Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 30, 1963, Image 4

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FRIDAY. AUGUST 31. 1
Niinlt mil Tuisuirt. totbrotD. okegon
lTryons la Boutnern Oregon
J. Tk. Mall Trihtlfl."
Published Daily except Saturday by
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
13 North Fir 8t, Ph.77a-1X
ROBERT W RUHL. Editor
HERB GREY Advertising Manager
GERAU) T LATHAM. Bui. Mgr
ERIC w A1XZN JR, Mm. Editor
EARL H ADAMS, City Editor
HARRY CH1PMAN. Teleg Editor
RICHARD JEWETT, Sport! Editor
OUVE STARCHER Women's Edltoi
DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr
An Indeoendent Newspapei
Entered second class matter at
Medford. Oregon under Act of
March 3, 1897
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By MU In Advene
Daily end Sunday 1 year tM.M
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Daily and Sunday 3 mo. 5.00
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Single Copy (Mailed! 10
By carrier And Motor Bout.
Daily and Sunday 1 year 121.00
Dally and Sunday J mo. L7S
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Official Paper of City of Magford
Offltlal Paper of Jackson County
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run Leased Wire
V. PJJlepJvotoNewspteturea
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rumiHiiti
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tt ATI ON At fOITOIIAl
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Publishers Association
Flight o' Time
Medford and Jackson County
History from th files of Th
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40
and 50 year go.
10 YEARS AGO
August 30, 1S4.3 (Thursday)
A group of Jackson county
small businesses, headed by
Frank Koch, Central Point,
have joined the Roseburg
Chamber of Commerce In op
posing a 20 per cent rate in
crease by the California Ore
gon Power company.
A motion to dissolve a tem
porary order in the case of
the State Air Pollution
authority vs. F. L. Somers,
Medford, and the Central
Heating company, Eugene,
was filed in Jackson county
circuit court.
tO YEARS AGO
August 30, 1143 (Monday)
Mexican brothers fined $10
each for knife brawl in local
beer parlor.
From Arthur Pcrry'g "Ye
Smudge Pot" column: "A Gal
lup poll of local juveniles
shows them about as enthus
iastic over the opening of
school as Italy favors peace,
except on her own terms and
when ready."
10 YEARS AGO
August 30, 1933 (Wadnttday)
John Cupp purchases
MF&H furniture stock.
County to restrict relief to
those unable to perform labor.
40 YEARS AGO
August 30, 1943 (Thursday)
Check shows daily average
of 7.611 autos use Main st.
crossing.
Lightning starts fires in Sis
kiyou range.
SO YEARS AGO
August 30, 1913 (Saturday)
L. G. Bishop forced to walk
from Crater Lake to Fort
Klamath when horse dies.
Don (Pinkey) Rader, Med
ford boy, farmed to Lincoln
of Western baseball league by
Chicago White Sox.
What's Your I.Q.?
NiM r ten cerrect Is tuirt
r sight It escellsnt; fir r
art it geed.
1. Was Leif Ericson inven
tor of the first submarine, a
Norse explorer or a Swedish
prize winner?
2. Is Rugby a French, Eng
lish, or Norwegian football
game?
3. What Is the Roman num
eral for zero?
4. What proverb expresses
the directly contrary thought
to: "You can t teach an old
dog new tricks"?
5. Was Nathaniel Greene a
military leader in the Revolu
tionary War, War of 1812, or
Civil War?
6. What river marks the
greater part of the southern
boundary of the U.S.?
7. Did the U.S. flag ever
have more than 13 stripes?
8. Who has been the young
est man to become President
f the U.S.?
9. Name ths Indian Chief
tfhv tet the Eieux Indians in
fcatt-I asataot Cuatef et iho
ItHle Bg Iter rtwr.
Mk Win sMm fa twusste
o the iwrtft by it OJtoaa
river?
AngnMew-4. ft taujiteaasm,
1. English. 3. Tim rwa
. nartr too old to learn.
I. Revolution. 6. Rio Gran)
7. Yes. t. Theodora Rootevell,
42. V Sitting Bull. 10. Kn-ruck.
New Constitution Still Alive
Mrs. Bonnie Phillips, in a talk the other day,
declared that the proposed new Oregon Consti
tution "is not dead.
She is right. It isn't. It suffered a severe set
back when the senate failed to permit the people
to vote on it, but the set-back was not fatal.
