Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 13, 1963, Image 6

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MUDKOKD MAIL TRIBUNE. MKDFOKD, OREGON
THE WEEK IN CALIFORNIA
World Series, Nobel Peace
Prize Noted in News Events
By United Press International
The king is dead, long live the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Just ask any Californian, and
he'll tell you what last week's
big news story was: The World
Series.
And lefthander Sandy Koufax
got it over within a hurry, pitch
ing the Dodgers to a 2-1 victory
on Sunday to complete a four
game sweep of the heavily fav
ored New York Yankees, the de
fending champs.
It was Koufax who also won
the initial game of the series,
in Yankee Stadium, and struck
out 15 Yankees for a new World
Series record. To no one's sur
prise, the southpaw was named
the series' most valuable play
er. Some 55.912 fans saw the fin
al game of the series in Dodger
Stadium in Los Angeles. By win
ning, the National League and
now world champs will collect
about $13,000 apiece. The Yan
kees, who won the American
League pennant, will take home
about $8,500 each.
Eleswhere, there were these
developments:
Triplets: The World Series al
so had its effect on the stork
world. The parents of triplets
born in Compton named all
three infants including one girl
after three star pitchers of the
Los Angeles Dodgers. The par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Turn
er, named the babies Don (after
Don Drysdale) .Ronald (for Ron
Perranoski) and Sandy (for San
dy Koufax.) The three were
born on the final day of the
series.
Pauling: Dr. Linus Pauling,
professor at the California Insti
tute of Technology in Pasadena,
was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize and thus became the sec
ond two-time winner in the his
tory of the award. Although the
Norwegian Nobel Prize commit
tee did not say why Pauling was
honored, there was indication it
was for his efforts to outlaw nu
clear testing. The 62-year-old
Californian also won the prize
for chemistry in 1954.
Warrants: The judges were
fined and two other persons, in
cluding a former deputy sheriff,
were sentenced to jail in Ukiah
for their respective roles in last
year's "warrant war" in Men
docino county. Their trial and
convictions resulted from their
parts in the issuance of 57 ar
rest warrants last year. The
warrants all were quashed by
other judges.
Narcotics: More than 200 bot
tles of narcotics and drugs wash
ed ashore at Daly City and were
discovered by thousands of Sun
day bathers. The unusual find
appeared to be the backwash of
a narcotics dumping operation
held at sea by the state. But
officials insisted the drugs were
not part of the cache. The nar
cotics included methedrine a
brain stimulant and numerous
bottles of other substances, such
as white powder which author
ities believed to be heroine.
Banks: The federal govern
ment filed suit to block the mer
ger of two large California
banks. The justice department
contended that the merger
would seriously and unlawfully
impair present and future com
petition. The suit, filed ir U.S.
District Court in San Francisco,
named as defendants the Crocker-Anglo
National Bank, with
headquarters in San Francisco;
and the Citizens National bank,
Los Angeles, and the Trans
America Corp., San Francisco,
a holding company which has
working capital of the Citizens
Bank.
Segregation: Robert L. Car
ter, general counsel for the Na
tional Association for the Ad
vancement of Colored People,
warned that his organization
would go to court to end so
called de facto segregation in
San Francisco and Oakland
schools. Carter spoke to news
men in San Francisco. Mean
while, in Sarcramento, a su
perior court judge ordered the
city school system to devise a
means to desegregate the Stan
ford Junior High school, which
he said was a victim of de facto
segregation. The school burned
down during the summer and
the students were sent to an ad
jacent school. The NAACP then
went to court in an effort to
have the students, mostly Ne
gro, distributed throughout the
city.
Shrivcr: Peace Corps Director
Sargent Shriver came to Cali
fornia on a recruiting mission,
visiting several college and uni
versity campuses throughout the
state. "Back in Washington," he
said, "We refer to California as
the Peace Corps state. Califor
nia has produced more volun
teers than any other state . . ."
Burglar: A burglar broke into
a San Francisco flat and walk
ed away with $29 sorth of phon
ograph records, coins and a
table radio. He left the follow
ing typewritten note: "In all my
30 years as an honest, hard
working burglar, seldom have
I came (sic) across as miser
able a haul as this. You peo
ple ought to leave some cigar
ettes around for guests. You
ought to be ashamed of your
selves. Meditate on this, friends:
Everything which I leave be
hind isn't even worth stealing.
Til later, Sydney the burglar."
