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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1963)
MEOrOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD. OREGON SUNDAY. JUNE II, IMS . .Communications . . . Lsttatt to tha Editor must bou tha duo tad addrasa oi tha writar. although undat cartain ciicumstancoi to w oi pa aim or initial tor publication it parmUsibla. Tho MtU Tribune resanras the right to edit U letters wUh a iew to clarification and condensation. Letters tobmittad ior publication mutt not axcaad 400 word. Tha lattart printad in lhU column do not aacauaril; rapruant tha views oi tha papers in iact tha contrary it oitan tha cat. Tha luua To the Editor: Tn respect to the controversy oi the Rogue Valley book-burners, we, my seli included, are missing the point. The question boils down to this: Who is to say whether or not "The Last Temptation oi Christ" is obscene? Cer tainly not a group of preju diced, devoted book-burners, such as we now have in action in Jackson county. By the same token, not a group elect ed or appointed by a city or a city government, nor a county or a county govern ment, nor even a state or a state government. Only the United States courts speak for the people. It is for this reason that any obscenity law passed in Jackson county or anywhere else would be illegal. It is illegal because it prevents the people from exercising their rights. It is illegal because it sets up a few people as gods, literally, who dictate to oth ers what they can or cannot read. It is rather like dictat ing to others when they can or cannot breath. The freedom to read what we please is as valuable as the freedom to breath the air of the United States. Making obscenity laws unconstitutional prevents the type of prejudiced vendetta we in the Rogue Valley are witnessing today. Naturally, a line must be drawn somewhere. This is why a book is taken to the courts when a reasonable num ber of people begin to con sider it obscene. The courts then decide the issue openly and freely, weighing both sides of the argument against each other. Each member of the court responsible for judg ing the book reads it as many times as is necessary for him to do so in order to under stand it. Then, and only then, does he render his judgment. It is obvious that not all of our book-burners have read the book they oppose, which is a typical thing with book burners, and the ones who have, do not really understand it. This is supported by the quotations pulled out of con text that Mrs. Black used. In summing up: The issue is not now whether or not the book is obscene, but who shall judge it so. Let us not lose sight of this in our ac tions. Dan Hays, i 431 South Front st., . Central Point, Ore.. ticularly when they are so flagrantly untrue. But if this is the pattern of the capacity to think and the ability to truly state the circumstances of provable economics and law, then it would seem to me that it is high time for Mr. Redden's removal from the Slate Legislature." Mrs. G. S. Jennings, 218 Saginaw dr., Medford Thoughts on Raca To the Editor: "Is the pot to ask the potter, why has thou fashioned me thus?" (Romans 9, 29). Later in the new testa ment we are reminded of "vessels of clay." It is only through the will of God, as manifested in the natural law that certain "vessels" are fashioned from a different color clay. Color problem? No! Rather what concerns us principally in man is his higher life. For it is the higher life that makes man so priceless. It should be kept in mind, however, that clay admirably symbolizes man's fraility. But why should there be different races? An answer to this can be found in a brief study oi tome scientific con clusions resulting from re search of five key words: Mu tation, selection, adaptation, migration and isolation. Multation occurs from an abrupt change in the structure of a gene. In the case of dark skinned people, they may have been favored in an area of intense sunlight. This re flects the theory of natural selection. Skin color is only one of a number of character istics subject to this kind of development. Scientists do not know the skin color of early man, the mutation could just as easily have been from dark to light skin. Migration and isolation played even a more important role. After early migration people lived for thousands of years in isolation and yet scientists conclude that men of different races have a great deal more in common than they do at vari ance. When we consider the myriads of genes, those ac counting for the differences in races are very few, which leads to the fact that all are basically one race. Then what of race superior ity? There is the blood, divid ed into tour types; but aside from varying concentrations of blood types in some races, blood has no racial signifi cance at all (yet we get some idea oi fear, confusion and ignorance present today when in the U. S. some doctors are required to keep Negro and white blood separate). There is the argument