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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1956)
o L! r - , i ki Li k-4 J ' .r CAM. HAIL Ar(. th supreme alunuture til nmn, li a unresting vuiuoua ut -tcranre wrillrn in pallioi and pm mn arrosa the mprrfirinl Irontirra nf Inanimate mntpruiN. Virtuoua because niiitrrlnl ia tranlnrmi-d Into the Immaterial stiliMnr of vUlon woven llirmiKh with I he ele mental fruition o( the humnn ipirlt, the only KxRking apirit In creation, . The haad thai erealei, ellhrr U III preaenl mamrnl ar Ihe eulllne f dlarevery a rave wall hidden (or M.00 jffart, la but ane had Ihal fcai brra rontlnuoua la III dealre la mark ill moment la Hie. In the hard lael ( malerlala in rrraior eeeka revelatUa .., 'Don 't Cook flow . . , but , , , we heard the announcer over KOAC the otder night lay that "Muvc That in dure! program will not m heard hnrause cf 4 1 thd haknibal would prove i broadcast of , , ' game, Inn ,' V 'ht, just it Ihe man, iid, there il a limit to all en durnce. John Silver . , . We've had a one-legged blackbird and hit wife around for tome time and we wonder how he hai liked the winter, Moitly the blackbirds fly south, but this fellow seems to have with stood California1! Chamber of Commerce laleimenihip. He It all right when on the wing, but when bathing in a puddle in the arhlevei thereby reaurreellaa. Ia'0wer 'ie'' re4'V needs hit lecond leg. the middling rlolbei at material ! Mor b'rdlore . . . Evidently the quails he ireki la expreai the Infinite aa1 think large familiei are practical, for a covey Wi'm" inrUM Pf"dBr o' '3 runs across our front lawn just about eight o'clock every morning, going nowhere, "Every great historic ace lakes but in a big hurry to get there. Its rise from some new leelinc. some new sense of reality; and that feeling finds iti formulation and embodiment in art while Iti eflectg constitute a new culture." Man is the only animal who has the power to leave records in a hard factual form concerning feel ings, ideas apart from their ma terial place in time. These ever accumulating records still possess their significance in a freah, age less form: Indeed thene feelings of eternal Immediacy can be so, over- Kwering in their spiritual proxim that we can forget the passage of time, the difference in race and culture. Card Camas , , , seems that Corvallii co nil are having to pretty up theie diyi, when Ihoir games are televi-.ed, They do some col ored 'card turning Hunts, laid to be quite an jnovation on iporti programs. Fiddling around . . , Reminiscent of the old radio dayi, when fani used to lit up to all hours twirling the dial to get Australia or South Africa In a whirr of static, We have been fiddling around with our dial too, and found some very attractive programi that nearby stations deem lets superior to those they let ut hear. One Is program called Symphony at Eight, which it on KEAR San Francisco (about 1501 on our dial) and which this week included an especially recorded In terview with Aaron Copeland, and some of hit compotitiont directed by him and played by Ihe Philadelphia orchestra. There evidently it good muiic if we know where to find it. Radio and Television'! insistence of almost ig noring the lover of good music probably e plaint why such large majority of records told are classical. . . MAXINE B'JREN 5)l.t(r ',m.ui, S.il. in. ()ic, Sun.. Jul. 2 '.VI (V c. Jl) Guest Day for Woman's Club On Friday ' Guest day will be a feature of the Salem Woman'i Club meet ing Friday at the clubhouse at 2 p.m. A board meeting will pre cede at 12:30 p.m. with Mrs. Harry Sappenficld, president, presiding, Each member is asked to bring a guest to the meeting. Interior decoratinc is the theme of the nrncrram and kin Thus in art expression we find i Eleanor Barbour Marshall will be one of man's great virtuous utter-1 the guest speaker. The music will ances because It overcomes its be furnished by Miis Marilyn history even while making it. Past. I Hanthorn, violinist, a Willamette present, and future, meet in art j University student, and shatter Ihe fart of single gen- Mrs. H. K. Mazloom Is the tea erations. giving voice to the one , chairman and she will be aasisted Man's Virtue Mrs. Santacruz Guest Speaker SILVERTON - Mrs. Guadalupe Santacrut was guest speaker Tues day night at the January meeting of the Silverton Jay-C Ettes. Mrs. Santacruz, a teacher of the foreign country, explained educntion and told of the social customs In her own country. Mrs. Olaf Paulson Jr., presided during the business hour when plans were made for spring events. Included was the entertainment of similar clubs front other towns on Iarch It. This event will be held at the Silverton Moose Lodge hatl. A white elephant sale will be held Feb. 21 when the group meeta at the home of Mrs, John Middlemeas and a spring dance will also.be' held later. The meeting wai held at the home of Mrs. Tom Myers with Mrs. James Ekman as aaaiatlng hoateas. A guest was Mrs. Wallace Jacobsen. ' The earth's orbit Is such that the aun is 1 million miles closer in January than In July. grand family cry of man, WhctheMhis cry, this signature, be 20,000 years old or fresh in the nativity of the contemporary mom ent it shatters the numb, voiceless fact of time and place with a ring ing utterance that