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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1963)
JX 6 A SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 1963 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON TO CONDUCT WORKSHOP Mrs. Nancy Jan. 29, 30 and 31. Crayon resist with Watkins, art consultant for Binney and Crayola crayons is one of the art techniques Smith, Inc., will conduct an art workshop which the teachers will "learn by doing." for teachers from Medford public schools Art Workshop Set in Medford Fifty teachers from Med. ford public schools will at tend an art workshop Jan. 29, 30 and 31 at Medford High school, according to Dr. Leon ard B. Mayfield, superintend ent. , A free educational service provided by Binney and Smith, Inc., manufacturers of Crayola crayons and other school art supplies, the work shop will be conducted by Mrs. Nancy Watkins, who has taught extensively and holds a degree from Texas Women's university. Teachers will spend ' 15 hours of their own time learn ing more about modern crea tive art education and some of Its materials and tools. They will learn by doing and trying out the art techniques presented, by Mrs. Watkins. Techniques will include some of the uses of crayons, water colors, poster paints, finger paints, colored chalks, and modeling clay. Simple craft techniques also will be shown, giving teachers an op portunity to work with paper paste and other materials to gain three - dimensional ef fects. All of the art workshop activities will be experiences which the teachers can relate to. their own classroom teach ing. School officials responsible for the workshop arrange ments, in addition to Dr. May field, include Elliott Becken, assistant superintendent. Now that King Football has made his seasonal abdication from the national sports throne, in the interim before King Baseball takes over ;rv viewers will be meeting some lesser sports kings. Golf, bowling, roller skat ing and boxing will be seen regularly, while bporis spec tacular. Wide World of Sports and Sports International will present less familiar athletic events, from ballooning over the Alps, mountaineering and high diving, to surf board rid ins and barrell jumping. However the emphasis seems to be on golf. "Wonder ful World of Golf," which pre mieres today at 4 p.m. on KMED-TV, will match top American golfers against leading foreign professionals on some of the world s most demanding and beautiful courses. Today America's Gene Litt ler and the former English champion Eric Brown play on the King's course at Glen- eagles, Scotland, a 6,644-yard, par 71 course. It has massive greens the 18th alone covers a half acre ominous sand bunkers, rolling, tumbl ing fairways and "an abund ance of gorse, bracken and heather that creates difficult lies to punish wild shots." On "Challenge Golf" today at noon on KBES-TV ( a re peat of Saturday's show), Ar nold Palmer and Gary Player continue in match play against challenging profes sionals. The difference in this show is that Palmer himself pro vides the narration. His golf bag Is wired for sound so that his comments and Player's are recorded and later censored. It seems a champion uses the same epi thets as a duffer might upon muffing a shot. New Officers for Realty Groups Are Installed at Event Joint Installation c e r e monics for 1963 officers of the Medford Board of Real tors, Women's Council and Multiple Listing Service were held at the Rogue Valley Country club with H. O. Mar tin acting as master of cere monies and Miles Doran, pro gram chairman. The Realtors' slate of offic ers included Don Whalin, president; Don Hcrried, vice president; and Herb Leonnlg, secretary-treasurer. The other members of the board of di rectors are Keith Bates, Ken Callison, N. A. Meade and Mary Fascl. Installed as Women's Coun- NtSUBUSHtO 1896 green ISTAMPS, ( Don't Let the Machine Catch You! Some month ago, the government opened a new data processing center in West Virginia the first of a series of such centers to be located across the nation. With them, the government will be able to check every fed eral income tax return in the country automatically. If anything looks fishy, the giant computers will toss out a return for additional