Communications
Letter, to the Editor muit bear tht name ind addreu oi lhe wilier, although undtr
certain circumitances tho use of a pan na.ua or initial (or publication if permissible
Tha Mail Tribuna reierva. tha right to adit all laitart with a iew to clarification and
condensation. Lalleri aubmiitad tor publication mutt not axcaad 400 wordi. Tha letters
printad in thit column do not nocetaarily rapraiant tha viawt of tha papar; in iact tha
contrary it oitan tha caia.
Against Stadium
To the Editor: I have writ
ten the following letter to the
Jackson County Court:
Gentlemen: Well here is
where I make a lot of sports
minded folks mad at me.
I do not favor the building
of the proposed stadium with
county funds. I think there
are several items much more
necessary to the people of
Jackson county than the pro
posed stadium.
One of the more important
Items needed in this county
and well within the finan
cial ability of our county is
the formation of camps for
boys such as those in Lane
county but paid for by the
county of Jackson. There is
no need whatsoever for state
Poets' Corner
Canductet by
Arnold Eugene Jenny
Proi. Vena, Poetry
It is in the use ot the emotional element that poetry
differs chiefly from prose, for although emotion is present
In prose, it is there properly subordinated to reason, while
in poetry it is one of the dominant elements. And in this
respect also poetry differs from mere verse, for when a piece
of writing depicts an emotion which gives the sense of being
false, when it is mawkish or overdone, when it docs not
carry the reader with it, it cannot lay claim to real merit.
-Gerald Sanders
-O-
Froms An Essay on Man
Heav'n from all creatures hides the book of Fate;
All but the page described, their present state:
From brutes what men, from men what spirits know;
Or who could suffer being here below?
The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to-day,
Had he thy reason, would he skip and play?
Pleased to the last, he crops the flow'ry food,
And licks the hand just raised to shed his blood.
Oh, blindness to the future! kindly giv'n.
That each may fill the circle marked by Heav'n,
Who sees with equal eye, as God of all,
A hero perish or a sparrow fall,
Atoms or systems into ruin hurled,
And now a bubble burst and now a world.
-Alexander Pope (1773)
(Suggested by Mrs. Alice Applegate Peil, The Manor, Medford)
-O-
Creations Of My Soul
I am happy
Within.
Joy spreads warmly through my being.
If I were an artist
I would paint my masterpiece with blazing hues of color.
If I were an angel
I would sing gloriously from my soul-silver notes
that shimmer in the air.
' If I were a sculptor
I would mold a living symbol of my heart.
If I were God
I would create a splendor of rainbows in the heavens.
But I am only I. ,
I am.
So I will listen to the melodies my heart sings silently.
I will watch with quiet eyes the beauty of joy.
I will feel the sculpture of my life, being
molded by these moments.
And the rainbows will always frame the clouds
of my dreams.
-Nancy Duncan
(Senior, Medford Senior High School, '62)
It's not the lover who is bound by love.
But his beloved.
It's not the love we give that forges chains,
But love received.
Wrapped 'round with promises and tied with dreams
The pretty gift is filled with hidden snares.
No prisons yet are made that hold more sure
Than prisons which the heart of love prepares.
Oh, my beloved, when the day shall come
That love has cooled and passion's gone away,
Love's prison doors will open wide and I
Will strike your chains and will not bid you stay.
For love alone is love if it can see
It has no right to hold what would be free.
-Louise Livingston
Medford
Us Make Room for New Fall .
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A Few Prints At 50, 65 and 85c per yd.
Remnants 35c Per Yard
Drapery Samples, 50c
Your Choice
VALLEY SHADE CO.
2034 Barnett Rd.
Medford, Oregon
funds. This is a matter which
I feel should not be a partisan
issue.
The proposed stadium will
only benefit those who play
ball games and will not help
in any way those who are not
sports-minded.
If the coumy u going to
provide recreation then it
should be for all and that is
rather impracticable. Now,
for example, I think it more
fun to make something, any
thing, than to watch a ball
game. I'd rather run my lathe
or a shaper, planer, boring
mill, radial drill, or other ma
chine shop equipment, than
fish, play ball or water ski,
etc., any day.
Right now I am in the pro
cess of building a light duty
iO o
combination pole-dolly semi
trailer to be used with a V4
ton pickup. When I get
through I'll not only have
had the pleasure of building
something I'll have some
thing useful to show for the
time spent.
