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Show 1 THE JOURNAL Page 10 Kaysville MUW Slates Phychiatrist As Speaker For Regular Meeting Dr. Olaug Bassoe, of Norway was the guest speaker at the regular monthly meeting the Kaysville 'branch of AAUW Friday, May 12, at the Davis county library at 8:00 p. m. Dr. Bassoe, physician at Salt Lake County hospital, came to America under an AAUW international study grant. After eight months' stay as a child psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins hospital in Baltimore, she was offered an AAUW grant to study child psychiatry at Rockland State hospital in New York and afterwards studied pediatrics at Iowa University hospital. She came to Salt Lake in January to further her pediatric training and plans to return to Norway up- I t I ! on finishing this training. She graduated as a physician in from University of Oslo Following her graduation Dr. Bassoe specialized in psychiatry because she felt that a woman might understand a woman's problems better than a man who had not personally experienced such problems and her switch to child psychiatry has proved a happy one. While she was taking her training in Norway she examined groups of women imprisoned as traitors. I found that those informers for 1930 I t i -- I I 4 I A 4 i t I I l the most part were persons who had parents with psychopathologic traits and had had a very unhappy childhood. I realized then that pediatrics is the basis, of mental hygiene and psychiatry pediatric when occur will a physiprogress cian learns to consider the whole environment of, a child from the beginning of pregnancy and including life at home, among playmates and in school. I Most of the traitors who brought so much suffering to our patriats by informing to the Nazis were people of considerably lower I. Q. than the average population. They were borderline cases of mental deficiency. We could strike at the source of trouble by offering group therapy to the brighter chil- dren in state training schools. Even the lay person could contribute .greatly by showing these children regular attention,, she added. Mrs. Dale Jost was in charge of the refreshments. Mrs. G. Gibbs Smith was in charge of decorations, and Mrs. William .Bingham and Mrs. Noall F. Hyde arranged the ...... seating. Dr. Bassoe talked and lead a discussion group on child 0. Congratulations to: Mootings ozawa and -- Ralph Parry, North Davis Junior High students, winners of American Legion Auxiliary poster and essay content. Otomi SCHOOL BUDGET. A public hearing to revise the school budget will be held in the board of education office at Farmington on May 15, at 8 p. m. Davisite Named To Fraternity 0 Members of the Layton Second of North Davis Junior ward M Men volley ball team, that Thomas Layton, son of Mrs, Virsecond place in the Ogden May 12 at 8 p.m. in the took High, of one is tournament. Division ginia Layton, Kaysville, school cafeteria. Lecture on child twelve students at the California by Dr. William D. Institute of Technology elected into psychology the campus chapter of Tau Beta Pi, OGorman. P-T- A Kaysville Man Named To Navy . national honorary engineering and MOUNTAIN VIEW club will science fraternity. meet at 'the home of Mrs. Rulon Eligible for election to the fratThayne, May 17, at 8 p.m. ernity are juniors in the top . t of their class, who also one-eigh- th qualify in ties. Officer School activi- extra-curricula- r, . Services Held For Ambrose No. Davis Relief . Funeral LAYTON were held Thursday at services p. m. in 1 , . Richard William Strong, of Kaysville, was named by the Bureau of Naval Personnel as one of the 1,800 successful candidates for the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps. This group was selected from 25,000 high school seniors or graduates who applied for the program last fall. Applicants participated in the Naval college - aptitude test last December and some 7,400 were certified. Those physically qualified were considered by a selection committee of the state or territory of the applicants legal residence.State quotas were apportioned on PART CHIPPEWA ladi a percentage basis of male high beth Bender Cloud, D school graduates in each state dur- . Linn, Ore., has been ebr Shakespeare Societies Set Musical Review r the Sunset mortuary chapel for Ambrose Shakespeare," Layton died May 1. Bishop who resident A closing soCLEARFIELD cial of the, year will be sponsored Frank Hickenlooper, of the Layton ward conducted the servby the North Davis Stake Relief Second society, in the form of a musical ices. Violin prelude and postlude music travelogue. Each ward music department will was played by Mrs. Carmen Dibaccompanied by Mrs. Marianne participate in the event which will ble, A duet, Mrs. Ruth Green and ing 1948. Call. be held May 17 starting at 8 p. m., lean Mother of IX Mrs. Carmen Dibble, sang, In the at the stake house in Clearfield. to addition In the 1,800 civilians, American Mothers Cc First stop on the musical trave-ogu- e Garden, accompanied by Mrs. Call. 200. candidates were selected from is the widow of the fcX Invocation was by Le Roi Day. will be in church, and will the Fleet for the NROTC. program. to be graduated treat ward