Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 13, 1963, Image 13

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    Northwest Assembly Calls For Better O
Eugene Participants in the
Pacific Northwest Assembly
Issued a final report Sunday
which called for improvement
and extension of educational
opportunities for all age
groups to meet the challenge
of automation, continuous con
sultations between labor and
management, and assumption
of responsibility by the pub
lic in areas not covered by
labor-management relations.
The final report summariz
ed the findings of the 55 par
ticipiants from five Northwest
states who met for four days
at the Village Green in Cot
tage Grove to discuss the im
pact of automation and tech
nological change. The Pacific
Northwest Assembly was co-
sponsored by the American
Assembly and the University
of Oregon.
Saturday evening the par
ticipants heard Leonard Har
die, field director of the San
Francisco office of the office
of manpower, automation, and
training of the department of
labor. He described the oper
ations of his office, which was
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NAME.
(flcoio Print)
ADDRESS
cirr
ZONE
Kot valid in states wheie orohibitH. tair-d
or regulated. Oiler empties on April 30, 196J
pportunities
established last year to assist
industry in retraining work
ers to meet automation chang
es. The Assembly's final report
states that in manufacturing
automation will replace much
of manned mass production
and "brings a threat of mass
unemployment as certainly as
it brings the promise of un
paralleled abundance."
A sustained effort is need
ed to maintain a high level of
effective demand, the report
continued. "The release of hu
man beings from excessive
toil upon education to enrich
the use of new-found leisure
and develop the highest po
tentialities of the individual.
SECTION B
PAGES I to 10
MedfordTribune
MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1063
The Medical Roundup
New Method of
Extraction Noted
Portland A new resources
development report issued by
the Oregon department of
planning and development,
"Electrowinning Copper and
Zinc from Oregon Mines,"
points to a possible new meth
od of extracting copper and
zinc from Oregon deposits of
sulfide ores.
Written by Robert E. Mere
dith of the OSU department
of chemical engineering, the
report discusses recent studies
made at OSU in cooperation
with the department of plan
ning and development on
more economical methods of
processing ores.
In the OSU laboratory stu
dies, an ammonia leach was
used to remove ionic copper
from the ores. By electro
chemical process, the two
metals then were plated out,
either separately lor together
as the constituents of brass.
Metallic mining in Oregon
has been held back by the
size and nature of the ore
deposits and by the high cost
of conventional ore processing
techniques.
The report also includes aa
discussion of Oregon's metal
lic mineral production and
known deposits by R. G.
Bowen of the Oregon depart
ment of geology and mineral
industries.
tmerltua Coniullant In Mrdirint
Mio i'linir
Emcrttui I'rofr-aatir or Mcdlclnt
.Mayo I'ltnic
(Rrgutcr and Tribune Syndicate,
Alvarrz
Mental Illneu
Readers of this column keep
asking me what is being
learned in regard to the possi-
bility that
mental illness
is due to some
abnormal
chemical
found in the
blood or the
urine of the
patient. Actu
ally, much re
search is being
done i n this
field, and a number of men
have reported very interesting
findings.
The most important point is
that a certain peculiar chem
ical is being found much more
often in persons who are men
tally disturbed than in per
sons who are well-adjusted.
There have been reports of a
substance obtainable from the
blood of persons with mental
disease, which if injected into
a sane person, will produce a
mental disturbance, but these
findings need more confirma
tion by a number of research
ers before they can be ac
cepted by everyone.
Today, there is a large
group of psychiatrists who
have banded together to form
the Society of Biological Psy
chiatry. This society is made
up, not of men who spend
their lives spinning theories
and modify ing the theories of
Freud, but of men who are
chemists, brain physiologists,
makers of new drugs, and stu
dents of drugs that either
stimulate or quiet the brain.
I think that the day is soon
coming when many more and
much better drugs than we
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189
Small
Worlds
Around
Us
By
lynn W.
Watkins
Bremer & Tribune syndicate, l!lfi3)
303 SO. FRONT ST. Ph. 772-5595
now have will be found (or
the calming of excited per
sons, and for lifting up the
mood of persons who are de
pressed. Already drugs have
caused the number of schizo
phrenics who leave a mental
hospital to exceed that of the
schizophrenics who are ad
mitted. Also, drugs have great
ly lessened the number of per
sons who need electroshock
treatment.
In Certain Families
Although I think it probable
that in some cases we will find
that a mental disturbance is
due to the development in the
body of chemicals which in
jure the brain, we will always
have to remember that, as
Freud once pointed out, ner
vous and mental troubles lend
to appear often in certain fam
ilies and rarely in other fam
ilies. Also, we must always re
member that the brain is one
of the organs of the body, and
actually the most complicated
one, and hence it must always
have some diseases all its own.
But a great day has dawned
when, instead of psychiatrists
merely theorizing, they are
going into laboratories to
study normal and diseased
brains with scientific technics
and exact chemical methods.
Today, more and more psy
chiatrists are beginning lo use
the clcctrocncephalo graph,
which can be so extremely
helpful in showing what is
going on within a brain, and
inshowing that the person can
be helped with a drug and not
by psychotherapy. Analysts
would be astonished to find
that some of the persons
whom for years they have
been trying to cure with anal
ysis have a definite and easily
recognizable "organic dis
ease of the brain, such as can
be helped only with a drug
like Dilatin of Mysoline.
