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Fremont Tribune from Fremont, Nebraska • 5

Publication:
Fremont Tribunei
Location:
Fremont, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ftppupitmgtit vpm iflprnrgmuy Tuesday October TPS Tiemont Tribune 5 Garden club members riireefer: Shes black. Ann Landers host cooperative luncheon female and Republican Doctor change heats waiting -a- merit given to the club for its scrapbook and yearbook and a citation for its world gardening program. Tentative plans were made for' a workshop to make Christmas decorations. The program, given by Mrs. Hattie Fleer, told of unusual trees in Fremont.

Next meeting will ba hosted by Mrs. Hattie Fleer and Mrs. Herman Benne on Nov. 14. rights be respected.

If he gets no satisfaction he should go to the head of the board of education. Even the emotionally disturbed are entitled to a break. In the Know Dear In: You were one of many who wrote to make this clear and I thank you. I was so busy sympathizing with the boy that 1 failed to zero in on the central issue. A cooperative luncheon was hosted hy members of Fremont First Garden Club when they met at the home of Mrs.

Guy Brubaker. Mrs. Charles Gibson reported on moisture conservation. She also mentioned a new Elm tree, resistant to Dutch Elm disease, hich is a cross between a Siberian and Netherlands Elm. Mrs.

Mary Hall said the state conservation department will test Whooping Cranes for resistance to fowl cholera found in the Funk area. Members were given forms to suggest ideas for studies, tours and other activities which could be included in next years garden club program. -President Mrs. Daniel Smith showed awards of Qakndah. OF EVENTS Select Accessories With Car6 Choose accessories carefully, for they ore os important to room os they ore to that basic block dress.

Accessories should always be considered as accents. You must like ond enjoy your wa or table accessories. specialists can keep their appointments if they are conscientious. Every good physician will confirm this. A Westchester Physician Dear Westy: I checked with three good physicians and they agreed.

Dear Ann Landers: Some-bod yo ut there needs straightening around. Please be the intermediary. I refer to the uncle whose six year old nephew disrupts his class, it mean to the other students, irritates his teacher and makes a general nuisance of himself. The question was, Can he be expelled from school? The answer is NO. In the United States no six year -old can be kicked out of school.

He can, however, be placed in a class where there is help for him. I know because I teach emotionally disturbed children. Parents and children have rights to education in this country. Most states guarantee a child an education until he is 18. Even if he strikes a teacher, a disturbed student can be forced to go for help, along with his parents if necessary, or be put in a special class.

That uncle ought to go to the principal of the boys school and demand that the childs Dear Ann Landers: Im writing about that flap bet-ween'the physician and the patient who was kept waitihg for 2j hours. I'm surprised no one called your attention to the fact that it is not the physician who schedules the patients, its his nurse or desk woman. I went to a doctor who always ran two or three hours late. It drove me crazy. When I heard his nurse schedule three people for the same time I got smart and changed doctors.

That was ten years ago and Ive never had to wait for more than 10 or 15 minutes since. A few times the nurse has come to the waiting room to tell -us the doctor was called out on an emergency. She offered to reschedule those who didnt care to wait. This certainly beats sitting around for two hours w'ondering what in the world is going on. I hope I have shed a little light on the subject.

Mrs. K. Dear Mrs. So do I-Thanks for lifting the shade. Dear Miss Landers: As a physician, may I comment on my colleague who blew his stack when his patient deducted SI .50 from her bill because she had to wait well beyond her appointment time? How often does this happen If it occurs rarely, or if the wait is a short one, she should overlook it.

If it happens frequently you can bet he has no interest in the patient or her medical problems. He is deliberately overscheduimg to keep the bucks rolling in. My advice is for her to find another doctor, not merely to save needless waiting time, but more importantly to make certain she is getting proper attention. Unfortunately, physicians who overschedule also tend to under treat. Except for emergencies, even the most successful These personal elements must fill a decorating need not displayed because you happen to hove them.

A good decorating trick is not to display them all a once Stock some away, to late give your rooms a scenery shift. By BENJAMIN SHORE Coplev News Service WASHINGTON Formally, shes called Chair. Informally, some friends call her a threefer. But no matter what shes called, Audrey Rowe Colom is an acknowledged force behind the involvement of women in politics. Colom, 29, runs the Womens National Political Caucus, a 4 year old nonpartisan organization whose national headquarters is crammed into a rumpled suite of rooms three flights of stairs above a French restaurant here.

