I?- " c . 1 i; . Keep Up With The Tin fi' : ' , V, ? JjS gE&gf ESB | / VOL. 6, NO. 36 Woma r _ ' v1vKsV *" $ s. Shown hero is a patient at (j Sanatorium making a rug while . ^Miss Martha Buttenheim is the REHABIL Miss Martha Eliot Buttenheim, a graduate of the Kalamazoo school of Occupational Therapy, Kalamazoo, Michigan was recently engaged through the co operation or tne tireensDoro Tuberculosis Association, a s teacher and counselor in occupational therapy, entertainment and rehabilitation at Guilford County Sanatorium, according to an announcement made yesterday by Beverly-C. Moore, president of the association. In addition to her degree in O.T., Miss Butenheim is ^also a graduate of Vassar College and Is registered as a qualified therapist with the American Occupational Therapy Association. She began her work April 1st aB assistant.to Miss Eva Reld, who started the program last September. Mr; Moore expressed a desire to thank the citizens of Greensboro and Guilford County for helping make this program possible through their purchase of Christmas Seals, for without, their sifpport this vital phase of the association's program to help tuberculosis patients would not have been possible. "With proper guidance and instruction, many tuberculosis patients can master some of the fundamentals for useful occupatlons while they are still In the hospital," Mr. Moore said. "Rehabilitation actually serves a two-fold purpose. It helpe prepare the patient for-an occupa ics! GREEN in Dies i &1P uilford 'County funds l'or tills aid he rests in bed. ever>' one who bl the work of tlie < teacher The ? atfou. ITATION tion when he leaves the hospital and, at the same time, it hastens the day when he will ibe able to leave in good physical condition. It hastens this day in that it diverts his mind from his disease, arouses his interest and gives him confidence in himself. Such patients, according to doctors, <"c rnuic ktkaiiy buicu uiau luo&e who are depressed and suffer the delusion that their usefulness is ended." "The philosophy of rehabilitation," Mr. Moore continued, "means service to the individual on any level and includes the in-' ' dividual's adjustment to his own helath problem, to his family and friends, to education, to work, to leisure and to society as a whole. It means service on a case work basis which takes i into account recognized counseling techniques, and which aims to develop in the individual an' ability to meet his problems adequately for Himself and for the 1 community in which he lives." "The purpose of rehabilitation is to assist individuals who have or have had pulmonary tuberculosis in working out problems which arise or have arisen j as a result of their illness." "The mental benefits patients may obtain from participation in this plan are many. Invariably, the patient's morale is bolstered with the knowledge that increased activity is associated i (Continued On Page Pour) ?THE? 01 ISBORO, N. C., SATURDAY, JUL."! In Pol In HMNF AM # K*%i> . U* ' . *'$& V" * ' I to patients is made xmssible by iys Cliristmos Seals or supports Brecnsboro Tuberculosis AssociPOLICE SEIZE WHITE MARRIED GIRL. WITH MAN IN RAID ON HOME OF NEGRO WOMAN This is one of those pathetic stories of a broken home, police court suspended sentences and tha,t sort of thing. Arnold Lee Britt, married and father of children, is under a suspended sentence for three years and naid SRO and rnata and Minnie Lee McDonald, pretty, young and married, is under a suspended sentence and she paid $25 and costs. " They were arrested as they occupied a room in the home of Jaunita Owens Brown, Negro woman, who faces charges of operating a disorderly home and selling whiskey. She told police that Britt and the young woman came to her home and engaged the room. She admitted that she sold them whiskey. The cops had a tip, a tip so direct that they knew it was a correct one, and they raided the home where the white truck driver and the young wife were found and arrested. Mrs. McDonald's husband, according to the police, was at the Btatlon when the patrol car brought them to headquarters and he immediately posted bond and took his young wife home with him. Jaunita Brown faces hearing on three distinct charges at some later date, having got a (Continued On Page Seven) ~_~l""~~~" Reat r 20,.1947 ctor's Discharged Prof. Accuses President Of The College Of Negligence In a three-hour session Wednesday afternoon, more than 20 charges against Dr. F. D. Bluford. nrf?Rident nf A on?t T College, were heard by the executive committee of the board of trustees. They were brought by A. C. Bowling, engineering professor, who after 17 years'with the college this year was not "re-elected" to the faculty because of alleged lack of co-operation with the college administration. Action on the charges was postponed until this afternoon at 2 o'clock when in a closed session the executive committee will meet again to consider their validity. Yesterday's meeting was open. Seeks Clarification Bowling is making no attempt to get back on the college faculty, he told the committee. He said he was interested mainly in clarifying the reasons for his dismissal. Charles A. Hines, board chairman and presiding?official? at yesterday's session, in a sweeping analysis reduced the charges specifically to four. Included were: 1 ? Dr. Bluford allegedly used college materials in his home. ,2?He had ibeen consistently dishonest and unethical with students, teachers, general funds and college propefrty^ 3?That he favored the arts departments of the college over the engineering. / 4.?Ineligible football players were allowed to participate In games. , ' But during Bowling's presentation of his "evidence," Pierce C. Rucker, member of the board, in his interpretation reduced all the chargeB to the fact that Bowling "seems to think Bluford is inefficient" and "that the two men disagreed generally about the way the engineering department should be run." , Denies All Charges v Dr. Bluford, in a brief presentation of testimony before Wednesday's session closed, denied all the charges, and Shelley B, Caveness, member of the board', told Bowling; "So far as we can see, you have failed to indicate any reason for your charges of dishonesty. What I think you are trying to imply is that in your opinion the college administration has been inefficient." Shortly after that, Rucker told Bowling that he thought the lat(Continued On Page Seven) i The Future Outlook! PRICE: 6 CENTS Office Is "^tt silts. ('LARA DONNELL WALLINGTON Mrs. Clara Donnell Wallington age 53, of Route 5, Greensboro, passed Saturday afternoon July 19, in the office of Or. J. B. McLaughlin, 9X3 East Market street, after a very brief illness. Surviving are: a husband, Mr. Hughey Wallington, a daughter, Miss Edna Wallington: three sons, James, Hughey, Jr., and Frank Wallington; three sisters, Mesdames Roxie Hayes, Bertha Moore of White Grove Section, Ella Wallington of Rudd section, three brothers Messrs. Lacy Donnell of Merchantville, N. J., Robert Donnell of Route 5, Greens boro, Martin uonnen ot rsass Chapel and a number of neices and nephews. Funeral services were held Tuesday July 2i2 at 3:30 p. m. at White Oak Grove Baptist church. Rev. S. G. Gilmer the pastor conducted the services. Interment followed in the church cemetery. two murder'cases lead court docket Two murder cases lead the trial docket of the criminal session of Guilford Superior Court which Judge Wilson Warllck of Newton will convene in the courthouse here at 10 ' a. m. Monday. Trial is set Wednesday for Wilie Downing, Negro, of 1232 Gray Street, who is charged with using a pistol June 14 to kill Garfield Oliver.. A first degree bill of indictment in the case was handed down July 7. Dorothy Tilley of WinstonSalem is scheduled to go on trial Thursday c for the murd^" October 13 of Alvin Kington, Winston-Salem. Kington was killed near Summerfield when struck by a car operated by the woman, his companion earlier in the day. The county grand jury, meeting Monday also, will pass on a bill of indictment In the case of John Thomas Swink, 18, Route 5, High Point, charged with criminally assaulting 11year-old Anne Marie Hunt June 28. .

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