An unofficial, non-partisan group entitled the
"Citizens (Jommittee tor Constitutional Kevi
sion," which is co-chairmaned by former Gover
nors Charles A. Sprague (Republican) and Rob'
ert Holmes (Democrat) is determined that the
voters ultimately will have a chance to approve
or reject a revised Constitution.
THE REASONS for this are well-known, and
stem from the fact that the state's present
Constitution is bulky, unwieldy, in many ways
outmoded or obsolete, and in need of revision.
At a recent meeting of the executive commit
tee of this group, it was decided to attempt to
initiate a vote on a revised document. ihe ver
sion to be presented will be determined by mem
bers of the original Constitutional Revision Com
mission, plus the co-chairmen of the Legislature's
joint committee on constitutional revision Pep.
John Dellenback and Sen. Walter Pearson.
It was also decided to raise funds for legal
expenses if it is challenged in the courts.
NE QUESTION had to be resolved before the
decision to attempt the initiative method was
made. This was the legal question of whether an
entire new document could be placed on the
ballot via initiative petitions.
The question is not all black-or-white, and
legal authorities disagree. One school of thought
holds that Constitutional amendments can be
initiated, but that a whole new Constitution does
not constitute "an amendment," and therefore
cannot be initiated.
The other school of thought is that the people
are the final and supreme authority in govern
ment, and that if they choose to adopt a new Con
stitution, no one is going to say them nay.
The committee relied on the second theory.
fpHERE are still formidable barriers to over
A come. First is obtaining agreement on which
version of the proposed Constitution is to be used
the one drawn up by the Revision Commission,
the one which emerged from the House commit
tee, or the one adopted by the Senate committee.
It will take some pulling and hauling, and
some compromising, to achieve this agreement.
Secondly there is the task of obtaining
enough signatures to have the document put on
the ballot. Third is defending it in court, if it
is challenged.
And finally is the task of convincing the vol
ers that (a) the old Constitution is outmoded
and (b) the proposed version is a better one.
rpHE COMMITTEE will work closely with the
1 the League of Women Voters on all of these
chores. The League has long had Constitutional
revision as one of its aims, and these women are
a tower of strength in educating and informing
the public on issues of the day.
There is, then, a long road ahead. But the
cause of Constitutional revision has already come
a long way in the past 10 or 15 years, and, as
there is no tearing hurry, tho.se who believe the
job must be done can take all the time necessary.
One of these years, we believe, the people will
vote on a new Constitution, and cither then, or
subsequently, will adopt it as the basic, charter
of state government. L.A.
Fast, Cool Summer
Along about this time of the year it is our
usual custom to write a little piece hailing the
advent of fall. We arc usually inspired to do so
when, early some morning, tnc smell in the air
has a tang and zip to it which is more autumnal
than summerish.
We have been frustrated in this, so far this
year. For how can one celebrate the impending
arrival of autumn if one isn't even sure that sum
mer has arrived?
Oh, we're not complaining, mind you. The
weather for the past three months has been ut
terly delightful. But it hardly qualifies for the
title of summer, except by those who believe that
the seasons are governed by the calendar instead
of the six senses.
DERHAPS that's one reason it has gone so fast.
No sooner were the kids out of school, or so
it seems, than it is lime to start preparing for
school again.
And what happened to all those lazy (or pro
ductive) week ends that we were anticipating
hours of loafing, or fishing, or snoozing in the
sun, or redding up the yard, or painting the side
of the house where it is peeling?
Whatever happened to them, they're gone,
and here it is almost Labor Day again already.
And Christmas is only days away. E.A.
Jacksonville Featured
It was a pleasure to see the full-page spread
which King Features Syndicate published and
distributed to 90 newspaiers in all parts of the
nation last week. A smaller version of it was
printed in the Mail Tribune Tuesday.
This is the kind of recognition which cannot
b prvhd. And it may be helpful in the lone
priX wmeumes discouraging task of convincing
PMiw including' scmie Jacksonvuhans that
thv town is worthy showcase of our western
heritage, (jTigritin preservation and, in some
cases, restoration: E.A. 1
You Mrh?'