checking. All of which means that your tax return had better be accurate right down to such things as drug deduc tions. It can be, when you purchase from us, because all of our customers receive aljoiiff7y jrte of cltarge our special DrugTax service. When you buy from us, all ot your purchases are recorded on "memory" tapes, which are later fed into giant electronic computers. At the end of the year, we send you a DrugTax statement which tells you how much you spent for drugs of a deductible nature. No guesswork. No cost to you, You may actually inte money because you get the benefit of every single drug deduction to which you are entitled. (You might be surprised at how many things are of deductible nature and you might lie surprised, too, at how many millions of dollars the American taxpayer loses each year because he doesn't claim them). Come in today and tale advantage of our free Drug Tax service. It's our way of saying "thank you" for your patronage. cil officers were Ann Rice, president; Midge Conrad, viqe president, and Myrna Adams, secretary-treasurer. t Several of the same names appeared in the list of new officers for the Multiple List ing Service, Inc. They are Ken Callison, chairman; Ellen Barker, vice chairman, and W. T. Fasel, secretary-treas urer. The four board members installed to complete the group of seven were Don Whalin, William Frohnmayer, Clark J. Walker and H. O. Martin. Martin reviewed some of the history of the Medford Board of Realtors, first or ganized in April, 1929, with C. S. Butterficld as president. The present board, he said, was incorporated June S, 1951, by E. L. Bartholomew, Clark J. Walker and Douglas L. Pickcll. Of the 13 past presi dents serving since formal records were kept, one has moved away, two have died and 10 arc still active in real estate, Martin noted. In Jackson county there are 101 brokers, 9 associate brok ers and 177 salesmen. Of the total 287 licensees, 74 are women or about 26 per cent. This county hns one licensee for every 256 persons, It was noted. Railway To Convert Cars for Lumber ! E. T. Hadlcy, general agent In Medford for the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, has announced that the rail way will convert 870 cars 1 specifically for lumber and plywood loading. i The box cars from North i western's present fleet will be I remaniifacturcd and upgraded and equipped with nine-foot doors and roller bearings to accommodate the mechanized loading and unloading of lunv bcr and plywood. The announcement came originally from R. C. Stubbs, assistant vice president, sales and service for the Chlcagf ! and Northwestern railway. Present production sched , tiles al the shop call fur Initial deliveries of the upgraded cars to start In April. The pro gram will continue through the summer and Is scheduled to be completed In November. On the Air By ELEANOR WIESE Dennis the Menace CONCERT HALL, 2 p.m. Sunday K-SHA radio. Tchlak ovsky's Suite No. 1 in D Minor; DeFalla's "Nights in the Gardens of Spain" and dances from the "Three Cor nered Hat"; Borodin's Sym phony No. 2 in B Minor. WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS, 2 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. Grand Prix of South Africa and Orange Bowl regatta. SPORTS SPECTACULAR, 2:30 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. Los Angeles Invitational In door Track Meet. WILD KINGDOM, 3:30 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. Mar lin Perkins journeys to Af rica and the jungles of South America to show how wild creatures use bodily devices to defend and protect them selves. TWENTIETH CENTURY, 6 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. Walt er Cronkite revisits Arnhcm, where as a war correspond ent he dropped with the 101st U.S. Airborne Division. "Air Drop at Arnhcm" reports on the massive Allied air drop in to Holland, largest airborne operation in military history, which ended in disaster. MEET THE PRESS, 6 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. Gen. Lauris Norstad, who has just retired as NATO's Supreme Commander in Europe, will be interviewed by Marquis Childs, Jack Raymond and others. DISNEY'S WONDERFUL WORLD, 7:30 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. First part of "Johnny Sliiloh," the histor it-ally authentic dramatization about the 10-ycar-old boy who became one of the Civil War's most honored combat heroes. STARLIGHT CONCERT. 