If the county has some ex
tra money to spend they can
equip a small machine shop
woodworking shop in the
Butte Falls area for us shop
fans. Of course the sports
crowd wouldn't like that.
But after all it would be just
as fair as the providing of
recreation facilities at the
various lakes and ball parks.
Floyd R. McCabe
Mt. Pitt Star rt.
Butte Falls, Ore.
Net Iniquity
To the Editor: Seldom do
I react to a letter to the Edi
tor as I did in reading one in
your paper of Monday, Aug.
13. A Mr. Bulman "foams In
shame" at the rather open ex
pression of nudity which our
culture has at last permitted.
and his bases of objection are
some rather far fetched verses
which he lifted from the Bi
ble and used completely out
of context. If he enjoys cov
ering all of his body because
of a shame complex that is
his privilege, but those of us
who enjoy "the wind and sun
upon the body" would cer
tainly not want to emulate
his ways.
Apparently he does not
think the head as being gross
ly obscene, since he would al
low "hats off" in honor of
people covering themselves
like they did in Victorian
days.
He does not realize that
the reason for the existence of
"burlesque dives" is the fact
that society has forbidden the
natural and wholesome view,
ing of the human body by the
artificial emphasis of fashion,
and the ancient Manlchean
theology that permeated much
of Christendom, I.e.: the body
is evil and only the spirit is
good. Such a philosophy has
been the basis of the struc
ture Of our society today, and
the result of such a philosophy
is a perversion of the very na
ture of man and a fostering
of the evils which Mr. Bulman
decries.
I want my four children
brought up with a wholesome
acceptance of the human
body, with a sense of grati
tude to the Creator of Life for
the power of their sexual na
ture, and with the ability to
assess the duplicity of a so
ciety which forbids nudity
yets allows the double stand
ard to operate. Thus, each
summer when my teaching
duties are over we pack off
to a nudist camp so that the
children can learn the real
values of life and so my wife
and I can relax in an atmos
phere of purity and decency.
We would welcome Mr.
Bulman, but I fear that his
concept that such camps are
"cesspools of iniquity" would
preclude his visiting, though
certainly the several dozen
non-nudist guests we had at
White Oak Lodge for a play
recently would attest that nu
dity is not iniquity and the
only cesspools we have are
the ones at the end of the
sanitation lines!
There is little we can do
with the cesspools of people's
minds who want to think evil.
Herb Seal
Staff Psychologist
Christian Counseling
Service
P. O. Box 1
Felton, Calif.
Shelters
To the Editor: It surely Is
most disturbing to see Wash
ington, D.C, officials going
along with private individuals
and interests to revive the
bomb fall-out shelter thing
after Its defeat in the House
of Representatives, whose
members are from or deter
minedly representing rural
districts that have been rec
ognized as the balance-wheel,
keeping the shlp-of-state on
even keel and course.
When it first emerged nigh
two years ago, it caught many
of us unsure and obviously
bewildered. Especially when
defense officialdom announc
ed over the radio that Russia
had fall-out shelters for man,
woman and child. This would
indicate the bear that walks
like a man was about to strike
an all-crushing blow, some
thing beyond retaliatory pow
er to cope with. My very first
public comment was to keep
our shirts en and not rush
Into disaster like bear-scared
sheep.
The most reassuring word
was when the Christian Sci
ence Monitor sent an observer
hurrying to Russia. He re
ported back that In an entire
trip from Leningrad to Mos
cow, and some side-trips, not
one fall-out shelter building
could be seen. Later on, this
was confirmed by Mrs. Khru
shchev to a peace corps dele
gation, that no fallout shelters
were being built there as they
were considered impractical.
However, local defense offi
cials Initiated a public meet
ing in the courthouse ts sr-
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
range itorage for freight
truck loads of emergency food
containers. My objection to it
as being impractical and de
void of merit was shouted
down and a demand for a
return objection was denied
me. Also a grey-haired lady.
When the meeting was ad
journed, not one person
stopped to commend me or
the grey-haired lady.
