Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 05, 1963, Image 3

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    Addilional Seals
Available in Area
Additional supplies of Christ
mas seals for use on holiday
mail and Christmas packages
may be secured by calling at
the offices of the Jackson Coun
ty Tuberculosis and Health as
sociation in the Leverette build
ing on West Main Street, Med
ford, or by telephoning the of
fice at 772-4818, Mrs. Allen
Perry, Christmas seal chair
man announced today.
They are also available at the
Jackson County Health Depart
ment or at the commissary at
Camp White, she said.
Although every effort is made
to see that each home in Jack
son County has a supply of
Christmas seals together with
an opportunity to help in the
fight against tuberculosis and
other respiratory diseases, the
association feels some have
been missed and there are oth
ers who want additional seals,
she added.
Christmas seals are now
being used on gift packages as
well as letters since they not
only create an attractive and
original wrapping, but also help
to promote better health, she
noted.
This year's seal has been
designed to be used with the
new Christmas stamp sold by
the post office.
Each year a national contest
is conducted among artists in
the country for the best design
for the seal and the winner for
1963 is Miss Judith Pisussi of
South Bend, Ind. She is a gradu
a t e of DePauw University
where she studies fine arts and
has been a free lance illustrator
with a special interest in batik
designs on silk. Her winning de
sign was made while she was
still in college.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1961
TIPSY PILOT
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP1)
A tipsy pilot, Frank Joseph
Konet, who shook the compos
ure of citizens and police when
he buzzed downtown office
buildings and flew through the
Federal Aviation Agency anten
nae field, was fined $50 for
being drunk in public.
431 V jX, 1
iw;cAv I ,; yi 11
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HEARING UNDER WAY Seaside, Calif.,
Police Chief Lee Pilcher (right) and Police
Sgt. Howard Sager (left) are shown as their
grand jury hearing was under way in Sa
linas, Calif., on possible indictment on fel
ony wiretapping charges. The jury indicted
them late Tuesday, and Monterey County
Dist. Alty. Bertram Young said that to his
knowledge it was the first time police offi
cers had been charged under the California
wiretap law. The hearing was outgrowth of
a police investigation of alleged harassing
calls received by a Seaside couple. (UPI)
' 1 - lp
BEFOnr THE SPEEDOMETER HEADS 30H'E"rXi KNOW JIOW EV IT 1S5
The second he touches his toe to the accelerator, his
amazement will begin. For no previous Cadillac ever
mnud like this one!
At 10 miles an hour, the most powerful engine in
Cadillac history ill already be working its magic.
By 20 that great Cadillac transmission the newly
improved Hydra-Matic or the completely new Turbn
Hvdra-Matic will reveal a smooth, flawless kind of
action he's never felt in any motor car before.
And by 30 the whole splendor of this new Cadillac
performance begin to unfold. New response. New
quietness. New balance and poise. New alertness.
At 40 or 50, the car will have so much added accelera-
MORE TEMPTING THAN EVER AND JUST WAIT Till YOU
tion that passing will be incredibly easy with an extra
margin of safety he's never known before.
And even at the full legal limit, this new Cadillac car
will be so steady and quiet that the only sensation of
motion will come from the passing scenery.
And then, he will take restful note of the other great
new Cadillac virtues the extraordinary luxury of
Comfort Control' . . , the magnificent comfort of the
new contoured seatu . . . the marvelous roominess and
convenience that come only with the "car of cars".
Want to find out yourself how new the 1961 Cadillac
is? Your dealer is standing by with the keys. All he
needs is you and thirty minute.
DRIVE IT-SIE YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER
SKINNER BUICK-CADILLAC
Wayne Morse Loses No Time in
Declaring His Independence
A 3
A. ROBERT
SMITH
Mail Tribune
Washington
Correspondent
WASHINGTON (Special) -Sen.
Wayne Morse lost no time
declaring his independence after
President Lyndon B. Johnson
assumed office.
Was this simply the custom
ary ritual of the Senate gadfly
for propagating the legend that
he fiercely withstands all pres
sures and yields not even to
the president of the United
States in voting his conscience?
