Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 11, 1963, Image 3

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    MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
MONDAY. MARCH 11. 1963
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Visit Between Khrushchev and Pope Is Possible
By ERNEST SAKLER
United Presi International
Vatican City - (liPB - The
next step toward the easing
of tensions between commu
nism and Roman Catholicism
could be a visit by Premier
Nikita Khrushchev to Pope
John XXIII in the Vatican.
Such a meeting between
the leader of a government
that opposes all religion and
the spiritual leader of the
world's half billion Catholics
would have been unthinkable
few years ago.
Now, in light of Thursday's
papal audience granted to
Khrushchev's daughter and
his son-in-law Alexei I. Ad-
F1RST WOMAN FLIER-Sometime next week, Mrs. Betty
Miller, will attempt to become the first woman pilot to fly
solo over the route on which Amelia Earhart disappeared in
i937. Mrs. Miller plans to deliver a Piper Aztec B aircraft
to its new owner in Syndey, Australia. She will fly by way
of San Francisco, Hawaii, Canton island and the Fiji islands.
Miss Earhart was lost along with her navigator in 1937 on
the same route flown in reverse. Mrs. Miller, shown here, is
an instructor at the Santa Monica Flyers Flight school.
(UPI)
Asforia Searching
For Sister City
- Astoria, Ore. - (UPI) - Astoria
is seeking a sister city -and
believes it has found one.
A formal invitation will be
issued to Walldorf, Germany.
City Council members said
Walldorf is a town of about
8,000 located 25 miles south
of Heidelberg.
Walldorf is the birthplace
of John Jacob Astor, the mer
chant who sent the expedi
tion that founded Astoria in
1811.'
CHARGES U.S. BUZZING '
Moscow-UIPIl-Moscow Radio
said Sunday that scores of So
viet merchant vessels have
been "buzzed" by U.S. Air
Force planes and shadowed by
ships of the U.S. Navy. The
broadcast quoted the U.S.S.R.
Ministry of Merchant Marine
It said the passenger ship
Admiral Nazimov "was buzz
ed 50 times by U.S. Air Force
planes flying at dangerously
low levels.
MARCH 25
Business
Training!
ROBERTSON
School of Business
40 N. Riverside, Medford
PHONE 773-4264
Government Study
Scholarship Listed
Fellowship applications lo
George Washington univer
sity for the advanced study of
government are being sought
by Scottish Rite Foundation
in Oregon, Inc.
Fellowships are for one
year's study and worth $2,200
to the successful candidates.
These are granted annually
by the foundation. Anyone
may make application who
holds a bachelor of arts or
bachelor of science degree
A gift of over one million
dollars from the Supreme
Council, of the Scottish Rite
to the George Washington
university school of govern
ment has made three fellow
ships available to worthy stu-
dents throughout the country,
The Oregon Selection com
mittee will meet in Portland
at the Scottish Rite Temple,
Saturday, April 6 at 12:30
p.m. to interview and pass on
applicants.
Anyone interested in apply
ing may do so by contacting
the local Scottish Rite chap
ter or by writing to the Port
land Scottish Rite in care of
the secretary at 709 S.W. 15th
ave., Portland.
Oregon Schools To Get
Ford Foundation Funds
Portland - ftlPD - Ford Foun
dation grants amounting to
! $900,000 will be awarded to
; Oregon schools in the year be
ginning July 1.
State Superintendent
Public Instruction Leon M
near said the money would
go to 32 school districts and
colleges, with the names and
amounts to be released later
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
Bell Vernon, Pa. -OiPD- Mrs,
Calliope Patrikousis, the old
est woman in Pennsylvania
and possibly the nation, cele
brated her 114th birthday Sat
urday.
Editor's note: The visit oi
Nikila Khrushchev's son-
in-law with Pope- John
XXIII is further evidence
of a thawing in the rela
tions between the Krem
lin and the Vatican. The
possible reasons for the ap
proaches being made by
atheistic Communism to the
leadership of the world's
Roman Catholics are ex
plored in the following dis
patch by a correspondent
who has covered Vatican
affairs for nearly a decade.
zhubei, it appears that Mos
cow is seeking a rapproche
ment with the Vatican.
In turn. Pope John also is
living with the times.
He never has said so flat
ly, but his entire approach
to communism leaves the im
pression that he senses a pro
found change in the Commu
nist world. He intends to help
that apparent movement
not through appeasement but
by a try at better understand
ing.
'We see as one age suc
ceeds another," he said last
October, "errors vanish as
quickly as they arise, like fog
before the sun."
The fog has lifted in places.
Soviets Make Moves
Soviet advances in recent
months including the un
expected release from a So
viet prison of Catholic Arch
bishop Josyf Slipyi after 18
years in confinement and tor
ture appear to bear this
out.
