6
MAIL TRIBUNE, M.df.rd, Or.
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1960
IPattras of District
Building Program
Would Meet State
Recommendation
Central Point Patrons of
school district 6C, which in
cludes Central Point, Gold
Hill and Sams Valley, will
vote Thursday, Feb. 4, on a
$295,000 bond issue to help
finance a building program.
Polls will be open between
2 and 8 p.m. at three loca
tions. They are the band room
at Hanby gymnasium at Gold
Hill, the auditorium of the
Sams Valley school, and the
gymnasium at Central Point
Junior High school.
Purpose of the district's
$295,000 bond issue is to fi
nance a building program
that will adequately care for
the educational needs of the
children within the district,
school board members noted.
By meeting state standards
n d recommendations, the
district will continue to feel
secure in its position as a re
cipient of state education
money which in recent years
has contributed over 35 per
cent of each year's operative
budget, they pointed out.
Long Range View
Board members said the
building program has a long
range perspective in that it is
correcting overcrowded con
ditions by additions that can
be flexible in use.
To alleviate conditions at
Central Point Junior High,
which is overloaded with
some 950 students, eight
rooms will be added to Jew
ett school.
By doing this, members
said, the pupils in the present
second grade, which consists
of six rooms, will be able to
ii. f i
remain at jeweu as mira
graders instead of using fa
cilities at the Central Point
Junior High school building.
One of the new rooms at
the junior high will be used
as a full time central library
for the use of the 525 to 550
pupils who will attend the
school.
Remedial Room
: The eighth room will be
organized as a remedial room
for primary children within
the district who will profit by
epecial education. The special
education room will meet
standards of the state depart
ment of education, which will
be mandatory for all first
class districts by 1962.
By moving the third grade
to Jewett, the district will be
able to improve the per pupil
space allotment both in the
classrooms and on the play
ground, the board said. Pres
ent state education standards
for elementary school play
grounds are a five-acre site
with an additional acre far
each 100 pupils.
A total of 2,000 square feet
of covered walkway will also
be available as extra play
space and for use as a physi
cal education area. This will
be especially useful during pe
riods of inclement weather,
board members said. y
The proposed building pro
gram for the Central Point
Junior High will be to con
vert the present library to a
cafeteria. This conversion
will correct the current lunch
room situation. At present, 500
pupils are rushed through a
cafeteria built to accommo
date about 100.
To continue an adequate li
brary program, a new library
32x45 feet will be built adja
cent to present library facili
ties. This building will also
Include a work area, audio
visual room and have a cov
ered walk. It will be so locat-
bd
new
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IN LIBRARY Students at Central Point
Elementary and Junior High school now
eat sack lunches in the present library
facilities because of lack of room in the
TRANSPORTED FOR LUNCH Shown above are pupils
from Patrick school in Gold Hill returning to school follow
ing lunch at Hanby school. Pupils have to be transported to
Hanby for hot lunches, physical education classes requiring
a gym floor and other school functions. Marvin Throne, near
bus, music and physical education teacher at Hanby, is ac
companying the children.
ed and constructed that it will
fit in easily with any future
plans the board may consider
for a new junior high school,
board members noted.
Plans for the Margaret E.
Patrick school in Gold Hill
include four new classrooms,
three of which will house
fourth and fifth grade pupils.
The fourth room will be used
as a central library in order
to meet state education recom
mendations. A multi-purpose room will
be a part of the new addition.
This will be complete with a
cafeteria and stage, and will
have many school and com
munity uses, the board said.
The room will eliminate the
continuous transportation of
pupils to Hanby for hot
lunches, physical education
classes requiring a gym floor
and other school functions re
quiring an activity room.
By moving the fourth and
fifth grades to Patrick, there
will be a room for the addi
tional eighth grade needed in
the 1960-61 school year. It
also will give Hanby a room
for a central library, which
will meet state department
requirements.
Board members feel that
the addition at Patrick will
adequately care for the prob
able evenutal increase in
school population at Gold
Hill, which will make neces
sary two classrooms for each
grade.
In its study of community
building needs within the dis
trict, the board felt that
I mmmmuMMmM T
cTf! lT
NO SPARKS! NO SMOKE!
NO FLOOR DRAFTS! LOWERS FUEL BILLS!
Uaifora ht I'pm oor t. lng. tmu yoed,
pmio-lagi t brier!. Yew cwrtral tr. ... yaw
km on4 foaiilr mlri
JENB FltEPUCt WIDTH lEIfiMT.
or Phone SP 2-7166
Smith-Dynge Lmbr. Co.
n n n n m
$22 Billion Taken
From Public Yearly
Washington (UPD FBI Di
rector J. Edgar Hoover charg-
ed Friday that the "barons of
the underworld" loot the na
tion to the tune of an "as
tounding" 22 billion dollars
a year.
Hoover said organized
crime was made up of a "law
less legion" of extortionists,
strong-arm hoodlums and spe-.
cial racketeers "whose greed
reaches into every communi
ty of our land."
Hoover said "the lawless
legion infiltrates t h r o u gh
every loophole, its booty flow
ing into underworld coffers
whether it be nickels and
dimes from a juke box in a
bar in the smallest town or
from a multi - million dollar
stranglehold on large metro
politan centers, obtained
through the domination of a
few dishonest labor officials."
