Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 10 Jul 1947, p. 5

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"It is a common question amorig the young‘~women to ask why the boost in need for nurses now that the war is over," says Miss Mary I. Bogardus, president of the Ilâ€" linois ‘State Nurses‘ â€"association. *Few people realize how great the expansion has been in health servâ€" ices that depend on nurses to carâ€" ry through successfully." (Continued from page 1) the United States as well as in Canada, Australia and South Amâ€" erica, For three successive years he has performed with the Chicago Symphony orchestra during its winter season in Orchestra hall. In .Qo-mfivfl, brief period of time, he has become one of the qutstanding pianists of the country and has won a wide Chicago and North Shore following. . Hannikainen, born in Finland, l tot Shcilee aindony ar Haske at the Sibelius academy at Helsinâ€" ski and then went to Paris, Berlin and Vienna. He was conductor of the Helsinski Symphony orchesâ€" tra before coming to the United States in 1940. ~Since then he has been guest conductor with the Boston Symphony orchestra, the Philadelphia orchestra, the Buffaâ€" lo and Minneapolis orchestras. He was made permanent conâ€" ductor ‘of the Duluth Symphony in 1942 and leaves that post in the fall to come to the Chicago Symâ€" phony orchestra as its assistant conductor. Thursday, July 10th, 1947 For Women in Nursing Field ‘ Opportunities in the field of nursing have multiplied so fast since the war, in comparison with the war time _ situation, that a young graduate nurse today may choose from at least a dozen fields in which to make her ca~ These opportunities are being explained and interpreted to the young women who visit or write the Illinois State Nurses‘ as~ sociation in Chicago asking for advice on a nursing career. .A HANNIKAINEN WILLâ€" Miss Bogardus enumerates the hospital building program in which the government is assisting, the increased use of hospitals by the public as a result of widespresd hospital insurange, new industrial elinics, expanded public «health programs from the federal to the local level, the +meed for more nurses in veterans hospitals, and, another aftermath of the war, the tragic need~of reMbilitation overâ€" seas. . This__ mieans â€"American nursés for we have half ofâ€" the nurses of the entire world. / . . There are still other opportuniâ€" ties for the young nurse after her graduation. She may go into teaching or private duty. She may prefer administrative or ex~ ecutive work in a nursing organiz ation or hospital. She may become a specialist in psychiatric, tuberâ€" eulosis or orthopedic nursing. There is a niche in the qursing profession for every type of talent and energy, according to Miss Boâ€" gardus. What graduates do with these opportunities and how far they advance in a chosen field is entirely up to them. Top jevel jobs in nursing pay as high as $8500 a year, Me:y nurses who joined the milâ€" itary services during the war, have married and have not returned to nursing service. â€" Their places must be filled and additional nursâ€" es enrolled to ensure adequate civ~ ilian health standards in line with The new Gâ€"inâ€"1 kitchen aid _A MUST fm housewife. Easy to use. M KEY opens Tars and bottics 90 per cent of.all rs an les. cen vacuum cans sold uf:ym withâ€" _ i a bottle opener, olive and cherry fork and catsup "starter." It‘s a handy, permanent kitchen aid made of a fine spring steel, heatâ€" treated to give longet, better servâ€" Larson‘s Stationery, A&P Superâ€" Market, Deerffeld Pharmacy and Degrficld Hardwhre. ________ tce. Msrint AIn1SN. :o t-lwm en * me have ::: mdnm teed. . 49 cents at the f stores: Blue Goose Food Market, c.-u-lnu;-m,nwmm Ravinia, Sears, Roebuck & Co., Ask for MASTER KEY Highland Park, Mincis current expansion . and health services. Miss Bogardus also points out M-hfin.h-u-u.::: conditions are greatly because nursing organizations and employers of nurses are now workâ€" ing together to ¢orrect unfavoraâ€" bie conditions, ‘This means health job satisfaction for the nurse in addition to pride in her profesâ€" sion. It is a rewarding lifetime career any way you look at it. Praise From Chicago Sun and AVC their fall semester in August or September. They are receiving applications for enrollment now and while a few nursing schools they have opportunities for addiâ€" tional qualified applicants. The Hlinois State Nurses‘ assoâ€" ciation, 8 S. Michigan avenue, Chi~ cago 3, maintains year round counâ€" Thomas A. Bolger, Democrat, of McHenry, who represented this district in the recently completed session of the Illinois General Asâ€" sembly, was one of three members of the