E- w i* i \\, . * kv ri; : ' | Keep Up With the Tin FUT VOLUME III, NO. 6 i 93 Hospitals Have Affiliated Units The U. S. Office of Civilian Defense today announced that 93 hospitals and medical schools scat.> ' tered throughout the country have complete formation of "affiliated ." * units" of civilian physicians which ';.'v - will be available to either OCD or h i'. tJjje Army in the event of need for jr.. setting up emergency hospital \ facilities in their respective areas. f.-\ Each unit is composed of 15 physicians, surgeons and other 8i>eclalists, and forms a balanced L-;' professional staff. OCD will use the units to supplement the staffs of "emergency base hospitals" lo; , cated in relatively safe zones on the fringe of erltlcal areas iq case V. it Is necessary to transfer civilian patients to these hospitals because -,5vv" of emergency in, such areas. ? The units will be called upon by the War Department to stafi extemporized hospitals should i<:V there be a sudden Influx of bat tie front casualties, or some other extraordinary military necessity requiring hospitals and physicians V , beyond the Immediate capacity ol the Army in, any, particular, local?; lly. ? --! V'V The OCD-afflliated units will be used for military emergency pur'a*! poses .only in or near the communi ties in which the staff re sides. Their duty will be tempprary andthey will be'Replaced by r/, Army doctors as quickly as the surgeon general of the Army can Kit; V- make the necessary assignments. Normally, all the 15j doctors ol B&w a.unit are associated with a single -'V, hospital. Each unit Includes: a i ?: chief and assistant chief of medl R*; . cal services, two general Internet lata, a chief and assistant chief ol ^A-'-surgical services,jfour general surgeons two orthopedic surgeons, one dental surgeon, one pathologist KgratQii one radiologist. |j vJ ^ J Physicians accepted for service umm _ received mucuve re serve commissions In the U. S Health Service, but will tx called to active duty'by the sur' '* ' geon general (USPHS) only a1 V j^'jvthe request of OCD. When a unit SVvs? isneeded,el th er to staff an emerhospital or to assist the ^/^' 'Army temporarily in a military ^^.'- /eiMrgency, the physicians of the /^JvVj.unlt'wlll be placed on active dutj fcwV'ifor the duration of that particulai f?r^tMpergency. . ... [^Organization of, these units it j- 'V selected communities will give |i|^^i*both OCD and the Army organ '/-lied emergency hospital BtgffJ ; ' whlcl?vcan be -called upon in time mP f is necessary to ge grade.:'A price for. one's eggs i ^IfUt^^cIean'^ahy dirty or sUlnee ;ones/and:do some-easy c&ndllm ' '"J.T V?JvT??<fve' the eggs with blooe [ spots. says-T. T. Brown, poultr; A ' it; specialist. *' \ ' V ' c V m i^ '0 ? ' 'N fltv. . Food specialists advocate pre &ViVparlng potatoes many ways fo ;jWaft.ety, -but-'to get the nios Rrc&^tamin C and thiamine from i jj!{'-wWteepotato,-boil-it -in its-owi ^Kjweil^sc rubbed Jacket. I ie8.r | ORE GRE'ENSBOH jylsTT \ i Twenty-three of the corps Training School, Army Air Bai prairie land, the school began phase given over to the study ol Mr. Major Alfred Reevers, instn engine assembly class. Reevers Bennett To Obsei Day Tuesi The 70th observance of the founder's day at Bennett college here Tuesday, December .14 will present in the main address Mrs L J. D. Bragg, president of the Woman's Division of Christlai Service of the Board of Mission! , and Church Extension lof the L Methodist church.1 In celebration of its founding in 1873 In the basement of St ; Matthews church here, the tradi tlonal program is expected to at > tract to the campus trustees, grad , uatea and friends of the collegt for. exercises to be heldi'ln Annlt s Merner Pfelffer chapel at 10:81 o'clock. Outstanding church leaders wll bring greetings to the college foi the occasion. Mrs. E. L. Hlllman of Rocky Mount, I president, Worn an's Division of Christian Service southeastern jurlstdlctlon; Mrs O. - O. Weaver, Winston-Salem president,1 Woman's Division o: Christian Service, Western Nortl Carolina Conference, and Mrs. J B. Caldwell, Winston-Salem, pres Ident of the North Carolina Con ference, will speak for the churcl groups. - , Words of appreciation will bi expressed on behalf of the college the students and the graduates b; Dr. Ivan B. Taylor, dean of In structlon; Miss Kathryn Daven g port, president of the student sen j ate, and Mrs. Qllberta Jeffrie ; Mitchell, Mebane, president ofthi 1 graduates association. 