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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1958)
Medford Tribune MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1958 "' ' fe 5 I 2,; :Tt?Wm6 -S i - ' . . 7 ': -:::-:::-: E'TJ fVV7VKKlikJifvnLi JT -- . - - Septtemmlbeip's IHfeire By Olive Starcher The coming of September means that vacation is over, school starts aqain and club women of the valley" take up their fall and winter activities. Among September's large benefit events will be the fall luncheons ancf style shows of Medford Junior Service league September 11-12 fo raise funds for the league's kindergarten for children with hearing difficulties. The two-day event will be held at Rogue Valley Country club, with the shows following luncheon at 12:30 p.m. each day. Medford branch, American Association of University Women, will soon resume its daily story hour program for children broadcast every afternoon over KYJC under the sponsorship of the Big Y. The program has brought the local branch state-wide rec ognition and the money goes into the AAUW fellowship fund. Dennis Hamlin, who first entered Medford Junior Service league's kindergarten last year, will return when the school opens later this month. Dennis, whose hearing was affected by an illness, is the son of Mr. ond Mrs. Donald V. Hamlin, 908 North Riverside avenue. Dennis posed with Mrs. Emil Mohr, league member who has been working to put the new kindergarten quarters into readiness for school. Six-year-old Rodney Kuschel won't have as much time to play with his building blocks after he enters Jackson school this month as a first-grader. Rodney, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kuschel, 706 Pennsylvania avenue, has two younger sisters. Nancy is two and , a half, and Judy is nine months. Rodney posed in his new plaid shirt and other' clolhes bought for the important first year at school. Mrs. Robert L. Kagy, Old Stage road, is- one of( the members of American Association of University Women who reads children's stories over th AAUW Story Hour which will be broadcast again this fall after a summer vacation. V. M. Califf, chief engineer for Radio Station KYJC, works with the members for most of the broadcasts, some of which are "live" and others of which are taped. Little Carol Kagy, 6, who will enter school this fall as a first-grader at West Side school, sometimes accompanies her mother to the station to listen to the story. Y'li--Of It! ! " i I 3 I"SL an- ' i& J' a' ' " II'. f f , i f Mr. and Mrs. Donald Robinson will return to the University of Oregon later this month, the former as a senior in journalism and Mrs. Robinson as a junior in liberal arts. After school closed last spring, young Robinson spent a month at the AFROTC camp near Sacramento, Calif., and now the young couple is living at 32 V4 Ross court. Mrs. Robinson is the former Deanna Campbell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Campbell, Campbell, Calif., and her husband is the son of the Wallace Robinsons, 29 Ross cour Miss Marjorie-Edens (at left) and Miss Edna Welch, both, 1958 graduates of Jacksonville High school, will both attend college on scholarships this fall. Miss Edens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Edens, will attend Lewis and Clark college on Elk Lumber company, Britt, and Westminster scholarships. Miss Welch, daughter of the Robert E. Welches, won two scholarships, one from the Britt committee and one from the Oregon State Board of Higher Education, and will attend Southern Oregon college to prepare herself for-4he elementary education field.