8 p.m. Sunday KBOY-FM radio, "Age of Gold" by Shostako vich; Samuel Barber's "Sou veniers"; and "Swan Lake Ballet" with Marcel Grand Janv featured on the harp. DINAH SHORE SHOW. 10 p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. Four piano stylists Liberace, i Peter Nero, Big Tiny Little and Ray Charles demon- 1 stratc the development of piano technique from Chopin C1IET HUNTLEY RE PORTING. 10:30 p.m. Tues day KMED-TV. Huntley visits the University of Washing ton's College of Fisheries to report on its unique project to improve the breed of sal mon and thereby help in crease the world's protein supply. Pick Up Sticks," the story of a once famous drummer who emerges from obscurity to cut an old-time jazz album. Mickey Rooney plays the drummer, with John For sythe, Geraldine Brooks and Barbara Nichols. SPORTS INTERNATION AL, 3:30 p.m. Saturday KMED-TV. Ballooning over the Alps and mountain climb ing are filmed in Switzerland. DAVID BRINKLEY'S JOURNAL, 8 p.m. Saturday KMED-TV. Brinkley visits Brazilia, the exotic but un finished capital of Brazil. DEFENDERS, 8:30 p.m. Saturday KBES-TV. Mary Astor, Patrick O'Neal, How ard St. John and Joan Hackett appear in an eerie story about a seance that culminates in the mysterious death of the host. I life P ' WhatS WMG with 60N1 Hippy? Ifs eem'H Wit SAO',' j About S32 Million For Public Works Projects in Oregon THE WEEK IN CALIFORNIA Bay Area Murder Trials Draw Attention Throughout State By United Pres International Two sensational San Fran cisco Bay area murder trials drew wide attention last week. In San Jose, former Hun garian freedom fighter Dr. Geza de Kaplany, shaken by pictures of the acid-scarred body of his wife, switched his plea from innocent to Inno cent by reason of insanity. He was accused of bathing the body of his bride of five weeks, former model and showgirl Hajna de Kaplany, in acid last August in their San Jose apartment. She died five weeks later. In San Francisco, the sup ply of available jurors grew slimmer in the murder trial of Ralph and Iva Kroeger, and so did the supply ol juror challenges permitted to de fense and prosecution attor neys. The Kroegers were accused of the double murder of Jay and Mildred Arneson, former owners of a Santa Rosa motel. The decomposed bodies of the Arnesons, who had been strangled, were found last August buried beneath the cement basement of the Kroe gers' San Francisco home. Elsewhere, there were these developments: . Legislature: As the Califor nia state legislature concluded the second week of its 1963 session a partisan battle was shaping up over Democratic plans to take the nonpartisan- ship out of local elections. Assemblyman Philip Bur ton, D-Snn Francisco, said "We want to bring local gov ernment a measure of party responsibility." Burton said he planned to introduce a bill requiring party labels on can didates for county boards of supervisors. Also introduced during the week were: a far-reaching pro grain to liberalize unemploy ment compensation benefits; a program to help the "disad vantaged" youngster by estab lishment of a "compensatory education" program, and an administration-backed bill to finance special veterans' pro grams from interest money from veterans bonds. The state welfare study commis sion recommended a far-reach-ing program to grant liberal ized benefits to 20,000 disa bled persons and 19,000 needy families but no bills were in troduced on the subject. Poisoning: State and county health authorities sought to determine the cause of food poisoning which struck some 400 elementary school stu dents in Riverside after they ate lunch. Some of the young sters had to be taken to hos pitals for treatment after com plaining to teachers they felt sick. . Carrier: Eleven crewmen were cut down by the whip lash of a 300-foot cable that snapped when a jet fighter landed on the accident plagued aircraft carrier USS Constellation, off San Diego. Chief Aviation Boatswain's Mate Eugene Williams, 36, and Yeoman Apprentice Gor don D. Buckman had their legs severed by the snaking cable. Ens. Leroy Hudson Jr., lost his right leg in the acci dent. The other injured re ceived fractures. It was the third time the 75,000-ton warship was In volved in a serious accident. Fifty workmen were killed New Directors Are Elected to Campaign Ashland Six new directors for the Ashland-Talent United Fund were named at the Jan uary meeting of the organiza tion. Elected were Lyle Know- er, Duane Baker, Robert Wright, Mrs. Horace Myers, Dr. Alvin Fellers and Cydc E. Smith. Retiring from office are the president, Richard Isaacs, Sid ney Ainsworth, Edd Rountree, Lyndcl Newbury, Dr. Fellers and Smith. Isaacs announced that $19. 