The Montana Kaimin, May 4, 1949

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Montana Kaimin, May 4, 1949 University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM) 5-4-1949 The onM tana Kaimin, May 4, 1949 Associated Students of Montana State University Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper Recommended Citation Associated Students of Montana State University, "The onM tana Kaimin, May 4, 1949" (1949). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 2454. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/2454 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Polls Open Tomorrow Morning For A SMS U General Election Constitutional Amendments THE MONTANA Go Before MSU Voters Also An expected 1,500 students will go to the polls tomorrow to write finis to a three-week Greek-ISA battle, with the Independents sure of only an inside chance to win a majority of major offices. At the same time the fate of four proposed cinstitutional kKAIMIN amendments will be considered by the voters. (A sum­ mary of these appears in Z400 Volume L Montana State University, Missoula, Montana Wednesday, May 4, 1949 - No. 104 American Music this issue.) As in other general elections This Picture’s a Winner Program Tonight where the Independents seemed on the verge of success, this one will In Main Hall be kind to them only in proportion to the turnout of voters. The hea­ A program of Aiherican music, Editorial vier the vote the more unaffiliated featuring compositions by univer­ students will take part. Probably sity students and contemporary 800-plus Greek votes, a solid bloc, THE CITIZENS FAIL, American composers, will be pre­ will go to the fraternity candidates The Citizen’s meeting in the for ASMSU offices. sented in Main Hall auditorium high school Monday night was Vital Races a sad denouement to those o£ tonight at 8:15, according to John us who presumed that at last B. Crowder, dean of music. Mem­ John Helding, Missoula, will face Henry Ford, Durango, Colo., in this city would measure up to bers of the University Music club its adult responsibilities. the ASMSU presidency race. Held- and Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, na­ ing’s Greek running mate, Dave City after city has recog­ Freeman, also of Missoula, must nized that the post-war juve­ tional music honorary, are cooper­ nile problem was largely a ating to sponsor the two-part pro­ topple Ross Miller, Great Falls, if drinking problem, and either he wants to represent the students gram, the university’s contribution as business manager. passed new measures de­ 'to observance of National and Two Greek women will fight signed to eradicate it, or en­ Inter-American Music Week. forced old ones. The' failure it out for the vice-presidency. Mar­ of the Citizen’s committee to Contest Presentations got Luebben, Dillon, and Kay Hen­ do either reveals a serious Original student compositions nessey, Conrad, are the finalists. failure to understand just entered in the contest arranged by For ASMSU secretary, it will be what the problem is. The “Colosseum,” a design photograph of the colosseum in Los the music school faculty to stimu­ either Lex Mudd, Missoula, or committee may be excused Angeles, won first prize in the journalism picture contest for Jim late composition of original works Edith Dresner, Yonkers, N. Y., the ISA candidate. for its ignorance, perhaps, Emrick', Conrad, journalism major. Emrick said that the picture will constitute the first part of but what can one say for the was originally taken merely as a snapshot, but when he enlarged the program. Judges Crowder, Ru­ Torv Halvorson, the ISA candi­ police officers who object to it he noticed the unusual patterns, patterns that won him first dolph Wendt, and George Perkins, date from Ledger, will oppose every suggestion to clean up place in the pic contest. of the music school faculty, will Henry DiRe, Anaconda, for senior illicit drinking by saying that select the best compositions and delegate to Central board: This is one of two major offices where the | the proposals are unwork- TWO POLLS TOMORROW announce the winners at the con­ 1 able? We could excuse them clusion of the program. Entries will Independents seem to be on the Two polling places will be inside track. I too if they could prove what Am endm ent be judged according to unity and open for the- general election In the competition for junior I they say, but they can’t. tomorrow, Jim Lucas, Miles coherence; compositional logic; in­ || In many cities in other states ventiveness or individuality; suit­ delegate, Jeanne Jones, Butte, and City, ASMSU business man­ Vote Due Lynn Lull, Helena, the ISA candi­ H a misdemeanor is committed ager said yesterday. The polling ability of texture to the medium, H by both the minor who orders ! and the over-all effect. date, will fight it out. place in the Bitterroot room of Dick Wohlgenant, unaffiliated If a drink and the bartender who the Student Union w ill be open Tom orrow The second part of the evening H serves him. Often the tavern candidate for sophomore delegate, from 8:30 till 12 and from 1 to 4. According to constitutional, re program will include works by is the strongest of the non-Greek g owner is jointly responsible The polling place in the vets quirements the following proposei contemporary American composers. §1 with his bairtender. Whether hopefuls. The Miles City boy polled community center will be open constitutional amendments a r “ Sonata in One Movement,” by more votes in the primary than his §1 this is the case in Missoula or from 11 to 1:30. Lucas said that being posted again for your ob George Perkins, choral director, is 5 not no one could say on the competitor tomorrow, Bob Smith, it would be absolutely necessary servance. The general election wil one of the compositions on the pro­ Choteau, and all the others elimi­ || basis of rambling statements by to have activity cards in order be tomorrow. gram. i If the law officers at the Monday nated on Aber day. to vote. Article VII, Section 5 shall b The program is open to the pub­ p meeting. We are asking the omitted and be replaced by th Light Vote Expected 6 county attorney for a rigid in- lic, Dean Crowder said. There is following as section 5: “All candi no charge for admission. A much lighter vote is predicted H terpretation of this law, and Job Openings dates for class office and repre in the various class office races. p will print it as soon as he com- Never heavy in the Aber primaries, sentatives to Central board shal RADIO GUILD MEETING p plies. Then we will see who it Vivian Burr and Mrs. Helen the class vote in the general elec­ be members of the class they ex TONIGHT IN MAIN HALL m is that is obstructing justice. Barkee of the Helena office of the tion generally falls below the State Department of Public Wel­ pect to represent, according ti I The real obstacle to" a credits, for at least two quarter The Radio Guild will meet to­ modest figure set on the holiday. I cleanup drive is the timidity fare will be on the campus tomor­ night at 6:30 in Main hall audi­ James D. Murphy, Great Falls, row for personal interviews with of the. regular academic year fo: I of the citizen’s committee to which they seek election.” torium, an hour earlier than its will face Joe Estes, Moore, in the | suggest the type of enforce- students who are interested in jobs regular time, according to John senior presidential contest; Martha with that department. Publish In Kaimin jj ment that is needed. The com- Article VII, section 6: “The sen Shepherd, adviser. Brown, St. Ignatius, and Marian I mittee hedged and hedged All students wishing interviews Guild members will try out for Bell, Kalispell, compete for the should sign the appointment list fences ‘The names of the candi­ I Monday, fearing to demand dates shall be kept secret until th< parts in “ Lucia Darling—Pioneer vice-presidency; Joan Smith, Kali- I that the police enforce the on the ’bulletin board in Old Sci­ Teacher,” a historical radio play spell, and Barbara Hartin, Spo­ ence 109, according to Mrs. M. W. closing filing date. The student au S laws already on the books. ditor shall publish in the Kaimii by Myrl Morris, Belt, which will kane, are candidates for secretary; Diskerman, group Work specialist be aired Saturday over the Z-Bar and Virginia Floyd, Butte, and gf Some deplored Gestapo tac- in the social work lab. the names of such candidates no jg tics, as they called them, which later than April 17th’ shall b< network. Rhoda Junek, Spearfish, S. D., will II would force a drinker to prove omitted and the following sen­ run for treasurer. p his age, failing to realize that tence put in its place: Junior Candidates p the first duty of a police officer “The names of candidates shal Junior class candiates: For presi­ || is to prevent crime. To prevent GREEK not be released through any offi­ dent, Edna Geary, Missoula, Bet­ fg crime those who are on the cial source until the student audi­ x ISA ty Lou Berland, Conrad; for vice- || verge of a criminal act must be tor releases them for publicatior president, Everett Chaffin, Mis­ || restrained.