Adzhubei himself told news
men at a press conference
within a stone s throw of the
Vatican Thursday that he
thought it would be a good
idea if the Kremlin and the
Vatican had diplomatic rcla-1 munist precedent by sending
tions. Pope John a personal mes-
It was Khrushchev' who sage on his 80th birthday 15
first broke 40 years of Com-1 months ago.
The Medical Roundup
Emeritus Consul tint In Medlcln
Mayo Clinic
Emerltui Professor of Medlclna
Mayo Clinic
(Register and Trlbunt Syndicate.
1963)
of
IGOA LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY
SALEM, OREGON
OFFERS FOR SALE
900,000 SHARES
SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
OF COMMON STOCK
AT $2.75 PER SHARE
Oregon retirienti miy send for prespecmi which eon
taint full infornutien concerning thii ttock offering,
by filling out and tending the coupon below , , ,
OREGON UNDERWRITERS INC.
143 S. LIBERTY ST. SALEM, ORE.
PLEASE SEND ME A COPY OF THE ICOA LIFE INSUR
ANCE CO. PROSPECTUS. I UNDERSTAND THERE IS
NO OBLIGATION.
NAME "
ADDRESS -
CITY
STATE
This announcement is not an ofer to sell or a solicita
tion of an offer to buy any of these securities. The
offering is made only by the "Prospectus", to resi
dents of Oregon only.
On Helping The D ef
By Walter C. Alvarex M.D.
George T. Street, Jr., of the
Veterans Administration, has
written an excellent article
full of advice to persons who
often have to speak to tome
one who is hard of hearing.
One difficulty for a person
who has only one good ear is
that w i t hout the "binaural
effect" (the ability to locate
the origin of a sound with the
help of both ears) when he
hears someone speak, he does
not know where to look. This
makes hearing more difficult
for him because when he
looks at a speaker's lips and
face, he is more likely to
understand what the person
is saying.
Few of us who hear well
realize how distorted and gar
bled the speech is that is per
ceived by the brain of a man
whose inner ears have been
partly destroyed. The injured
hearing part of the inner ear
of some deaf people reminds
me of a tiny piano with
number of the ke- s missin3.
Mr. Street asks us to im
agine a man's saying to a per
son with such defective inner
ears, "That cloud formation
would sure make nice photo
graphy." The person addres-
ed may hear, "At owl orma-
tion ache ice dog fee. Nat
urally, he has to ask, "What
was that?" Then, if the speak
er cannot do a better job of
talking, the poor person with
the bad ears may make be
lieve he heard, and in doing
so, he may give an inappro
priate answer.
Mr. Street explains that not
only do hard-of-hoaring peo
ple have to cope with people
who mumble, and with the
distorted sounds that reach
their brain; but many of them
suffer from constant ringing
in their ears or the "hissing of
escaping steam or the "roar
of a waterfall," or the "chirp
ing of crickets."
These sounds tend to de
form many words. When the
person who is hard of hearing
is wearing an aid, all sounds
may be so magnified that it
does no good for the speaker
to shout. Then the poor list
ener may be distracted and al
most pained by the loudness
and harshness of the voice.
Obviously, any person who
speaks to the deaf should try
to speak clearly and in an
even tone of voice. As he
talks, he should keep looking
at the listener, so that his
lips and facial expressions
ran be seen.
The Oral Sabin Vaccine For
Polio
Of late, in Washington,
there has been a good deal of
hesitation about the use of
the oral Sabin vaccine that is
given by mouth, and especial
ly about giving this to adults
For some time it has seemed
to me that we have been over
cautious in the matter, be
cause I have read that in sev
eral parts of the world, mil
lions of doses of the Sabin
vaccine have been given, with
no mention of bad results
I was just re-reading
article telling of the oral vac
cination, within a few weeks,
of 12,140,790 children ir Ja
an. According to Dr. M. Ki-
taoka. of their National I
sthute of Health, in 1980
Japan, 5,606 children w e r
i attacked by polio; in 1 9 6
there were 2,456, and in the
i first 11 weeks of 1962, the
were only 48. The doctor does
not mention any bad results
from the vaccination.
In the Journal of the Airier
January 26, 1963, Dr. A. B.
Sabin said that there were
cases of a polio-like illness
seen among 31,000,000 per
sons who received type I vac
cine (in non-epedemic areas)
1962. As regards the type
III vaccine, which is the one
most feared, Dr. Sabin is en
couraged by the absence of
any "valid reported cases" of
polio appearing in 13,000,000
persons vaccinated.
What this means is that if
physicians vaccinate a . mil
lion people, they are bound
vaccinate a few children
who are already coming, down
either with polio, or with one
of the diseases that resemble
it. Among 162,000,000 persons
vaccinated, Dr. Sabin feels
there have been very few
cases in which, when polio
quickly appeared, it could be
attributed definitely to the
vaccine.
The doctor emphasizes the
Importance of keeping up the
campaign to vaccinate all in
fants, because if many are left
untreated, in a few years we
will have epidemics of polio
again.
