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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1962)
FRIDAY, JULY 6. 1962 in a MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON Fho Medico Roundup by Medirtn Medians hmcrihik Consultant in Mayo clinic merllu I'r(ite!bnr of Mayo clinic (It renter aod Trihum Syndicate, 1.. ' f ) FIVE MILLIONTH CONSUMER Atfncul- hind the secretary 15 si liuue )li(l(Ki;ili 'if ture Sccrctnry Orville Freeman makes a the rancher and Ins wife. Mr. and Mrs. John telephone call from his Washington omce McGunin of latum, N.M., using a kero- to a New Mexico cattle rancher who be- sene lamp which is now replaced by rlcc- comes the five millionth consumer to re- tricily. (UPI) ceive electricty through REA loans. Be- Nitrogen Harming Health of Babies Pasco - IUPII - A high con centration of nitrogen in irri gation blocks of the Colum bia Basin project in Franklin county is a threat to the health of area babies, accord ing to the district health of ficer. Dr. Vernon Michael, Frank lin county health officer, said the problem is caiscd by nitrogen fertilizer and has been increasing in some parts of the county. Only one child has been affected by the p.oblem, he said. The infant, who lives on a farm near Eltopia, re covered from the illness, which Michael said resem bles carbon monoxide poison ing. He said the maximum num ber of nitrates in well water which is safe for bt.bies un der six months of ag- is con sidered to be 10. Al the Bureau of Recla mation office at Eltopia, the number of nitrates per mil lion during tests have jumped from 31 in October of 1058 to 55 in April of 10H0. GIMINI kIM8 1924-31 STAR GAZEIC Wfi 22 ?-M-3-4fl 78-8489 uuius Oi 2- 8 21 -2d CANCER 4 JULY U OM6 y- no JULY 2A AUG. 23 K)59-63-64-65 VtROO AUG 7 SWT. 23 3-28-54-74 -V75-76 83-88 -iiy CLAY R POI-LAN four Daily Acttvity Guido Accardma to the Start. V To develop message for Saturday, read weds corresponding (o numbers ot your Zodiac birth sign. 2M(jl.it .1? f'k...rj 3 Owl :i? Into A 1'htTU 'M A.rwctK S AiUadivt US I'n D) .-is Worn 7 Oi'porrufnty 3? A'-Jiviti'-i 8 Ne- 33 You .i9 Lpicti 40 Aioinit 41 Y "i 4? A-vf T-v Al A 9 Avo tl 10 Mov 7 Thougoit-jl 1J An 1 5 Pot 160J ) Lov I B Accent 19 K 20 ToHov 21 F 'J2 lnw 23 Is 24 Upon 2b bs 26 No- 27 T..1 ,..g 2R Doy 29 I L.f 50 Money 4ft A 40 0' SI Lwin ,ri? A.vl 53 Ari 54 T,.r c,r. Pk -iJO'-ir. .-if ."5 SrrrnH 7 Hitnijf Adverse (' 1- 32-33M7-56 :S 6C 62 1i 6-1 1-17-70 H SASITTARIUS U-16 17 23 -' 27-66 63 CAPBICOPTI 41 48 51 551 I -70 72 '.J AQUARIUS I? r-V- 4-14 ?r 3(V. .15 57-62 V- PISCH Capitol Memo Flight Engineers To Appeal Order New York-tUni-The fliKht engineers union says it will anpcal a federal judge's sec ond extension of a no-strike order which would prevent a walkout against Pan Ameri can World airways at least until Auk. 1. Federal Judge George Ros ling Thursday extended his temporary restraining order against the Flight Engineers International Association which initially had halted a brief engineers' strike against Pan American on June "23. The Judge said he wanled more time to bring out the facts and study the law In the case. doencer not i o Be Available for Shit Demo Post in Wm If.. -ri" I llmiclAi tnlnp By DOUGLAS GHIPP Salem -llll'll- E. D. "F.d" Spencer. Salem, has served notice that he is not a candi date for another term as Slaie Democratic chairman in lili)4. He was elected here this wee!; to a two-year term as chair man, and told the D e in o enitic state central cum in i 1 1 r c the same tiling. He said he is giving plenty of notice so i there won't be any misunder-1 standing later. ! f iff 19 z liicluird Ihirlon Liz Taylor Dues 1 1 Know' Spcncrr's philosophy is th;ii n stiitr chiiirman's effect ivo ne.ss is "used up aJ u r severjil yonrs." "After tluit," he s;tys. ' Ytiu ' need new people with ivv ' ictens." He adds th;it nftei ;i few years at the helm, most e!i; ;r men are iusl plain worn on! Speneer, ;t!t. took on ;he non-pay mj, brickbat