Recommended publications
  • At Dawn on a Chill and Misty Morning in May, a Navy Battleship, The
    At dawn on a chill and misty morning in May, a Navy battleship, the U.S.S. Montana approached New York harbor steaming first past the Ambrose Light Ship and then the Statue of Liberty. Slowing as she sailed deeper into the harbor, the Montana stopped and loosed her anchor mid-stream in the Hudson River opposite the lower tip of Manhattan Island, a park called "The Battery." On her deck lay 17 coffins, each neatly draped with the national ensign. As a silent crowd watched, a tug slipped its moorings, moved to the anchored warship, and lay alongside. Crewmen carefully and tenderly trans­ ferred the coffins to her decks. The tug returned to the park and the coffins were placed on waiting caissons. Soon a solemn funeral procession began, and in it rode the President of the United States. He was somber, grim-visaged, and seemed to be almost in a state of shock. As the procession rolled on he stared straight ahead, as a man alone, which, saddened, at this turn of events resulting from one of his recent decisions, he was. The year was 1914, the President Woodrow Wilson, and the funeral that for the 17 Marines who died as they stormed ashore at Vera Cruz, Mexico, to avenge an insult to the American flag, and in the doing, give some teeth to Wilson’s displeasure at the undemocratic regime of General Victoriano Huerta ruling the turbulent nation. The Mexicans had resisted fiercely, and while losing Vera Cruz to the combined Marine assault and naval gunfire, had killed the 17 Americans.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix As Too Inclusive
    Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen Appendix I A Chronological List of Cases Involving the Landing of United States Forces to Protect the Lives and Property of Nationals Abroad Prior to World War II* This Appendix contains a chronological list of pre-World War II cases in which the United States landed troops in foreign countries to pro- tect the lives and property of its nationals.1 Inclusion of a case does not nec- essarily imply that the exercise of forcible self-help was motivated solely, or even primarily, out of concern for US nationals.2 In many instances there is room for disagreement as to what motive predominated, but in all cases in- cluded herein the US forces involved afforded some measure of protection to US nationals or their property. The cases are listed according to the date of the first use of US forces. A case is included only where there was an actual physical landing to protect nationals who were the subject of, or were threatened by, immediate or po- tential danger. Thus, for example, cases involving the landing of troops to punish past transgressions, or for the ostensible purpose of protecting na- tionals at some remote time in the future, have been omitted. While an ef- fort to isolate individual fact situations has been made, there are a good number of situations involving multiple landings closely related in time or context which, for the sake of convenience, have been treated herein as sin- gle episodes. The list of cases is based primarily upon the sources cited following this paragraph.
    [Show full text]
  • 1003 Soldiers, Sailors and Marines Furuseth
    1003 Soldiers, Sailors and Marines Furuseth FURUSETH, OSCAR CARL. Army number 863,233; registrant, Moun- trail county; born, Halstad, Minn., March 7, 1891, of Norwegian parents; occupation, blacksmith; enlisted at Fort Snelling, Minn., on Dec. 15, 1917; sent to Vancouver Barracks, Wash.; served in 407th Aero Construction Squadron, Air Service, Signal Corps, to Feb. 1, 1918; 404th Aero Construc- tion Squadron, to July 4, 1918; 31st Provisional Squadron, to Jan. 21, 1919; 27th Spruce Squadron, 2nd Provisional Regiment, to discharge. Grade: Sergeant, Feb. 8, 1918. Discharged at Camp Dodge, Iowa, on Jan. 31, 1919, as a Sergeant. FUSKERUD. ALBERT. Navy number 1,518,819; registrant, LaMoure county; born, Nunda, S. Dak., March 29, 1890, of Norwegian-American parents; occupation, farmer; enlisted in the Navy at Aberdeen, S. Dak, on Dec. 4, 1917; served at Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, Ill., to April 18, 1918; USS Leviathan, to Nov. 11, 1918; Grades: Apprentice Sea- man, 59 days; Seaman 2nd Class, 120 days; Fireman 3rd Class, 137 days; Fireman 2nd Class, 26 days. Discharged at Hoboken, N. J., on Oct. 29, 1919, as a Fireman 1st Class. FUSSELL, EDWIN BRIGGS. Army number 467,712; registrant, Cass county; born, Washington, D. C., Oct. 4, 1886, of (nationality of parents not given); occupation, reporter; inducted at Fargo on March 6, 1918; served in Training School, Ordnance Field Service, University of Cali- fornia, to April 27, 1918; SuPply School, Ordnance Training Camp, Camp Hancock, Ga., to July 2, 1918; Ordnance Detachment, Ordnance Depot Company No. 123, to discharge. Grade: Private 1st Class, July 10, 1918.
