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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1958)
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN 1 rg:y-';y " v A f t, y, , ,.-:?.' r.r '---- , SL-i- wav ..s 99 Monday, January 13, 1958 we In frag I fcipr ifc liw liMipf Tlht las' foftr hmM SC1ESC5 CLiSiJV. SvtLDiH ..0..Thfc5ti ORICOK .COLLEGt 1 SCIENCE BUILDING Now under con- men's dormitory, estimated cost $420,813; struction at the rear of the Southern Oregon college commons for dining and social func- college campus in Ashland, the science tions, $269,187; central heating plant, S357,- building for classroom instruction is one of 000. The science building has 22,000 square four new buildings presently being built at feet and the estimated cost is $460,000. the college. Also under construction is a ' HORNBROOK Scout Staff Reunion Held By MRS. H. H. CHAPMAN Hornbrook Bob Paine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lauran Paine, and a member for several yean of the Boy Scout staff of Camp McLoughlin at Lake of the Woods, attended a re union of the staff held Dec 30. After dinner at the Oregon Inn, the group returned to Medford, where they .spent the evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lamb. Lamb is an executive of the Crater Lake Area Council of the Boy Scouts. Other members of the staff attending the reunion were Mr. and Mrs. Darl Gleed of Yreka, who is a Field Scout executive of the Yreka area of the Crater Lake Area Council, and from Medford, Mr. and Mrs. Jud Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Throne, who have served as cooks at the camp, Wilson Gilinsky, Wayne Breeze, Jim Gordon, Mike Forbes, Jim Boyd, Kel ly Somers, Glenn Allison, Dick Clark and Leon Mc Dougal. The boys were ac companied by their dates. On Sunday, Jan. 5, Bob and his dad drove to Eugene, Ore., where Bob will resume his studies at the University of Oregon, after spending the holidays with his parents. A day of fun in the snow brought a happy ending to the holiday vacation for a num ber of high school and col lege students here. Bundled to the ears against the cold, and with a rented toboggan, they drove to the summit of the Siskiyaus last Friday, thence down the Colestin road to their favorite slope. In the group were Sharee Walsh, Lillian Rawhouser, LulaBelle Whitten, Bill Hol land, Bob Paine, Eddie Ma son, all of Hornbrook, and Eddie's friend, George Steffes of Detroit, Mich., and from Yreka, Marsha Taylor, Mari lyn Brawman, Pat Hossick, Jim Bartlett, and Duane Culp. After an afternoon of to bogganing, they drove to Ash land for hamburgers and a show, and returned home in the evening, full of assorted bumps, bruises, skinned shins, and wet clothes, but all de claring they had "had the time of their lives" and were ready to go back for more! Mr. and Mrs. Earl Scovel and son, Steven, of Albu querque, N.M., stopped while enroute to Seattle, Wash., for a visit last week with Mr, and Mrs. Ed Mason and daughters, Linda and Lillian Rawhouser. Mrs. Scovel is the girls' aunt. Mrs. Agnes Tackaberry of San Francisco is visiting with her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Pettee. The Pettees spent four days during the holidays visiting friends and relatives in the Bay area, and Mrs. Tacka berry returned north with them. NEED A TRUCK? SEE Wilcox Beehive TRUCK & CAR RENTAL NEW LOCATION At the End of SO. CENTRAL . o 1006 S. Central For U-Drive Service SP 3-3281 SP 3-3003 . Evenings Ph. KE 5-1285 Christmas in the Floyd Burns' home was observed with a family gathering. Pres ent were their three daugh ters and their families, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Spearin and two sons of Anderson, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Herd Stickney and two daughters of Bel mont, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Stickney of Medford. Other guests for Christmas dinner were Burns' brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ardon Burns and daughter, Barbara, and their son, Bob, and his family from Yreka. The second in a series of card parties held by the Horn brook Grange, took place Sat urday evening, Jan. 4, at the Grange hall. About 45 were in attend ance, including several from out of town. Frank Bear won high score, and low was held by Frank Henley. Proceeds from the card parties go to ward the building fund. The next party is scheduled for Jan. 18. Mrs. Ed Smith was hostess for the Contract Bridge club at her home on Tuesday. High score was won by Mrs. Bertha Bradley and second high by the hostess. Others playing were Mrs. Fred Mills, Mrs. Laura Swin- nerton, Mrs. Duane Hamner, Mrs. Lester Nye, Mrs. Hen ley Clawson, and Mrs. John Griffin, the latter two sub stituting for regular mem bers. Mrs. Malcolm MacLeod of Spokane, Wash., and her mother, Mrs. M. Todd, of Moyee Springs, Idaho, were guests the forepart of the week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Walsh. Mrs. Mac Leod and Mrs. Walsh served as registered nurses in the same hospital a number of years ago, and have continued their friendship since that time. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jones and sons, Billy and Darrel, drove to Washington for the holidays where they visited in Centralia with Jones' sis ter, Mrs. Marjorie Pomeroy, and in Rochester with Mrs. Jones' brother. Eddie Mason and his friend, George Steefes, of Detroit, Mich., returned to their Navy base at San Diego last Mon day. The boys had spent a 10-day leave here with Ed die's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mason. On their return to San Dipgo, both boys will enter the Navy electronics school. George Hoxie of Buckeye, Calif., was in town last week to "view the remains" of his former home here, the Ted Gessler place which burned to the ground Dec. 24. He also called on several friends here. Her birthday was the oc casion for a surprise party for Mrs. L. C. Walsh at her home the afternoon of Jan. 4. Friends spending the after noon with her were Mrs. Lauran Paine, Mrs. Carl Wil liams, Mrs. S. D. Haworth, Mrs. Ralph Bennett and daughter, Marsha, and Mrs. Harry Chapman. Sharee Walsh also assisted in the sur prise for her mother. A visitor at the Frank Bear home is Mrs. Bear's brother, Ed Klontz, of Au burn, Wash. He came down' with another brother and his wife, also from Auburn, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Klontz, who, after a two-day visit here continued on south to Sacra mento, Santa Cruz and Los Angeles. The Women's Society of the Methodist church held their first meeting of the year Thursday, Jan. 9, with Mrs. Henley Clawson as hostess at her home. Devotions were led by the hostess, who read a leaflet on a subject appropriate to the beginning of a new year. The president being absent, Mrs. Harry Chapman con ducted the meeting. Those attending were Mrs. Minnie Bloomingcamp, Mrs. Mabel Sanders, Mrs. Laura Swinnerton, Mrs. T. D. Kil lingsworth, Mrs.-L. C. Walsh, Mrs. Ardon Burns, Mrs. S. D. Haworth, Mrs. Bertha Bradley, Mrs. Clara Howard, Mrs. Arlie C 1 y b u r n and daughter's, Ardis and Lori Kay. It was voted as the project for 1958 to assist the Fred Finch home in Oakland, Calif, in any way they may request. This is a Methodist Children's home. Plans were discussed for the annual Valentine Silver tea to be held Feb. 13 at the church. The next meeting of the society will be at the home of Mrs. Killingsworth in Henley on Jan. 23. HOW TO DEAL WITH YOUR TENSIONS The quest for peace of mind er for good mental health, which is another name for it is universal. Yet very few of us are blessed with all the internal qualities and external circum- stances that automatically as sure us of peace of mind. Ve have to work to achieve it. Following is one of a few sim ple, ready-to-hand actions which may help you. TALK IT OUT When something worries you, talk it out. Don't bottle it up. Confide your worry to some levelheaded person you can trust; your nusoana or ut, father or mother, a good friend, your clergyman, your family doctor, a teacher, school coun selor, or dean. Talking things out helps to relieve your strain, helps you to see your worry in a clearer light, and often helps you to see what you can do about it. This is one of eleven simple suggestions that can be helpful if they are applied diligently. If you would like further infor mation, write for the free new booklet : "How To Deal Wrra Your Tensions," written by top experts in the field of psy chiatry. Address : Better Mental Health, Box 2500, New York 1, New York. Council and the newspaper oiw Prima Donna Leaves Without Solution Milan, Italy (IP) Prima donna Maria Meneghini Cal- las will leave for Chicago Thursday without solving her dispute with the Rome opera house, her husband said Sat urday. , Industrialist Giovanni Me neghini said Miss Callas' . voice "is now back to its or iginal perfection and the un-; fortunate accident which took place in Rome will be soon considered as a thing of the past, we hope." Meneghini said he and his wife would fly to Paris Thurs day and after a six-hour stop over proceed on to the Unit ed States. He said they would arrive in Chicago at 2:30 p.m. (CST) Friday. The dispute began when Miss Callas walked out after the first act of the opera "Norma" on the opening night of the Rome season a week ago Monday. 