Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 30, 1963, Image 3

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    MLDKOKD MAIL TRIBUNE, MKUKORD, OREGON
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1963
i
MARY JO BATZER I NANCY GALLOWAY
r
PAM G1LKINSON
PAM ELY
MONICA SETTY
Homecoming Activities Set at College
ASHLAND Southern Oregon
College opens its three - day
Homecoming program tomorrow
and, with the opening one of
five coeds will become a queen.
Winner of the queen contest
will be announced at the Petty
coat Bowl when the "Wow
Girls" from Cascade Hall meet
the "Slippery Susies" from Su
sanne Homes Hall in a flag foot
ball game on Fuller Field at
4 p.m. The queen and her court
will be announced and present
ed at halftimc.
Contestants are Pam Gilkin
son, Mary Jo Batzer. Nancy
Galloway, Pam Ely and Monica
Setty.
Following presentation of the
queen, every hour of the three
day celebration will be filled
with entertainment. Chuck Ins
keep of Medford, general Home
coming chairman, announced.
After the Pettycoat Bowl, a
barbecue will be held. From 7
p.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday a com
bined rally and bonfire will
take place, and a dance at the
tennis courts will follow.
Friday, Nov. 1, at 7 p.m. in
Britt Ballroom, the Variety
Show will be presented. There
will be various acts offered by
SOC students and some talent
from valley communities.
Starting at 10:30 a.m. Satur
day the annual Homecoming pa
rade will leave Lithia park and
wind through the city of Ash
land. Clubs and organizations
from the college and from
Rogue River valley communities
will compete for a long list of
parade trophies. Eight bands
will be in the line of march.
At 1:30 p.m. Saturday the
football game between SOC and
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
WASHINGTON Rep. Olin E. Teague, a member of the House
Space Committee, on Soviet Premier Khrushchev's announcement
that Russia would not make a try to land a man on the moon:
"I wouldn't trust Khrushchev, even if he swore on a stack
of Bibles as high as the Kremlin."
WASHINGTON Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Tex., denying he
slugged Rep. Ed. F. Foreman, R-Tex., in the House of Repre
sentatives: "I didn't hit the guy. If I had hit him he would have
stayed hit."
KODIAK. Alaska Oscar Dyson, a member of the Alaska
advisory Fish and Game Board, protesting Russian "invasion"
of the rich fishing waters off Alaska:
"We are not going to stand by any longer and watch our
livelihood destroyed. We are going to find some way nr
means of protecting our own property in our own way."
Chico State will be played and
during halftime activities the
queen and her court will be
presented again.
The final event of the week j
end will be the Homecoming i
dance at 8:30 p.m. in Britt Ball-1
room, music for which will be !
played by Martin Denny and I
his band. I
Plans have been completed
for 10 class reunions during the
Homecoming festivities.
The Kampus Keepers Klub
Day, sponsored by Ashland
merchants will be held Satur
day, offering merchandise at a
discount or savings to SOC stu
dents. This will be the first
such event to be held during
the Homecoming week end,
Inskeep reported.
Homecoming com m i 1 1 e e s
which have completed the round
of work which has made the
Homecoming possible are head
ed by Vicky Coffee, Lois Sted
man, Jacqueline Muller, Robbie
Durham, Ray Hansen and Dan
Hays.
Heading halftime activities is
Joe Anderson; Homecoming but
ton sales, Pam Ely; dance deco-
Free Lecture on Christian Science
Entitled
"The Origin and Power
of Thought"
by
Paul Stark Seeley, C.S.B., of Portland, Oregon
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
FRIDAY-NOVEMBER 1-8:00 p.m.
rations, Pat Calhoun; publicity,
George Gilman and June Brai
nerd; barbecue, Dick Cotting
ham and M. Carson Vehrs;
queen's , activities, Terry Cas
ten; scavenger committee, Den
nis Jones; alumni dinner and
activities, Jeff Lee and Dr.
Alvin L. Fellers; poster com
mittee, Mary Joe Heath; bands,
Dr. H. M. Cecil, and rally,
Karen Hawlcy.
Iheme of this year s Home
coming is "The Past in Re
view" and decoration of the
campus by dormitories and or
ganizations has been in keep
ing with this theme.
Judging of decorations will
take place Friday evening be
tween the hours of 6 and 7. An
nouncement of winners will be
made during the Variety show.
