6 A
14 SOC Students
Are in Who's Who
ASHLAND Fourteen South
em Oregon College undergrade
ate students have been select
ed to have their names included
in the 196344 Who's Who Among
' Students in 'American Univer
sities and Colleges.
Students are Mary 'Jo Bat
zer. Medford: Barbara Jean
Bell, Coos Bay; Mildred Ann
Boyd, Richmond, Calif.; Terry
W. Casten, Ashland; Harold W.
Friend. Medford; Carol Anne
Kelso. Lakeview: James L.
Long, Malta; Jean Margaret
Pletsch, Medford; Lanl Frenzel
Schreeder, Redmond; Chubbin
Mae Snero. Klamath Fails:
Katherine Elaine Straus, Cen
tral Point: Barbara Marie Ty
ler,.- Medford; Carol Jeanne
Weischedel. Azalea; ' and Mil
dred Ann Williams, Sutherliit,
Candidates were nominated
by - Southern Oregon College
clubs, organizations and faculty.
A final list of nominees was
made by a faculty committee
on student honors and awards
before the. names were submit
ted to the publication.
Nominations to the college
Who's Who were based upon ex
cellence and sincerity in schol
arship, leadership and partici
pation in extra-curricular activ
ities, citizenship and service to
the .school and promise to fu
ture usefulness to society. To
be eligible for nomination, stu
dents, had to be fulltime, regu
larly . enrolled students during
the quarter in which they were
nominated.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, U63
SAE Pledgemaster
Returns to Campus
After Kidnaping
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) -
David Garner, 22. Botell
Wash., was en route home to
day following one of the most
bizarre fratern ty "kidnapings
Garner said he w a s "kid
naped" early last Friday mor
ning from his bed in Tacoma.
Wash., where he is vice pledge
master of Sigma Alpha Epsilon
fraternity at Fusel Sound Uni
versity
Fraternity pledges taped his
Oregon Sets New
Traffic Death Mark
BEAVERTON (UPI) -Oregon
had a new traffic death record
Tuesday.
The State Traffic safety Divi
sion in Salem reported the offi
cial count has reached 494 with
the death of a Beaverton woman
Monday night and a report of a
fatal accident near Pendleton
last week.
The old record for an entire
year was 492, set in 1959. The
state does not count accidents
on private property.
Margurite Reddy, about 60,
Beaverton, was injured fatally
when struck by a car Monday
night. .
The other death reported by
the division Tuesday was that of
Oliver Keener, 23, Pendleton,
last week in Umatilla County.
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legs and handcuffed the pajama-
clad senior but freed his bonds
and gave him clothing at Uni
versity of Oregon. Garner was
shuttled by car from pledge
class to pledge class through
three states for a distance of 1,-
500 miles, a 36-hour trip. -
When he arrived at San Diego
College last Saturday night he
was whisked immediately to Ti
juana, Mexico, to attend a party
in his honor.
Garner said his "captors"
were respectful and pledges at
Puget Sound University who
talked by telephone with each
college along the coast where
Garner happened to be. at the
moment always asked him if
he were having a good time.
A fraternity brother is driving
Gamer home.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
IP J 4m t i yvs -'
fi4.il:.
BIG SNARL Cary Baldwin, director of
Fleishhacker Zoo in San Francisco, Calif.,
gets a big snarl from five-months-old black
maned Ethiopian lion, as Cary welcomed
the cub last Friday. The cub was flown to
San Francisco from Mexico City, via Western
Airlines, after it was won as a prize at a
travel agents convention. The new owner
then found out how much it costs to feed a
hungry lion, and promptly offered it to Bald
win at the zoo. (UPI)
News About Servicemen
. ROTC CADET
Pvt. John G. Champ Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Champ,
Central Point, has been pro
moted to cadet corporal while
serving in the college ROTO
program at Wheaton College,
Wheaton, 111.
- WAC GRADUATES
Pvt. . Barbara E. Eskew,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
0. Eskew, itoute 4, Meaiora nas
been graduated from the U. S.
