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Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 5

Publication:
Statesman Journali
Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

18 4 Robertson Continued from Page 9A. "because it was so intensely personthan any piece I've ever written," al. They were ashamed that I had she said. "It produced an avalanche exposed myself and my family to of mail. The only truly unexpected my deepest emotions." thing was that half of the people who BUT THE SHAME when it wrote in were men.

This was not just passed became clear that the story was a piece about a grisly disease. The of survival. Sur- helping women and doctors to recogsubplot was a story nize of disease that vivor stories don't know any symptoms can, a but should not, kill. gender." Her mother was in the story. So National public recognition came, was her sister and her brother-in- finally, during the sunset of a Jaw.

long career, over the loudspeaker in The story was intimate to the the New York Times building. point of shaming her family in the The announcement that she had first blush of its appearance. won the 1983 Pulitizer Prize for a little while, my family was ture writing boomed throughout the ashamed of that article," she said, building. Advertising Information Funeral Notices Frank Morris Hughes Monday, in Salem. Survivors include: wife, Florence E.

Hughes, Keizer; son, Frank M. Huges Portland; daughter, Doris Hughes Douglas, Salem; six grandchildren, five great grandchildren. Services will be held at 10:30 AM, Friday, Oct. 14, at First Baptist Church. Interment 1 will be at Restlawn Memory Gardens.

The casket will be from 5:00 PM Wednesday until 9:00 AM Friday. Contributions may be made to the Memorial Fund at First Baptist Church, or North American Indian Mission the church. Arrangements are by EDWARDSDOERKSEN CHAPEL OF THE GARDENS, 1350 Com'l SE. Lenore A. (Mamie) Engle Late resident of Salem.

Monday, Oct. 10. Survivors include: daughter, Marlene Strandt, Salem; son, Robert Strandt, Salem; four grandchildren, ten great-grandchildren. Graveside services will be held at 2:30 P.M. Thurs.

Oct. 13 at Restlawn Memory Gardens Rev. Michael Foss officiating. Contributions may be made to the American Heart 615 Lower Ben Lomond Dr. SE, Salem, 97302.

Casket will be open Wed. from 10:00 A.M. to Thurs. 1:00 P.M. at VIRGIL T.

GOLDEN FUNERAL SERVICE, 605 Com'l SE at Isabelle (George) Fleming Graveside Memorial Services will be held at 1:00 P.M. Thursday at City View Cemetery. Arrangements by VIRGIL GOLDEN FUNERAL SERVICE, 605 Com'l SE at Oak. Ivy Hofacre Sun. Oct.

9. Survivors include: husband, John Hofacre, Salem; daughters, Ruth Lauderdale, Sacramento, Joyce Winn, Salt Lake City, Utah; sisters, Violet Neilsen, Logan, Utah, Ruth Rich, Salt Lake City, Utah, Phyllis Ward, Logan, Utah; six grandchildren, two great grandchildren. Graveside services will be held at 3:00 PM, Wed. Oct. 12, at Belcrest Memorial Park.

Arrangements are by the BARRICK CHAPEL, 205 Church St. SE. Isabelle 1.0'Hara Late resident of 1115. Che- mawa Rd. NE.

Oct. 9, Salem. Survivors include: husband, John P. O'Hara, Salem; David O'Hara, Salem, Patrick O'Hara, Fairfield, California; daughter, Barbara Leahy, Seattle, Washington; nine grandchildren, eight great grandchildren. Mass will held at 10:00 AM, Thursday, at St.

Edwards Catholic Church. Interment will be at Claggett Cemetery. Contributions may be made to St. Edwards Catholic Church. Arrangements are by RIGDON- RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage at Chemeketa a NE.

Funeral Notices Lt. Commander Robert F. Hobson Late. resident of 1218 Lisa Ct. NE, Monday, Oct.

