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Calgary Herald from Calgary, Alberta, Canada • 27

Publication:
Calgary Heraldi
Location:
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE CALGARY HERALD Saturday. Oct. 7, 1961 ital 7 To Graduate From Holy Cross Mosp Vv .4 1 Kid i awft, I a. Darlene Drabylc Moote Jaw, Sask. Barbara Fiynn Calgary Andrea Fairley Calgary Beverley Church Joy Cushing Balzac, Alia.

Cabri, Sailc. Sandra Bealing Georgia Berkhold Rose-Marit Briand Donna Brooks Calgary Redcliff Drumheller Calgary Nina Bartlett Calgary George-Ann Aintworth Calgary -i J' i -J I Sara Hailett Red Deer Elaine Hanna Trochu Lorna Kole Milo Jacqueline Kennedy Calgary Mena Hauck Gladyi Herler Irene Hilliard Hilda Hildebrandt Donna Haslam Montgomery Lioydminster, Sask. Fort Macleod Calgary Calgary Marilyn Gibson Red Deer Doreen Girling Calgary Darlene Montgomery Marjorio McEwan Elaine McKl Calgary Lois Moen Airdrie Mary Page Didsbury Lucille McGlynn Jean Milne Pincher Creek Carlyle, Sask. Rosella Lindsay Vivienne Lavalley Margaret A. Langloil Arlene Mercer Condor Wardlow Calgary Calgary Blackfalds Calgary 0 3 4 A I 4 4 I O'V.

Vera Rumen Fernie, B.C. A Mat Geraldynne Pogson Donna Phillips Calgary Carseland Irene Quinn Bowden Carolyn Smart Bowness Eileen Pedrsn Calgary Diane Rodbourne Calgary Florence Poland Condor Marilyn Plaher Grande Prairie Isabella McGrath Shaunavon, Sask. Teresa Mraz Coleman 1 r- 1 1 1 4. SM? Mildred Wiley High River Theresa Wright Calgary Gwendolyn Vincent Elii. Wotherspoon Sylvan Lake Success, Sask.

Margaret Young Barbara Ziebart Calgary Calgary Patricia Stewart Kath. Troehanowskl. Caroline Thumlert Calgary Berwyn Castor Margaret Stawart a Ponoka Eliiabeth Shannon Calgary Patricia Stark Calgary master of ceremonies will be Dr. Douglos Cadger. Dr.

Malcolm P. Taylor, principal of the University of Alberta, Calgary will deliver the graduation address while the Very Rev. Msgr. Joseph LeFort will present the diplomas. The Rev.

Louis Connelly will lead the professional pledge. Winners of special awards will be proclaimed by Alderman George Ho Lem, representing the City of Calgary. Reception will follow in the concourse. DIPLOMAS TO BE AWARDED. Fifty-seven students of the Holy Cross Hospital School of Nursing will be awarded graduation diplomas Oct.

5, following completion of the 1961 Registered Nurses' Examinations given in August by the University of Alberta. Graduation day will open with Mass in the hospital chapel, to be said at 8 a.m. by the Rev. E. Toole.

Breakfast will follow in the school auditorium, with all faculty members to be present. Commencement exercises will start that evening at 8 o'clock ot the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium, when Retirement Age Nev Poser For Presidents Of Colleges that is very gratifying." Mrs. Bunting's prederer-snr, Dr. Wilbur K. Jordan, left Rad-cliffe in 1360 at 57.

and all, being a college president is one of the most interesting ways to feel that you are working for a moral purpose By TERRY FERRER Hurald Tribun Nw Service NEW YORK The late Edmund Ezra Day, president of Cornell University for' twelve years, once remarked to a "friend: "A college president does his best work in the first five years. In the second five years, he sets the criticism, and he spends the third five years seeking some kind of retirement." Recently Dr. Carroll V. New-som, 57. took Dr.

Day to his word. He resigned as president of New York University after only five years in the post. Dr. Newsom cited as his reasons the administrative pressures on today's college presidents which duil "imaginative and dynamic leadership" when carried for an extended period of time, the headaches of fund-raising and the lack of public understanding of the needs of education "of what we're trying to do. should pass the fund raising over to somebody else.

Dr. Dodds belitves that all colleges should tt tht prtti-dent's rttirtmtnt at 40. "Witdom it no tubitituto for vigor and tht ability to tat eight dinners a wetk away from home." Tlwe is such a thing, he says, "as beinu a college president too long, both for the individual and the institution." Shaking the tin cup for colleee coffers must remain the function of the president, and time must be made for it. "Even if he is relieved and returned to education," Dr. Dodds says, "the college president will never find his life free from pressure.

The eight dinners a week, remember, may be traded for eight faculty suppers. MOST AGREE A check with some of the newer college presidents who have taken over from the young men who left the presidency for academic work, revealed that most of them would agree with Dr. Dodds. Mrs. Mary I.

Runtinc, a new president of Radchffe College put it this way: 'Only in the most extraordinary circumstances should a college president serve less than years or more than 15. Fund-raising That, of course, is tied up with money." Dr. Newsom thus joined the growing number of college presidents who are not finishing out their terms until retirement. Many of these youncer men who have resigned in recent years have had the same complaints as Dr. Newsom.

and have left the world of red tape and hat-passing to return to the ivory tower of research, writing or teaching. LOSING CONTROL The most common of the woes of the modern college president Is that he deplores losing the educational leadership of his institution and close contact with his faculty. Dr. Harold W. Dodds, president emeritus of Princeton, agrees that presidents no longer control the educational destiny of their colleges as they should.