Army Signal School at Ft. Mon
mouth, N.J., after 10 weeks of
training as a photographic technician.
and Mrs. Albert L. Hawley, 597
Midway Road, Medford has been
promoted to specialst lour
while serving in the U. S. Army
as a pharmacist at William
Beaumont General Hospital, El
Paso, Texas.
: : IN PUERTO RICO
Gary Keith Boyd, son of Mrs.
Ruth Boyd, 723 W. Second St.,
recently graduated from the
U. S. Navy's heavy equipment
operator's training school a t
Port Huemene, Calif. He is to
report for duty in Puerto Rico
early next month.
COMPLETES TRAINING
Gordon D. Hackworth, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd J. Hack-
worth, Route 2, Medford, has
completed basic training at the
Naval Training Center, San Di
ego, Calif.
PROMOTED .
Allen K. Hawley, son of Mr.
GRADUATED
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Roland A.
Wilkerson, husband of Vayle
Wilkerson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. H. E. Specht, 1320 Pros
pect St., Ashland, was gradu
ated recently from the U. S.
Air Force transition t r a i n ing
course for C-130 Hercules trans
port pilots at Sewart Air Force
Base, Tenn. He is being reas
signed to the Naval Air Station,
Moffett Field, Calif.
PRE-FLIGHT SCHOOL
Marine Cadet Walter J. Do-
herty, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wal
ter Doherty, Route 1, Gold Hill,
is attending the Naval ire
Flight School, Naval Air Sta
tion, Pensacola, Fla.
INSTRUCTOR DUTY
Staff Sgt. William E. Bates,
son of Loyal W. Bates, Talent,
has completed the course for
U.S. Air Force technical in
structors at Sheppard Air Force
Base, Texas. An accounting and
finance technician, Sgt. Bates
will remain at Sheppard for in
structor duty.
OPEN
Sundays
635 E. Jackson
Small Worlds
Around Us
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Misplaced Some Organs
It may have been intentional
in the beginning, when Nature
was designing and creating liv
ing things, to misplace various
body organs in odd or, unusual
locations in the bodies of her
subjects. Possibly it was more-
or-Iess an experiment, sort 01
toying around with ideas as to
the best place to locate various
organs.
The experiment, if that is what
it was, seems to have been suc
cessful for although some organ
placements seem rather ridicu
lous to us, it works out pretty
well for the creatures that have
to use them.
The katydid, listens well with
her "knee-ears"; the starfish
sees all that is necessary with
its "arm-eyes," and the sea
horse gets along swimmingly
without a backbone, and the tur
tle without any ribs. The tree
frog breathes comfortably by
pores in its stomach or absorbs
moisture the same way. All
these things are commonplace
with those, creatures that are
adjusted to their way of life.
But just the same, organ place
ment, or body functions, in some
animals are unusual.
Teeth Placement
An extraordinary and absurd
location for teeth would be down
in an animal's throat but that's
just where the ocean drum, a
coarse marine fish, carries his;
they are called paving stone
teeth, and they are strong
enough to crush oyster shells.
The great Manta ray, often call
ed Devil-fish for no justifiable
reason, has its teeth "knocked
down its throat" too. Perhaps
old Mother Nature was in a foul
mood when she kicked the teeth
down the throat of the Manta
ray.
Something must have messed
up some of the lines on crea
tion's drawing board, when the
antennae of the roach was ex
tended out to abnormal lengths.
The heart of the roach just
didn't have the power to send
the body fluids such a distance.
So, what did Nature do? She
didn't shorten the antennae but
instead she built in a couple of
auxiliary pumping stations in
the insect's head. They take
over the body fluids and give
them an added push, forcing
the blood up to the far tips of
the long antennae.
Frog Lungs
Encouraged by the success of
the "head-heart" Nature tried
something else equally outland-
lsn. hne put lungs right in the
stomach of the frogs, making
it possible for them to bury
themselves in deep mud, hold
their breath, and live there,
without air, for several months
at a time.
