv rush Ji on for thra dependably! performing, economically pricedB 6!V utility nw. W With workhorse features that include! a 1 H.P. motor developing 3500T i.p.nv, wrap around patent, as well! as an anti-bind spindle, you have! a saw inai is . ready and able H-Hf98 to take on any SCIM home mainle- Q nance prob- VJ'" Jems. W & Klamath Principal's Certificate Revoked Klamath Falls - (UPD - The teaching certificate of Klam ath Union High school princi pal Willard McKinny has been revoked by the State Board of Education, City School Supt. Ray Hunsaker announced Thursday. The action has the effect of removing McKinny from the post. No acting principal has been named. Hunsaker said the board notified him the certificate was revoked as of April 23 because evidence has been secured that McKinny made false statements in his appli cation. McKinny declined comment beyond saying he would ap peal the decision. Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton has been asked for an opinion on whether McKinny could con tinue to hold his post pend ing an appeal, Hunsaker said. Life expectancy in the Unit ed States since 1900 has risen from 47 to 70 years. Washington -0IPD- The Sen ate began debate today on a $1.4 billion catch-all money bill including a crackdown on lobbyists for Philippine dam age claims. No voting was expected on the bill before Tuesday. Chairman J. William Ful bright (D-Ark.) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee urged approval of a rider re vising the 1962 Philippine War Damage Act to pay $73 million directly to the Philip pine government, instead of to individual claimants. The supplemental appro priations measure, already passed by the House, also in cluded S450 million for Presi dent Kennedy's accelerated public works program. The Foreign Relations Com mittee questioned Washing ton attorney Ernest Schein, an associate of Philipipne claims lobbyist John A. O'Donnell, at length Thursday on why Schein had not registered as a foreign lobbyist while split ting fees with O'Donnell. Disclosures by the commit tee last week of O'Donnell's activities led to quick action to redraft the 1982 claims law, which Congress passed against the administrations recom mendations. In other congressional busi ness, the House Ways and Means Committee faced up to the need for a higher ceiling on the national debt so the federal government can pay its bills. The committee called Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon to a closed session to work out a compromise bill that would accommodate red ink spending of the Kennedy administration through the summer months. The recent hike in steel prices is expected to have no appreciable effct on consumer prices, a Labor Department of ficial said. Arnold E. Chase, price expert for the Bureau of Labor Statistics, made the statement in testimony pre pared for the House Senate Economic Committee, which is investigating the price rise. He said that although the steel companies still were adjust ing their prices, the overall price rise in steel from the mills was expected to be about 1 per cent. The United States uses 250 billion gallons of water a day. Regional Edition U-137 714"Utility SAWS a Medford? Page 2A Tribune Sup up to the u that's big ml capacity but low in cost. Step out! uith this capable Black t Decker! If," utility saw. Take over those home repairs voul iu eie always restricted to tnei pr.wessionat carpenter. sptciAL95 Choose this P.c.e.,erini.s AQ.Bi U-251 ZtAre JIG SAW Set your own pace with this lively I handful of power. The deluxe jiel taw makes cuts smoothly through! capacity ot in sou wood and I I in nardwood. Cut those large jobs down to siel as you watch problems turn into! PMuurei wiin this lively alue 2ft'rii'9: from BAD. sptciAL- MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1963 Foreign Briefs RED CHINESE PREMIER TO VISIT UAR Tokyo-(UPli-Communlit Chines Premier Chou En-Lai ac cepted "with pleasure" an invitation to visit the United Arab Republic, the Communist New China news agency said today. ISRAEL TO UNVEIL NEW JET FIGHTER Jerusalem, Itrael-flPD-Th Israeli air force's newest jet lighter, th supersonic French-built Mirage IIIC, will be unveiled to the public for the first time at an Independence Day air show next week, it was announced Thursday. hI look.. MB WHAI TUULANUU .