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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1962)
o MEDFOHD BIAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHP. OHEGON TUESDAY. MAY 23. 1962 Senior Selected To Teach in Winslcnf e Miss Nadine Brood, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Brood, Dark Hollow rd., Med ford, is among 26 graduating Linfield college seniors who have signed public school leaching contracts for this fall, according to the Liniicld Education department. Miss Brood will teach girls' physical education at Doug las High school, Winston. AFS Students This Fall To Be From Denmark; Malaya This fall Denmark nd the Federation of Malaya will be represented at Medford High school under the American Field service program. Mrs. R. E. Mencke, local chapter president, recently an nounced that Jans Hasfeldt, Lyngby, Denmark, and Miss Nik Azizah Binti Haji Nik Yahya, Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaya will attend the local school as seniors. As in the past the students 86 PROOF ECHO SPRING OIST. CO. jJ years old mmm. LOUISVILLE. KY. BOURBON The success of the "Ages" M65 1 Fifth $495 Pint fffl NATIONAL TAVERN MAY 1962 IHt FRIENDLIEST PLACE III TOWN y SAY IT AGAIN, AGAIN AM AGAIN! y i will have American foster families durintheir 10 .lonth stay. Young Hasfeldt will be living with Mr. and Mrs. James P. Rowan, 828 Minne sota ave. Miss Nik Yahya will be the "daughter" of Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Ricchers, 2218 East Main st, James Rowan Jr., a sopho more this year at Medford High, and Peggy Riechers. a junior, will be the AFS brother and sister for the exchange students during the coming year. Background Noted In announcing the place ment, Mrs. Mencke explained some of the background con cerning the two students. More complete information will be available periodically from now until the two arrive in August or September. Jans will be 17 when he arrives in Medford. He plavs handball, football, and bad minton, and the clarinet, bass, cello, and coronet. He present ly attends Bagsward Boarding school, and hopes to become n engineer. Miss Nik Yahya, or Azizah as she will be known in tne United States, also is interest ed in sports. She is a girl guide and a member of the de bating society. As a result of her ability in Malayan folk dancing, she has performed for the King of Malaya. She will be 18 when she arrives in America, and is a student at Zainab Secondary school. June 15 will be the depar ture date for the two students presently in Medford under the auspices of AFS. Miss Sussi Bergholm. Orsa, Swe den, and Claudio Paterlini, Mantoba, Italy, will leave for a bus tour of the United States preceding their trip back to Europe. ft , i. aMBfta A 3 The Family Council Editor'! Not: The Famllv Council consists of a itidre, a psychla trlfl. three clerKvrnrn, three rdilors and a woman's editor. r:ach artlrla la a kiin.marv of an artual r.ie history. The Council report! on prob lems that have been deal tvtlh by rrponslbla agencies and counftlors. (Cups-right by General Feature! Corp.) HOLDS CHECK Betty Halzi holds the $125 award check which she received for her participation during the past several years in the public information program of the Med ford social security district office. She assisted district man ager Edward B. Jacobson in planning, preparing and ap pearing on the office television programs. Her contributions to the public information program were in addition to her recularly assigned duties which she performed .with a high degree of efficiency. A native of Klamath Falls, she moved to Medford in 1957, and joined the statf ot the Medtord social security office in 1959. MURDER TRIAL SET Portland - lliPU - The first degree murder trial of Rich ard B. Schwensen has been set for May 31 by Circuit Judge James Crawford. He is charged in the death of Mrs. Jean Rosaria Bussey, 29, last September. COSTLY PINT Swindon, England-(UPP-La-borer Malcolm Hambridge, 22, was sentenced Monday to six months in jail for dousing De tective W. Dodge with a pint of beer. He also was ordered to pay the constable's cleaning bill. LOWER INTEREST RATES Mrs. D. L. - She's too con scious of her height. Carol L. - I have six feet of it to be conscious of. Mrs. D. L. - I have a beau tiful daughter, 23 years old, who's bright and smart ex cept when it comes to one thing men. Whenever we ask her to meet someone nice we've heard of, she only asks one question about him. "How tall is he?" Nothing about his brains, looks, character, dis position or income. Not even his weight. Just his height is all that interests her. As a result, she sits around home. envying her friends who are shorter or who don t care about such superficial things. It's true she's taller than average. But why must she insist that her escorts be even taller than she? That narrows the field for her around here. Her attitude seems all wrong. She should either see a psy chiatrist, I think, or move to Texas. They're all tall there I here. Carol L. - What's really got Mother down is that I re fused to go out with the son of her best friends. He's in town for a luggage dealers' convention, and the two mothers have been plotting for us to meet for years. He lives down South. Well, he called here and he's a nice enough chap. But I can't walk out with him. It's not that he's short. He's average height. It's me. I'm so tall I have to bend down to talk to him. I feel like a mother telling him he's a good boy. I just don't gel that "protected" feeling a girls wants. And even though Ray was polite enough to ask me out, I know he wouldn't relish getting a stiff neck from