dodm job nine months ao, moving up from ehairm.in of the Mar ion County Deinoeratie Cen tra) committee. While he loved taking Hie state party reins, and still loves it, he quteklv had to ad just In a seven day a week Knnd. Me m a n a n e s a 1r:iflnv4 stamp firm here, ami all of his free time, meaium,' eveiy evening and week e.,d, is de voted to party problems and activities. Me admits he can'l com plain much, and he dee .n I , Some Curious Signs Of Heredity ! tor many years now, it has been popular to say that her edity has hardly any e f f c c t r 'l and environ- il merit is every- 1 1 J tiling. Years ayo. a man b o came world - fa mous by claiming that he could take ?a- . 1 ;mv ehild. and ! 5' . , it hv train i n m tm. r- Alvartt W C 1 I, could make perhaps a great 1 scientist out of him. Thou ' sands of able persons who have struffIed lor Jo years trving to make .something of a mentally defective child they early adopted could have told this professor how very wrong he was. i In a recent number of that i excellent little journal. Sci i nice News Letter, I found the reports of two interesting studies which should go far to change the opinions of those, persons w h o believe that only environment is im portant, and who turn a deaf ear to the hundred.-, of thou sands of intelligent mothers who keep saying, "My diffi cult (or mentally disturbed, or mentally retarded) child was peculiar from the day he was born. He was not quiet and good-natured and happy like my oilier babies; he was restless, bad-tempered, and unhappy. He cried different ly; he went into tantrums; and held his breath, and he tried to run the place to suit himself." On the campus of Antioch college, in Yello-v Springs, Ohio, there is the remarkable Fels Research Institute in which several able men keep studying the environment of children and men and women from birth until they are 'M) or so. Dr. Lester W. Sontag, the director, just reported that one can deteet the in fluence of heredity even be fore a child is born. The type nf heartbeat of the unborn child sometimes will warn the investigators that the child will later have problems. Also, a definite relation has been found between the ac tivity o the unborn baby in I the month or two before his i or her bu t h and ''the social i apprehension of the child ' when he reaches nursery j school aye." i Aggressive Pre-Schoolers Curiously, the less active babies tend to become the ! most aggressive pre-schoolers. An irregularity in l lie heart ; rate of the fetus tends to con tinue after birth and until ! the child is in his or her teens. The young adults who , have grow n up with an irreg ular hear beat tend to show is doing it b iih! ib h e e a u s I'houv. Snntr pnh!uv HI ne t!ii- ch.urnKirs1 stepping si. me 1,. elective litical ether Hut s p says this is mil Iiuh, "I love Ivu km'oiincI ami c;ini;itnni work." hi don't intend to seek live public otfiee " K f Jk T ' ! A ' V t A His friends know brulally frank nnd family regards him t i . ... Danu and ilcvoled lather. The public i of him as a Casanova. Which is the Richard Burton ? hi ni as tempestuous, extremely talented. His as an all'ection.iie lius- links he. i p,.I willun e M ,v real Be Sure to Read the .Inly Nth Issue A Colorful Part of jour Mcdford Mail Tribune Speaking et ni ;;.ini: Speneer says that if the ! legislature won't I'. ik a j 1 !'t: I law requiring s'ate I tieal eon entions alter j liiarv eleetions. then hi ; at It asl the t line limit I relaxed I The law now leiiuiri major parties to h o I primary eonvenl ions la to ell days alter t! election Speiuer faors tendiuy tins to lia or ?n d.i He polllls out lhal ',, I'entral I'ommittee- ,:on l reoi ijani.'rii somel'nu s l.i days alter the prima nnd this makes planium; a stale convention loo sn and loo lieetie I CLOSE S H A V K ' I'arltadt. N .1 ;v Frank Slrutii-x. II. h.i.l close s!ae 'r'Hirsda lid i i-c he took a late s iou , r al'. t f!!l!