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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1963)
MEDFORD HIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON TUESDAY, MARCH 19. 1963 JACKSON COUNTY RURAL SCHOOL DISTRICT NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of the Rural School District of Jackson County, State of Oregon, that a SCHOOL MEETING of the said RURAL SCHOOL DIS TRICT will be held at County Court House on the 1st day of April, 1963, at 11:00 o'clock A.M., for the purpose of discussing the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1963, and ending June 30, 1964, hereinafter set forth. BUDGET-FISCAL YEAR 1963-1964 SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES, RECEIPTS AND AVAILABLE CASH SCHEDULE 1 BALANCES AND TAX LEVIES A. Total General Clearing School Estimation of Tax Levy All Funds Fund Account Apportion- Fund ment 1. a. Total Estimated Expenditures $3,000,381.25 $238,553.32 $18,000.00 $2,743,827.93 DEDUCT: 2. Total Estimated Receipts and Available Cash Balances 100,245.18 82,245.18 18,000.00 !. Amount Necessary to Balance Budget 2,900,136.07 ADD: 5. Total Estimated Tax Levies For Ensuing Fiscal Year 2,900,136.07 6- Analysis of Estimated Tax Levies: a. Amount Inside 6 Limitation 2,234,736.89 b. Amount Outside 6 Limitation .... 665,399.18 156,308.14 156,308.14 $2,743,827.93 GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE II ESTIMATED RECEIPTS AND BEGINNING CASH BALANCE Actual Receipts Budget Estimated Fiscal Year Fiscal Year Allowance Receipts Endina Ending Current Item Ensuing June 30, June 30, Fiscal Fiscal Year 1961 1962 1962-63 10. Revenue From Local Sources $ 39,647.08 $ 96,969.40 $ 1 1.1 District Tax -Current -.11 11.2 District Tax Prior 20, Revenue From Intermedial Sources 2,441.00 4,350.00 7,000.00 29.0 Curriculum Center Services $ 5,700.00 30. Revenue From State Sources 3,982.08 31.2 Other Basic Fund Receipts 12,000.00 4,000.00 12,000.00 31.32 Special Education (MR) 21,800.00 31.33 Speech Program 4,475.00 499.53 4.300.00 31.34 Able & Gifted Program 4,500.00 4,000.00 31.35 Curriculum Imp. Plan 3,000.00 1,300.00 39.0 School Dist. Reorganization 1,300.00 15,000.00 73,000.00 60. Loans 80. Receipts From Other Districts 2,598.20 ' 9,698.48 14.210.54 81.0 Tuition Special Ed. (MR) 26,650.20 81.1 Tuition Speech Program 3,275.00 300.00 300.00 83.1 Testing Services 300.00 14,531.55 24,121.29 9,500.00 83.2 National Defense Ed. Act 8.000.00 $ 90,199.91 $212,938.81 $ 52,610.54 TOTAL RECEIPTS $ 79,000.20 Beginning Net Cash Balance 23.485.39 8.099.37 (or Deficit) 3,244.98 TOTAL BUDGET RESOURCES $113,685.30 $221.038.18 $ 52,610.54 GENERAL FUND $ 82,245.18 RECEIPTS: $ 31,000.00 $ 43,250.00 $ 20,000.00 CLEARING ACCOUNT FUND $ 18,000.00 GENERAL FUND SCHEDULE III ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES Actual Expenditures Budget Estimated Fiscal Year Fiscal Year Allowance Expenditures Endina Endina Current Item Ensuing June 30, June 30, Fiscal Fiscal Year 1961 1962 1962-63 Administration $ 22,831.77 $ 22.896.02 $ 40.000.00 110 Salaries $ 42.037.00 4,371.84 7,872.28 120 Supplies, Postage, Printing 6,394.25 127.47 500.00 141 Elections 250.00 125.00 144 Audit 125.00 2,281.96 3,268.90 5,600.00 145 Travel 6.200.00 265.22 602.00 190 Other Expenses - 735.50 $ 25,113.73 $ 30,929.45 $ 54,699.28 Total Administration Expense $ 55,741.75 Instruction $ 21,100.04 $ 50,416.35 $ 55,042.00 210 Salaries $ 81,102.00 4,103.88 9,771.89 14,091.59 220 Teaching Supplies, Testing 11,245.74 4,915.87 8.347.37 13,150.00 227.3 Audio Visual Materials 21.940.43 31.000.00 39.200.00 20,000.00 227.4 District Applic. N.D.E.A 18,000.00 1,419.80 2.682.46 3,062.00 245 Travel 2,413.00 . 130.69 926.67 1.000.00 290.1 In-Service Programs 1,200.00 999.06 2.998.02 8.B00.00 290.2 Able & Gifted Student Frog 9,325.00 4,000.00 290.3 Curriculum Imp. Plan 3.000.00 $ 63.669.34 SI 14,342.76 $118,945.59 Total Instruction Expense $148,226.17 Pupil Transportation $ 296.61 $ 347.27 $ 2,700.00 536 Special Education $ 4,500.00 $ 296.61 S 347.27 $ 2,700.00 Total Pupil Transportation $ 4,500.00 Operation of Plant 12.97 $ 1,248.03 $ 1,200.00 633 Telephone $ 1,200.00 $ 12.97 $ 1,248.03 $ 1,200.00 Total Operation of Plant $ 1,200.00 Maintenance of Plant $ 383.90 $ 409.00 736.3 Repair of Equipment $ 330.00 $ 383.90 $ 409.00 Total Maintenance of Plant $ 330.00 Fixed Charges ,- $ 2 771.11 $ 3.597.05 $ 5.810.00 851.0 Retirement, Social Sec $ 7.R42.77 172 67 1,281.38 1,689.00 852.0 Insurance 1,563.69 26.67 476.39 423.00 855 Interest 700.00 3,000.00 880 Rental of Classrooms 5,000.00 $ 2,970.45 $ 5,354.82 $ 10,922.00 Total Fixed Charges $ 15,106.46 Capital Outlay $ 2,937 25 $ 5.456.87 $ 10,456.65 1273.1 Instructional Equipment $ 8.220.34 340.50 2,951.60 1,918.95 1278.2 Non-Instructional Equip 228.60 S 3,277.75 $ 8.408.47 $ 12,375.60 Total Capital Outlay $ 8,448.94 Debt Service S 15,000.00 $ 50.000.00 1381.1 Payment of Debt Principal $ 15.0no.00 $ 50,000.00 Total Debt Service fl)R,H6 6.500.00 EMERGENCY S 5,000.00 ' ' TOTAL GENERAL FUND $111.025.38 $211.014.70 $207,751.47 EXPENDITURES 823855332 77oy9T2Tlyi3r903.50 S 201)00.00 CLEARING ACCOUNT . ... .