-! it A.C. Motor Oil 2SS149 Not Refined Oil, A-l Quality NEW OIL! Rural MAIL BOX WHAT YOU CAN DO FOR A PINNY I Fifteen mil en of modern singleitrand electric fence cam be charged for JVm than a penny a day with a . NOW $298 AT DUNHAM'S 1SHOX-STOK M FENCER Sg6' .jj! HYDRAMATIC FLUID LINER TO TAKE CATS TO ISLAND Cap Town, South Africa-in-When the U.S.S. Spiegel Grove, flagship of Navy Task Fore 88. sails from Cap Town Sunday it will have a cargo of cats aboard. The cats are being taken to the remote island of Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic. Islanders who returned last month to their volcano-ravaged homes after a two-year absence found them overrun by rats. Stocks Back, Fill; Motor Prices Ease 49 Qt. American Made Round Point SHOVEL ONLY 2.79 See Dunhams for Complete Stock of Electric Fence Supplies. Completely Reconditioned SPARK ?oodA,",w an to rir AM Can PLUGS 39". DUNHAM'S INC. AT THE BIG Y SHOPPING CENTER Open Evening and Sunday New York - tUPH - Stocks backed and filled today. Motors tended to ease fea turing Chrysler off nearly a point. DuPont jumped more than a point in an otherwise mixed chemical section. Steels were fractionally lower. Alcoa and Revere Copper were up a point or more, re flecting firmer product prices. Cluctt Pcabody dropped more than 1 on lower earnings. Goodrich and Goodyear tend ed to ease in the rubber section. DOW JONES AVERAGES New York - Rfl - Dow Jones final Itock averages: 30 industrials 718.33. up 0.59: 20 railroads 184.01. up 0.52: 15 utilities 138.61, off 0.31. and 65 stocks 254.01. up 0.16. Sales Thursday war about 5.07 million shares compared with 5.91 million shares on Wednesday. on selected 49', .5-M-l.Ii Thursday prices stocks: Allied Chemical A lu Co Am American Ait Lines i American Can : American Motor AT&T Amei1cn Tobacco Anaconda Copper Armco American Standard ; Bendix Corp Bethlehem Steel Hoeinn Air Brunswick Caterpillar Corp Chrysler Cotp Coca Cola CBS Columbia (f Continental Can . 38), 31. 44 t 19' 124. IV, 32 s. lift 107'. 93 29 1 a 0 Crown Zellerbach Crucible Steel Curtlsi Wright Dow Chemical Du Pont Firestone Ford General Electric General Foods General Moi.iri I General Portland Cement Georgia Pacific Greyhound Gulf Oil Homes take Idaho Power . IBM tnt Paper Johns Mam,' tile Kenneeotl Copper Lockheed Aircraft Martin Merck Montana Power Montgomery Ward National Biscuit New York Central I Northern Pacific Pac Gas Eire ! Penney J C t Penn RR Perma Cement Phillips , Procter Ar Gamble j Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safewav Santa Fe Sears . j Shell Oil : Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co Southern PacWc . j Sperry Rand ! Standard California 1 Standard Indiana ; Standard N. J ' Stokelj Van Camp Texas Co Texas Gulf Sulfur i Texas Pacific Land Trust : Thlokol Trans nor lea Trar World Air . Tri-Continental . I'nion Carbide . I'nion Pacific foiled Aircraft 1 Vnited Air Line 1" S Plywood V S Rubber I r s Steel I'nited Utilities West Hank Corp Younjstown 37 21 20i 63, 246 j 3Hi, 48', 79a 223, 49, . 40 43', h 4'j . 33 , 464 1, 31 , 49, Rj . 301, 89'. 37'. . 36', 48 , 18', 49', .. 18 . 13'. 33'. . 78 . 64'. . 43', 33', '.'9 . 82 .. 41--, 88', .. 33a . 33', - 14'. 68 . 60' . . 66'. 19', 69'. . 16'. . 20 . 26, . SO'. 14. . 46, 110'. . 39'. 49 38 , . 36'. 47', 30', .. 37'. 38', 99 . Salem -rtirt- Chairman John Dellenback of the House Con stitutional Revision Commit tee said today extra meetings are planned in an effort to get a proposed new constitu tion to the floor for action in a week. The House committee and its Senate counterpart have been meeting together all dur ing the session. The constitution was intro duced on the House side, how ever, and would have to re turn to the Senate committee if it won the two-thirds House vote needed. Signs are the House com mittee may make a few final decisions alone, leaving a handful of differences with the Senate committee to be re solved. The two committees have agreed on most sections. They still failed Thursday, however, to resolve two im portant issues: Legislative ap portionment and selection of judges. Differ on Judges The Senate committee voted Thursday in favor of electing judges as at present. The House committee voted against the present plan. Some members said they favor in itial appointment of judges, with subsequent election. The House committee in a separate meeting, voted to re store the constitutional prohi bition against lotteries that was taken out by earlier joint action. The House committee ap proved articles 7-12 on an elective "watch dog" secre tary of state, local govern ment, public officers, taxa tion and finance, government-1 and revision. The action ran- par.. app al activities, and amendment I fled material, for the most 1 committees. How to set more io See Francisco Step aboard a Gray Line sight-seeing bus. Start with the Deluxe City Tour. For just $3.80 it lakes you to historic Mission Dolores, world-famous Cliff House above the Pacific, the Golden Gate Bridge, the spectacular view from Twin Peaks, the Presidio, the Palace of Fine Arts, Golden Gate Park, exclusive residential areas, and much, much more ! Then choose from a host of other colorful Bay Area tours. Tickets and reservations at your travel agency, hotel, motel or Gray Line Depot: 44 Fourth Street. Mail the coupon below lor free color folder.' The Cray Line, 44. 