Do
Pressures Building Up for Increased
Trade Between West and Iron Curtain
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign Nw Analyst
Partly as result of the new
partial nuclear test ban
treaty, partly as result of
long-standing pressures, there
is today in-
creasing talk
of a vast new
buildup in
East -West
trade. The
United States
I t I has admitted
I Jji I it is review
I 'f I ing its poli-
N..,m lowara
C o m m unist-
bloc nations. For years under
Nikita Khrushchev the Soviet
Union has pressed for in
creased trade with Western
nations and has protested es
pecially the Western ban on
strategic materials which cov
ers far more than the question
of guns or rockets.
For the West, the more
cautious advise that the nuc
lear test ban treaty by itself
constitutes no real break
through in East-West relations
and that in Germany, for ex
ample. Soviet demands have
not been reduced in the
slightest.
There also is the question of
doing business with and help-
Strictly Personal
By Sydnoy i. Ka.ris
(ct Field Enterprlsoi. inc.
Communications
Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer.
althouah under certain circumstances the us of a ocn name or initial
for publication It permissible. The Mall Tribune reserves the rlaht to
dlt all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letter
submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters
printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of tr
paper. In fact the contrary it often th case.
Lav Colds Alon
To the Editor: The Food and
Drug Administration an
nounced recently that they
proposed banning more than
50 "cold cure" prescription
drugs after a team of leading
medical scientists found that
the antibiotics have no effect
whatsoever on the common
cold.
It is fortunate that the anti
biotics did prove ineffective,
and here is why: In the first
place, there a c t u a 1 1 y is no
"cure" for the common cold
for the very good reason that
the cold itself is the cure for
what Is wrong in the system.
It is a cleansing process which
should never be interfered
with. This common "afflic
tion" is nature's method of
lowering an existing toxic
level in the first stages, allow
ing the individual to "clean
house" before some really
serious disorder develops.
Drug treatment causes colds
to become chronic because it
stops nature's eliminating ef
forts, jeopardizing health and
life itself. Dr. W. H. Craves
warns that the drug is far
more dangerous than the cold.
Properly managed, a cold is
never dangerous. A cold is
not a disease, but an intelli
gent bodily reaction. It is one
of the finest examples of Ihe
way in which naure works lo
keep the body in health. When
waste accumulates in the
body, the natural reaction is
to try to dispose of it by de
vices such as the creation of
a fever or skin eruption or
resorting to germ activity lo
bring about vicarious elimina
tion through the mucous mem
branes.
The Nth degree of lunacy
is readied in the ordinary
treatment of colds. Millions of
dollars are spent annually on
salves, pills, drops to be
squirted into the nose, and
dozens of other equally sense
less "remedies." They might
just as well be rubbed on
the doorknob because they
bear no relation whatever lo
colds. When a cold develops
there is only one sensible
thing lo do. Stop a'l solid
food to help along the cleans
ing process until all symptoms
have disappeared.
Lydia Burnham
R14 Warne St.,
Prescotl, Ariz.
Picnic Goert
To the Editor: We are won
dering what happened to the
news in the Tribune about the
family picnic. At least 1500
people showed up. After a
very liberal repast and all Ihe
cold drinks anyone wanted
the fun started. It was like
a three ring circus, gold pan
ning, bicycle racing and con
tests all going on. Later horse
shoe racing started.
Our club is all set to lake
first place again next year for
having the most people out
to represent their club. We
had 90 this year. Let's see a
write up about this picnic,
that the Democratic Commit
tee put on. We look some Re
publicans with us and all had
a merry lime.
Rulh Bishop
Security Benefit Club
Medford
Huemuls it Skunks
To the Editor: I never knew
wot a huemul wuz until I
read about one In the Tribune.
I thought a huemul wuz a
camel, but It wuz a South
American deer wot won't run
from hunters, and that's wot
I wuz looking for. An Amer
ican deer starts runnin' two
days before the season opens
and I can't hit a deer with
that much head start. I
couldn't hit one if we got an
even start. I could hit any
thing wot wuz standing still,
like a barn door, a garage
door, plate glass window,
horse troughs and rocks. Ev
erything wot could run would
run under the old Brush car,
skunks, porcupines, jackrab
bits, dogs, black cats and
squirrels. It ain't much fun
to run over a porcupine with
thin tires, but it's a lot better
than having a skunk run un
der your car and you ain't got
no windows. OH YEAH!
Everett Acklin
Ashland, Ore.
DESCRIPTIONS
Have you ever thought of
the utlcr impossibility of de
scribing someone you are par
ticularly close
to, or espec
ially fond of?