from evolu tion, and race supremacists point to the comparisons of the receding forehead and small brain of the ape. They then go to the larger brain of the Negro, thence to the Mongoloid and lastly to the still larger brain of the Cauca soid (average). Well scientists reject evolution from the ape in a single line; also the ape is hairy and thin-lipped, and oi course, the hairiest and most thin-lipped oi the three major races is the white races. . . . II you will allow it, I would like to continue these thoughts in another letter. Robert J. Howard 792 Beekman St. Medford. For Enllghtmant To the Editor: This is writ ten tor the enlightment of the several writers whose letters revealed their lack oi knowl edge of historical facts with reference to Jesus and the Radden Challenged To the Editor: In Rep. James A. Redden's letter of 51263, Medford Mail Tribune, he made several misstatements in answer to my letter that I wrote in favor of the Liberty Amendment. I sent his letter to Mr. Willis Stone, the origi nator of the Liberty Amend ment. Mr. Stone writes: "Mr. Redden is guilty of some fla grant misstatements of truth. Either he has failed to read the Liberty Amendment or the Constitution or both. Un der any circumstances, he has failed to comprehend either." He said that the sponsors would have gladly testified at the hearing but because of his long association and re search on the subject, he was invited to appear before them. Mr. Stone wanted to know how Mr. Redden could prove that the sponsors intended to vote against the resolution. "This is on the wild side without any indication of truth." Another misstatement was made that no House member had said that they would vote for it. Despite fantastic pres sures brought against the committee, three members oi the nine man committee did vote for it. Mr. Reddev, said: "Take the government out of all business." Another misstate ment, because the govern ment of the United States has legitimate business activi ties which are spelled out in the original Constitution of the United States. As the Lib erty Amendment is designed only to give force and effect to the Constitution, all of the activities and natural business of the government of the Unit ed States will be retained ex actly as the Constitution pro vides. Mr. Redden should know this. When he says that the Lib erty Amendment would crush corporations, "Mr. Redden hasn't the remotest idea of what he is talking about. It would do nothing of the kind. It would relieve the corpora tions from the most ruthless competitor ever known to man. It would stop the in-1 human practice of double tax-1 atlon upon the earnings of corporations." Mr. Stone ends his letter by laying; "The most flagrant j untruth in the whole thing I is that statement by Mr. Red den that I admitted that the 1 fourth section of the Liberty Amendment it Just a 'gim mick.' I have no idea why Mr. Redden hat chosen to put j tuch words in my mouth, par-1 Poets' Corner Conduct!1 by Arnold Eugene Jenny From: To A Skylark , Hail to thee, blithe Spiritl Bird thou never wert, That from heaven, or near It ' Fourest thy full heart In profuse strains of unpremeditated art. What thou art we know not; What is most like thee? From rainbow clouds there flow not ' Drops so bright to see 'As from they presence showers a rain of melody. . Teach us, sprite or bird. What sweet thoughts are thine; I have never heard Praise of love or wine s That panted forth a flood of rapture so divine. Teach me half the gladness That thy brain must know, Such harmonious madness From my lips would flow The world should listen then, as I am listening now! Percy Bysshe Shelley O Tha Giver She drove a six-horse team across the plains, With her two babies on the seat beside her. Though barely seventeen, she held the reins In fists of steel and trusted God to guide her. She never saw the inside of a school, But, being wise as nature she could fight Adversity and sin by the same rule: And so she taught herself to read and write. She washed and ironed, scrubbed and sewed and cooked . She aided neighbors: heard the homing cry Of children or laid out the dead: all looked To her for help to live or help to die. She merged herself and all that she possessed Into the bone and sinew of the West. Mary Boyd Wagner New York, N.Y. From the author's volume, "Roots," published by The Wings Press; reprinted by permission. -O View From Ashland's Lofty Crest I stood upon Mount Ashland's lofty crest, Niona at my side, to watch the sun Rise from its golden couch beyond the hills. We saw the shadows lift, and one by one, The mountain peaks were tipped with liquid gold; The shades of night went racing to the west And all the higher places smiled to greet This daily miracle from out the east. First, Shasta rose, shaking night's sable robes From brawny shoulders, snowy crest held high, Shaping the outline of his giant bulk In silhouette against the streaming sky; Then the new-born day in buoyant glee Caught old