In the little tree toad the
stomach pores absorb moisture
from dewy leaves. This little
guy can go into a state of sus
pended animation and sleep in
a deathlike sleep while the wea
ther is cold. Come the spring
and warm, weather, the creature
shifts gears and begins breath
ing normally;
Not entirely satisfied with the
miracles already accomplished,
Mother Nature pulled out all the
stops and went overboard with
organ placement in the common
housefly. Here a highly sensi
tive area was invaded. The fly's
brain was located on the floor
of the stomach. With this ludi
crous arrangement the fly can
be decapitated and still continue
to function like a normal fly.
Only trouble is the poor jerk,
having no mouth parts, starves
to death.
Council Statement
On Catholic-Jew
Relations Lauded
VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Ecu-menical
Council fathers gave
warm and prolonged applause
Tuesday to the presentation of
historic statements on Catholic
relations with Jews and on re
ligious liberty, i .;
The statements declare that
Jews should not be made scape
goats for the crucifixion of
Christ and proclaim the right of
all men to the free exercise of
religion according to the dic
tates of conscience.
Although the statement on re
ligious liberty received the
greatest applause, the council
fathers gave close attention to
the presentation on the state
ment of Jews made by Augus
tin Cardinal Bea, head of the
secretariat for promoting Chris
tian unity. .
The German-born "cardinal
said the statement was a purely
religious matter and that there
was no question of the council
getting mixed up in difficult
cult questions of Arab-Israel
politics.
Oriental Fathers Object
Some Oriental council fathers
had objected Monday that the
special treatment of the Jews in
a document on Christian unity
could lead to the persecution of
Christian minorities in the Arab
world.
Cardinal Bea told council fath
ers that his secretariat has in
formed Arab states of the non-
political nature of the proposed
statement.
The document is Intended to
recall what the church of Christ
has received through the Old
Testament of the Hebrews and
that the church in modern times
is the continuation of the cho
sen people of Israel, Bea made
clear in his presentation.
Despite the cardinal's speech,
three' more prelates Tuesday ob
jected to the inclusion of the
statement on the Jews in the
overall document on Christian
unity. '
Emile Cardinal Leger of Mon
treal, Canada, said both the
chapter on the Jews and that on
religious liberty should be de
creed as separate documents. .
1 Gives Presentation
Bishop Emile De Smedt of
Bruges, Belgium, gave the pres
entation of the chapter on reli
gious liberty on behalf of Card
dinal Bea's secretariat.
His report was greeted witn
what the official council spokes
man called "the longest, warm
est and most general applause
of this session.".
Bishop De Smedt said the
proposed teaching on religious
liberty climaxed a doctrinal ev
olution on the dignity of the hu
man person and religious liberty
which reached its peak -in Pope
John's last encyclical "Pacera 1
in Terris" (Peace on Earth).
The religious liberty chapter,
prepared partly at the urging
of the American church hierar
chy, proclaims the right of In
dividuals to follow their con- -sciences
in religious matters
and to worship freely or refrain
from worship without govern
ment interference.
If approved, this would be the
first unequivocal Catholic state
ment of this view. The church
has traditionally held that "er
ror does not have the same
rights as truth," a position
which has sometimes been
Interpreted as a denial of re
ligious liberty. : '
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WESTCLOX
Legislators Get
Per Diem Expense
SALEM (UPI) -Legislators
got their $20 per diem expense
money Monday for the first
week of the special session.
All but two legislators were
sent expense checks.
Secretary of State Howell Ap
pling Jr. said Rep. John Dcllen
back, R-Modford, wrote a letter
last week rejecting his expense
money. Appling said Sen. Tom
Monaghan, D - Milwaukie, a
school teacher, turned down the
money for three days during
which he was teaching.
Meanwhile, the Full Ways and
Means Committee Monday fail
ed to approve a bill by Rep.
Jake Bennett, D-Portland,) to
cut the pay of legislators and
state employes.
The committee amended the
bill more than a dozen times,
but refused to pass it out.
Proposals to cut the pay of
state employes and legislators
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the legislature.