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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1963)
MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFCRD. OREGON THUHolMt, ItbHUAHf 14. 9S3 ! . i ,JEaltoiaAw' ""Yf ! Ml J NEW LABORATORY - Dr. J. Arnold Shot well, associate professor of biology and geology and assistant director of the Mu seum of Natural History at the University of Oregon, surveys the recently completed paleoecology laboratory financed by a grant from the National Science Foundation. New Paleoecology Lab Opens Eugene A modernistic new building, housing a pa leoecology laboratory, has opened at the University of Oregon. Dr. J. Arnold Shotwoll, as sociate professor of biology and geology and assistant di rector of the Museum of Nat urday History, and his asso ciates are in the process of moving furniture and equip ment into the one-story, 40-by-50-foot structure which is located in the physical plant area across the millrace from the main campus. The building was financed by a $40,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. In addition to construction costs, the grant also covered the cost of a part of the equip ment. Wood Construction The flat-topped, open-beam building is constructed pre dominantly of wood with concrete-block sides and glass and wood-panel ends. The laboratory will be the site of an unusual collabora tive study in paleoecology, aimed at reconstructing the total environment of ancient mammals in the Northern Great Basin southeastern Oregon, southern Idaho, and northwestern Nevada. The project is being con ducted under a $48,000 grant from the National Science Foundation and $30,000 in matching funds from the uni- "FOLK CONCERT '63 " 1 SAT., FEB. 23 IN PERSON Med ford Armory 8:30 pm Ticker $1.50, S2.00.J2.50 Puruckr and on Campus, SOC Sponsored by Tail Kappa Epsilon SHORT LUNCH PERIODS? We now have our 2nd Kitchen completed. It is Now Possible to Give You Prompt and Exacting Service. Our New Menu Hot Prima Rib Plata N-4 Luncheon USDA Choice Steak SI. 75 Cube Steak '1S Breaded Choice Veal Cutleti $1.1$ Sirloin Tips with Mushrooms $1.15 Chicken Liver Saute Mushrooms $1.35 Filet ot Sole 51-35 Deep Fried Prawns Soup or Salad Potatoes Vegetable Rolls and Butter Beverage It Dessert Bring Your Luncheon Party to the MATADOR ROOM versity. Collaborating with Dr. Shot well on the project are Dr. Jane Gray, research associate at the Museum of Natural History and an authority on fossil pollens, and Dr. Law rence Kittleman, adjunct as sistant professor of geology, whose specialty is a study of ancient sediments. Locals Chimney Blaze Medford firemen reported a flue fire about 1:20 p.m. yesterday at the William von der Hellen residence, 3490 Jacksonville highway. Permits Issutd The Med ford building department is sued permits Wednesday to Roy Wilkes to erect a resi dence at 1964 Brookhurst st. at an estimated cost of $21, 000, and to the Colony Club, 8 Geneva St., to make an ad dition to the building at an approximate cost of $2,000. Investment Funds Noon quotations on laltctad stocks? Bullock 12.62 13.R4 Chemical Fund 10.H1 11.54 Colonial Energy .... 12.09 13 21 Eaton Howard Stk.. 13.33 ' 14.41 Fidelity 15.0!1 16.31 Fundamental 9.35 10.25 Group Sec Avla-Elec 6.92 7 39 Group Sec Com Stk 12.68 13.88 Group Sec Petr .-,12.12 Hamilton C7 5.01 5 47 Keystone B-3 16.10 17.57 Kevtsone B-4 10.00 10.01 Keystone K-2 . 5.02 5.48 Keystone S-l 21.29 23.23 Keystone 5-2 12 39 13.32 Keystone S-3 13.83 13.09 Keystone S-4 4.08 4.46 Mass Inv Growth .... 7.73 8.45 National Growth 7.93 8 67 Slocks 17.78 19 TV-Elcc 7.29 7.95 United Accum 13.67 14.94 United Canada 17.39 18 90 United Continental.. 