MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1363
A 5
Boiler Regulations
Hearings Scheduled !
SALEM lUPD-A public hear
ing on steam boiler regulations
will be held in Portland Jan. 14. j
Labor Commissioner Norman 0. ;
Nilsen announced today. j
The hearing will he held at ;
10 a.m. in room 36 of the State
Office Building. j
Pope Considering j
India Trip in Fall
VATICAN CITY (L'PD-Pope
Paul VI, who will travel to the
Holy Land next month, is con
sidering a trip to India next fall
to attend an important Roman
Catholic conference, Vatican
sources said today.
Reports from New Delhi Tues
day said the Indian government
was issuing a formal invitation
to the pontiff to visit that coun
try. Reliable sources first said 10
days ago that the Pope might
go to Bombay for the opening
of (he Eucharistic Congress
there Nov. 28, 13(54 , if every-1
thing went well on his Holy Land '
pilgrimage Jan. 4-6. I
The pontiff was not expected
to make any public statement
on an Indian visit until after
the Holy Land tour, according
to the sources.
A Eucharistic Congress is a
solemn gathering of Catholic
clergy and laymen from all ov
er the world. The Pope is usu
aly represented by a delegate,
who presides.
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Art Department
Driving
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t' Artist
Outfits from
beginners to
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BEDFORD
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From
Walt Young's
STATIONERY
210 E. Main
Child Receives
Reprieve From
Total Blindness
DURHAM, N.C. (UPD-Blonde
little Vicki Wray won a second
Christmas and a reprieve from
total ' blindness Tuesday. But
her parents received the great
est gift hope.
Doctors at the Duke Univer
sity Medical Center said there
was a slight possibility the two-year-old
girl may not have to
undergo an operation for the
removal of her remaining eye.
Vicki's left eye has been sub
jected to high intensity radia
tion and chemical agents in an
effort to stop the spread of can
cer, which cost her right eye
last July.
Won't Speculate
"The treatment has in some
cases preserved both the vision
and cured the cancer," a medi
cal center spokesman said.
"But we would not want to
speculate at this time" about
Vicki's case.
Doctors did promise the girl's
father, Robert Wray, a $50-a-week
textile worker from Boil
ing Green, S.C., they would not
perform the operation, if it is
necessary, until after Christ
mas. The Wray family, including
nine children ranging in age
from 14 years to one month,
celebrated Christmas prema
turely last Monday when it was
believed Vicki would be blind
on Christmas. The little girl's
expressed wish was to see a
gaily-decorated Christmas tree.
Wallace Schedules
Speech in Eugene
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPD
Gov. George C. Wallace of Ala
bama will make a speaking tour
of five western states in Janu
ary, his office said today.
A detailed itinerary was not
yet announced, but sources said
the tour would cover Colorado,
Arizona. California, Oregon, and
Washington.
Speaking dales include Eu
gene, Ore., and he probably will
hold a press conference in Port
land. His office said he was re
sponding to a number of speak
ing invitations received during
the last several months.
HOW MUCH MEAT?
LONDON (UPI) - Labor par
ty Member of Parliament Mar
cus Lip'.en attacked "this pal
sied government of ours" Mon
day night when a spokesmen
admitted it took the Agriculture
Ministry seven years to com
plete a study on how much meal
should be in a meat pie.
'23
r ins
ARRESTED Angelo Burno, left, of Philadelphia, reputed boss of
the Cosa Nostra in that city, is shown wearing manacles as he
arrived at FBI headquarters Friday. Burno was taken into cus
tody at Boston's Logan International Airport by FBI agents on
Federal conspiracy charges. Agent at right is unidentified. Burno
arrived in Boston from Italy by jet. (UPI)
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
AUSTIN, Tex. J. J. (Jake) Pickle, commenting on his victory
over a conservative Republican in a special congressional elec
tion :
"This vote Is one for unity, a vole of confirfrnrr by Ihe people
of this district In the Democratic parly and in President Johnson's
administration."
NEW YORK-Richard Judy, a faculty member of the Air
Force Institute of Technology who studied in Moscow, reporting
that Communist leaders face severe internal discontent unless
they boost crop production:
"A hungry population is a discontented population, and such
discontent may generate political opposition and evm counterrevolution."
CHICAGO Director Peter Rossi of the National Opinion Re
search Center, discussing a series of interviews made shortly
after President Kennedy's assassination:
"People reacted quite differently. A sizeable minority weren't
touched by it at all. Their notion was one of two things 'he had
it coming to him for his civil rights views ... or, he was just a
man like anvonc else."
Book on Kennedy
Assassination
Grows in Demand
NEW YORK (UPD-Produc-tion
of the United Press Inter
national - American Heritage
hard cover book on the assassi-
i nation of President Kennedy
was placed on an around-the-
clock basis Tuesday with a first
press run of three-quarters of a
million copies.
Forms for the 144-page illus
trated volume were locked up
this week, and the printing
started at two plants.
Two binderies, with a total
capacity for handling 60.000
copies a day, will beRin ship
ping orders to UPI subscribers
shortly after the first of the
year. All copies are scheduled
to he shipped in the first week
of January.
Flood of Orders
When the joint project was
announced on Dec. 2, plans
were made for a press run of
250,000. A flood of orders by :
UPI subscribing newspapers :
and broadcasters for resale to
readers and listeners increased
the run to 750.000.
