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The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee • 7

Publication:
The Jackson Suni
Location:
Jackson, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

likewise delighted to rate a The Worry Clinic By George W. Crane, Ph.D.,M.D. THE JACKSON TUESDAY, MAY SUN, 7. 13, 1969 Kuykendall Will Speak "Hi" from a fellow in Junior or Senior High School. Applied Psychology 'Very Useful' But young girls are doubly gratified to be noticed.

So why don't you mothers urge your family to join my "Compliment Club," since i tutors your children early in Cora and Jim illustrates a vital rule in ADDlied For males are more interest ed in "things" than in "per sons." Phychology that all good mothers should stress. For anybody who learns the secret of winning friends while in Junior High School, will have "ceiling unlimited" in his future career. Good mothers should tutor their i I ff So they become preoccupied president of Development Corp. and secretary of Minit-Stop Corp. He served his community as vice president of the Chickasaw Council of the Boy Scouts of America and is now its representative to the National Council of Boy Scouts.

He was co-chairman of the Shelby United Neighbor Campaign; vice chairman of Special Gifts for the Cancer Crusade; was a member of the board of directors of the with baseball, football and their other competitive sports until they are oblivious of dozens of kiddies in being deft psychologists as per the experiment below. being Applied Psychologists? Send for the "Compliment Club" booklet today, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Use it as a wholesome project for Scout Troops and Sun- chances to buoy up the morale CASE J-592: My wife's name of the admiring youngsters all diplomatic mother prodded him is Cora, wnen sne was oniy years of age, she used to visit around them. An eight year old boy is into taking his seven-year-old Iday School Classes, too. her cousins.

cousin to the soda fountain. Jim Blaine was about 13 But it would be very smart if DAN KUYKENDALL years old at tne time, so ne all boys were thus instructed in seemed very grown up to a 7- how to win friends and produce lifelong admiration from the fe year-old girl. Beer Permit Ruling "Cora" Jim once asked male sex. Congressman Dan Kuykendall, will address the Wednesday noon luncheon meeting of the Rotary Club in the New Southern Building. The 9th District congressman was born in Cherokee, son of Tom Groves and Sarah Johnson Kuykendall, and attended public schools at Cherokee.

He graduated from Texas University in the Class of 1947 with a B.S. degree in Industrial education. He married the former Jacqueline Meyer on July 6, 1951 and they have four children. Kuykendall is a member of Mulhns Methodist Church in Memphis where he served as board chairman and founder and teacher of an Adult Sunday School Class. He served with the U.S.

Air Force between 1942 and 1945 as a bomber pilot, attaining the rank of lieutenant. Kuykendall was employed by Procter Gamble in 1947 and held management positions in Texas and Kentucky. He moved to Memphis in 1955 as general manager for five southern states. He joined Equitable life Assurance Society in 1965 and set an all-time first time record for this company in sales. Also he has served as For girls are very much im Is Appealed pressed by any little favors or attention which they receive A new hearing in Circuit her, "would you like to go down to the drug store and get an ice cream soda?" As we were discussing this childhood event recently, my Court has been granted a Jack from schoolboy classmates and son woman who was denied a especially males who are a few beer permit by the City Com wife laughingly said, "My Aunt years older.

mission. Alas, not one boy in 100 will Mrs. Jo Ella Murphy charged probably urged him to invite me for that soda." But the thrill of being escort do what Jim Blame did, unless Charter group drafting a new charter for the City of Memphis on 1965-66. which was adopted Nov. 8, 1966.

In 1967 he was co-founder and is on the advisory board of Housing Opportunity Memphis Enterprises, a foundation to assist low income families to become individual home owners. Kuykendall was a Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate in 1964 and was elected to the 90th Congress on Nov. 8, 1966 and re-elected to the 91st Congress on Nov. 5, 1968.

He is a member of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce and the Subcommittee on Aeronautics and Transportation. Presiding over tomorrow's luncheon meeting will be Rotary President Kendric Koger. that the City Commission's ac under pressure irom his par tion in rejecting her applica ed by a much older boy dazzled ents! tion was "unjust and illegal her and stands out through all Yet those same boys will ego the intervening years as a high and that the board acted "arbitrarily and without any tistically carve their initials on tree trunks or paint their nam spot in her childhood. For teen-age boys disdain be reaseon or cause." She sought a permit to sell es on the sides of cliffs just to ing linked with younger chil be remembered for many dren and that goes double when beer at South Side Center, 403 S. Church.

