April 13, 1967 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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Princess $anis Tells:
What Forest Festival Means
it% tlig h
this,, cheo] carpent-y class is
tern (t at, looks at one of the kitch-
I.,.,h;boy s are installing. Work
liszt Y the class taught b Arne
]t at ressing well .... Y •
t a' . tne house is
'ay ,L d Grant on An leside
• L' :na/rll- _ g •
. t the selection com-
mittee for the program, reminded those
who might be interested to get applications
in for next year's house. The selection is
handled through the VFW. Anyone Inter-
ested can direct inquiries to Veterans Hous-
ing Committee, Post Office Box 204 or con-
tact Cray at the Post Office.
les Tell How Students See Labor
dO f .
]1!' trltPlCtUre_(toes the "What is " i i t cxt a source of violence disrup-
,--do get .... " mclude( n be t - " and
[ :[% ior ':.ne A- books invites, encourages and tion to the econom
' [:::ei sttMit ''!2n]ent? even demands an anti-labor there any attention
[ [ th ach t ,a' te on judgment from the reader." economic causes of :
] ,,t most s..U ming The other study was made by the worthwhile bern
i .lmated' .cat ,. text Prof. Robert Doherty of Cornell out of them.
I]SliD'r i , o Present i si who du into the And there is vlrU
-,t a , e Un ver ty, g s "
[Rprei',. s a i fl r st fa- way industrial relations is taught tention given to th
U:lv "eat of r e 1 1 in high schools, most collective ba:
|i_':otci ',"'lason Doherty's findings: "There is conduct in an at
:] , e, ,. a state- no question in my mind, now peaceful negotiations and that
i uflies Was ^ that the survey is completed, 85 per cent of aM labor manage-
Dt 'a o ,- mad that by and large students re- ment agreements are reached
'.or n¢]ih' llatitae Institute ceive an inadequate, often dis- without a work stoppage ever
.]!::lfotCalifria at the torted and sometimes biased pie- taking place.
1/ 12t tidied 2" at Los ture of the role of labor unions The results of Scoggins' study
].Et a grade [ textbooks and the practice of industrial re- are published in a book called
I:l" a d Arc Classes on lations." "Labor in Learning," Doherty's
]:!," , erican Prob- The two studies make it plain are in a hook called "Teaching
}] hlsloa that in most textbooks, organ- Industrial Relations in High
Was this. ized labor is treated mainly as Schools."
i!l TM | "
i f I. t
tion to the economy. Rarely is
there any attention paid to the
economic causes of strikes or to
the worthwhile benefits coming
And there is virtually no at-
to the fact that
bargaining is
conducted in an atmosphere of
By PRINS8
JANI8 HARSTP, D
• The Forest Festival to me is
a celebration of the expanse of
progress of the forest industry
which surrounds us here in Shel-
ton and throughout lason
County. It is also a special
gathering of people to recognize
and enjoy the appropriations
created by God, molded by na-
ture, and given to man.
Because the most popular ap-
peal of our forest is the oppor-
tunity it provides for rugged out-
door recreation, this occasion
enables the people of the forest
and lumbering industries to
share their knowledge and skills
by teaching the public the im-
portance of the preservation of
our natural gift. In addition to
the festivities of the special day,
the preparation of posters and
slogans such as the ever-popular
"Keep Washington Green" and
Smokey the Bear, is a demon-
stration of belief in creative
conservation of our forests,
fields, wildlife, watersheds and
recreation areas.
Our vast forests are America's
playground-- but they also are
lands of many other uses: for-
ests help create jobs and in-
come, so that the average A-
merican citizen has the leisure
and the money to spend on rec-
reation. They also must continue
to protect our watersheds; they
must provide food and habitat
for the fish and game so eager-
ly sought by fishermen and hunt-
ers; and they must provide
places for scientific research.
The functions which forests
must serve are many, but when
management of forest lands so
as to provide a combination of
uses is realized and acted up-
on by the public, our forests
will be able to satisfy all these
demands.
The appreciation of wilderness
values is an invention of civili-
zation. Man generally dues not
recognizes such values as an in-
vention of civilization, h_an gen-
erally does not recognize such
values until he has become sep-
arated from them; but this is
the very thing the Forest Fes-
tival helps to prevent. It 'is a
KWG Honors
Four Groups
Three State of Washington
agencies and the University of
Washington's College of Forest-
ry will he honored by the Keep
Wasllngton Green Assodation,
Inc., for "distinguished service
to forest protection" as the 27th
annual KWG banquet in Olym-
pia April 14.
Dave James, KW president,
said special awards will be dedi-
cated to the late Stewart H. Hol-
brook, nationally-known author
and historian, who served as the
first director of Keep Washing-
ton Green in 1940'43.
Presentations to representa-
tives of tim Washington Depart-
ment of Natural Resources, De-
partment of Highways, State
Patrol and the College of For-
estry will be made by Robert
Del_mg, public affairs manager
of St. Regis Company, Tacoma.
DeLong is a former president
of Keep Washington Green.
dlell 40th Anniversary Celebration
strong community work that
builds morale, fortifies faith in
our industries, and tmtes peo-
ple in a way to let it be known
to the public the utility and
beaut3, of our forests as the
"Goose laying the G o ! d e n
Eggs." In other words our for-
ests providing lands we can use
and enjoy even as we make
ready to pass them on to an-
other generation as a cherish-
ed part of our God.ven gift.
In conclusion, I'd like to say
that to me the Forest Festival
means the bringing together of
citizens who are increasingly
concerned about and have an
interest to become aware of all
the factors involved in the use
of our forest resources to meet
the changing needs of the times.
