Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 90, Number 48, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 25 May 1967 — Page 6

PAGE 6

NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS

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THURS. MAY 25, 1967

Bible School At North Main Mennonite Church The dates for Summer Bible S ih: .• 1 ait the North Main Men- -! mite Church, are June 5-16. Regfilna.'.V'n is the first morning, June 5, from 8:30 - 9:00. The daily schedule is 9 to 11:30 a.m. Classes

wfol'l be for all children who were 3V2 years aid by March 1, 1967, through Bth grade. Children will 'be in the class just finished in public school. The it. aching staff includes: Primary Department, Superintendent, Mrs. Francis Bender. Nursery: Mrs. Paul Sehmueker, Mru. Alvin Miller, Mrs. Larry BurekharC, Miss Karen Miiller. Kindergarten I: Mrs. Robert Glen, Mrs. Andy Farmwald, Mrs. Marvin Miller, Miss Doris HochJtXiiler. Kindergarten II: Mrs. Gene Blocker, Mrs. Ernesit Miller, Mrs. Dean Hochateier, Mrs. Lester Diener. Grade I: Mrs. Ezra Hoehstetler, Mrs. Leonard Stichter. Grade 2: Mrs. Bill Miller, Mrs. Bob Maslt. Jun.or Dept. Su.pt., Mrs. Kenneth Bofllman. Grade 3: Mrs. Leroy SLabaugh. Grade 4: Mrs. Ralph Stichter. Grade 5: Mrs. Kenny Farmwald. Grade 6: Mrs. David Weldy. Grade 7: Mrs. Clyde Hershberger. Grade 8: Mrs. Alvin Graber. There will be an offering taken each day. This year’s project is Refuge Relief Vietnam. The Primary children will be furnished school and health kits for the Vietnamese children. The junior department’s offerings will be sent to the Vietnam Christian Service, which is involved in various projects which help children. There are: medical services at hospitals and clinics at Ntoatrtang and Pleiker; milk distribution to school children ait Quang Ngba; Social welfare and public health services for Monibagnord refugees at Di Linh; a community center in Saigon with day care and public health; feeding in Saigon providing lunches for 32,000 children ah school days. All community chidren are invited to attend our Bible School. For further information, call Mrs. Boilmlan at 773-3547.

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Union Center "Happy" Blue Birds made wren houses as a craft project. (Members left to right top rowj Cindy Detwiler, Sandy Haines, Sandra Freet Cheryl Hile, (Bottom row) Kathy Miller, Barbara Johnson, Grace Gonzales. (Absent) Gale Robison. Leaders are Mrs. Lowell Hile & Mrs. Robert Johnson.

Special Class Students Take A Trip Students in the Special Glass of Central School were taken on a field trip on Wednesday, May 17, by members of the Thursday Club and their teacher, Mrs. Eldon Hepler. Plans were formulated by toy president, Mrs. Ralph Green. Potawalomie Park Zoo was the first interest spot where the children were allowed to pet a 2-monith old lion cub and see many animals. Ladies who furnished transportation were: Mrs. Harold Hoffer, Mrs. Lloyd Becker, Mrs. Robert Callendar, Mrs. Glenn McMurray, Mrs. Charles Stump and Mrs. Mary Fowler. Mrs. George Rose also drove. Lunches were served at noon. They had been prepared by Mrs. Ray Hopewell, Mrs. Russell Bolyard, Mrs. Vern Meeks, Mrs. Berniece Byers, Mrs. Don Nichols and Mrs. Fred Culp. The last event of the day was a trip to Story land Zoo, where the children enjoyed feeding the animals and riding on the train and other rides. A tired but very happy group returned to Nappanee at the day’s end. Class members are: Linda and Brenda Barnes, Sharon and Doris Bowers, John and Mary Hoohstetler, Allen Mast, Sheila Mead, Bobby Elliott, Danny Shepherd, Wayne Yoder, Michael Mast, Judy Boettger, Jack Rose, Richard Martin, Steve Hoehstetler and Shirley Linviille. HASTINGS Mrs. Kenneth Heckaman Otto Beer, Jr. narrated slides of his trip to Haiti last summer and in December, for 35 people Sunday evening at the Island Chapel Church. The pictures showed the conditions of poverty in the country and the work of the group he went with. Callers of Floyd Davis at the Elkhart General Hospital this week the Dean Harmans, Mrs. Robert Rumfelt, Mrs. Virgil Stump, Jr., the Lloyd Rummels, Mrs. Merle Buzzard and daughter of Wakarusa, Mrs. Elizabeth Kuhns, Mrs. Hazel Estep, the Jess Klotzs, Rev. and Mrs. Raymond Wilson, t/he Lester Gays, Kenneth Fifens, Mrs. Deloss Harman, Mrs. Harvey Hollar, Walter Kaspers, Mrs. John C. Yoder, LeSter Rowlands, Harold Klotzs, and Mrs. Freda Wilkens of Cumberland, Indiana. Mrs. Robert Knick and daughters were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Roy Tusing. Afternoon callers were the Rev. Floyd Hartzell