Dr. Dodds, who retired In 1957 after 24 years as Prince-ton'i president, has completed a two-year study of the American college presidency, under grant of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. His book will he published in the spnnj. But he has already made some points on how long a man should hold a college presidi ncy, how young he should be and whether or not he IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 'OLDEST' GROOM ADMITS HOAXING U.K. PUBLIC LONDON (AP) There was only one thing wrong with 102-year-old Sidney Thain's wadding he wasn't in2.

"I'm sorry I hnaxed the nation," he said Thursday. "There has been a mistake." He was right atvuit that. Advertised on television as the wedding of the oldest bridegroom in Britain, 5,000 people showed up for the ceremony Wednesday. TV cameras recorded the arrival of the bridegroom and widow Maud Franklin, aged 73. Sidney turned up in a chauffeur-driven limousine, the bride in a carriage drawn by two grey horses, all paid for by well-wishers.

Touched and tickled, the British public heaped presents on th man they thought was starting a new lie at the age of 102. Cheques, furniture, carpets, a TV set and clothes. Hughie Green, the man who puts on the TV show "Double Your Money," served as best man. Champagne-paid for by other well-wishers flowed at the wedding reception. Then a doubting newspaperman handed him a reproduction of his birth certificate.

After an embarrassing pause, Sidney said; "I seem to have made a slight mistake, I'm not 102. I'm just 79." Never at a loss for words, he added: see, a bomb blew up my house during the war. I lost my memory. When I regained it at the hospital they told me I was 82. I couldn't contradict them.

Why should I felt 82." Kor the moment the bride looked stunned. But. breaking into a wide smile, she announced to the numerous guests who parked a pub for free "Never mind. It's the best wedding present I could She leaned over, and bussed him, saying: "Why, he's only a boy." 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I i 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i ri 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 Natal Council Requests Bid For Fire-Fighting Equipment A Rocket To Probe Aurora SASKATOON (CP) An Instrumented rocket designed to gather information about the Northern Lights over northern Canada probably will be fired next year. The shot is being conducted by the University of Saskatchewan and the National Research Council, each of which will contribute instruments for the 150-pound payload atop the Black Brant 11 rocket.

A. Kavadas of the University of Saskatchewan physics department said Thursday the rocket will be fired as soon as launching facilities, destroyed by a fire, become available again at Churchill. Man. Kavadas said the SR-fooi-Iong, 3.000-pound rocket will be capable of reaching height rf 129 miles. One of the University of Saskatchewan experiments will measure the electron density or concentration of charged particles wilhin the Northern Lights.

Concentration of charged particles seriously affects radio communications, and scientists hope the information gathered from the payload will result in bctter-desicned communications equipment for lite north. Girl Guide Officers Elected FONOKA Mrs. John rater-son was elected president of the Ponoka Association of Girl Guide Parents at the group's annual meeting held here. She succeeds Mrs. William Savage who was instrumental in reorganizing Girl Guides here after a several year lapse.

Other oficers elected include Mrs. Grant Bailey, vice-president: Mrs. William Earl, secre When "time is ddovs eors coused by faulty hearing can be truly costly. The ostute solves this prcb'eTi efficiently with the new AURiCULETTE CC. 1 Saturday, Oct.

14, 8:33 p.m. Jubilee Auditorium y-n rpntTV rnnrrnTt a EATON'S HEARING CENTRE A pre'esi onal Sffrvitf sf th Hard ot Ha ini In other business, council: Agreed to allow use of a room in the villace offices by the volunteor fire brigade: Approved installation of clearance lights on the village truck; Approve placement of insur tary-treasurer; and Mrs. V. R. Sparks, badge secretary.

The town's two Brownie packs have a combined enrolment of Brown Owl is Mrs. Allen Robertson and pack leaders are Mrs. Victor Mayled and Mrs. John Waring. Warranted guide leader, Mrs.

Don Culham. has charge of 21-member Ponoka company. Other leaders jnc'iiric Frank Ed arris and Mrs. S. A.

Weaver. THo srhpiuid a mot her-and-rt ght 'i" hamue for Oct. 30 a St. Mary's Hail. (Hi-aid CfirrveondM NATAL.

C. The Natal Village Council has decide to ask a Saskatoon fire engine firm to submit a bid to provide a fire truck with front-mounted pump and TOO ga'l'in water tank. A 'number of bids have al-rrady been received by council otbrr f.rms. Iv was mailo to sck fe Saktoon b'd after rocrril hoard no ballet espanol ROBERTO IGLESIAS COMPANY OF 20. Re.

Si: J3.50, SJ.CO. 17 50. H.W now at CELEBRITY BOX OFFICE, 3rd fioor Hudon' Bar Phone AM 2-6416 5n tvburiberi via tickt rr'kd EVENT EATON Cc ance on the village buildg and' contents: aid Authorized the villas" sort el-1 ary to ron'art a CVsary firm, in contortion wuh the purrhaso 12 mercury vapor street Streets Oiled HANNA Kanna wa- forced In oil its strorts this rk in an at'empt to prevent a dust storm the town. from f.rp chic's at I Beilevue and i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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