Some three months ago, an
eminent biologist pointed out
how impossible fall-out shel
ters would be, that the insect
tribes would get less nuclear
radiation than any other crea
ture. Mankind would get ten
times as much. And our best
protector against the insect
horde, our birds all, would
get ten times more than we
and would be first to disap
pear from the face of this
earth. Without them, he warn
ed, human life would be im
possible here. Such a pity it
is that so many people will
go for such an impossible
thing, when a little hard rea
soning would prove its utter
worthlessness.
F. J. Clifford.
Route 2, Box 200F,
Central Point, Ore.
Hetpital Hopes
To the Editor: With both of
Oregon's United States sena
tors backing the proposal, it
is quite possible that a hos
pital for veterans will be es
tablished by next summer.
David Frisch,
P.O. Box 292,
White City, Ore.
-O-
Dear Mr. Frisch: Thank
vou verv much for vour re
cent letter and the copy of
the letter you received from
the Veterans Administration,
which states it would not he
possible to obtain the medical
specialists required.
I believe because of the
growth and develoDment of
Josephine and Jackson coun
ties, as well as elsewhere in
southern Oregon and north
ern California, spec 1 a 1 1 s t s
would be available for Vet
erans Administration hospi
tals. I understand that the last
survey made on this subject
was done by the Veterans Ad
ministration some ten years
ago and does not reflect the
current situation. A survey
would need to be made by
the Oregon State Medical as
sociation and for the Jackson
and Josephine county associa
tions. I am certain it Is only a
matter of time until a VA
hospital is established for
southern Oregon and northern
California. I am afraid noth
ing is going to happen Imme
diately, but we must remain
active so we will - h ahu
to take advantae of th
tlon when the appropriate
time arrives.
With best wishes, I am
' Sincerely,
Maurine B. Neuberger,
United States Senator,
Washington, D.C.
Spaceman
To the Editor: It took me
262,809 ho'ars !u make my
first million r-il,-- . nrf i
er got to the moon once. It
toox the Russians Just 48
hours to make a miltinn mil
but, of course, I didn't spend
an my time flying around in
space. I just spent half my
time in space. When I want
ed to fly Into space, I just
cranked up an early model
car and drove it down a cor
rugated road with solid rub
ber tires on wooden wheels.
I wuz on the cushions half
the time and in the air the
rest.
I never drove around in
space much at night. I always
had to check the gasoline
with a yard stick, turn on the
gas for the headlights from
the running board, run back
and light the barn lantern
hanging on the rear spring,
pin up the side curtains and
then run like hell before I
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necessary to patient care except medications, physical therapy,
X-Rty and medical laboratory charges.
This information is offered in response to inquiries most often
made. For more complete details call 773-7711, or write toi
HAWTHORNE CONVALESCENT
AND
REHABILITATION CENTER
625 STEVENS STREET
Mtdford, Oregon
run out of something. It wuz
usually daylight by the time
I got ready to go any place
at night.
Everett Acklin,
Ashland, Ore.
O
P.S.: The reason I didn't
get to the moon wuz because
I didn't have 20 billion dol
lars to get started.
Lest Csntinants
To the Editor: That there
were once two continents,
now submerged In the Atlan
tic and Pacific oceans, is not
only a theory and legend, but
evidence to support the tacts
is self evident.
History speaks of the earth
eons ago before any rain fell
upon the planet, as a mist
from the canopy above fell
upon the ground and watered
the whole earthl
One of the many obscure
land or rock marks is in
Lake County, Oregon, near
Lake Abert; Abert rim, the
huge basalt rock fault, larg
est of Its kind in north Amer
ica. The ancient symbols
painted on the sheer walls
by some early human race
now extinct. So far as we
have learned the ancient pic
ture writing on stone has
never been deciphered by the
present day aborigines. Some
authorities we read give credit
to the Lemurians.
Bert Kissinger,
322 South Riverside ave.,
Medford
A Jeb Te Be Dene
To the Edtior: A man wsj
convicted of a brutal slaying
of a child in February, 1981,
and was sentenced to die, This
man was tried and found guil
ty by a jury of 12 persons who
had reviewed this man's life
since he was a child, which
as I understand was mostly
a life of crime. After a lengthy
deliberation, and very care
ful consideration of the case,
McGahuey was found guilty
by unanimous decision.
I personally feel that Gov.
Hatfield made the right deci
sion, in that he did not com
mute the death sentence of
LeeRoy Sanford McGahuey.