Or was it a premature declar
ation of hostilities by the Ore
gon liberal senator who habit
ually tangled with Johnson when
the Texan was running the Sen
ate in much too conservative
fashion to suit Wayne Morse?
Months Will Tell
Only the coming months will
tell. But the proposed Soviet
wheat deal provided an oppor
tunity for Morse to flare up with
indignation aimed at the White
House before Johnson was in of
fice a week.
It occured when the Senate
killed a bill by Sen. Karl Mundt,
K-o.D., which was designed to
prevent the Export-Import bank
from guaranteeing credits ex
tended to the Soviets by Amer
ican grain dealers who sell
wheat to Russia. The late Presi
dent Kennedy opposed the
Mundl bill, and so did Johnson
because Treasury Secretary
Douglas Dillon concluded that
U.S. commercial banks aren't
prepared to grant such credits
and that "without Export-Import
Bank guarantees, it is very
doubtful that the sales can be
made."
Morse had testified for the
Mundt bill before the Senate
Banking Committee. The com
mittee voted 8 to 7 against the
bill, with Sen. Maurine Neuber
ger among those who opposed
it. When the Senate voted to kill
it, 57 to 35, Morse was absent;
but the Congressional Record
the next day recorded him as
paired against the Mundt bill.
Declaration of Support
Washington newspapers inter
preted the vote as a senatorial
declaration of support for the
new president. But Morse didn't
want anyone to suspect he had
changed his mind or yielded to
White House requests to vote
against a bill he had been for.
So he rose in high indignation
the next day to say:
"I did not case my vote on
the basis of instructions that
came to me from the White
House, for in my opinion the
president was dead wrong in the
position he took on the Mundt
bill. I do not sit in the Senate as
a senator of the president of the
United States. I sit in the Sen
ate as a senator of the people
of the slate of Oregon and it is
to them that I owe my trust of
following where the facts lead.
I owe them and not the presi
dent the duty of voting in the
Senate in accordance with what
I think the best public interest
is lu connection with any issue
and not in accordance with the
wish of the president If I con
sider him to be wrong on any
issue."
Morse prefaced this by telling
the Senate that one of the presi
dent's assistants had telephoned
him to say the president "would
like to have me vote against the
Mundt bill." Morse said he re
plied to the White House aide
that he should tell the president
that the Oregon senator "would
vote for the Mundt bill because
in my judgment it was in the
public interest."
Matter of Judgement
"This is a matter of judg
ment," observed Morse. "I am
sure it will not be the last time
that 1 will find myself in disa
greement with the president of
the United States on the merits
of some issue."
Morse explained his position
on the bill by predicting that the
Soviets may welch on the deal,
refusing to pay the agreed costs
in full. Morse said "our exper
ience with Russian leaders Is
perfectly clear."
"I can hear them. They may
say that they have found that
the wheat is wormy. Or they
have ifound it dirty. Or they
have found this and that wrong
with the wheat but they have
found some excuse for welching
on their purchase," he added.
"I see no reason why taxpayers'
money from the Export-Import
Bank should be set up as a sub
sidy guarantee to the grain deal
ears of the U.S., assuring them
that they can trade without loss
because the taxpayers will guar
antee their payments."
Dr. Petersen Author Of Planning Guide
ASHLAND - "A Guide for
Planning the Field House as a
College or School Physical Edu
cation Facility" has been pub
lished by the Institute of Field
Studios Teachers College, Co
lumbia University, and written
by Dr. Alexander Petersen Jr.,
of Southern Oregon College.
According to Dr. Henry H.
Linn, institute editor, the guide
is important because it "dis
cusses not only what to do, but
also what not to do" in planning
the erection of a field house for
physical education activities.
Dr. Petersen, who serves the
college as head of the health
and physical education depart
ment, has discussed the subject
in four major areas: develop
ment, planning, design, and the
operation and servicing of the
unit. The chapters are illustrat
ed with numerous schematic
drawings and photographs.
TIMELY VARIETY
NEW YORK (UPI)-Twenty-three
different metals and al
loysranging in variety from
gold to steel, copper and beryl
liumare used in the making
of timepieces and electronic
watches, say engineers for bu
lova Watch Company here.
w
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