Rogue Valley Edition Page 2A
MEDFORDifTRIBUNE
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1963
Foreign
Briefs
REMAINS OF VIKING FORTRESS FOUND
Oilo. Norway-UI'li-Archeologisls havt found the remains
of a larg Viking fortress and traces of giant Viking imps at
Nesna in northern Norway. Some of the eight ihipi at the lite
were estimated to be more than 90 feet long and 18 feet wide.
TUNISIAN MISSION TO DISCUSS AFRICA
Tunis, Tunisia-lUI'luTunisian Foreign Minister Mongi Slim
said Monday night his mission to the United Nations will
disculs Portuguese colonies and South Atnca with several
African nations. Slim laid the racial situation it becoming
more grave in those areas.
BRITISH SOLDIERS TO TRAIN IN OKLAHOMA
London-Wli-The British War Office said today British sol
diers will train at Fort Sill, Okla., next month. The 791h com
mando battery is scheduled to undergo training at the U.S.
Army artillery school.
LEONE'S PARTY TO GET CHAIRMANSHIPS
Rome-WCli-Italy's center-left parlies have agreed to give
Premier Giovanni Leone s Christian Democrats the chair
manships of at least 10 of the 14 chamber of deputy commit,
lees, informed sources said today.
Strike-Threatened
Rails Pave Way
In Higher Market
New York-IIOT-Stocks mov
ed higher today.
The slrike-threalened rails,
which have been setting the
pace for most of the market s
activity recently, once again
paved the way. The feeling
among most brokers has been
that the government will in
tervene and avert a nation
wide carrier strike.
Southern Railway, Soo
Lines, Chicago & North West
em, Louisville & Nashville,
Norfolk & Western and Illi
nois Central provided the best
gains.-'
Finance shares moved high
er after Undersecretary Rob
ert V. Roosa, speaking before
the House-Senate Economics
Committee, failed to change
an impression left Monday by
Treasury Secretary Dillon,
that a boost In the Federal
Reserve System's d i a count
rale is possible.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
New York - Oll'l) - Dow
Jones final stock averages!
30 industrials 714.09, up
3.43) 20 railroads 174.25, up
2.18) IS utilities 139.49, up
0.29, and 65 stocks 2SB.93,
up 1.56. Sales Tuesday
were about 3.83 million
shares compared with 3.29
million shares Monday.
Tuesday's prioel on selected
storks:
Allied Chemical SO's
AUun Co Am ., J
American Air Lines ill la
American Can - t
American Motors Jl
AT&T Ut.
American Tobacco 'y
Aiuiconda Copper - -
Armco JU
American Standard . 17
Bcndlx Corp - Bl;a
Bethlehem steel so;,
BoelllB Air - SJJa
Ciilerplllur Corp
Chrysler Corp "Ha
Coca Cola - I"
c. B. s - a "f
Columbia Caa - aj'i
Continental Can j' ,
Crown Zcllerbach ""'.4
Crucible Steel 21
Curllu Wrlht 31 Vj
Dow Chemical "
DO Pont
Eaatman Kodak l"8'i
Flrentone - M'
Ford - . Bal)i
General Electric '
General Foods BX'i
General Motors 101
r.enernl Portland Cement al'i
Geomta Pacllic , .12 4
Greyhound i
Gulf Oil - JI'
HomoBtnke
Idaho Power M'l
1 B.M ",
Inl Pnir 2fl
Johns Manvllle Tj
Kennecotl Copper M'.
Lockheed Aircraft .. Sti 'l
Martin .. '""a
Merck .. tl.1
Montana Power aH
Montsomerv ward -.. "
Nutlrtnnl RLruit ... S3
New York Central 21 1,
Northern Natural Gas 01
Northern Pacllle - 4H
Pc Gaa Elec 3l'k
Penney J. C. .........
Pcnn rm
Permanente Cement (xdl in1!
Phillip.' S31:
Procter Gamble . 7H';
Tlarllo Corporation "TO " U
Richfield oil
Kurcurav HO
Santa Fe .. 211
Seara .. "0
Shell Oil 44 H
Sm-onv Mohll Oil 1"
Southern Co M'k
Southern Pacific J"
Snerry Rand ...t 1.1
standard California H.I
Standard Indiana Ml7.
Mandnrd N. J. .. film
Sun Mines 12
Tcxaa Co 721'.
Texas Gulf Sulfur ., 13
Tcxua Pacific Land Truat .... 2:114
Thloko aai
Trnna America 31
Trana World Air .. IT;.
Trl-Conllnonnlal 46
Union Curhido 104
Union Pacific 4)
United Aircraft 4e'ii
United Air Lines 37
U.S. Plywood Bflii
U.S. Rubber 46
U.S. Steel 47
United Utllltlca 381,
Weat Bank Corp 40 1.