6.62 7.23 United Income 11 89 12 99 United Science 6.33 6.94 Value Line 5.20 5 68 Variable 6 3fi 6.88 Wellington 14.23 15 51 Obituaries CORA OCTAVIA HEATH Funeral services for Mrs. Cora Octavia Heath, 58. of 625 Park Place No. 5, who died Wednesday, will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at Memory Gardens Funeral home. The Rev. Robert E. Cull, pastor of the Medford Assem bly of God church, will offici ate. Interment will follow in Memory Gardens Memorial park. Mrs. Heath was born Feb. 2, 1905, in Sandy, Utah, the daughter of Isaac N. and Anna L. Bevel. In 1935, she was married at Vancouver, Wash., to John Arleigh Heath, who survives. Mr. and Mrs. Heath have lived in Medford for five years, moving here from Cen tral Point where they resided for 13 years. Prior to that, they had lived in Coos Bay. Survivors, besides her hus band, include a son, John A. Heath, Jr., Medford: two daughters, Mrs. Annette L. Tosh, and Mary Heath, both of Medford: three sisters, Mrs. Pearl Campbell, and Mrs. Jnona Barrowcliff, both of Bend, and Mrs. Ruby Taltt, Alhambra, Calif.; two broth ers, Clarence Bevel, Phoenix, Ore., and Roy F. Bevel, and three grandchildren. LUTHER LAURENCE Luther Laurence, 86, of Gold Hill, died last night in a local nursing home. Funeral arrangements will be an nounced by Conger - Morris Funeral directors. Over-the-Counter Western Stocks By I'nlteed Press Bank of America ... Calif. Pac. Utll Con Freight - . Cyprus Mines Equitable S ir L First National Bank Jantzen Morrison Knudsen ... Mult Kennels N W. Nat l Gas Oregon Metallurgical Hf&'L , PGE U.S. National Bank United Utilities West Coast Tel Weyerhaeuser International Bid Aked 2fl ... 124 . 22 ... 3:1 'i .. 64 26'i .... 30 .. 3'i, 34 4 28', 134 23-;, :m 07 'i 32N HARRY D. DAVIS Funeral services for Harry D. Davis, 79, of route 1, box 292, Gold Hill, who died Mon day, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Chapel in the Trees Mortuary in Siskiyou Memorial park. The Rev. Earl Best of the Ruch Community church, as sisted by the Apple gate Grange, will officiate. Private interment will follow is Siski you Memorial park. Mr. Davis was born Aug. 6, 1883, in Napoleon, Ohio. He was married to Mrs. Cyrena L. Davis in Snohomish, Wash. Mr. Davis had been employed as a general contractor in the building industry prior to his retirement. The family moved to the Applegate area from Los Angeles, Calif., in 1949, and in 1959 moved to Gold Hill. Mr. Davis was a member of the Applegate Grange. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Cyrena L. Davis, Gold Hill; four sons, Leo C. Davis and Robert L. Davis, Ingle wood, Calif.; Lawrence B. Davis, Burbank, Calif.; Wil liam E. Davis, El Monte, Calif.; one daughter, Mrs. An gela M. Bandle, Sepulveda, Calif.; three grandchildren, two great grandchildren, and a nephew. Honorary pallbearers will include John Byrne, Omar Culy, Otis Buck, A. R. Street, Robert Sugden, and Pierre Dauga. Funeral arrangements are entrusted to Siskiyou Funeral Service directors of Chapel in the Trees Mortuary. TRUMPET PLAYER - Carl Severinsen, noted trumpet player, will conduct consultation sessions and informal discussions at Ashland Junior High school Saturday. His appearance here is sponsored by the Southern Oregon Music Educators associ ation in cooperation with Puruckcr's Music House. He has worked with such artists as Vaughn Monroe, Kate Smith, Dinah Shore, Eddie Fisher, Sid Caesar and Steve Allen. Man and Space Air Force Fondness For Dyna-Soar May Give Way To Gemini Three Requests Are Considered During Planning Meeting Three requests before the subdivision committee of the Jackson county planning com mission were considered at