462.60 had been collected in the annual drive, representing 88 per cent of the S22.150 goal. Final 1962 payments to the UF agencies were paid last week. The new officers will as sume their duties at the Feb ruary meeting. JOBLESS CLAIMS GROW Olympia, Wash. - il'PH -State , unemployment claims grew by 6 per cent to a to tal of 62,656 during the week that ended Jan. 5. Dec. 19, 1960, when fire broke out while the ship was under construction at New York City. Two Navy men and two civilian employees of the Brooklyn Navy Yard were asphyxiated Nov. 6, 1961, in another fire in the carrier's machinery room. Murphy: The Jack Murphy family of San Diego offered a $5,000 reward for informa tion leading to the safe re turn of two-year-old Jamie Murphy, who disappeared from home without a trace. Law enforcement officials the orized the boy, grandson of San Diego Union sports editor Jack Murphy, may have been kidnaped or drowned in the ocean several blocks from the family's Point Loma Home. Basham: The FBI in Santa Monica, arrested William R. Basham, 31, in connection with the theft of a valuable oil sketch by French impression ist Eduardo Manet. The paint ing was taken from the Uni versity of Kansas art museum at Lawrence, Kans., last Au gust. The FBI said it recovered the painting, "Portrait of Line Campineau," which was the object of a nationwide search since university officials dis covered it had been cut from its frame. Its value was placed at between $40,000 and $70, 000. Martians: A leading expert on Mars said that interplane tary studies indicate that Mar tians, as imagined in science fiction, do not exist on the red planet. If there is any life there, Dr. Rodney W. Johnson said in Los Angeles, "It is probably a low form of an! mal life or plant life that lives and then goes dormant in sea sonal cycles. The atmosphere and climate of Mars arc not compatible with life as we know it." Mother: A young mother got out of bed in El Centra and walked out of the mater nity ward of Imperial County hospital, leaving her day old baby girl. "I've got important things to do," she told a star tled nurse. The woman threw a brown coat over her hos pital gown "and simply walked out" a hospital spokes man said. The woman gave her name as Rose Sanchez, 19, of Los Angeles. Central sDruq Your Convenient Prescription Pharmacy Main & Central Phone 772-9431 Wright Named to Head GP Red Cross Chapter Grants Pass - The appoint ment of Oregon Slate Police Cpl. Charles Wright, Grants Pass, as chairman of the local Red Cross chapter was recent ly announced by the organiza tion's board of directors. Wright, who will sneered the Rev. Raymond E. Brandt, has been a member of the board of directors for 1 a years and has been In charge of the chapter's first aid program. THE FABULOUS ERA. 7 30 p.m. Wednesday KBES-TV. Henry Fonda Is host for a re view of famous Hollywood movies with stars of past and present shown in scenes from these motion pictures. VIRGINIA N. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday KMED-TV. Teen age singing favorite Fabian guest stars as a troubled young man goaded by his father to commit murder. ATTENTION DOG OWNERS! Jackson County dog owners may apply and receive their dog licenses and ta Washington - IUP1) - Presi dent Kennedy Thursday called on Congress to provide nearly $32 million for public works construction in Oregon. The President's budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 also called for an additional $57 million for work on the John Day dam on the Colum bia river between Oregon and Washington. Included in the budget pre sented to Congress