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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1963)
WEDMEI0AY. APRIL 1. 1M1 m 1 w n Social Events Women's News aai B:l l Community Bll . H. T H fBJ M VifaBafe. H H ''' bbi Bffi i ?fjrOeBBj,ejB MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORECON Unwed Parent Problems Reviewed by Magazine m. kxub mmoa or Th. Mall Trunin muat M labmltud la wriUnt uri UdUna lor th. Sun oy flUoo M 1 MS. Friday Ond un. foe tbe MID eeJender to jo of Ik amy of publication and (or mm aor bsw I I tm. th oay Mlora .unaeaBon. Wadnesdar 7:30 p.m. -Siskiyou Knife and Fork club, Htrk Antony hotel, Aihland S p.m.-Auxlliary to Nation 1 Letter Carriers association Mrs. Larry Row.-, 2110 Co rona dr. 8 p.m. - Roxy Ann HEC Mrs. Orle Barnea av 8 p.m.-WWI Veterans and auxiliary, Girls club. Thuraday 10 a.m.-Providence guild Knights of Columbus hall Black Oak drive at Barnett rd. 10:80 a.m.-Butt Falls ex tension, unit, home of Mrs Sherlcy Hatcher. - 10:30 a.m.-Weatslde ex ten sion unit, Mrs. Dan Doty, 2197 Beall lane, Central Point, 1:15 p.m.-Medford Coordi nates committee of PTA Griffin Crk school cafe teria. 1:30 p.m.-Medford Garden club, Jackson county home ex tension bldg., in Fairgrounds, Maple Grove drive, and Bar nett rd. , 1:30 p.m.-Sama Valley La dles club, home of Mrs. El- wood Abbott on Highway 334. FarnUy Visits In Wlld.rvlll. WUdervllle Mrs. Neil Pierce and children, Corvallls, were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Lindsay, Fish Hatchery road. ftf oT Saf fW tt f$SttMtof ' lr RESTAURANT w "A t4 plat t t" Oam Daily , . , a.m. 310 North RIvsrsM Musicians and ether music lovrs of ill city ar working ibis week In in annual mmbrahip anrollmtnt of Jackson County Civic Music association. Among I hoi at tending a kick-off luncheon last Saturday war (loft to right) Mm. Lailia Boaidman, Dr. Justin L. Dyrud, Gary Lovro and Mrs. Paulln Bush. Headquarter! are in opera tion at th Mod Cross building. 80 Haw thorn avonu. and th telephone numbr is 778-1381. Any interested parson may become a mambar of th association. Th nrellmant drtv Is usually conducted la th fall, but a spring wk was chosn this yar. Th campaign will dos Saturday, April 8, and only paying memberships will b abl to attand concerts during th 1M3 84 lessen. Visit Relatives Gold Hill Miss Jennie Lou Thompson and Miss Marvelle Lichtensteln recently spent week with relatives In San Francisco. The young women are seniors at Crater high school. Gam Club Plant Demontlration Jewelry making will be demonstrated at a meeting of Roxy Ann Gem and Mineral club to be held Friday, April at 8 p.m. at Girls Com munity club, 228 North Bart lett street. Guests, especially young people, are Invited to attend. Visitor Returns To Band Home Gold Hill - Mrs. Lawson of who Single, former resident Gold Hill and Talent now resides in Bend, has re turned to her home there aft er spending some time in Grants Pass at the home of her brother-in-law and sister, I taneity Susana y Jose Company Presents Varied Program RICHARD D. WERNER Known as a pocket-size dance company, Susana y Jose with their piano accompanist Armln Janssen, Naranjito de Triana, flamenco singer and Pedro Sevllla, guitarist were the fourth presentation of the Civil Music association, last night at the high school auditorium. Although Susana Audeoud and Jose Udaeta have top bill ing they are not the most in this company. Triana, the singer and Sevllla, the gui tarist garner a goodly share of the applause. And as the evening moved to the close It became quite evident that the latter two had the most to offer. This Is not to say that the dancers were not good. They were very good in fact but a certain spark and spon- re MCKing in tneir Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rhyme. 1 work which was very , clear MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER OPEN SUNDAYS 10:00-5:30 Have lunch in our charming Rogue Sidewalk Cafe. STORE HOURS SUNDAYS 10:00 TO 5:30 - MONDAY AND FRIDAYS 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. TUESDAYS, WEDNESDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9:30 TO 5:30 SMUDGE SEASON PROTECTION To protect the Bogus Valley" precious fruit crop, smudging Is a necessity. To pro tect your precious furniture, stVM it with washable covers from Newberry. LUXURIOUS ONE PIECE ALL SLIPCOVERS THAT STRETCH TO FIT Stain resistant! R Water repellent! No-iron! Washable! Sofdl popular colon to choose from. Other itylts, orhtr textures t ditrertnt prict rangts. Com select, compere Newberry Low Price. 