10. Survived by beloved wife, Ethel M. Hobson, Salem, Ore; brother, Carl Hobson, Salem, Ore; one granddaughter. Services will be held Friday, Oct. 14 at 11:00 A.M.

at BARRICK CHAPEL, 205 Church SE. Interment will be 2:30 P.M. at Willamette National Cemetery Portland. For those who wish, contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society. Carl T.

Stettler Late resident of 2232 42nd Ave SE. Oct. 11, Salem. Survivors include: wife, Eleanor Stettler, Salem; daughters, Betty Sodeman, Joanne Stettler, Marilyn Butler, all of Salem, Patricia Hardy, Seattle, Wash; sons, Ronald Stettler, Fossil, Fredric Stettler, 29 Palms, Cal; brothers, Fred Stettler and Lauren Stettler, both of Salem; sister, Emma DuMars, Yakima, Wash; twelve grandchildren, five great grandchildren. Services will be held at 10:30 AM, Friday at RIGDON-RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage at Chemeketa NE.

Rev. Dell Schomburg, offic. Interment, Belcrest Memorial Park. Contributions may be made to the Stroke Rehab. Unit, Salem General Hospital.

Charles Edger Pierpoint Late resident of 404 17th SE. Oct. 11, Salem. Survivors include: sons, Clifford L. Pierpoint and Raymond E.

Pierpoint, both of Salem; daughters, Mildred Lamphere, Kirkland, Washington, Lula B. Simons, Redmond, Ore; sister, Ida M. Thompson, Riverside, Cal; eight grandchildren, twenty four great grandchildren, six great great grandchildren. Cryptside Services, 3:00 PM, Thursday at City View Mausoleum. Rev.

Charles Shorow, officiating. Visitation will be at RIGDON-RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage Chemeketa NE, from 10:00 to 9:00 PM Wednesday, and 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM Thursday. Contributions may be made to the Oregon Diabetes Assoc. Hester E. Fleener Graveside services will be 3:00 PM Oct.

12, in City View Cemetery. Arrangements by VIRGIL T. GOLDEN FUNERAL SERVICE, 605 Com'l SE at Oak. Funeral Supplements, DEATH INFORMATION A 24 hr. recorded message 371-1567 Lots Monuments 3 cemetary lots Restlawn Memory Gardens.

Mkt. value, 1200. Sacrifice $600 cash. 581-2421. Home delivery now available in these communities: Salem Aumsville Brooks Turner THE NATION NIW SPAPIR Woodburn Dallas Hubbard Monmouth USA Mt.

Silverton Wilsonville Angel Sheridan Willamina Independence TODAY Keizer Lincoln Newport City Toledo Waldport Tillamook Sublimity Yachats VIA SATELLITE Stayton McMinnville Albany Newberg Corvallis Lebanon To subscribe call today 399-6872 Office hours 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday The Nation At Your Doorstep across the region Salem Joe Dodd scholarships Two scholarships named for the late Joe Dodd were announced Tuesday at the banquet of Salem Catholic schools. Dodd was a community leader and supporter of. Catholic education.

A scholarship will be given annually in his name to a sixth grader entering Sacred Heart. Mid-High School and to an eighth grader entering the Sacred Heart High School. Larry and Janette Epping of Salem were honored for their leadership and support for Catholic education. They were involved both with their children attending Catholic schools, but also were on the Salem Catholic Schools board and the Salem Catholic Schools Foundation. He is a local developer.

The banquet attracted people to the Salem Rodeway Inn. It honored the 120th anniversary since Sisters of the Holy Name started a school in Salem. The nuns still have responsibility for Sacred Heart. Speaking at the affair were the Rev. Thomas Oddo, president of the University of Portland, and Bishop Paul Waldschmidt, auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon.

Catholic schools in Salem, besides Sacred Heart, are elementary schools at Queen of Peace, St. Joseph and St. Vincent de Paul parishes. 6 appointed to panel The Associated Press Gov. Vic Atiyeh has appointed six new members of the Governor's Commission on Senior Services.

