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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1963)
Local and Gasoline Spilled City ire men flushed down five gaso line spills from parked autos in Medford during the week end. The spills resulted from expansion of gasoline in tanks which were filled too full. Auto Collision Cars op erated by Leo Edwin Osborn, 34, of 655 , Normal ave., Ash land, and Everett Irl Barnes, 58, of Lithia Auto court, Ash land, were involved in an acci dent on North Main st. near Wimer st. around 8:20 a.m. Sunday. No one was hurt, police said. , Arrested Maxwell D. Gillispie, 18, of 823 East Ninth st., was arrested Saturday by Medford police on a charge of possession of alcoholic bever ages. Gillespie was lodged in city jail and was released to day after appearing in mu nicipal court. He was fined $30. ' Recovering Word has been received from Concord, Calif, that Don Snider, form erly of O'Brien, is convales cing at home following open heart surgery. Automation Etfects Topic of Hearing Washington - (UPH - A Sen ate labor subcommittee be gins a six month investiga tion today of the effects of automation on education, so cial welfare, labor and indus try. : - r Witnesses called to open the hearing were Labor Secre tary W. Willard Wirtz, Com merce Secretary Luther H. Hodges and Ivan Nestinger, undersecretary of health) ed ucation and welfare. Sen. Joseph S. Clark, chair man of the labor manpower subcommittee, said the hear ings were being held to ex amine the "drastically chang ing" opportunities for em ployment resulting from a shift from a "manual to a computer and automated econ omy." "We must look at the total problem so that we can meas ure the task of developing a national manpower policy which will respond to the terms of the new economy." Causes of the changes will be examined, Clark said, and efforts made to find out how to help individuals adopt to the new life. Obituaries Horse Trainer Dies; Funeral Wednesday Funeral services for Albert F. White, 63, of Thompson Creek rd., Applegate, who died Sunday, will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Perl Funeral home. Mr. and Mrs. White have been owners and operators of Al White's Rogue restaurant on South Central ave. for many years. He has made his home on Thompson Creek rd. near Applegate since 1943, where he was known for his interest in training and rais ing show horses. He was born May 30, 1899 at San Jose, Calif, and came to the Rogue valley from Marshfield, Ore., in 1940. In 1941, in Reno, Nev., he was married to Ella Driscoll who survives. Also surviving Is a Jialf brother, James E. White, Hol lywood, Calif. ALLIE OLDHAM Mrs. Allie Oldham, of 827 West 14th St., died Saturday night in a local hospital. Fu neral arrangements will be announced by Conger Morris funeral directors. RALPH J. HUND Ralph J. Hund, 54, a resi dent of the Veterans Adminis tration domiciliary, White City, since December, 1962, died Sunday. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Perl Funeral home. JESSE O. CARNELL Jesse O. Carnell. 80, of 523 South Holly St., died in a local hospital early today. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Perl Funeral home. GATES OPEN 8 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK Wl ENDS TUESDAY. SODOil i ftla.k.nr1n ItfUtHi eM5GJ wninii SKs'ltH MITT Personal Enters Hospital Joyce Barnes, 8, of Wilderville, has entered Josephine General hospital for surgery. To Show Film - "The Proud and The Beautiful," a French film made in 1953 from a story by Jean Paul Sartre, will be shown at Med ford High school Tuesday, May 21, at 8 p.m., by the Rogue Valley Art association. Admission is free to members of the association, and each member may take two guests. The film stars Michele Mor gan and Gerard Philipe. ... Vandtrpool Injured-James A. Vanderpool, 27, Central Point, suffered injuries Satur day night when his motor scooter ran off the roadway on Morrow rd. east of Biddle rd., according to city police. He received emergency treat ment at the Crater Osteopath ic hospital, Central Point, and was released. Grange News Lake Creek Grange The Lake Creek Grange charter was draped in memo ry of Fred Stanley, who died recently. The service was con ducted by Chaplain Faye George and Ceres Ozie Bur rell. Bob Gilkey reported on House Bill I on the revision of the state constitution. It requires two-thirds vote of both houses to be referred back to the people. The Grange is opposed to including