The application was years to come. such a lad is expected to enter This is a part of the inherent filed March 24 and denied by tain a girl who is in the early Your next car: Chrysler 1969. human cravmg for immortal the City Commission a unanimous vote on April 11. years of grammar school. It is very likely that Jim's ity.

Boys, it would be far smarter to imitate Jim Blaine and learn how to leave a glowing lifelong Then, Too, Most Students Just Don't Cure A Whoop impression on young girls. For they may later blossom out as campus beauty queens, or mov jay I find your inaction in them to engage in a meaningful By HAL BOYLE ie stars and other influential leaders of feminine society dialogue?" the history of the Arab League to be taught in Arabic." "Here's a telegram from the chairman of the university's the present crisis deeply disturbing. Therefore, I am drop NEW YORK (AP) Remarks that make a college president wish he were running a whom you'd like to impress. ping my plans to contribute board of trustees, sir. He's just $100,000 toward a new student nursery school: And if any of you boys hope to become politicians, then it is also wise to begin winning the found out that his son is one of dormitory.

However, I'll con "They've got the dean of men the student strikers and asks "Except for the fact the Veterinary Building is still on fire, sir, the rest of the campus is relatively quiet." "You may think you're having your troubles running the university, Dr. Rutherford Romulus Frothingham, but let me tell you as your wife I'm having trouble running your home, too. locked in the men washroom and thrown away the key." "Guess what the latest stu feminine votes by showing a little attention to the girls in your neighborhood, even if they are that you do everything possible to talk some sense into the boy. He says he can't do a thing with quite young. dent demand is, sir.

They demand parking facilities equal to As a 12-year-old boy thus him himself." "As best we can analyze it, tribute $200,000 if you'll use it to build a student jail." "You've tried pampering them. Why not call in the National Guard now and try clubbing some sense into their heads?" "In essence, sir, the Negro students want a new Center for Afro-American Studies, the Jewish students want a Hebraic heads for school, if he will Our part-time maid has just merely say, "Hi, Janet" to an Dr. Frothingham, the five per cent of the student body who eight or 10-year-old of the neighborhood, she will feel happy all want you to resign belong to the Students for a Democratic Society. The five per cent who day. quit and is carrying a picket sign outside our house.

She says she's in sympathy with your student strikers." "Well, whatever we do, we have to do it soon. The legisla those allotted to the faculty. Now they're really going too far!" "Fifty per cent of the faculty voted to go on strike themselves unless you take a firmer hand with the students, and 50 per cent voted to go on strike if you do." "Do you think it would be of any help if we simply called in 300 2-Door Hardtop For any slightest attention from those "big" boys, always Center, the Irish students want want you to stay belong to the Students for a Sane Democracy. makes a younger child feel a new Institute of Gaelic Culture, the Italian students want ture meets next week and you The remaining 90 per cent ap more important. an Italo-American Department parently don care a whoop ei- But teen age boys are poor psychologists.

(So know what their attitude is toward student revolts." "As a loyal alumnus of Popin tner way. They aon't care and our lone student from Egypt is demanding a course on the student leaders and asked I whether school keeps or not." are their dads, too!) CIDAA Money Lenders Demanding Profits From your Unbeatable Chrysler dealer who makes it possible. life insurers such as John Hancock and Metropolitan reasoned that a hedge was needed and came up with the solution of seeking profits that would float with inflation. Among the various deals now profits or the increased value of By JOHN CUNNIFF I kicking up a fuss among some Business Analyst real estate people. the properties they finance.

NEW YORK (AP) The eq- Just months ago the big mon- Inflation is said to be the cause of the situation, but a lot uity or income kicker, which lenders were content to earn interest on their loans. Now, of real estate dealers are bet being transacted are these: gives mortgage lenders on income properties some of the profits as well as interest, is ting that even if economic sta however, they are seeking additional income by sharing in the AUTHORIZED DEALERS One to even 3 per cent of CHRYSLER 5jf MOTORS CORPORATION bility returns the common mort CHRYSLER gross profits from rents. gage on income properties is never again going to be a rela Ten to 15 per cent of future mcreases in gross income. Actual partial ownership of the building. Adams Motor Co.

