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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON WEDNESDAY. MAY 1. 196J They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo CAvl LOOuZ MEATLQ4P SEEMS TC ,ftV( 2U-SAY HE'S POPULAR.' V ijcdp 7tSl-)fJSIl U RrtV uaCA BE VEHy WPUUR WHO) V 7 W'S A ClNCM TO LOSE WERE HAVE I L,S HEPREJDENT t4U. fU LEAST A HUMDCED REE M kFFP, JVvPS I liUrt COF 7,45 CLlj6 ? Hf VlVK NV TIME HE HiSjr 5T7.TO INSIDE sroians RfcJfSy oiTwhat j Mir MEATY, yjZ,s AND 3-CARO FLUSHES HSS3 A PAL IS J if OLD KID.'.' UT7$ N0 STAYS IN JACK-r MEATBALL, AS ' II YOU'RE A 1 plA FOTS OM A PAIR Jt1 jS L0N6 AS HIS w Such popularity must 5SJSZ??5fffi B& DESERVED" VWrfffiSloSa " TOWfe ISIP SANTA CLAUS r ' M 1 yr- 's ANY CRITERION" Double Jeopardy If They Don't Get You on TV They'll Get You With An Album. If Washington (UPD Double jeopardy is unconstitutional but one form of it has been i 1 1 flour ishing lately. Let me give you an example. As I jjflBi &xfl was driving -j nome ' r 0 m if I work the oth er evening, I turned on my "U r ramo Just -in time to weit hear someone making a shambles out of "I'll Get By," one of my fa vorite tunes. Curiosity overcame my dial-switching impulse and I held on to the bitter end to ee if the disc jockey in charge would identify the culprit. He did. Jle said the recording had been committed by a fellow from the television program "Bonanza." Now I lead a rather shel tered life and that program had somehow escaped my no tice. I assumed from its title that it was some sort of a giveaway. Bui when I got horn I learned I had leaped to the wrong conclusion. My teen age daughter, who es all, knows all and tells all where television is con cerned, told me that "Bo nania" ii a Western. Furthermore, she said the chap' I had heard undermin ing "I'll Get By" plays the part of a ranch owner. That astonished me. Judging from his voice, I would have guessed that he played the part of a stampede. Anyway, this is what I mean by double jeopardy. If you miss 'em on television they will get you with a rec ord album A All sorts of wanderers of Newton Minow's wasteland are cutting records these days. Ben Casey sings and Dr. Kildare sings, to mention a couple. Their albums have helped popularize laryngitis. Another singing television actor is George Maharis, late of the program "Route 66." A record-plugging tour brought him to Washington recently and I took the occasion to examine this peculiar cul tural manifestation at close range. In cashing in on what ever it is that prompts a television fan io buy an actor's vocal album, Ma haris had to overcome a rather severe handicap. He once took singing lessons. Generally speaking, only an actor whose voice is un sullied by musical training can expect to produce a hit record. To make matters worse, Maharis was earning his liv ing as a singer before he took up acting. This could have been fatal to his career. Fortunately, he developed a throat condition that forced him to stop singing. His croaky voice was ideally suited to the "method school of acting, however, so he turned to the theater. Being both an actor and a non-singer, he could have be come a big recording star. But unfortunately, his voice came back. Maharis hasn't done badly considering his handicap and I wish him well provided that he lays off of "I'll Get By." Resolutions Deal With Game Laws Four resolutions dealing with game laws in the state of Oregon, passed at a recent meeting of the Jackson Coun ty Chapter of the Oregon Fish and Game Council at Centre! Point, were approved last Sat urday, when presented to the state meeting in Bend. The resolutions recommend ed that the positions of sttte game commissioners be changed from appointive to elective: that validation of deer and elk tags of every hunter be made mandatory; that the annual report and recommendations made by the state game biologists to the state game commission be made public and that funds allocated by the legislature to the state game commission to operate state fish and game manage ment programs be used for the specified pur poses only. Members of the chapter maintained