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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1959)
J Personnel Management Problem Is College Extension Course at MHS Problems in personnel man agement, carrying three hours of under-graduate or gradu ate college credit is being of fered at Medford High school Tuesday evenings, 7 to 9:45 p.m. Enrollment was unusually low on the first class meeting and the class will be cancell ed on April 7 if enrollment does not increase greatly, ac cording to school officials. Original publicity stated prerequisite requirements for this course, but later infor mation shows, that this was eroneous and there are no prerequisites to enrolling in the class. Every organization, no mat ter its function, whether large or small, has problems in getting things done because some members arne't cooper ating as much as they are able to, officials noted. To help these groups become more effective, and to help employees become more ef fective in securing their own objectives, it is essential to study ways of dealing with the human problems present ed. This is done most effect ively by taking a look at spe cific case problems, asking what should be done and why, officials said. , Each student proposes solu tions, and group solutions are attempted through class dis cussion, in the light of various viewpoints and sound person nel principles'. .' Dr. Scott D. Walton, associ ate professor of business ad ministration at the Univer sity of Oregon, will instruct the class. The fee is S27 whether the student takes the course for credit or non-credit. For further information call MUrdock 2-4611, Ash land, General Extension Di vision. Other college ' extension courses include business Eng lish, 7-9:45 p.m. Tuesdays, room- 249, Medford High school; constructive account ing, '7-9:45 p.m. Wednesdays, coom 229, Medford High; and edupation seminar, social foundations of education, 7 9:45 p.m. Wednesdays, room 201B, Medford High. Six adult education courses sponsored by the Medford school system started at Med ford High school last week, Lindsay M. Vinsel, director of adult education, has an nounced. Courses which started in clude refresher shorthand. which is being held between 6:30 and 7:50 p.m and Wednesday in room 232; and. intermediate typing, be-' tween 9 and 9:30 pjn. Mon day and Wednesday 'in room 225. Study of Keeping Buildings Planned A committee to study the possibility of organized sup port for Jacksonville in main taining the historical nature of certain buildings there has been named by the Jackson County Chamber of Com merce. Russ Jamison was named chairman of the committee, with Clarence Young and Gor don Hudson serving with him. Jacksonville officials and oth er interested groups will be contacted to discuss means of coordinating county-wide ac tivities, Jamison said. Hugh Coleman, president of the chamber, asked that some action be taken as soon as possible to take full advantage of renewed interest in Jack sonville or Oregon's Centen nial observance. A Panama Canal Zone in sect called the "flying walk ingstick,"" gives free rides to Monday tiny, wingless female flies. "We're proud to have such able represen tation in this area and we're confident it wiH enable us to meet the ever-growing demand for Esther Williams Swimming Pools." &7 announces Williams- l 2425 Nielo Way; Medford i 1 Phone SP 3-5858 Exclusive Distributor for Esther Williams Swimming Pools 9" S j 1 - tY 1 4 K. "We're pleased to be asso ciated with the leader in the field. The Esther Williams Swimming Pool has euery-thing-right design and ma terials, safety and an amaz ingly low installed price." Frank R. Gordon Family Pools, Inc. FAMILY POOLS, INC. Exclusive Distributor for Jackson County ' PHONE SP 3-5858 I )William$ - ) VSwimming A. . Pools I International Swimming Pool Corporation , White Plains, New York Exclusive Manufacturer of the World-Famous Esther Williams Pools News About Books From the Library 4 In 1958 former presidents Herbert Hoover and Harry S. Truman issued the following message on the occasion of the first observance of Na tional Library week. The Bible tells us that the truth 'shall make men free. We Americans know that if freedom means anything, it means the right to think. And the right to think means the right to read-anything, writ ten anywhere, by any man, at any time . . . Men die; devices change, success and fame run their course. But within the walls of even the smallest library in our land lie the treasures, the wisdom and the wonder of man's greatest adventures on this earth. National Library week, April 12 to 18, will greatly serve if it makes us pause and remember these things. New books added to t h e Jackson County library dur ing