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10-29
Philips Named
Chairman of Event
E. C. (Tex) Philips has been
appointed Jackson county chair
man of the State Democratic
Dinner, Charles Crary, chair
man of the Jackson County
Democratic Central committee,
reported today.
The dinner will be held Nov.
8 in Portland and will have
U. S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye as
guest speaker.
Tickets for this first major
fund raising event to be spon
sored by the State Democratic
Party in 1963 may be obtained
fi through Philips, Crary said. The
telephone numbers to call are
772-8037 and 773-5152.
Members of the Oregon dele
gation in Congress have express
ed hope that they will be able
to be in Oregon to attend the
dinner, Crary said. Sen. Wayne
L. Morse will introduce Sen.
Inouye, Honolulu, who is Ha
waii's senator.
Congratulating Oregon Demo
crats upon their choice of Sen.
Inouye as speaker for the din
ner, Sen. Maurine Neuberger
said: "He is an effective worker
for the president's Civil Rights
program and co-sponsored the
Public Accommodations bill. He
has carried out his campaign
promise to work for world peace
by strong support of the nuclear
test ban treaty and co-sponsoring
a recent Senate concurrent
resolution calling for the Presi
dent to initiate steps which
would make United Nations
more effective as a world peace
maker." Folk Singers Plan
Concert in Medford
The Bay City Minstrels, a
group of San Francisco area
folk singers, will present a con
cert starting at 2:30 p. m. Sun
day, Nov. 3, at Medford High
School adutiorium.
, Stan Llead, owner and busi
ness manager of the group,
said the Medford show will be
a "whistle-stop type show,"
since the group will be en route
from the University of Oregon
at Eugene to the Bay area fol
lowing a performance in Eu
gene Saturday night.
Tickets for the show will go
on sale at 2 p. m. Sunday at the
auditorium.
Llead said the Bay City Min
strels include Herm Wyatt: the
frio, "Songdivers;" the Foothill
Singers; the Black Mountain
Boys; Bob Hefner and the
group's star. Sherry Snow.
, The hootenanny show will last
about l'i hours.
Student Studies
In Mexico City
Michael Lynch Reymers, son
of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Reymers,
2677 Hillcrest Road, is a student
at the University of the Amer
icas in Mexico City, Mexico.
A graduate of Ashland High
School, Reymers attended the
University of Oregon before en
rolling in the Mexico college to
do graduate work in business
administration.
2 FIRST RUNS!
On it 7 p.m- & 10:30 p.m.
BODYGUARD To
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SworibsMANt
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ON AT 9
P.M.
THE
HAPPY
UrURss
Time
LN--
Obituaries
JAMES W. AMBLER
James W. Ambler, 69, of 28
N. Orange St., Medford, died
early today in a local hospital.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Perl Funeral
Home.
MRS. DELLA WHETSTONE
Funeral services for Mrs. Del
la Minora Cook Whetstone, 86,
Medford, daughter of Southern
Oregon pioneer parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Cook of the Apple
gate Valley, where she was
born, were held this afternoon in
Conger Morris Funeral Home.
The Rev. James Sinclair, Ash
land, pastor of the First Church
of Christ, officiated. Mrs. Whet
stone died Sunday in a nursing
home.
Interment was in the Jack
sonville Cemetery.
Delia Cook and Henry Francis
Whetstone were married on Oct.
17, 1894, in the Cook home at
Applegate. They made their
home for many years on the
Whetstone farm on Rogue River
in the Tolo district.
Mr. Whetstone preceded his
wife in death several years
ago. A son, Floyd, also preceded
Mrs. Whetstone in death many
years ago.
Mrs. Whetstone served for
many years as clerk of the
Agate School Board when that
school district was active and
participated in many commu
nity projects. She was a member
of the Baptist Church.
Mirvivine are two sons, Ne
well Whetstone of Ashland, and
Alton Whetstone of Redding,
Calif.; two sisters, Mrs. Lulu
Hannum and Mrs. Dora Bowers,
both of San Francisco, Calif.;
three grandchildren and four
great grandchildren. A sister.
Mrs. Emma uook kudu, aiea
last week.