    [Show full text]
  • Marine Modelling Revisited 26 USN Dreadnought Battleships
    REVISITED Marine Modelling International magazine ran from October 1985 to August 2017 for a total of 365 issues with 240 ‘Waterlines’ articles including in the first and last issues. Beginning in 2011 many of these articles were gathered together in various ‘Waterlines – Revisited’ pdfs providing the opportunity to re-read some of those early and not so early articles virtually as they were. This final pdf combines a series of unpublished articles originally planned for late 2017/early 2018, their subject being the United States Navy’s Dreadnought Battleships. Additional pictures & information have been included. 26: USN Dreadnought Battleships Early Dreadnoughts .................................................................................................................................................................. 2 Notes on the Waterlines ........................................................................................................................................... 2 South Carolina Class ................................................................................................................................................ 2 Delaware Class ......................................................................................................................................................... 3 Wyoming Class ........................................................................................................................................................ 3 New York Class ......................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Company Journal and "The Feeder Line"
    Gelinas, John From: Gelinas, John Sent: Wednesday, July 08, 2009 6:13 AM Subject: Company Journal - Issue 51 - Part II The Company Journal and "The Feeder Line" Issue # 51 Summer 2009 Wednesday, 7 July 2009 Part II More Faces of the Fire Service Firefighters Richard Feliciano a nd James Encalada (Tower Ladder 2) 1 Chief of Department Gerry Reardon , Former Governor Mitt Romney . - Tactical Aide FF Dan Maloney (Division1) FF Jeremiah Hart (Squad 4) – FF Ryan Murphy and FLt. Fred Ikels (Engine 5) 2 FLt. James Drewicz, FF Adam Shuman, and FF Steve Kelley (Rescue 1) ) – FF Stephon Kinn, FLt. Robert Walsh (Engine 8) and FF Michael DeAmbrose (Truck 4) FFs Raymond Vaillancourt and Edmund Friel (Engine 4) 3 FF Michael Franks, FCapt. Brian Gover, and FF Nathan Jarvi (Engine 1) Truck 1 and Truck 3 members with Fire Apparatus Mechanic Steve Lopez – FF Ken Albert (Truck 1) FF Richard Rycroft (Truck 4) - FF Paul Finnegan ( Truck 3) 4 DFC Jim Burns (Tech Services) - Belmont Chief of Department David Frizzell CAFD members – Tactical Aide Dave McCaffrey (Division 1) 5 FLt. Robert Walsh, FF John Pasquarello, and FF Joseph Waddie (Engine 8) FLt. Brian O’Regan, FF Kevin Conroy, and FF Philip Amenkowicz (Engine 2) FCapt. Greg Carter and FF Hugh Devlin (Squad 4) DFC Bob Scott (Division 2), DFC Michael Morrissey (Division 1), and DFC Paul Sheehan (Division 2 covering the city) 6 FLt. Earl Howard and FF Kevin Pierre (Engine 3) FCapt. Michael Bruno and FF James Encalada (Truck 2) FLt. Tom Kotowski and FF Henry Sisco (Engine 6) 7 FF John McEachern, FCapt Charles Murphy, and FF Arthur Moy (Engine 9) - Photos above by Jay Connor Transfers Per General Order 08 of 2009, effective Sunday, April 12, 2009 at 0700 hours: Fire Lieutenant David S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Guns of August and the 1914 European Cruise of USS Tennessee (ACR-10)
