Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, JUNE 11, 1450,
By JACK HARR
WEA Staff Correspondent
BELOIT, Wis. — (NEA) — The
sweetheart of Beta Theta Pi fra
ternity at Beloit College is a
housemother the members claim is
the oldest in the nation in age and
in point of service.
She’s Mrs. Minnie Raymond, 83,
who has coddled, guided, advised
and been parent-by-proxy for two
generations of Beta men in the
past 89 years.
A leader since 1911 among the
women who make thelr living by
heing parents-away-from-home
for college students, she loves her
work and is stiil going strong. Her
philosophy: “If it’s no trouble for
a woman to run one man,
m’s no trouble for me to run
50 men!”?
Mre. Raymond took her position
when her husband was forced to
quit work because of tuberculosis.
At first she did all the cooking and
mending fer the men, but now she
acts ag hostess and housemother
nlv,
In recent years, many sons of
men she guided 25 or 30 years be
fora have passed under -her care.
At present there are three men in
the Beta chapter at Beloit whose
fathers knew Mrs, Raymond years
"6 « % ®
Comparing the generations, she
thinks the college student of today
g fundamentally the same as the
coliege student of 39 years ago.
‘Society has changed, but not the
hove with their individual prob
lems and goals,” she says.
Mrs, Raymond, cheerful and ac
tive, says there’s another thing that
hasn’t changed in the eventful
years ©f this half-century—the
superlority of the female sex.
she's seen it demonstrated re
peatedly in the various romances
which have sprung up involving
her “boys,” she says.
Mrg, Raymond claims she un
failingly remembers all the men
whom she watched through their
formative college years since 1911,
She had a ¢hance to reminisce with
plenty of them this month when
Beta alumni came back for the
soth anniversary of their chapter,
To Atiend Air
Three persons Jrom Athens will
be in sitendance at the week-long
Scout encampment at Jacksonville
Naval Air Base, July 23-29.
They are Ralph Tolbert, jr.,
Rodney Cook and Ray Nicholson,
ail of Troop 22, sponsored by First
Baptist Church. They will be ac
companied by Carle Collings, jr.,
Screven, University of Georgia
student, who is assistant scout
master,
The Seouts will take a one-day
eeuise up the St. John’s River in
a Coast Guard cruiser to see the
Navy’s “Moth Ball Fleet.” They
will get 1o fly in a naval airplane,
and will be afforded all opportuni
{ies of air training except at the
yotual eontrols of an airplane.
Other persons wishing to take
the trip should apply immediately
at the Northeast Georgia Council
Boy Seout office in the Shackel
ford Building here because only
250 Scouts and leaders from four
states are eligible for each of the
two ene-week encampments.
.
Death Claims .
Mrs. Wells -
In Commerce
Mrs, C, E. Wells, well known
rostdent of Commerce, died unex
pectedly at her home Saturday
morning .at ten o’clock.
Funeral-arrangements are to be
announeed later.
She is survived by the follow
ing chaldren: J. R. Wells, Los An
geles, Calif.; Mrs.” J. H. Wells,
Winter Haven, Fla.; grandchildren,
Mrs. L. L. Coker, Auburndale,
Fla.; J. T. Ayers, Burlington, N.
C., and Miss Joyce Aylers, Com
nerce.
NEED DIGESTIVE AID
Australian wood-eating white
ants keep, in their intestines, cer
tain protezoa which secrete an
acid that breaks up the woody
fther. Take away the protozoa and
the white ants, being unable to
digest the wood, die.
The ivory carving industry in
fapan consumed 33,060 pounds of
raw ivory in 1949 for production
of export goods, as eompared with
13,224 pounds in 1948.
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‘ Wi FUTURE BELONGS TO THOSE
1 WHO PREPARE FOR I,
{ Moyt N. Chick Sr.
Phone 1130-J.
{ THE PRUDENTIAL
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MODEL CIRCULATION SYSTEM — Dr. Arthur T. Evans of
Cincinnati, 0., demonstrates to the Ohio Medical Association,
meeting in Cleveland, his plastic model of a human circulatory
system. The doctor-is injecting a dye into the arterial tree to show
how blood is supplied to the kidneys and other abdominal organs.