4
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10 YEAR GUARANTEE
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LESS TRADE-IN
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i
Milk Deliveries
Resume by Gilman's
Patrons of Gilman's Dairy,
Medford, did not receive milk
Thursday.
A statement in explanation of
the failure to deliver was issued
by the dairy Thursday after
noon. It read: "At 6 a.m., Oct.
10, Gilman's Dairy was in
formed that unless the dairy
signed a teamster union contract
there would be no milk delivery
on this date.
"There have been no previous
expressions of dissatisfaction
from the employees and Gil
man's is not an organized union
shop. No effort had been made
to organize or to appoint a union
as its negotiator. Since the con
tract could not be signed for
purely business reasons, deliv
eries could not be made to all
of the dairy's customers Thurs
day. Deliveries were resumed
Friday morning and will con
tinue. "Because of rearrangement of
milk routes some deliveries will
be later than usual.
"Sincere apologies are extend
ed to our customers and friends
for any inconveniences caused
by this event," a spokesman
said.
New Life Will Start Soon for 50,000
EavDtian Nubians Moving From Nile
PLAN RESETTLEMENT Engineers are shown Dam along the Nile river. In the background
here mapping plans for new resettlement to are partly constructed homes in the villages of
house Nubians displaced by the Aswan High Daboud, Upper Egypt. (UPI)
The new villages have been
named after the old ones. In
the allotment of houses in each
2 UNDER PAR?
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Roger
Lord, 78, bettered his age by
two strokes when he carded A
7fi on the Old Warson Country
club golf course.
By MAURICE GUINDI
United Press International
CAIRO (UPI) - A new life
starts next Thursday for the
vanguard of 50,000 Egyptian Nu
bians who will move to e w
homes from their archeological
ly famed ancestral land astride
the Nile south of Aswan.
It will be a journey of no re
turn. Next summer the back
waters of the Aswan high dam
now under construction will
start flooding the 200 - mile
stretch of land along the Nile
making up present-day Nubia.
In one of modern history's
biggest resettlement projects,
the Nubians, tall, handsome Ne
groid people who inhabited
southern Egypt for centuries,
will be given abode in 33 newly
built villages.
Some Not Happy
They are in the Kom-Ombo
area on the eastern bank of the
Nile 40 miles north of Aswan.
Some Nubians, especially older
ones who are sentimentally at
tached to their homeland, are
not happy about the change but
they accept it as unavoidable.
The actual transfer will be
completed in eight months, but
the process of putting the gentle,
hospitable and poor Nubians on
their feet economically and so'
eially and fusing them in their
new surroundings is expected to
take five or six years.
The "exodus" of the 16,861
Nubian families from their
homeland, famed for its virtual
ly crimeless record, is a neces
sary prelude to completion of
the first stage of the billion
dollar, Russian - financed high
dam that will store enough irri
gation water to add just over
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Los Angeles Times
JUNE 13, 1963
State Senate
Probe Clears
Birch Society
Organization It
Not Subversive,
Committee Says
By GENE BLAKC
Tht John Birch Society
It nor subversive the StJt
Son ei t Fetct-Finding Subcom
mittee on Un-Americin Ac
tivities decided Wedneidiy
tor a twoycu investigation.
No evidence w.u found that
trie society it sfrrrt, Fascist,
snti - Communist, fundamental
ist organization."
Moetingt Attended
The subcommittee said it
sent representatives to Birch
Society chapter meetings and
obtained names of members
without difficulty. Statements
or affidavits were received from
many members and officers,
whose names are listed in the
report.
"We have found the average
member to have been concerned
about the advances of the world
Communist movement and the
advances of Communist sub
version in this country," the
subcommittee said.
"The John Birch Society ha
provided the only organization
with a militant program of
study and action through which
the frustrations of these people
can he rrlrasrd."
The) Honorable
John H. Roussclot
Member of the Eighty-Seventh
Congren and Diitrict Governor
of the John Birch Society for
Six Western States, will give a
LECTURE
ON
"DISARMAMENT
BLUEPRINT FOR
SURRENDER"
Hoover School
MEDFORD
Monday, Obi 14
8 P.M.
Admission $1 00
2 million acres to Egypt's 6.7
million acres of arable land.
To Be Completed
The southern section of the
dam, called the upstream cof
ferdam, is scheduled to be com
pleted next summer and the
waters it will back up then will
flood the first of Nubia's 40
villages which dot the river
banks all the way from the dam
site to the Sudan border.