    The Guns of August and the 1914 European Cruise of USS Tennessee (ACR-10) Andrew C. A. Jampoler USS Memphis (CA-10) In 1966 Captain Edward Beach Junior, US Navy, wrote The Wreck of the Memphis, a book published first by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, and then republished in 1998 by the Naval Institute Press as part of its “Classics of Naval Literature” series. The reprint’s introduction by the author marked the eighty-first anniversary of the loss of the armored cruiser USS Memphis mid-afternoon Tuesday, August 29, 1916, on the south side of the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. She was pushed on shore at Santo Domingo by great waves and quickly battered to death on a rock ledge there, a fate narrowly escaped by USS Castine, a small gunboat anchored in the same roadstead when the terrible seas—the product of a distant hurricane or a submarine earthquake; it’s still not agreed which—hit. When she died, Memphis was under the command of Captain Edward Beach, USN, the father of the author (who was born two years after the wreck). The idea that a tsunami killed Memphis was congenial to young Beach; it made his father the victim of an unforeseeable act of God, rather than guilty of a fatal lapse in readiness for sea that cost Beach Sr. his ship. Hispaniola lies atop one fault and very near the intersection of two tectonic plates. It’s in a high risk earthquake and tsunami area; however, there’s no other evidence of a Caribbean earthquake that day and the source of the surge remains controversial.
    [Show full text]
  • Program Edit Smaller
    PB 1 ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM SPONSORS DIAMOND General Dynamics Electric Boat Lockheed Martin Newport News Shipbuilding a Division of Huntington Ingalls Industries PLATINUM General Dynamics Mission Systems L3Harris Technologies Northrop Grumman Raytheon Technologies GOLD BWX Technologies Leonardo DRS Teledyne Brown SILVER Carahsoft HDR Oceaneering International Sheffield Forgemasters Sonalysts Systems Planning and Analysis The Boeing Company VACCO 2 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS MONDAY AGENDA ......................................................................................................................................................5 TUESDAY AGENDA .....................................................................................................................................................6 WEDNESDAY AGENDA ................................................................................................................................................7 SPEAKERS RDML Edward Anderson, USN .................................................................................................................................................................. 9 FORCM(SS) Steve Bosco, USN ................................................................................................................................................................. 9 Hon. Kenneth Braithwaite ...................................................................................................................................................................... 10 ADM Frank Caldwell,
    [Show full text]
  • F Ifi* Njw'fr Signature of Certifying ^Ffuslai/Title Date Marc A
    NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 (Oct. 1990) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations of eligibility for individual properties or districts. See instructions in HowYoCorrtptoteJtfe National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A) Complete each item by marking "x" in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories listed in the instructions Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property_____________________________________________________ historic name USS New Jersey (BB-62)__________________________________________ other names/site number Battleship New Jersey_________________________________ 2. Location_________________________________________ street & number 62 Battleship Place | | not for publication city or town Camden City vicinity State New Jersey code NJ county Camden code 007 zip code 08103 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, 1 certify that this >. nomination |_ | request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property pp meets | | dpesnot meet the National Register criteria. 1 recommend that this property be considered significant |~x~| nationally | XfstBtewide^, | | locally.