Suspect Jailed
In Murder Case
MIDLAND, Tex. (UPI) - A
muscular young man sat som
berly in his jail cell today fac
ing murder charges in the
bludgeon-slaying of the socialite
wife of a Texas millionaire oilman-sportsman.
Police said James Lee Mar
ion, 22, a Negro, confessed he
dragged Mrs. Fred Turner Jr.,
screaming from a balcony into
her bedroom and beat her to
death with his fists and pistols
she had wielded.
Marion, a shortorder cook,
said Mrs. Turner, 66, surprised
him while he was burglarizing
her $500,000 home. He quoted
her as saying, "I'm going to
kill you," and said he attacked
her after she fired a .38 auto
matic pistol wildly.
"I was looking for monev,"
Marion said. The 5-foot-4, 158
pound man said he had been
drinking heavily. Two officers
said he waved a pistol at them
menacingly when he fled the
victim's home.
Turner, whose horse Tomy
Lee won the 1959 Kentucky Der
by, learned of the slaying when
he returned home from a trip
to his Las Vegas, N. M. ranch.
The couple's daughter, Mrs.
Clarence Seharbauer, Jr., was
knocked unconscious by the at
tacker when he fled the man
sion. Marion was arrested Tues
day cowering in the attic of a
nearby garage.
Negroes in Omaha
Discontented With
Housing Conditions
BARUCH GETS HONOR
ATLANTA, Ga. (UPD-Ber-nard
M. Baruch, a leading
American financier since the
turn of the century, was named
by the editors of Dixie Business
magazine as their "Great Amer
ican" for 1963.
Funeral Rites Held
For Harry Shipstad
PORTLAND (UPI) - Funeral
was held Tuesday at Encino,
Calif, for Harry Gerald Ship
stad, 68, who was manager of
the Portland Sports Arena from
1943 to 1955.
Shipstad died Saturday. He
and two brothers formed the
Shipstad & Johnson Ice Follies
in Minneapolis in 1935.
First Church of Christ, Scientist
100 Windsor Ave.
One Block South of East Main Street
Parking & Nursery Facilities Provided
Medford
STAR GAZERJ
OJ L.LA T K. I'UU-AiV
t t- 3-14-21
'23-42-4B
yf TAURUS
APR. 21
( MAY 2!
2- 6-37-41
46-55-80-88
OlMINI
MAY 22
JUNE 22
A36-39-52-691
'72-76-86901
CANCER
9 l JUNE 23
,11-22-28-43
56-62-68
MO
JULY 24
iAUG. 23
13-27-34-6d
74-78-84-BSH
VIRGO
gt yfj MJO. 24
kM SEPT- 22
tiP15-!8-W-4.l
r 49-64-65
Your Daily Activity Guide
According to the Stars.
To develop message for Thursday,
read words corresponding to numbers
or your odiac Dirth sign.
1 You
2 You
3 Cannot
4 Ruffesn
bYour
6 RocervB
7 You
8 Hove
9 Express
10 The
1 1 Pay
12 Home
13 To
14 Trust
15 Plan
16 You'll
17 Or
18 No
!9Find
20 Sudden
21 Your
22 No
23 Judgment
24 Ambition
25 People
26 Your
27 Prevent
28 Attention
29 Somewhat
30 Regrets
LIBRA
SEPT. 23
OCT. 23
6-19-25-290
153-58-75
61 Make
62 Words
63 Could
64 A
65 While
66 Become
67 View
oB Flattery
69 Matters
70 A(e
71 Attends
72 Renlols
73 Reolily
74 R.d
75 Plea&e
76 Leoies
77 Your
78 Of
79 Are
80 Who
8 1 Mom
82 If
83 Poor
84 Useless
85 Drawbacks
86 And
31 Buy
32 But
.'-3 A
34 Stumbling
35 New
ii6 Fne
37 Friendly
38 And
39 For
40 Ooy
41 Support
42 Regarding
43 To
44 Changes
45 Chances
46 From
47 Worrying
48 Finances
49 Wait
50 And
51 Equtpmsnl
52 Property
53 Easy
54 When
55 People
56 Honeyed
57 Anticipation 8 Needed
58 To 88 Count
59 Pessimistic 89 Impediment
60 Get 90 fmproveniem
SCORPIO
OCT 24
NOV. 22
9-26-30-38 4
161-71-82-87
()Cood (K) Adverse
ior)
) Neutral
SAGITTARIUS
NOV
DEC 22
,47 50-59-67(
70-77-81-85'
CAPRICORN
DEC 23
JAN. M
7- 8-10-24,
132-45-79-83'
AQUARIUS
JAN. 21
FEB. 19
4- 5-12-17,
bl -3551 '
MSCtS
'MAR 21 tf.i?