Lower House given special praise last week by the Chicago Sun‘s ace political columnist, Milâ€" burn (‘"Pete") Akers. interested in nursing as their life time profession. ‘The association state directory . of _ approved schools of nufsing, and other litâ€" erature. + Bolger‘s Record Wins Akers, who has been frank in his criticism of the Assembly‘s "poor ‘record" ‘and *antics," deâ€" voted his column on Saturday to the thesis that "all members of the Assembly aren‘t bums." Alâ€" though he called the picture "defâ€" initely bad," Akers named three senators and three representatives, including Bolger, as "good legisâ€" lators." _ Aker‘s selections were equally divided betweenâ€"theâ€" two political parties. The columnist cited Mr. Bolger as a "‘watchdog of the treasury‘ and an able advocate of the needs of the public schools." . ‘The. job of _ state ‘senâ€" ator ‘or of state representaâ€" tive is too important to every perâ€" son in Illinois to permit service by any one other than a community‘s highest class citizen," Akers deâ€" clared.. _ ‘"Unfortunately, many communities permit persons of the opposite ~ caliber to ‘represent them." This week Edmund Grossberg, acting chairman of the North Shore chapter, AVC, in a stateâ€" ment complimented Mr. Bolger on the Sun‘s citation, adding that he "was one of the few who resisted dangerous ‘Little Dies committee‘ legislationâ€"" *Choice of red, blue, black or green on cither white or black mpe. Plesse send me the following Cash‘s Woven Names. 12 dozen $3.50 6 dozen $2.40 9 dozen $3.00 3 dozen $1.80 As the Notions Comâ€"-o'-uilth;um GARNETT‘S FIRST REQUISITE FOR SCHOOL AND COLLEGE OUTFITS . . . . Generations of boys and girls have gone through school and college with all their belongings marked with Cash‘s Names, Give your son or dauighter dnemeglnlptomdmhunhcdofiq mixups ‘s name tapes are permanent, fase color, easy to artach by sewing or with Cash‘s NOâ€"SO Cement â€" 25¢ # tube. of CASH‘S Wosesn NAMES of Vets May Carry $1000 To‘lmh-_ Regardless of Occupation With less than a month remainâ€" ing for veterans of World War U to reinstate their national service life insurance without a physical examination, Veterans Adminisâ€" tration officials pointed outâ€" that veterans are not required to car rythofnutli.m;nflq. ‘They may reduce their GT insurance to us low as $1,000:~ The deadline is However, VA insurance officials are encouraging veterans to take full advantage of their NSLI and to carry as much as they can af~ ford up to the $10,000 maximum. Catholic Youth ~Fiftyâ€"six CYO vacation centers ‘pft_qan‘fnt recreational activiâ€" ties to‘children from 6 to 14 years old opened‘in Chicago and in Jolâ€" work in less of the hazardous conditions, without paying. any extra premâ€" One of the top features of NSLI is that a policyholder may To reinstate, a veteran needs only to sign a form that his health is as good as it was when the polâ€" iey lapsed. iet Mc T © Mfindu.h:y'l,fulm Started in 1981, the centers, fnquenfly.ulld\mp day camps, will be supervised §‘= hundreds of trained volunteer Te includâ€" ing priests, nmn,mly:ri-u and Catholic high schooh boys and girls. e xt Strategically located, m open _ to â€" children of creeds and colors, and afford chilâ€" dren of 'q;;king parents a place for directed play. y tgry A varied program of dramatics, music, games, field trips and ‘athâ€" letics from 9 to 12, Monday thru Friday mornings, is expected to atâ€" tract over 14,000 children. A typi~ cal~day includes an informal as sembly, flag raisimg, announceâ€" ments of coming events, ard the singing of songs. _ Registration will â€"begin â€"with the opening â€" on Monday. Craft materials and milk will be supplied free of charge.~ The program is sponsored by the recreation department of the CYO, . which is headed by Tom Keating.:. Hi sassistants are Wilâ€" liam Lynch and Mrs. Sylvia Lynch. (Continued from page 1) Benno F. Nell, a veteran of servâ€" ice as a deepâ€"sea ship captain, and Malcolm Vail, noted Lake Michiâ€" gan yachtsman, both residents of Highland Park, haye been asked to serve on a safety committee headâ€" ed by Dr. R. R. Ringland. This group will lay plans for extensive safety measures which, they hope, Fortyâ€"nine of the centers, which are held in parishes, community centers, and parks, are in the Chiâ€" cago aréa and seven in Joliet. YOUR COMMUNITYâ€" Name (please print) THE â€"PRESS hazardous than on many other betâ€" terâ€"protected waters, The race committee includes Anâ€" dy Kaiser, chairman, and Edward Weeks, while the harbor commitâ€" tee will consist of Grant Brown, chairman, aided by John Mordock and. John Seabury, the latter of zallos us . so ly m d for many years," Jones said. Winnetka, both former