It simply can
not be done
without
sounding
vague, stupid,
insipid and
quite super
ficial. When
Barn an out-of-town
friend the other day asked
me what my middle daughter
is like, I suddenly became
banal and tongue-tied, mum
bling something like, "Good
sport . . . tall for her age . . .
Cod Approved
To the Editor: The enclosed
is a copy of a letter sent to
the Board of Education of
Medford School District 54!)-
C. I think it concerns a ma
jor problem in our schools
and would appreciate your
printing it in your paper.
Please do nol print my name,
I do not wish to embarrass my
daughter. Thank you.
(Name on Filr
Medford.
O
Board of Education
School District 549-C
Medford.
Gentlemen: Congratulations,
and many thanks for your
good judgment in supplying
Ihe Medford Senior High
with a good code of ethics
this year. But let's nt.i slop
there, or should I say let's
not start there. The Junior
High is in dire need of the
same thing. I have a daughter
just entering (he Senior High
this year and she feels it is
quite a blow to get toned
down, after having so much
freedom, so lev sy-eak. in the
Junior High.
Do you realize how hard
it is for parents who do not
approve of t h e short, short
skirts, outlandish hair styles,
and enough make-up for the
stage, to keep their teenagers
in tow when "Everyone else
does it." They leave the house
in the mornings looking de
cent and within reason, only
to reach school and head
straight for the girls room,
to hike up the skirts, re-do the
hair, and add the final touch
of make-up, so they do not
look like the same "squares
that left home a few minutes
earlier.
I hope the teachers and the
principal "stick to their Kuns"
and enforce these simple and
long needed rules of dress.
Please, please make tnem
keep their faces clean, comb
their hair and definitely keep
those skirts down. I'm sure
that the majority of the par
ents are behind you 100 per
cent.
School has not yet begun
and there is still time to mim
eograph these few wearing ap
parel rules for the Junior
High, loo. It's easier not to
begin a bad habit, than it is
to break one already started.
Sincerely,
IL
JL
m
i
Pipe Dream
To the Editor: When Khru
chshev says the workers will
"bury" capitalism, he shows
himself to be, like all Social
ists, a wishful thinker, a false
prophet.
Slalin may have started out
as an idealist, but as soon as
he arrived at the point where
he look the helm of the Rus
sian slate affairs, he recog
nized thai there was no ideal
ism in international politics.
Al the meeting in Yalta,
someone spoke of the power
of the Pope. Stalin quipped
"How many divisions has the
Pope got?"
As of now. with an atomic
stalemate between the two
hostile camps, diplomacy and
the spoken word can, in the
course of time, effect great
changes in international rela
tions. But as to a takeover by
the workers as managers of
our economy, that is just a
pipe dream.
Could il be that comrade
Khrush and comrade Tito
smoked a pipe together and
had that kind of a dream?
John E. Ring
1049 West 11th st.
Medford.
swims like a fish . . . nice
kid."
But if we are asked about
someone we dislike or resent,
the words come tumbling out
of our mouths almost faster
than the brain can form them.
We know (or think we
know) exactly why certain
personalities offend us; we are
mostly in the dark about the
magic chemistry that pro
duces not only love but also a
sense of closeness and companionship.
This ttrang disparity it
not limited to our feelings
about people: it includes
things as well. Although I
have little interest in it my
self, I know that ihe aver
age fisherman, for instance,
achieves a deep spiritual
satisfaction from hit sport,
which has Utile to do with
th number or til of fish
he has caught.
Yet no fisherman can put
into adequate words his
sense of "wholeness" or
serenity while fithing, and
the reasons usually given
are obvious, trivial and
lame.
This stammering man,
however, can explain with
voluble accuracy why he
despises golf, or bridge, or
driving a car in traffic.
Deep positive emotions
cannot be verbalized
which is why to many mil
lions of bad love-poems
and love-songs are perpe
trated year after year. With
the utmost of sincerity (and
even with contiderable tal
ent), we become mawkish
babblers when trying to
convey tuch feelings.
II is no accident that al
most every young writer be
gins his career with comedy
and satire and scorn and
malicious wit directed against
society. Even Shakespeare
began this way; the plays in
which profound love dom
inates came much later in his
career, and it took the sum
mil of his genius to carry
them off successfully, as. in
the incomparable "King
Lear."
