Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978, November 03, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

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    Page
2
The
We believe that tbe two open houses, one in the ture m ust co n tain more th a n emo- dollars of bonds floated by the
l
£ 1
i.rk ccLcvd -ind th e o th e r ill th e Brook- tion, to furnish the g rea test aes- sta te for use on th e program
beautiful
new k high
Sincp
th<? deparlment ha> is.
D C d u m u i MCW
m g ,.. school, , and the Other in tne OroOK th etic experience
ings Plywood plant arc so closely knit that easy ldentit
r have known peoph?. who w ere sued 53 million dollars to finance
PILOT
Oregon.
Ray Pisarck, Joe Murphy
Editor» and Publtaher»
SUBSCRIPTION
R A T I«
Tear ie Advaooa (In C»rry C en t/; -----
O b « Tear In Advanee (outside Curry County;
0*
loaded w
w ith
ith em
emotion, b ut w ere the program and total paym ents
loaded
1C ' Wc
ir believe that •£
U It n c V in ir t P l v u r a i d w a s n ’t unable to do intelligible a r t work, by borrow ers, to last August 31,
if the Brookings Plywood wasn t
u pajntjnK have to talled $37,332,678, in prin-
as progressive in their industry as they are there would they w em unable to discrim nate, cipal, of which $7,408,731 repie-
or com m unicate. Every a rtis t sents in te rest earnings, the rate
be **
no need or desire to build a new high ■ school
here.
°r
leans comm'
direction
other, UVillg
being 1 4 p percent.
ent .
I
£ 1 * loans
in one l4A
»VA.v»vr>l v or
r* th e via».*.
cictiii. The
A departm
*------
- j —
-—
. —. ; A e - expenses
------- --- are
It
SCCtnS
likely
to
US,
t
h
a
t
a
good
share
O
I
t
m
Some
who are mainiy
mainly em otional
m in
istrativ
paid
It seem s llKCiy io uj >, u w i u
— -----
wno
ouonai ad
ate oaid
.rrrwizth and nropress in the Brookings area has come b-com e great a rtists .and th© sam e i out of th e interest earnings and
g ro w tll <
1 ft
, .
p,
can be said for the intellestuals.
—
—
through tile growth anti progress in tlK bioo 'lllgs
Leonardo, De Vinci, M ichelangelo!
,=
and El G reco w ere in tellectu al
wood plant.
in Renaissance art, but
•
AW INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
. » c o n i-o t a » « a tta r. at tha o a .to iilo . at BrooMln*.
March T, 1»««. under tha Act o t March 3. l»7*
A IR
Thursday, November 3, 1955
H arbor pilot brookings , O regon
____________ ________________ __________
brookings
93M
he m ade
ii-
i
We are proud of our new high school, and the
were also emot.onal p ^ e .
men and women who conceived, built, and are now run- Who felt deeply.
num the
ain tin g done by therexciusively
mug
uiv school Wc v feci that it is an asset to any / com- em P otional
person am ounts to little
NEWS PARER
PUBLISHERS
ASSOCIATION
B E G IN S
„ n n
TO
CLEAR . .
The air is starting to clear on the Chetco Cove
Chetco River Improvement projects in Brookings, wo
recent meetings, one by the Chetco River Improvement
group with Harris Ellsworth, and the other by thJ
Chamber of Commerce meeting jointly with a Medford
delegation, and Harris Ellsworth, have brought out a
much clearer picture of what is attempted and what is
contemplated.
.
. .
We think of the situation is this. The Brookings
Chamber of Commerce has for years been interested in
the Chetco Cove project, with an eye to making Broo -
ings a deep-water -harbor, which could be one of the
best from San Francisco to Portland. This would lift
the community out of the small town picture and make
about 22 m illion d ollars of th e
money repaid •>> v eterans m ade a
p art of the 7 mi ion oane
o
levy was required to
finance
the program,
Sev 'ral hundred 1 ousan
o
this loan money has been used in
the Chetco area. As long as the
loans run, the county is a*sured
tho tax money wh ch is inc u
in the veteran s paym en s o
loaning agency.
loaning
agency.