Named to the panel were: Carlton Berg, Terrebonne; Louis Grimer Salem; Patricia McCann, Astoria; Mary Alice Muncey, Siletz; Clayton Nyberg, Tualatin, and Maryanne Staton, Corvallis. The 21-member commission advises the governor and the state Senior Services Division on programs for the elderly. Health care cost options discussed It would rub most people the wrong way to think that a 70-yearold stroke victim would be denied an ambulance to get to the hospital, said the director of a statewide series of bioethics conferences. Yet that, and other possibilities that seem "incredibly cold-blooded," must be discussed and sometimes implemented if we are ever to contain health care costs while still providing adequate care to everyone, Ralph Crawshaw told members of the Statesman-Journal editorial board Tuesday. The scenario of the elderly stroke victim is one that is fact in some countries, Crawshaw said.

"That doesn't fit with your way of thinking, does it?" he asked. The conferences, which will be held in local communities for the next six months, aim to get an idea of the health care priorities held in Oregon. Conference delegates will bring up issues of ethics in medicine before local civic groups before helping to organize town hall-type meetings in their communities. The agenda for the meetings is not clearly set, although Crawshaw said the two major issues will center around allocation of health care resources, and definitions of life and death. Tough medical decisions are made daily already, he said, but they are made without society's guidelines and in an atmosphere of increasing mistrust by patients and fear of litigation by doctors.

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can put new life to your wardrobe too all REG. pants, jeans specially upper level, Nordstrom Mall 363-0267 Statesman -Journal, Salem, Wednesday, October 12, 1983, 11A around the valley Measure's cost A Keizer man's wish to place a measure on the ballot that would require all city employees to live within the city limits has cost the city $600 in legal fees, officials said Tuesday. Les Bahr has submitted his petition three times because of imprecise wording. Checking each petition and assigning a ballot title is what's costing money, said city attorney John Lien. Lien said he expects the cost figure to go up after he reviews the petition submitted Monday.

Bahr, an unsuccessful city council candidate in last January's election, said he is taking the action because of reports that Keizer's new city manager, Roy Payne, considered purchasing a home in Turner area. Bahr said he and his wife, Ann, will canvass the city for the 150 signatures needed to get the measure on the May primary ballot. Mayor Bob Simon said a special election could be called earlier, but said he would oppose that because it would involve additional expense. Teen-ager robbed A 14- year-old boy was robbed of $25 and his bicycle about 6:30 p.m. Monday at 17th and Ferry streets SE, Salem police said Tuesday.

The boy received a dislocated shoulder: and was treated at Salem Hospital Memorial Unit following the incident, officer said. He told police that as he rode past a man, the suspect grabbed his arm and pulled him from his bicycle. The boy, a carrier for the StatesmanJournal, dropped his receipt book and cash as he fell, officers said. The man fled on the 10-speed red bicycle. He was described as in his mid-20's, 5-8 to 5-9 tall with a stocky build and dark straight hair.

He was wearing blue jeans and a gray jacket, police said. Bowl robbed Two men, one wielding a knife, fled with $114 early Tuesday from Northgate Bowl, 2380 Northgate Ave. NE, Salem police said. KPDX hopes to be at full power today VANCOUVER, Wash. Northwest Oregon viewers should be able to receive the area's newest television station, KPDX, Channel 49 at least most of the time.

The station, after several delays, finally went on the air at 3:15 p.m. Friday. Since then there have been sporadic and brief butages, due to minor technical problems with the transmitter, said Denny Moore, programming and promotion director. The 2.6-million-watt station, which has a tower in Portland's West Hills, was operating at 70 percent of power Tuesday, following a technical problem Monday. "So far today we're doing well," Moore said Tuesday.

He said he hoped full power would be restored by today. He termed the technical difficulties predictable for a new station An employee told police one of the men asked him for change and dis: played a knife when he opened the cash register. The other man stood by the door to the parking lot. The men were described as Hispanics in their early 20s. One was 5-feet-9 to 5-feet-10, weighing 150 to.