Her title is Chair not chairman, chairwoman or chairperson. Threefer? Shes black, female and Republican, she explains with an infectious smile and easy laugh that softens the impressive impact of a woman who knows hat she means and says it clearly. Elected to a two year, term at the WNPCs national convention last June in Boston, Colom has set out two major goals for the organization: ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment and. development of stronger state and local women's political caucuses to carry out their broad objectives. The ERA, passed by Congress but needing the approval of two thirds of the state legislatures to become part of the Constitution, is the common denominator of womens political activist groups at the moment.

Following fairly quick approval by 33 states, the ratification effort now ap-. pears stalled. Only four more 6tates are needed, but that gap is proving difficult to close. So the VVN'PC will be directing most of its 1976. political muscle to the election of women to the legislatures those states' which have yet to ratify.

To win WNPC support, Colom says, a woman not only must endorse the ERA but also be strong on issues such as equal access to credit for women, minimum wages for' domestic help and most of tiie other issues of equality that underlie the womens TUESDAY. 8pm Chnty Circle of First Lutheran Church, Mrs. Eunice Johnson, 03S W. 10th St. 7.30 pm.

Group of First United Methodist Church with Mercedes Reed, 1820 N. Garfield St 7.30 pm. LaLeche League toddler meeting, 1030 N. Michael St. 8pm Golden Rule Rebekah Lodge Nq58 at Oddfellow hall.

Wednesday 1.30 Fremont Council of Garden Clubs guest day at Keene Memorial Library. 7.30 m. Policy council meeting and parent meeting at Presbyterian Church 7.30 pm Recovery. at First United Methodist Church. THURSDAY 11am.

Arts and Crafts Day at Fremont City Auditorium, sponsored by the home extension clubs council. 7pm. Movies at Fremont Tower 1.30 pm. Dorcas Circle in hirst Lutheran Church lounge 9.15 am. First Uniled Methodist Church Circles: Group One with Mrs.

Rod Ballard. 2123 N. Cedar GroupTwo with Mrs Sherman Jordan, 193 N. Irving and Group Three with Mrs. Hemenway.

2045 N. Hazel St. 1:30 m. First United Methodist Church Circles: Group Four with Mrs. Walter Pfeiffer, 145 E.

First Group Five with Mrs. F. L. Spear, 1770 N. Colson Group Six with Mrs.

George Carlin, 20Sti Hickory Lane: and Group Seven with Mrs. Gordon Soderberg, 1140 N. I St. .9:15 am Presbyterian Church Circles: Circle One with Mrs. Dennis Bunde, 2233 E.

19th nnd Circle Two with Mrs. Charles Hall, 405 E. Ninth St. 1:15 pm. Presbyterian Church Cir-clea: Circle Three at the Westminster Room at the church; Circle Four with Mrs.

Paul Teigeler, 1715 N. Nye Circle Five with Mrs. L. J. Rowe, 1240 N.

Nye Ave and Circle Six with Mrs. Carl W. Johnson, 1712 N. Nye Ave. 7M champion Audrey Rowe Colom, head of the Womens National Political Caucus, has set two major goals for the organization and one is ramification of the Equal Rights Amendment.

(Copley Photo) ENOS WED. NOW! Cheryl Ann Lunn Lincoln couple plans winter rite Cheryl Ann Lunn of Frem However, she notes, the WNPC feels it must remain flexible in its standards and would not necessarily fail to support an otherwise qualified female political candidate who happened to oppose, for example, the Supreme Court decision liberalizing abortion laws. You support a woman like that and hope that at some point she will move to your point of thinking, Colom says, reflecting her reputation for creating powerful coalitions out of-nominally disparate Meldene Cushman For Fashionable Homes Coll For Appointment RIEPER'S INTERIORS 541 N. Main 721-5746 Studio 9.30-5 weekdays Sat by appointment and Republican organizations. She says her philosophical affinity to the GOP (whose national committee chairman, Mary Louise Smith, is a major WNPC figure) is rooted in her strong belief in states rights and more efficient spending of government money.

