Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 1963)
THUHSDAY, DECEMBER 12. 1963 A 11 Policy To Insure Teacher Filness John Nuich Has Ihe Gifts for a "' PORTLAND (Wl 4r"T h e State Board of Higher Educa tion has adopted a policy that would insure competency by community college instructors. Dr. Miles. C. Rnmney said the policy was necessary to guaran tee that community college credits can be transferred to in stitutions of h 1 g h e r education. S1EDF0RU MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON fSW n f tfm "g oo.o. J :'mM XA ! S1fk. sSi CANADA :- BRITISH ai1a T fliSSKga Ss55 I". CCHUM8IA ""7 xSszS i AMtADO- :i (mm( MAN.Tcppg C". j- 0 SASKATCHEWAN lpf OUtMC Jim ziJ j1 ONTARIO r w15tesSK " J RECEIVES PICTURE - Standing in the front hallway of the Jackson School in Med ford, where Christmas decorations remind the public that this is the season for giving, Frank Bash, chairman of the board of School District 549C, was given a framed picture of Picture Presented to Frank Bash, chairman of the board of School District 549C and president of the Oregon School Boards Association, was , Honored By me JacKson acnool student body Wednesday. Bash, who has served on the Medford School Board since 1949, was : presented a colored photograph of the first school building constructed in the United States as a gift from the student body in recognition of the many- years of service he has given the schools. The build ing photographed, was located in St. Augustine, Fla. The presentation was made by Lucky Shopp, sixth grader at Jackson School, who said: "Be cause you have done so much or Oregon' schools, especially in Mcdford.Hhe Jackson School student body would like to have you have this picture of the first schoolhouse in the United States." Bash thanked the students for the gift and assured them it would be given a place of honor in his homo. The photograph was taken sometime .during the 1770s, ac cording to Mrs. Prccia Medley, League Plans Study On Pollution Control PORTLAND (UPO - The Oregon Seed Growers League will concentrate on limiting air pollution in the Willamette Val ley in the coming year, it was decided at the association's con vention Wednesday. League members pointed out that field burning is necessary lu prevent certain diseases in seed crops. However, they agreed to cooperate to mini mize pour visibility and other burning problems, and to at tempt to acquaint the public with the need for burning. WRESTLING Medford Armory TONIGHT! DEC. 12 8:30 P.M. TAG TEAM MATCH IUTHER NICK LINDSEY & KOZAK Vs. SOIDAT DON GORKY & DUF'Y 2 Other Matches Ringside :.. 12 00 General $1.50 Children 75 (Under 121 Tickets at Lamport'i 226 East Main St. GREAT PICTURES! Tonile! Hill OR ON SCREEN 7 2nd Hit! At 9:40 P.M 1 III 1 the first school building in the United States. The presentation was made Wednesday by Lucky Shopp, sixth grade student at Jack son, with Dr. Leonard Mayfield, superin tendent of Medford schools, by his side. instructor and school librarian, Following the presentation Bash, Dr. Leonard Mayfield, superintendent of District 549C, OBITUARIES CHARLES BUCKMASTER Charles Robert (Bob) Buck master, 36, died yesterday at his home, 801 No. Central Ave. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger-Morris Fu neral Directors. WILLIAM J. CAMERON William J. Cameron, 77, of Hucncr Lane, Jacksonville, died this moring in a local hospital. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Conger Morris Funeral Directors. KITY MATTOS MONTAGUE - Kitty Mattos, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Mattos, McCloud, who was born Nov. 16, died nine days later in a San Francisco hos pital, while under observation. Interment took place in the Mt. Shasta Cemetery. , Besides her parents, she is survived by a sister, Ruth; two brothers, Mike and Lonnie; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Williams, Little Shasta ranchers, and a paternal grandmother, Mrs. Louise Mat tos, Ml. Shasta. WILLIAM A. 1IANNAFORD Funeral services for William Arthur Hannaford, 63, of 808 Palm St., Medford,, who died Monday, will be held at 1 p.m. Friday in the Chapel in the Trees mortuary in Siskiyou Memorial Park. Dr. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian Church of Medford will officiate. Private interment will follow in Siskiyou Memorial Park. Mr. Hannaford was born Nov. 23, 1900, near Joplin, Mo. On Oct. 27, 1926, at Yreka, Calif., he was married to Goldie Cog hill, who survives. The family have been resi dents of this community since 1925. He had been an employe of Ihe California Oregon Power Company, now Pacific Power and Light Company, since 1929, until he retired in March, 1963. He was a member of the Inde pendent Brotherhood of Electri cal Worker's of Medford. Survivors, besides his widow, include two sons, Elmer R. Han naford, Medford, and William A. Hannaford Jr., a student at the University of Oregon, Eu gene; one daughter, Mrs. George Scndelbach, Palmdalc, Calif.; one brother, Edward Hannaford, McClcary, Wash.; one sister, Mrs. Cora Ricper, Colville, Wash.; and 10 grandchildren. Funeral arrangements arc en trusted to Siskiyou Funeral Serv ice directors of Chapel in the Trees mortuary. EARL I". .MALBOURN Funeral services for Earl F. I VEIN JJULU P.M. & 1 A.M. kirk DOUGLAS -KIM NOVAK ERNIE KOVACS BARBARA RUSH CinimaScop wut.vN COLOR! 3rd Hitl At 11:15 P.M. Five TIN HEFIIK Branded Bash and Mrs. Moore Hamilton, mem ber of the State Board of Educa tion, were guests of the student body in the school cafeteria. Malbourn, 64, of 133 N. Ivy St., who died Wednesday, will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at St. Mark's Episcopal Church. The Rev. George R. V. Bol ster, rector of the church, will officiate. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial Park. Perl Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Mr. Malbourn was born Oct. 17, 1899, in North Hartland. Vt. He was employed as an agent for the Internal Revenue Serv- L?in,iu4arS,26iU'l!nMin" npannns Minn anrl pinht vn.-irv neapolis, Minn., and eight years in Auerdecn, S. U. He retired in 1960 and moved to Medford. He was a member of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Med ford Elks, and president of Med ford Chapter National Associa tion of Retired Civil Employes. On Aug. ,23, 1947 in Minneap olis, Minn., he was married to Charlotte Ruth, who survives. Also surviving is one daugh ter, Mrs. Rolf (Barbara Ann) Killerud, Minneapolis, Minn.; one sister, Mrs. Henry (Helena) McCusker, Moody, Maine, and four grandchildren. Casket bearers will be Wiley Blancett, Peter Nelson, George Watson, Henry Ernest, E. Stan ley Robbins, and Edwin Eggers. Friends who wish may con tribute to Die heart or cancer fund in care of the postmaster. IRA D. CANFIELD Funeral services for Ira D. Canfield, 81, of 104 S. Kcene way Drive, who died Tuesday, will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at Perl Funeral Home. The Rev. George Bolster, rec tor of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, will officiate, assisted by Carl Oestreich of Medford Masonic Lodge. Interment will be in Siskiyou Memorial Park. Mr. Canfield was born May 13, 1832, in Renova, Pa. He moved to the Rogue Valley in 1920 from Honolulu, Hawaii. He was a veteran of World War I, serving as a corporal in the United States Army from 1917 to 1919. He served in the AEF in r ranee from March 29, 1918, 10 may u, igiu. j He was a member of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, fifty-year member of the Hono lulu Blue Lodge, Medford York Rite, Medford Scottish Rite, Hillah Temple Shrine, past pa tron Order of Amaranth, past patron Honolulu Harmony Or der of Eastern Star, recipient of Scottish Right Knight Comman der Court of Honour, Oregon De partment Commander Veteran of Foreign Wars, Past Comman der of Disabled American Vet erants, member of World War I Veterans, 40-ycar member of American Legion and Sons of American Revolution. On May 5, 1920, in Medford, he was married to Julia Hop pin, who survives. Also surviving is one nephew, William F. Flack, Lock Haven, Pa. Honorary casket bearers will be Fred Perdin, Ralph Luc, Charles Hoppe, Howard Cold smith. Marshall Day, Hal Bish op, Glenn Linn, Clarence Hur wood and Mcrritt Swing. Active casket bearers will be ! Mylcs Berry, Roger Wester i field, Vernon Turpin, John Pond, Ray Lawless and Ed Smith. MAL'DK M. CLLBKItTSON Funeral services for Maude M. Culbertson. 