Type | issue |
Date | 1947-06-30 |
Paper | Utah State University Student Newspapers |
Rights | No Copyright - United States (NoC-US) |
Publisher | Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
OCR Text | Show wffl i I I UTAH STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE VOLUME XLVI LOGAN UTAH JUNE 30 1947 ' HealthCourse Commences WithtlS Aid A Teacher Training for Health The school is under sponsorship of rf v I o £ - the U S Office of Education with Frank S Stafford workshop director in charge 'Hunsaker said four staff members from the U S office ould be in attendance 0 Two representatives from each of six western state schools are expected here and also two from each of six state departments of health All expenses will be paid by the U S office Approximately ()1 are expected Delegates will be housed in the rural arts building with sessions in the main ' hall there ' Committee chairmen on the campus are Prof William Scholes Dr W W Smith ibr Clyde Biddulph and Prof Israel Heaton while committee members are Prof Vaughan Hall Dean Ethelyn O Greaves Prof Elizabeth A Dutton Dr LeGrande G Noble Miss Ann Bums and Prof Shirley Nelson $ l' Lorerie K Fox Sets Lecture Thursday In Main Auditorium b h Thursday t Dr Fox who received her doctor of philosophy degree at Teachers' - Tuesday July 1 Wednesday July Thursday July '3 Friday July 4 2 Alexander Kerensky Lecture Faculty Meeting Kekensky Lecture Kerensky Lecture Old Juniper Hike Lorene K Fox Lecture ‘ No School Monday July 7 Hunsaker Details Program for Old Juniper Hike ne 3 i 11:00 m am 1 V Annual Utah State summer school Ray Nelson of the Logan Herald-Journtrek to “Old Juniper” will begin Wedstressed the importance of nesday July 2 at 4 p m according publicity media and newspapers - in to Prof H B “Hy” Hunsaker head putting over Extension Service proof the physical education department grams at the closing session of the three-wee- k and hike chairman course in extension methods The trip to Old Juniper camp will be and extension journalism conducted at made by bus Arriving at the camp the college Other speakers of the final day were site at 4:30 groups will be organized there for the trip up the mountain to Director W W Owens of the Exthe tree The group tension Service and John Stewart edishould arrive at Old Juniper at 6 p m tor Speakers during the "week inAppropriate ceremonies will be held it cluded Doyle Green the tree and the group will return to editor Everett Thorpe of the college the camp site for the wiener roast and art department and Murray Moler manager of United Press campfire program al 3500-year-o- ld ion All members making the hike will be initiated into the Old Juniper” club and presented Old Juniper cards Last year 142 members were initiated Prof Prof Miss Prof Lunch Meet Ends basis Delegates were divided into two groups with Prof Vermillion Dean Ethelyn O Greaves and Prof Louise Pierce conducting sessions Miss Elna Miller of the Extension Service and Miss Mildred Bowers of the University of Utah addressed sessions meeting-worksho- p I t Alexander Kerensky premier whose 11 a m lectures drew the biggest crowds of the Summer Session to date will be heard today Tuesday and Wednesday His topics will include an analysis of Russia today and Soviet international policy Russian-America- n relations The dynamic speaker who was premier in 1917 opened his series last Monday with a lecture pointing out that the world was never farther from its dream of “one world’ He said the world is divided geopolitically politically economically and spiritually He analyzed the “world before 1914” and pointed out that from the end of the Napoleonic wars in 1815 until the first world war the balance of power principle prevented total world war Tuesday he compared the United States Great Britain and the Soviet Union calling them three nations which are entirely different types of world empires and which control the world's future He said the three are in search of a “new world equilibrium” and cited their power and precedence over the UnitecT Nations general assembly Mr Kerensky’s Wednesday topic concerned the question of “planned economy for free men or planned economy for slaves” He said that planned economy was born during World War I with the economic section of the German general staff performing the ex-Russ- 4:00 p m 11:00 am Extension Meetings End as Nelson Discusses Publicity time she analyzed the political ence for School Lunch Supervisors and social needs of the Americah according to Prof Una Vermillion farmer following a study made of farm chairman The meet is part of a long-tim- e propopulations in a western New York state county gram for supervision of school lunch The conference was on a that the farmers she rooriis She nomic or social K change considered Americans and re- themselves old-ligarded labor unions as interlopers and opponents of the American way of life Schools and all means of information are needed to educate farm people she pointed out 11:00 a Week of Centennial Programs Begin lone S Bennion in Charge Atthat eco- Applauded Sets 3 Talks :00 a m 3:00 p ra 1 1 ADVANCE NOTICES Thirty Utah Lunch room supervisors Columbia university was met at the college the past week in college praised for her Friday June 20 lecture sessions of the second annual Confer- reported studied were averse to political Russ Scholar Health Education Meetings Begin IMdnday June 30 Committee chairmen are Vaughan Hall hike supervisor Moyle Q Rice campfire program Dr Lorene K Fox in charge of Shirley Nelson arrangements and mentary education in the public Israel Heaton song leader schools Schenectady N - Y‘ who lectured at a recent Summer Session program will be heard again next July 3 NUMBER FOUR Outline of Events Edu-- '' cation workshop opens today on the campus with sessions scheduled thru July 12 Coach H B “Hy” Hunsaker is campus coordinator for the conference ' NOTICES All classes will be dismissed Fri- day July 4 for Independence day Students who "plan to attend the second session which begins July 28 are advised to check the schedule for the session If classes which are desired are not being taught ‘students may consult instructors and if a suffic’ent number wish instruction the classes may be added according to Prof Milton R Merrill ian caesareanbperation Thursday he discussed the fight be- tween “two irreconcilable ways of life: democracy and totalitarianism” showing that the fight is an endless one because there is no middle ground In his Frdiay question-answsession he asserted that planned economy and democracy definitely are reconcilable the world to is take Feeding going and also that such a union is inevitable lot food fiber and and of western a agriculture thereby has a large stake This was the mesin world affairs sage of Glen H Craig U S State Assurance that the USAC Music Department aide to some 150 western states delegates gathered on the campus Clinic will be a regular summer session feature followed a Wednesday Thursday and Friday for concert Thursday night ending this the twentieth annual conference of the school under direction Western Farm Economics Association year’s two-weof Dr N W Christiansen In concluding sessions of the The climaxing concert was Friday morning Dr W P Thomas head of the USAC agricultural by a large crowd in the main economics department led a general auditorium with performers showing discussion of farm credit marketing and excellent results from instruction by musicians who production adjustments necessary for four nationally-know- n joined the clinic staff peacetime work Ag Econ Meetings er Music Clinic Praised chorus-band-orches-- tra ek -c- onference well-receiv- ed " |
ARK | ark:/87278/s6zw6pjw |
Reference URL | https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zw6pjw |