72 x 90", Mu Iti.u.e throws , 6 charming decoretor colore .. JBffPfl BiaX aaafl LsBb! 98 una sir fit all chair On eta fit aR sofas, ds. 5 99 5.98 USE YOUR NEWBERRY CHARGE ACCOUNT ACRIS OF FREE PARKING NEWBERRYS SHOPPING CENTER STORE 3S (. Jackson in the others The flamenco singer Triana performed with a clear aban don as If he were in an inn or tavern In Andalusia. And the guitarist Sevllla, with his head resting on the guitar was most certainly oblivious to the audience. Departing from the printed program Susana and Jose did three Spanish dances, Capric cio Sspanol by Rimsky- Kor sakoff, Danza X by Granadas and Baile de Luis Alonso by Jimenez, as the opening num ber. Armln Janssen did some very beautiful piano playing in this set of pieces. However he was hidden behind the tor mentor and did not share in the applause. It was clear in this group that the dancers were good but not of really great caliber. We would say that Jose was more graceful and lithe than Susana. In his singing of some pop ular melodies Triana, accom panied by Sevllla we were In troduced to the type of sing ing done in the inns and tav erns and night spots in Spain. It is a semi-florid style influenced by the Moors and has had a strangle hold on Spanish music ever since. It Is of the same nature that syncopation has on American music. Both countries will need a towering genius to break, it. The guitarist Sevilla, a very small man not over five feet tall, did some very excellent playing all during the even ing. Although he did his share of flamenco strumming he also displayed a finger tech nic delightful to hear. It was in the closing fla menco dances that thia pocket size company came into its own. All four joined In with much verve and a very in teresting mixture of hand clapping. There was no set pattern and each one seem ed to make up his own rhythm as he went along. At times it seemed they were spelling out words. It was in many ways similar to the hand clap ping of the tribes of central Africa In its complexity. Janssen, who had perform ed variations on a theme from Mallorca by Roblcdo took solo bow and rightly so. His playing was most excellent. Carnival Slated In Jacksonville Jacksonville -A school car I nival, sponsored by the Jack sonville Parent-Teacher asso ciation, will be held Friday, April 3, in the school gymna sium from 6 to 9 p.m. There will be games, prizes and fun for the whole family to participate in. the commit tee states. Hot dogs, hamburgers, pic, cake and coffee will be served at the food booth throughout the evening. This is the main fund-raising project of the PTA for the school yesr. Proceeds will be used to again sponsor trans portation to swimming lessons for Jacksonville area chil dren. All parents are especial ly invited to attend with their families. Wipe off anything spilled on marble at once-)ust as you would from a wood furnish ing. Occasionally, wash mar ble surfaces with lukewarm water and a clean cloth. Dry with a chamois0 or soft dry cloth to prevent spots iS streaks. Washington, D. C.-What is and is not being done about unmarried parent is de scribed In the March-April issue of "Children," a maga zine published by the U. S. Children's Bureau. "We called upon some of the nation's outstanding spe cialists in the field to give us their views about this com pelling problem; what is needed to meet it, including casework services for unmar ried fathers as well as the so cial services, legal protections and schooling of the young unwed mother," Mrs. (Cather ine. B. Oettinger, Chief of the Bureau, said. In portraying the general framework of illegitimacy in the United States, Hannah M. Adams and Ursula M. Gall agher of the Children's Bu reau comment: "A majority of all unmarried mothers keep their babies . . Some of these children are brought up by grandparents or other relatives . . . some are passed along to strangers who do not want them . . . some are even tually brought by their mo thers to agencies for place ment in foster homes or insti tutions . . ." "Community efforts toward prevention, to be effective, must be directed toward the broad social, economic, mor al, and psychological prob lems of which illegitimacy may be a symptom," according to Patricia Garland of the executive committee of th National Association on Ser vice to Unmarried Parents. Problems Listed "The more flagrant prac tices (by some adoptive cou ples) of exchanging medical care for babies . . . underser vice to a substantial propor tion of the unmarried mother population ... a chronic shortage of Negro adoptive homes . . . (and) maternity homes . . . frankly