A cough, a "cold," indiges
tion, skin disease-all of these
could be caused by allergy.
You'll find help in recogniz
ing allergies in Dr. Alvarez'
booklet on the subject. You
may get a copy by sending 25
cents and a s e 1 f-addressed,
stamped envelope with your
request to Dr. Walter C. Al
varez, Dept. MMT, Box 957,
Des Moines 4, Iowa
HaHaeHBmaMMe.- ,. - -.seBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBi
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. i bb! Cr.. Stiio
Pope John sent a polite ac
knowledgement.
It was Khrushchev again
who publicly lauded the
Pope's efforts for peace.
The sudden interest in the
Vatican by self-styled atheist
Khrushchev may be just tac
tics or part of Russia s steady
evolution away from the Sta
lin and Mao Tze-tung "hard"
pattern of communism.
Or it may be Moscow s re
alization of the staying pow
er of religion among the peo
ple of Communist - dominated
Eastern Europe and of Rus
sia itself, often reluctantly ad
mitted even by the Soviet
press.
It may also be an attempt
to break the resistance of
Catholics to Communist pene
tration in the West by show
ing them a friendly face. For
one thing, Adzhubei's visit is
certain to be exploited fully
by the Communists in the cur
rent Italian election cam
paign. Whatever Khrushchev's mo.
lives, Pope John himself
a sharecropper's son is ser
enely confident that the truth
will prevail over the Commu
nist error.
As in the East-West dia
logue, the Vatican is believed
to feel that the important
thing is not what the step
forward is. What matters is
that there is movement.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
217 E. Main
Medford
& '.v
TRIBUTE TO GLENN-Mrs. Sara Batholomac, who won a
$4.5 million divorce settlement recently disclosed plans
Thursday for a $1 million Mercury Space Capsule chapel in
tribute to Astronaut John Clcnn Jr. Mrs. Batholomae points
to a drawing of the shrine which she says will be built atop
knoll overlooking Brea canyon, 30 miles east of Los
Angeles, Calif., on the Diamond Hills ranch. She said Glenn's
orbial flights one year ago last month inspired her to go to
church and pray for strength and courage such as his. The
plans call for a Mercury-shaped capsule with a 114-foot high
needle. A 150-foot waterfall will fall from a lagoon surround
ing the chapel and the rest of the 17-acre site will have
flowers. (UPI)
Ml . K?.iSw'SS.KiPNSi 'f-: JS agists K:
rt imps,
mm -
v. - i
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STAR GAZEKV
By CLAX K. rOLLAN-
yf TAUtUS
APR. 21
MAY 21
Hn 4- 7-20-64
j-'J JUNE 22
tf 3- 8-10-251
OEMINI
MAY. 22
CANCER
S73-77-78
uo
-Sa-, AUG. 23
,13-18-30-33
49-63-84-87
Ft?
vmoo
A AUG. 24
flffiySl SEPT. 2!
Q 5- 6- 9-22
24-27-72
Your Daily Activity Cuidm
According to the Start.
To develop message for Tuesday,
read words corresponding to numbers
ot your zodiac birth sign.
1 Wonderful 31 Additional
2 New 32 You
. 3 Listen 33 Trouble
A Keep 34 Friend
: 5 Smile 35 Keep
6 You'ro 36 Money
7 A 37 Old
8 Carefully 3BDonr
9 The 39 Away
lOSofneone's 40 New
1) Surprise 41 Let
12 Prepare 42 Proposition
13 Don't 43 Organize
14 New 44 Your
15Good 4b li
16 Yourself 46 Them
17 Luck 47 Friends
18 Argue 4BCosh
19 Clothes 49 Tempest
20 Personal SO Up
21 Someone 51 Success
22 Bright 52 On
23 Gifts .53 Are
24 Shining S4 From
25 Got i5Af lairs
26 And 56 In
27 Star - 57 Business
28 Something 58 Early
29 Believes. 59 Buv
30 There's 60 And
UttA
SEPT. 21
OCT. 23 t
21-29-32-381
61 Down
62 Now
63 In
64 Promlu -
65 Or
66 Business
6? Pay
68 Indicated
69 Threshold
70 Then
71 Romonct
72 Today
73 Youre
74 Engagement
75 Rest
76 Enter
77 For
7S Asking
79 And
80 Your
81 Picture
82 Approaches
83 Their
84 The
85 Sleeve
86 Relax
87 Teapot
88 You
89 Later
90 Plons
(glGood ()Adv fl)Neuill
OCT. 24 fc'a.
.NOV. 22
,15-17-56-57(0
IVi
SAGITTARIUS
NOV.23 A
43-44.55-58T1
CAMKOIN
DEC 23 ff
JAN'. 20 vjA
1- 2-11 Zlfc.
137-47-68 VS
AQUARIUS
pen ie
1419-26-31,
48-76-80-81
PISCES
35-39-54-59 iT
162-67-89-90
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