the commission's meeting last night. Approved was a request by Ross Adams, subdtvider for the Splendor View subdi vision, to sell vacant lots to present adjoining property owners in his original sub division. The committee approved his subdivision addition 1, subject to the condition that homes only be constructed on alternate lots until provision is made fur community water and sewers. In the original subdivision, the committee approved the recommendation that the al ternate unbuildable lots may be sold to adjoining property owners providing the restric tions are filed to prevent homes being built until com munity facilities are provided. Rejected was a request by Cal-Ore Ranches Inc. for pro posed roads in an area nearly two miles from the proposed Agate dam site. The roads, all dead end, were on sleep land and were objected to by the county engineering depart ment. The subdividcr, according to the subdivision committee, said that he would resubmit the plat. Another proposed road, also a dead end which would be 1,300 feet long, was approved on the condition that pro visions be made to tie this road in to Sky View dr. In other action, the com mission approved naming Hoi comb Springs id., a road 1 1 .... 26' 2 .... 27, .... 7(1 ... ski; .... 21". .... 27 H, 36', I5. 27', 21"., 811 38", 23 2a Portland Livestock Portland (UPIl USDA Cattle 25. No early test. Calvea 10. No early test. Hoss 100. Barrows and ftilts 2.1 30c lower: 1-2 srade 200-220 lb. 16.73-17: 2 and 3 trade 200-245 lb 16-1630. Sheep 25. No early test. Portland Produce Portland (UPIl Dairy market: Eegs To retailers: AA extra larsc 50.55c; AA large 47-52c; A large 47-50c; AA medium 45-49c; AA small 30-39C; cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retailers: AA and A prints 66c; cartons lc higher; B prints 63c. Cheese (medium curedi To re tailers: 46',-47'ac: processed American 3-10 lb. loaf, 43-45c. Portland (UPIl Dressed chick ens No. I grade dressed to retail ers: Frvers. whole drawn 32-30C lb : cut-uD. 30-44C lb.: hens, light type, whole drawn 22-26C lb.: light type hens, cut-up 25-30C lb.; heavy whole 36-3DC lb. For Reservations Phone 773-5474 m DINE & DANCE IN THE CROWN ROOM Every Friday and Saturday Night to the music of Caesar Muzzioli! All new menus, same high quality food. Dancing after Nine every evening. llkk Antony MOTOR HOIll Ph. 482-1721 So. Ore. "Sunshine" Spot Ashland. 0r. By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. Cape Canaveral-llPII-A half dozen young jet pilots stand a good chance of becoming the world's first unemployed astronauts. These are the men chosen last year for the Air Force's Dyna-Soar space glider pro gram. They are ready to take a ride through space any time. The trouble is, their space flivver isn't finished. It won't be for another two or three years. And if Air Force enthusi asm for the project some times called simply the X20 continues to wane at the pres ent rate, it may never be. The Air Force, it seems, has a roving eye for attractive man-in-space programs. About the time it seems ready to latch onto one, another good- looker appears. The chase be gins anew. litis has been going on for years and the Air Force is still grounded, as far as manned spaceflights are con cerned. The Air Force's infatuation Willi Project Dyna-Soar began when the space age was born in 15)57. The object of the whole thing was to put an astronaut into space aboard a ship with a set of wings so he could come down and land more or less where he pleased. Good On Paper It looked good on paper. But there were some problems-no rockets, for one-and the Air Force lost interest. It had been caught up in a fas cinating project called