Showing posts with label Public Health Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public Health Service. Show all posts

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Thursday, July 1, 1943. Romania seeks a way out, Cadet Nurse Corps established.

Romanian Foreign Minister Mihai Antonescu met with Benito Mussolini in an effort to secure Mussolini's cooperation for both countries to leave the Axis and exit World War Two.  Mussolini was non-committal.

Romania clearly saw which way the war was going and that the time had come to get out.  It likely figured it couldn't get out on its own, however.

The Women's Auxiliary Army Corps became the Women's Army Corps, reflecting it having achieved permanent status.

On the same day, the Cadet Nurse corps was established.

The organization hoped to relieve wartime and peacetime nursing shortages.

The Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare issued it's An Investigation of Global Policy, with the Yamato Race as Nucleus.  Based on Nazi concepts of racism and Lebensraum, it justified the ongoing attempt at expansion of the Japanese Empire and planned to impose Japanese names, the Japanese language and the Shinto religion on all minorities within the Empire.

President Roosevelt commuted the death sentence of German-born Detroit restaurant owner Max Stephan to life imprisonment.  Scheduled to hang in just seven hours, Stephan had been convicted for harboring a German POW who had escaped captivity in Canada, and even taking the fellow to a tour of Detroit restaurants.

An item about keeping your radio working from this month in 1943, something vitally important as there was no wartime radio production.

Keep Your Radio Working: 1943

Friday, November 19, 2021

Saturday, November 19, 1921 Anticipating Thanksgiving

 


Given the giant post on agrarianism and homestead that goes up the same morning, this post is likely to be buried and little read.  Nonetheless. . .

Norman Rockwell was anticipating Thanksgiving, a holiday that often presents images relating to childhood, in his November 19 Country Gentleman illustration.

Collier's, oddly, didn't bother to contemplate the upcoming holiday at all.


On this day in 1921 the House of Representatives approved the Sheppard-Towner Act, which is generally, but inaccurately, regarded as the first instance of the United States government taking a role in what we might term welfare.  The act provided a guild to the instruction of hygiene of maternity and infancy care trough instruction through public health nurses, regulation and licensure of midwives, and it resulted in the creation of 3,000 child and maternal health care centers. The law was in effect for eight years.

Pilot Bert Acosta set a new world speed record of 197.8 mph, beating his earlier record set on November 3, and flying the same Curtiss CR-2 airplane.

These members of the Alaska Native Sisterhood met on this day in 1921.


The organization dates to 1912 and there's a companion one for men. They work for civil rights for native Alaskans.