CARL H. CLAWSON
Funeral services for Carl H.
Clawson, 74, of 119 W. Pine St.,
Central Point, who died Sunday,
will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wed
nesday in Hillcrest Memorial
Chapel on the North Phoenix
Road.
The Rev. John V. Hebcrling
of the Central Church of Christ
will officiate. Committal will be
in Hillcrest Memorial Mauso
leum, with Conger-Morris Fu
neral Directors in charge of ar
rangements. Mr. Clawson was born April
9, 1889. He had lived in Southern
Oregon for the past 12 years,
moving from Beaver City, Neb.
He was married June 15, 1920,
in Aline, Okla., to Letha M. Mc
Cully, who preceded him in
death.
Survivors include three sons,
Ronald Clawson. Medford; Wen
dell Clawson, Hillsboro, Ore.;
and Lt. Carl H. Clawson, U.S.
Navy, Lynn Haven, Va.: a
brother, Luther Clawson. Cleo
Springs, Okla. A son, James
Clawson, died in infancy.
Casket bearers will include
Jack Florey, Frank Knox, Jack
Milhoan, Ernest Himmelman,
C. R. Buttram and Willard
Hunter.
MARTHA L. NORRIS
Mrs. Martha L. Norris,
94,
...... . --
died early this morning at tile
home of her son, Albert T. Nor
ris. 737 Siskiyou Blvd.. Ashland.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Ashland Mor
tuary. MARY T. GARRISON
Mrs. Mary T. Garrison, of the
Robinson Hotel, died last night
in a local hospital. Funeral ar
rangements will be announced
by Conger-Morris Funeral Di
rectors. ROY M. FLESCTIER
Roy M. Flescher, 60, of Cen
tral Point, died this morning in
a local hospital. Funeral ar
rangements will be announced
by Conger-Morris Funeral Directors.
' K;il Fwluff Sirjit:. It,- . , V rfcj HKhl j. 1
Prineville in Dark
After Car Hits Pole
PRINEVILLE (UPI) -An es
timated 800 Pacific Power &
Light Co. subscribers in t h e
Prineville area were without
electricity for an hour Monday
night.
The pewar tutage was caused
wftrm a ear driven by Lyle Hoag
ttf Pf jpfflwii!- hit and knocked
,sis a Kn was not injured.
v
J)
MEDFORD
By Jimmy Hatlo
THERE WAS A CALL FOR
E8BO BEFORE AND EVEN
He WASN'T HERE
TktMLMOA TP Of W
no.beroen.nj:
aV
Study Compares
English-U.S. Child
The English child is much less
involved in the public life of his
community than the Amerieian
child, and as a consequence his
assumption of adult responsi
bilities tends to be abrupt rather
than gradual.
Whether or not this compara
tive childhood picture has
changed during the past decade
will be the subject of study dur
ing the coming year by Dr. Phil
Schoggen, associate professor of
psychology at the University of
Oregon, and his wife, Maxine,
research associate in psychology-
The study is a joint University
of Oregon-University of Kansas
project being supported by a
two-year $67,400 grant from the
National Science founda t i o n.
Oregon's share of the grant will
be $23,316.
The project is a continuation
of research begun in 1954-55 in
volving two small towns-one
American - and one English
which have been given the
fictitious names of Midwest,
Kan., (population 715) and Yore
dale, Yorshire (population 300).
A husband-and wife team from
the University of Kansas, Dr.
Rodger G. Baker, professor of
psychology, and Louise Shedd
Baker, research psychologist,
conducted the original English
study, and they are presently in
Yoredale setting up the new pro
ject. After the Schoggens are set
tled in Yoredale in January, the
Bakers will return to Kansas to
direct the Midwest phase of the
study. The Schoggens, as grad
uate students and staff members
at Kansas in the 1950s, lived in
Midwest and assisted with the
original research.
The scientists are working on
a problem in phychological
ecology, an attempt to study the
behavior of people in their natu
ral settings without the re
searchers imposing themselves
upon the environment.
Yale Investigation
Workers Arrested
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (UPI)
Police picked up five Yale
students and two other workers
participating in an anti - segre
gation campaign Monday.