-. .S 18.000.00 RURAL SCHOOL DISTRICT EQUAL $2,074,241.82 $2,170.173.97 $2,553,585.93 IZED LEVY APPORTIONMENT ....$2.743,827.93 Approved bv Budget Commhtce Don Patterson Approved March 4. 1963 Chairman, Budget Committee Signed: Posted March 11-12, 1963 Sam B. Harbison Signed: Secretary, Budget Committee Alf B. Mrkvold Clerk, Rural School District I itr . ' -I'm i RECEIVES AWARD Lindsay Darneille of Medford High school, the Mcdford Amer ican Legion Post's entry in the Legion's annual speech contest, is now Oregon's entry in future competition. She posed here after winning state honors with (left to right) Dr. Gordon Pefley, Portland, depart ment of Oregon chairman for the Ameri can Legion; her mother, Mrs. Don Dar neille, and on her right, her father. Don Darneille. Lindsay received the $300 state prize and now moves into the regional finals in Moscow, Idaho. g v If iiirfiT"'L-. 7 f i CONTEST FINALISTS St. Patrick's Day in San Francisco Sunday saw eight out of sixteen girls chosen for the Miss San Francisco contest, and not one of them was proper Irish. Here they climb the wall for photographers shortly after their selection as finalists. Reading clockwise from the top are: Diann Guinta, Valerie Lewis, Thclma Roy, Jerilynn Sturdivant, Patricia Davis, Galo Hietti, Carol Ann Sandvik and Chris Catalano. (UPI) The Family Council Editor's not: The Family round) consist! of a Judge, a phvehiatrist, three clergymen, three editors and a women' editor, fcarh article it a ummary of a family disagreement presented to the Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor, encountered by guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by Mrs. Alma Denny. (Copyright by General Features fiorp.) Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. W ATKINS (Register and Tribune Syndicate, 1963) 'Table-Scrap' Diet Unusual For Today's Canine Friends "Lucky dogs," those ca nines living today, many of which enjoy comfortable homes, expert professional care when sick and proper food. The old "table-scrap" diet, once the sole source of food for "man's faithful friend," has pretty well been aban doned at least for most household pets. Today's dog is pampered; he enjoys a wide variety of prepared foods, moist and dry, that are well balanced and contain all the necessary minerals and vi tamins necessary to a long and healthful life. The dog, of course, does not read the labels on the can or package. He doesn't really have to: he depends on his owner to know what is good and what is necessary. Most dogs will eat anything the master cats, even those foods not normally fed to dogs. Most owners, fond of their pets, take care that their dogs have the proper food, served at the right time and in the correct amounts. Not Always So It wasn t always that way back in the "labe-scrap" era when our canine friends sub sisted on a diet of odds and ends anything the family left on their plates, even those articles unfit for human consumption. In some in stances, even today, some pet owners who don't appear to be too bright feed their dogs inedible items. Such an animal was brought to a small animal clinic a short time ago by its owner. It took some time to diagnose the trouble. Later, it was found the dog's stom ach was almost completely plugged up with cellophane. Our first thought would be that it must be a pretty stu pid dog that would willing ly fill its stomach with this noncdible material. Any ani mal dumb as that deserves to be sick. Such, however, is not nec essarily the true picture. It was the dog's owner that was the ignorant one The dog suffered because of having explicit confidence in an ig norant master. He had placed his boundless faith in a false leader. No Wrong Any dog. regardless of breed or upbringing, has the deep seated belief that its master can do nothing wrong . . . that he knows all and can control all conditions. He holds as a superior being the one person in all the world he feels he can trust. The dog follows blindly, not realizing there are some dog owners who know little more than the animal over which they hold domination. These are the animals which cither die from mis-use or wind up in the small animal clinics in distressed and often desperate condition. J Etta D. - She thinks it's okay for her son to bully mine. Doris A. - Why doesn't she teach him to fight back? Etta D. - Doris is my best friend and there's nothing we like more than a