    [Show full text]
  • E Z) V MEXICAN BORDER SERVICE
    e Z) V MEXICAN BORDER SERVICE HEARINGS 6 ^ ^-yat.^ j^^U^ BEFORE THB " COMMITTEE ON INYALID PENSIONS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES SEVENTY-NINTH CONGRESS FIRST SESSION i\"'i ' -^ lOat^ ON H. R. 1653 and H. R. 2073 /v, • ^e BILLS TO EXTEND PENSION BENEFITS TO VETERANS WHO SERVED DURING 1916 AND 1917 ON THE MEXI- CAN BORDER, AND TO THEIR DEPENDENTS SEPTEMBER 13, 1945 Printed for the use of the Committee on Invalid Pensions H^-BI^^I UNITED STATES GOVEUNMBNT PRINTING OFFICE 77484 WASHINGTON : 1045 COMMITTEE ON INVALID PENSIONS JOHN LESIN8KI, , Michigan, Chairman FRANK W. BOYKIN, Alabama J. HARRY McOREQOR, Ohio HERBERT C. BONNER, North Carolina CHARLES M. LAFOLLETTE, Indiana AUGUSTINE B. KELLEY, Pennsylvania ROBERT HALE, Maine WILLIAM L. DAWSON, Dllnois LEON H. QAVIN, Pennsylvania JAMES H. MORRISON, Ix>uislana ROBERT J. CORBETT, Pennsylvania CHARLES R. SAVAOE, Washin(!ton T. MILLET HAND, New Jersey THOMAS E. MORGAN. Pennsylvania EDWARD J. EL8AESBER, New York ADAM C. POWELL, JR., New York CLYDE DOYLE, Californl^^ U E. H. HEDRICK, Wos» V^^e BDIOHAH W. MATHIAS, Clerk ^ CONTENTS Page ,-i^ H. R. 1653 1 -^ H. R. 2073 3 T+- Article by Col. John Q. Tilson from the New Haven Journal-Courier: Mexi- v\' can Border Veterans 73 Letter from—• Beurer, Charles F., 157 Cedar Hill Avenue, New Haven 11, Conn 73 i Cavanaugh, \V. Scotty, national deputy inspector. Regular Veterans • Association, 439-441 Gibraltar Building, Kansas City 6, Mo 74 Clark, Marion W., commander, John W. Tiffany Post No. 53, Veterans of Foreign Wars of United States, Fenton Mansion, Jamestown, N. Y - 74 Clift, Chester H., Rural Route No.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 • Third Quarter • $6.00
    2019 • Third Quarter • $6.00 | 1 Third Quarter 2019 Indian River Colony Club “The Place Patriots Call Home” Plan your next reunion in NORTH LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS! SUBMARINE• Full REUNIONrun of USS Razorback PACKAGE Have your next reunion at USS 55+ Military Community • Experienced sub vets on-hand Razorback (SS-394), a 90-percent • Group photo • 2-4 BR Single Family Homes operational sub maintained by • Hospitality space at museum Interested? Learn more! Join a resident host to play • Extensive Maintenance Program vets like you. FULL RUN of the • Engine lighting ceremony golf or tennis, dine in the At Ease Club, & tour the • Private Par 72 Golf Course boat and assistance from our community! • Free reunion planning assistance • Your first year of golf is included experienced reunion team! • Gorgeous views of the Arkansas River with home purchase; free golf • Access to Hoga, a tugboat from Pearl Harbor 3 DAYS/ 2 NIGHTS LET US HOST YOUR lessons with Pro. Florida has no state income tax • Planning spouse outings around town per person, transportation not or estate tax. • Assistance with caterers and group dining GetAway! included NEXT• Planning REUNION assistance with entertainment Ask about our Military 877-490-6787 Reservations include a full, hot breakfast buffet Discount! www.ColonyClub.com 3 blocks from AR Inland Maritime Museum Indian River Colony Club · 1936 Freedom Drive · Viera, FL 32940 · [email protected] Two ballrooms divisible by seven sections Six breakout rooms Two Hospitality Suites 220 spacious newly renovated guestrooms Your Reunion Team Complimentary airport/downtown shuttle Jim Gates (USS James K. Polk); Complimentary shuttle to & from maritime museum Camille Smith; Myna Miller; Greg Complimentary parking Zonner (USS Von Steuben); Joe Mathis Outdoor Pool (USS Jefferson City) ON THE COVER 2 award winning restaurants & lounges on site 2019 • Third Quarter • $6.00 The Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine USS Asheville (SSN 758) underway off the coast of Southern California.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter # 255, Mon, May 20, 2019
