Image provided by: SEIU Local 503; Salem, OR
About The Oregon state employee. (Salem, Oregon.) 1944-195? | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1949)
5 relig io n s; a m usical program.- by' m em bers of the House; folk dancing ; after noon tea I on the United'Mf j ^ i dhs, parks, m useum s, hospitals, and indus t r i a l I p lan ts. R One very th rilling experience fdrO. ^ ^ i e last October was joining m y In - dian friends to help celebrate the b irth d ay of M ahatm a G andhi. The speaker was an In d ian scholar who is ,;Uni- versity in W ashington, D.C»EiBl»3alBl friend of G andhi and of the great In dian poet Tagore, '-about whom he spoke at a later m eeting. The w om en’s wing overlooks the Hudson I no need to com pare the Palisades w ith the C olum bia R iver Gorge. No scen ery th a t I saw in the East can com p are in proportions w ith the West. B H every place has its own beauty.) D uring the w in ter and spring m y ^ ^ e l l o w residents on our Spadf - she who m ost added td m y know ledge and respect for If h e ? India, for th eir ancient culture and th eir plans for the future. 'Some- of the m ost stim ulating and e ^ ^ S ^ ^ ^ S e r - sations w ere w ith the m en .^ ^ g o 'm e n - from countries such as India and KE^ rali, w hich are establishing th e ir new s t a tus as indep endent mo dern '-t rfa- ‘ isfucm m sh'f Indp- nesia, A frica and Korea, w here in d e pendence and unity are so earnestly desired. T heir enthusiasm for 'th eir;' new status, th eir sense of direct p a r ticipation in the d l l a « g |n m te of th eir countries, th eir condem nation of in tern atio n al discrim ination b ro u g h t-m e: closer in understanding and feeling to forefathers th an all m anner of passages in textbooks and I rejoice th at there are such places as In tern atio n al Houses and am glad th at m ore are being b uilt all over the ^^M 'd . I am g ratefu l th a t I w as able to h | - x p e r ie ^ ^ K B iffte r - 1 ii^ S ^ g . F or 'the w orld tru ly M f o m m an y d istan ces. My firs t ev en in g lives un d er one roof at I. House (as ^ ^ n New York, w here I was a com we call it). We had residents from plete stranger, a young w om an from every geographical area of the w orld I 'tegO at hom e in her except the Soviet U W ini T he largest me pictures of h er num bers from abroad came from C hi handsom e h usband and little son at na, India and Canada. home, and told me about her studies. On m y w ay back to the West, I S he had an exceptionally fine singingI visited t h e Chicago In tern atio n al voice. F our m onths before, w hen she House. As soon as I h eard t h W B dians’ came to A m erica she could only say accent around the halls and the rapid “H ello”, you,” “Yes” and conversation of the Chfnesei^M f e l t i n t n l 4 h all was B ^ e i ffaBhome‘ T han I had felt since I a Filipino - nu rse who had served in >le w ere not the Ti strangers to m e although I did the occupation and the bom bing of know No ;p artK |f the M anila. I w onder w hat w ill be the ex w orld can ever seem “rem ote” again periences of a Chinese nurse who was . . . m aybe I have a frien d there. packing to re tu rn to h er hffi® || this E ditor’s Note: Miss Dotson, form er sum m er. Was she distu rbed about re Editor of this m agazine and turning? “I th in k it is best this w a y ,” L i- was h er answ er. T here w ere also girls |@ rm eri | ^ W p loB^M at brary, has recently re tu rn ed from a pn our floor from F in lan d /1 Chile, B u r- y e a r’s studies at C olum bia U niversity ma, Norw ay, C alifornia, New England, Louisiana, Georgia and U tah. The ^ ^ d ^ ^ K ^ O b nck in- public service as ^ ^ m u n g 'H in d u ^ z b m a ^ K ^ ^ o^Bm ^feson t'eGr D irector of the School of the Air, OSC E xtension Service at C orvallis. We K | | o n t h e ^ ^ ^ S t council feel s u re s f e R B etty ’s re tu rn -iy^ill ■ be and adm ired by all of us. She was an welcom ed by h er m any friends and exceptional stu d en t and was alw ays - inh j j S lov^U suK i^frof OSEA m em bers and th a t she w ill prove to b e i n h er gorgeous In d ian cloth. D uring late eve ning discussions in our room s, it w as )hew lw sffiion. •