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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1958)
A MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Wednesday, October 8, 1938 The Family Council - - - m.uv rauiuy t.nnncij COD51SU OI m juuge, psycuiairiSH uree clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writers. Each article Is a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does n?Jiiv" lvice: merely reports on problems that hav been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Bertram G. She has no faith in our love. Marilyn R. I can't help it I'm afraid. Bertram G. My fiance and I are 26 and 28 years old, respectively. We have been engaged two years. We were to have been married a year ago, but certain family problems interfered, and now it looks as though we'll have to wait another year. We are sure of one another and of our love for each other at least I was sure. Now I'm beginning to wonder. I feel Marilyn ought to be wil ling to have sex relations be fore our marriage. We are moral individuals, but not re ligious. We are not teen-agers, but a mature man and woman. I feel Marilyn's refusal shows lack of trust in me and therefore, lack of faith in our relationship. Marilyn R. In theory I think Bertram is right. I know I have often taken that side of the argument when discus sing these things with my girl friends. But when it comes down to action, I find I can't do it. Maybe I'm afraid of sex or something. I don't really know. When I think of hav ing to lie to my family about my whereabouts arnd what I'm doing, I get a sickish feel ing. Bertram says this is just a hangover from childhood the fear of doing anything that displeases your parents. I realizs it's childish, but I can't help it. I am beginning to have an awful sense of having failed an important test of our love, but I just can't see my way out of this. The Council: Bertram has imposed a very unfair "test of love" and Marilyn is wrong to feel herself a failure in the face of it. As a matter of fact, it is he who is failing the test of love by his refusal to fully appreciate her point of view. It is true that Marilyn's reasons for her refusal are based to some extent on fear and a childish "hangover" rather than mature under standing. This, however, can not be helped. Marilyn, for tunately, has had no bitter or unsatisfactory experience of sex under improper cir cumstances, and she has no 4 OX. to" 1 2'i-to-3-tt. 0rego y (an tomato past frytr, cut op y, cup water Vi cup butter or margorine y4 tup bouillioii 2 green ontonf, topt an oB 2 tablespoons parsley 1 teaspoon monosodium ghrtamato . . u in 2-quart casserole. Combine onion, Br0wn chicken. Arrange ch.ck.n ,1U tomoTO past, ond .oncsodium gMa-J. preheated to 350' 'or on. hour. bouillion.Addtoch.ck.n.Bak.uTO P Garnish wun pau - . Hearty fall appetites will applaud this new casserole fryer dish. Tender, meaty Oregon-Grown fryers are enhanced by this onion mushroom sauce for a real dinner delight. When you buy fryers . . . LOOK FOR THE LABEL that says: "This Fryer Grown in Oregon" . . . that way you know it came from nearby iarms, was rushed to your grocer at the peak of freshness. Choose a fryer by the label . . . your own State label. Oregon-Grown fryers are Naturally Better because they are Naturally Fresher! Please, send me the "Bake-A-Fryer" strong intellectual apprecia tion for the values that have been handed down to her through religion. But Marilyn's weak, diluted arguments have some validity. Even men, who profess to be more aggressive in sexual matters, have their guilts and childish hangovers in this realm. It is probable that few men or women in our society, even those far more mature than Bertram and Marilyn, can freely engage in sexual activity outside of marriage without some sense of guilt, shame and degradation. Mar ilyn is right to want to avoid this unhappiness. The fact is that when hu man beings in our society in dulge in sexual intercourse without marriage, they fall readily into a pattern of using one another. When they com pletely accept one another, they wish to fully commit themselves. They need the framework of marriage as a symbol of their total commit ment. If Bertram and Marilyn must wait another year be fore their wedding, they could employ this period far better by getting a