This new method of tracking trouble spots inside the body by
“lighting up” the arterial system took first prize at the meeting.
By
Jonathan Forman, M. D., Vice President
FRIENDS OF THE LAND
Columbus 1, Ohio
Friends of the Land, as an or-
ganization, is much concerned
about the control of the many de
structive floods that occur in this
country every year. We have spent
hundreds of millions to protect
ourselves from their ravages but
we have done very little to stop
these floods at their sources.
Where flood hazards are high,
an emergency program nrust be
developed to preveni heavy sur
face run-off and so reduce eros
ion and sedimentation. Economi
cally, it is also important that not
only must the lands of the water
shed be protected but that these
lands, both those in grass and
those in forests, be made to pro
duce for us meat, timber, water,
and recreation.
Too many of us do not appreci
ate the importance of what hap
pens when a raindrop hits the
bare ground. They take it for
granted as natural and therefore
harmless, Most of us forget that
all of our agriculture is artificial
and an interference with the nat
ural order.
W. D. Ellison, seil conservation-
Health Is Local Problem, Says
Medical Association Head Here
“It would be less expen? to
spend our money at hom& for
health clinics than to-channel it
through Washington,” asserted the
President of the Medical Associa
tion of Georgia in his speech at a
health conference on the Univer
sity campus here Friday,
He added that health is a local
problenr.
Dr. A. M. Phillips, of Macon,
addressed nearly 200 communit,
leaders from 29 Northeast Georgfi
counties at a one-day Better®
Health Conference, spensored by
the Georgia Citizens' Council. He
told the group:
“Hard work can do more-toward
county health improvement than
any government agency can do.” -
Discussing ways and means. of
improving public health, Dr. Phil
lips said local health committees
should be organized to put a bet
ter health program into. effect.
Dr. Phillips went on to say that
he did not condemn Stat}é and
Federal aid for health programs,
but felt that a community should
do as much as it could toward
solving local health problems be
fore it called for outside help.
Feilure of the people to recog
nize the need for public health
clinics is one of the biggest stum
bling blocks in the widespread es
tablishment of better health pro
grams, Dr. Phillips said.
He named tuberculosis control
as an example of a health prob
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
SCHEDULES SUMMER CONFABS
A full schedule of conferences,
clinics, and special workshops will
be held at the University of Geor
gia’s College of Education this
summer in an all-cut eéffort to aid
Georgia’s public school system.
Eight special conferences and
clinics which will be attenced by
teachers and school heads through
out the state have been arranged.
Workshops for teachers studying
at the University this summer will
also be held.
The first conference, a Safety
Education Seminar, will begin
June 19 and continue through
June 23.
Other conferences slated are the
State PTA Conference, June 20-
22; Readin% Clinic, July 10-14;
two School Lunch Workshops,
FOR F. H. A. LOANS
4149, SERVICE see “CHICK”
Buy - Build - Refinance
Phone 1130-J
HOYT N. CHICK, SR.
ist to the United States Navy and
possibly the greatest living au
thority on the impact of the rain
drop, told Friends of the Land, at
their eighth annual Conference on
Conservation, Nutrition and Health
at Ohio University this summer,
that “The violent, unseen erosive
action of the falling raindrop has
been making a mockery of much
of our conservation work. Rain
drops cause a splash erosion when
they hit the unprotected topsoil.
Our principal defense against this
is soil covering crops and mulches.
With the proper raindrop control
incorporated into our program,”
T™ison predicts, “many of the
present-day problems of soil de-
owdewon and water waste that
arise from rainstorms on the land
will fade.”
In the meantime all of our great
dams built to control flood waters
are rapidly filling up with silt and
in a few years will be useless as
will many of our expensive irri
gation reservoirs, Building dans is
a waste of money unless the land
upstream is properly managed and
protected so that it will stay at
home, i
lem whose solution lacked public
support.
Tuberculosis Work
“Ne provision is made in Geor
gia for the treatment and isolation
of incurable tuberculosis patients,”
he explained. “They’re not accept
ed in the State Tuberculosis Hos
pital, so most of them have to
stay at home, where they "spread
the disease to others.
“We cannot make much prog
%-ess in preventing tuberculosis as
ong as the source of the disease
is left unchecked.”