that validation of tags would give a more accur ate count of annual deer and elk killed. They also express ed the opinion that the public has the right to know what the county biologist recom mends for the county in which he lives. The Jackson county chapter of the Oregon Pish and Game Council will hold another meeting May 16 at the Central Point Sportsman club, Walter Craig, president, announced. Dennis the Menace 102,956 Employees Washington - IUPD - Oregon had 102.958 public employees as of last October, the Bureau of the Census said Tuesday, Pre-School Clinic Set in Rogue River Rogue River - A pre-school clinic will be held in the Rogue River kindergarten May 8 for children who are to enter the first grade in the Rogue River schools in Sep tember. Dr. A. E. Merkel, Jackson county public health officer, will be the examining doctor. The clinic will be held from 9:30 a.m. until noon, and from 1 p.m. until 3:30 p.m. Each child entering the first grade is asked to have a phys ical examination at this clinic or by his own physician be. fore September. The uliino is arranged pri- marily for those children not under private medical super vision. Appointments may be made by calling 582-3213. for those who think young Jlepsi UiilillliiUl! J iSL, r-' ' C" ' Vow's the time for sunlight and fun... a natural setting lor r??!. Light bracing Pepsi matches your modern activities with a sparkling clean taste that's never too sugary or sweet. Nothing drenches your thirst like a cold, inviting Pepsi. So think young-say "Pepsi, please! Bottled by Pepji-Cols Bottling Compiny, Medford, under Appointment from Pepsi-Col Company, N.Y., N Y. r, PEPSICOIA 'I'll siop runnim' up'm down the aisles if YOU'LL TEU ME WHERE: VOU KEEP OI BWOOfAl' Health Group Sets Meeting on Monday Personnel from the Oregon state hospital in Salem will speak at the Jackson County Menlul Health association meeting Monday, May 6, at 8 p.m. In the Rogue Valley hospital auditorium. ( Speakers will be Dr. John j Rennebohm and Dr. George Sakurai, psychiatrists, and Miss Nina Carton, sociologist, all of Unit 6 which comprises Jackson, Josephine, Douglas, Coos and Curry counties. They will conduct a panel discussion on new concepts of care for the mentally ill, the decentralization program at the state hospital and the In creased community responsi bilities, according to D-wcy Wilson, Medford attorney and president of the association. The program will bear on President John F. Kennedy's message proposing a "bold new approach io the problems of mental illness with empha sis on community education and community facilities." A .9 Quotes From the News BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Albany, N.Y. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, after parry ing questions from newsmen as to whether he plans to marry Mrs. Margaretta Fitter Murphy: "Can't we change to a more productive line of quest ioning." Fredericksburg, Va Lawrence G. Hoes, president of the James Monroe Memorial Foundation, after telling Soviet diplomat Ignor Kolosovsky that the Monroe Doctrine had forced Russian missiles out of Cuba: "He (Kolosovsky) sort ol recoiled as if I'd socked him." Washington Rep. Roman Pucinckl (D-Ill.) who Interprets the New Hampshire lottery bill as starting a nation-wide trend: "Juit imagine what fun this country could have wait ing to hear who will be the nation's newest millionaire every 90 days." Atlanta Jimmy Alexander Hood, a Negro, who will at tempt to break the racial barrier at the Alabama State Uni versity in Tuscaloosa: "I feel there should be no need for a student, regard less of race, to leave Alabama to get a top education." TWO TIME LOSERS San Jose, Calif. (UPD Santa Clara county supervisor Sam Dela Maggiore has proposed a way to cut government costs by charging county jail pris oners for their room and board, if they can afford it. The suggestion was referred by the board to the county counsel for study. :FI.EE-dciicinug IKIIAUT RECIPES yav-ejuni Dept. M P. C. Box 2589, Portland 3, Ore. 9 Live Better Electrically rWDS PP.1 '5 New Reduced Rates! 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