78, of Route 2. Box 213. Medford, who died Wednesday, will be held at 111 am. Saturday at Perl Funeral Home. Dr. George Roseberry, pastor hospital. Funeral arrangements of First Methodist Church, will I will be announced by Perl Fu officiate. Interment will be in ncral Home. tic is vice chancellor for aca demic affairs with the state sys tem. Under state law, the state board must approve courses in the colleges which are intended to be transferable and nvist al so approve the hiring of instruc tors who will teach such cours es. The policy also stipulates that community colleges have ade quate library facilities, and that they must not impair the effec tiveness of instructors by ask ing them to teach too many dif ferent courses. The scope of courses taught without intention of transfer credit is determined by the State Department of Education and the colleges. Airmen Return to Space Capsule Test SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPD Four teen-age airmen emerged Wednesday from a steel box and 30 days in an explosive at mosphere of pure oxygen, the longest known test of its kind. They underwent medical tests then returned to their simulated space capsule for five more days of followup. Their condi tions were good. The test, part of a continuing series of experiments to find out man's reaction to space capsule environment, was sponsored jointly by the Air Force School of Aerospace medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, and the Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston. The four airmen who breathed pure oxygen for 30 days were Jerry J. Huber, 18, of Hope, Mich.; Philip B. Jameson, is; r IT!.. Thnmdc A Rusiecki, 19, of Niagara Fallsj .... : .. n m. ,n N. Y. ana Konaiu u. lasKey, rj, of Westeinville, N.Y., all air men 3.c. Weather FORECASTS Mtrlford end vicinity. Fair, cool and smoky through Friday. Morn ing for; patchcr. in northern por tion of valley. Low tonight 20-2J. High Friday near 45. Western Orcfion: Fair toniphl and Friday. Little temperature change. Low tonight 22-31. HiEh Friday 35-45 in interior and 45-55 on coast. Northern California: Fair tonight and Friday, except ros or low over cast in San Joaquin Valley and during- morning In Sacramento Valley. Little temperature change. LOCAL DATA TEMPER ATUnE: Mean yester day 20; below normal 10. Record high this date 03 in 1 f 1 3. Record low this dale 8 in 1032. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours lo midnight, none. Midnight to 10 a.m. none. Total this monlh .12 inch, 104 Inch below normal. Total since Sept. 1. 7.04 inches. .74 inch ahove normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 41 'c, highest tills a m. loll . III! It CITY Yestcr day Brookings sr Crater Lake 42 Grants Pass 43 Howard Prairie .... 30 Klamath Falls .... 2g MEDFORD 42 4:110 31 - a.m. nr. Low Prcc. 311 17 22 H Portland Seallle 3!) : Spokane 11 1 Yakima 26 Eureka Red Bluff Sacramento San Francisco Los Angeles .11 50 .13 Phoenix Denver Chicago Miami Beach .... New York Washington. D. 37 40 CHARITY CARDS KANSAS CITY (UPI) - Two Christmas cards designed by Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy arc being sold across the country this Yule season to help raise funds for the National Cultural Center in Washington. Hallmark Cards, which is donating all proceeds from the cards to the culture center, expects the to tal to be thousands of dollars. Memory Gardens Memorial Park. Mrs. Culbertson was born Aug. 4, 1881, in Karns City. Pa. She moved to Hood River, Ore., in 1909, and to Medford in 1920. She was a member of First Methodist Church and the Navy Mothers Club. On Dec. 27, 1906 in Renfrew, Pa., she was married to Thomas A. Culbertson Sr., who died in February, 1959. Survivors include four sons, Thomas A. Culbertson Jr., Med ford, Richard M. Culbertson, Oakland, Calif., Paul Culbert son, Medford, Emory Culbert son, Beverly Hills. Calif.; two brothers, G. H. Miller. Renfrew, Pa., Roy Miller, Lakeworth, Fla.; one sister, Mrs. Olive Crilchlow, Prospect, Pa., and five grandchildren. One daugh ter, Emma J. Culbertson, pre ceded her