deeper under standing of marriage through books and consultation with a clergyman. (Copyright 1958. General Features Corp.) Gust of Wind Collapses Balloon Alamogordo, N.M. (UPD A sudden guest of wind Tuesday collapsed a giant balloon that might have carried an airman 100,000 feet above the earth to the fringes of outer space. The giant balloon narrowly missed about 150 newsmen gathered to cover the launch ing, -.nd forced the Air Force to postpone its experiment. the collapse happened less than an hour before the launching was scheduled to take place. Lt. Clifton. M. McClure, who had been put in the sealed gondola below the bal loon, was taken out to a de compression chamber. Workers quickly released about $12,000 worth of helium already in the balloon after the wind gusts tore loose one of the inflating tubes. uour lv appetite... Vt teaspoon"' '4 teaspoon peppor 7 - RECIPE FOLDER Get your copy of this handy recipe folder featuring "8 easy ways to bake Oregon-Grown Fryers." Send coupon or request tot The Oregon Fryer Committion , 4096 Center St. N. E., Salem, recipe folder. Theyll Do It Every BEFORE YOU RACK THEM UP show you My cav- ORlTE TRICK SHOT THREE BALLS HERE, AH' YOU'RE SUPPOSED TO KNOCK 'EM ALL IMTO ONE SIDE POCKET-GIMME YOUR CUE SL-ta. 'jf? , r ' PuTTIrJ6 UP WITH lllllWV' ' , ik 0N EVERYTHING'S HE S77A , - -d SHOWS OFF HIS MISSPFWT Q 19C8, King Fcatarw Syndicate. Inc., World right wtrtrf ? J yjjjpRjgg Physically Handicapped Get Fair Consideration Throuqh Civil Service Editor's note: Tbe following was written by John W. Sinders. co ordinator of selective placement for the physically handicapped at the Camp White Veterans Domi ciliary and a member of the Jack son county committee for employ ment of the physically handicapped. National Employ the Handicapped Week is currently being observed. The Federal Government has recognized for many years the unlimited and virtually untapped reservoir of abili ties possessed by the handi capped and have taken steps to do something about it. Records reveal that each year several thousands people with serious, permanent phy sical handicaps take their places in the career civil serv ice through the government- wide selective placement pro gram conducted by the U. S. Civil Service Commission in cooperation with Federal de partments and agencies. Since 1942, more than 165,000 dis abled workers have joined Uncle Sam's civilian work force. Fair Consideration The program is designed to assure the handicapped of fair consideration for gainful em ployment. It operates within the framework of the. Civil Service Merit System. Not only must the physically handicapped be qualified to do particular jobs, they must also compete with non - dis abled applicants for such Civil Service positions. In the light A EC an Oregon FRYER tonight f towwffl a. n I i mm rr? 1 , ff f & UvfiVO Ort. I . 1 I III! 1 I I 1! ii III III "VV5T- I I Time I t-OOL. CHSLK IS RIGHT IN THAT , 2,)&J X I FOR KEEPlN TABLE COSTS A W V V" XI BUCK AN HOUR- JV I - ITU. TAKE HIM EVER SEE II " I M I i I 1 i - rTi v ' I of this requirement, the rec ord of the selective placement program standst as testimony to the truth that, properly placed, the disabled worker is as good as the non-disabled. Selective placement em phasizes abilities not dis abilities. It is founded on the principle that the physically handicapped, when properly placed, is not job handicapped.- The selective place ment program poses three questions with respect to the handicapped applicant: -Is he qualified for the job? -Can he efficiently perform the duties of the job? -Will he be a hazard to him self or to others? Thus, disabled applicants for Federal employment can expect fair consideration with out respect to their physical handicaps. No Preferential Tzeatment The selective placement program is not designed to ac cord disabled applicants pref erential treatment over others eligible for similar work. The commission does not general ly advocate tailoring or alter By Jimmy Hatlo 7 BEFORE HETJ huy A out- Aht HOUR POR A T4BLE,HE'D WAhTT A FULL- COURSE DINNER ON IT ing jobs to make them appro priate for people with certain types of handicaps. Nor does the Commission advocate ov erloading the Government with handicapped people or making Government jobs a safe harbor for those who can not hold their own in compe titive private enterprise. The Commission views its responsibility, insofar as utili zation of the handicapped is concerned, as consisting of finding out the physical de mands of Federal jobs, find ing out what people with cer tain handicaps can or cannot do, and passing this informa tion on to its many appoint ing officers, assuring fair con sideration for appointment. It requires proper placement and makes -certain that the physical condition is not used as the basis for unfair discrim ination in connection with any phase of Federal employment under its jurisdiction. INCRIMINATING PROOF Wareham, Mass.