Grange property on tax rolls. A letter is being sent to Richard Eymann, chairman of the tax commis sion, expressing the group's dissent to the proposal. Fire Insurance agent Cecil Kee cautioned members to get a "pink slip" from the insur ance agent before traveling in Canada. Property insurance requirements in several of the provinces were increased re cently. Weather permitting the completion of the roof will soon be done. Larry Perry and Bob Fish er are building an arena on the Usher ranch. They will remove sand from in front of the Grange for their arena and replace it with gravel. Refreshments were served by Ozie Burrell and Arlene Stover. A dance will be held at the hall on May 25. Hornbrook Grange Hornbrook Grange met re cently . with . Master Alfred King prseiding. Preceding the business meeting, a Mother's Day pro gram was presented. Corsages were given each lady as she entered the hall. Children tak ing part in the program were Lora and Patty Price, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. Dean Price, and Jodee Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Mi chels. A new member, Donna Hat cher, was voted in. It was an n o u n c e d that Greennorn Grange was conducting first and second degree work May 18, and all were invited. Members voted to have a fea ture booth at the Siskiyou County Fair this fall, and also to enter the Community Serv ice contest sponsored by Sears. Mrs. George Michels was named chairman of this com mittee, i Home Economics Chairman Mrs. James Riant reported the annual Memorial Day dinner will be served from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m. This is a money raising event, and is held each year for the accommodation of the many who come from a distance to visit the his- toricai Henley - Hornbrook cemetery. Discussion was held on the possibility of the community women getting training in prevention and extinguishing fires as an auxiliary to the local volunteer fire depart' ment. A clean-up, fix-up date was suggested. Members of the Grange at that time would make their pickup trucks available to haul trash to the dump. The time and date will be set at the next meeting, May 24. Subscribers To report Improper or non delivery of the Mall Tribune in Medford. phone 772-6141; Aah land call at 416 Bridge tt . or phone 482-30(12: Yrexa. phone Vlctorv 2-2606 belore 6:45 p.m. dally and 1030 a m. Sunday. If regular delivery arrives shortly alter you call please nolify office, thus eliminating special measenger eervic. NORTHS CHUCK WAGON 1016 N.Riverside Phone 773-3681 Banquet & Party Facilities lounge with Private Entrance lunch 1 1 a.m.-2 p.m. Dinner 5 'til 9 THE WEEK IN CALIFORNIA California End, Fight By United Press International With just live weeks lett in its 1963 session, the California legislature has begun to clear the decks for what usually proves the biggest fight of all. That's over money. The major money question this year is: Will Gov. Ed mund G. Brown's "no tax" proposal for 1963 balance the biggest budget figure of any state in history, $3.2 billion? Secondly - This has yielded first position by a nose only and the race isn't over yet -will education, always a ma jor issue, get its cut of the pie? The key to Brown's no tax" proposal is simply a speed-up in collection of taxes, or a pay-as-you-go sys tem including payroll deduc tion of state income taxes such as the Federal government uses. Two Preliminary Victories Although the Democratic leadership has stated outright that It doesn't feel, the "no tax" proposal - in fact, a pledge during the last cam paign - will do' the job for education, Brown already has won two preliminary vic tories. His proposal to withhold state income taxes squeezed past the assembly revenue and taxation committee, 8-7, and a measure requiring insur ance companies to pay taxes on a quarterly basis, instead of once a year, was approved earlier by the committee. Brown has stated the econ omy of the largest state in the union is already growing faster than predicted and should, with his tax collection reforms, generate enough The Family Council bdltor'i note: The Family Council consisti of a Judge, a, fhychiatrist, three clerjtymen. three editors and a women's editor. Each article Is a summary of a family disagreement presented to the Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor, encountered bv guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by Mrs. Alma Denny. (Copyright by General Feature Corp.) Lucy R. I enjoy fixing things, even though people ridicule me. Mrs. N. R Repairing au to engines and plumbing isn't a girl's work. Lucy R I wish my mother would get off my nect about being more "feminine." Since my tastes run along mechan ical lines, why can t 1 M i Miss-Fixit? The more I can learn, the sooner I can work with my father, a carpenter, and my brother, an electri cian. Other girls go ga-ga over hats. I get ' a thrill out of hardware. I'll be useful if not ornamental. Mrs. N. R.