I doi. t believe I am a sadist
because I believe an eye for
for an eye. I think that most
people feel the same way.
Maybe for a few the murder
of a baby would have to be
closer to home, before they
would face reality.
We forget too quickly the
brutal slaying of Mrs. Hile,
by James Norman Jensen,
who was found guilty and sen
tenced to die. His sentence
was commuted by Gov,
Holmes. He was then placed
in the insane asylum in S'
lem. After serving a short
time he and another inmate
escaped with help from
guard. Luckily they were re
captured in a farm home and
again by a stroke of luck, the
family was gone. Could have
been another gruesome story
over again.
I say nobody can prove a
murderer is rehabilitated, if
so, what made him do it In
the first place? Will he have
another compulsive fit of pas
sion, as the reporter put it?
Or is he a psychotic, who in
the instant they take anoth
er's life couldn't care less
what will happen to them
afterwards? After all, a man
condemned to life in prison Is
eligible for parole in seven
years.
I'm sure nobody wants the
job of putting this murderer
in the chamber, but It Is a Job
that has to be done by some
one. Before we start taking sides,
let's stop and think what if it
were your child? I would sug
gest that if our dewey-eyed
reporter feels he can't face
up to his Job, he should get t
replacement.
An Interested Citizen,
(Name on file)
Medford
On the Air
By ELEANOR WIESE
There's a new sound of mu
sic In the Rogue Valley - S
hours daily of serious music -to
round out a variety of ra
dio schedules which include
everything from western and
rock n roll to religious and
standard favorites.
From 1 to 8 p.m. Monday
through Saturday on KBOY
FM Bill DeMarco will play a
blending of concertos, sona
tas, operas, symphonies, bal
let and chamber music, and
even a little early sun wor
ship music, accompanied by
his own comments on the ar
tists and composers.
Mr. DeMarco, who for ten
years managed San Francis
co's classical music station
KSMO and has taught music
appreciation at Notre Dame
college, Belmont, Calif., and
at the University of Califor
nia at Berkeley, plans his
commentary to be as interest
ing and human as possible to
add to the enjoyment and un
derstanding of the listener.
Scheduled as major works
this week will be Puccini's
opera Tosca on Tuesday
with Zinca Mtlanov, Leonard
Warren and Jussi BJoerllng:
on Thursday Oscar Straus's
Chocolate Soldier" with Rise
Stevens and Robert Merrill;
and on Saturday Rossini's
Barber of Seville" with Ro
berta Peters and Robert Mer
rill. Local radio stations have
shied away from program
ming too much classical mu
sic because they felt the larg
er audience was served by
playing lighter compositions,
so lovers of fine music should
be in a musical heaven every
afternoon now.
CONCERT HALL, 2 p.m.
Sunday K-SHA radio. Featured
selections will be Gottschalk's
Cakewalk Ballet" and Mor
ton Gould's "Fall River Leg
end." WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS, 4 p.m. Sunday
KMED-TV. The Gold Cup Hy
droplane race at Seattle, and
the Open Jumper Stake at
the Ox Ridge Hunt Club
Horse show at Darian, Conn.,
will be shown.
TWENTIETH CENTURY, 5
p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. "Cris
is at Munich," a report on
how Britain and France Infur
iated Hitler In 1938 when
they agreed to his demands on
Czechoslovakia. (Repeat).
THIS IS NBC NEWS, 5:30
p.m. Sunday KMED-TV. The
work of the Peace Corps In
Southern Chile, badly damag
ed by earthquake in 1980, will
be pictured.
ED SULLIVAN SHOW, 7
p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. A var
iety of new talent - singers,
dancers, comedians, a pianist
and a magician are presented
in this show seen for first
time.
STARLIGHT CONCERT, 8
p.m. Sunday KBOY-FM. High
lights Include: Mendelssohn's
Symphony No. 3 in A Min
or, the Scotch Symphony";
William Schumans Sym
phony No. 3"; and Vladimir
Horowitz playing Liszt's "Sec
ond Hungarian Rhapsody."
WHO IN THE WORLD, 8:30
p.m. Sunday KBES-TV. Maria
Trapp, of the famed family of
singers, will tell about her
plans for a new mission to be
established in New Guinea.
