10 6
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13. 1963 ,
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON
DIRECTOR Dr. Robert D. Gal
lagher, D.S.C., whose offices are
in the Medical Center Building,
will direct the 1964 March of
Dimes campaign in Jackson
County. Dr. Gallagher, a World
War II veteran and graduate of
the California College of Podi
atry in San Francisco, recently
attended a regional meeting of
March of Dimes workers from
five states in Seattle. Persons
interested in assisting in the
campaign for funds to combat
polio, birin delects ana rneuma
toid arthritis are urged to con'
tact Dr. Gallagher at 773-6864,
Ullman Believes Tax Cut Bill Needed to Stimulate Economy
By YVONNE FRANKLIN
Mail Tribune
Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON - Rep. Al
Ullman is confident that the $11
billion tax cut will set the Na
tion's cash registers jingling
Charles McNair
Discusses World
Education Tour
Much of the U.S. foreign aid
film's spent abroad seems to
be wasted, and generally the
recipients of this aid are not
aware of the source.
This observation was voiced
by Charles McNair, son of Dr.
and Mrs. Raymond McNair, in
an address Tuesday before the
Medford Rotary club. Recent
ly he returned from a world
tour as a student in the Inter
national School of America and
is now a pre-medic major at
the University of Oregon.
Speaking at a luncheon meet
ing at the Rogue Valley Coun
try club, McNair told his Med
ford audience that the "ugly
American" impression of U.S.
citizens abroad was not at all
apparent in his contact both
with Americans in foreign coun
tries and with foreigners them
selves. Describes School
McNair described the unique
round the world school, now
in its fourth year, initiated with
the idea that world study can
become more effective if under'
taken on location. The course
begins with introductory work
in this country, then covers the
principle countries of the world
including a period behind the
Iron Curtain in Poland, Hungary
and Russia.
Among the subjects covered
In this extended world school
tour are the populations and
economy of nations visited, im
pact of technological develop
ments, foreign aid, common
market, archaeology and the ef
fect of ancient civilizations. Re
ligious and philosophical docu
ments are included in the study.
Thailand impressed him most
on the interesting tour, McNair
said, and Greece proved to be
the second most fascinating
country.
McNair- was an -associate
member of the Medford Rotary
Club when he was student body
president at Medford High
School .
Medford Students
Win University
Debate Honors
EUGENE (UPI) -University
of Oregon entries in the sixth
annual Oregon Forensic Tourna
ment held here Nov. 8-9 took
more first places than any other
competing school.
Oregon students tied for three
debate titles and took five in
dividual first places in competi
tion with 22 schools from the
three Pacific Coast Slates plus
Idaho and Nevada.
The UO team of George Aust
in, Hillsboro; Gary Cross, Ft.
Scott, Kan., and Gary Simmons,
North Bend, tied with three oth
ers for first in senior men's de
bate. The team of Carolyn Rid
dle, Portland, and Marilyn Elle,
Pocatcllo, Idaho, tied with Judy
Eberhart, Ashland, and Jo Ann
Johnson, Medford, and two oth
er teams, for top honors in the
senior women s debate.
Bill Dames Ties
Another tie occurred in the
junior division with Mike Salve-
son. Hi soboro. and Ken Steph
ens. Eugene, matching efforts of
Bill Dames, Medford, Larry
Johnson, Salem, and Roger Neu,
Hillsboro, for first.
Individual title winners in
cluded Bill Koons, Eugene, in
senior men's impromptu, with
Austin second. Bill Sweetland,
Klamath Falls, was second in
junior men's debate.
Miss Elle in the senior divi
sion and Miss Johnson in the
junior won top women's honors.
Tony Wascher, Portland, sen
ior men's and Dawn Newsom,
Portland, senior women's, got
the other firsts with oral inter
pretation victories.
and the economic growth rate
pulse tingling, but he isn't too
happy with those who say they
don't want the tax cut without
drastic cuts in federal spending,
particularly with regard to education.
Ullman is a member of the
tax writing House Ways and
Means Committee and a ler-
vent advocate of the tax cut
bill as urgent and necessary to
stimulate economic growtn.
