Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1931 — Page 4

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MEDIC STUDENT NOT JUDGED ON ! SCHOOL RECORD College Dean Places Brains Above Degree as Basis for Admission. Bn Science Service CHICAGO, Feb. 17.—Mecl.cal students must be equipped vdth brains and a knowledge of mathematics and English, Dr. Wilburt C. Davison, dean of Duke university, Durham, N. C., said here Monday at the congress on medical education held here under the auspices of the American Medical Association. Besides these essentials he advised greater pre-medical training In physics and chemistry. The matter of brains best can be judged by personal Interview, he“ said. Academic records alone, no matter how excellent no longer are the sole basis for admission to medical school. Dr. Davison doubts the necessity for four years of college work before entering medical school. Culture Is more likely to be acquired during the early years in the home than from four years at college. He pointed out that the modern high school provides nearly as broad an education as was given by colleges in 1893 when the Johns Hopkins university first made a college degree a requirement for entrance to medical school. Value of Clinics Cited The knowledge of French and German obtained from most college courses is so superficial as to be almost useless to the medical student. If he must read scientific literature in foreign journals, he will get the knowledge anyway, Dr. Davison believes. Thousands of dollars can be saved to the state by developing its mental hospitals into mental hygiene centers for their communities. Dr. James Allen Jackson, superintendent of the Danville state hospital, Danville, Pa., told the congress. Community clinics and educational efforts in connection with the hospital will help many persons adjust to their environment and prevent development of many cases of mental and nervous breakdown and disease. At the Pennsylvania hospital ten such clinics, established in the last ten years, have received 10,000 visitors, of which about half were new cases. Os these about two-thirds were children under 16. Preventatives Arc Needed

These children Were so handled that less than one-fifth of them had to be committed to correctional institutions. The mental hospital in the rural area is better adapted to this type of work than the urban hospital, Dr. Jackson said. Mental hygiene is a community Job, agreed Dr. George S. Stevenson of the national committee for men-

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Beauty, music, and leadership are combined In the queen of the Kansas State Teachers college of Pittsburgh. Miss Reba Kirby, brunet from Plcher, Okla., has been selected to rule the beauty section of the college yearbook. She is majoring in music, and she is also president of Theta Sigma Upsilon social sorority of the campus. Newspaper Man Dies ?,!/ Times Spcci'il FRANKLIN, Ind., Feb. 17.—Influenza and heart weakness caused the death of Roy G. Freeman, 25, a member of the editorial staff of the Evening Star since completion of his studies in Franklin college two weeks ago. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Freeman of French Lick. tal hygiene. He pointed out that prevention of mental disorders differs from prevention of physical disease. Not only medicine, but criminology, pedagogy, social service and religion are concerned in the prevention of the mental ailments. The political connections in which state institutions such as mental hospitals sometimes are involved was decried by Dr. Samuel W. Hamilton of White Plains, N. Y. He urged the medical profession to take standards maintained in these hosa greater interest in having high pitals.

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'RICH MINE HEAD IS LINKED WITH LOVE TRIANGLE John G. Velie, Member of Auto Making Family, Faces Charges. i By Vnited Press , CHICAGO, Feb. 17.—John G. i Velie, member of the family that j formerly manufactured the Velie | automobile, faced arraignment today on assault charges made by a I man whose wife said she expects to marry Velie. Velie, Charles Chappell, 29, and Mrs. Dorothy Chappell, 25, were arrested Monday after Chappell suffered cuts on his head during a fight with Velie on a trair. Chappell said that his wife, an artist, had gone with Velie on a trip to his mine properties at Iron River, Mich. Velie told police Mrs. Chappell was his secretary. Chappell said he had gone to look for his wife and that on a train

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coming from Milwaukee he saw her. | He followed her, he said, to a coach | where she joined Velie. The fight followed and Chappell was injured ! when he fell against a window. Both Velie and Chappell were charged with asasult and battery, and Mrs. Chappell with disorderly conduct. | While under a’-rest, Mrs. Chappell 1 said she expected to be married to j Velie as soon as she had divorced j her husband. “Let her have him, he’s 73, If he’s a day,” Chappell told police. Velie is said to own extensive mine properties and to have inherited much wealth. FOG~AVERAGE LESSENS J Moose Peak, Me., Reports Slight Increase in Sunshine. By SEA Service j WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—The foggiest spot in the United States brightened up a little in 1930, and ! had only 1,562 hours of fog, so lighthouse keepers at Moose Peak, Me., have reported to the lighthouse | service of the department of ccm- ! merce. At Moose Peak, records for the last sixteen years show a yearly average of 1,607 hours of fog. Runners up on Moose Peak's record are Libbey Island and Petit Manan, also on the Maine coast.

‘NEW YEAR' IS JOY TIME FOR CHINESE KIDS San Francisco’s District Is Bower of Flowers for Celebration, Sam Lee. a resident of San Francisco's famous Chinatown and a craduate of an American colleee, has written the following- account of the Chinese new year j celebration, starting today. BY SAM LEE United Press StaC Correspondent SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 17.—Another new year, the 4,484 th, dawned in the Chinatown of the Golden Gate today, amid a profusion of water lilies and flags. From every doorway was spoken the traditional greeting, “Kung HayFat Choy”—China’s counterpart of | “Happy New Year.” | The week-long celebration, when i all Chinese pay special marks of respect to their children as the founi dation of the future, was more quiet

on opening day than it will be as the days pass. All China believes that the numeral “one," being uneven, holds no omen of good luck, and therefore, the first day can not be so lucky as later days. Paper lanterns were hung along the streets, firecrackers were touched off, street vendors shouted their oriental delicacies, and little comer flower stands did a thriving business in lilies and chrysanthemums. The 26,000 Chinese in San Francisco Joined in the celebration. Thousands of laughing children, preparing for the fete to reach its height at midnight tonight and the great “lion dance” to follow later In the week, dashed from house to house and filled every thoroughfare. They were bright-eyed with hap-

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I piness, for it was their own time of the year, and each had received the | traditional gift of "Lai Shee," good luck coins wrapped in red paper. For the elders realize each new j year they have lost a twelve-month of their lives, while the children have another year ahead. Tongs Are Restless By Vnited Pre NEW YORK. Feb. 17.—1n the narrow, dirty, winding streets of ! Chinatown there was a New Year’s celebration today, but there was little spontaneity. And there was an undercurrent of something more sinister than sadness, to which a heavy guard of police both in uniform and plain

FEB. 17, 1931

clothes bore witness. AH Is not well between the On Leong tong and the Hip Sing tong.

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