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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1962)
SUNDAY. JUNE 10. 1962 A 5 EDITOR'S NOTE The "Poet.' Corner" and the Communica tions column appear on Page 6 of today's Mail Tribune. Next week they will return to their ac cutomed spot on Page 5. AaIUKY Fum.SS South Riverside MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON Aquatic School For Youth Slated To Open Today The first youth aquatic school to be conducted under American Red Cross supervi sion will open lod-y at South ern Oregon college. It will continue throug'. June 16. Jackson County and Kla math Basin chapter.- of the Bed Cross are sponsors of the pilot program. Purpose is to train young people in basic boating, basic canoeing, life saving, water safety and first aid. National officials have informed the local chapters that they are the first in the Red Cross organization to at tempt such a school Mrs. Roy Wilkes, Medford, water safety chairman for the Jackson chapter, is school di rector. Registration Limited The training is for young people IS through 17 years of age. Registration is limited to 40 students an ". 22 from Jackson county and 18 from Klamath will attend the ses sion. Students will be housed in college dormitories and will use other campus facili ties. Part of the instruction will be at Twin Plunges in Ash land and another part at Rene L. Bounds lake. Both junior and senior life saving will be taught. Train ing will be offered for water safety aide (instructor's as sistant). Basic boating will in clude rowboats and motor boats. Standard or advanced first aid is on the curricula. Instructors will include Dr. Ruth Bebbcr, director of Southern Oregon college's women's physical education department; Robert Bennett, assistant professor of physi cal education at the college; Lawrence Jones, student at University of Puget Sound and Maiin pool staff member; Mrs. Lowell Jones, small craft chairman for Klamath county, and Granville Thom as, who has retired as a mem ber of the University of Cali fornia PE department. Taught at Schools Thomas has taught at sev eral Red Cross national aqua tic schools and Dr. Bebber has taught at one. She was water safety instructor trainer. Mrs. Wilkes, Jones and Mrs. Jones have attended ARC national aquatic schools. Thomas is founder of the water afety program and was director of small craft training in the San Francisco ARC chapter. Mrs. Wilkes is the wom en's progiam director at the Medford YMCA and will di rect Y camp this year. She has worked as waterfront di rector for Camp Fire Girls. Bennett is, a water safety and first a I d instructor. Jones has conducted Klamath county's swim program at Crescent lake for two years. Mrs. Jones holds water safe ty and canoe instructorships and has served for seven years as Girl Scout camp waterfront director. Successful completion of the courses in the junior train ing session will provide foundation for students to go on to instructor status after becoming 18 years of age. Chest X-Rays Topic Of Television Show "Why Have a Chest X-ray?" will be the topic for discus inn nn ' AHvnnture in Medi cine" at 3:30 o'clock this after noon over station KBES-TV. With the mobile chest x-ray unit in the county during June, the first time in 10 vearc thp Jackson Countv Tuberculosis and Health asso ciation is emohasizine the lm pnrtance of the chest x-ray as one of the two most effective methods of finding early pul monary tuberculosis. According to Chester Irish, association Dresident, other respiratory diseases such as emphysema, bronchiect a s 1 s, and pneumonias often show up in a chest x-ray. iumurs, ranrpr anH certain heart con ditioni also are often found by this means, he said. Thr Medford ohvsicians, Dr. Earl L. Lawson, radiolo gist rr .lames W. Quinn, tnrarip mroenn. and Dr. Thomas J. Tinsley, patholo e st will discuss the impor tance of the chest x-rays as t riiacmnttie aid. 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