discrim inatory in their admission pol icies" are discussed by Rose Bernstein, Consultant on So cial Services for the Massa chusetts Committee on Chil dren and Youth. Sanford N. Katz, on both the law and social work fac ulties of Catholic, university, surveys the legal rights of the unwed mother and her child: 'There are indirect as well as direct means of requiring a father to support his illeg itimate child. Some states do this through their poor laws . . Other states . . . through criminal laws . . . Still others through the bastardy laws which prescribe legal proce dures for the determination of paternity." "Work 'With unmarried fa thers has revealed that they have considerably more feel ings about their Illegitimate offspring and the mothers of these children than has' here tofore been recognized," writes Reuben Pannor of the Vista Del Mar Child-Care Service in Los Angeles. Practice Criticised Jerry L. Kelly, Assistant Dean at the University of Washington's school of social work, criticizes the practice of withholding edu cation from unmarried mothers: 'Since the boys involved are Nominations Set For Jayceettes Officers will be nominated at a meeting of Medford Jay ceettes to be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Everett Payton, 1101 Loal avenue. Mrs. James Rouhicr will be co-hostess. A committee will present a slate of names, and nomi nations may also be addrd from the floor. The current project for Jayceettes Is completion of uniforms in time for the Jay cee state convention to be held in May. Committees planning the annual merit award luncheon will report. The luncheon Is set for May 11 at North's Chuck Wagon. The award is presented annually to a young Medford woman for outstand Ing service to the community. Information concerning the luncheon may be obtained by contacting Mrs. William South, 772-8310. Court To Hold Rites Saturday New officers of Roxy Ann court, Order of the Ama ranth, will be installed at an open ceremony Saturday, April 6, at 8 p.m. In the Med ford Masonic temple. Heading the court through the ensuing term will be Mrs. Hal Bishop, royal matron, and Mr. Bishop, royal patron. Many grand officers and other Amaranth members from over the state will be attending as well as a dele gation from Siskiyou court, Yreka. Calif. Representatives from various Masonic organ izations are also to attend. A reception will follow the Installation ceremony, of which Mrs Ira Canfield and Mrs. H. C. Goldsmith are chairman and co-chairman. Forty per cent of th nat Ton's families have more than on Income, the Institute of Life Insurance reports. rarely, if ever, excluded from school, the protection afford ed others by putting the luck less girls 'out of sight and out of mind' seems somewhat illusory "Children" is an interdis ciplinary journal tor all the professions serving children. "We hope that this sympos- P::b!ished six times annu ally! the period'ca' is ava'l" able' on a yearly subscription ium on- unmarried parents , . . m at ,5 wilt be of value to those mos. ! " , , of DoCuments, Gov capable of initiating further j Printing Office, study of the problems," Mrs. ggggJJ 25, D. C. Oettinger said. . DAYS LEFT For yoo to take advantage of the opportunity to own the finest in stereo radio, phono, TV equipment at DU0 PRICES. These are not clojse-outs er discontinued models, but the' LATEST in electronic development, with Magnavox s IN COMPARABLE quality, craftsmanship and styling. This great tale is POSITIVELY the ONLY Magnavox sale we will have this year-and definitely ends Saturday! We are open tomte-brmg the family and come in. the magnificent wiagnavox factory authorized ANNUAL SALE ...on these magnificent ASTRO-SONIC STEREO HIGH FIDELITY RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS with revolutionary new Solid State Circuitry NO TUBES. ..NO HEAT ...NO TROUBLE This astounding development exceeds all previous accomplishments in the perfect re-creation of music! The Astro-Sonics have such great tonal dimension, they can fill a concert hall like a full symphony orchestra! In your home, they can "whisper" the full beauty of music, or "shake the walls" with the crescendo of a great symphony and all without a single tube! U Th. Colonial Astra-Senlc, 1-ST672. TOe authentic cabinet is beautifully crafted in distressed cherry; YOUR CHOICE of any of these styles $ NOW ONLY 495 Th Contemporary Astro-Sonic, 2-ST667. In your choice of hand-rubbed natural or sable walnut Also in (bony-now only J 52 5. I The Italian Provincial Astro-Sonic, 2-ST640. 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