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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1963)
10 D THURSDAY. OCTOBER 17, 19fiJ MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON , , , . -H ' , ' 1 a Student Population Growth Results in More Gift Dollars NEW YORK (UP1) The the Council (or Financial Aid lo , nrnwlh in !hp sluripnt rxinulation fcducauon. of the United States has been ; Recipients Listed amounts of philanthropic aid from their corporations, but that The major foundations nave i generally they realized that it holnnH dm " ho said "nnrt ie. ! was an area nf mutual henpfit. accompanied by a growtn in Uariy lne For(j Foundation. allnlmpnt nf thp cornorate EiUlThpv have pnrnnrappH rnllpL'ps dollar to education, a new sur-iand universities to map .ong- In its survey, the NICB found v. rii-lnuri tnHav ranBe plans in their search tcr : lhat education now took about L v . , , ; . i r 1 funds. ad f "Pl"re their! 41.9 cents of the corporate del The National Industrial Con-jneed:i he fu(ure as wc as i jar. Listed as recipients in the ference Board reported in a re- j for (ne present." ! education category were, in the view of the corporate philan- j Although the largest share nf , higher education group, scholar thronv of 465 firms, large and corporate donations went to ed- ships, fellowships, research ,ml , lhl, ,i, aiinn had taken i ucation' a Stealer number cf i grants-those not treated as a small, that education had taken those surveed Rave ,0 hpa(h ' business expense-plus capital over the number one spot Irom , and wei(are agencies, the NICB ' ,unds for buildings, endowment health and welfare as the ben-1 said. I for extra pay for faculty mem- The board began its, Watson said that in conduct-; bcrs; unrestricted grants direct the corporate gifti' nK me 5urvey ne naa ncara oi ( ' ihshis Kiuups, eu- sume cases wnere siocKnoioers, utcuun teidieu agencies, at annual meetings, opposed the I Health and welfare PRESIDES AT HIEETING Deputy Prime Minister R. A. But ler, odds-on' favorite to succeed ailing Harold Macmillan as premier, arrives at No. 10 Downing st. in London for a meet ing of the Cabinet. Business of the meeting was routine but it was the first full one at which Butler .had. presided face-to-face with his major rivals for the post Foreign Secretary Lord Home and Science Minister Lord Hailsham. (UPI) Invalids' Homes Marked for Safety WORCESTER, Mass. (UPI) -Fed stickers that shine in f h e dark are being placed on thp front doors of all Worcester homes where there are invalids. The Exchange club,' which is sponsoring the project, hopes that the "invalid, stickers" wj protect invalids from being overlooked during fires in their homos UtHB L 1 made naturally... so naturally it's better: Negroes Uncertain Over Next Moves BIRMINGHAM, Ala. UPI- Negro loaders are reported un certain about what steps to take next in the continuing Birming ham battle over civil rights. Dr. Martin Luther King ,Ir. met with Rev. Fred Shultle- sworlh and local Negro leaders for almost five hours Tuesday. There were no public state ments, hut some local Negro leaders were said to have urged King to hold back a threatened demonstration cam paign. King drove to Selma, Ala., later to help stir support for a lagging voter registration cam paign. He told Selma Negroes to ne "ready to present your very bodies" in demonstrations, then drove lo Montgomery where he caught a plane for Atlanta. Sources in the Birmingham movement said some local Ne gro leaders want a cooling-off period to give a bifacial group, which has urged hiring of Ne gro police, lime lo work. eficiary. analysis of the corporate dollar shortly after World War II, and found that for the first time education had come to the top among recipients. Contributions by the survey firms totaled $154 million, o r about one-third of all corporate giving last year. The survey was done on the understanding that the names of surveyed companies would remain confid ential. One of the firms reported to tal gifts tn educational as well as other causes, of $15 million in a single year. At least three reported donations of $7 million. New Emphasis John Watson, who piloted the survey for the NICB, said that at least a share of the change in emphasis could be laid to the work of groups which campaign for corporate donations to ed ucational institutions, such as took 40.9 cents from the gift do! lar from corporations; civic and cultural causes took 5.3 cents; others, including religious caus es, groups devoted to economic education alone, groups whose principal objective is aid to other countries, took 10.3 cents; and 1.5 cents of the dollar was listed as not identifiable because i tion budget to educational caus . TO BE CANDIDATE KLAMATH FALLS (UPI) I Fred Heard, Klamath Falls, has ' announced he will be a candi- Children's Bureau Reports on Injuries WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ac cidental item from the U. S. Children's bureau: "Injuries to children under 15 result in 55 million days of re stricted