------
HÄM DINNER
m ore th
inunity.
>** an
"*■ em otional — explosions
h — - —
We are also proud of the Brookings Plywood w hile th e ex trem ely intellectual
,
,
i
i
. I . i „ U ., person may put ev©ry color and
Corporation. We feel that they have contributed a lot tone exact|y in the right piace-
according to the rules of harmony
to Brookings, and will continue to do so.
and com position but the resu lt
is th:n, mechanical, and void of
deep feeling.
Th© mind is extrem ely complex,
but once we know how th e eye
functions, we have a w ealth of
knowledn? about the mind, as
they function alike in m any ways.
N ext week I shall point out one
function, which is common to
both. This is th e function of isol­
ating objects and thoughts from
surrounding m aterial in order th a t
they may tak e on a special m ean­
ing, and not he confused w ith su r­
-C’A / ' - 1 '
roundings or related circum stnces.
This function is or.© of the prim e
w ere no longer able to learn to considerations of G estalt Psychol-
paint. They couid give long, and ogy.
most interesting disserations on
such a high ¿©gree. th a t they
The 15,000 S tate V eterans Loan ,
a rt. they knew a rt hjstory. and has recently been processed, ac- j
they understood th e m echanics of cording to a release from the
art,etc, but when it cam e to paint- Stat,? Bureau. Tm s loan b ro u g h t,
lng. they w ere hopelessly inhibited. th e ag g reg ate loans to qualified
T he emotions give nr-aning and veterans slightly under 76 million
substance to a picture. A rt ere- dollars since the loan law w ent
ated from the em otions, speaks into effect in 4954, and paym ents !
directly to the emotions, of th e by the borrow ers have been used
spectator. Needless to say. a pic- to cancel out the first 1 m illion
IN EVERÜDfly LIFE
•^q CCqcCe LÖoo-cC
______ __________
VISUAL PE R C E PT IO N P a rt 17
G estalt Psychology
tiecau.se th e mind functions so
much like vision, in many ways,
th e w riter considers the brain as
a kind of extension o f the eye. T ri•
w e s one of the first organs to
develop in the embryo, and it
reaches full sias and m aturity,
long before m any of th e o th er or-
cans
T his early developm ent
svems to indicate, th a t millions of
years ago. vision was the prim e
a real city out of it.
. ,
However, the Army engineers felt that the capital
expenditures required in making a harbor w ouk.it ‘
warranted-providing that this immedate area would
be the only one using the harbor. There just isnt enough
tonnage to be shipped in and put of the Brookings area
to justify the government coming in and spending five
or six million dollars. Therefore, the Chetco Cove pro- function of the sensory system
Some au th o rs contend th a t first
ject was dropped by the engineers.
the sense of touch developed, then
Subsequently, a group of men under the leader­ th e sense of smell. If this is true,
ship of Wilson Freeman and Fd Ackley have begun these senses have rem ained prim ­
itive as com pared „to vision.
gathering support for the opening of the mouth of the Reactions to odors and touch
Chetco River. T hey have, in the words of Congressman can moi© easily be explained in
s of chemical reactions, than
Ellsworth, “Done a magnificent job.” They have secured term
s^;ht. C ertain chem icals react to
a tremendous amount of support- and have done enough each other, in w ays th a t reminds
casual observer of hum an-like
hollering and screaming to male their project known the
behavior. A piece of cellophane
This project does, and does not. conflict with the laid in the palm of th e hand, will
Chetco Cove. Obviously a community cannot be split on tw ist and curl in to rtu red con- ;
vulsions. This phenomenon could I
a question such as this. Obviously too, the engineers, and l»e related to th e sense of touch.