1 The observance will feature i roll call of the.class agents whi are expected to(' report the result of . the endowment campalgi t among the graduates who hav a been asked to contribute one $2! t, war bond toward the fund. Music for. the exercises will b ?THE OU 0, N. C., SATURDAY, DECEMBER . THE i h t'kj ^BP I^m9 1B. ^1 of technical instructors on duty at le, Lincoln, Nagraslca, are Negroes, functioning in June, 1042. The coi ! some particular branch under experl jctor of aircraft mechanics, who is g was formerly principal of a school at rve Founder's lay, December 14 furnished by the Bennett choir of 40 voices under Orrin Clayton Suthern, II, organist and director of music at the college. Bennett college is a standard four-year college devoted exclusively to the higher education of Negro Women. It has the high rating of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools an dls a member of the Association of American Colleges. The college received its name In honor of Lyman Bennett, of Troy, N. Y., its first benefactor. It operated as a small co-eduea) tlonal unit until 1926 when it was reorganized by the Methodist wviinh 4nlnf nrtHrtn nf fVlO 2 UXU1U* LUlVUgU JVU1I, HVUVU v? KUV board of education and the Woman's oHme Missionary Society. Dr. David D. Jones,* a native . of Greensboro and a Phi Beta L Kappa graduate of Wesleyan university, was appointed to theprest ldency and has guided the destiny j o fthe institution slncQ that date. Since 1026 the college has r grown to a place of leadership - and respect in educational circles i of America. Today Its student body represents 30 states and the t District of Columbia, i, During the past seven years the Ir college has received nearly a mil lion and one-half dollars for eap. ltal expansion. > Currently the college is works lng toward a goal of $300,000 to e supplement a sum of $200,000 from the General Education Board of i New York dty.\ ? B NURSES TO MEET. a The district Nurses' club will e meet here at L. Richardson Me5 mortal home Sunday, December 12, 4 o'clock. All graduate nurses e are urged to attend. \ Read TLO 11, 1943 srmyp 4 11 W^~ g I mpi|m 111, ;:.-i I the Army Air Forces Technical j Located on Nebraska's rolling irse consists of 13 phases each j t supervision. Pictured above is ] iving pointers to students in the j ; Oswego, Kansas. ^ f Council 01 Social I Agencies Studies Delinquency At its regular bi-monthly meeting last Monday afternoon the I Council of Social Agencies met at Hayes - Taylor YMCA at one o'clock to discuss recent rising trends toward delinquency in the city of Greensboro. Mrs. Beatrice Harrison presided at the session In fVio oHoanna /if tha nrAol/lont Wilbur K. Wright The body listed among rising trends the employment of young people under fourteen years of age without proper work permits, the 'employment of young people In beer' gardens and cafes serving alcoholic beverages, slackening ' In school attendance, the sudden influx In Grensboro of soldiers, and the need for more recreation a al activities In the public schools. The council plans future meetings in which persons in authority, and others would be Invited to discuss these and other pertinent problems now In our community. The council has been responsible for the opening />f a Travelers Aid desk at, railway station where housing and other Information relative to travelers aid Is given. PROMINENT PERSONS VISIT Y. M. C. A. Among recent visitors to the Hayes-Taylor Memorial T. M. C. A. were Herbert King, national student YMCA Secretary, New York City; William C. Craver, executive secretary of YMCA, Houston, Texas; R. Maynard Catchlngs, national student YMCA secretary, Atlanta, Georgia; Herbert T. Miller, executive secretary Broklyn, New York YMCA; and William J. Trent, Washington, I>. a The Future Outlook! f PRICE: 6c M'Laughlin Named To Chest Board Dean J. C. McLaughlin, head of epartment of agriculture at A. nd T. college was named to serve or one year on .the board of direcors of the Greensboro Community nd War Chest. The meeting of oth groups was held last. Monay afternoon at the Richardson livlc center. This marks the first line that a Negro has been so ligtily honored. Dean McLaughlin headed the fegro division of recent communty and war chest drive and his livision oversubscribed their goal >y 102 per cent. Other persons lamed to serve for one year with lean McLaughlin are as follows: Jajor L. P. McLendon, George E. 'errin, Robert Moseley, Mrs. .Talus Cone, J. K. Voehringer, Jr., rV. H. Holderness, Mrs. E. F. ..ucas, Larry W. Wilson, Marion Teiss, R. W. Baker, Dr. Clyde A. tUlner, W. J. Carter and H. F. starling. DR. KARL DOWNS VESPERS SPEAKER AT BENNETT COLLEGE A philosophy of everyday living is far more important than the external means which one may possess, declared Dr. Karl Downs, president of Samuel Huston college, Austin, Texas, speaking yesterda yat Bennett college vespers. The youthful administrator illustrated his declaration saying that the military men know the value of the philosophy which a soldier carries into battle and prepares him for a philosophy. He asserted that college students also need a philosophy and a towering faith in humanity. He admonished his audience to get something to cling as we go out into the darkness of the world where "the lights are going out one by one." . He asked for an impregnable love of society. The speaker was introduced by Dr. Ivan E. Taylor, dean of instruction, who presided. The college choir sang, "Holy, Holy, Holy',' by Tschalkowsky and "Go Down Moses," by Burleigh under the direction of Orrln Clayton Suthern, II. fatiotvofeABC fk VICTORY mi VACCIPES I to ufcgaari fightao' buKS . TU1(M IT IN! ; *2SP

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