-Ever since Lucy little girl, I've tried to make it cleear to her that she's not one of the boys and should try to act ladylike. Whenever she dresses up pretty, its un. Weather Medford and vicinity: Variable cloudiness through Tuesday. Scat tered thundershowers mostly over mountains this evening and agBln Tuesday afternoon and evening. Low tonight near 50. High Tuesday Western Oregon: Isolated thun dershowers near southern moun tains this evening. Cloudy on coast and a few clouds in Interior to night. Partly cloudy and cooler Tuesday with Isolated afternoon thundershowers near mountains. Low tonight 50-59. High Tuesday 66 to 76. except 60-85 on coast. Northern California: Mostly fair tonight and Tuesday except a few scattered afternoon thunderstorms In Sierras and fog or low overcast on coast. Little temperature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 69: above normal 10. Record high this date 82 In 1047. Record low this date 35 In 1950. PRECIPITATION: None. Total this month 2.12 in., 1.21 In. above normal. Total since Sept. 1 25.55 in., 7-74 in. above normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 34';. highest this a.m. 96r'r. llllh 4:00 4- CITY Yester- y so a.m. nr. Low Prec, 50 42 Brookings Crater Lake Grants Pass Hnward Prairie . 01 Klamath Falls ...... 85 MEDFORD 89 Portland 87 Seattle 88 Spokane 76 Yakima . . 83 38 32 62 44 reka Red Bluff Sacramento ... San Francisco . 98 . 8.1 , 63 63 Los Angeles Phoenix 99 Denver 52 Chicago 67 Miami Beach 83 New York ... 81 Washington. D C. .. 84 83 FlVF.-nAY FORECAST (Through Msv 231! Western Oregon - Western Wash ington - Temperatures averaging above to much above normal with cooler trend about Thursday. Highs in 80s and low In 40s and 50s. Chance of a few showers by cr.d ot week. Northern California No rain except scattered thunderstorms in mountains on two or three after noons Temperatures ahove normal inland and near normal on coast. MEDFORD Legislature Nears Over Money Seen steam to carry the state through another year. Confidence Is Reflected Brown's confidence in his "no tax" proposal was reflect ed recently vhn. an incen tive to lawmakers who dis trusted it, he added a 50 per cent forgiveness clause. Un der this, taxpayers could write off 50 per cent of their state income tax in 1964. But the Department of Fi nance has announced that total money bills introduced so far call for $213 million more than Brown has pro posed in his record budget. As expected, the biggest boost among the proposals is' one which would increase finances to education by $71.5 million more than the $30 million in crease Brown has suggested. And the money bills do not include substantial additional appropriations asked for wa ter development and for temporary loans. Leading the fight for more money for education are As sembly Speaker Jesse M. Un run (D-Los Angeles), whose reputed power has not yet been tested openly in the As sembly so far this session; and Senate pro tempore Hugh M. Burns (D-Fresno), whose tax stands have caused Brown worries. Cooper: Following a rain drenched spring, California seemingly was headed at last for summer. Confirming this was an unusual "weather re port" from space. "I can see the California Coastline very well," said astronaut Gordon Cooper as he made his third pass over the Pacific Coast. "The weather is crystal der protest and more to please me than because she likes smart clothes. She's 19 now and has a bookkeeping job in a garage where they let her work as a grease-monkey, too. How about homemaking? The Council! World War II changed a lot of things be. sides maps; one being the line between man's work and woman's work. It was cross ed and now has almost disap peared. Today there are lady barbers, bus drivers, paper hangers, and grave diggers sisters in the sorority of Tug boat Annie and Cluny Brown. No matter how Lucy makes her living, her skill with a wrench may make her more desirable as a woman than her skill with a skillet. The smart fellow who marries her won't come