chatty after noon with each other about once a month. We live about an hour's drive apart so we take turns in each other's homes. Theoretically this should work out fine because we each have a son about the same age. Mine is almost 4. Her's was 4 in December. But the visits have turned into torture because she won't curb her child. Mine knows how to play nicely. He gets along fine with playmates in the neighborhood park. But Doris's son grabs, pushes, bumps, knocks. And Doris thinks it's cute and natural. Maybe if it was her son at the wrong end she'd pay some attention. Instead of stopping him, she seems to approve. Doris A. - I thought Ella had more sense than to thlrk she can keep her son in a co coon all his life. Those kids she says he gets along with must be infants in their car riages, or a bunch of dim wits. He just doesn't know how to play with a child his own age, where it's a matter of give-and-take and stand up for your rights. It would be a shame if our close friendship had to bang up over our chile" -e-. But she won't admit that hers is over sensitive, while mine is just normal natural kid who knows how to hold his own. If she keeps him acting like a scared rabbit she'd better keep him in his own backyard. Of course we could meet without the kids, but that's hard to arrange. The Council-Belwecn two "best" friends, why turn to a third party - The Council to settle a matter that has un settled them? Can it be that the friendship iself has begun to pall and that if the chil dren hadn't handed up a bone of contention, some other one would be found sooner or later? But to take this disagree ment at face value, by itself, we'll assume that Etta con siders this the only boulder in the path of true friendship and wants it smoothed down in a reasonable, unemotional spirit. Our first reaction is that the two children make a ridic ulous pair, quite uneven, de spite the affinity between their mothers. It's quite all right, in fact recommended, to expose pretty-well-malch- cd kids to one another and let the chips, punches, wallops fall where they may. But it s quite another matter to say, "Go play and leave us alone," to a cat and a dog, or to two disparate youngsters who have nothing in common. If this duo is to "play" to gether, three changes must be instituted. First, they must be briefed ahead of time on approximately wbil'i in store, then there must be supervision so that the "win nings" aren't always on one side, and finally some on-the- spot training can take place. Doris's boy can learn othrr ways of solving problems than via his fists, while Etta's Junior Milquetoast won't al ways automatically resort to tllght. As friends, the mothers can exchange specific suggestions, but not in the children's pres ence, especially under the pressure of wails and screams. To sum up, the chem istry of the two boys does not blend. Their mothers have been trying to turn them into prc-school baby-sitters for each oilier. No can do. Etta and Doris must each watch over their respective sons during those visits, with "girl talk" wedged in when possi ble. Otherwise, get together without the kids. What's sauce for the goose is loss for the gosling, in this case. A 19 NAMED QUEEN The International Students' Society of George Washington University in Washington, D.C., has named Raija Touri of Finland, as Queen of International Night. Finnish Ambassador Richard A. Seppala crowns Miss Touri as her two princesses, Maria Bouret, of Puerto Rico, right, and Rumiko Sato of Japan, left, look on. (UPI) Medford Residents Outline Proposals For Alba Relations This little dog with its stomach plugged with cello. phane was one of the un fortunate ones. It paid the penalty for having a stupid master. The man had fed the dog the wrappings from various kinds of prepared meats and cold cuts. Because the material tasted somewhat of meat, and because the man, in whom the dog had confi dence, had handed it to him, the inedible' material had been swallowed. Hasn't Caught Up This man, the little dog's owner, just hasn't caught up yet with today's progress. He is still living and thinking if he thinks at all of condi tions that existed 50 years ago when prepared foods, in cluding meals, were packed in casing that really were an imal intestines, and as such were edible. Today, most cold cuts are packaged in cellophane or plastic - like materials. Un fortunate it is that a dog's blind trust and unbounded confidence should bring about extreme discomfort and suf fering. Its faith and trust is violated because a human has not yet learned some of the very simplest facts of mod ern packaging. A group of Medford resi dents, functioning under the name "Friends of Alba," has held a number of meetings re cently to outline proposals for perpetuation of