Music is a greater art than
literature to me, precisely be
cause it embraces a wider
range of human feelings than
the spoken word. I cannot
help agreeing with Pater that
"music is the art to which all
the other arts aspire," for in
it the form and the content
are utterly the same.
The right movement of a
Mozart concerto might make
you feel what my daughter is
like, but I can only tell you
that she is tall for her age
and swims like a fish.
ine to build a system frank
ly dedicated to destruction of
the Western democracies and
their economies.
Within both blocs there are
important pressures beyond
the political.
In the Soviet Union and
its satellites there is an in
creasing demand for an in
crease in the standard of liv
ing and the supply of con
sumer goods after years of
hardship. And as the Soviet
bloc has increased its own
output of both manufactured
and raw materials there is an
increasing need for outlets.
Among the satellites, en
joying a period of respite
from hard Moscow control,
there also is a spirit of inde
pendence demanding free
dom to develop their own
economies, including in
creased Western contact.
Among the latter, Romania
offers an excellent example.
The Romanians not only have
increased their trade faster
with the West than with their
Communist-bloc partners but
also have shown marked re
luctance to join the integrat
ed economic program advo
cated by Moscow.
Among the Western na
tions, with production capac
ity in some cases outdistanc
ing markets, there is a grow
ing temptation to dip into th
"oceans" of trade promised by
Khrushchev.
German and British mer
chants have been particularly
restive under U.S. demands
for strict enforcement of tha
ban on shipment of strategic
materials.
Under pressure of the West
German government, German
merchants finally cancelled a
deal to supply pipelines lo
the Russians.
The British government
showed no such inclination.
The British also are interest
ed in exchange of ships for
oil.
The West Germans do some
S600 million a year in trade
with the Soviets, the British
more than $300 million. U.S.
trade with Russia is only
about $35 million.
While admitting the risks,
advocates of a revision of Al
lied trade policies argue that
increased contacts with Com
munist regimes mean greater
opportunities lo wield influ
ence. Increased trade with thn
satellites, they say, nol only
should weaken the bloc as a
whole but also decrease de
pendence of the satellites on
the whims of the Kremlin.
Hope Is Such t "3l
A Fragile Thing
By Arthur Hoppe tSmJ'A
In the Day's News
By FRANK JENKINS
Washington - They are
holding the historic hearings
on the test ban treaty in the
caucus room of the old Sen
ate office building. It is a
big room with maroon car
pets, Corinthian columns and
crystal chandeliers. Each day,
as you enter, its cool dignity
impresses you anew after the
soupy summer heal outside.
Across one end of the room
is a huge mahogany table,
perhaps 40 feet long and six
feet wide. Behind this are 27
high-backed leather chairs for
the Senators. Facing them is
the witness's chair and to
each side of that the long
press tables. In the rear are
100 or so folding chairs for
the public. Nol a sound from
the hot, noisy world outside
penetrates the dimness.
In front of each Senator's
place sits a microphone, a
glass of iced water and a
copy of the treaty itself. II
is 1500 words long, its lan
guage simple, its meaning
clear. But, to me al least, it
is the mosl precious thing in
that elegant room. It is hope.
It is nol the miracle solution
lo the world's problems, but
merely hope hope that may
be, somehow, after all, we
will yet manage to squeak
through without incinerating
ourselves and our children.
There is, to me, nothing more
precious than that hope these
days.
And as I sat there, the
room, as rooms do, grew more
familiar, less imposing. Usual
ly, more than half the 27
high-backed chairs are empty.
And those Senators present
sprawl in their seats, whisper
ing to each other or reading
idly through papers.
The seats for the public are
seldom filled. The audience
is mostly tourists, who silent
ly enter in groups to sit and
watch for a few minutes and
silently leave. The press tables
are virtually vacant. Ana at i .-iu. ty conirasi, il seems so
one a woman sits all alone, sweaty and blaring. And so
day after day, working cross- very, very real,
word puzzles. And each day, you hope
After all, everybody knows ' again.
what each witness is going lr
say.
And each witness reads hi
lines faithfully. The General.i
- oh, so militant in their stars
and ribbons - most of them
cautiously favor the treaty.