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family of Goshen and Mrs. Robert Cullers and Jeffery. Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Kasper of Milford were Sunday supper guests of the Ryce fillers. They d‘er a tended the program at the .hutch. Mrs. Junior Hcujar, Syracuse and .virs. Paul Rw'.'&r a tended the Mothers Cay Tea, smorgasibtard upper and May Festival at Indiana Central Ccilege a. Indianapolis on Saturday. They were guests cf their daughters, Janice and Ganger and were overnight gue-lts on the campus. All amended church services on Sunday morning and enjoyed dinner, at Laughner’s Cafeteria.. Sunday dinner guests of the Rudy Hoehutst’er family were the Levi R. Hochsiteltlers and the Ura Ohupp family. The Wayne Harmans, Mrs. Ethel Lambert and Mrs. Minnie Weimer called on the Donald J. Weimers in South Bend Sunday afternoon. The Oscar Haneys and Mrs. Virginia Dietrich and family attended the Scoutanama in Plymouth on Saturday evening. Friday dinner guests of the Kenneth Haneys were Mrs. Eugene Cotton and Terry of Pierceiton and the Galen Haney family of North Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Goble and family visited the Paul Kegebeins Saturday evening. Mrs. Clara Gall of Winona, was a weekend guest of the Russell Hollars, Sr. Sandra Kidwell and Kent Brown of Gary visited the Ron Smiths on Saturday. The John L. Mast family called on the Sam Ohupps on Sunday afternoon. On Thursday the Omer HochStetlers attended a wedding of her niece, Tressie Hoehstetler and Albert Jay Lehmen at Topeka. The Kenneth Heckamans called Sunday on Mrs. Anne Hansman in the Murphy Medical Center in Warsaw.. Freda Wilkens of Cumberland, Indiana, spent Friday night and Saturday morning with Hazel Estep and Mrs. Floyd Davis. Paul Hollar, Max Shively, Leesburg, and Arden Warner, Silver Lake, flew to Washington, D. C„ Monday evening to attend the Congressional luncheon on Tuesday in behalf of Rural Electric. The Dean Harmans spent Saturday wiith the Deloss Harmans. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fox entertained the Kenneth Haneys for Sunday dinner at the M & M Restaurant at North Webster. In the afternoon they called on the Galen Haney family. Mrs. Virginia Dietrich and family were Sunday afternoon and evening lunch guests of her parents, the Oscar Haneys. The John S. Yoders were Sunday dinner guests of the Milo Yoders in Nappanee. The Dan A. Millers, Ray Millers, Levi J. HochSteitlers of Nappanee and the Ezra Schmuckers were Sunday supper guests of the Johnny Girods at Berne. Friday overnight guests of the Omer Hoehstetler family were her mother, the Levi Masts. On Saturdiay the yattended the funeral of Mrs. Isaac D. Yoder, a former Hastings resident. The Kenneth Fifers, Deloss Harmlans, Roman Miller family, and Mrs. Elizabeth Kuhns, were dinner guests of the Alvin Kuhns family Sunday near Shipshewana. The Burl Farote, Jr., family of Warslaw, were Saturday evening visitors of the Donald Foxes. Oscar Haneys attended the graduation exercises of the Evangelical Theological Seminary, Naperville, Illinois, from which their Son, Rev. Josepfy Haney graduated on Friday evening.

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Indianapolis, Ind. Dale Christner and Rod Stump talk with veteran Indy race drive Parnelli Jones about Firestone's new Super Sports Wide Oval tire during their visit to the speedway a Jew days ago. More than 200 dealers and store managers of The Firestone Tire & Rubber Company's Indianapolis sales district were at the famous track for a meeting on the company's May sales promotion plans. All Firestone May sales promotions are tied in with the Indianapolis 500 race.