000 A First of a Series of Statements For Americans in A Huclear Age . deep uneasiness exists inside Americans as we look out on the world. It is not that we have suddenly become unsure of our selves in a world in which the Soviet Union has dramati cally laid claim to scientific supremacy. Nor that the same propulsion device that can send a man-made satellite into outer space can send a missile carrying a hydrogen bomb across the ocean in eighteen minutes. Nor is the uneasiness only the result of headlines that tell of trouble between Turkey and Syria and a war that could not be limited to the Middle East The uneasiness that exists inoide Americans has to do with the fact thai we are not living up to our moral ca pacity in the world. Mr We have been living half a life. We have been devel oping our appetites, but we have been starving our pur poses. We have been concerned with bigger incomes, bigger television screens, and bigger cars but not with the big ideas on which our lives and freedoms depend. Wee e ore facing a danger unlike any danger that has ever existed. In our possession and in the possession of the Russians are more than enough nuclear explosives to put an end to the life of man on earth. Our uneasiness is the result of the fact that our ap proach to the danger is unequal to the danger. Our response to the challenge of today's world seems ojit of joint. The slogans and arguments that belong to the world of competitivefiational sovereignties a world of plot and counter-plot no longer fit the world of today or tomorrow. Just in front of us opens a grand human adventure into outer space. But within us and all around us is the need to make this world whole before we set out for other ones. We can earn the right to explore other plan ets only as we make this one safe and fit for human habitation. The sovereignty of the human community comes before all others before the sovereignty of groups, tribes, or nations. In that community, man has natural rights. He has the right to live and to grow, to breathe unpoisoned air, to work on uncontaminated soil. He has the right to his sacred nature. If what nations are doing has the effect of destroying these natural rights, whether by upsetting the delicate balances on which life depends, or fouling the air, or devitalizing the land, or tampering with the genetic in tegrity of man himself; then it becomes necessary for people to restrain and tame the nations. Indeed, the test of a nation's right to survive today is measured not by the size of its bombs or the range of What You Can Do 1. What you say and what you do make public opinion. Let the people who serve you in public office know of your appre hensions and your hopes. Above all, make your ideas known to the President of the United States. 2. You can join the signers of this statement. 3. You can help make it possible for this statement, and other statements like it to appear in newspapers throughout the country and the world. 4. You can talk to your friends and neigh' bors about the points in this message. You can discuss these matters in your church or synagogue, your club, your school, your union. 5. You can fill out the two coupons below: Send one to the President and the other to the National Committee For a Sane Nuclear Policy. its missiles, but by the size and range of its concern for the human community as a whole. There can be no true security for America unless we can exert leadership in these terms, unless we become advocates of a grand design that is directed to the large cause of human destiny. There can be no true security for America unless we can establish and keep vital connections with the world's people, unless there is some moral grandeur to our pur poses, unless what we do is directed to the cause of human life and the free man. There is much that America has said to the world. But the world is still waiting for us to say and do the things that will in deed and in truth represent our great est strength. What are these things? FIRST, AS IT CONCERNS THE PEACE, AMERICA CAN SAY: That we pledge ourselves to the cause of peace with justice on earth, and that there is no sacrifice that we are not prepared to make, nothing we will not do to create such a just peace for all peoples; That we are prepared to support the concept of a United Nations with adequate authority under law to prevent aggression, adequate authority to compel and enforce disarmament, adequate authority to settle dis putes among nations according to principles of justice. CLIP AND MAIL TO: CUP AND MAIL TO: PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON 25, D. C Dear Mr. President: I respectfully urge yon . to go before the United Nations and propose: That nuclear test explosions, missiles and outer-space satellites be considered apart from other disarmament problems; That, as there is now agreement in principle on the need for supervision and inspection necessary to verify a cessation of tests, all nuclear test explosions by all countries be stopped immediately and that the U. N. then proceed with the mechanics necessary for monitoring this cessation; - That missiles and outer-space satellites be brought under United Nations-monitored control, and that there be a pooling of world science for space exploration under the United Nations. Now, more than ever before, mankind waits for some sign that it can be released from the terror of sudden attack and the grip of armaments. We look to you to give form and direction to that aspiration. Sincerely, NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR A SANE NUCLEAR POLICY P. O. BOX 1750 NEW YORK 17, N. Y.' Note: Make contributions to "Sane Nuclear Policy". Q I am enclosing $. .as my con tribution toward advancing the work of the Committee and in helping