"But I am never going to be
accused of saying that because
we have a tax cut we should
not carry on our other respon
Coast Guardsmen
Escape Injury
BANDON, Ore. (UPI) -Two
Coast Guardmen escaped injury
when their 14-foot aluminum
boat capsized in the mouth of
the Coquille River Monday.
The men, wearing life jackets,
Post Office Unravels
Address of Numbers
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPD-Rufus
K. Barton Jr. addressed a let
ter to:
"0-5220837
"110423
"79916." y
His son, LI. Rufus K. Barton
III. received it at Ft. Bliss,
Tex., one week later.
The first, set of numbers was
the younger Barton's Army se
rial number, tne secona set re
ferred to the air defense school,
and the third set was the zip
code for Ft. Bliss.
Seal Scrubbing
Will Start UO
Homecoming Eve
EUGENE The traditional
scrubbing of the seal in front
of the Erb Memorial Student
Union. Tuesday, Nov. 19, will
open the University of Oregon's
1963 Homecoming activities.
Other traditional Homecoming
activities will include a tug-of-
war contest on the Mill Race
at 3 p.m. Tuesday; q-ien elec
tion, a keg hunt and keg hunt
ers ball on Wednesday, Nov. 20;
and Kanearoo court for tradition
offenders on Thursday and Fri
day, Nov. 21-22.
Returning alumni will register
between 3 and 7 p.m. Friday,
either at the student union or
the Eugene Hotel. On Saturday,
registration will be from 8 to
noon.
Rally Parade Scheduled
A rally parade will be held on
campus at 6:30 p.m., tnaay,
followed by the annual bonfire
on the Intramural Field. A rock
and roll dance has been sched
uled for McArthur Court, with
the aucen coronation at 10 p.m.
Saturday's activities negin ai
mile down the coast line and
were washed onto the beach
near here.
The were Larry Sims, 25, and
Martin Mas, 21, both stationed
at the Coast Guard Electronic
Repair Station al Empire.
drifted in the o c e a n about a 10 a.m. with the Alumni-Facul
ty collee nour at ine Browsing
Room of the student union. The
annual Alumni Luncheon will be
held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in
the dining room of the student
union.
The football game between
Oregon-Oregon State will start
at 1 p.m., followed by an exhi
bition rugby game. Then the
celebrating crowds will be in
vited to open house from 4 to
5 p.m. in campus living organi
zations.
One of the major events of
the week end will be al 7:30
p.m. when victor tsorge, pian
ist, appears in concert at Mac
Court. The Homecoming Dance
will commence at 9:30 p.m. at
the same site, with music by
The Starlightcrs.
Homecoming festivities f o r
1953 will conclude with a con
cert by the University Singers,
1 n.m.. Simdnv. Nov. 24. in the
I student union (ishbowl.
HOSPITAL COST UP
NEW YORK (UPI) - One
measure of rising hospital costs
a health insurance policy writ
ten for workers of a large firm
25 years ago listed room and
board benefits of $3 a day with
a maximum allowance for oth
er hospital charges of $15.
In conslrast, the m m s pres
ent plan provides reimburse
ment for hospital charges of all
kinds; for physician s charges
for visits al home; for diagnos
tic X-rays and laboratory exam
inations; for oxygen, ambulanc
es and prescribed drugs. This is
typical of the trend of the fu
ture, the Health Insurance In
stitute reports.
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S4H GREEN STAMPS
sibilities, he said, ' and one
of the most important is the
education of our citizens."
"The simple economics of the
situation will necessitate an in
creased responsibility on the
part of the Federal Govern
ment," he continued, "because
in a State like Oregon, we place
the Drimarv burden (for school
support) on the backs of the
property owners.
"We are at the point of di
minishing returns and can't
push them any higher. But the
educational needs are becom
ing more pressing and more ex
pensive witness our troubles
in Oregon.
