Image provided by: SEIU Local 503; Salem, OR
About The Oregon state employee. (Salem, Oregon.) 1944-195? | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1949)
11 .' After^^fcsqnally piregeutihg^ ^ B W S cates to the 80 trainees, ’and congrat- B^tihg^e^eh .of them individually, he added the-, thought, “Courtesy is I the grea^st .instrument-in the world for improving « h h c relations.” b The courses given were in filing methods and accounting procedures were sponsored by the state civil of e in- &rfeased efficiency among state work-, ers. Robert Johnson, state civil ser vice director who presided, said the ‘commission will endea\ me the TraSm^Kh the I autumn. ( G H O S T O F TH E P A ST (Co ver Picture) 1I for the tomorrows>Nature sees fit to permit. I I To an artist such as- Ted Rosin, .who knows; the o u td oejB O »p ells beauty to be captured forever by the camera, and for visitors without camerasjit is a scene to be long remembe^ecfi Branches against the blue, Nature’s finest artistry frames forest-covered Wizar'djiO^m^with its' i rugged b ack- ground of jagged crater wall heights. wfhpfel-^Rtting of Ihpernal quiet, a million yesterdays and more rest deep in mysterious waters which long ago c am e to replace volcanic fires which destroyed a ^ ^ ^ O Mt. Mazama. Thus was created beauty born of violence thrilJ^^B^u^'thWugfr|aK the years. By E. A . Rostell Deep snow and screeching wind C A L IF O R N IA ST A T E E M P L O Y E E S storms of uncounted yesterdays have A S S O C IA T IO N P L E D G E S W i S i l S i marks on this alpine veteran clinging to the brink of .beaOram S E R V IC E TO TH E ST A T E Crater mutely telling the story Our attention has been directed to of Nature’s battles in the highlands. the Pledge of Service of the California In I death, State Employees As^Eationffifflichii& Bcarred old trunks have become things ^>^mmg^^RjÆ^impli^S| We quote it mf beauty which add to the blue ^ B ms of the mountain wonder held “We, public servants of the State of | £ i| | | B O | h e K lra ^ ^ e rp fcjH M o ff the ourselves: southern Oregon Cascades. “ To ^ p rm our work honestly and How long it may have lived and efficiently, s tri ving always to improve how long it may have died, a victim its value to. the public. cf the elements in the high country, “ To treat the public and fellow ro person will ever know. It would workers with courtesy and considera BOMbe^^WoiOwe to.suggest that-’ it tion. finery when “To uphoWj the laws and principles Hil|||an, a wandering of our ^SÈ^ançl, nagonL and— prospector, discovered the lake of “By earn', fop’ the ^pphire on that June day in 1853. public the highest esteem and Then, too, it , already suc- respect.” cum^ec^ to the winds and;i- snows, In view of the f a l l .¿hat our own standing as '-a monument to its own Association I ^ ^ ^ B elj ^ ^^B ned|Sfter green^w^^^H ^W ^ ofg M B r h ia , and also that the . Perhaps the more' imaginative vis California Association is the most itors, who at times ¿sWculMEjon things successful employee association in the ¡H I were, ymay/ • see Indians on the Nation, perhaps w ë'Should read their pm, camped near I the tree while on pledge once more a n q B ^ ^ î f ô ja we one of their infrequent trips to this measure up to proven and successful .mysterimis*uplan^. Perhaps th^medi- pi£p£pts upheld by others. cine men, who were the most frequent visitors, found help and inspiration ’/tpj^v^he tree to make good ;me||Sse g j l h s ] “If you have 10 dollars in one in the centuries before white man pocket and 15 dollars in the other, stumbled on the 'Sublime: scenl^M Baa^ ^SM S u ? ” - But there it stands, witness to the Bill:. “I have on somebody else’s unknown years and there it will stand pants.” I