SPOTLIGHT ON SCIENCE

Are you likely to become an alcoholic? Someday you may be able to walk into a doctor’s office, undergo a series of tests, and be told whether or not you possess what is called a “predisposition to alcoholism.” This so-called predisposition to alcoholism is the focus of study of Dr. David Lester, a Rutgers University biochemist. The term signifies that factors may exist which make a person prone to alcoholism. Dr. Lester is working mainly to see if biological factors may cause this predisposition. He knows, however, that a person must first have an environment that leads him to drink or makes it easy for him to, and that alcohol must be available. But biological factors may also enter into alcoholism exactly how, no one knows just yet. Most of Dr. Lester’s present research done at the Rutgers Center of Alcohol Studies is done with raits and mice. Development of an animal model of the human alcoholic would be valuable for understanding alcoholism and its causes, but an animal model has not yet been developed with rats and mice. However, some of the conclusions made about alcohol and alcoholism in rats and mice have significance for studies of human predisposition to alcoholism. Experiments with mice have Shown that preference for alcohol may be a genetically controlled trait. In an experiment done with two different strains of mice, one strain, when faced with a -bottle of water and a bottle of diluted alcohol, drank much more of the alcohol' than the other strain, which drank more water. In other experiments with rats and mice, tests were made for the influences of taste and smell on their selection of diluted alcohol rather than pure water. It was found that these two senses indeed affect this selection. Some mice seem to enjoy the taste and smell of alcohol. The 'basil metabolic rate of these animals also seems to be associated with alcohol selection. The basil metabolic rate is merely an indication of the calories required to maintain normal body tempera utre and function when an animal is at rest. Mice with a lower basic metabolic rate tended to prefer alcohol more than itihose mice with higher rates. Although .these experimental results can’t actually be carried over and applied to human alco-

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holism, they do have some significance for the disease in humans. “It is probable,” said Dr. Lester, “that if alcohol selection is due to more than one factor in rats and mice, it is certainly due to more than one factor in man. The alcoholic can’t he said to become an alcoholic only because of his environment and the stresses and strains that he undergoes; biological factors undoubtedly come into play somewhere. When working with human subjects in predisposition experiments, data is often confused because the researcher has no way of knowing what condition existed in the alcoholic before he started drinking, and What may have been changed because of his drinking. But one thing that doesn’t change is blood type. In an experiment done by three scientists, lit was discovered that a greater percentage of alcoholics had blood type A than the general non-alcoholic population. This experiment, carried out with 939 persons, indicates that biology probably has something to do with the cause of human alcoholism. But no one actually knows what causes contribute to the predisposition of a person to alcoholism. It could be any number of factors. Perhaps it is enzyme activity and it is just this aspect of biological predisposition with which Dr. Lester was recently working. Stan and Gene, two horses that Dr. Lester knows, were the subjects of experiments concerned with enzyme activity and alcohol. They had alcohol injected into their blood Streams to see just how fast their todies would dispose of it. In the test tube, it was found that enzyme extracted from horse liver was ten (times more efficient in disposing of alcohol than enzyme extracted from human liver. But when Stan and Gene were give a dose of alcohol equal to two to four ounces of whisky in a 150 pound man, the effects were the same as in a man, but they lasted longer. “In the tesit tube, conditions are not the same as in the liver, where you have cellular and other kinds of organization,” evplained Dr. Lester. He found that the horses actually dispose of alcohol at one-half to one-third the rate that man disposes of alcohol. Enzyme activity, inheritance, blood type, teste and smell all of these factors may someday Show Dr. Lester and his co-work-ers what actually makes a person prone to alcoholism. “I don’t believe we’ll have a really rational therapy until we

know What is actually going on in the alcoholic,” said Dr. Lester. “Now we’re just treating the symptoms, but not the disease. When we finally find out what causes alcoholism, biologically and otherwise, then we can act to prevent its occurence.”

Happy Birthday

MAY 25 Ida Mae Becker (Mrs. Lloyd) Dee Tobias Laura Ham man- - Mrs. LaVern Pleitcher Paul Klotz Lloyd Sassaman Mel Hahn 27 Bee Fox (Mrs. Delbert) Diane Price Donald Wagner Ricky Rogers Debra Krou Mrs. Lloyd Yackey Debra Hare 28 Beth Bloomfield Velma Lopp Wilma Fippenger Mrs. Howard Field Merrill Blosser Rita Reed Charles Scoltit Hochstetler Ernie Cnilow 29 Everett C. Hollar Willis Kuhns Norma Mitschelen 30 Esther Kintzel Mary Miller (Mrs. Raymond) Brenda Brenneman Eloise Ogle Roger E. Shively Denny Templeton 31 Arthur Leroy Miller Wayne Harman

The Light Touch by Fred Curtis

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A dictator would have a rough time in a country like this, where people threaten to kill the umpire for one bad decision . . . * * If you miss your anniversary today, you’ll catch it later . . . Ask It’s not easy to be humble unless you have no choice! * * Give me my golf clubs, the fresh air and a beautiful girl for a partner, and you can keep the golf clubs and the fresh air. * * Laughing is feeling good all over, and showing it in one spot ... * * You’ll feel just great when you come to Curtis TV & Music Center, 158 W. Market, Ph 773-4612, Nappanee for the kind of attention you want your TV to have.