was $1 million for deepening the channels of the Columbia and Lower Willamette rivers to 40 feet and 35 feet. The budget includeo $300,000 to begin construc tion of the Agate dam and res ervoir in the Talent division of the Rogue River Basin Pro ject. The project was author ized late in the last session of Congress. Green Peter Largest The largest single budget item entirely within Oregon was $11,650,000 to continue construction of the multiple Dumosc Green Peter reser voir. Also included was $3.5 million to bring the Cougar reservoir within 93 per cent of completion. Budget requests for tne Bureau of Reclamation in cluded $3,150,000 to continue construction in the Western division of The Dalles pro ject, including work on the Mill Creek pumping plant in the city of The Dalles. The budget included a re quest for $642,000 to complete the Bully Creek dam and res ervoir in the Vale project. Army Work Listed Recommendations for con struction by the army en gineers included: Blue river reservoir, $1 million; major rehabilitation of the South Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river, $500,000; Fall creek reservoir, $3,740,000; Lower Columbia river bank protection in Ore gon and Washington, $500,- 000; major rehabilitation of the north Jetty at Tillamook Bay and Harbor, $1.1 million; Willamette river bank pro tection, $600,000, and Yaquina Bay and harbor navigation project, $1.5 million. The budget included $100,000 for a new planning start on advance engineering of the Lost creek reservoir, a multiple purpose project to be constructed by the Army Engineers. Six Future Projects Funds also were requested for general investigation by the Army Engineers of six fu ture projects: Chetco river navigation project, $7,000; Coos Bay deep draft harbor, $15,000; Coquille river navigation pro ject, $10,000; McKay creek flood control $12,000; Siuslaw navigation project, $9,000, and a comprehensive study of the Willamette river basin, $350,000. Stepped-up project develop ment activities of the Bureau of Reclamation would cost $1,482,000, compared with $829,229 in the program for the current year. The program for development of future projects included $200,000 for planning of construction and rehabilitation of the Baker project in Eastern Oregon. Developmental budget re quests of the Interior Depart ment also included: Burnt River Basin survey, $37,000; Willamette River Basin survey, $196,000; Grande Ronde project invest igation, $88,000, and Pendle ton project' investigation, $94,000. FUNDS ALLOTED Portland -HJPN- The Bureau of Land Management said Fri day an additional $511,000 has been allotted to Oregon for conservation and recrea tion projects in the Salem, Albany and Gold Beach areas. Them's a RIGHT SIZE WORLD OF BENNY GOODMAN, 8 30 p.m. Thurs day KMED-TV. Goodman's place In American Jnzz and his six-week tour of the Soviet Union under a cultural ex change agreement is studied. His past and present asso ciates give a verbal portrait of Goodman as a man and a musician. PREMIERE. 10 pm. Thurs day KBES-TV. "Five Six, I' tar M. COURT HOUSE MFncnon nonu : t PLEASE SEND ONLY CHECK OR MONEY ORDER WITH YOUR APPLICATION Your license and tag will b. mailed to you Immediately upon application and rem. .nc If you have mora thin one dog, pleas, use othtr forms of this nature or attach a separata schedule with tha required information. !AAJ,AJTE.FOR PURCHASING A DOG LICENSE WITHOUT PENALTY IS MARCH 1, 1963. Application tor Dog License I 1963 . Data . . I Owner I Address Indicate sax of dog by encircling one of the Following: I MALE SPAYED FEMALE FEMALE I Dog's Name Color Breed . Amount of Money Enclosed . I Signature of Applicant j .---rr..MJl ni LED a i-I'm. . .' in automatic gas waferheafer,too So when you replace yours, remember fo- t Choose an automatic gas water heater big enough to supply the oceans of hot water re quired by a growing fam ily, an automatic washer and a dishwasher. -Choose a make and model that carries a 10 year warranty plan. This assures qualityl 3 Insist on CAS! Be cause gas heals water three times faster and costs lessl YOUR PCUMBER OR DEALER HAS YOUR SIZE Bf CALIFORNIA-PACIFIC 7 TTTTI TTtPO h-t-- Tr -a-mr.j mnrrtii i TL1 Prions 772-5281, Mtdfortf 482 2116, AihlinJ