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The Winona Times from Winona, Mississippi • 11
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The Winona Times from Winona, Mississippi • 11

Publication:
The Winona Timesi
Location:
Winona, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VATION NEWf 1 Thursday, December 11, I960 WINONA (MISS.) TIMES 3 401 News By Mrs. Ed Donahoo Mrs. Bonnie Thomas. French Camp By Sue Davidson Gregg, Ozell and Harold, Mr. and Mrs.

William Garrett and Deborah have been Mrs. Ellingburg, Elvie Lee and Melvyn's visitors this week. Mr. and Mrs. Caloway Gregg, Starkville visited recently with Mrs.

Ellingburg and the Bee Gregg family. Mr. and Mrs. Billy Armstrong and family went shopping in CHRISTMAS JTOUR STRENGTHS Our sympathy goes out to the Anglin family in the death of Mrs. Anglin.

vVe were so very sorry to hear of her death- forest green, and white sideburns Way he thinks, Clarence Simes, Tomnolen visited with us Wednesday night. Quinton Harrison stopped by to see Harold while he is on leave from the Army. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donahoo, Ronnie and Tracey of Tuscaloosa, Mr.

and Mrs. Billy Miller, James, David and Tressie, Mrs. Katherine and Nanda Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Donahoo, and Gail Rod-gers were visitors in our home Sunday.

Mrs. Linda Simes and one of her friends of Tomnolen came by for a while Saturday afternoon. Jimmy Donahoo and one of his On Tuesday night, a Christ- mas reception was held in the French Camp Academy Museum for the students and staff Ihrto I 5 iifi ESta Visiting with us last week brennan strode across end were: Mr. and Mrs. Dar- rell Donahoo, Toinnolen, Mrs.

lot ot tne state ot-in Jackson on his (Catherine and Nanda Johnson, of the Academy. Greeting guests at the door were Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Angle. Mr.

Angle is president of the Academy. In the display rooms were Danny Col- dress a recent meet- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Donahoo, Afike, and Dwayne, Mr. anf" Conservation kduca- Ly Council.

1rs. Billy Miller came by for Greenwood one night last week. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moran, Kennie, Cindy and Scott, also Edwin Hearon of Ocean Springs spent the holidays with their parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Howard Hearon. Those who ate Thanksgiving dinner with the Hearons were Mrs. Waylon Orsborn and La- ler, Jim Smith, Dennis Vance, laturalists, Dr. Bren- his element in the and Adrian Travis.

Tea girls were Sonny Reppond, Betty Link, Francis CamDbelL ami while Sunday. Mr. Gail Rod-gers and Jamie Greenlee were Harold's visitors. They enjoyed horse back riding. Darrell was in on that too.

with tne breeze Ld the sun shining, friends of Belzoni visited Harold Donahoo Sunday light. Mr. Ed and Billy Miller went to Carthage to church at Mount ound him the creaks is and rustlings of Mis. Katherine and Nanda Johnson and Becky Donahoo Olive. Reported a good meeting king, growing, and and Roberta Havers.

Mr. and Mrs. John R. Cockrell assisted the surator of the museum, Miss Sue Davidson in explaining exhibits to visitors. Mrs.

Ruby Stevens and the tea girls served refreshments. Plantation Grown Premium Trees Double Balsm Austrian Pine Scoth Pine Will Flock For You In Beautiful Colors Red, Blue, Gold Green ROGERS BELl 334 1 ST. ST. PH0. 226-3323 GRENADA went skating Sunday.

Reported a way in uie woria a- Verne, Mrs. Barney Morgan, Beverly, Barry and Sheila, Mr. Mack Youngblood and Bobby of French Camp, Miss Kay Pearson of Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Morgan, Kennie, Cindy and Scott and Edwin Hearon.

Maxie Pullen and Mitzie called a while that night. an outdoor laoora- nr. Brenan. Doint- lot of neutral ground feet wide and dis-by nothing more than Ms. Shiriey Pullen and Mitzie visited Mrs.

