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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1963)
2 B WIODNKSUAY, DKCIi.MBKR 18, 11163 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Foreign Aid Money Bil! Scheduled for Senate Floor Action WASHINGTON (UPD-Scnate Senate bill and a scrap also loomed over the House approved provision to forbid the export-import bank from under House's business if some House, The Senate was expected tol The Senate committee voted! eludes $9.1 million in carryover leaders hoped to call up for de-i bate today their embattled S3..) billion foreign aid money bill in a drive to speed Congress to ward adjournment by Friday. But the objection of a single , senator could force a delay un-j til Saturday, virtually wrecking administration hopes for final action on an aid appropriations bill before Congress goes home. The Senate Appropriations Committee approved the meas ure Tuesday. The bill includes, $5(10 million more than the $2 8, billion voted by the House for; the fiscal vear that began July 1. ! Aid foes threatened new ef forts to cut the amount in the. members wanted to send franked, unaddressed mail to everybody the postman can find in their districts. If the Senate accepts the House position on so-called "unk" mail, it will end a dead-; lock over the $1W million mon-; ey bill to run Congress for the current year. I Still locked in controversy was a $817 million authorization bill for continued or new work on a number of river basin con struction projects, all now in jeopardy because of a House-1 Senate split over the proposed $247 million Knowles dam proj-j ect in Montana. I approve promptly the bill 1 to give the Peace Corps the full ! money. The House had granted passed by the House Tuesday $102 million authorized by Con-1 a total of only $91.9, including to authorize a new 50-cent piece ; 8ress' although the total in-' re-appropriations writing credit lor grain sales to Russia. Roll ( all Showdown The grain restriction is not in thp Senate bill. Sen. Karl E. Mundt, R-S D., Senate sponsor of the proposal, said he would insist on a roll call showdown on the amendment. The Senate rejected a similar proposal last month. A wrap-up of some other ap propriations bills also was on the congressional agenda. And the House hoped that the Senate, at last, would concede it was the bearing the likeness of John F. Kennedy. There also was a chance Congress could push through a bill to name the pro posed cultural center here in honor of the late President. On foreign aid, both the House and the Senate commit tee agreed to re-appropriate $209 million in leftover, unspent funds in addition to the "new money" appropriations. Besides the aid money, the bill also contains funds for the Peace Corps and for several lesser items. What Happens? . . . . . . when the shoulder they lean on nceas 4 shoulder? Call me tor information on how vou can protect vour family income when accident or sickness strikes. Call me today. Ph. 664-1433-5145 Dobrot Way - Central Point Representing WOODMEN ACCIDENT AND LIFE COMPANY Ellsworth J. Robison ' 'I. ! L-3:"iLy feSL 'lViYl h I ilillltf 4 tf&L'eeJf'. .WbElii Mil.ltO LKAIJhlih rTCSKieni Johnson meets wilh two Negro women load ers at the White House. They are Mrs. Rosa GraER, president of the National Association ot Colored Women's Clubs, left, and Miss uurolhy Height, president ol tne naliunal Council of Negro women, center. Miss (IraEg suggested to the President that a Negro woman he appointed as an aide to the First Lady. (UPI) UAL Dispute With Union Settled WASHINGTON (UPI)-A la hnr dispute between United Air Lines and the machinists union that threatened n strike of ground crews at the height of the Christmas rush was settled during the night, 8 reliable source said today. Terms of the settlement were not learned immediately. Up until the report of settle ment both sides had said the negotiations were stalled but bolh said they were awaiting further calls from government mediators. The union sought a 43-cent hourly pay increase in a 42 month contract. United offered the .Iti-cent hourly raise recom mended by the presidential hoard. Mechanics now earn about $3.13 an hour. 'Winnie-the-Pooh' May Have Deep Significance BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI) "Winnie - the-Pooh" may not have been a children's book aft er all, but rather a work of deep political and psychological significance. This tongue-in - cheek sugges tion comes from Frederick C. Crews, an associate professor of English at the University of California. Crews feels that any literary critic who digs deeply enough will find complex and hidden meanings in the simplest of writings. To illustrate his point, Crews has written a parody of A. A. Milne's classic books for chil- ventures of Pooh, Christopher ; Robins, Piglet and their com- paninn.s may be rife and signif icant mr numanity, ine soul, the proletarian struggle and the understanding of neurotic tendencies. His parody is in the form of a series of essays written in the style of different critical schools, including Freudian, Marxian, New Critical and Hu manist. Some examples from the book: Phantasy-Screen Freudian: "What is Milne's unconscious attitude to bears'.' The frequent presence on the drcn "Winnic-thc - Pooh" and "isionisuc pnaniasy - screen, or The House at Pooh Corner." ! P1"1. 01 lnose hooks, ol a The parody, called "The Pooh hear, strongly pomls to an ob- t'ern ex. t. '. uuuon ano i.o., "-"'" Is illustrated with original draw ings from Milne's books. Crews suggested that the ad- FAST QUALITY FILM SERVICE BOLEX GUARANTEES RESULTS ON YOUR FIRST ROLL OF FILM! 