McLoughlin In its warm embrace And planted a kiss upon his glowing brow; And next old Baldy showed his pallied face From nightly vigils o'er the "Marble Caves;" Then Griizly, Roxy Ann and Pompadour Shouldered into view; and then the valley Glowed in the splendor of the morning hour. It was a view well worth the arduous climb Through darkness Up the steep and rocky trail. And ttays Impressed upon my memory Where loftier views in other climes but fail. Richard Posey Campbell From "Dick Posey's" "A Daughter of the Roguet," A Tale of the Rogue River Vtlley, published 1919 in Ashland. Courtesy of Mrs. Alice Applegate Peil, The Manor, Medford. supposed "resurrection." Let me assure them that Pierre van Paatsen, the Uni tarian writer I mentioned in my letter, is an authority on the subject. In the light oi modern research and Biblical criticism he hat stripped the traditional story oi myths, legends, and other accretions oi time and produced a recital of breathless interest in his book "Why Jesus Died." . Here is a revealing iact with which the average per son is not familiar, quoted from Pierre van Paassen's book: "The metaphysical person age who emerged from the creeds drawn up in various Councils succeeding the Coun cil of Nicaea in the year S2S -who was 'conceived of the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, who descended into hell, rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven to sit on the right hand of God, the Father', is not a human being. He is the Christ oi the Church, a symbol borrowed irom Greek philosophy and mythology. He is a dogma, a i 1 e e t i n g unseizable image existing in the thought oi schoolmen. He Is not the Jesus of history, the man who lived and breathed and slept and died in Palestine at the beginning of the present era." In other words, the Jesus who was "resurrected" never existed. He is simply one of the world i 16 mythical cruci fied saviors about whom the same story is told. The real Jesus never rose from the dead after his death on the cross. That is an impossibility for any human being. Those who still believe in the "resur rection" of a Jesus who was not human are worshipping a myth. Enlightened people, on the other hand who know the facts, unanimously agree that the crucifixion of the inoffen sive Jesus was the worst crime that was ever committed. Lydia Burnham 814 Warne St., Prescott, Ariz. Conviction! Shaken To the Editor: Have you ever been a firm believer in your convictions and then sud denly had those convictions shaken and change your mind? Recently I had the oppor tunity to represent my firm of Harry and David in a tour of tome of the Portland agen cies that are recipients of the United Medford Crusade and I must say, my convictions were very much shaken. Many people believe tnat the cases handled by these agencies In Portland are some one else's problems. Such is not the . case. All of these agencies help many, cases from our own Jackson county. The accomplishments of these agencies on such limited funds is astounding. I would like to present some of th "pictures" that I saw on this tour. I wish that it were possible for all people to meet Miss Elda Russell oi the Louise Home ior Girls, a school for delinquent and wayward girls and of the Albertina Kerr Nursery. Miss Russell is one of those rare persons who is so com pletely and wholeheartedly dedicated to her work of helping people. In fact, when you listen to her speak of her" infants and young girls. you feel ashamed ior having begrudged your contribution to the Crusade. This woman has assumed work load that would make husky man stagger, in order that others might benefit by her sacrifice. Some oi the other agencies that I refer to are: St. Mary't School tor Boys: Where Father Goodrich'! phi losophy and understanding is extended to young boys re gardless oi race and creed. Some of these boys have never known the comforts oi a real home. What this home lacks in modern conveniences, it makea up ior in the personal attention that each boy re ceives irom Father Goodrich and the Sisters. Our Lady oi Providence Nursery: Where each Sister personally worries through the long nights with a sick child, handicapped or normal. The University oi Oregon Medical School: Where your contribution goes into re search. Each and every per son benefits by this research. Everytime a person becomes ill and receives a miracle drug or a new type oi sur gery, these and many more achievements in research are due to a contribution. So the next time you are asked to contribute to the Medford Crusade, before you give your pat answer of, "My husband gives at the office!" Stop and think! Thank God for the agencies and dedicated people mentioned above and feel good in your heart knowing that your contribu tion is going to help a young ster to know a normal way of life for the first time, or perhaps it will be YOUR con tribution that will help find the cure for cancer. Stop and think! Violet S. Cummings, Personnel Assistant for Harry and David, Medford .