relations be tween Medford and its sister city. The group represents an ex pansion of the original Sister City committee, and now in cludes eight members, chair maned by Robert Baccus. The Friends of Alba plan to send a newspaper written In Italian to Alba once every three months. The newspaper will contain stories of events and happenings in Medford and the Rogue valley. Sponsoring Contest Since the newspaper needs a name, Baccus said the com. mitlce is sponsoring a contest and that a prize -will be PLEASED BY VERDICT Shirley Carlson, 25-year-old moth er of six, hugs her attorney, E. J. Skcllcy, in a Los Angeles courtroom after she was found not guilty of murdering her husband. The jury delivered its verdict after four hours of deliberation. Mrs. Carlson was charged with the first degree murder of her husband to climax what was testified in court as 10 years of married anguish. (UPI) China Claims U.S. Leadership Shaken Tokyo (UPI) i- Communist China claimed today that United States lcadrcship of the West has been "greatly shaken" and the Western al liance is disintegrating. Red Flag, the leading the oretical journal of the ruling Chinese Communist party, said an "unprecedented grave crisis of a bad split" has de veloped among the Western Allies. It said disunity among the Allies was caused by the challenge to U. S. leadership from the European countries, particularly the Common Market nations France, West Germany, Italy, Bel gium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg. awarded to the person sub mitting the winning entry. The- name, Baccus said, hould be indicative of the Rogue valley and contain some of the local flavor of Modferd. Entries may be sent to Mrs. Dorothy Sneddon, sec retary to the mayor, in care of city hall, Medford. Groups at St. Mary's High school and Medford High school are preparing to send some materials to students In Alba, Baccus stated. The I, R. L. club at Med ford High school will send two booklets, prepared in both English and Italian, on the economic, social and po litical structures of Oregon and the United States. The Italian version was prepared by Claudio Paterlini, an ex change student who Jived with Bill Barker and family while he was in Medford. St. Mary's students are pre paring some information on American schools, govern- ment and preparation of teachers in response to re quests from some students in Alba. ' The committee also is col lecting a variety of flower seeds which will be sent to Medford's sister city as an in dication of friendship. The Friends of Alba plan another meeting in about two weeks to determine the name of the proposed newspaper and to consider new areas of communication between the two cities. Members of the group in clude Mrs. Vic Millies, Mrs. Joanne 'Smith, Mrs. Curt Ns chcim, Gene Piazza, Bill Mc- Kibbcn, Omar Bacon, John Snider and Baccus. Reports of Attic Spraying Noted Three cases of Medford res idents paying persons sub stantial amounts to "spray at tics for termites" were "oorl cd to Medford police last week end. In each case, according to police reports, the home own er was approached by two young men who wanted to check the house for signs of termite damage. After check ing the exterior of each, one of the men woulc'. inspect the attic, re turning with a hand ful of sawdust, saying that the building was infested with termites. After the men had sprayed I the attic, with what police be lieve is dicsel oil, they would present a bill to the home owner. In the three cases re ported so far, the mc have received payments of $250, $168, and $200. City police checked with local termite exterminating firms and were told that it is rare for termites to be found in attics in the area. Police encouraged rcsidenU to check identification of per sons who approach them for such work and if in doubt contact the Medford finance department and the Medford Chamber of Commerce. If the home owner is suspicious of the persons soliciting the serv ice, they should contact the Medford police department. f Over 19,000 Calls to Prospective Customers In Just a Few Hours A CLASSIFIED AD IN THE MAIL TRIBUNE For Quick Results Use This Convenient Order Form Write Your Ad Below - 1 Word to a Space - Cost Per Word Appears at Right Njmt and Addrtu Count Hit Smi OMwr Word Minimum Sin 2 Llni Jackion, Joiephln fe Sliklyoa Counties 1 1 1 ; ConsecuUv Insertions Mini mo in Slxt I Ltnei 1 day .08 per word - ' ' 1 1 1 1 "' 1 " 3 days ,12 per word j - - .U - - N 4 .IT - " .! " m g, j n m ' Minimum cish prlca SOe. 1 1 Minimum 1 a Hat a. Charged ads, on approved credit, are tilled on Una i , .i i i rata. Minimum charge 11.20. Minimum ill a I line. ' ,.. , ' Rata out'ilde the threa Countlei. to per word per day. 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