"If we must," Hoover said,
"let us learn a lesson from the
barons of the underworld who
have shown that cooperative i
crime is profitable - coopera- j
tive law enforcement can be
twice as effective."
there are two major consider
ations. They are the educa
tional needs of the children
and the meeting of state
standards in order that dis
trict 6C will be assured of
state department monetary
aid.
RECEIVE Calorfoi BMklet FREE.
Easy Terms
Vote
jp
cafeteria. Under a proposed building pro
gram, a separate library building will be
constructed, and the library, shown above,
will be converted into cafeteria space.
John Piper Among
Drake Graduates
John Edwin Piper, son of
the Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Piper,
590 Oakdale dr., is among the
approximately 165 persons to
receive degrees from Drake
university, Des Moines, Iowa,
today.
Piper, who majored in New
Testament, is a candidate for
a bachelor of divinity degree
in the Divinity school.
Piper's parents will leave
early this week for Coeur
d'Alene, Ida., where Mr. Piper
will assume ministerial du
ties. He has been minister of
the local First Christian
church here for the last sev
eral years.
i me
I figure... my
savings add up
faster at
Jackson County
Federal!
on $295,000 iond
CAFETERIA About 500 students at Cen
tral ,Point Elementary and Junior High
school are rushed through a cafeteria built
to accommodate about 100 pupils. This situa
tion will be corrected if patrons of the dis
Arms Collectors to
Meet in Ashland
The Jefferson State Arms
Collectors will hold a meet
ing Saturday, Feb. 6, at 7:30
p.m. in the Britt Student Cen
ter at Southern Oregon col
lege, Ashland. .
The display theme will be
"Winchester Guns," club of
ficials said. Many of the out
standing weapons manufac
tured by the company during
the past 100 years will be dis
played. All interested persons
are invited to attend.
More than 3,000 new hous
es and flats were built in
Britain between 1945 and
1958,
rested in
start
Cumi
1
I figure . . the more you
save . . . the more you
earn at Jackson County
Federal!
CMGMm
SAVINGS
Home Office
126 E. Main
Medford, Ore. -
Otto Brown to
Speak at Luncheon
Otto Brown, superintendent
of Crater Lake National park
and Oregon Caves National
monument, will speak at the
Medford Chamber of Com
merce roundtable luncheon
at the Jackson hotel Monday.
Brown, who recently was
transferred here from Yellow
stone park, will discuss the
park's plans and program for
the coming tourist year and
will show the luncheon slides
of some of the parks he has
seen.
The public is invited to at
tend the luncheon which will
start at noon.
avm
ty Federal amid
save
year ahead!
LOAN
At
trict approve a bond issue at a special elec
tion Thursday. Shown above are kitchen
and cafeteria facilities in the basemont of
the building.
Survey Ship Being
Moved to East Coast
Washington - (UPB - The sur
vey ship Explorer will sail
Feb. 1 on the first full scale
U.S. oceanographic expedi
tion since the early 1880s, the
Commerce department said
Friday.
Scientific teams sponsored
by a dozen or more organiza
tions will make studies on the
cruise from Seattle, Wash., to
Norfolk, Va., by way of the
Panama canal.
Puerto Rico's gross nation
al product - the value of all
goods and services it turns
out - has risen 97 per cent
in the past decade.
a
t
ASSOC
ATlON
thrifty
at
more
Ashland Branch
337 E. Main
Ashland, Ore.
ta TBuMirsdlay
Burglars Attempt
To Open Store Safe
Burglars Thrusday night
failed in an attempt to break
open a safe at Dunham's Inc.,
a store at 1951 North Pacific
highway, according to city
police.
Officer Glenn F. Schneider,
who was on routine patrol,
discovered the attempted bur
glary at 2 a.m. Thursday
when he noticed a door to
the store that looked as if
someone had tried to break it
open.
He called for assistance
from city and county officers
who searched the area and
found that someone ha failed
to break through the door but
had broken a window at the
side of the building and gone
in that way.
In addition to the safe the
burglar or burglars also tried
to break into a cash register,
a soft drink machine and a
desk drawer, but failed in
each attempt and apparently
left empty handed, police
said.
Police said the burglars
used screwdrivers to try to
get into the safe and said the
attempt appeared to have
been made by youths or
amateurs.
HELP
US!
We n.ad clothing, ahoas, dishes,
furniture, and bedding.
We Pick Up.
HELP OTHERS!
The Salvation Army
SPring 3.7335
B
ackson
for
the
And . . don't forget, il
you save by the 10th,
your savings earn from
the 1st.
Per Annum
Court Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Albert Leroy Cox, disobeyed
traffic signal, $10.
Robert James Robinson, violation
of basic rule, $10.
Patricia Carol Bishop. visIaUan
of basic rule, $10.
Ptricia Carol Campfield, dis
obeyed traffic signal, $10.
George Leo Fulcher, disobeyed
traffic signal, $10.
Barrington Miner Grant, viola
tion of basic rule, $10.
Stephen Gilbert Crippen, viola
tion of basic rule, $10.
Arthur Olof Am. violation of ba
sic rule, $10.
Adelaide Elizabeth Brown, dis
obeyed traffic sign, $10.
Mary Edith Kellington. failure
to yield right of way. $25.
Randolph Warrin Hugdahl, dis
obeyed traffic sign. $5.
... and they qre
wildl
Opportunity
Days
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