Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 June 1939 — Page 10
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PAGE 10
COURAGE FIRST NEED, HARVARD
GROUP IS TOLD
Hugh McK Landon Presides At Alumni Exercises In Cambridge.
Times Special
CAMBRIDGE, Mass, June 23.—|i
Hugh McK Landon of Indianapolis, Harvard Alumni Association president, declared here yesterday that American youth is going through “one of those rare and transitional periods which calls for courage, self-reliance and human resourcefulness, for great and venturesome minds.” Mr. Landon, who presided at alumni exercises, said this period “should develop the strangely individual qualities of the poineer.” “The same sturdy capacities which enabled our foregathers to develop this continent in a material sense are demanded of this generation to pioneer in a social and spiritual sense,” he said. “Youth needs a brave and understanding heart, emotional stability to meet the social stresses of a dynamic age; he needs the flexibility of mind, the imaginative and thought-breaking pattern which will enable him to adjust himself to the rapidly shifting economic conditions in a world in flux. “He needs a sense of humor, that gift of God which encourages us to laugh at ourselves occasionally. Above all he needs a certain toughness and resilience of souls which will give him strength to evolve the spiritual ideals which alone can keep him sane in a mad world.”
HEAD, NEW JERSEY, FLECTED BY ROTARY
CLEVELAND, June 23 (U. P.).— Walter D. Head, headmaster of Montclair, N. J., Academy, last night was elected president of Rotary International to succeed George C. Hager, Chicago lawyer and builder. Mr. Head received 1837 votes to 1221 for Dr. Amos O. Squire of Ossining, N. Y. The election followed an earlier contest in which Mr. Head received 1887 votes, Mr. Squire 1307, and Ricard C. Hedke, Detroit manufacturer, 765. Delegates decided on a second ballot because Mr. Head lacked the required majority. Mr. Hedke was dropped from the second race.
“DRESSED FREE”
GRANT POULTRY
Juanita Winfield
Wyoming Robinson
committee chairman.
Irene Tammela, of Indianapolis.
personality.
Columbia, Mo., reported today to Advancement of Science. The trend away from the oldfashioned morality of grandmother’s day was apparent, he said, in unsigned answers to questionnaires turned in by 114 first and secondyear girl students in his classes in health and hygiene. The educator believed mental health experts would accept the change as desirable if it does not mean a rejection of social standards but instead an application of intelligence in the solution of moral problems. Professor Van Buskirk detected in the girls’ replies “a belief that the
123 N. New Jersey RI-1905
acquisition of scientific information would help them in the solution of
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Marian Douglas
Irene Tammela
Butler University scholarship awards to four Indiana high school graduates were announced today by Dr. Henry G. Nester, scholarship
Receiving the awards were Misses Juanita Winfield, of Carthage; Marian Douglas, of Trafalgar; Wyoming Robinson, of Bridgeport and
The awards are based upon scholastic standing, character and
College Girl Trend Fro Absolute Morality Noted
MILWAUKEE, June 23 (U. P.).—America’s college girls “appear to be rejecting the standard of absolute morality as a means of solving their sex-social problems,” Prof. E. F. Van Buskirk of Stephens College, |
the American Association for the
them.”
“It is hardly necessary to add that mere knowledge is not all that is needed for a wise solution of human problems,” he cautioned. He said he had questioned his classes before and after study of the topic of premarital sex experience.
LEADERS PICKED BY CIRCULATORS
Alabama Man President; 1940 Meeting to Be in Jacksonville.
Don R. Davis, of the Birmingham, Ala. News-Age-Herald, today became president of the International Circulation Managers’ As-
sociation. He was elected to succeed Jack) Estes, of the Dallas (Tex.) News at the close of the association’s 41st annual convention at the Claypool Hotel yesterday. Jacksonville, Fla. was selected for the 1940 conven-
tion. Other officers named were C. D. O'Rourke, Cleveland Press, first vice president; Ralph B. Cowan, Toronto (Ontario) Star, second vice president; Robert W. Taylor, Flint (Mich.) Journal, sergeant-at-arms, and L. W. McFetridge, Tulsa (Okla.) World, secretary-treasurer.
New directors named were Phil Knox, Oakland (Cal) Tribune; Charles Staab, Cincinnati Enquirer; Jesse Birks, Decatur (Ill.) Review; George W. Stabler, ot the Grit Publishing Co., Williamsport, Pa., and Joseph E. Fehrenbach, Kitchener (Ontario) Daily Record. Mr. Estes becomes chairman of the board of directors.
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