When construction of the main
dam is completed in 19G8, the
water will have completely sub
merged the rest of the Nubian
villages. Although the flooding
will be gradual over a period of
four years, the government has
decided to resettle all the Nu
bians in a single operation start
ing Oct. 17 and ending next
June.
A basic principle guiding the
resettlement project has been
to reproduce for the Nubians in
their new environment some of
the conditions prevailing in their
old homeland so the change
may be less jolting.
Resettlement Area
The resettlement a.r e a,
stretching in a semi-circle with
a radius of 20 miles from the
city of Kom-Ombo, provides a
terrain and a landscape bearing
shades of resemblance to the
Nubian scene hilly with an
alternation of green patches,
yellow desert sand and an oc
casional brownish rock protru
sion. But it does not offer the
same ruggedness and vastness
so dear to the hearts of the
nature-hardened Nubians.
As in Nubia, the resettlement
area has been divided into three
zones and each will accommo
date one of the three ethnic
Nubian groups. There will be
the El-Knouz in the north, the
Bedouins in the center and the
Nuhis in the south.
The Bedouins speak Arabic
while the other two have their
own dialects. Each has its own
customs and traditions and thoy
hardly ever mixed socially in
Nubia. They expressed the de
sire to keep things the same
way in the resettlement area
and the government acquiesced.
village, the social position of
the family an important fac
tor in Nubian life will be
taken into consideration. Many
families will even have the same
neighbors. And the same order
of things in each village will be
maintained, with improvements
in method.
Dwellings in the new villages
are built of masonry and their
design was approved by Nubian
representatives before construc
tion began in April, 1962. They
consist of four, three or two
rooms each plus a yard, a shed
and a kitchen.
They have been built in neat
rows close to each other and the
rooms can be considered of me
dium size by modern urban
standards. But the Nubians, ac
customed to much greater space
in and out of their old homes,
criticize them as not sufficiently
roomy and not far enough apart.
500 Families to Move
The first group to move will
be the inhabitants of the village
of Daboud at the northern tip
of Nubia. Its 500 families, com
prising 1,223 persons, are pack
ing their scant belongings in
preparation for the trip to As
wan by boat and then to their
new abode by car. They will de
part Oct. 17 and arrive Oct. 20.
Arrangements have been made
for moving their livestock too.
The chairman of the resettle
ment committee, social affairs
assistant under - secretary Mo
hamed Safwat, told UPI:
"Moving the Nubians to their
new homes is the easiest part
of the project. The really chal
lenging task is to help them
settle down and feel at home,
harmonizing themselves with
their new environment and
earning enough on their own.
This will probably take five or
six years."
Depend on Agriculture
The Nubians depend for their
livelihood on agriculture and
small manual crafts such as the
weaving of straw baskets and
the embroidery of multi-colored
SKUii-caps.
But many of them have anoth
er important source of income
their younger menfolk who
are scattered all over the main
cities of Egypt, working as gov
ernment and company employ
ees, waiters, doorkeepers, cooks
and helpers of all sorts and who
send part of their earnings to
their families back home.
The government is paying
compensation to the Nubians for
their homes and lands which
have already been expropriat
ed by republican decree. But it
will charge them for the new
houses and agricultural land
they will get in the resettlement
area. Half the compensation is
paid in cash and the other half
will go to cover part of the
price of houses and land which
will be paid by installment over
forty years.
Wealth of Antiquities
One of the many things the
Nubians are sorry to part with
is the wealth of antiquities
which formed an integral part
of their surroundings for many
decades. The ancient relics in
clude temples, chapels, fortres
ses and tombs that have been
or will be dismantled and moved
to other places or preserved at
their present sites, protected
from the waters.
Foremost among them are the
Abu-Simbel temples which will
be rebuilt on top of a mountain.
By 19B8 the Nubia known to
many thousands of foreign tour
ists will be under water. In its
place there will be the biggest
man-made lake in the world.
About 360 miles long and five
miles wide. It will be the res
ervoir of the high dam, storing
badly -needed irrigation water
for land-hungry Egypt.
Zenter Will Play
With Johnny Mafhis
ASHLAND Si Zenter and
his 25 piece orchestra will ap
pear with Johnny Mathis, well
known recording artists at 8
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 22 in Hed
rick Junior High school, Med
ford. Zenter, who has had band ex
perience with such people as
Les Brown, Harry James, and
the late Jimmy Dorsey, recently
had a record breaking engage
ment at the Roosevelt hotel in
New York City.