-fflPD-While cross-examining State Troop er N. O- Suneson in a gam bling case in district court, the defense lawyer borrowed a nickel to prove that a "one armed bandit" that was part of the evidence wouldn't work. The lawyer hit the jackpot. His clients were promptly convicted and fined. I fewrf lid s n n n best Air Conditioning Playing Key Role In Space Conquest New York -&?D- Air condi - tioning is playing a key role in man's conquest of the world around him. Whether it's "up there" or "down there," devices for controlling temperatures, hu midity and purifying the air are needed to keep man alive as" he explores the unknown above and below the earth. Most Americans are famil iar with air conditioning in the home, at work or at places of recreation. But not many may know that the deep gold mines in South Africa could not be worked without air cooling units. Controlled Temperature Or that the atomic sub marines Nautilus and Skate which successfully explored beneath the polar ice cap car ried apparatus with a cooling capacity equal to the air con ditioning system of an eight story building. And when man goes , into outer space, the vehicle that carries him will have to have a controlled temperature within. Dr. Paul Wehrle, of the Syracuse Medical School fac ulty, explained that the heat from one man's body in a sealed 20-by-20 foot room, would raise the temperature from a normal 72 degrees to 105 degrees in nine hours. In atomic submarines, a Carrier Corp. official ex plained, air conditioning is needed t offset the combined heat generated by the atomic engine, the lighting system and appliances and by the hu man body itself. Charles V. Fenn, a Carrier vice president, said humidity control also is important be cause the human body gives off moisture as well as heat. He said Carrier has orders for equipment to control temper ature and humidity on 13 nuclear submarines. Air conditioning also has enabled man to burrow about 10,000 feet underground in one of the deepest gold mines in the worid-the Turf shaft of the Robinson mine near Johannesburg. At one time oppressive heat in the shaft threatened to bring mining 1 to a halt Scientists calculated that the temperature in the shaft rose one degree every 187 SB ? Pittsburgh'5 mm. FALL WALLPAPER Buv one roll at Regular Price gef second roll for All first-quality papers ... no seconds or off-brands! A once-a-year opportunity to redecorate at a big, big savings. enn Ob . 1W 93 PatternsyashablefadePr0(l,;. CHOOSE FROM PATTERNS IN PRICES FROM OOc TO 00.00 A ROll 2" Brush REG. 98t NOW l WEST 6th feet resulting from compres sion of the air under its own weight in the confined shaft. In addition, heat was given off by rock temperatures ranging up to 130 degrees and from power equipment used in the mine. "Now," a Carrier engineer pointed out, "every 24 hours, air cooled and dehumidified by the equivalent of the melt ing 2,250 tons of ice enables DECORATING VALUES w : ? 4 ..unF SMTtWw Dries in one hour iwu . . . uuiauic uuuuc9 Outstanding colors. STREET men to work at depths great er than 9,000 feet." The nuclear freighter S.S. Savananah, now under con struction, will introduce air conditioning to an area never previously cooled successful-ly-the boiler room of a ship. And, looking far into the future, air conditioning engi neers see the day when city streets will be cooled in sum mer and heated in winter. GARAGE and PATIO PUSC3 DROOr.l Full 14" wide Finished handle Tough, rugged bass bristles Limited stock with purchase of ONE GALLON WALLCJIDE RUBBERIZED INTERIOR PAINT READY-MIXEO COLORS Deep tenet and S JT AS 6 fi MaMh Colon al" slightly oxtm PHONE SP 2-6883 m u u u R4Rt A nrk of the Orsoaa frvtv fnen ADDRESS . ZOMf . I