Another remarkable fact is
that since 1055, the science of
genetics has been advancing
at such a rapid rate, and the
geneticists have been doing
such remarkable things that
soon it will be impossible for
the psychoanalysts to ignore
their work. No longer will
they be able to deny the tre
mendous Influence of hered
ity in making us men and
women either able and well
adjusted or shiftless and poor
ly adjusted.
A family needs help (o un
derstand mental illness when
it occurs. Much helpful advice
is contained in Dr. Alvarez'
booklet, "When Mental Illness
Strikes a Family." You may
obtain it by sending 25 cents
and a self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request
for it to Dr. Walter C. Alvar
ez, Dept. MMT, Box 957, Des
Moines 4, Iowa.
Two Lois Remain
On Sale by BLM
The Bureau of Land Man
agement h." ; announced that
two lots remain unsolc. in the
Kanaka Flats homcsitc area
near Jacksonville and Med
ford. There will continue lo be
offered at public auction at
10:30 a.m. each Wednesday at
the Portia: 1 land office uniil
March 14, unless they are sold
before that date.
Stanley D. Lesler, manager
of the Portland land office,
said that each lot contains
five acres and is accessible via
Highway ?38 which crosses
both lots. Electrical power
and telephone facilities arc
available from lines ncaroy.
Lester rcid the appraised
value of each lot is $(150 and
that no bids would be ac
cepted for less.
Bids may be made in per
son, or by mail accompanied
with the full amount bid '
the form of pr t office oncy
order, cashier's or certified
check, or bank draft. More
detailed ln'ormition and a
diagram of the land may be
obtainc. from the n-magcr,
land office, room 1221, 710
NE Holladay, Portland 12.
Ore., or from the district
manager, 11.13 South River
side avc., Mcdford.
Pat and Three Ducks,
Or. Quackert in Wrain.
It was a short and pleasant
walk to work every morning
and back home every night.
But when the street was wet.
either from rain, dew or
street cleaning, "at, the girl
in the while sweater, had to
detour out into the street ani
so arrived at work or at home
with muddy shoes.
There was a reason for t he
detour: she had lo avoid the
three ducks. Experience had
taught her that to avoid being
buffeted by powerful wings
or pecked by sharp bills, one
must bypass a certain lot
where the three ducks lived.
The lady wh- owned the
ducks lived alone, and pre
ferred to remain alone.
She was thankful that her
pels kept people at a distance.
The three ducks saw to that;
they were her guards in
feathers.
Every morning before day
light the lady allowed the
ducks to lake up their posi
tion on the front lawn. The
birds appeared always to
sleep with one eye open, al
ways ready to chase anyone
or anything that dared lo
walk along the sidewalk op
posite their lot. If a stranger,
not knowing the ducks, ven
tured on the walk, the birds
would rush him with flailing
wings and hissing beaks.
Never an Invi ion
For some unexplained rea
son they never invaded the
yards on either side of their
wner's property. Neil her
did they ever bother any per
son considerate enough to
walk out in the road, tnercby
by-passing their sacred terri
tory. By some duck-reasoning
they fell a strong senso of
possession.
The thrr" duc'-.s hecame a
tradition in the neighborhood,
as well as a thorn in the side
of the more sensitive folk9.
Some folks resented being
pushed off into the street by
three ducks; some treated it
as a joke.
For their part, the three
ducks gave every indication
of enjoying the frequont en
counters with human beings.
They probably felt a little
important that they could
force people to walk out Into
the street and not trcsnass on
the sidewalk they felt wa
(heir very own. When folks
rioloured out to miss their lol
tne ducks beady iute eyes
glittered with a superior
gleam. They sat and watched
with evident satisfaction.
Just a Joke
Pal, the girl in the while
sweater, treated the silualinn
joke, even when she
alcr had lo clean the mud
from her shoes. In fact, she
saw an interesting parallel
between herself and the three
ducks and Goldilocks and her
experiences with the three
bears. Both girls were build
ing memories for later years
of enjoyment.
But, as could be expected,
there were other folks less
tolerant. They complained
bitterly; they resented being
forced off the sidewalk by
three brazen ducks. Some of
these people went to the po-
icc. The police came; they
wanted to sec what all the
shouting was about.
No respectors of uniforms
or badges, the three ducks
hascd the police off the side-
walk. That did it.
The lady was ordered to
pen up or, better still, get rid
of the troublesome bird3 who
thought the sidewalk was en
tirely their own.
Put, the girl in the white
sweater, now arrives at work
without mud on her shoes.
There is no need to detour
now. But somehow she misses
her pursuers. The lot and the
street seem strangely empty
without the three ducks.
Medford Girl Member
Of OSU Orchestra
Corvallis Julie Latham,
Medford, is a member of Ihe
symphony orchestra this year
at Oregon Stale university.
The OSU-Corvallis Sympho-
ny presents three concerts
each year. 11 is composed of
selected university students
and townspeople.
Miss Latham is a freshman
at Oregon State this year in
the school of engineering. She
is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Latham, 815 Park
I avc
Cap C. Vandagrift
REAL ESTATE APPRAISER, CONSULTANT & NEGOTIATOR
ANNOUNCES
HIS NEW LOCATION
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Medford, Oregon
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