Mer cury. The Mercury capsule sim plified things. It had no wings and thus saved a lot of weight. True, its landing was a little erratic and thousands of men had to run around utv der it like so many firemen with a big net, to make sure the capsule and astronaut were recovered safely. But it worked, as the Air Force could sce-from the out side looking in. Mercury be longed to a new organization called the National Aeronau tics and Space administra tion. About two years ago, the Air Force reunited with Dy na-Soar. Enthusiasm ran high A model was built, and It looked like a flyable flatiron. A new rocket called Titan-3 was put on the development list, and a tentative flight plan made. Even astronauts were se-leetcd-Maj. James W. Wood of Pueblo, Colo., Maj. Henry C. Gordon of Gary, Ind., Capt. William J. Knight of Mans field, Ohio, Maj. Russell L. Rogers of Phoenix, Ariz., Capt. Albert R. Crews of Alexandria, La., and civilian Milton O. Thompson of Crookston, Minn. Gemini Comet Al"ng Dyna-Soar rolled along un til the federal space agency showed up with a new baby called Gemini. It was a space capsule a la Mercury, only more of it-enough room for two astronauts at a tune The Air Force cast covetous eyes. And when the federal space agency indicated late last year it might like to pull at least partially out of Gem ini to concentrate more on the Apollo manned flight to the moon, the military boys leaped. What the Air Force propos ed was to buy as many as seven Gemini capsules, to launch Its own astronauts. Someone even went so far as to tag it with the rather odd name of "Blue Gemini." If all this comes about, the Air Force and Gemini may be tied together starting in 1064. But it cannot finance two loves at once. Dyna-Soar may-and probB bly will-go. Weather northwest from the intersec tion of Ramsey Creek rd. and Sams Valley rd. The road, it was explained, has been called Fitzgerald, Hall, Edington and Holcomb Springs rd. The road termi nates at Holcomb Springs. The commission made the recommendation to the county court so a public hearing A 7 could be held on the proposal. The commission also requeu ed that the spelling of the suggested name be checked since maps show Uie spellins both as Holcolm and Hoi comb Springs. Ma Wafer District Lists New Commissioners The new board of commis sioners of the Charlotte Ann Water district was announced Thursday by Mary H. Brown, corresponding secretary. The board includes Jack Bush, chairman; Cecil Wat son, secretary; Gus Witte, treasurer; Fred Marchbank, commissioner, and Ray Bolz, commissioner. Births WALTER - To Mr. and Mrs. George, 2799 South Pa cific highway, Medford, Feb. 13, 1963, a boy 834 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. SMITH - To Mr. and Mrs. William Francis, post office box 424, South Pacific high way, Talent, Feb. 14, 1963, a girl, 9 1 3 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. SUTTON - To Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Lee, 3529 Grant rd., Central Point, Feb. 14, 1063, a boy, 6V3 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. TROWBRIDGE - To Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Jr., 2227 East Main St., Medford, Feb. 14, 1063, a boy 54 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. TONIGHT ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT Only One Show DOORS OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS 7:30 FEATURE STARTS 1:00 IN ALL OF MANKIND'S ' DAYS ON EARTH . . . NO SIN OR SPECTACLE TO EQUAL IT! SODOM All D GOMonnnii SlfWAH GIANGH-HU AHGEU-SHNUY LUKE KUU WMIU K MtlHW HUM WW UMIt MM COM h WM Mm hr ZM CmIvM k ROAD SHOW ADMISSIONS ALL SEATS $1.00 CHILDREN 50 FORECASTS