in death in 1930. Casket bearers will be Wal ter Berkhcimer, Wilton White, Jack Garrett, Carl Quacken- bush, Warren Bayliss and George Moller. CARLTON MAX DcVORE Carlton M. DeVore, 55. of Bar- nett Road, Medford, died I Wednesday evening in a local CANADA This United Press International newsmap locates some of the cities of Can ada, a nation of 3,500,000 square miles with Canada's Chief Characteristic Is A Deep By LEON BURNETT United Press International MONTREAL (UPI)-"A coun try larger than any other ex cept Russia (has) found itself feeling at times as small as Luxembourg and as significant as Outer Mongolia." Locals Patients Convalescing at Sa cred Heart Hospital following surgery are Mrs. Joan F. Eu banks, 1421 E. Main St., and Donald Cook, Gold Beach. Med ical patients there are George H. Fish, 1422 Benton Trail, Grants Pass; Mrs. Eileen Out calt, Klamath Falls; George H. Schwicgcr, 1940 Orchard Home Drive; Mrs. Dorothy Childs, 210 Vancouver Ave., and Gary Smith, 407 Ross Lane. Automobile Accident Vehi cles operated by Joseph Harold I Howard, 45, of 1856 Fairview Drive, Medford, and Mclvin James Hackworth, 18, of Route 4, Box 350M, Medford, collided about 11:45 p.m. Wednesday on Interstate 5 between Central Point and Crater Lake Inter changes, according to Oregon state police. Both vehicles were southbound when Hackwortn, misjudging the sped of the How ard car, struck it from behind police said. Hackworth, who was treated at Rogue Valley Hospital for cuts and released, was cued by police for violation of the basic rule. Time Corrected E p s i 1 o n Chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, will meet at 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 14, in the Episcopal Parish Hall, Ashland, rather Ulan at noon as stated in yesterday's issue. Bell Sounds Firemen were sent to Hcdrick Junior High School about 0:05 p.m. yester day when the school fire alarm bell sounded, it was lounu inai a custodian had accidently tripped the alarm while clean ing the building. Stove Overheats Medford firemen were summoned about 9:20 p.m. yesterday when a stove overheated at the Haskell L. Stewart home, 327 Marie St. Motor I'irc A fire in a com pressor motor extended to shelves and did minor damage last night at the 11. V. Martin Chain Saw Shop, 1321 N. River side Ave., firemen reported. They said that the motor ap parently shorted out. Firemen were dispatched about 10:25 p.m. DAVIDSON - To Mr. and Mrs. Harlcy James, 1173 Va'.v tcr Road, Medford, Dec. 10, 1903, a girl, 8 pounds, at Kogu ? Valley Hospital. Thur.-Fri.-Sat. , DAN 1! 19 million people chiefly U.S. border. (UP1) Personality The country: Canada. The speaker: Douglas How, a na tive Canadian who is managing editor of the Readers' Digest Association of Canada. How's remark was in refer ence to the chief characteristic of Canada the deep and biding split in her national personality. Her personality is splintered, actually. But the big breach, the biggest barrier to a cohesive national spirit, is between the French and the English-speaking Canadians. Nowhere is this schism more marked than in Montreal, the second largest French-speaking city in the world. Occupying an oblong island in the St. Lawrence River, this me tropolis is divided squarely in the middle English-speaking conclaves lo the west, French to Ihe cast, with a thorough mixture in the center. About 30 per cunt of the na tion's population is of French origin the big majority living in Ouebec Province Add to this all across the country, a heavy flavoring of practically every other ethnic group you can name many of incm reluctant -to break, away from the languages, customs and loyalties of their respective homelands and you have the potpourri that is Canada. Loyalties Divided There are other complica tions: English-speaking Canadians have retained a sense of broth erhood with Great Britain, while acting and speaking much more like their neighbors in the United States. This nation of 3,500,000 squaro miles in land area is peopled by only 19 million and the vast majority of these live in a narrow cross-country band ot land hard by the U.S. border. This, along with a persisting Canadian reluctance