317 Airways Blvd. II I IHI 1 (he fun place Uto A per cent of net income, as JOHN CUNNIFF much as 20 to 30 per cent of what remains after stipulated III! expenses such as taxes and maintenance are paid. There is now a definite trend to participation by lenders, al tively simply document. They reason that once the big lenders such as savings banks and insurance companies taste a piece of the action, as several real estate men put it, they won't be satisfied to earn their return on interest alone. The development is a tacit admission that the fixed dollar return on investments, so long preached by life insurers in selling policies, is inadequate in today's inflated economy.

The situation began developing more than two years ago but seems to have gained momentum in the past six months as interest rates rose and inflation continued at an annual rate of four to five per cent. though opinions differ as to how widespread the practice is. "There's more talk than ac tion," says James Latta, senior vice president of Associated Mortgage of New York, but he concedes that the practice will spread "as long as the inflation trend continues." John Wetmore, research di rector of the Mortgage Bankers Association, feels the practice If a company lends money on a conventional mortgage of 8.5 per cent for 25 years and does has mushroomed in recent months. He tells of one case which he terms the triple not include a kicker, it faces threat, which: two dangers: First, interest rates might continue to rise but the lender would be locked in at lower The lender obtained a percent age of the gross profits, a per centage of the net income, and rates; second, inflation might A) STUDENT I pW EMPLOYMENT ADS dilute the return on the invest the right to purchase the property at a depreciated price at ment. Faced with such instability, the termination of the loan.

Quality Of Hospital Care May Soon Be Affected i The week of May 11-17 is being observed as National Hospital Week to call attention locally to hospitals and health care services. Theme for the observance is "Your Hospital Pathway to Progress in Community Health. This is the second in a series of articles dealing with Jackson-Madison County General Hospital and other local health facilities. The nursing shortage in Tennessee is reaching the point where it could soon affect the quality of care given in every hospital in the state, Jackson-Madison County General Hospital administrator Dr. John R.

Thompson Jr. said today. The Jackson hospital has a 270-member nursing staff but needs 52 more trained persons on the nursing staff to reach its full complement. "We are lucky here," Dr. Thompson observed.

"There are many hospitals in Tennessee having even more difficulty in recruiting sufficient numbers of professional nurses." If you are seeking employment for the summer or Full time Write the kind of job you're looking for and whether full or part time. Use no more than 20 words plus name, age, and Telephone Number. Mail them or bring them in person to: The Jackson Sun P. O. Box 1059 Jackson, Tenn.

38301 NO ADS ACCEPTED BY PHONE Ads Will Appear Beginning Sunday, May 18 Through Friday, May 23. It is a service program designed for free use of students high school or college who seek full or part-time summer employment and for employers who want bright young people to fill in while regular employees are vacationing or who want full or part-time summer help in any field. Ads will run six days and remember it costs YOU nothing. The Tennessee Hospital Asso ciation, of which Jackson-Madi son County General Hospital is a member, is recommending The major reason for this mat the state establish a scholarship fund for nurses who wish to obtain a master's degree. The THA further recommends that growing shortage is that the demand for nurses exceeds the number of graduates from nurs the scholarship program pro- Just two of many in sizes 7-14 tare IB ing schools, he explained.

"From 1956 to 1965, admissions to hospitals rose 42 per cent, but the number of students enrolling in nursing increased only 7 per cent." The administrator pointed out that Tennessee does not have a master's degree program in nursing. This means, he said, that nursing schools must at viae a iorgiveness clause lor those nursing graduates who return to the State of Tennessee. "This would help relieve the existing shortage of faculty and would allow expansion of the nursing education program," Dr. Thompson noted. "Something must be done quickly," he said.

"The shortage of professional nurses is going to continue to worsen unless financial support from government is forthcoming to educate more nurses, and the hospitals will not be able to continue to mmd Cotton facqoard A-line or embroidered polyester-and-cotton coat dress. 5.99 Also polyester-and-cotton drop waist or A-line. .4.99 or ruffled A-line 5.99 tempt to recruit qualified faculty from other states. By 1975 Tennessee will need 11,461 professional nurses, which is almost twice as many as are employed today. At the present rate of enrollment there will not be enough nurses to provide the necessary nursing services.

provide the high quality of health care that patients need and deserve.".

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About The Jackson Sun Archive

Pages Available:
850,446
Years Available:
1936-2024