activity and 15 million groups days of bed-disability annually." the donee is unknown. Industrial companies showed a greater generosity than serv ice companies, and local com panies generally were more gen erous, in proportion of gift to total income, than national com panies. Four major manufacturing groups, the survey said, gave at least half of their total dona- ... . J.. r JltA t Ik. Dnmih. es. These were cnemicais ana uaie uciL-gaic io mc ..cku allied products, petroleum refin- lican National Convention from ing, primary metal industries , Oregon's second congressional and transportation equipment. I district. Happy as a bird withjhjsk MALDISTRIBUTION SAN DIEGO (UPI) - There are about 2,fitK) marines sta tioned at the Marine Corps Re cruit depot here and only 127 of Ihcm are women. Trading Stamp 'Champ' Found TRENTON, Mo. (UPI) - Peo ple are claiming a new world , titleholder in this town of 6,000 a stamp champ who accumu lated 20 years' worth of trading stamps in one year to get a trip lo Hawaii. Surveys say H5 per cenl of all J women save stamps, bul Bolene Johnson lops Ihcm all.. The av erage homcmakor redeems ner stamps for home lurnisnmgs, giftwares, utensils and leisure- lime equipment. As a rule, sue gets them by saving about 10 or 12 books a year. When stamps were introduced al the Trenton A&P market,; Miss Johnson decided lo make her dreams come trup. For most of her 40 years, she had wanted lo visit Hawaii. Here was her chance to get a 10-day, all-expense trip lor two, by saving stamps. Miss Johnson persuaded her married sister and family In help Iter. Then .she got friends, o - workers and customers of her downtown restaurant to con tribute their stamps. When the ! mailman heard, he spread t h c word. Bolene Johnson's trip be came virtually a community project and she a local celebrity. F.ven strangers dropped in tn swell the stamp total. She finally licked the last of 252.000 stamps and placed it in Ihe 210th book. The trading peo ple checked their records. No individual had ever amassed so manv stamps in so short a lime only 12 months. I ,1 4W liow do you answer the hunger In a child's eyes, if he lives thousands of miles away? By joining CARE S Food Crusade, you span the world to help feed hungry school children, orphans, refugees, the aged and sick, desperately poor families, what you do a share oui fatm abund ance staple fona4od by the U.S. Food for Peace program. CARE adds other foods, packs various units to match coun try needs. Every $1 you give sends one package with your name and address, to bring a, personal message cjf friendship from the Amciican people, where need is urgent, CA"R8 delivers your gilts. You cannot specify persons, but you, may choose any cf these places: Colombia, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Greece, Haiti, Hong Kong, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Macau, Mexico, Pakistan, Poland, Sierra Leone, Turkey, West Berlin, Vietnam, Yugoslavia. .New York 16, N-Y. or your local CAKE nflirr Here is $..........;..... for the Food Crusndc. (Make check payable to CARK, Inc.) ,1 i 1 ft- I (Vour name) (Address) 0.1 41 A V '- I' 1 Jr TE LOAD UP Oil THESE PINEAPPLE CHOICE OF CRUSHED TID-BITS CHUNKS RflUHD-UP r.-TWWaJ" Rfr. RIP. CflDHfllMCI mm MM Ml ma inn tunc I AMmrnKJNtriUtu mT LUu ENDS 7M&? TASTES BETTER Quick Delivery mlKntyf999SWsafaM PHONE 772-2111 immm 1 i- B BIG, BIG BARGAINS! FRUIT COCKTAIL No. 211 Tins DEL MONTE FANCY SLICED DEL MONTE Peach Halves DEL MONTE Sliced Peaches ! mm nil wTI SALAD 1J Tins I V&T --1 A No. 303 n Tins EAPPLE 2791-89 Si Not 303 M MONTE fhSezji Tins Si ti II "COTTAGE" ALL GREEN (CUTS and TIPS) ASPARAQU No. 300 ' T.ll Tins U DEL MONTE CATSUP 14-oz. Bottles SI il'lJ DEL MONTE Grapefruit Sections DEL MONTE BARTLETT PEARS 3 No. 303 Tins m DEL MONTE Tomato Sauce DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE- nylnh GRAPEFRUIT Sil Niil DEL MONTE Kp 46-oz. I l I I Prune Juice Qts. CREAM CORN No. 303 S1! 00 Tins 1 DEL MONTE fARM Whole Kernel lUKIl No. 303 V Tins QO DEL MONTE DEL MONTE Early Garden DEL MONTE Early Garden GREEN BEANS PEAS SPINACH No. 303 $ 00 Tins 1 Tins y A No-303 $1 Tins 1 00 31 H jjy ly jjjj p P "BEDFORD'S FINEST MEATS SINCE 1940" "NEBERGALL'S" OLD FASHION S , Skins On FRESH CRAB HEAT Delicious Ocean Fresh $1189 "SWIFT'S PREMIUM" GUTTERBALL TURKEYS This Year's Crop. Approx, 8V2 to 14 Lbs. OUR OWN PURE PORK-DELICIOUS 2m9c FRESH GROUND BEEF 1 0 Pound Pkg. 375f FANCY FROST-FREE Artichokes FRESH.CRISP CELERY FRESH NEW CROP Cranberries FANCY CALIFORNIA DATES FLORIDA "INDIAN RIVER" Large Bunches RUBY RED Grapefruit W R I w I J - FANCY AGED "CHOICE" STEER BEEF BONELESS ROASTS T-BONE STEAKS SIRLOIN STEAKS ROUND STEAKS CHUCK STEAKS I RIB ROASTS SIRLOIN TIPS AND RUMPS lb. (WELL TRIMMED) lb. (BONELESS - NO WASTE) lb. !ALl CENTER CUTS) lb. (MARINATED - GRAND FLAVOR) lb. 98 $19 $49 98' 69e 89' "TT73 DELIVERY Jtfflflf Phone 773-7444 222 West Main Street NEXT TO POWER COMPANY CLOSED SUNDAYS (PREPARED FOR EASY CARVING) b. Courtesy of Mail Tribune O o IT o 0 r ,0 0$ 9