DU PONT SHOW, 0 p.m.,
Sunday KMED-TV. "The For
gery," the trial of the Dutch
painter who forged for profit
a series of paintings "by" Jan
Vermeer. (Repeat).
HOLLYWOOD SPECIAL,
10:15 p.m. Sunday KBES-TV.
"The Wonderful Country,"
Robert Mltchum and Julie
London star in a drama about
delivery of contraband arms
on the Texas border.
THRESHOLD FOR TO
MORROW, 1 p.m. Monday
KMED-TV. A reoeat of the re.
port of the research under way
in five major fields - the sea,
the atom, miniaturization,
una and computer technol
ogy.
MONEY TALKS. p. an n m
Monday KBES-TV. Each eve
ning this week Prof, John F.
Coleman of Carnegie Initltut-
of Technology will examine
the problems of U.S. econom
ics and their effect on the
average citizen.
KRAFT MYSTERY THEA-
TRE, 8 p.m. Wednesday
KMCU-TV. Desl Arnaz and
Akim Tamiroff star in "Thun.
der In the Night," a drama
filmed In Italy about the for
eign market in counterfeit
American passports.
U.S. STEEL HOUR, B p.m.
Wednesday KBES-TV. "Mur
der in the Night," a story of
three Korean war comrades
who plot to kill a former aol-
dier who betrayed their
friend to the enemy.
DAVID BRINKLEY'S
JOURNAL, 8:30 p.m. Wednes-
oay ivMEu-i v. Retraining uit
employed West Virginia mln
crs and elaborate modern m
tela are Brlnkley's subjects.
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SUNDAY. AUGUST
THE LIVELY ONES, 8:30
p.m. Thursday KMED-TV. Vic
Damone's guests are classical
guitarist Laurendo Almeida,
jazz lute player Jack Marshall,
singer Ruth Olay and imitator
Frank Gorshin.
SUMMER SPECIAL, 8:30
p.m. Friday KMED-TV. "The
NOW AVAILABLE
to Oregon residents only
COMMONWEALTH SECURED
Q BONDS
For people who wiah to up grade invest
ment earninga Commonwealth Secured
S Bonds are the answer. Now avail
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Mail Coupon or
Phone Medford 773-2788
For Complete Information
i I"to (OMMON
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Tenth and Central
OKU
19. 1962
Lonely Woman," a dramatic?
documentary about loneliness'
and varying ability of individ
uals to cope with it. '
About three million persons
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each year, according to cur
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WEALTH l
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1J2.50 SPRINGFIELD J H.P. Tiller 9t.f
119.95 EARTHIIRD SYi H.P. Tiller ...144.H
40.00 SUNIIAM llecrric M.w.r 49.88
17.95 RIO 21" R.nry Mawer 9.!
5.00 50 ft. SUPPLIX H" H.i. J.44
J4.95 TRAVIL-AIRI C.nWItl.n.r 27.11
14.95 SCOTT Lawn Senatar 11.95
21.95 Hint Lawn M.w.r l.ll laarini 17.11
10.00 SILIX lltri Lawn Trimmtr .... 24.88
1.50 Lawn 4 Jhrok Pretatar fence .. .18
l.f 5 50' S Take SUPPLIX Sprinkler 4.ff
S.0S Seeare Law 4 Carta Sprlokl.r 2.07
t.fl C.l-D.k H.i. R..I. 4.98
7.f 5 GREEN SPOT Oiclllatlne
WAVE SPRINKLERS S 18
1.95 SHERMAN Wave Sarlnkl.r. 1.18
12.91 SUNIIAM RAIN Kief Wave
Serlnkler
1.25 MIRACLI Gr.u Skaare 2.91
4.00 ROWEL E-Z Lawn Edgar 2.11
1.9 5 SHOVEL, Len htntla. Rnt. Pt... 2.1 f
10.00 GATES 50' TRU-CORD Rukkar
4," Hoia 7.9S
10.00 AMEPCO 50' Dura-Tret H"
Nylen H.i. 7.95
1.49 f-et. UNIREAKAILI Garten 4
Flewer SPRINKLING CAN, Colert 2 99
1.00 WIST IIND M.litur. Mtttr .... Ml
Tellt when te water 4 fertilise.
NEW
and
USED
POWER
MOWERS
Valuel
51 A
WEEK
DOWN
QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES!
HOMfWAftlSi
Phone 772-5201
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