33-40-54.57,
163-66 73 &j
United Press International
Omaha, Neb. seems about the
most unlikely place in the nation
for a racial disturbance.
Public accommodations, trans
portation and schools are fully
integrated and Mayor James
Dworak has a bi-racial com
mittee at work to make the ra
cial climate ever better.
Even many of the residents
of Omaha profess not to know
what it all means when they
hear of noisy demonstration at
City Hall.
Today, City Council meets
again and Negroes promised to
be there with demands for an
"open occupancy" housing ordi
nance, a regulation that is not
likely to be offered at tnis
time.
Omaha, a Missouri River city
of 2!)5,0O0, has a Negro popula
tion of about 30,000. Most ot
the Negroes are boxed into the
near north side of town in
housing they contend is ghctto-
like in appearance ana cxorui-
tant in cost.
They support their discontent
with claims of paying S90 to
more than $100 monthly in some
instances for second floor
apartments that have no sani
tary facilities inside individual
units.
An orcanized Negro group
called the Citizens Coordinating
Committee for Civil Liberties,
or the "4CL" as it is known lo
cally, is demanding that city
council open the city so Ne
groes can buy or rent housing
where it is available.
The mayor's bi-racial com
mittee has a sub-group work
ine on housing but that is
as far as he intends to go at
present.
Dworak accuses the or
canized integration movement
of blowing ud incidents for pub'
licitv purposes. When informed
that the Rev. Rudolph McNair
one of the Negro leaders, had
called on the city's 30,ooo we
crocs to stay off the job and
out of school to demonstrate
at the council session, he
nuioDed that "they are more
likelv to draw about 100,
The Omaha Ministerial Alli
ance, composed mainly of Ne
cro clergymen, adopted a reso
lution urging Negroes not to
support McNairs demonstra
tion and to stay on the job
and in school.
The integration campaign in
Omaha got up a head of steam
about the time the racial drive
was moving into high gear in
the South last summer. Until
then, about the worst incident
anyone could remember was a
brawl involving some Negroes
at a high school football game
about IS years ago.
Ticking Off Demands
Today, Omaha's organized
Negroes are ticking off new de
mands that include better jobs
and more integration in schools
as well as better housing. A
new school superintendent re
cently agreed to halt the plac
ing of Negro teachers only in
predominantly Negro schools.
The bi - racial employment
subcommittee has sent ques
tionnaires to industry in search
of jobs to fit the skills of lo
cal Negroes and a clearing
house for jobs has been estab
lished for Negro labor.
Nebraska, a hotbed of con
troversy over the slave issue,
was admitted to the Union
right after the Civil War. At
Nebraska City, just south of
Omaha, there was a terminus
of the famous "underground
railroad by which slaves es
caped from the south and stay
ed to live. Many who live there
today apparently arc their des-cendents.
Now, 100 years later, Ne
braska once more is caught up
in the civil rights crisis along
with the former slave-holding
states of the old South.
-A 3
Mediators Schedule
Talks with Company
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Fed
eral mediators, who helped set
tle Westinghouse Electric Cor
poration's contract dispute with
the International Electrical
Workers Union (IUE), have
moved into company talks with
the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers (IBEW).
Joseph Piconke of Washington
and Arthur Wellman of Pitts
burgh joined the IBEW-West-inghouse
talks Tuesday in hopes
of negotiating a settlement be
fore the union's contract ex
pires midnight, Oct. 31.
The firm, which meets today
with the IBEW, also is conduct
ing negotiations with the Unit
ed Electrical Workers (UE).
The UE has been negotiating on
a day-to-day basis since mid
night Oct. 14 under a contract
extension.
Piconke and Wellman worked
with the IUE and the company
before a settlement was
reached last weekend.
Great to yivc, grand to gctfi
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MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER
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