Cano 160 pounds and wearing green fatigue pants and a hooded jacket. The other was 6 feet, 160-165 pounds with black collar hair and a threeday-old beard, officers said. Schools. Continued from Page 9A. Death Notices William H.

Pahrman Late resident of Salem. Sat. Oct. 8. Survivors daughters, Sharon includes, San Jose, Cynthia Hamme, Rebecca J.

Lutz, both of Cypres, Donna Sanders, Culver City, Cal; son, Craig A. Lutz, Aloha, William C. Pahrman, Salem, Brian K. Lutz, Salem; sister, Evelyn Marks, Wanatah, Indiana; six grandsons. No services will be held.

Contributions may be made to the American Heart Association. Arrangements are by the VIRGIL T. GOLDEN CHAPEL, 605 Com'I SE at Oak. Kenneth I. (Red) Isham Late resident of 8200 65th Ave Brooks.

Oct. 11, Salem Hosp. Survivors include: wife, Lorene Isham, Brooks; daughters, Pamela A. Thompson, Brooks, RaVerta Corbett, Oxford, Mass, Dorene Standish, Turner, Donna Major and Shirley Isham, both of Salem; brother, Willford LaFountaine, Tidewater, Ore; thirteen grandchildren. Services are pending.

Contributions may be made to the Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children, Portland. Arrangements are under the direction of RIGDON-RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage at Chemeketa NE. Funeral Notices Clint G. Kuhn Late resident of 527 Wilshire Keizer, Ore. Oct.

6. There are no survivors. Graveside services will be Oct. 12, at 4:00 PM in Claggett Cemetery, Keizer. RIGDON-RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage at Chemeketa NE, is in charge of arrangements.

James Alfred Michael Late resident of 2300 Taft Maytown, Texas. Oct. 6. in Maytown. Survivors include: mother, Muriel Michael, Salem; sons, James Michael Maytown, Texas, Roy Romey, Stafford, Washington; daughter, Cindy Marie Michael and Terry Lee Michael, both of Stafford, Virginia; brothers, Roy Jerry Michael, Boring, Edward Mark Michael, Dayton, Ore; sisters, Georgia Renfeld, Connie Kerper, both of Salem, Magie Baker, Aumsville, Alice Herdman, Phoenix, Arizona.

Graveside services be held at 2:00 PM, Wednesday, at Hopewell Cemetery. Rev. Dennis Stolenberg, officiating. Arrangements are by RIGDON-RANSOM COLONIAL CHAPEL, Cottage at Chemeketa NE. Those desiring to purchase message in this space should call 399-6788 and said they should be cleared up by next week.

A couple of areas in downtown Portland reported reception problems, but Moore said he had not heard any comment from Salem or the coastal areas. "Nine out of 10 calls coming in here are positive," he said, adding that some callers say they don't need the special UHF loop antennas for good reception. Some Fred Meyer stores, carrying the antenna at a special price of 49 cents, reported selling them out and have requested new shipments. Channel 49, an independent commercial station carrying mostly movies and syndicated programming, is carried by cable operators in Portland, but Viacom Cablevision of Salem has said it will not be able to carry the channel until late December or early January. provide a draft of that letter to other board members before sending it out to the churches.

The controversial letter, which did not reflect a consent of the board, was part of Sides' plan to get into the community and deal with school issues. Comments from letters presented to the board Tuesday include: a citizen of this community and a supporter of public schools, it is discouraging to me that a school board member, albeit a chairman, needs to be educated in the basics of separation of church and state," wrote Laurel Simmons of Salem. "'The program has the potential of being politically divisive," wrote the Rev. Tom Whitehead of the First United Methodist Church in Salem. He said it was impractical to expect school board members to have the time to visit a significant number of churches.

"I believe you have opened a real Pandora's Box with the way you chose to word this letter," said school board member Joanne Stern. "It is simply another example of passing off your personal opinions as the decision of the board." The Rev. H.B. London of the Church of the Nazarene in Salem wrote that he approved of the idea of sharing the program and philosophy. of the public school system with on local congregations.

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