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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1958)
Unander Accuses Matfield (Of SeroousBy Injuring Party Portland Wi State Treasurer Sig Unander Mon day accused Secretary of State Mark Hatfield of "seri ously injuring his party and his state" by referring to Un ander's plan for a self-liquidating forest roads program as "glib promises" and "verbal garbage." Hatfield and Unander are candidates for the Republican nomination for governor. Unander, addressing a meet ing of women volunteers at his Portland headquarters, The Family Council Editor's note: The Faintly Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's tditor and two writers. Each article s a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does not give advice; it merely reports on problems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Eunice M. We fell in with a bad crowd I want to move. Otto M. There's no sense running away from things. Eunice M. We are a couple in our mid-20's and we have two children, ages 2 and 4. We are living in what I once thought was a nice communi ty, near my husband's work, but I feel we now have good jrason to move. We made friends with a roup of couples of about our ovn age and we soon fell into the habit of seeing them quite frequently at drinking parties. We fell into step and started tfrinking much too much. I soon realized that this rowd was very loose morally, 3s well, and 'I'm afraid we fell into step with that too. flirtations led to something more serious and I soon found Ihyself half in love with one St the other men in the crowd. At one party I narrowly es caped going all the way with Viis man. This really pulled ano up short. I am not that ind of person. I want to have A food marriage and whole torn home. I now want to Biftvt out of this community, $' mj ftusband is opposed. tie t. I share my wife's Ida I It about our marriage and Jom life, but I look at it way. Wherever you go, rou tr bound to find good bad elements in the com munity. We weren't smart faoujfc to make the right tSoica from the start, but I think we can get on the right Vtclt Without making a move. I tae fought hard to get into the position I've now chifved in my company. I fan look forward to an excel lent future here, but my chancta don't look so good at this time with any other com Jtnj I know about. I may nevtr again have an oppor tunity like the one I have kere. I feel there is no sense in running away from things. You have to know in your own mind what you want and stand by your principles. Ours is a large community and we do not have to run around with this old crowd if we don't care for them. We can make new friends and start life afresh in this very com munity. The Council: Otto's argu ment is essentially sound, but it is possible he does not fully appreciate his wife's problem and, therefore, his solution may not be as workable as he believes. Eunice is the one who felt the most danger from the re lationships the couple had formed. Possibly she still feels more vulnerable to this temp tation than she cares to admit to herself. In such a case, physical distance would help her blot out her own unde sired feelings. It would be worth a financial sacrifice to help her toward a new and better marital life. A mere physcial move, how ever, is no total solution. We are 100 per cent behind Otto in his belief "you must know in your own mind what you want and stand by your prin ciples." No matter where this couple decides to locate, they must make an active effort to main their own standards and associate with those who share such standards. A compromise solution might be this: Eunice and Otto should give their present com munity another try for a def inite period. They should form church ties and do all they can to strengthen their marriage and their ideals, and to find worthwhile friends. If, at the end of such a period, Eunice still feels threatened by outside influences, a move may be in order. (Copyright 1958. Genertal Features Corp.) said that "personal attacks by the secretary of state in his quest for political advan tage are weakening the Re publican party." Favorable Concideration "My program for. more logs, more access roads and more jobs has been served up in the press by Mark Hatfield as 'verbal garbage,' " Unander said. "Is the S40 million pay roll I helped bring into Ore gon only a few months ago by arranging the sale of one billion feet of ready-to-cut timber . . ..verbal garbage? No, it is a reality." Unander said his access roads program ' had received favorable consideration from Republicans and Democrats in Congress, including Sens. Richard L. Neuberger and Wayne Morse and Congress man Charles O. Porter, all Oregon Democrats. Proposed Fund Unander has proposed that the federal government estab lish a self-liquidating fund to finance construction of access roads in national forests. The fund would issue reve nue bonds to the Secretary of the Treasury and these bonds would be retired through charges for use of the roads in removing forest products. The U. S. Forest Service also would compensate the fund for using the roads to protect forests against fire, insects and disease. Alabama Democrats To Pick Candidate Birmingham, Ala. (IP Ala bama Democrats go to the polls today to select their gubernatorial nominee from a field of 14 segregationists candidates. ' The primary winds up long, colorful' campaigns by barn storming hopefuls, some of whom drew crowds with hill billy music and promises of unflagging opposition to inte gration. There