The book. "Four Days The
Historical Record of the Death i
of President Kennedy, con-1
tains 1:10 photographs, including
14 in color. All of the photos
and text were selected from
thousands of pictures and 1
words produced by UPI camer
amen and writers, beginning on
Nov. 22 when Kennedy was
killed in Dallas, Tex., and end
ing on Nov. 25 when he was
buried in Arlington National
Cemetery.
Mahley Thompson, vice presi
dent in charge of production for
American Heritage, said prepa
ration of the copy for the
presses was completed in 15
days, a remarkably short time
for a book of such quality and
permanence.
EL CENTHO, Calif.-Air Force Capt. Charles J. Corey, de
scribing his free-fall jump of almost eight miles with 12 other
parachutists:
"Your body starts falling faster than 200 miles an hour. You're
on the ground in a little over three minutes, so you don't have
much time to think."
Street Lighting Levy
Planned in Portland
PORTLAND (UPI) The City
Council Tuesday laid plans to
put a 10-year street lighting levy
of $18.5 million before the voters
here next May.
The council instructed t h e
city's attorney to prepare a re
solution to get the measure
ready for the voters.
Ems
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SPECIALISTS A MkUhUKL,S
Roseburg Youth's
Death Described
By Companions
KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) -
Two companions today told how
David Wyalt, 20, of Roseburg,
Ore., was killed Dec. 4 in a 500
foot fall while crossing Tashi
Lapcha pass in Central Nepal.
Steve McCarthy and Gary
Payne, both students at Reed
College in Portland. Ore., said
they and Wyalt, a Chicago Uni
versity student, had organized
a private scientific expedition to
the foot of Mt. Everest to col
lect specimen! of beetles and
butterflies for the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, D.C.,
and the Chicago Museum of Na
tural History.
"We had finished trekking
around Ihe village of Namche
bazar at the foot of Ml. Ev
erest and were reluming to Kat
mandu through Ihe Rolwalling
Mountains." Payne said.
Huddnelv Slipped
"While crossing 20.000 - foot
high Tashi Lapcha pass, David
suddenly slipped 500 feet to his
death."
They said the accident oc
curred far west of Ihe Everest
mountain range in the Eastern
Nepal Himalayas.
They said they complied with
Nepalese government orders not
to climb any mountain peaks
since they were considered a
non-climbing scientific team.
In Roseburg, Ore., the youths'
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Wyatt, got a telegram from
Payne and McCarthy Tuesday
telling them of the tragedy.
Wyatt was reported buried at
Ihe sile of ihe fall.
Try and Stop Me
-By BENNETT CERF-
rpWO BRICKLAYERS, writes Jerry Shane, were working
-I on a building. A sidewalk superintendent paused to
ask precisely what they were building. The more stolid
bricklayer replied, "I
don't know and I don't
care. All I do is slap this
crummy mortar on these
crummy bricks and pile
them up in a crummy
line." But the second and
more imaginative brick
layer enthused, "I'm
helping to build a great
cathedral with a beauti
ful spire that will point
straight up to Heaven."
So the second man was
fired because they were
building a garage.
a
Jackie Gloa.ion dropped In at a summer resort in the Cat
skills where business was so phenomenal that the management
turned away a young- unmarried doctor.
1563, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Kmc Keilurei Syndicate I
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
CHRISTMAS
PROGRAM
Friday, December 20
7:30 p.m.
"The Real Light of Christmas"
220 Children Tell the Story
Colorful Costumes Joyful Songs 3 Scenes
Nursery Care .... A Treat for Every Child
Apostolic Faith
CHURCH
loyce C. Carver
Pastor
Phone 772-2757
J
3rd and Central, Medford
Railroad Porters
Reach Agreement
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A rail-1
road labor dispute that threat
ened In disrupt train service
over the Christmas holidays '
was averted today when the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters, AFL-CIO, and the car-
riers reached agreement on
three major issues.
Labor Secretary W. Willard
Wirtz announced that represen
tatives of both sides had
reached agreement in the dis
pute, which stretched back to
Assistanl Labor Secretary
.lames J. Reynolds said three i
principal issues were at stake
the porters' monthly work
schedule, job protection, and ;
wages. About 2.000 porters em
ployed by Pullman, the New
York Central, the Chicago,
Rock Island & Pacific, and the
Soo Line were involved.
Taxation Authority
Dies in Manhattan
NEW YORK (UPD-Roswell
Magill, 68, a noted authority on
taxation and former undersec
retary of the Treasury during
the Roosevelt administration,
died Tuesday in his East Side
Embezzlement
Charges Faced
SALEM M.TI- The former
Polk County Democratic Central
Committee chairman, Leslie
Vernon Bahr, 41, Salem, was
arrested Tuesday night on a
charge of embezzling more than
$15,000 from a Salem firm.
Sheriff's deputies, who arrest
ed Bahr, said he was indicted
on a charge of embezzling Ihe
money from the Truck Sales
and Service Co. here during a
21-month period while employed
as a bookkeeper.
Rahr resigned his party office
last spring af'.er an unsuccess
ful candidacy for the slate legislature.
Certificate Need
Reported by Thornton
SALEM 'l'Pll-A person act
ing as vice principal in Ihe
public schools will be required
to hold an appropriate admin
istrative rcrlificatc after July I,
IWS. Alty. On. Robert Y.
Thornton said lodav,
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ghdlH bate him if,itip-
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