to place this message in other towns and cities throughout the United States and the world. (This statement is available for reprint in your local paper.) I wish to know if a group to forward these ideas exists in my community. Send me further information about the Committee and its program. Name- NamcL Address. Address. C5ty- (ptme pita) Medfotd Mail Tribun NEXT, AS IT CONCERNS NUCLEAR WEAPONS, Am3CA CAN tXU That the earth is too small for intercontinental b&lfi tic missiles and nuclear bombs, and that the first order of business for the world is to bring both under control; That the development of satellites or rocket stations and the exploration of outer space must be carried on in the interests of the entire human community through a pooling of world science. AS IT CONCERNS NUCLEAR TESTING, AMERICA CAN SAY: That because of the ave unanswered questions with respect to nuclear test explosions especially as it con cerns the contamination of air and water and food, and the injury to man himself we are calling upon all nations to suspend such explosions at once; That while the abolition of testing will not by itself solve the problem of peace or the problem of arma ments, it enables the world to eliminate immediately at least one real and specific danger. Also, that the aboli tion of testing gives us a place to begin on the larger question of armaments control, for the problems in monitoring such tests are relatively uncomplicated. AS IT CONCERNS OUR CONNECTIONS TO THE REST OF MANIOKOt, AMERICA CAN SAY: That none of the differences separating the govern ments of the world are as important as the membership of all peoples in the human family; That the big challenge of the age is to develop th concept of a higher loyalty loyalty by man to the human community; That the greatest era of human history on earth is within reach of all mankind, that there is no area that cannot be made fertile or habitable, no disease that cannot be fought, no scarcity that cannot be conquered; That all that is required for this is to re-direct our energies, re-discover our moral strength, re-define our purposes. SIGNED MICHAEL MURINE Scitnee Writer CLEVELAND AMORT Author, "The Proper Bostonlanf SOGER K. BALDWIN DR. JOHN C BENNETT Dean of the Faculty, Union Theological Seminary DR. HARRISON BROWN Professor of Geochemistry, California Institute of Technology 'NORMAN COUSINS Editor, The Saturday Review THE REV. HENRY HOT CRANE Detroit DR. PAUL DOTV Chairman, Federation of American Scientists THE REV. GEORGE B. F0R0 Pastor, Corpus Christ! Church THE REV. HARRY EMERSON FOSSICK Pastor Emeritus, Riverside Church, New York CLARK EICHELBERSER Director, American Association for the United Nation HAROLD FEY Editor, The Christian Century St ERICH FROMM Psychoanalyst, Author 'ROBERT 6ILM0RE Executive Secretary, American Friends Service Committee, New York CLINTON GOLDEN Labor Official OSCAR HAMMERSTEffl R Playwright 'THE REV. DONALD HARRINGTON Minister, Community Church. New York LELAND HAZARD Vice-President, General Counsel, Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. JOHN HERSEY Author, "Hiroshlnuf and "The Wair 3RIGADIER SENERAl HUGH B. HESTER 3R. HOMER JACK Minister, Evanston, Illinois JAMES JONES Author, "From Bert to Eternity" ' mil EDWARD E. KLEIN Stephen Wise Free Synagotm, New York OR. STANLEY LIVINGSTON Department of Physics, Mats, chusettt Institute of Technology DR. KIRTLEY F. MATHER Professor of Geology, Emerkus, Harvard University 'LEHORE 6. MARSHALL Author of "Other KnowUdf LAWRENCE S. MAYERS. JR. President, L&C Mayers Co Int. THE REV.. ROBERT J. MeCRACKEM Minister, Riverside Church, New York LEWIS MUMFORD Author, "The Condition of Mmn ROBERT R. NATHAN National Chairman, Americans fnr Democratic Action DR. WILLIAM F. NEUMAN Associate Professor of Biochewt- istry. University of Rochester ELLIOT NICHOLS Civic Leader JAMES 6. PATTON President, National Farmers Union CLARENCE PICKETT Executive Secretary Emeritue, American Friends Service Committee JOSEPHINE W. POMERANCE DR. CHARLES C. PRICE Chairman. Department of Chem istry, University of Pennsytvanln . ELEANOR ROOSEVELT ELMO ROPER Marketing Consultant and Public Opinion Analyst PHILIP SCHIFF Washington Representative, National Jewish W elf art Board JAMES T. SHOTWELL President Emeritus, Carnegie Bn dowment for International Peatt OR. PITIRIM A. SOROKM Professor of Sociology, Emerttnt, Harvard University NORMAN THOMAS DR. PAUL 1 TILLICft University Professor, Harvard University DEAN HOWARD THURMM Marsh Chapel, Boston Unhtnttf DR. HUGH WOLFE Chairman, Department of Phytitt, Cooper Union, New York JERRY VOORHIS Executive Director. Cooperwttv League of America he signers of this statement are acting in their Individual opacity and not as representatives of organizations or as mem Hts of the National Committee for .a Sane Nuclear Policy, 'fames preceded by an asterisk indicate members of the organic ng committee.) NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR A SANE NUCLEAR PCUCY 202 East 44th Street Hew York 1S, JL Y.