Yet it was only four years ago that she joined' with Rep. Bella Abzug, Gloria Steinem and other politically Involved women to create the WNPC. While it originally was dominated by Democrats and still is essentially white, its selection of Colom to be its leader testifies to the growing awareness within the WNPC that womens issues are nonpartisan and A dull I 2 CI.Wr.il 1 One Show Nitely At 8 DO PM ont and Randall E. Jensen of Lincoln are planning a Dec. 27 wedding at Salem Lutheran Church in Fremont.

Parents of the bride elect are Mr. and Mrs. Donald Herout of Fremont and Nor-' man D. Lunn of Wichita, Kan. Jensen is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Richard E. Jensen of. Fremont. Miss Lunn is employed at Mutual Savings Co.

in Lincoln. Her fiance will graduate from the University of Nebraska with a major in criminal justice. He is affiliated with Phi Delta Theta Moving women to her side on major broad issues keeps Colom on the road at least two full days each week, meeting with state and local WNPC caucuses and speaking to college students, womens groups ss si si si si si MUNLY GbouL (people. Sid FaeMsaid Mae Say i m. WED.

THURS. FRI. ONLY Is fS eS 1 fS 'Z is Is is is Regional bird chairman Xi Alpha Beta to host banquet will' be guest speaker Hey Ladies! si the Eastern Area Judges Council, Tekamah Garden Club and Botany and Dundee Garden Clubs of Omaha. Newcomers to Fremont, according to the Department of Utilities are: Clyde Frizzell, 1046 W. Eighth from Wartrace, Charles W.

Davis, 650 E. 15th from Kansas City, Randall Lee Sanders, 2535 W. Ninth from Wahoo; Jerry Tierney, 1423 N. Platte from Herman; Ewald Schulz, 134S N. Colson from Wisner; Bap-, bara Jonas, Yorkshire Manor, from Ceresco; Alan Hackbarth, 145 Schuyler from Arlington; Reed! Anstine, 1105 E.

Fifth from LaMesa, Patrick TRADE IN YOUR is worth 5c PER LB. towm-ds the purchase of any WASHER OR DRYER from our large inventory Wed. thru Fri. Only! YOUR CHANCE TO SAVE on the many models we have on hand. P.S.

We will give him bach Xi Alpha Beta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority will be in charge of the fall banquet 6:30 p.m. Nov. 4 at the Elks Club. The Yankee Doodles drama group from Fremont High School will provide entertainment. Reservations must be made to Alice Jessen by Oct.

25. The chapter will host a luncheon style show at St. Patricks Auditorium 1 p.m, Nov. 8. Models will be selected members from the Fremont Garden Club Council will entertain at a guest tea 1:30 p.m.

Wednesday at Keene Memorial Library. Guest speaker is Mrs. 'Richard Hancock of Tekamah, former national and Kocky Mountain regional bird's chairman of the National Council of Garden Clubs. Hancock is serving her fourth term as state bird chairman and has attended ornithology classes at Dana' College. She also is a flower show judge and a member of The program will include pictures of birds in their habitat and information on feeders, houses and a collection of bird polydomes.

Members of First Garden Club, Evening Gardeners, Rambling Rose Club and their guests are invited to attend, said spokeswoman Mrs. Ardele Bass. Cedar Bluffs Garden Club members also will be guests. I si si Si Si Si other seven Beta Sigma Phi- Keultjes, 2124 N. Union sMDd) PLUS I YOU CAN (S.

chapters in Fremont. Proceeds from the event will go to the Dodge County Head Start program. The sorontys Nov. 11 meeting will be at the home of Lee Paden. Si on this Kenmore Heavy-duty 5-Cycle Washer and Dryer Pair Jeane Dixon Impulsiveness jolts schedules from Sioux Falls, S.

Roger L. Vogt, 405 N. Lincoln from North Platte; Alice Bessey, 349 W. Sixth from Arlington; Sondra Johnson, 605 N. I from.

Hooper; John A. Cartwright, 648 E. Fourth from Pennsylvania? Donald Jokumsen, 348 E. Eighth from Valley; Victor L. Kerker, 928 Locust from Ottawa, Mary Holloway, 635 N.