-. by different parties. Both branchet operate under an obsolete state constitution. Given these formidable handi caps it is a wonder that any thing at all was accomplished. It is also true that dishar mony prevailed, particularly toward the end oi the session. But this is not bad: it it good. It is a manifestation oi con flicting convictions strongly held. Without such convictions they would Indeed have a short, harmonious session. But it would be characterized ay apathetic consent to every whim of every special Inter est, and the state would be left In a shambles. If more people could have teen the legislature in action, particularly its toilsome com- ittees, more would Join In thanking the representatives and tenatort for a job done under difficult circumstances. Janet McLennan Executive Secretary, bipartisan League to Retain Equal Representation 7101 S.E. 36th ave. Portland, Ore. Legislature Defended To the Editor: The sharD criticism of the legislature prompts me to speak up in its defense. As a private citizen and an official of a citizens group, I worked closely with the legislature on a number of bills and resolutions. Of course I was disappointed that certain bills failed and that others passed. Nevertheless, I was impressed by the dili gence, courtesy, and sincerity of most legislators. They put In long hours of work start ing early in the morning and often lasting Into the night. They are subject to harass ment, ridicule and Intense po litical . pressures. , Yet they spend months away from home at an indispensable a beit thankless job. The aver age legislator is, in a word, unappreciated. The legislature is criticized for not accomplishing much (despite their hard work) and for a great deal of wrangling and bickering. But is it the fault of the legislature that little was accomplished? The House is split with 31 Demo crats and 29 Republicans. The Senate is dominated by an uneasy coalition of Republi cans and conservative Demo crats. The executive and legis lative branches are controlled "Mr. Bob Ma ben, Jackson I county game biologist, will I be at the next meeting of the : Jackson county chapter oi the : Oregon Fish and Game Coun- cil which will be held June 22, 8 p.m. at the Central Point Sportsmen's Building on Pine. He is going to bring some slides that were taken along the irrigation ditch in the Howard Prairie system. The problem oi the deer being lost in this ditch will be discussed. Our organization will work with Mr. Maben in trying to reach a satisfactory solution to bring the death rate of the deer along this ditch down. We cordially invite everyone interested to attend this meet ing." Mrs. Ken (Shirley) Oswald Secretary Jackson County Chapter ' P. O. Box 83 Gold Hill, Ore. PET TALK 3y M. I. L BLM Tour To the Editor: Mr. Walter Craig, president of the Jack son County Chapter of the Oregon Fish and Game Coun cil, has the following com ments regarding the field trip with the Bureau of Land Management that we would like to have printed In the paper: The Jackson county chapter and the Klamath county chap ter of the Oregon Fish and Game Council met with the Bureau of Land Management at 9 a.m. Sunday, June 9, at the BLM office In Lakevicw. Mr. George Lea, district su pervisor, took the members on a guided tour of the areas they were spraying to kill the sagebrush. The area ranges from about seven miles touth of Hart Mountain to approximately three miles into Nevada. It was found that the BLM is spraying nothing but sagebrush. Mr. Lea stated that they were leaving the Bitterbrush completely alone, that they are re-seeding these areas with crowned wheat and alfalfa which is to be utilized by both cattle and wildlife. Mr. Lea stated that they had cut the grazing permits in halt this year ana that the wildlife, In the future as well as in the past, will have preference over live stock. "It Is the opinion of the Oregon Fish and Game Coun- ell that the BLM it doing their lob well In restoring sagebrush ground to a useful purpose. We go on record as being 100 per cent benma tne BLM In the reseeding of tnese sagebrush areas. We feel that the reseeding the BLM it do ing will place a greater amount of food at the disposal of our wildlife and the BLM should be commended for a Job well done. It might be furiner men tioned that they are building dams in all areas possible to catch and store the winter run-off. Mr. Lea has Invited us to another field trip at a later date to check the prog ress of the reseeding and we have accepted this invitation. Raca and tha Constitution To the Editor: I admire your editorial oi June 7, 1963 and its clear cut understanding oi the Constitution of our nation, I was alto very much inter- 1 1 e d in your editorial oi Wednesday, dealing with the teaching oi Communism in schools. You recognized the value oi a perfect understand ing of this controversial Ide ology. You also expressed a real fear that subject might not be taught In the proper manner, that the full