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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1956)
EIGHT MZDFORB (OREOOK) MAIL TRIBUNE Thurday,"May 3. 195B Freud's Belief on Instinctual Drives in New-Born Explained 94 Precinct Polls For Election Listed Following are the polling placet in Jackson county's 94 pre cincts for the May 18 primary election ballot, as announced by the county clerk's office. The eight single counting boards are marked with an asterisk, all others are double boards. NO. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 IS 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 28- A 29 29- A 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 45- A 40 46- A A T 47-A 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 55- A 56 56- A 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 71-A 72 73 73-A 74 75 76 77 77-A 78 79 80 CI 82 83 84 NAME POLLING fLAl-LS Ashland Public Library Ashland City Hall Ashland Legion Hall Ashland - Armory Ashland First Presbyterian church Ashland Calvary Baptist Church Ashland Junior High School Ashland 715 North Main Street Ashland . Lincoln School Ashland ' Briscoe School Ashland : 130 4th Street Ashland Walker School Ashland S.O.C.E. Gym Ashland West - Valley View School Barron '.: Klamath Junction Cafe Belleview... - Belleview Cafe Pinehurst - Lincoln School Colestine . Sis. Q. Maint. Station Lake Creek Lake Creek Store Butte Falls : Town Hall Eagle Point North Teen-Age Club Eagle Point South High School Gym Flounce Rock. : Prospect Community Hall Trail . Trail Creek School Shady Cove Shady Cove School Reese Creek - Dinner Bell Cafe Derby ' Derby School Howard ... Howard School Howard Haupert Tractor Co., N. Pacific Hwy. Howard East - Main Building Airport Howard East McCormic Farm Equip. Co., 2232 Biddle Rd. Roxy Ann 1060 Crater Lake Ave Hillcrest... Hillcrest Orchard Home Medford .-. Pythian Building, 141 N. Grape St. Medford....Free Methodist Church Annex, 337 . West 10th St. Medford. - City Hall Medford Eads Transfer, 123 N. Front St. Medford 610 South Central Ave. Medford . - Lincoln School Medford 1116 North Riverside Ave. Medford Latter Day Saints Church, Ivy and Monroe Sts. Medford - Court House Medford - - 701 Park St. Medford .Mike's Seat Cover Center, 621 East Jackson St. Medford . ..... Boy Scout Headquarters Medford . - 1112 East Main St. Medford . : Roosevelt School Medford ' '. Church of the Brethren Medford '. Hedrick Junior High School Medford 2415 Lyman Ave Medford Washington School Medford - 706 Beekman St. Medford New Fire Hall, 8th and Lincoln Sts. Medford .. Assembly of God Church Annex Medford 25 Summit Ave, Medford ... Jackson School Medford 548 Fairmont St. Medford St. Mark's Guild Hall Medford . Parish Hall Catholic Church Medford Senior High School Girls Gym Medford 605 Dakota Ave. Medford First Church of Christ, Scientist Medford 1315 Bundy St. Orchard Home East ... Jefferson School Orchard Home West 1840 Stewart Ave. Phoenix East '. Presbyterian Church Phoenix West Phoenix New. School Gym Phoenix Southwest Grange Hall Talent West Old School Gym Talent East . : City Hall Griffin Creek Griffin Creek School Jacksonville North Jacksonville Community Hall Jacksonville South City Hall Perrydale North . Oak Grove School Gym Perrydale South . Temple Baptist Church Central Point West .... Townsend Hall Central Point N. East... Crater High School Gym Central Point S. East East Legion Hall Central Point S. East Junior High School Old Gym Willow Springs Willow Springs School Mound Adm. Building, Camp White Mound . Table Rock School Sams Valley... .... Sams Valley School Wimer . Grange Hall Rogue River East . Grange Hall Rogue River West...... '. V.F.W. Hall Rogue River West Homers Associated Station, 4830 S. - Pacific Highway, Grants Pass . City Hall 362 2nd St. Gold Hill North.. Gold Hill South.. Foots Creek Applegate Union Watkins.. Sterling Community Hall School Gym - Old Ruch Store ..Route 2, Box 67A, Upper Applegate Old West Place, Applegate rd. By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Editor New York (U.P.) According to Freud, every human being en ters this world fully stocked with instinctual drives. These drives are energized and they "drive" toward only one goal, which is their own gratification. Collectively Freud called these drives the "ID" and this "ID" is the beginning of the mind. Soon after birth, the infant's awarenes of the objects and peo ple around him begins. Aware ness of himself in relation to those objects and people, and of himself as a living, functioning physical being. His is the "ego" component of the mind. It is energized by the ID and it seeks to execute the ID'S drives and bring them to the point of grati fication. But the infant ego is an ex ceedingly poor instrument ' for