looking up at me. And to whisper, he'd have to stand on tiptoe. Mother needn't worry. I'm sure there's a big guy I can be comfortable with, who'll also have the virtues she mentioned. to do lots of bending. Thus the frame becomes unimpor tant. It's what's inside the frame which Carol, as well as her suitors, must check up on. This is not to say that we do not sympathize with Carol. Her problem is an outgrowth of today s emphasis upon stereotypes, including the hackneyed tall-boy tiny-girl perfect couple prototype. But she needs the clear vision and common sense to note the mil lions of exceptions who, re gardless of footage, pair up devotedly for life. Face to face, they see eye to eye. U CD Gross charge per year with lA down, 24-months loan Before you buy a new car, compare loan costs! With an Oregon Bank Auto Loan you pay a lower rate of interest -and deal with your car dealer on a cash basis. At The Oregon Bank, your loan is arranged quickly with no hidden costs, no red tape, no needless delay, no pre payment penalty, and no "balloon" payment at the end. And you choose your own insurance agent! Lome in today ana save: PHONE 773-7315 OR 773-5339 FOR THE COSTS ON YOUR DEAL -Onniversajiy EXAMPLE: You choose a new car priced at $3,000. Your trade-in is worth $1,000. You borrow $?,000 for 24 months. Your direct bank loan payments are $90.88 per month. EAST MEDFORD BRANCH 701 Call Jickion St. ROGUE VALLEY BRANCH 1109 Court Slrttt MEDFORD Other branchai in Millon-Fraawatar, Pcndltton, Portland and Tha Dlllat. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System The Council - We've heard alas, of "dying by inches." but here's Carol who lives by inches and lets them keep her miles away from the im portant things In life. These, including a varied and stimu lating social life, seem to be passing her by. And all be cause she has never come to terms with, never accepted, her physical "differentness. Instead, she lets it block her. Since self-acceptance is the first law of good mental health, Carol may require psychological counseling to achieve this. But if she's as bright as her mother claims, maybe she can revise her cockeyed scale of values by herself. What she needs is some of the philosophy of Popeye (fancy our quoting him to a smart girl) who states: "I am what I am 'cause dat's what I am" and then goes on to other matters. Once Carol is at peace about herself, she'll realize that go ing out with men is a per son to person proposition, not a public service. How things "look" should not gov ern her decisions. It's how things are that counts. Thus, while making small conces sions to the aesthetics of ap pearance (wearing flats, per haps, and skipping the bee hive coiffure), she'll concen trate upon the fun. interest and camaraderie which can accrue from a date, rather than upon what sort of fig ure the pair will cut along Main st. After all, in the long hard stretches of a mar riage, it doesn't matter who's taller, because both will have Ashland Cancer Donations Reach New High, $1,947 Ashland "The Ashland area's American Cancer So ciety's 1062 Crusade has reached an all-time high and we hope to go even higher," said Mrs. Phil Selby, co-chairman for the Ashland General crusade. As of May 17, the Ashland residents have contributed $1 947.47. The Spring Fever card party netted $224.50. Ash land's share of the national Bowl Down Cancer week brought in $134.75.- The residential crusade reached more people than ever before with its life-saving literature this year. In Area A, Mrs. Raoul Maddox, chairman, $81.01 was collect ed. Area B, under the co chairmanship of Mrs. Robert Flynn and Mrs. James Sin clair, turned in $460. Area C received $478.84 under the guidance of Mrs. Howard Pierce. 1 In commenting on the funds I raised, Mr. Howard Pierce, I general Crusade chairman, 1 said, "Sixty cents on each dol-1 lar given us will stay in Ore- gon. This money is used tor local and regional cancer con trol programs of research, education, and service to the cancer patient. The 40 per cent going to the national crusade is used primarily for research. Research is neces sary to find the causes, cures, and ways to prevent cancer." Mrs. Selby said that she and Mr. Pierce were highly pleas ed with the work done by the ISO volunteers. She also urged that people who were unable to contribute on "C Day" use their mail-in en velopes. "Every nickel, every dime brings us that much closer to finding a cure for cancer. In the meantime, we need money to continue our service program and finance our edu cational program which will help prevent the thousands of needless, wasteful cancer deaths now occurring. amamWallnilliMa)aJ i r ill ..run artHwwr ,a n TJCTTOBHkl GRADUATED Technical Sgt. George A. Mack, son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Mack, 475 Liberty st., Ashland, has been graduat ed from the Strategic Air Command Senior Noncommis sioned Officers academy at March Air Force base, Calif. He is an aircraft gunner as signed to Beale Air Force base, Calif. JOINS ARMY Douglas A. Duln, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Duln, 427 South Central ave., entered the U.S. Army this month and is undergoing training at Ft. Ord, Calif. Easiest way to remove old wax! Now wax remover really jrg g works without rubbina! V New Bruce 5-Minute Wax Remover does the work for you. 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Even filters the air and removes stale air and odors. Choese models from 11,000 to 16,500 BTU capacity. Installs easily without special tools. Come see them! Trnk. Choose Yours from $219.95 JOHNSTON STORES as new. It really works! 112 SOUTH RIVERSIDE 0 O o o