commo~ dores of other yacht clubs, "They will revive the campaign for a Some Outstanding Members tivities may call Mr., Jones, H. P. 534. A beach supper tomorrow (Friday) night at 6:30 will celeâ€" brate the reopening of the clubâ€" At Fort Davis of the ROTC at Fort Sheriâ€" can and does accompany ability in other fields. Captain of Georgia Tech‘s varsâ€" ity football squad he was on the 1945 and 1946. Named on the secâ€" ond and third Allâ€"American teams in several selections naming him on the first team, he also was varsâ€" ity basketball captain in 1946. Though ipnly .20 years old,.beâ€" hind the rise of this native â€"of Coâ€" lumbus, Ga., to cadetâ€"colonel, the highest rank possible for an ROTC cadet, is a fine record both as a student and as an athlete at Jorâ€" dan vocational high school, Columâ€" bus, from which he was graduated in 1944, and at Geogiaâ€"Tech, Atâ€" lanta. He has served as president of the.Interâ€"fraternity council, and is a member of the Chi Phi fraâ€" ternity, the senior honorary sociâ€" ety, Bulldog club, Student counâ€" cil, T club and was named to Who‘s Who of College Students, lh-l J. Piccard Paul‘ J. Piccard, nephew of an internationally known: pioneer in aviation, is taking training with the ROTC. His uncle, Auguste Piccard, twin brother .of Paul‘s {tther designed and flew a stratâ€" osphere balloon in 1931. He also has designed the world‘s first mulâ€" tiple balloon, in which he plans to makeâ€"a flight soon. Paul‘s par ents, too, have participated in this type of aviation. In 1934, they made _ a _ stratosphere â€" balloon ‘flight â€"from Dearborn, Mich., to Cadiz, O., where they attained a height of 57,579 feet. > Cadet Piccard has considerable military service behind him. After his graduation from University high school in 1941, he‘ attended the University of Minnesota for two years, and entered the army in April, 1943. He trained with the 97th infantry at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., served with it in Gerâ€" many, and later with the Third army in Czechoslovakia, He was sent to Japan after his return to the States and was discharged in March, 1946. ~Cadet Piccard now is continuing his education at the University of Minnesota, GJor Good Printingâ€" Olson Printing Company Publishers of The Highland Park Press PHONE â€"q Highland Park is a thing of the past, summer is by no means over and it is not too late to take up a new outdoor sport or to try to improve your technique in one in which you hnmwuu-.cxj tent. To help you do this the liâ€" brary has on hand a large collec tion of books dealing with nearly every summer sport you ever heard archery, fishing, golf, tennis, boat ing, sailing and canoeing, to menâ€" "Fifty Years of American Golf" by H. B. Martin is another fine book on summer sports. This book tion only a few. ah Palfrey Cooke should prove enâ€" helpful, Complete with graphic ilâ€" lustrations, this volume is written in simple, direct language and inâ€" eludes a section on rules of the strokes and tactics which must be employed by the successful tennis is more of a book on golf. It is abundantly ilâ€" of all important events, people and places which ‘have become famous in American golf history. t\ â€" Wake a note to lioten Nonâ€"injury accidents Injury accidents ..... Fatal accidents ....... Although the Fourth of July Operations performed Report for the week 6/28/47 to 7/4/47 inclusive Laboratory examinations 516 LAUREL AVENUE 982 Linden Ave. HIGHLAND PARK POLICE DEPARTMENT HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL DOINGS MURPHY and MILLER, Inc. 5 5 7 e June 28 th July 5 June 29 to July 6,°46â€" Tot. $ sofoartemitecifiebces, B 7 171 ° pnefredecian ooo i 1 27 AVAILABLE NOW See on Display at. Winnetka 4166 Nictor E. Lawson‘s .book â€" on swimming which is entitled simply "Swimming" is also to be found on the library‘s shelves. It conâ€" tains several chapters on various strokes used in swimming as well as chapter on diving, life saving, water polo and teaching children . There are many other books to help you get as much enjoyment and value as possible out of your summer vacation. Come in and se¢ the rest of them. on a special shelf in the main room of the library. The librarian or one of her assistâ€" ants will be glad to assist you. For those who prefer to engage in a less strenuous sport, John R. Games," in which he tells about badminton, groquet, lawn bow!~ ing and other games of a similar nature, * and dies. ,But one only gets to read it once.â€"Pathfinder. Make a 3â€"Year Contribution Highland Park Hospital Building Fund Drive in mc «o k cse EB to the Hubbard Woods Last So Far 21 of 582 234 520 2034 1595 Page 5

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