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(UPI! llarold V. Kggleslon, 4f. Hidgc lield, Wash., was shot in the el bow' and chest Tuesday after a short chase by Clark County Sheriff's officers some 10 miles north of here. Kgglcstnn had been inside his house since Saturday when offi cers attempted to take him inln custody on an assault warrant signed by his wife. Tear gas failed to dislodge him from his home Monday but shortly after It a.m. Tuesday he (led in his car, attempting to outrun officers along Washing ton Highway Is. He was taken to Vancouver Memorial Hospital where h i s wounds were described as not critical. United States, USSR Near Equal Budget Parings WASHINGTON (UPI) - With the test ban treaty as an ex ample, the United States and Russia appear at least on the surface to be headed to-' ward approximately equal re ductions in military spending. Against a Soviet slash of SlitiB million for the coming year, President .Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara have announced the U. S. mili tary hurlfet to he submitted to Congress next month will he "several hundred million dol lars" below the lnw spending rate. Kxperts Cautious , Pentagon experts were ex tremely cautious, however, in drawing conclusions from the j Soviet budget figures announced this week. They cited hidden factors and differences which can be either higher or lower in the purchasing power of U.S. and Soviet money. The Soviets, they said, ap peared to be able to keep 3.3 million men under arms on a budget substantially less than it costs the United States to keep 2 7 million men in uniform. On the other hand, reports in dicate the Soviets are spending almost as much as the United Slates in the fields of space, military industry and research. In advanced technology, their costs in dollar equivalents may be equally high, or higher. The Soviet military hurigct was placed at $:M billion includ ing hidden factors, against ap proximately $")() billion for the United States. Higher Proportion Rut the Russian military bud get is a much higher propor tion of total Soviet output 16.1 per cent as compared to 9 per cent in the United Slates. The Russians announced they were reducing their military spending by 4 4 per cent, but when the hidden factors are in cluded this comes out as a cut of only 1.6 per cent, experts said. Hecause the U.S. budget pro posals arc subject to debate in Congress and are usually trimmed at least moderately, the U. S. defense reductions may he about the same percent agearound 2 per cent. President Johnson will be ask ing (or about J2.S billion less than was asked by President Kennedy last January. Vancouver-Comas Rood Secfion Opens VANVOl'VKR, Wash (t Pl) Guv. Albert Rosellini was to at tend the opening o( two more miles of freeway in Clark Coun ty at 3 p.m. today. It is an extent ion ol Highway H.W. the Lewis and Clark High way. The new stretch of four lane, limited access highway is part o( Hie planned route be tween Vancouver and Camas. Wheeler To Lose Extension Agent KOSSll,, Ore. (UPI) Wheel er County will be without a home economics extension agent effective about Ioh. 1, county extension agent Les Marks has announced. The position, presently occu pied by Mrs. Runny Oyer, is be ing terminated to comply with budget cuts resulting from the Oct. IS tax referendum. It is one of I'.l county agent positions hems terminated tn Ihe state, according I o Gene M l.ear. Associate director of the Oregon State University exten sion service. The action would leave the sparsely populated Fa-tern Ore gon county without 4-11 Adult education programs. Save Time . . . Gas . . . Coins USE OUR CONVENIENT Wash-Dry-Fold Service CASH AND CARRY 8 x 7 5 Each Additional Pound 9c Drop oM vour ljundfv on your wjv to work Pi (It if up m rht ftenin; Hftfifl youfi 6ty dcimnq, loo Dumas Domestic Laundry and Dry Cleaners 00-32 N. Riverside Medfotd USE OUR DRIVE-IN SERVICE "NMhma Mlkti Clsthat n CUan a a Uundiv" WIN! WIN! fKJtl jin " CENTRAL POINT SHOPPING AREA'S NO PARKING METERS First Annual All Merchants Will Close At 6 p.m. Christmas Eve! Look At These Outstanding Prizes To Be Awarded December 21 2-$50 GIFT CERTIFICATES 2-$10 GIFT CERTIFICATES 2-$25 GIFT CERTIFICATES 6-$5 GIFT CERTIFICATES These gift certificates ere good it any Central Point store. Drawing will be held Saturday, December 21, on the Faber's Market parking lot. No purchase necessary to participate, you need not be present to win. Winners names will be posted in all stores and gift certificates must be picked up by the following Wednesday at 6 p.m. or another name will be drawn. ALEXANDER HARDWARE IMPLEMENT CO., INC. ANHORN-FABER INSURANCE AGENCY Shop With Ease In Central Point! Close To All Stores and Shops! Hurry! Last Week of Prizes! Drawing Saturday, Dec. 21 REGISTER AT ANY OF THE CENTRAL POINT FIRMS LISTED BELOW & CENTRAL POINT CLEANERS CENTRAL POINT REALTY CENTRAL POINT VARIETY CRATER MUSIC COMPANY CUPP'S FURNITURE ECONOMY MARKET FABER'S SUPER MARKET FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON GRANGE CO-OP GRAY'S FURNITURE BARN, INC. JACKSON COUNTY REALTY LOADING SERVICE COMPANY. INC. t IVIWflCTOM rniu a dccdac cunts it a win at ui.ibinvG jnur m a VI KHALI T r MELBA'S CAFE PAULINE'S FASHIONS MODEL BAKERY PAULSEN & GATES APPLIANCE rvtl. fill (.(JMPANY PIONEER CAFE POSTAL DRUG S & M AUTO PARTS SAXBURY CLOTHING STRAUSS MEATS STEVE'S BARBER SHOP THE CENTER VAN WEY'S THRIFT MARKET VI'S DRESS SHOP V-JL if CENTRAL POINT CLEANERS CENTRAL POINT PHARMACY CHENEY FOREST PRODUCTS CHET'S FLYING A SERVICE CHUCK'S BARBER SHOP COLLEY REAL ESTATE CORNER CLUB CRATER FINANCE CORPORATION CRATER LAKE MOTORS HERM'S BODY SHOP LITTLE DUTCH LAUNDERETTE o