that purpose. For one thing, the infant is helpless and small, especially in comparison with the "giant" adults with whom his ego is forced to deal and this is a fact which does not es cape his notice. Frustrations Interpreted Ego energized by ID comes up against stone walls over and over again inevitably. Ego is com pelled to interpret these "frus trations," and interprets them as threats to its very existence. These threats could become overwhelming if there were no way of dealing with them. There is a way. Ego "identifies" with the "giants," first with mother or the "mother substitute." He "borrows" their bigness and and their strength. And before long another part of mind begins forming- from this detaching fabric of ego. This part is super-ego. It is the beginning of the "moral sense" with which human-beings are conspicuously endowed and of the conscience. Freud called it "super ego" to indicate it was "over" ego. Its beginning func tion is to keep ego out of trouble, to preserve ego against threats and dangers. It passes on the demands of ID, so to speak, and sorts out those which ego can carry out safely and re jects those which it feels ego can't. Ego is caught in the middle, between ID and super-ego. It is energized by ID its sympathies are with ID's "drives." But su per ego is the law and the en forcing policeman in one. To make matters worse for ego, super-ego takes on specialized de partments with which to main tain a minute control over ego. One of these is "ego-ideal." You may see super-ego work ing in the small child who says, "You be a good boy, Johnnie." He is speaking to himself, al though you, wouldn't think so from his tone of voice. You may see ego-ideal working in the child who says, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the greatest lawyer in the world." Ego ener gized by ID is manifest enough infants want what they want when they want it. Pain and Labor So the full mind is formed in the Infant and very young child, but never without pain and la bor. ID has to be disciplined and regulated, and ID'S two drives, "aggressive" and "sexual," the latter being 'libido," are primi tive animalistic forces which do not take kindly to discipline and 'regulation. Ego is on their side, all other things being equal, and, with super-ego being what it is, conflict is constant. Compromise of one kind or another is the usual result. ID drives are "repressed" or they are "sublimated" that is diverted from a channel lo which super ego objected to another chan nel which super-ego okays. How ever, it has to be that many of DRINKING BLAMED The Marine Corps charged that SSgt Matthew McKeon (above) was under the influ ence of liquor when he led six Marine recruits to their deaths on a night "discipli nary" march at Parris Is land, S. C, three weeks ago. A court of inquiry formally recommended that the 31-year-old sergeant face trial by general courtmartiaL Burned Youngster In Good Condition Myrtle Creek, Ore. (U.R) Hospital attendants here said to day that four-year-old Sharon Barnes, who suffered minor burns in a home fire this week, was in good condition. Authorities credited the life of the little girl to the quick ac tion of her mother and a neigh bor who pulled the child from her bed in the flaming two-story dwelling after she had been overcome by smoke. , The girl's mother, Mrs. Homer Barnes, was visiting a neighbor, Mrs. Lavona Kusler, when she glanced out a window to see flames leaping from her home. She climbed through a bedroom window to find her child un conscious. As she. pulled the child toward the window, Mrs. Kusler pulled the mother out of the burning building. Mrs. Barnes was overcome by the smoke but her neighbor ap plied artificial respiration to the little girl until aid could .be sum moned. .- these conflicts are never" settled. They remain in this unresolved state and charged with energy in the unconscious. Tomorrow: Phycho-analysU How Freud found out. Norblad Charges Marines Top Easy In Disciplinary Acts Washington U.R) Rep. Walter Norblad (R-Ore.) ac cused the Marine Corps today of going too easy on the officers in taking disciplinary action for the "death march" at the Parris Island, S. C, training center. He particularly charged the corps with "glossing over" the responsibility of the immediate superior officers of the assist ant drill instructor who led six marine recruits to their deaths in swampy Ribbon creek during the night of April 8. Charges Mad in Latter Norblad fired the charges in a letter to Maj. Gen. Randolph McCall Pate, Marine Corps com mandant, who this week ordered a series of sweeping reforms and disciplinary moves in the wake of the tragedy which shocked the nation. The assistant drill instructor, Staff Sgt. Matthew C.. McKeon, was charged with being "under