Three were charged with traf
fic violations and were released
after being questioned. John
Else, a white Yale divinity stu
dent, was also charged with in
terfering with an officer and
fined $20.
Others charged were Gerald
William Bray of Detroit and
Douglas Smith of Hattiesburg,
both Negroes and representa
tives of the Student Non-violent
Coordinating Committee.
Weather
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Partly
cloudy this eveninc. Fog or low
cloudiness Wednesday morning.
Generally cloudy Wednesday aft
ernoon, cnance 01 Hum rain Wed
nesday evening. Low tonight 40.
Hich Wednesday 53.
Western Oregon: Increasing clou
diness tonight, but some patchy
fog interior valleys. Cloudy Wed
nesday with occasional rain on
the coast and Interior north half.
A little cooler tonight. Low 32-42.
Hich Wednesday 48-56.
Northern California: Variable
ctoudlnexs tonight and Wednesday.
Continued cool.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
39: below normal 11.
Record high this date 76 In 1MB.
Record low this date 25 in 1929.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours
midnight 03 In: Midnight to 10
a.m. .00 in.
Total this month 1.39 In., .31
In. below normal.
Total since Sept. 1 1.65 In., .65 in
below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
flir.. highest tnis a in. wu . .
High
Yeiler.
day
s
.. 3S
. 49
44
5.1
48
S7
.... 35
45
36
37
73
.... 78
.... 72
81
4:01)
24.
CITY
Brookings
Crater Lake . ..
Grants Paas
Howard Prairie
Klamath Falls
MEDFORD
Portland
Seattle
Spokane
Yakima .. . .
a.m. nr.
Low Free,
43
2n
4.1
31
39
43
4I
44""
13
23
M
55
53
58
85
""63
36
Tr.
.12
.09
II
.03
07
.01
04
.08
Eureka
Red Bluff
Sacramento ...
San Francisco .
Los Angeles
Phoenix
Denver
Chka.n
Miami Beach
New York .
Washington, DC,
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
Kindergarten for Deaf Topic Of
"If a deaf child can be reach
ed early enough, he can be
trained to be self sustaining dur
ing his adult life." the director
of the Junior Service Lea cue
Kindergarten for Deaf Children
declared Monday.
Speaking to the noon luncheon
of the Medford Chamber of
Commerce Roundtable, the di
rector, Mrs. Brands Bartels,
said the league's kindergarten
accepts deaf children at the ace
of 18 months.
In recognition of the point,
Mrs. Bartels said that the state
school for the deaf recently low
ered its acceptance age limit
from six to four years.
Mrs. Bartels said she regret
Juvenile Department
Noted Busy Period Here
Jackson County Juvenile De
partment Director Lawrence
Tweedy noted today that the lat
ter part of this month has been
one of the busiest periods in the
history of the juvenile depart
ment and detention home.
This was naaticularlv true
Oct. 24 when the home was full.
Between 10 p. m. and 4:30 a. m.
on Oct. 25, the director received
many calls from the Medford
city police and state police.
These covered eight runaway
cases. The department person-
Locals
Card Part)- Pythian Sisters
Past Chiefs Club will conduct
a public card party and lunch
eon beginning at noon, Wednes
day, Oct. 30, in Girls Commu
nity Club.
Sale Set Home Economics
Club of Central Point Grange
will conduct a rummage and
"white elephant" sale Wednes
day, Oct. 30, from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m., and Thursday, Oct. 31,
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
,
Attends Dedication Clifford
W. Curl, representative for the
Business Men's Assurance Com
pany, here, has returned from
the dedication of the new BMA
Tower Home Office building in
Kansas City, Mo., recently. Curl
qualified for the trip for his rec
ord of sales during July, Au
gust and September. In addition
to the dedication was a two-day
sales seminar.
Permits Issued The Med
ford building department has is
sued permits to Federal Sign
ana signal company to erect a
$6,000 sign at 827 S. Central
Ave. and a $2,600 sign at 545
Stevens St.; to Allied Neon Com
pany to erect a $2,500 sign at
132 S. Central Ave.; to H. L.
Roberts to build a residence
at 1006 S. Oakdale Ave. at an es
timated cost of $3,000; and to
D. L. Pickell to erect $10,000 res
idences at 1691 Roberts Road,
and at 2872 and 2874 Howard
Ave.