4th St., San Francisco 7. Pleese send me tree color folder on San Francisco tours. Name Address m City State SAN FRANCISCO Four weeks of things to do and sights to see in May in San Francisco, the eventful city. asp THEATRE -a Hermione Gingold in "Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelln' So Sad" plays at the Geary May 7-19. "Carousel" starring John Raitt and Jan Clayton is the Civic Light Opera presentation at the Curran. "Bye Bye Birdie" with Van Johnson is at the Garden Court Dinner Theatre thru May 12. G. B. Shaw's "Major Barbara" opens May 3 at the Marines' Memorial. Ray Bolger presents "The Big Brothers Big Show" a musical revue with Pearl Bailey 4 John Raitt at the Masonic Auditorium May 26, evening. The Media Theatre presents "Mr. Roberts" May 20-26 at the Geary Theatre. S. F. Ballet concludes its spring season with performances May 1, 2, 3 & 4 at the Geary. "Lawrence of Arabia" at the United Artists and "How the West Was Won" a Cinerama production at the Orpheum, are outstanding motion pictures with exclusive Northern California engagements. Hal Holbrook as "Mark Twain Tonight" appears May 4 at the Nourse Auditorium. rsic Spring Opera of San Fran cisco offers five popular productions. May 3, 7, 14, 21. 25 & 28 at the Opera House. San Francisco Sym phony features Jose Iturbi as guest soloist May 1, 2 & 3; other concerts May 15, 16, 17, 22, 23 & 24 will conclude the present season at the Opera House. The Limeliters appear at the Masonic Auditorium, May 10. San Francisco Folk Fes tival will be held 8 p.m., May 24 at the Masonic Audito rium. San Francisco Chil dren's Opera performs May 19 at Marines' Memorial. "Treasures of Versailles," a collection of 200 paintings, sculptures, tapestries, furnishings from the French Palace, will be on display from May 24 at the Legion of Honor. Featured shows at the de Young Museum include S. F. School Children's Art Exhibit thru May 27; Photography in the Fine Arts, May 3-29; and 100 Books of the Grabhorn Press opening May 19. The San Francisco Museum of Art features Contemporary Craftsmen of Northern California thru May 12; an Emll Nolde Exhibition opening May 23; Jacques Lipchitz Exhibit of Sculpture through May. ft SPORTS SF Giants vs Pittsburgh May 14 & 15; vs New York May 16, 17 & 18; vs Philadelphia May 19, 21 & 22; vs Los Angeles May 24, 25 & 26, at Candlestick Park. Open ing Day Yachting Parade will be held May 5 with 500 pleasure craft competing for "Best-dressed" boat awards. Hearst Regatta will be held May 25 & 26. Har ness Racing begins May 18 at Bay Meadows. Wrestling at the Cow Palace May 11. Roller Derby at the Cow Pal ace May 18. Polo Matches can be seen free Sunday afternoons at Golden Gate Park Stadium. SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Second Annual Furniture Fashions Exposition, a million dollar panorama of home furnishings. May 11 19 at Brooks Hall. The opening ceremonies of World Trade and Travel Week will be held at noon. May 20 in Union Square. Scout-O-Rama is at the Cow Palace May 3 & 4. Office and Industry Tour, a benefit tour of a variety of business and industrial facilities will be held May 5, noon to 5 p.m. Vaughn Meader appears at the hungry I May 2-18 followed by Dick Gregory on the 20th. Fair mont Hotel's Venetian Room features Billy Daniels thru May 15; Jack Daniels opens May 16. June Christy ap pears May 3-12 at the Off Broadway, followed by Sarah Vaughn May 14-28. Buddy Greco returns to New Fack's May 21. Bimbo's 365 Club presents Ted Lewis and His All Star Revue thru May 8. Arrangements for group activities made without charge. Write: SAN FRANCISCO sz .- San Francisco 3 VISITORS BUREAU Cal.forn.a You're sure of satisfaction . . . from retailers who feature known brands Retailers know you're sure of satis fact ion with known brands because you'll get the quality you expect. Brand Name3 are built on your con fidence. You and your neighbors dictate the standards a Brand Name product must meet to consistently deliver the value and service you want. A respected Brand Name is a manu facturer's most valuable asset and he pares no effort to protect it by constant ly testing and bettering his product. A Brand Name is the maker's guarantee of satisfaction doubly endorsed by the retailer who sells it. For dependable quality and consistent satisfaction you wiii do better with the brands you know; get to know those you see advertised in this newspaper. To get the most for your money buy by Brand Xante and be sure! CONFIDENCE BRAND NAMES SAnSFACTIONy A Brand Name is a maker's reputation BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION. INC.. OJ FIFTH AVENUE, NEW VOHK l. N.. i i