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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1963)
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NOW FAST RELIEF PROM MODIRATI ARTHRITIC RHEUMATIC MUSCULAR PAINS WHINIVH THIY OCCUR DOLCIN TAB LIT Monty-baok guiranttl When simple hemorrhoidi cause agony i anu emoarrassing ncn, use DC win s Manan now even more eneciive with Allanloin, a special healing agent. wan .an auto contains nenzocaine lo ease pain, anu a vasoconstrictor to neip reuuee swelling, for soothing .action and fast palliative relief, try . . . WNTMINT ON tUWIJITOBIBS PHOTO CREDITS Page 2i H. Armstrong Roberts, togs 6. Wide World. Poge 7: UPI. I i n USX, MOVIES BUY BONDS Does BLADDER IRRITATION MAKE YOU NERVOUS? After 31, common Kldntr or Bladder Ir rlutlotu affect twice aa many woman as men and mar make rou tense nd nervous from too frequent, burntns or Jtohlm urination bothdayandnliht. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Head ache, Backache and feel old, Ured. de pressed, In such Irritation. CYST EX usually brines fast, relax Ins comfort by curbing irrltatlrut terms In strons. acid urine and by analseslo pain relief. Get OY8TKX at druaaUU. rtl better nut. NANCY SINATRA JmHv ' aft" cjmjumh She Wants to Make It on Her Own! In films, Nancy wants no help from her famous father, but she's grateful for her parents' finest gift: a sensible, down-to-earth upbringing By PEER J. OPPENHEIMER Frank Sinatra's oldest daughter suspicious ly faced producer Hugh Benson, who was casting "For Those Who Think Young." "Would you still think I was right for the role if my name weren't Nancy Sinatra?" she snapped. "Nancy, I know Frank Sinatra well enough to say hello to him," Benson answered, "and I have said hello to him three times in my life. Sure, this picture is for your father's Essex Productions, but I'm in charge of it and I want you to do this role." - Nancy accepted the part, but it is understandable why she had qualms about it "I have been offered a lot of parts by people who just want to use my name," she told me. "So I turned them down. Often you find out that your friends don't really care about you; it's simply nice for them to be friends with Nancy Sinatra. That hurts and it will again because I can't just shut myself away." A starring role in her first film might seem like favor itism, but 23-year-old Nancy is not exactly unprepared for her film debut. She made her first professional appearance at 15 as a member of a trio of girls who sang on her father's television program. She has done little-theater and summer stock and spent a good deal of time in New York studying voice and drama. "Your father never had any singing lessons. How did he feel about your studying?" I asked her. "He insisted that the more training I got, the better off I'd be. He told me the best training was traveling around with a band, but I'm not the kind of girl to go on the road. I'm a homebody. The first time I went to summer camp, I got so homesick that I came back in two weeks. "This seems to run in the family. When my brother Frank first went on the road with a band, he called home all the time; it just about killed him to be away. But Dad thought it was time for him to get out on his own, and my brother showed he could take it. He's a man, and that's something Mom and Dad wanted to find out. He even lives on his own earnings now." NANCY tried TO take her first step toward independence when she was 18. "I went to New York by myself, but I wasn't completely alone. I had family back East my grandparents. Also, I lived in my father's apartment, a girl friend of mine lived in the next building, and Dad made darn sure that I was well looked after. He had all sorts of people watching over me, and he even left a list of emergency phone numbers in his apartment." ' It is quite apparent that Nancy was reared in a practi cal, down-to-earth manner. She gives credit for this to both her father and her mother (who also is named Nancy). "We all worked at summer jobs as soon as we were old enough to get working permits. I got my first job at 16, selling clothes. Most of the money I made went into the bank, which was great training in saving. Mother didn't ask for rent, but I had to buy my lunches, my clothes, and my books for school out of my earnings. "I never really got an allowance. If I wanted to go to a movie, I would have to ask for the money. If I wanted to take a bus downtown to buy a blouse, I had to get the money for-that, too. It was never just hairded-to-me. -I had to have a good reason for every dime I spent. "My mother always tried to keep the household as nor mal as possible. We went to public schools, and she was active in the PTA. I was discouraged from dating any one in show business. The only exceptions were the Crosby boys. I went out with them a few times, but these were strictly friendly dates." - After Nancy was graduated from high school, she went to the University of Southern California for one semester. (Continued on page 20) II Family Wklw,NotmbT 17, 193