-h!ec. v ork ai a w al e;5o:i c here 1'mdlllk; 'he w iiv'i.mi-i Ioi k. for the l::0. he u -- lilt.l Kill lhimi-:li a k I: ;!:l alht accliicnlal' ti ippi O i Im 1 1 i; alarm. It look him mole lliall all la1.!!" to on X'lllce polli enlen w ho ' . , Cd lllm tii.it lie w as ' i 1. i" " I more conflict over dependen ley, more compulsive behavior, : more anxiety and indecision, and a greater tendency to in trospection. ! If a certain woman were alive today, she would lovs 1 to read of this work because 1 she a keen observer always maintained that when j four of her children were put : in her arms, right after birth, j she was happy all day because I she read in their faces that they were going to be happy i and she was right. But j when one of her sons, now deceased, was put in her arms, she cried much of the day i because she sensed that he j would have a life-long ten dency to unhappincss . . . and j .she was right. He was 30 be- j fore he found his niche in life ! and became successful, and ' those first 30 years were un- happy for him, in spite of ev i ery effort that she and her I husband made to help him. The other article in Science News Letter is about strange babies who, on the first day of life cither are particularly inactive and apathetic or par ticularly irritable. It has been found by the research work ers, Dr. Barbara Fish and Murray Alport of New York City, that the peculiar infants often are born to mothers suffering from schizophrenia (the commonest form of men tal trouble.) The infants gradually re covered from their peculiar abnormalities of ina c t i v i t y and development until, by the age of two years, only the most irritable ones remained peculiar in their behavior. The experts who studied them felt that they were headed for schizophrenia in later years. Tho Anti-Coronary Club Whenever, in this country, a number of people suffer from some particular difficul ty, or have an interest in com mon, they form a club. I read now that, for the last two years, in Montclair, New Jer sey, there has been a club the members of which all have had a coronary heart attack. They gather at mealtime to j eat food which contains very I little cholesterol and little I fat of animal origin. The food lis supplied by the National Heart Institute. The plan now is to carry ' on with this club for several ' more years until, perhaps evi ! dence is secured to show i whether or not the life ex i peclaney ot men with arterial heart disease can be increas ed, first, by reducing the amount of fat in the diet, and second, by changing the type of fat which is consumed. Riots on Chinese ! Mainland Reported Hong KongJUPIi-The Hong Kong Tiger Standard report ed today that some villagers in Kwantgung Province, on the China mainland coast, rioted against the Communists last week after hearing ru mors of a Nationalist inva sion. The paper quoted an uni dentified Hong Kong business man who arrived here Thurs day as the source of the report. "Heart Trouble". To obtain it, send 25 cents and a stamp ed, self-addressed envelope with your request to Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, Dept. MMT. The Register and Trib une Syndicate, Box 957, Des Moines 4. Iowa. Raul Castro Lauds Soviet Assistance Moscow - fUPl) Cuban De fense Minister Raul Castro told a Moscow television au dience Thursday night that the American economic block ade of Cuba has "affected" Cuban life. But Castro, brother of Pre mier Fidel Castro, said things were "not as hard as they might have been, were it not for the disinterested aid of the Soviet people." "We it not for the assist ance of the Soviet Union," he said "imperialists would have made us shed an ocean of blood, because we have hoisted the banner of free dom." Castro, who is visiting here, praised the Communist revo lution in Rusfia and said the He said Cuba is ready to "socialist camp is stronger bring other Latin American than the camp of capitalism." ' countries out of their trance. 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