Flown to Hospital James C.
Salmon, Dunsmuir, Calif., was
flown Monday from Mount Shas
ta, Calif., to Ft. Miley Veterans
hospital, San Francisco, by
Mercy Flights Inc. Salmon was
found unconscious from severe
head injuries after an estimated
18 hours in the woods, accord
ing to the report. He was the
1,636th patient flown by Mercy
Flights.
Innocence Found
In Portland Trial
PORTLAND (UPI) -A Circuit
Court jury Monday found Bossie
Hale, 37, innocent of a murder
charge in the fatal shooting of
his wife, Susannah, 31, on Aug.
2.
HE
Accurate
Complete
News
Coverage
1 Y..r $22 ( MmiKi $lt
J Mtnrht $5.50
Clip fall tVtrftstmeitf f
rstara It with yswr thesk t
maaey anler ta:
The Christian telenet Mtatttf
Oaa Narvay Street
Inttn, Mtai. Ulll
Pt.i
ted that the league's kindergar
ten was only equipped to keep
the deaf child until he was six
years old, but on an annual op
erating budget of $5,000, the
school "can only afford one
teacher."
"We hope some day to be able
to teach eight grades here," she
said, "so that area youngsters
won't have to leave home when
they are six and transfer to a
school upstate."
The speaker said the league
is workind to "integrate" deaf
children in public schools.
"These deaf children will
have to live all their lives in a
world where other people hear,"
she said. "If they are to be inde-
nel lodged two runaway bovs in
the Jackson county jail due to
lack of space.
Juvenile department person
nel had to call Mrs. Mary Car
penter, child welfare division
caseworker, who helped place
four girls in two different shel
ter homes.
Lodged In Home
A boy and a girl were lodged
in the detention home after mak
ing room by releasing two boys
to their parents, Tweedy said.
One other boy was released to
a shelter home by the director
to make room for a 11-year-old
girl who needed protective cus
tody from an unstable family
situation.
The runaways came from a
wide area covering Los Angeles,
Calif., and the northern borders
of Oregon. By Friday evening,
Oct. 25, they had been returned
to their respective homes.
In juvenile court Oct. 22 a 16-
year-old boy was ordered to
MacLaren School for Boys for
thefts and for other undesirable
behavior patterns- Tweedy said.
un Oct. 25, six cases were
heard by Juvenile Court Judge
James M Main, These involved
thefts from coin-operated ma
chines in Medford. All six boys
involved were released to their
parents on rules of probation.
FAA Asks Comments
On Church Proposal
The Federal Aviation Agency
is seeking comments regarding
the proposed construction of the
Congregational Church in Med
ford which would exceed by 30
leei me neight regulations in
the flight approach area for the
Medford municipal airport.
To assist the FAA in this in
formal aeronautical study affect
ing the utilization of airspace,
comments are welcomed. Per
sons may send them to the
Chief, Airspace Utilization
Branch, Federal Aviation Agen
cy, western Kegion, Box 90007,
Los Angeles, Calif., 90009.
The church, to be constructed
at the corner of East Jackson
St. and Berkeley Way, will have
an overall height of 98 feet. It
is located 12,400 feet south-south
east of the approach end of the
airport runway 32. and 15.100
feet southeast of the airport rcf- i
erence point.
All comments must be receiv
ed by Nov. 20 to be considered
before final action is taken.
America has to be tops! It
takes top talent to maintain
our world lead in science
and business, in jobs and liv
ing standards ... in moral in
fluence.
Where does this talent come
from? Higher education sup
plies most of It. But costs
have crept higher. . . the col
leges are battling to keep up.
To stay on top, we must back
our colleges. They need
classrooms, laboratories and
competent teachers.
HELP THE COLLEGE
OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI
To find out how th college crisis
affects you. writs to HIGHER
EDUCATION, Box 36, Tim
Square Station, New York 36.