Medford and vtcinltv? Pnrtlv cloudy tonight with considerable Bin ana mornine vauey ioe. in creasing clouds Friday with occa sional light rain by evening. Low tonight 3035. High Friday near 53. western uresun: raruy cioutiv tonight but with considerable fog and low clouds in valleys. In creasing clouds Friday with chance of a little rain by evening. Little temperature changes. Low tonight 33-42. High Friday 46-56. Northern California: Occasional rain extreme north Friday, other wise, mostly fair through Friday with considerable morning fog and low clouds. Little temperature changes. I . I. rA li un i f TEMPERATURE: Mean vaster- aay t, aoove normal o. Record hteh this date HB in l30 Record low this date 20 In 1020 PRECIPITATION: 24 hours tt midnight, .01 Inch. Midnight to 10 Total this month 1.24 Inch, .04 inch above normal. Total since Sept. 1. 10.07 lnchai, a. 21 inches above normal HUMIDITY: Laurent yesterday niv. niftiest mis a.m. iuvt. 1 High 4:00 24- CITV Yeater- a.m. hr. day I-ow Free. Brookinffs til 45 T. Crater Lake 38 20 .05 Grants Phmb til .in .28 Howard Pralrit .. 43 3.1 Klamath Falls .... 47 3d - T. MEDFORD 58 30 T. Portland 40 41 .07 "&ae$mtJi'' DANCE Friday, February 15th BRING YOUR VALENTINE MATAD0RR00M Music by HARRY & JIM DOUGLAS TWO Seattla .12 43 Spokan 3B 20 .01 Yakima 47 20 T. Eureka 112 4B Red Bluff .1!) 4.1 .07 Sacramento ........ tii 4.1 .01 San Kranclsco .... HI .11 .III Lot Angeles 68 .18 ;13 Domiciliary Employee Promoted to Engineer The transfer and promo tion of Eugene M. Bishop, as sistant engineer, to the posi tion of chief engineer at the Veterans Administration hos pital, Martinez, Calif., his been announced by C. T. Jackson, director of the Dom iciliary at White City. Bishop has served as assist ant engineer at the Domicilii ary at White City since Aug 24, 1958. He and his family have resided in Central Point. Mrs. Bishop and chil dren will remain here until the close of the school term when they will Join Bishop at his new location. NOW THRU SATURDAY SHOW STARTS 7:00 iMOST INCREDIBLE ItRUEI STORY IN U.S. WAVY WSTORVI ! i T ITT mmt f A 0C4.0 COAT WWOOCTlON UNtnSl'l'wiww xuvi THOSE "PIUOW TAIK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN ......a t .a noa r- Maraura-saaear ntimt a ft II III I f Rock Hudson -Doius Day Tony Randall teW 'JpvERCaMEBac - i( ? coco atf ; fDIEJW,S-mOAKEjraKRIJSCHN SUPERB FEATURES! i m in mm ROBERT MITCHUM SHEUEY WINTERS LILLIAN GISH Hie NIGHT of the HUNTER . J V1L a . HAIf 'aTVtV TJX Htm r , a nnv THE DUf FROM mm H Inn. )r. flwey OhH Bierstauben! At the DARDANELLE -mttmm Buffet- Phoenix SB Denver 40 Chicago 23 Miami Heacn ua New York 31 Washinfton, D. C. 39 IS .1.'! 24 25 DINNER FOR TWO $5.00 ' PLANKED riLET MIGNON ' CORNISH GAMI HEN ' LOBSTER TAILS Plus Our Regular Menu YOUNG FOLKS under 21 always WELCOMI to thl MATADOR ROOM Maka Rasarvationi Now! Phona 773-5474 1206 North Rlnrtldl Featuring: BARON ROAST OF BEEF Sauerbraten Gingersnap Gravy Kartoffel Klosse (potato dumplings) Hasenpfeffer Dutch Kraut Succulent Sausages APPLE STRUDEL1!! and . . . Old Hiedleburg Smorkuhirg BROSTI VERBOTENI Any mention of "diet" Wide Selection of Continental Beverages DARDANELLE Internal S at Cold Hill Junction ENJOY A DELICIOUS SPAGHETTI mm All Proceeds To Be Donated to the Jacksor County HEART FUND i FRIDAY, Feb. 15 Serving From 3 P.M. Till 7 P.M. 0 SATURDAY, Feb. 16 Serving From 2 P.M. Till 6 P.M. at the BIG Y SHOPPING CENTER (Bakery Section) Spaghetti With Meat Sauce, Salad and Pepsi-Cola or Coffee-All for Only 25' Sponsored by The Big Y, Majorette Macaroni Co., Snider1! Dairy, Pacific Fruit and M.J.B. Coffee Co. This Ad Courtesy of Medford Mail Tribune top no mtvw. 3ib m:m