He is one of the top trombon
ists in the music business. He
records for Liberty and among
his biggest-to-date albums is
"Big Band Plays the Big Hits."
Tickets may be purchased at
SOC, Purucker's and Mann's in
Medford; and the Melody House
in Grants Pass.
Bloodmobile Will
Be in Medford Two
Days During Week
For the price of a telephone
call, nil to most people, a life
may be saved.
That telephone call is to the
American Red Cross chapter
and the number is 773-3813.
In fact, the telephone isn't
even necessary. Shoppers and
people working downtown can
drop in from 2 to 6 p.m. on
Monday, Oct. 14, or from 10
a.m. until 2 p.m. on Tuesday,
Oct. 15, at the Bloodmobile at
the chapter house, .60 Haw
thorne ave., according to Bob
Heffernan, chapter chairman.
The blood program in Jack
son county is carried on by the
Red Cross. It is a highly regard
ed system which performs a
generous and efficient service.
As long as this volunteer type
of blood program is in exist
ence, residents of the commu
nity can feel protected against
heavy expense and the trouble
involved in obtaining blood if
they ever need it, Heffernaa
noted.
If it were not for the Red
Cross Bloodmobile operation,
local hospitals and doctors
would be dependent on commer
cial blood banks, and patients
would pay from $25 to $45 a
pint for the blood, in addition
to the hospital administration
charge of about $19.
Heffernan, presiding over the
monthly Red Cross board of di
rectors meeting, said: "If this
type of service is to be con
tinued, more new recruits ara
needed."
The blood program, as a vol
untary and non-profit service,
can make real contributions to
society for many years. The ex
tent to which it does this wilt
be measured in terms of wheth
er the generosity of the public
comes from a thick or a thin
vein, Heffernan said.
o
QUESTIONS
to our fellow citizens of
Jackson
County
Do you know that under Meas
I ure 1 our county will receive)
$3,054,076.72 Basic School
Support funds from the state during
the current biennium to offset local
property taxes? '
J Do you know that if Measure 1
aC J is defeated on Oct. 15, any cuts
.. - ' -i in Basic School Support will
have to be made up by lowering our
educational standards (making our
children the victims) or by raising
property taxes?
VOTE YES on Measure 1
A YES vote means 'No'
to higher property taxes!
Thii ad paid for as a community lervice by the following:
Executive Comm. Jackson County Unit O.E.A.
John Stewart, President
303 Church St., Phoenix, Ore. '
CRATER FINANCE
Cascade Shopping Center
White City-826-2721
Let Us Put You On Top of
The Wonderful World of Money
The "money months"
are here againl If you
need EXTRA CASH
just give us a ring on
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how much you need.
ONE LOAN ONE
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todeyl
A Handy Hundred or More From Crater Finance
Money From Creter Finince il like Money From Home. ,
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CRATER FINANCE
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1 1 if
7
SUNDAY
OCTOBER 13TH
ITIark Antony
MOTOR HOTIL
Phone 482-1721
SERVED IN OUR BEAUTIFUL
CROWN ROOM
AND NEWLY DECORATED
COFFEE HOUSE
SUNDAY SPECIAL
' COMPLETE DINNERS
From 12:00 Noon to 10:00 P.M.
French Onion Soup
and
Tossed Green or Vegetable Jello Salad
Choice of Dressings
ENTREES
BROILED NEW ZELAND LOBSTER TAILS $3.75
BEEF STROGANOFF W RICE 3.00
CHICKEN CALCUTTA W RICE 2.75
CHOICE PRIME RIB OF BEEF AU-JUS
A Sunday Special 3.00
ROULADE OF BEEF W RED CABBAGE 2.25
BROILED SALMON OR SWORD FISH
Lemon wedge 2.35
SWISS STEAK Burgundy Style, extra nice 1.65
ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY-Oregon grown 1.85
BREADED VEAL CUTLETS-Country Gravy 1 .75
Potatoes Vegetables Roll and Butter
Coffe or Tea
DESSERT: Sherbet-Fruit Jello - Ice Cream
We Have From Our Broiler - Choice Eastern Beef of course,
facially aged and trimmed for the most discriminating.
TOU KINDLY . . .
O
YOUR CHEF,
MR. E. SHAW
.J:
00
(?)
ml