the past two weeks are as follows: R e f e r e n ce: Information Please Almanac, 1959; The Family Medical Encycloped ia, Schifferes; Warships of the World, Kafka; Oars, Sails and Steam, Tunis; 1953 Modern Plastics Encyclopedia and En gineer's Handbook, ' Plastics Catalogue Corporation; Flags of the World, Carr; Sources of the History of Oregon . . . The Indian Council at Walla Wal la, Young. Social subjects: Now or Never, Blanton; Public Vocational-Technical Education in Oregon, Flesher; Whu t's Wrong with U. S. Foreign Policy, Sulzberger; What We Must Know About Commun ism, Overstreet. History and Biography: Ar tur Schnabel, Saerchinger; The Great Decision, Amrine; Mine Enemy Grows " Older, King; D-Day, The Sixth of June, 1944, Howarth. Other non-fiction: Matern ity, Goodrich; The American Way in Sport, Tunis. Teen-Age: Careers and Op portunities in Engineering, Pollack; Twixt Twelve and Twenty, Boone. Serious fiction: The House in the Mulberry Tree, Gar rett; The Eavesdropper, Lin; The Middle Age of Mrs. Eliot, Wilson; Mount Olive, Durrell; The Poorhouse Fair, Updike. Humor: Danger! Marines at Work! Fuller; The Rib and Adam, Shenton. Adventure stories: Alas, Babylon, Frank; Runway Zero-Eight, Hailey; Lone Star Cowboy, Scott; The Last Nine Days of the Bismarck, Forest er; Cone of Silence, Beaty. Historical romance: Roses from the South, Reniers; The Scarlet Feather, Van Every; Letter of Marque, Hepburn; The Scarlet Lily, Shipley; Trail of Tears, Forrest; The Unanointed, Chinn. Short story: A commodity of Dreams and Other Stories, Nemerov; Blackberry Wilder ness, Berkman. Romance: Nurse Gerry, Gaddis; Peaceful Harbor, O'More; Goodbye, Old Dry, Cushman. Mysteries: The Hours before Dawn, Fremlin: The Inno cents, Savage; Man in Am bush, Procter; The Galton Case, MacDonald; See No Evil, McDermid; Midsummer Malice, Fitzgerald; Dead of Winter, Cornish;. The Butter cup Case, Crane. Other fiction: Summer Thunder, Ethridge; The Hour- ! glass, Gilbert. . Linens for a Bride . . . . t I VT - -vjWk m Mill A-.?. 7262 ' Make a bed-set a pair of towels or pillowcases.! Roses set off by lazy-daisy flowers. Choice linens are the de sire of every woman, for they add beauty to furniture to rooms. Pattern 7262: trans fer of a 6 x 21-inch motif, tow 5 x 15-inch motifs. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for 1-st class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune, House hold Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PAT TERN NUMBER. Our new 1959 Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalogue has many lovely designs to order: crocheting, knitting embroid ery, quilts, dolls, weaving. A special gift, in the catalog to keep a child happily occupied a cutout doll and clothes to color. Send 25 cents for your copy of the book; Enrollment Record Seen at College Ashland With an all-time spring enrollment record in the offing, Mrs. Mabel 'W. Winston, registrar, said 946 students had enrolled by April 1 at Southern Oregon college compared to 905 enrolled on the comparable day last year. Of the total, 598 were men and 348 women students. Last spring, on the comparable date, 577 men and 328 women f ..s'V,5f" 4.. &t 3 "One " V-f MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sunday, April 5, 1959 1 jfZt 'Stf1 ?".-",,' "p Graham Promoted To Army Major Daniel O. Graham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Pat Graham, 175 Jeanette st., Medford, has been promoted from captain to maj or, and is now attending the strategic field command train ing school at Ft. Leavenworth, Kas. Following completion of the training school, he will re port to the Pentagon in Wash ington, D.C., for duty as as sistant chief of staff for in telligence. Graham was graduated from Medford High school with honors, and was appoint ed to West Point. HOW CHRISTIAN SCIENCE HEALS Station KWIN 1400 K.C. Sundays NUMBER -ONE-William Black, the first Southern Oregon college students to register under one of the National De fense Education Act loan plans, is pictured in the registra tion line in Britt center. Black (right) is a freshman student from Medford and is majoring in teacher education. A for mer veteran's administration , contact representative, he is also a free-lance writer and photographer. Assisting Black is Registration Clerk Lois Baccus. Dr. Alvin Fellers, direc tor of student affairs at SOC and dean of men, looks on. He will serve as coordinator for the loan program. had registered. . ' Though the official closing date for .registration is April 4, Mrs, Winston reported that a few late registrations would be permitted due to a number of reasons involving sickness and other unforeseen difficulties. 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