WcstintfhouKe 361
Key Points o(
Brown's Program
Meet Trouble
Sacramento -(UPD- Gov. Ed
mund G. Brown today sent
his new tax and annndino
proposals to the legislature
but key points were in deep
irouDle already.
At the second dav nf the
speclul session:
Brown's tHX reform pro
gram, containing five major
points, was Introduced In the
Senate by Sen. Virgil O'Sulll-
van (D-WilllamsV It would
boost the state's tax takn hv
SI47.3 million durns the
current fiscal year.
The flovernor'a nronnsnrl
$114.4 million hiirluct mm.
mcntution was Inlrnrinrnri In
the Senate by Sen. Stephen
icale (D-West Point), fi.
nance committee chairman,
and in the assemhlv hv Ac.
semblyman Robert W. Crown
UJ-A lamcda), WBys and
means chairman.
Assembly Renubllcan ri.
nowed their stand against a
wiinnoidlng tax provision.
Caucus chairman Don Mul
ford of Piedmont said flatly:
wo n light it all the way "
Oregon Accidents
Take Three Lives
By United Press International
lnree Dersona Inul thn p
lives In SCDaratn acclriom. In
Oregon Monday.
Mrs. Rebecca Roomer, 18,
Sllverton, was killed In a
mree-car accident on State
Highway 213 about 10 mil
east of Sutem.
Steven Hill. 7 n.
drowned while swimming
alone in the Row river 14
miles southeast of Cottage
urovc. He was the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Hill of Do
rcna. Eddie Tcague, 18, Yoncalla,
was fatally Injured when he
fell from horse while riding
with his father on the family
ranch,
Greek Royalty in London; Clash Breaks Out
London - (lira - King Paul I
and Queen Frederika' of
Greece arrived today on a
controversial state visit that
sparked a clash near Bucking
ham Palace between units of
their massive guard force and
demonstrators against their
rule.
The demonstrators, demand
ing the release of political
prisoners in Greece, pushed
their way through police and
armed sailors massed shoul-
dcr-to-shouldcr as the Greek
royal couple rode in open car
riages past spectators stand
ing six deep.
One of the greatest security
forces in modern British his
tory was mobilized to protect
the royal couple and to pre
vent a recurrence of disor
ders last spring that saw a
group of leftist demonstrators
chase Queen Frederika down
a dead-end London street. The
Queen was forced to take re-
Missing Mountain Climbers Sought
'Pushing' of Liquor
Brand Investigated
OlyniDia. Wash.- IUPII -Atty
Gen. John J. O'Conncll said
Monday that his office is in
vestigating charges that i
state liquor store clerk has
broken the law by trying to
"push" the sales of certain
brands of beverages.
O'Connell said his prelim.
lnary investigation indicated
that only one clerk, an em
ployee of the Mountlake Ter
race store, was Involved,
The attorney general did
not name the clerk.
Gov. Albert Rosellinl said if
the reports turned out to be
correct, the individuals Involv
ed "should be vigorously
prosecuted to the limit of the
law."
State law requires liquor
. slore clerks to be completely
impartial In their handling
of all brands. They are even
forbidden from telling a
housewife which type of wine
would go best with the din
ner she Is planning.
'Sno' Boy' Search
Enters Last Day
MiamWUPli -Navy and Coast
Guard planes today began the
Inst day of a hopeless search
for the fishing boat "Sno'
Boy" apparently lost with 4U
persons aboard In Caribbean
waters,
The search began when the
64-foot vessel failed to report
after leaving Kingston, Ja
maica, July 1 for Northeast
Cay, 80 miles away. Since
then rescue squads have
found one unidentified body,
raft and pieces nf debris
from the blue and while boat.
The Navy said it would call
off the search after today.
Nine crew members and 31
Jamaican fishermen were on
the vessel when It left fur
Northeast Cay in the Pedro
Banks fishing grounds to the
south. Skipper of the ill-fated
ship was identified as Lewis
Tolo, an Australian.
Concrete, Wash. (UPD - A
search has begun for two Port
land mountain climbers re
ported missing In the Bould
er Ridge area of Mt. Baker,
north of here.
The two have been identi
fied as Dr. Rudolf Engel and
Mrs. Harriet Osborne. Engel
is an associate professor of
pediatrics at the University of
Oregon Medical School at
Portland.
Searchers, led by members
of the Search and Mountain
Rescue Council, were expect-
to
ed to hike into the area
look for the pair today.
The Whatcom county sher
iff's office said Engel and
Mrs. Osborne were in a party
of 10 Mazamas, a Portland
climbing organization, which
went into the Boulder Ridge
area Thursday to climb Mt.
Baker. ;,
The climb was called off
Saturday , because of bad
weather. Other members of
the group returned home Sun
day, but Engel and Mrs. Os
borne remained behind and
apparently became lost. '.
fuge in the apartment of an
American actress.