Other Talks
Mrs. Bruce Shaefer, Toccoa,
chairman of the Northeast Region
al Committee for the Better Health
Conference of Georgia, presided
over the conference.
Dr. Irwin V. Sperry, Associate
Professor of Family Development
at the University, led a panel dis
cussion on the establishment of
community. health centers. On the
panel with Dr. Sperry were con
sultants from the State Depart
ment of Public Health, including
Dr. T. F. Sellers, Director; Mrs.
Charles Center, Assistant Director,
Health Education; Miss Theodera
Floyd, Director, Nursing Division;
Dr. Guy V. Rice, Director, Divis
ion of Maternal and Child Health,
and Dr. S. C. Rutland, Director,
local health oganizations,
A second panel on the “Emo
tional Needs of Children” was led
by Frank Smith, Clayton.
July 10-14 and 17-21; Coaching
Clinic, July 24-28; School Admin
istrators Conference, July 26-28;
and Conference of Georgia School
Board Members, Aug. 9-10.
Special workshops on health ed
ucation, guidance and counselling,
school leaders, and the problems
of elementary, secondary, and vis
iting. teachers will be held from
June 14-August 2.
Other workshops on music, nu
trition, and life adjustment educa
tion will be held during *he three
and half week period June 14-
July 8. Final workshops on the
maintenance and operation of the
school plant and on the programs
of principals, superintendents, and
supervisors of apprentices are
scheduled for July 10-August 2.
SAME GAME, OTHER NAMES
The game of checkers has other
names in other hands. It is known
as draughts in England, dambrod
in Scotland, and les dames in
France,
Georgia P-TA
ToHold 28th
Institute Here
The Georgia Parent-Teacher
Association will hold its 28th an
nual institute at the University of
Georgia June 20-22. All sessions
will be held on the Coordinate
Campus.
The conference, attended by
more than 300 Georgia leaders
last year, will stress home-school
cooperation and is designed to af
ford parents an opportunity to
study techniques and procedures
in home building, child rearing,
and educational development. This
year’s Institute will emphasize the
relationship of education to state
legislation. -
Principal speakers at the Insti
tute will be Mrs. Robert Shank,
board member, National Congress
of Parents and Teachers of India
napolis, Ind., and Dr. O, C. Ader
hold, dean of the University’s Col
lege of Education.
Mrs. Shank will speak at the
opening Institute session on
“Leadership.” Dean Aderhold will
speak later that day on “Life Ad
justment Education for Georgia
Youth.”
Mrs. Shank is vice-president of
Region Four of the National Con
gress of Parents and f{eachers and
is a former president of the India
na PTA Congress. She is also a
member of several councils promo
ting the health, education, and
safely of Indian children.
Other prominent PTA workers
participating “in the Institute are
Mrs. Ralph Hobbs, Cataula, presi
dent, Georgia Congress of Parents
and Teachers; Mr. Knox Walker,
Atlanta, treasurer of the Georgia
PTA Congress and a national re
gional vice-president; Mrs. Bruce
Carr Jones, Macon, chairman- of
by-laws and procedure for the
Georgia Congress and Mrs. Char
les Center, College Park, budget
chairman of the Georgia Congress.
Certificates will be awarded by
the College of Education to per
sons completing the three-day
course.
Dr. Charles Joel
Opens Offices
In Decatur, Ga.
Dr. Charles Joel, jr., son of Mrs,
Charles Joel and the late Mr. Joel,
has opened an office at 2117 North
Decatur Road, Atlanta, for the
practice of general medicine,
Born in Athens and a graduate
of Athens High .School, Dr. Joel
received his B. S. degree from the
University of Georgia and his
medical degree from the Univer
sity of Georgia School of Med
icine, Augusta.
Dr. Joel spent three years at
New York City Hospital, the city’s
fourth largest hospital which “is
also affiliated with the New' York
Medical College. He served as a
resident physician in neurology,
and for the last 18 months was
resident in medicine and medical
specialities. "
While serving in the United
States Navy, Dr. Joel was station
ed at the U. S. Naval Hospitals in
Oakland and San Diego, Calif,,
where he was in cherge of neuro
logical and psychisiric services.