Washington would look with askance on providing any­ Odoriferous gases em itted by some
acids wjll cause violent reactions
thing for a city that didn’t know what they wanted.
w ith certain m etallic substances. ■
Ellsworth and the engineers have looked with This reaction is vaguely related to
nerve responses in the
approval on that plan to develop the river mouth, be­ certain
hum an system. O dors are but sub­
cause of the small cost involved. Chances of securing an jective responses to odoriferous
appropriation .seems “quite good” to Ellsworth. Of course gases.
Light ray s striking certain chem ­
this project has already received authorization.
ical». will set up electric currents,
T hen, out of the clear blue sky, a group of Med­ which seem to characterize some
of the processes of vision. How­
ford men during the last month began to demand act­ ever,
vision has undergone a more
ivation of the Cove project. They want an outlet to the elab o rate evolutionary process,
while th e o th er two senses, just
jea partially because it would put pressure on the rail mentioned,
have by comparison,
ways to give them more boxcars and to secure lower rem ained primitive.
V. F. W. HALL
Saturday, November 5, 1955
- - BAZAAR OPENS 2 P.M. - -
DINNER SERVED - 5:30 to 8 p.m.
ADULTS
CHILDREN
. . . .
.
.
$1.50 PLATE
.
. 7 5 « PLATE
PRESBYTERIAN WOMEN'S
ASSOCIATiON
It is generally believed th a t the
freight rates.
brain developed late in th e evol­
Fine if the Medford, Grants Pass and even utionary process of hum an devel­
Klamath Falls could get behind such a movement it opm ent. There is am ple evidence,
th a t th e |h u m an brain is still evol­
would have a chance for success . . . hut, more import­ ving. On the oth er hand. som„c
ant even than the harbor, under those conditions would anthifipoligists contend th at the
brain is degenerating. TTiejr a rg ­
lx- a road into the valley from Brookings.
um ent is based on th© Cro-Magon,
Consequently, at this recent meeting with the who had a brain m uch larg er than
Medford group, these conclusions were reached. B ro k ­ the Homo-Sapien, living to-day.
However, the size should not b?
ings should attempt to go after a bird in the hand (the taker, as a final index, when we
river mouth), and in the long-range planning should consider the size of the w hale s
brain.
attempt to set up machinery to get the Cove project
It is. however, universally be­
and more important—tile road project underway. But lieved th at the cortex develop'd
first—we all need to get behind the river mouth improve­ much la ter th an th e thalam us.
The cortex (ex terio r layer of the
ment group, and help in any way possible.
brain, commonly referred to a s
Two Open Houses Are Closely Related
An outside observer would likely, assume that
. ¡,
' ouscs in Bookings this week were en­
tirely unreined.
T1 is is I »t so.
SAVE with S A f ECO
A
a u t o in s u r a n c e
You can a i t your auto insurance bill if
you are a safe driver. Get better all-around
PETE J. LESMEISTER AGENCY
Phone 3311
Brookings
*
"gray m a tte r" ) is the portion that
d iv s thP thinking, of the higher
order: w hile th? thalam us (the
¡»art of th e brain most closely I
connected to the spinal cord) is '
closely related to biological proc­
esses of th e body. The th alam u s
governs o erta ,n g lan d u lar funct­
ions. reflexvs, and is the scat of
th»* em otions, while the cortex
gives direction to th e emotional
responses. The development of the
cortex separated (he hum an being
from the lower anim al.
It is when the cortex and the
thalam us ai© w orking in unison,
th at the hum an being js function­
ing most effectively. When a split
occurs between th e cortical and
the thalam ic functions, a person
is not functioning normally Near-
ly everyoir? has this split to some
degree. It is when one dom inates, j
at the exclusion of the other, that
hum an behavior is throw n off I
balance.
T he higl.'.st form of a r t is a
resu lt of close integration between I
em otion and reason. I have known ,
people w ho have d ev elo p 'd th eir j
reasoning processes. at the ex- j
pense of em otional responses, to
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I
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t comes
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You get an even better hint when you open the doors
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For here is perform ance w ithout parallel. A new
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SEE JACKIE GLEASON O N TV
Every Saturday Evening
MENNING BUICK
Highway 101 North
Brookings, Oregon