could be more of the same, since a runoff appeared certain. Three candidates appeared to have the edge: Attorney General John Patterson, who fought racketeering in the former vice capital of Phenix City; Jimmy Faulkner, a pub lisher; and Circuit Court Judge George Wallace. All three have vowed to "go to jail" if necessary to preserve separation of the races. FIRST SPACE REPORT Three physicists at Iowa State University in Iowa City, examine "spare" of Explorer I to check phenomenally high counting rates of unidentified radiation reported in the far reaches of Explorers I and m. (Left to right): Ernest C. Ray; George H. Ludwig and Carl E. McDwain, who worked with James Van Allen in preparing first major report from space, shown with upper, or instrumented, half' of the satellite and rolls of tape which tell the radiation story. Van Allen presented the radiation report in Washington to U. S. International Geophysical Year leaders. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medferi, Oregon, Tuesday, May 4, 195S J Back Stairs: Ike's Frequent Trips By DAYTON MOORE United Press Correspondent Backstairs at the White house: Washington OP) Presi dent Eisenhower wasn't speaking lightly last week 'Studio One' Show Long, Soggy Clump of Twaddle, United Press Critic Says By WILLIAM EWALD United Press Correspondent New York (IP) I know Monday night's CBS-TV "Stu dio One'' wasn't dead because the man at the start of the show said: "A n d now I live from Hol 4 lvwooH . But I think the man was c optimistic. It seems to me it lay there kind of w o u n ded most of the William Ewald hour. "The McTaggart Succes sion" was the name of the piece and I'm sure that it was one of those things that on paper looked like a darlin' little romp. In its execution, however, it struck me as a little like watching two medi ocre situation comedies stuck back to back. It was all about an adult Irish - American family of three brothers and a sister who needed a housekeeper be cause the sister was ailing. Along the way, they lassoed a comely niece to keep house, only to discover the girl plan ned to marry a young man and leave them. Naturally, the brothers tried to discourage the romance, but young love found the true way. This summary may not sound like much to you and you're right. It was a long and soggy clump of twaddle. Dennis Day, Jim Backus and William Gargan played the brothers and Hope Emerson the sister. They all looked suitably embarrassed. Anne Helm as the young niece was decorative. Graham To Resume San Francisco Crusade San Francisco (W Evan gelist Billy Graham resumes his San Francisco Bay Area Crusade tonight at the Cow Palace with a sermon on "Where Did Evil Come From." Graham took a day off in his six-week Crusade Monday as Joey Giardello and Rory Calhoun took over the Cow Palace for their 10-round mid dleweight fight. Astrobiology Not a Dirty Word Washington (IP) If your kid comes home and says he's studying astrobiology you don't have to wash his mouth out with soap. This and some other flashy S1.25 words turned up Mon day in House Space Commit tee testimony. Here, with some home-made definitions, are samples: Spatiography A sort of ge ography where' there isn't anything to stand on. i Planetary ecology What it's like on Mars and similar out-of-the-way spots. Astrobiology Love among the stars and other duller bi ological matters. Bioastronauticist A fel low who knows all about planetary ecology and astrobiology. when he said he couldn't see that his frequent trips away from - Washington made "a very great difference in the way that the presidency is conducted." - An aide said he had in mind that the White House to a large degree both literally and figuratively is with the President wherever he may be. ONLY SECOND GRADE Effingham, 111. OP) Mrs. Clarence Schmobe wondered today if one of her hens was trying to grade its own pro duct. She said she found an egg with a perfect "2" etched on the shell. The President is at one end of. an elaborate communica tions setup when he is in Get tysburg, Augusta, or any where else even when he is on the golf course, in an auto, or. aboard the presidental plane Columbine III. Cabinet members or White House aides can get a message through to him without any delay. Private telephone and tele printer circuits and coding machines are set up at -temporary headquarters outside Washington even if the Presi dent is only going to be there overnight. Private telephone circuits are connected with his plane at every scheduled stop. The big plane and all White House limousines are equipped with radio telephones and Secret Service agents who accom pany him around a golf course carry radio walkie-talkies. In this sense, Mrs. Barbara Castle, a Laborite member, spoke accurately when she told the British House of Com mons that Eisenhower kept in touch with the Strategic Air Command headquarters even while playing golf. A White House spokesman said, however, that she "slight ly exaggerated," in a techni cal sense. He said the Presi dent is always accessible to receive an emergency mes sage from SAC, in Washing ton or elsewhere, but the mes sage would be relayed through the defense secretary. The White House does not have direct communications set-up with SAC. Eisenhower got a hearty chuckle out of a recent car toon about his golf. Entitled "Carnival" and drawn by Dick Turner for NEA service, it showed the head of the White Hoyse Secret Service detail pointing out an agent as "one of the best men we've got hasn't lost a golf ball yet." 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