Waylon Orsborn a bush. good time. On Sunday morning Mr. and Mrs. Ed Donahoo, Mrs.

Katherine Johnson and Becky visited Mrs. Myrtle Dodd in the nursing home. She is able to walk now and doing so very much better. Also visited Mr. and Mrs.

Higginbotham and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stewart. Mr. and Mrs.

Ashley Austin, Stewart, Mrs. Vernon Taylor of Pascagoula, Mrs. Linda Simes, Mrs. Darrell Donahoo, Mrs. preaching by Brother B.

R. Ware. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Donahoo, Mike and Dwayne visited us Saturday night.

Those who- spent Thanksgiving with the Ed Donahoos were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hodges, Ray and Jeff of Belzoni, Mrs. Katherine Johnson and Nanda, Mrs. Billy Miller, James, Teresa, Mrs.

Linda Simes, Mrs. Darrell Donahoo cf Tomnolen. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donahoo, Ronnie and Tracey of Tuscaloosa, Ala.

came by that afternoon. Mrs. Jewell Fair, Mobile, Mr. and Mrs. Walton Henderson, and Mr.

and Mrs. Homer Henderson attended the funeral of Mr. Henderson's sister, Mrs. Olive Holmes of Mobile. Mrs.

Holmes was reared at Hunts-ville near French Camp. Mrs. W. 0. Potts of Corinth has been visiting her daughter.

difference in the plants? Some of the rown. Some is light ie dark green. This hat the soils even a while Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Leola Hearon, Mrs.

Barney Morgan, Mrs. Waylon Orsborn and Mr. Mack Youngblood visited Rev. C. F.

Anglin in the Kilmichael hospital a while OUTDOOR LABORATORIES for schools were discussed at recent meeting in Jackson of the Conservation Education Advisory Council by Otis Allen (left) Greenwood, Leflore County superintendent of Education; Dr. Matthew Brennan, Milford, dircetor Pinchot Institute for Conservation Studies; Dr. Harold Fisher, Vaiden native, (left, standing), Blue Mountain, president Blue Mountain College; and R. C. Roberts, Jackson, science supervisor, State Department of Education.

-SCS Photo. i.Nutrena Feeds IT. JACKSON 9 UMNEL 3 SATURDAY Thursday afternoon. Howard Hearon made a business trip to the coast this week. Mr.

Mack Youngblood visited his wife, Mrs. Flora Youngblood in the Riddell Nursing home Monday. tries to make a fire and fails, he learns from being cold. If he tries to use a compass and fails, he learns from being lost. Learning is Fun Mr.

and Mrs. Junior Donahoo, Frances and Judy of Augusta, Arkansas came Friday night and went home Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Donahoo, Mrs.

Katherine Johnson went to Old Simpson school house to an all day meeting. Had a wonderful meeting. 'Mrs. Billy Miller, James and Carl Miller of Memphis visited Mrs. Ed Donahoo Wednesday find evidences of change.

One child found a leaf that was turning brown. Another found the evidence of interdependence in a leaf miner that was living on the leaf. Dr. Brennan talked about the need for man to understand his environment, on which he is dependent and which he, alone a-mong organisms, can manage, control, improve, and destroy. "The outdoor laboratory is the only place in the school where ert Moore we can run and jump and holl er and shout It is a place where children who are good manipulators have a chance to develop prestige and esteem a mong tneir peers it is a Politics "The things which man is doing to his environment are not being decided on the basis of scientific knowledge," the scientist said.

"They're being done place where children can over 4 is in Vietnam Army First Sergeant Elbert H. Moore, son of Mrs. Lois Franklin, Charleston, was assigned in October to the 1st Cavalry Division in Vietnam as a first sergeant. His father, George G. Moore, lives in Duck Hill.

His wife, Juanita, lives in Tacoma, come their fears of being afraid of wild animals, of being alone in the dark a place where TV tally new concept in average, watcn teie- evening. Mrs. M. L. Ellingburg.