states with em phatic confidence, "I am here, and you ahall know me, for I have discovered and glorified in theL A . . . , .. srr is poured much that Is Instinctive When art's first expression found ' U . lh. think'n8 mind Mt embodiment on cave walls it camel5'm direc,,on. 1d Pu,rPose- Thl l unci nut mean inai siyie is a aci- but rather a well proportion- by Mrs. Effie D. McAfee, Mrs. W. S. Levens, Mrs. A. A. Carper, Mrs. Benjamin F. Lambert, Mr, raul A. Lardon, Mrs. Lindley V. Koons. Mrs. Mary M. Lachelle, Mrs. Claude 11. Glenn. Mrs. Fred erick Leupold and Mrs. Arthur A. Kcene. forth as hoth "avmntnm and avm. bol"; expressing the feelings to-' " T ra.,her e 11 proportion- wards obiects depicted yet symbol- Drl" "Irrea S (m. i.l i m.r m... ki.. ' measurea Dy reason, aiyie u in fvna an meat inv.-'v Mjisdia nave i . I-, ,t . . an import and-meaning beyond ,cluaIlt(y lhe mythf lhe P"04 m ,V. given form or coherence, either i iv i lliv liv.il, I nihil II IV vai V O V man, so with the contemporary, he is still Involved in this symptom and symbol dualism.' Indeed, all contemporary art movements have actually been based on the isola tion or the resistance to one or theother. Art's virtuous atteraneei hive! much to tearh. Evea If we fail to' understand their ityle we eaa still recover the aenae of life Ihal brought them Into being, whether II be f a magical, rellgloui aa lure ar a scientific nature: eve to the meat primitive aocletir there I a scientific aipeet to ere lioa. Ritual, eraft are warki ' reaaoalng, however rudimentary. It ia this thinking mind that creates the style, and style that gives virtue to every creative work. Into every work of art there what it desires of life, or what it actually is. Style is the "configur ation of spiritual qualities" seeking visualization. This visualization is virtuous beca'ue it is "The begin ning of all true freedom, self awareness, spirituality: the sym bolic expression ef feeling." EAST SALEM AUCTION CENTER Clyde HimmeH, Owner Anmvncn nS tninf a mim lv n4 Upkafocry CUmIhi FUi. Our mw MrvM act aaly Mm y, tiatri cUmkif bt 4n H I mw aractw wi Wl I iwumMly tint yawr ti44 rl 4 KUtry. W ImI vry lrtwnt ia biniii rh mtvhm kV. h4 D. Wrifhf, wha's ttrvicM f wiJtly lnwn ia Orta mi Clifnii. Aba w 4 tnoth-atfin tn4 math irminttiaa. Free Estimate Free Pickup and Delivery EAST SALEM AUCTION CENTER 122S N. Lancaster Ph. 4-3971 Daughter Born To Lamberts SILVERTON - Silverton friends and relatives are receiving an nouncements of a daughter born January 11 to Mr. and Mrs. Law rence Lambert Marilyn Sannerud) in Doctor's Hospital, Seattle. She weighed 7 pounds and 9 ounces. Mr. Lambert is a pre-medical stu dent at the University of Washing ton. Maternal grandparents are Mr. . and Mrs. Harry Sannerud, Milwau kie, formerly of Silverton. There are three great-grandmothers, Mrs. L. C. Goplerud, Silverton, and Mrs. Inga Sannerud, Milwaukie, ' and Mrs. Mathilda Raymond of Ever ett. Wash. For the past year Mrs. Goplerud has been making her home in Mil waukie with'her ion -in -law and daughter, the Sanneruds, although she still owns her home here on Coolidge St. v Salon Donates -To Hospital The Marlon County Salon of Eight and Forty voted Wednesday night to give $100 to the National Jewish Tuberculosis' hospital at Denver, Colorado towards a hos pital bed. This entitles the Salon to membership in the Hundred Dol lar club. The meeting was held at the Legion club. The Denver hos pital is the famed, free, non - sec tarian medical center that concen trates on the fight against tuber culosis in infanta and children. The president, Mrs. Austin Wil son of Salem, reported that clothes had been purchased for a two-year old boy at Christmas. Special honor was paid to .Mrs. Frank Powell of Silverton, a char ter member of the Marion County Salon, who recently celebrated her golden wedding anniversary. Mrs. Fred Lucht of Mt. Angel and Mrs. Theodore UDakko, Salem sane a - duet in compliment 4o Mrs. Lucht Mr. Ira Herriford of Mt Angel was obligated as a new member. The annual birthday party was an nounced for Wednesday, February 15, with the following hostesses, Mrs. H. H. Henry, Mrs. J. H. Cordon. Mrs. Hattie Cook, Mr. I. F'U'oni. all Silem. and Mrs. Ben a r-3t r.t. Portland. A n-bo-it dinner, arranged by !'rr. A. I). Appcrson. Mrs. T. J Brcbcc and Mrs. Glen Burright, Salem, preceded the meeting.. New York's Port Authority bus terminal U" the- largest in the world, according to the New York Convention and Visitora Bureau Tt handles a proximately 5.000 Interstate bus movements and used by over 130,000 passengers DR. SEMLER Scys Ym aat mI cadi bacausa yaur cra4it il as aaad aa tath at Dr. Sanlar'a. Arranit to have all a? your aMar ' anrl warfc caalttttf RIGHT NOW . . . aay later a kit aaailv attar. yaa caa li j J "There are NO c EASIER CREDIT TERMS" CSOWNS FILLINCS CRIDCEWORK PLATE W03K t INLAYS X-RATS Ym wit appreciate kow aiy ft 5s arreee for credit hi Dr. Semler's dental offices . . . no red tape ... no delay . . . no bank or finance company to deal with. You pay AFTER your work it completed, and you can spread the payments over any reasonable length of . time. REMEMBER, there are no eaiier credit terms than those offered by DR. SEMLER. 2 mm - r .'.t.'.ii ii H i I U 1'.. 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