Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 08, 1955, Page 7, Image 7

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    MONDAY, AUGUST R
1955
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE SEVEN
Mrs. Dunbar
Home Again
Mrs. R. H. Dunbar, teacher and
principal in the KJamath Falls
school system for 37 years has re
turned from an extended trip to
the east coast.
After leaving here June 5 by
United Airlines sho spent some
time with a step-daughter, Mrs.
Ernest Moser and family, frequent
visitors in Klamath Falls. Mr. and
Mrs. Moser, former missionaries
in Africa, are now in charge of a
home at Stony Point-On-the-Hud-son,
willed to the Presbyterian
Board of Foreign Missions lor the
use of missionaries home on fur
lough. During her visit Mrs. Dunbar
visited Harvard for graduation
when Helen Keller received her
doctorate's degree and Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer of West Ger
many received an honorary doctor
ate. She visited Hyde Park. Bos
ton, Columbia University and took
a boat trip around Manhattan Is
land. '
In Richmond, Tndians, she visit
cd a brother, Charles F. Parker
and family. He is associated with
the guided missile division at
wnjlit Patterson Field. Later
Mrs. Dunbar attended a session
of the U. S. Congress and visit
ed Esther Vcatch McDonald, at CBn
lon. Ohio. Mrs. McDonald is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Elbert
Veatch. Klamath Falls. She also
attended the National Presbyterian
Church. Washington. D.C.. the
church the President and Mrs. Ei
senhower attend, and went to serv.
Ices at several others.
She returned home by way of
San Francisco.
I , Ir" """ 'I
:
; :t. 1.-:. T. M. Pt;. V S Pat CT. L I
Csr. 195! by t;CA Zi
"That's about all! Just avoid starches, fats, sweets, and ;
wear slenderizing pin-stripes!"
Roterians
Plan-Tour
The annual Rotary Club Live
stock tour is scheduled for August
9, 10 and 11. They plan to visit
every 4-H livestock club member
in the county.
In order to succeed in visiting
every livestock project, the Rotar
ians have set up two groups with
a definite area to cover each day
of the tour.
Group I'will start the' tour at
Keno and work toward Klamath
Falls while group 2 will travel to
Bonanza and Langell Valley.
The second day the two groups
will cover the Olene, Henley and
Midland areas and the Inst day
will see group 1 In Malin and group
2 in Merrill.
Soviet Air Crash
Picture Published
MOSCOW Wl Pravda Monday
published news of one of Russia's
worst known air disasters in recent
years the fiery crash of a Soviet
airliner whiclr claimed The lives ol
25 persons, including 10 Norwegian
women.
It was the first time in years
that the Soviet press has reported
such an accident. The brief dis
patch on page three of the Com
munist Party organ , said the
trngedy occurred Saturday near
Voronezh, 290 miles southeast o f
Moscow.
The women were members of
Norwegian political parties who
had accepted a Soviet invitation to
visit Russia. The remaining victims
were Russians, five of them crew
men.
pud Growers
late Meeting
The Klamath Potato Growers As
sociation has scheduled a, meeting
for Friday evening, August 12, at
the Recreation Hall in Merrill.
Growers are concerned with the
market outlook for the 1855 crdp.
An effort is being made to pro
vide Section 32 funds to encourage
diversion of low grades. Marketing
agreement regulations will be dis
cussed. ReDresentntives of the Stiite De-
nartment of Agriculture wish to
discuss administration of Oregon's
new potato grade and labeling law.
Reasons for increased inspection
fees will be explained.
Emotionally Disturbed
Women Turn Up Records
Of Excessive Surgery
By DELOS SMITH social and economic setting. The
United Prat Science Editor second 300 women were his con
Nip w YORK rup In wealthy, trola - not one had ever been in
fashionable Westchester, a subur
ban area adjacent to New York
City, the women who are emotion
ally disturbed have managed to
get many more surgical operations
than the women who areu t.
Dr. William A. Triebel looked in
to the situation carefully. He
couldn't know, of course, whether
all the women deserved all their
operations but he was frankly sus
picious that many of the women
with disturbed emotioi had hood
winked their surgeons into futile
slicing.
Dr. Triebel. of the sUff of New
York Hospital-Westchester Division
in White Plains, had been roused
by a 28-year-old nursery school
teacher. Her symptoms, as she de
scribed them (and as she acted
them - out physically) all pointed
clearly to a malformed stomach.
NORMAL STOMACH
This was confirmed by a series
of standard gastrointestinal tests.
Confidently, the surgeon opened
her and found quite a normal
stomach. In retrospect, said Trie
bel, one could see that her sto
mach troubles had all originated
in her mind. Yet she had produced
symptoms and signs which fooled
doctors and tested positive.
So Triebel took 300 women who
had been patients in psychiatric
hospitals or had been treated by
psychiatrists. Each one of the 300
he matched with a woman of the
same age, marital status, and
In the body. Or perhaps emotlon-l turbed persons, and conveyed this
ally disturbed persons maae mucu emnusiasm to weir doctors, ur
more of symptoms than undis perhaps surgical operations have
great psychic value to the emotion'
ally disturbed and they deter
minedly seek operations.
a psychiatric hospital or treated
by a psychiatrist.
Of the first 300, I'M had had
major operations. Of the 300 con
trols, only 68 had had major oper-i
ations. The 129 had had 1W oper
ations among them. The 68 cou
trols bad only operations.
He had his 300 emotionally dis
turbed women sub-divided uito
categories according to the nature;
of their disturbances. Of the neu
rotics among them, 65 per cent
had had operations while only 23
per cent ot their matched controls
had had operations. In the other
categories, the relationship was
about the same, save that for
schizophrenia. Here there was no
significant difference between the
disturbed and their controls.
PSYCHIC VALUE , ,
Triebel, in his report to the
New York State Journal of Medi
cine, could ofier only a series of
perhaps" In trying to explain it.
Perhaps, he said, emotionally ill
Dersons might have some "constl-
tuttonal inferiority." Or perhaps
"events" in the mind had effects
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