Today's demonstrators wore
black sashes with emblems of
white painted on to protest
the continued confinement of
nearly 1,000 political prison
ers in Greek jails.
Area Students
Make Honor Roll
Fourteen students from the
Medford area made the spring
term honor roll at Oregon
State university, Corvallis.
To be eligible for honor roll
listing, students must make at
least a B-plus average for the
term.
Medford area students on
the honor roll include: Jeffrey
C. Anhorn, Ronald D. Lamb,
and Alice A. Thompson, Cen
tral Point; Laurence R. Mon
gold, Eagle Point; Larry An
derson, Karen J. Culbertson,
Tommy R. Hensley, Kenneth
R. Wise, Anne L. McDuffee,
Robert T. Elmer, Frank E.
Balch, Glenn C. Gratsinger,
Nicholas F. Gier, and Robert
L. Steele, Medford.
Terry Chandler, secretary
of the militant "Committee of
100," which had announced it
would protest the Greek royal
visit, claimed he was charg
ed by a police horse and
thrown across the pavement."
The demonstrators contrast
ed with a party of Greek girls
near the palace who wore
their national costumes and
cheered the Greeks as they
rode by Queen Elizabeth and
Prince Philip en route from
London's Victoria Station.
The clash was the only one
to break out during the 10
minute royal ride to the
palace under a brilliant sum
mer sun.
Most of those in the crowds
lining the route either cheer
ed politely or watched in sil
ence. There were isolated
jeers and cat-calls.
Queen Elizabeth and Philip
went to Victoria Station to
meet the Greek royal couple
who had arrived earlier at
Gatwick Airport and took the
train from there to the heart
of London.
Spokesmen for demonstra
tors demanding freedom for
Greek political prisoners
warned they planned to picket
Buckingham Palace and any
where else King Paul and
Queen Frederika appear dur
ing their four-day state visit.
Reports said that Scotland
Yard officials learned of a
plot to halt the two monarchs'
train ride from the airport.
London newspapers report
ed that three Greek-Cypriot
Communists landed in London
recently and were being
watched closely by the Yard.
The scheduled visit aroused
controversy from its incep
tion. Ban-the-bombers Earl
Bertrand Russell of the "Com
mittee of 100" and Canon
John Collins, leader of the
"Campaign for Nuclear Dis
armament," joined several
Labor party members of Par
liament in opposing the trip.
In Greece, the government
fell because of it. Former
Premier Constantine Caram
anlis warned that any vio
lence during the state visit
could injure Anglo-Greek re-
BPA Expansion Block Attempted
Washington-IUPD-Rep. John
P. Salyor (R-Pa.j, sought Mon
day to block extension of the
Bonneville Power Administra
tion marketing area into
southern Idaho.
Saylor, who attacked the
BPA as a "public power oc
topus," introduced a resolu
tion calling upon Interior
Secretary Stewart L. Udall to
revoke a recent order mak
ing the extension.
The ranking minority mem
ber of the House Interior
Committee told the House that
the extension would cost tax
payers some $5.5 million a
year.
He said the extension was
an effort to expand "the fed
eral power empire" and call
ed upon Congress to place
territorial limitations on the
BPA in the same way it lim
ited the Tennessee Valley
Authority.
"The Bonneville Power Ad
ministration seems to be re
placing the TVA as the na
tion's number one public pow
er octopus," he declared.
lations and urged King Paul
to call it off. He resigned
when Paul refused.
Subscribers
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Phone
772-6128
for
The greatest underwater
range of mountains Is the mid
Atlantic ridge which stretches
from Iceland almost to the
Antarctic.
Corvair 700 Club Coupe
The hardest part about parking a Corvair is finding a nickel
That may be a slight overstatement, but such jaunti
ness, comes easily when you're a Corvair owner.
And you can usually back it up aseasily as you
can back up a Corvair. You'll find yourself doing that
occasionally, if only to adjust the brakes they're
self-adjusting. That's all there is to it, and that's a
good example of how delightfully easy Corvair is to
own, drive and maintain.
But since we began by talking about driving, let's
stick with that awhile. A large factor in the fun
of driving a Corvair is the location of its engine in the
a,
AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERS
rear. Why the rear? It gives Corvair extra traction
on any road surface. It provides a nearly flat floor '
for more useable interior space. Best of all, it
produces steering so light, so responsive, you wonder
why no other American-made car thought of it.
Corvair's engine is also air cooled, we might add,
which means there's no antifreeze or water for you
to add. Ever.
All that pleasure from something so practical
almost makes you think Corvair is unique among
American cars. Which isn't surprising, because it is!
CHECK HIS TNT DEALS ON CHEVROLET, CHEVY II, CORVAIR AND CORVETTE
COURTESY CHEVROLET
9TH & BARTLETT
MEDFORD
PHONE 772-6115
I)