Age Group Increases
Oregon Education Association
figures show that the age group
in Oregon, up to age 18, in
creased 45 per cent from 1940
to 1950 while the income-producing
group between 22 and 64
has increased only 2.8 per cent,
and Oregonians are producing
38,000 babies annually.
The real financial crisis Is
at the State level, not the fed
eral level," maintained Ullman,
"and leads to the simple con
clusion that to meet the educa
tional challenge, the Federal
Government must have an in
creasingly larger share of the
financial burden."
He said he thought federal
programs were at present being
carried on well without federal
control and future programs
could be done without control.
Ullman was critical of the
Oregon State legislature and
Gov. Mark Hatfield for cutting
educational needs from the
State budget, particularly com
munity colleges which he feels
is "the greatest need in t h e
whole American educational sys
tem today."
As a result of the Oct. 15
tax vote, the Oregon State
Board of Education, acting on
orders from Gov. Hatfield, post
poned allocation of the $1.3 mil
lion community colleges build
ing programs for construction
for: Blue Mountain, Central
Oregon, Clatsop, South West
ern Oregon, Treasure Valley,
Eugene Technical - Vocational,
Portland Community and Salem
Technical Vocational .
( Answer Said Supplied
Ullman explained that he was
particularly concerned for com
munity colleges because he felt
they supplied the answer to the
overwhelming need for "sub
professional" technicians which
are currently in short supply.
He said the need was greater
than for scientists. He criticized
the four-year colleges for ham
pering the development of com
munity colleges in Oregon.
Every year since his arrival
in Congress, Ullman has intro
duced a bill to aid States in es
tablishing community colleges.
He pointed to California, a State
which has burgeoned in com
munity colleges for decades,
and their booming economic
success in attracting defense
and space age industry. He be
lieves that community colleges
should devote more than half
their efforts toward technical
sub - professional training be
cause of industrial needs which
are not being met for trained
personnel,
Ullman agreed with the thesis
of economist Charles Killings
worth of Michigan State Univer
sity who has stirred interest in
Washington with his "bottle
neck" theory of the need to in
vest in human beings to pro
vide tor nighly-educated work
ers:
"In the past dozen years, au
tomation and the growing pref
erence ot consumers lor more
services rather than more goods
have stimulated heavy demands
for highly - educated workers
and have greatly diminished
job opportunities for poorly ed
ucated workers," says Killings
worth. "Despite a steady (but slow)
improvement in the average ed
ucational level of the work
force, the change in the pat
tern of demand for labor has
created a large surplus of poorly-educated
workers and seri
ous shortages of certain kinds
of highly-educated workers.
"Because of the new employ
ment patterns in the economy,
a general increase in spending
for goods and services by con
sumers and an increase in in
vestment by business firms
(which are hoped - for effects
of the $11 billion tax cut) would
soon result in acute shortages
of many kinds of highly-eou-
cated workers without greatly
reducing the present surplus of
poorly-educated workers.
"The bottleneck in the sup
ply of workers at the top of
the educational ladder would se
riously impede the continued
economic expansion that is es
sential to reduce to tolerable
levels the shocking rates of un
employment that we find to
day at the middle and bottom
of the educational attainment
ladder."
Bill Introduced Annually
To meet this need for skilled
manpower for a hoped-for ex
panding economy, Ullman has
introduced each year since his
arrival in Congress a bill to
aid States in establishing com
munity colleges.
His bill calls for spending
$200 million each year for three
years on a matching basis to
assist states in setting up com
munity colleges.
Ullman explained how the tax
cut would stimulate growth:
"The high tax rate was put on
in wartime for one purpose, not
just to raise revenue, but to
put a damper on a private sec
tor of the economy and more
into the puMic to win the war,
and it worked. But it took away
incentive capital; and if you
want to put more dynamism
into the private sector you take
it off (taxes).
"What you are doing is put
ting $11 billion into the pockets
of the taxpayer to spend. There
is then the multiplying effect.
If the taxpayer gets $10 in his
paycheck, he is going to spend
it . . . this money turns over
and over again. It is the whole
basis of the free enterprise sys
tern and why the Russians have
not been able to compete.
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