(But we must maintain our
military might through morn
defense spending.) And tho
scientists. - mosl of them grey,
soft-spoken men - most of
them cautiously favor tho
treaty. (But we must conlinuo
exploding bombs under
ground in order, as one of
them says, "to keep our peo
ple thinking about bomb prob
lems.") And each of the pro-Administration
Senators, so careful
in his questioning of the wit
nesses to make sure Ihe record
shows he is "unalterably op
posed lo communism'' and
doesn't "trust the enemy."
And those anti-Administration
Senators who will vole in the
end for the treaty, bul who
must do all in their power to
belittle it and riddle it with
suspicions and doubts. So that
the Administration will not
receive too much credit.
And through it all, thn
stenotypist who records each
word, lounges in his chair, one
leg extended to rest on a low
red leather bench, pecking,
pecking, pecking, al his ma
chine. So each day. as I sit there-,
hope dies a little. The treaty
remains, but the hope dies.
In the cool dignity of that,
room it dies in a langlc of
words and ambition and cau
tion and politics and boredom.
And each day in thai room
you feel nobody cares. Not
really.
But then each day you
leave the cool, ra'rpetcri.
marbled, cryslaled room and
step out into the world out
side, the world of honkinf
taxis and shouling children
and green grass and hot pave-
This tragic story comes over
the wires from Independence,
up in the Willamette valley:
Three boys were found
suffocated Monday night in
an ABANDONED FREEZER
CHEST. They had gone out
to play-about 5 o'clock in the
afternoon, telling their par
ents that they were going to
the school grounds. Three
hours later, they hadn't re
turned. So a search was
started.
They were found DEAD in
an old freezer box which had
been discarded without re-
code i moving Ihe lock. Presumably,
they had climbed into it to
play, and when they closed
the lid of their playhouse it
SNAPPED SHUT and locked.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
rpwo FRACTICAL jokers shared a hotel rm a', a b:s
A convention in Chicago. One sneaked :n early ihe ,-ercr.d
night of the doings, filled the bathtub and deposited trincin
two live ducks he had
aft er
long
j U'HAT TO DO aboul such
" thincs-'
J
Code Criticized
To the Editor: Regarding
Mrs. William Nelson's view
points on the ethics
being dropped to the lower
grades. They should have nev
er been started.
The schools, however,
should take over when their
own parents don't care if they
wear too much makeup or
too short skirts, but when it
comes to telling a student
what to w ear and how to - A m u c h better way
wear it. this has gone loo far would be to SEE TO IT that
and should be stopped no old refrigerator box-or
Most people can't afford to j any other box with a snap
buy clothes for their child ! lock on the outside-is EVER
and then find out they can't thrown away without seeing
wear them. to it that the lock is first
If the people who wroleiTORN OUT.
these rules thought back on j Passing a law is the EASY
how thev tried to rebel on the way.
B
Well.
UT
procured
search.
His companion was
properly flabbergasted
when he saw the ducks
paddling about in the
tub. "They must have
flown in through the win
dow while we were out,"
surmised the jokester.
"Sure, sure." agreed his
friend, "but what bugs
me is how the dickens
we could pas a law. , did thev turn on the
water?"
ff3, lirii
"Wander If my life fvoulda been dliferrnl if I da gote back
('school 'that on fali tsigjyyeari ago?"
rules of their day. these rules
would have never been start
ed After all. t school is made
for learning, not for criticiz
ing what a student wears
1 iN'ame on file)
I Medford
F
CONCLUSION;
merely PASSING A LAW will
solve such massive problems
as civil rights and nationwide
strikes'" J v . I
One wonders.
Don Freeman encountered on laiv m Las gi. vho
jackpot at 3.00 a m and wasn t hap'pv about ,. a. '.. .'.t
to be up another hour at least new." h (rtctr.b'iM h.-'?..
or alt thee silver TelUr '-
FAMOUS QUOTES
"If Its true that the t..r pltnets : mhabjiM t
earth must be their lunatic gaylum." Berp.er4 a;-.s
"Fnentship irtlie fet:h:ng fg, ,'n -,.,'! ,
Oliver Wendell Hnlm.
'The only to outwit a wnman s h , ,
and run:" John lUrrymnrf,
'The best way to matte a fir' -,h h gtv.fc, j, ..
one of them is a mavh." Will Reief.
'The cat is a Mm'. wn there are no is-.. ,
proverb. v. ' O
b- Bennt't Ctrf Clitnbu!4 by King rt-
&