Third )e presented by Layton A solo was rendered by David of four graduates of n the form of a sacred trio. The Cook, and also by La Rae Weste-greeleges, and herself Maybe next stop will be a school daysV Mrs. Call. . by accompanied The dimmer the light, the more Oregon Federates ( a pantomine by the Sunset ward. Lawrence were Bishop Speakers Clubs. (Intemtfa&l Sahara Village has prepared a skit I.' scandal power. Gosport. D. and Miller Arnold Criddle, entitled, Hats of Yesterday. A Bishop Hickenlooper. duet rendering music of Stephen Benediction was by Lynn CridFoster will be the offering of Syra- dle. Dedication of the grave in the cuse Fourth ward. Syracuse will Kaysville-Layto- n Memorial present Mothers Dream; Lay-to- n was by Clarence S. Simmons. park, First ward a sextet of the gay Nineties, and Anchorage will present Indian tnusic. Other presentations will be: Lay-to- n Second ward, Spanish music, West Point, an Irish trio; Clearfield First, Broadway Rhythm, and Clearfield Second, a double trio. Finale will be a concert number, Sundown, by the combined chorus of all wards. ; KAYSVILLE Regular monthof the ly meeting Kaysville Ameri82 can Legion Post was held in the hall last Monday. Three air city force films were shown, delegates and alternates to the' district conKAYSVILLE Oakleaf camp, vention to be held at Ogden on Daughters of Utah Pioneers, will June 3, 1950, were elected. meet at the home of Mrs. MarguerConvention delegates are: Max FIGURE ON FORMULA . . After discussing ite Nichols Thursday evening, Apr. Sandall, Amos Odd, Bob Hennesman possibilities cf a farm price support prop Brennan, and 18, at 8 p. m. sey, Fred Kershaw, Roy N. Pace, Harold D. Cooley, Charles Howard Bonnemort, Kenneth , ' leave White Esnsa. ONeil, Clark Cheney and Harry Epperson. Alternate delegates elected were: Alan Scof field, Wayne Swanger, Emil Whitesides, Fred Hennefer, Leonard Larson George Norelius, - i r tt n, A'vK Legion Post 82 Delegates To Rally Are Named , Oakleaf DUP Camp To Meet .VW 1 . Benefit Dance Review Slated i i wtrvVi 4 A dance review will be held Sat- the North Davis stake house, featuring students of urday, May 20, in Kil-foyl- . e, USACGraduate List Includes v the Symphonic School of Dance, Randall Bowring, George Reid, Layton. Ballet and tap numbers Harold Williams and Paul Williams. will be featured on the program. Yvonne Parker of Kaysville will The event is being sponsored by the Clearfield Second ward. Admis- be among the 1200 men and women sion will be by donation to the who will receive bachelor of science stake building fupd. degrees from Utah State Agricultural college this spring. Carl Buys . -- Kaysville Man Presented USAC Award KAYSVILLE Wayne B. Ringer, Kaysville, was awarded for high scholastic attainments at the Utah tate Agricultural college. The award was a gold pin presented students in recognition of having had straight A grades for three consecutive quarters of residence at the school. Dr. Wallace J. Vickers made the presentations in ceremonies held in the LDS institute at the college last Sunday. Mr. Ringer was one of 21 students to receive the award. Mr. Ringer, who is in his last quarter at the USAC, will graduate in August and will take a teaching position at the new North Ogden junior high school. He has . majored in industrial arts. Moss, Eloise Wilcox and Rollo C. Richards, of Clearfield will also be numbered among the graduates. Nearly 150 students will receive masters degrees, and for the first time in history the college will grant doctor of philosophy degrees to twq young men. They are Walter Gardner, Logan, and Than Myint, Burmese student. The total number of graduates will approach 1400. Among the events of Commencement week will be an occasion honoring President Franklin S. Harris. Completing 29 years as a college president, 24 at BYU and 5 at USAC, he will become president emeritus of USAC. He will go to the Orient in June as chief of a mission on technical collaboration between the United States and Iran. Elder Ezra Taft Benson of the LDS Council of the Twelve will give the baccalaureate sermon on Sunday, May 28. Dr. George Duke Humphrey, president of Wyoming university, will address the graduates in exercises at which they will receive diplomas on June 2. , V w .w..s smv.v. V. r fi Syracuse Area Evaluated il ! ' At $806,767 4 fl . J. . v - An idea of what the assessed evaluation for Davis county will be this year was given with completion of an appraisal of the Syracuse area. According to Joseph H. Johnson, county assessor, an appraisal of Syracuse, recently completed, shows an increase in evaluation of the area of $58,580 over 1949, or an increase of more than 33 per cent. The increased evaluation comes largely from remodeling and improvement of homes, Mr. Johnson stated. He pointed out that this rapid increase in the evaluation of an area indicates the necessity for periodic The job of appraising the entire county is in process and has been completed as far north as Centerville, the county assessor said. A v A M.. ' J . ''f-'W-.H- N A 1E3 SEVERE RIDES AGAIN tf Washington te spread message for hon v of capital, Marking the 175th anniversary hr-ffV- -4 LS vttnfcri ca Capitol C .. |