Publishad ass svblie ssviis
In eoopaio with Ttra A4ssh9
Counwl 1-4 to Jaaaar ,
sWuraMa) txaxinvw, amm-atMA. s
i
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tops
in '
talent
7
pendent, they must learn to
compete with hearing people."
Mrs. Bartels reviewed briefly
the history of the kindergarten
from its beginning 10 years ago
after the Junior Service League
decided following a year's
study to sponsor the school
as its "big project."
The school opened with three
pupils in the Presby t e r i a n
cnurcn. since then, 52 young-
sters have "graduated" and are
now enrolled in other schools
and "doing well," she said. I
The kindergarten is now lo
cated in the offices of the ahan.
doned housing project adjacent
iu uHLKson ocnooi park, but
Mrs. Bartels said the quarters
are rapidly becomine inadp.
quate, and she speculated that
in aoout two years" a new
building will be needed.
Discusses Difficulties
Mrs. Bartels spoke of the dif
ficulties encountered in teach
ing deaf children. "Due to the
lack of this one senje hearinn
these children are handicap-
peu iar Deyona wnal they would
be with the loss of some other
sense," she said.
Lip - reading is the principal
method used at first in initial
work with the children.
"In the beginning, these chil
dren know nothing," she said.
"They don't know whether they
are boys or girls, and they don't
know the names of anything."
"Their world is visual," she
said. "They have no auditory
memory. They must learn
everything through their eyes."
Can Re Reached
She said it has been deter
mined that there is no such
thing as a "completely deaf
child." With proper amplifica
tion of sound, the youngsters
can be "reached."
The speaker said that each
child in the kindergarten is fit
ted with two hearing aids, and
a powerful amplifier is used in
group work.
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"Once the child realizes the
pleasure of sound," she said,
"they get used to wearing the
hearing devices all the time."
For the first two months or
so, a new student at the kinder
garten will just sit and watch,
but she said they soon begin to
enter in the class activities. By
the time the child is three years
old, he is using the words he
has learned, and by the age of
six, most youngsters have a
good vocabulary and are read
ing. Teaching To Talk
But Mrs. Bartels said it takes
"forever" to teach a deaf young
ster to talk. After months of lip
reading, participation in class
games, and work in word con
tacts, training is started in
speech.
"The children can't hear when
they make a faulty sound," she
pointed out. "They must learn
to 'feel" a proper sound."
Tongue exercises are con
ducted to build up muscles that
have not developed through non
use. There are 32 speech ele
ments, and each has to be indi
vidually learned, she said.
The kindergarten director said
that time is also spent in "par
ent counseling."
Misunderstanding
"Frequently, there is much
misunderstanding and emotion
involved with parents of deaf
children, who often feel their
youngsters have "some thing
wrong" with them, or that they
are mentally retarded.
Sometimes the parents are
"ashamed" about their child's
defect, and have feelings of
guilt that they are being "pun
ished" through their child for
having done something wrong.
Such parental problems in
crease the difficulty of reaching
the deaf child, Mrs. Bartels
said. Deaf children actually
need more love and understand
ing because of their handicap
than normal children do.
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER
Roundtable Lunch
The league's kindergarten is She said that each new Junior
now in a "new phase," Mrs. Service League member is en
Bartels said, and is beginning rolled in a six months' course
to work with children who have !
some "brain damage," which
has caused them to have lan
guage difficulty.
Has Five Students
The school now has five stu
dents with brain damage. She
said that "so far the results are
not too good," but that it was
still "too soon" to expect any
real progress. "These young
sters are all mentally bright
and normal physically in all re
spects, except for the area of
language," she said.
No tuition is charged for
youngsters in the kindergarten,
Mrs. Bartels said, but the
league insists on the close co
operation of the parents with
school activities.
WRESTLING
Medford Armory
Thursday, Oct. 31
8:30 p.m.
WIRED IN!
BORNE
BOCK WINKLE
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Both men and referee will
be locked in ring by chicken
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in dealing with children. If the
member passes an examination
at the end of that time, she may
volunteer for work at the kin
dergarten, Mrs. Bartels said.
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