This celebration is also an op-
portunity to give thanks to the
hard working people of our for-
est and lumbering industries for
their influence upon us toward
wise management of our forests
for the good of all the people.
Census To Ask
About College
• Information about college ed-
ucation will be obtained from
local households by the Bureau
of the Census the week of April
17, Director John E. Tharald-
son of the Bureau's regional of-
rice in Seattle announced this
week.
The questions will provide
data about men with college de-
grees (schools attended, fields
of study, degrees granted), and
are part of the Bureau's rrmnth-
ly Current Population Survey.
They will also supplement the
regular monthly inquiries on em-
ployment and unemployment
collected for the Bureau of La-
bor Statistics, U.S. Department
of Labor.
The identity of those question-
ed is kept Completely confident-
ial, and the facts obtained are
used only for statistical pur-
poses. The same questions will
be asked in all households in
the survey throughout the United
States, Tharaldson said.
Census Bureau interviewers
who will visit households here
during the week of April 17 in-
clude lVLrs. Polly A. Swayze,
Shelton.
Needham Through
Service School
Dental Technician Third
Class Charles E. Needham, USN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J.
Needham, Shelton, was gradu-
ated from the Field Medical
Service School at the Marine
Corps Base, Camp Pendleton,
Calif.
The five:week course is de-
signed to instruct Navy medical
men, attached to Marine units,
in emergency care of casualties
under combat conditions. Sub-
jects taught at the school are
practical field medicine, evac-
uation of the wounded, logistics
and special medical procedures
for nuclear and chemical war-
fare.
After graduation the students
are assigned as combat corps-
men with Marine units in the
United States or with Marine
combat forces overseas.
0s00onsfrafion Prizes
I0000fr00shrnen÷ s
V00cefi°n Trip wiCh New Uni¢
00Urchased during April
00HEV. OLDS
I( 'Used Cars
>
FOREST FESTIVAL buttons went on sale
here tis week as plans for the annual cele-
bration progress. Here, Queen Shayne
Larson pins the first button on Max
Schmidt Jr., president of the Festival asso-
ciation. Button sales are being handled by
the Rotary Club again this year.
Legion To See Films On Philippines
• Films on the Philippine Is-
lands highlight an American Le-
gion program scheduled for next
Tuesday evening in Memorial
Hall at the monthly joint dinner
meeting of Fred B. Wivell Post
31 and its auxiliary.
The evening's program has
been arranged by the auxiliary
under President Mildred Lake-
burg and will be keyed to the
auxiliary's "Foreign Relations"
theme for April. The dinner will
start at 6:30 p.m. with all pest
and auxiliary members a.
their families as guests for the
evening.
At last week's regular Post
31 business session, an unusually
fine turnout greeted the final
visitation of the year by 4th Dis-
trict officers, headed by Com-
mander Norm Goodsir of Olym-
pia and Vice Commander Jim
Jensen of Parkland.
Goodsir keyed his remarks to
the Legion's national "law and
order" program recognizing and
honoring lawmen of city, county,
state and national stature and
urged all Legionnaires to do ev-
erything in their power to re-
verse today's alarming trend to
downgrade officers of the law.
He stressed in particular an ar-
ticle on this subject in the cur-
rent issue of Legion Magazine
which points out the terrifying
situation in virtually all metro-
politan communities of the na-
tion which is dissipating the
authority and powers of lave of-
ricers throughout the country.
Goodsir urged Legionnaires to
actively support the Legion's
"law and order" program
through public activities which
would help build respect for law-
lnlen.
Jensen complimented Post 31
on its excellent membership rec-
ord for the current year, which
showed a roster of that evening
at 287 against a quqta of 256
with strong potential for topping
300 before the Department con-
venUon next July.
Commander Bill Dickie ap-
pointed a nominating committee
of Jay Umpbenour, Milt Cloth-
ier, John Luhm and Vin Con-
m)lly to present a slate of nom-
inees for post officials at the
May 2 meeting. Dickie and Ad-
jutant Ruth Moore were named
Post 31 delegates to the 4th Dis-
trict spring conference in Ta-
coma May 28.
Jane Chappell Is
MMK Salutatorian
• Jane Chappell, with a 3.75
grade point average, has been
selected as the 1967 Salutatorian
at Mary M. Knight. She will
give the Salutatorian address at
the commencement exercises
June 2.
Her Senior subjects are Ad-
vanced Math, Chemistry, Eng-
lish, Bookkeeping II, Contenpor-
cry World Problems, and Span-
ish H. Jane's favorite subjects
are Math and Istory.
Jane plans to attend Western
Washington State College in Bell-
ingham next fall where she will
major in Psychology. She would
like to be a high school counsel-
lor, or work with juvenille de-
linquents.
Jane has been very active in
sports, playing baseball and bas-
ketball during all four years of
high school. She is the Sports
Editor for the yearbook, and a
member of the Pep Club.
As a Senior, Jane served as
Girls' League vice president,
Student Body vice president,
and Senior Class President dur-
ing the first semester. In her
junior year she was the Girls'
State Representative from M:M.
Her hobbies are cooking, read-
ing, water skiing, and swim-
ming.
During the streamer Jane was
employed under the NYC pro-
gram at the school.
She is the daughter of Mrs.
Nellie Chappell and has three
brothers Charlie, 19, who has
just completed basic training at
Fort Lewis, Larry, 14 and Steve
11.
JANE CHAPPELL
/
/
See
These
Salesmen
for
your
bes÷ buy
Art Nicklaus
Wally Dundas
Gee. HasBrouck
Bob Osterman
Art Mell
Quick Service
Men., - Sat.
Rental Car & Pickup
1st & Grow • 426.4426
Thursday, April 13, 1967- Shelton-Mason County Journal- Page i3