SCHOOL DESIGN 2
REDUCES COLDf
BELLFLOWER, Calif—(AP)—
School absences due to colds can
be reduced by modern design and
heating of school buildings, says
Dr. Norman Wampler, superin
tendent of schools here. He credits
them with effecting a 14 per cent
cut in such absences among chil
dren in a new kindergarten.
The floors are heated by radiant
panels, eliminating updrafts. The
heating is controlled by outside and
indoor thermostats, the outdoor
thermastat is a weather anticipa
pator, sensing changes in outdoor
temperatures and signalling the
heating plant to get into action be
fore indoor changes occur. The
room thermostat modifies the ac
tions according to the number of
pupils in the room, and other con
ditions. The system does away
with “the cold 70,” when the ther
mometer may read 70 but the room
is still chilly, said engineers nf the
Minneapolis - Honeywell Regulator
£o.
CAN’T HIT BOTTOM
A marble dropped into the Red
Jacket shaft of the Big Calumet
mine, Calumet, Mich., will not go
to the bottom. The earth’s motion
causes it to lodge against the side
of the shaft.
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ROOFTOP HAVEN—ALI the comforts of hose are staked out on
this garage roof in the Wildwood-Ft. Garry area of Winnipeg,
Manitoba, but the owner isn’t enjoying them. Forewarned that
the flooding Red River would overrun his home, the owner tooq
this desperate step to save his furnishings. .
Community Leaders To Be On
Campus For Leadership Insfitute
Community leaders from
throughout Georgia will meet here
Juné 20-23 for the fourth annual
Leadership Institute,
Sponsored by the University of
Georgia’s Division of General Ex
tension, the Institute will bring
together all community leaders
who are interested in building
stronger community life and or
ganization in Georgia.
Theme of this year’s four day
conference is “Operations Com
munity” with emphasis on edu~
cation, community improvement,
libraries, and welfare.
Miss Emily Woodward, director
of the Division of Forums and In
stitutes and originator of the first
Leadership Institute, will be in
general charge of the program.
Talks, Panels
Three addresses and more than
a half dozen panel discussions are
scheduled. Dr. Robert L. Suther
land, director of the Hogg Found
ation of the University of Texas,
has already been ' announced as
opening speaker.
He will give an address, “A State
Joseph McKee, Tenor
ANNOUNCES the opening of his voice studio
Mr. McKee, B. F. A. Univ. of Ga, will teach a limit
ed number of students in singing at his home, 540
McWhorter Drive. For appointment call 2182-W,
MARTIN'S FRUIT STAND
512 W. Broad Street _
Watermellons, Canteloupes and Mangoes.
Also real nice Tomatoes and Lettuce. |
B For Fancy fruits etc., come to Martin’s Fruit ‘
Stand at 512 W. Broad Street across ‘
! | from the Snack Shack. :
— OPEN EVENINGS —
Open All Day Every Day
Richard Martin, Prop.
TR {
Is As Strong As Its Community
Skills,” at the first conference ses
sion Tuesday Tuesday night, June
20.
Other speakers are Mrs. Gret
chen Knief Schenk, president of
the Alabama Library Association
who will speak on the importance
of library service and Dr. Paul W,
Chapman, associate dean, College
of Agriculture, who will address
:he group on “A Balanced Agricul
ure.
Dean Chapman will speak on the
Farm Family Achievement Day
program June 22, which is being
held as a part of the Institute.
Georgia farm families who have
made outstanding improvement
during the year will be recognized.
Topics for panel discussions
scheduled are education, aims and
achievements of Georgia's com
munity improvement programs, li
brary extension, and emotional and
spiritual security for all children.
- Panel members will be an
nounced later,
BY ). R. WILLIAMS
? arnens Nl “AHONT AN
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Tonite — One Show Only - 9:00 P. M.
LARRY PARKS — MARGUERITE CHAPMAN
in “THE GALLANT BLADE”
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» MITCHELL LEISEN moseme 58
Plus Short “Did’Ja Know” — News.
1 {J[\ TODAY and TOMORROW
A Circus of Joy!
A Riot of Song!
TWICE the FUN and THRILLS
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PAGE ELEVEN
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