truth and aspects may not be brought out or be slanted by b i a t e d personal sentiment. Any subject oi this magnitude should be taught In a truely academic sense. Your fears are well Justified by the man ner in which our Constitution has been handled. This wave of racial prob lems, with which we are faced today, is only the outcome of the injustices of man to man at far back as history record. This is not local or surpris ing for every medium of news reflects man't cry for Freedom the world over, nor It It any thing organized or planned; it it only that education on part of the oppressed Is enhanced by class distinction, racial hatred and all other forms oi bigotry and ignorance, tended to bring to head the turmoil that has through all these past ages goaded men everywhere to demand their rightful Jus 1 1 c e t at this chronological period in history. Too few have been taught or have grasped the fact that slate rights and ttate tover- elgnty went out when the Confederation of Statet tailed It class. The magazine "True" for I sacrificed at a relisiotu rit. January, 1962, published So it Itn't Just ignorance. tome very revolting pictures What is it? Not the cruelty of dogfights at a convention, due to want oi knowledge ot where the plight oi torn and how to handle animals nran stricken victims It even less erly. Not the greed in exploit. revolting man mo eager, con- ing OI animals for mnn.v. centrated, Intense gaze oi the whether In a circus, or ior spectators, gloating over the their iur and oil, aavagery. The greater the savagery Dogfightlng Is against the the greater the thrill. Th answer It supplied by. a psy. A 5 law in the U.S. It if adver. tlted secretly and various rutet are retorted td, in order to outwit the S.P.C.A. and the" law enforcement offlcera. At a recent meeting over 1,000 spectators were present. ANALYSIS OF CRUELTY Cock-fighting also Is out. The subject of cruelty it Uwed in 45 ttatet but th endless. We are concerned editor ot "The Gamecocu ' here with only two proposi- ei,imate tner BOO pits' lions: that cruelty It unlver- states D V sal, and that it is Immoral. From , ,,. . Cruelty is so, universal osseum onwards, crueltv has that it cannot have been dls- become so Ingrained In un semlnated by word or ex- regenerate human nature thai ample only. It it found In all " f.,ouna over tn world ,, , . . .. , till: sometime! public and nations, peoples and tribes at L.mni.n.o . . Jl.i " 7. every stage of their clviliza- diUon in Mexi d tion. beginning very early lnQ , blood ".ports" every- ana con. nuing. even ii unaer- wnere. Fox hunting - ffrntinH Ihrnnffh thjklp Tnlth I, ... --- i nunui in irr lanrt it not confined to any Iorm5 protected as a national custom, in Africa, horses arts tn five our Infant nation anv I chologist who was Present at binding fabric of unity and ,ne dogfight convention, ha protection. Therefore it be- ?ala: "I've got a theory, but came evident that a parent 11 ' not Pretty. There's some body, namely a Federal Gov- h'n8 vaguely sexual In alt ernment, with obligations and tne violence. The more pro. uthorlty, a supreme law that nouncea the violence, tha assures equality and protec- more pronounced the texual. tion and unity guaranteed by - the Constitutionally created So, tn general, the dlsrep. system ot legislative. Judicial utable pleasure people fincj and executive, was needed. in witnessing organized cruel. The acceptance of the Con- ty to animals must be traced stitution and Its first seven 1 sadism, which means per? famous words of its preamble verted sexual pleasure. "We, the people of the United civilized society ha States," also the clearly de- evolved many forms ot rival. fined second paragraph of ry, wmch should satisfy all Article 6, automatically re- the pugnacious Instincts ot placed states' rights and ttate numan nature. These physical sovereignty In the y e a r ot contests are both - team, 1789. The adoption ot amend- matches or Individual con menti 13, 14 and 15 In 1870 tests. These are respectable. put a legal end to racial dls- satisiymg ana nave all th crimination, and It Is to the thrills oi combat. everlasting glory oi our Presl- But cruelty, to animals It dent that he demands we immoral. It upsets the Dlvlna make a reality oi that to order ot creation, It is con which we have heretofore trary to the care God has given only Up service. for his creatures, It exceeds Since no race or nation has man s rights to use creatures, a monopoly good or bad It but not possess them, it has a is pitiful that otherwise Intel- baneful effect on character. llgent citizens wear away and it It declared punlthabl most of their superiority In I by God trying to convince othert that they have It. C. R. Burrlll 83414 Cherry St. Central Point, Ore. "Any reckness desire to kill oft animals, all unneces sary harshness and callous bruelty toward them Is to b condemned." Plus XII. Complett Visual Care Contact Lenses DR. DUKE G. 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