Elvie Lee and Melvyn enjoyed Thanksgiving day with their son and Brother Heram Ellingburg and family of West. Several other families joined them there including several deer hunters. They brought in one deer. They also visited the Henry Gregg family in Winona and found Henry feeling better. 'Mrs.

Allie Pettegrew, Mr. and Mrs. David Ellingburg, Rita Garrett, Marlon Seaney, Jackson, Hiram Ellingburg cf West. Mr. and Billy Armstrong, Lisa, and Michael, Mrs.

Henry Joe Evans and Jeffery, Mr. and Mrs. William E. Garrett, Lisa, and Gerald, Mr. and Mrs.

Bee Em TP wis 0FF1CIAL ArL-NrL on the basis of social desirability, economic feasibility, political expendiency, religious belief Every decision about the use of land in America, and in the world, is a political decision When the public becomes concerned about a problem, it's reflected in schools. "Our purpose in developing conservation concepts in children is to make them see polluted air mismanaged forests sum PRO foot apart are different. The nutrients in the soil are different. Maybe somebody scattered lime in one spot and missed another. The drainage varies.

This bush in the center of the plot is an outdoor laboratory. It has had to react to its environment. Dogs visit it. Life is dependent on it. Insects chew on it; birds nest in it.

"Outdoor laboratories don't have to be pretty or well-clipped. A junkyard is a good laboratory. Lots of animals live in junkyards." Thus Dr. Brennan, director of the Pinchot Institute for Conservation Studies, Milford, Pennsylvania, illustrated what he meant by saying "any place where people can learn is a laboratory." Over and over, he repeated that children should not be marched down a nature trail where they "look but don't see" hemmed in by prohibitions: "Don't touch this. Don't touch that." Education Art iT this scientist who was educated at Brown University in the tradition of Dr.

Louis Agas-siz, who has taught at all levels of education from high school through college, who has explored the fields of biology and meteorology and even had a mountain in Antarctica named for him, "education" means the "art of the acquisition of And children perfect and polish the art through experiences, by seeing and feeling the woods before they are taught the difference betwen oak and mulberry leaves, or that all things grow toward the light. "The outdoor laboratory is the only experience of the school where the child can fail without penalty," said Dr. Brennan. "Outdoors, if he does something wrong, he learns from it. If he TBSLL" as discrepant objects like a kitchen sink in the living room." citingly different etimes humorous htary oh the pros 55 vtaf action, your local list-time and station.

Dependable protec- learning is fun." The whole idea of outdoor laboratories is under consideration by the Mississippi Conservation Education Advisory Council, composed of representatives from the natural resource a-gencies, state colleges and universities, the State Department of Education, public schools and civic groups. Council Will Promote In fact, according to chairman W. L. Heard, Jackson, who is also State with the Soil Conservation Service, the Council has set this as an important objective, and SCS is one agency which is presently working on guidelines to help schools select sites and develop laboratories. Undoubtedly, talking with conservationists will help teachers learn to use the environment to teach conservation concepts.

However, Dr. Brennan cautioned against trying to pack a 4-hour college course on forestry into a single afternoon tour of the forest. "Don't give children the science all in one load," he said. "Instead, let them learn in a series of carefull planned conceptual field trips out into the environment." As an example, he told of one conceptual field trip planned to your own pro into ie your Independ- r.per insurance diet us tackle your problems. ranee REPRESENTING it r1 FROM THE DEPENDABILITY FECFLE MAYTAG limes 1 7 more gIfSi, lot water fefefJL 1'V- less than -IMJri I i9 YS, I ithecosty bbi 1 CHICAGO 60640 testa I IPSRE KEMPER lROTECTION SERVICE to 1 FILL YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST WITH PU RE NOT JUST GIVING fa The IMPROMPTU Model A5S9 Handsome three-piece modular Circle of Sound stereo unit lets you hear stereo the way it was meant to be heard all around you.

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About The Winona Times Archive

Pages Available:
74,903
Years Available:
1894-2024