Bell from Des Moines, and Jack L. Dickinson, 779 W. 11th from Lincoln. TflovisL QIdcJl si Si si vow innoi CicrTtoL val vf Empress Tuesday, Wednesday Benji, Complete program, 8. Don't cover ripe tomatoes when you are storing them in the refrigerator.

2 '4-hr; Wrinkle Guard Feature Help present wrinkle artin after drying! si si Si si Si si Si si Si Si Large Capacity 38 more waah apace then our reg. capacity! happen. Its a great day to begin a diet and esercise program. 1 Virgo (Aug. 23 Sept.

22): Newcomers have no grasp of the situation, and theres no time to educate them now. Simplicity is your goal. Drop details that havent been given the green light. Libra (Sept. 23 Oct.

22): Your ow'n restlessness is stimulated by others. Becoming too temperamental or impulsive is hazardous in many ways. Avoid taking chances. Scorpio (Oct. 23 Nov.

21): If youre supposed to be in the. driver's seat, be there early. If you're not, stay out of the situation and you avoid the oressure and the blame. I 1 Is? cs fS is is is iz is is is cz is PRESENTS CAROL Solid-State Sending 4 Drvrr aenaea moiature in your clothe! Si 65701 HEMPSTEAD Five Temperature Set wachnnae combi-aatiofte to rail 25701 Your birthday today: Impulsive moves early in the year jolt you off your schedules into activities with which you haven't had much involvement before. Your intuition sharpens to meet generally strong competition as you learn to see people as they are.

Relations of all kinds take on greater importance this year. Todays na lives are restless and home -loving, need considerable time alone. Many are painters, poets, writers. Aries (March 21 April 19): This is a day for general caution but not for a defensive attitude. Dealings that concern money are tense.

Just realize people are in contrary moods and have plans that do not include you. Taurus (April 20 May 20): Friends are off on a speculative venture; don't join in their schemes. The older generation upsets the status quo with their opinions. Follow your judgment without fanfare. Gemini (May 21 June 20): You have too many irons in the fire.

Take time off from work to attend to home and family, or vice versa. Establish priorities in your heavy schedule. Dont overlook some matter of importance. Cancer (June 21 July 22): You move things around without giving much thought to possible repercussions. Those yon love entertain unrealistic ideas about your capabilities or income.

Take care while traveling. Leo (July 23 Aug. 22): Leave joint finances alone. Inspect home and work condi- Sagittarius (Nav. 22 Dec'.

21). The situation seems placid, as usual, but things arent quite so tranquil. Everybody concerned is up-, tight. Stick with familiar rounds and well known Carol has recently joined our staff 'of expert stylists. Make an appointment soon so that you may be able to take advantage of Carol's SAVE 35 EIcctric'Dryer m9s SAVE s5 Automatic Washer 95 "INTRODUCTORY OFFER' Si Si si S5 si Si Si- Si si Si si $1 discount on Shampoo Set $4 discount on any ene of Reg.

$219.93 $249.95 Gas Dryer $214.95 Colors S3 extra Colors $5 extra Reg. $299.93 Capricorn (Dec. 22 Janl 19): While steady business is the ideal, youre unlikely to achieve it. Discussions that try to solve problems end up in confusion and may as well be skipped. Have cash ready to see you through.

Aquarius (Jan. 20 -Feb. 18 If youre asked for help, do only what is necessary, at your convenience. If you aren't asked, keep out of the problem since your advice isnt welcome. Pisces (Feb.

19 March 20): Sudden questions and minor problems pop up. Nobody is in a sympathetic mood, so go it alone. Impetuous decisions Comco's Select Permanents (offer Expires November IS, 1975) 721-9277 2204 N. BELL Sears Has a Credit Flan to Suit Most Every Need 529 N. Main 721-6800 Fri.

9-5 PJA. Thursday 9-9 P.M. Salurdoy P.M. Sale Ends Oct. 28, 1973 Frices are Catalog Prices Shipping, Installation Extra SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back OPEN MONDAY THRU BLASS, BOEBUCK AND CO.

Red Ken Outlet free Forking tions fof safety and take premiss the mark. Keep all" cautions before accidents travel to a minimum..

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Pages Available:
822,839
Years Available:
1883-2024