home to a help less little hand-wringer for whom all life stops when a machine conks out. She'll talk back to machines in their own languagee. He'll be glad to set out the dinner and diaper the baby, in exchange. A Miss Fixit, Mrs. R., will not be a Misfit. Diamonds aren't every girl's best friend. Lucy's is a well-tocked too chest. Add a few linens and it will make a hope chest for a hammer happy pair. Sessions on Gifted Students Scheduled Mrs. Dorothy Norris, Cleve land, Ohio, directing super visor of the major work class es, will direct two-week work shops on the gifted at Oregon College of Education, Mon mouth; Southern Oregon col lege, Ashland, and in La Grande. ' The Ashland workshop will be held July 1 through 13. Mrs. Norris's appearance is cosponsored by the state de partment of education and in stitutions of higher education. The workshops will be di rected toward the needs of elementary teachers and ad ministrators. A session in Eu gene at the University of Ore gon, directed by Dr. Leon Lcs singer, assistant superintend ent at Grossmonl, Calif., will explore learning theory in depth for teachers and admin istrators at all levels who have had previous studies in this field. Concert urn It Hedrick Jr. High Auditorium, 1:30 P.M. MAIL TRIBUNE. MECFORD. clear.1 The third pass was al directly over San most Diego. Percodan: A battle was waging between Los Angeles mayor Samuel Yorty and Democratic state committee chairman Eugene Wyman that could be heard as far away as Sacramento. Yorty charged Wyman had influenced the defeat of a bill in the legisla ture that would have required triplicate prescriptions for the drug percodan - which Atty. Gen. Stanley Mosk says is in increasing demand by addicts - as a means of keeping track of who is buying it. Yorty said Wyman had worked as legal counsel for a drug firm which manufac tures percodan. Wyman, who denied he sought any favors, shot back that Yorty was re talliating against the voting of his wife, a member of the Los Angeles city council. Gov. Edmund G. Brown and Mosk released statements sup porting Wyman. Flyer: A fuzzy-haired doll named "Dammit" afixed to the instrument panel as a good luck piece, Mrs. Betty Miller, 36, Santa Monica, be came the first woman to fly solo from California to Aus tralia. Mrs. Miller, a house wife, made her 7,000 mile flight in 51 hours, 38 minutes in a twin-engine, $50,000 plane in a trip that began April 30 In Oakland and end ed May 12 in Brisbane. Mrs. Miller said her great est moment of anxiety came on the last leg of her trip be tween Noumea in New Cale donia and Brisbane, when an engine started to run rough. The engine held on the rest of the way, although Civil Aviation officials in Brisbane placed two planes on alert as a precautionary measure -without telling her lest she be alarmed. Shakeup: The Los Angeles office of the State Department of Motor Vehicles received a new, temporary chief investi gator in a shakeup by the Governor's office that was sparked by a series of grand jury indictments against auto dealers. The grand jury hinted some investigators of the Los Ange les office had not reported questionable sales practices until after the district attor ney had started an investiga tion. Jack L, Johnson, a spec ial investigator at the depart ment's Compton office, was named to temporarily replace Morris Genser, who was sus pended as regional supervisor. Portland Livestock Portland (UP1) (USDAI Cattle 1300; good-choice steers near 10H5 lb. 24; 1150 lb. 23,30; canner cutter cows 11-13.50: hulls Indi vidual commercial 1500 lb. 22. Calves 150; good-choice vealers 28-31. Hogs 400. barrows and gilts early sales 1 and 2 at 200-230 lb, 17: mostly No. 2 at 16-16.50; 2 and 3 grade 250-200 lb. 15. Sheep 3000; spring slaughter lambs high choice - prime 22.25 22.50: mixed choice-prime 21.50 22; shorn slaughter lambs good choice 1, 2 and 3 pelt 03-120 lb. 16.50-17; ewes cull-good at 5. Portland Produce Portland (UPIl Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: AA extra large 39-43C: AA large 30-41c: A large 37-40c; AA medium 32-37C: AA small 26-30c; cartona l-3c higher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints 66c; cartona 3c higher; B prints 65c. Cheese (medium curedl To re tailers: 46-48C; processed American 3-10 lb. loaf. 43-45C Portland (UPIl Drnied chick em No. 1 rnHe rirejM-d to retaileri: Frven, whole drawn. 30 3Bc lb.; cut-up. 3fl-42c lh.; hem ItRht tvpe. whole drawn 22-2flc lh.; light type hens, eut-up 21-28C lb.; heavy whole 3fl-30c lb. Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected stocks: Fund Bid Askrd Bullock 13.47 14.76 Chemical Tund 11.17 Colonial Eneray 12 50 Eaton Howard Stk .... 13 tin Fidelity 16 IS Fundamental . B S4 Group Sec-Avla-Elec .. fl.S Croup Sec-Com Stk .... 13 ,311 Hamilton C7 9 14 Keystone B-3 lfi 71 Kevatnne B-4 10 14 12.1.1 I3.ns 15.11 17.18 10.78 7.63 14 5 62 18 23 II 07 3.74 24.0.1 14 13 16 34 4 67 8 0.1 8 07 2034 8 17 15 02 20 21 7 60 13 61 7 34 8 83 6 32 19.88 Keystone K-J a Keystone S-l 22 0.1 Kevslonc h-z Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 Mass lnv Growth ... National Growth ... . Stocks ... IV . Elec United Accum United Canada United Continental United Income United Science Value Line Varlahle Wellington 12 0.1 14 fin 4 28 ID 7 93 . 18 SI , 7..10 14.17 . 1A ,1! . S US . 12 4.1 . 72 , .1.3.1 . B 7B . 14.58 Tomorrow, Tuesday, May 21 OREGON Small Worlds Around Us By Lynn W. W.tklns Keglstar & Tribune Syndicate, 19(31 Unlike Humans, Animals Live Without Guilty Feeling The man wasn't kidding; he really meant it. He be lieved the birds that visited his property had feelings of guilt. Otherwise, he reason ed, why should they always fly away the minute the man opened the back door? Probably this man wrong ly interpreted animal actions with human actions, applying the old adage "the guilty flee," and naturally arrived at a wrong conclusion. To fly, run, or walk away when caught in a misdeed is, of course, pretty typical of human wrongdoers. Many hu mans, caught in an unlawful act, invariably flee. Their first thought is to get away. The hit and run driver is oft en obsessed to get as far away as possible in the shortest pe riod of time. The guilty do flee, but only when the offen der is human and caught in the act. To protect himself against as well as others of his kind, man has enacted laws where by he attempts to prevent a wrongdoing, or punish the evil one. But most certainly the birds that fly away when approached do not have a feeling of guilt. Actually, they have committed no crime. Rather, it's a lack of trust In those that have the power to destroy them. , Way of Survival The rabbit has no feeling of wrongdoing when it dash es away from danger, real or imagined. It runs away, but it is only a way of survival. It experiences no feeling of guilt, even after nibbling the bark from one of your favor ite trees. It understands no sense of ownership. It falls to associate your tree with your efforts to beautify your prop erty, or to yield to you the fruit it produces. It is mere ly following the dictates of its appetite. Certainly . there is no sin in thai, even when the fuit tree is valuable or be longs to a superior being. The squirrel in the branch es of the hickory or walnut tree is actually not stealing. It, too, is following its age' old custom, as well as the in stinctive compulsion to lay away a little something for what might be a foodless to. morrow. The animals fail pi to NEVER On a Sunday- . ... but every other night BILLY DARE Lives it up with his terrific Combo! Billy Hotel Medford takes pleasure in presenting the most Unusual Personality ever on our stage "Tha guy It i dynimo. Th longer h itayi on tf, tht kHtr ht liktn It. You cn olmoit too him ftnontinf nirgy tatft thin ht can um It. In ihort, Vaiflcoi tint fcaloi thfjfrinos. (Ho'i a good ihowman.) lob Wtltart, Tht Ortgonian. Billy hit bcn fearurad at tht'popular "La llitro" In tho Windy City, "Jack Dinnlton'i" on Hollywood Suntot Strip, "Tht King Arthur Room" In Haw York and "Tho Sahara" In Lat Vcgai, and many othara. Ho lingt in Yiddish, Graak; Frtnch, Italian, Spanlih and Arabic. Norman Taurog will uia Billy In hit nut film and Billy will ting tho titla tong In Libra Productions' "Son of tht Buccanoar," which will bo ihot In ftoma. Sot Billy, Chlco Dtmtki and John Jordan In a Continuous Floor Show Starling 9 p.m. Tonite Hotel Medford New Argument on Cuba Policy Started Washington - OIPO - GOP Chairman William E. Miller started a new argument Sun day with the administration's Cuban policy by asking if President Kennedy planned to abandon the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay. Miller, a New York con gressman, also quoted news reports as saying that "fresh intelligence" showed the Russians were building a na val base at Banes on the north eastern tip of Cuba. He asked Kennedy if such reports were true. Sen. Hubert Humphrey ID- Minn.) replied to Miller's questions by calling them "simple, mischievous n o n- sense, without any foundation whatsoever. He said the GOP leader was engaging in "monkey business and she nanigans to spread doubt and confusion when he has no facts." Humphrey said that "ap parently the GOP strategy is to raise doubts" about Cuba and then demand "that the President set the doubts to rest." realize that all these things were once theirs, and now man had claim to all things and is jealous of what he con siders his own. Ownership of any object Is alien to its nature as well as Impossible. A feeling of guilt never bothers Its head. Nature has always provided, and the animal can see no reason why there should be a change. So when he grabs an ear of corn from the farmer's cornfield and runs, he is not hurrying from the scene of a crime. Rather, he is just hurrying home to save a little some thing for tonight's supper, or tomorrow's dinner. , Seek Escape Why , shouldn't they run these little creatures guilty of no crime other than want ing to live? They are not gull ty; they must run, fly or hurry only to escape. Survival de pends on their alertness and ability to be somewhere else when man enters the area where they are. To flee is merely a precautionary meas ure and not because they are caught in a misdeed. Of course they "run scared. They have learned a sad les son from their near associa tion with manklng and have found that distance alone can save them It was Mark Twain who spoke a great truth when said: "I never knew an am mat that craved, or needed to I to. Dare MONDAY. MAY 20. Sheriff, Deputies Four representatives of the Jackson county sheriffs of- j flee have been attending law enforcement meetings the last few days. Detective Bjarne Bjornsen and Sgt. Dean DeBerry re turned this week end from I the annual Western Crime i conference In Boise, Ida., May I IS, 16 and 17. Representatives of federal, state and local police agencies ! discussed known criminals and pooled information on! major crimes. Such informa tion helped the Jackson coun ty sheriff's office to appre hend two men on burelarv charges last year. states represented were those of the Pacific North west, the province of British Columbia and Idaho, Nevada, North Dakota, and Utah. Sheriff De Armond Leigh and Undershriff Paul Bettiol attended the Oregon Sheriff's association meeting in Ore gon City Friday. Plans for the National Sheriff's conference for Portland this summer were discussed further and proposed state legislation of interest to law enforcement I departments. Bettiol noted that Idaho uo- llce chiefs and sheriffs will be tied in with Oregon on a teletype network soon and 65 Washington stations in Aug ust. Six-Hour Minimum Of Sleep Required banta Monica, Calif. -(UPP- The hours of slumber needed for a good night's sleep may vary from one person to the next but there is a minimum requirement, reports Dr. Na thaniel Kleitman. It is around six hours and sleeping longer seems not to add to alertness or efficiency. Dr. Kleitman reported in the Journal of the American Med ical association. "If you can wake up spontaneously at the usual rising time and feel alert the afternoon, he said, 'you have met your minimum requirement of nightly sleep." TO ATTEND DINNER Beverly Hills, Calif. - (DPI) - President Kennedy will at tend a $1,000 a couple din ner here with producers, ex ecutives and other top enter tainment figures during his June visit to Southern Cali fornia. he 'ROM THE UMEUTERS This new addition to the fabulous Umeliters' repertoire is possibly the most important album by this amazing group. Truly thrilling folk hymns. Naturally you want itl LPMLSP-2588 in Living Stereo and Monaural Hi-Fi RCA VICTOR At LSP.2547 tyft? IMsASMiM -the UMEUTERS appearing In Person Tuesday, May 21 8:30 P.M. ' At Hedrick Jr. Hi Auditorium Tickets $2.50 $3.50 available at Puruekar's Records by tha hundreds! You'll find all your faveritt albums in eur record department "" the largest and most complete ll In So. Oregon & Northern California )L DIIDIIfMfETn A 11 Attend Meeting lnformation-773-7323 LAST TWO NITES CO-FEATURE COPS CO AIRBORNi! mm m,t . m mm ni m GATES OPEN 8:00 P.M. Show Starrs st Dulk LAST TWO NITIS llllllllllllllllllllll mi get LPMLSP-Hrt M ft 'f IHIMM 1S63 WFFA8LE ' l'Jr V CHARACTER , M ' ft EXPLODES I . v 4 I ACROSS THE ' 2 - JLJ SCREEN! t 'JLmPU' 11 ' AVt .fwMastroiannilfc VJO'vorceJr Vw ItalianStyle I- PLUS -PSEtJ(IMIN Ptniiiiid bi warnir mno: Q 7 I UIIUVIIB-Il MUSIC HOUSE 11 1 No. Central Phone 773-7538 , GEWfcwr"' MtCOMHTf