to lay out risk capital, has severely ham pered CNploitatiun of Ihe coun try's tremendous wealth in nat ural resources. Many Canadians are com plaining that the federal gov ernment has, under both the Liberal and Conservative par ties, failed to provide the lead ership necessary for national unity and progress. Despite these problems, Cana dians in general arc happy, friendly people, deeply devoted to hockey, skiing weekends and the proposition that putting things off until tomorrow is not necessarily the worst thing in the world. They also have the happy at tribute of being able to laugh at themselves. Individually, they have no hostility toward the United States or its people. They ex press considerable resentment, though, when they feci that U.S. government officials are trying to manipulate Canadian af fairs. Wood Products Primary U.S. investments here aside, Canada puts the great bulk of its economic dependence on for ests and grain fields. It's almost unbelievable ex panses of woodland have made TRY OUR IN-CAR HEATERS BE COZY WARM mssr nun 7 GARNER Ntmit fT DANc'fROUSl kJ ) Sha't 3- m i DVHIMITFI NINA FOCH DCAN JAGGER located along the Split pulp, paper and other forest products its primary industry. raroicum and natural gas lie in tremendous reserve supply under Canadian soil. But U.S. dollars have financed much of the tapping of this so far. Physically, Canada is a land of contrasts. Its big cities of Montreal, To ronto and Vancouver arc as modern as any anywhere. Its Northwest territories and Hud son Bay region encompass some of the most remote and forbid ding terrain on the face of the earth. Its plains regions are flat and unchanging as the Great Plains of the United States. The Cana dian Rockies are among the world's most majestic moun tains. The sleepy fishing villages of the Maritimes provinces are ages away from the booming ports of Montreal and Vancou ver. French Ask Recognition The cry from Quebec for more recognition of the French Canadians indeed, even for the separation of the province from the rest ot Canada has not gone unheeded. Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson shortly after his elec tion this year set up a commis sion on bi-cuUuralism to study this problem and come up with some plan lor unity. And increasingly, leaders of the English-speaking society are urging their fellows to seek a meeting of minds with the French. Editor Mow, discussing the problem in a speech last Juno, put it this way: : We have many things In common to build upon in Cana da, perhaps more than we know. "One is the proverbs our her itage has brought down to both cultures, and one of them is especially appropriate today. In French it is 'Vouloir e'est pou voir.' In English it's 'where there's a will there's a way.' " NOW PLAYING 1H SMIIIOM-INIllNSIIONtl ICIUII tni DAY OF THE 1IUFFIDS ONI MA'SCOPr COLO JUNGLE Tenors... Taboos.., love! 3 ELEPfflNT WALK TECHHIC010K PITH (INCH LADY BULOVA if 17 jewel, self wind ing, certified, wa- erproof, shock re sistant, stain! ess siccl case, dainty styling. $59.95 JET CLIPPER "A" 1 7 j., self winding, certified waterproof, shock resisting, slam- ess steel case, full uminous dial and hands. Handsome padded leather strap. in or vtllf Lmeft liar I 0PEN (. "flz 1 mmm i wmmym i ...ft ! a v 'Ph tin diamond. 478o 94 L-aC.- ALL SOLID 10K GOLD AtQilahtt in wMl at ri"oy gold I lnd tttv mil I'll) and tia lac In mitchnrj daiign. ItqnrJ flrvniinai. TIE IAC 2500 LASf It SMS 1ft ld Ha' riio el 10K fl vail pild. (juina. diamond. j 59s0 vlv Nationally Admired EASY TERMS High Fashion ;A0G? Diamond Ring Styles by Columbia ?:aJI .. zrmr :au BLACK GOLD CREATIONS for Men and Women 231 EAST MAIN Give the incrcdiblt ACCUTRON' by BULOVA World's Only Electronic wrist timepiece . . . Guaranteed 99.9977 accurate on your wrist First Major Advance in Personal Timekeeping in 300 Yeanl Prices Start at $125 Easy Terms there's no gift like a fine sapphire or ruby color nl'fltMl hi urn vVffiS' fh OkWhtl. geld ring V i X S OPtN tASY IfMS Mnrlf'n ( inf ifqr panrfflM, 10k wM or Ylln qitd. 1 S: 27S0 ( Jgb F"' n'ui DASON Quality See the Exciting New OPEN EVENINGS HAND FASHIONED HILLS PHONE 773-6763