    spring 2019 AMHE Newsletter may 20 Haitian Medical Association Abroad Association Medicale Haïtienne à l'Étranger Newsletter # 255 AMHE NEWSLETTER Editor in Chief: Maxime J-M Coles, MD Editorial Board: Rony Jean Mary, MD Reynald Altema, MD Technical Adviser: Jacques Arpin Genetic Chimerism (Chimera) In this number - Words of the Editor, Maxime Coles,MD - NOAH NY Medical Mission - La chronique de Rony Jean-Mary,M.D. - LA PROMOTION DU DR. COICOU - La chronique de Reynald Altéma,M.D. - Published on the AMHE Facebook page last two weeks - United States’ Occupation of Haiti, Maxime Coles,MD - And more... - AHDH 2 genetically female. know what sex is the predominant and The congenital Chimerism can be then remove the less dominant organ. “tetragametic” through the fertilization of Evolution in medicine has shown that we two separate ova by two spermatozoids may have “missed the boat” because of with aggregation of both eggs at the stage our incapability to perform any genetic “Blastocyst or “zygote”. In other way, testing. this is the merging of two non-identical It is only when they exhibit abnormalities twins and as such, they can be male or like “male-female’ or “hermaphrodite” or female or have mixed intersex skin pigmentation etc. that they may be characteristics. These chimera organisms examined and diagnosed. A variant of develop organ which may have different Chimerism is more noticeable on the sets of chromosomes like a kidney or a “Calico cat” or “tortoisehell cats” with an liver in the same individual may present extra X Chromosome. One can understand different set of chromosomes.
    [Show full text]
  • American Submariner from Opt out of Paper, Save a Tree
    Volume 2018 Third Quarter Page 1 Volume 2018 Third Quarter American $6.00 Submariner USS SCAMP SS-277 USS Scamp SSN-588 Our purpose is, “To perpetuate the memory of our shipmates who gave their lives in the pursuit of their duties while serving their country. That their dedication, deeds and supreme sacrifice be a constant source of motivation toward greater accomplishments. Pledge loyalty and patriotism to the United States of America and its Constitution. Today is a great day to download your American Submariner from www.USSVI.org Opt out of paper, save a tree. Send an E-Mail to [email protected] ISBN List# 978-0-9896015-0-4 American Submariner Page 2 American Submariner BOLDMILITARYJEWELRY.COM OFFICIAL U.S. NAVY LICENSED ART NO PRINTED CATALOGS SEE THE COMPLETE LINE OF WATCHES, CUFFLINKS, PENDANTS AND RINGS ON LINE TOLL FREE:877.703.9370 DIRECT: 973.941.9943 BOLDMILITARYJEWELRY.COM Volume 2018 Third Quarter Page 3 AMERICAN TABLE OF CONTENTS 4 Officer’s Call SUBMARINER 7 USSVI Committees - Chaplain’s Corner 8 USSVI Regions and Districts The Official Magazine of the United States 9. Submariner Poem - Arizonal Memorial Submarine Veterans Inc. is published quarterly 11 Incoming (Mail) by USSVI. United States Submarine Veterans 12 USSVI Scholarship Awards - Audie Murphy Inc. is a non-profit 501 (C) (19) corporation in 13 2019 USSVI Calendars the State of Connecticut. 14. USS Scamp (perpetuating the memory) Printing and Mailing: 16 Rocky Mountain Wedding BuzzPrint Dallas Texas 17. USS Ling (Terrorism) 18 Base ScuttleButt National Editor 24 2018 USSVI Convention at Sea 26.
    [Show full text]