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-
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IMTO ONE SIDE
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SL-ta. 'jf? , r ' PuTTIrJ6 UP WITH
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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
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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
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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.
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