the influence of alcohol" when he ordered the disciplinary night march. He will be court-martialed on four charges, including manslaughter. In addition. Pate ordered the transfer of- the Parris fsland com mander and, other officers, named a congressional medal of honor winner to ride herd on all Marine Corps recruit train ing, and launched an extraord inary" reorganization of the whole training system. Should Share Charges Rep. Paul Cunningham (R-Ia.) said yesterday he thought some officers should share the man slaughter charges lodged against the sergeant. Norblad, like Cunningham, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, wrote Pate that the "time-honored military maneuver of transferring offic ers in circumstances like this certainly does not satisfy me." "It seems evident that the com pany commander has a very major responsibility to know ex actly the- caliber and actions of the sergeants under his Imme diate command and to be in fairly constant touch with their activities," Norblad said. Man Found Guilty on False Check Charge A circuit court jury yesterday found Orvil J. Mathews guilty of uttering and publishing a false check at Elk City market June 1, 1954. The jury deliber ated about 20 minutes, accord ing to District Attorney Walter Nunley. Sentencing was set for 1:30 p. m. Friday. The case was heard by Judge Charles Foster of Lake view, who has been assigned to hold coutt in Jackson county this week. Witnesses included ' Elaine Konopasek, who worked at the Elk City market; Theodore Weixel, who was manager of the market at the time; and Capt. M. L. Alford, of the Ore gon state police, Salem, who testified concerning signatures on the check. Mathews was arrested recent ly in Arizona and extradited to Jackson county. Salem U.m Articles of in corporation were filed here to day for the Van Ness Corpora-' tion of Grants Pass. They were' signed by Gene L. Brown, Naomi Sisco and D. F. Myrick. Dead line tor Sunday Classified Is at noon Saturday Sunday, May 13 is LMotK Do ers Remember her with from our complett selection. VtM'li JU Htf.l.l.U Oregon Crop Prices Higher by 2 Per Cent Portland (U.R)-Crop prices in Oregon in the 30 days ending April 15, showed a two per cent increase while livestock prices declined one per cent, the fed eral crop reporting service said here yesterday. The overall price farmers re ceived, showed a fractional gain during the month but a decline of 5 per cent from a year ago. Alex McDonald Named To Beaver Boys Staff Corvallis Alex McDonald of Medford has been selected for the. Beaver Boys State staff at Oregon State college June 10 to 16, according to Dan Mc Dade of Portland, Beaver Boys State chairman. McDonald will-be' a 'senior counselor. Some 500 high school youths will attend the training program sponsored by the Oregon Amer ican Legion. Individuals are sent- on scholarships provided by clubs, organizations and bus inessmen, and learn of the func tional aspects of citizenship. r.Cu Investment! made by the 10th at Hi imnrii earn divi dendt at ef the First. INSURED SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ARE OUR SPECIALTY. Invest your money where it is protected to $10,000.00 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Combine this SAFETY with a comfortable RETURN and liberal with drawal provisions and you have an excellent investment. Open your insured savings account now ... for PROFIT ----- AVAILABILITY SAFETY FIRST FEDERAL SiviRgs ft Loan Assn. of Medford 27 North Holly R. F. Kyle, President 4& .Sv 7 YOUR MEDFORD RETAIL TRADE COMMITTEE and JACKSON COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE are proud to Announce Their Combined Sponsorship of NORMAN A. DAVIS Portland Sales Trainer and Consultant Many of our merchants recall the' splendid training sessions held here for management and sales people two years ago. The results, derived from Mr. Davis Training in strengthening our Customer Good-Will is still being praised by those that participated. , Your Retail Committee and The Chamber highly rec ommend Mr. Davis to all business firms in the area: Retailer Wholesaler Jobber Manufacturer Hard Goods Soft Goods Tangible or Intangible Wherever public contact is vital to your business. Mr. Davis says "Mr. Businessman" your present and future customers are the , most important people in the com munity. Let us prove we mean it by attending the "Customer Good-Will Clinic." MAY 16-17-21 -22 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at the JACKSON HOTEL For reservations, call you local Chamber of Commerce, 2-6293. Don Boone, special representative for Norman A. Davis, will gladly give you full information. SEE OUR LARGE MAY BARGAIN DAY AD ON BACK PAGE OF THIS SECTION "MEDFORD mwm rail. 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