Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 94, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 December 1984 — Page 8
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The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, December 22,1984
Putnam scanner
Putnam Circuit Court Clifford Poynter and Glenda Poynter vs. Proctor-Silex, Inc., complaint for damages. Terry L. Ford and Steve Bellmore, battery with a deadly weapon. Gary Brock, burglary and theft. Putnam County Court Criminal cases filed: Thursday, Dec. 20-David C. Driggs, operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and illegal consumption by minor. Marriage Licenses Jack David Oliver, Roachdale, and Peggy Jo Broadstreet, Greencastle. Charles Lee Wallace, Greencastle, and Tonya Lynn Sage, Greencastle. Real Estate Transfers David B. Monnett to Thomas G. Monnett, et ux, quit claim deed, Cloverdale. Alan Thomas Jones to Thomas G. Monnett, et ux, warranty deed, Cloverdale. Michael A. Gleb to First Indiana Federal Savings Bank, warranty deed, Greencastle Eastern Enlargement. Tri-County Bank and Trust Co. to Bionna S. Newsom and Beck J. Edgerton, corporate quit claim deed, 71 and 6 acres, Russell Twp. H & W Concrete Products Inc. to Terry McCarter, et ux, corporate deed, Green castle. Kenneth Ferrand to Terry McCarter, et ux, warranty deed, Greencastle Original Plat. Meridian Farms, Warren Coggeshall, George Murphey and Robert Pickett to Charles G. Moulock and Charles W. Moulock, warranty deed, 10 acres, Floyd Twp. Almeda Ferrand to Ray T. Jackson, et ux, and Rex A. Jackson, et ux, warranty deed, Clinton Twp. Curtis L. Sinclair, et ux, to James K. Hutcheson, et ux, warranty deed, 1 acre, Cloverdale. Centeral National Bank to William Kaylin Barcus and Gayle Ann Barcus, trustee’s deed, 40 acres, Jefferson Twp. Earl Russell Blaydes to Ronald A. Chatlos, et ux, warranty deed, Washington Twp. Stephen Blaydes, et ux, to Ronald A. Chatlos, et ux, warranty deed, Washington Twp. Charles R. and Rosalind Ferguson to Cataract Lake Water Corp., right-of-way easement, Cloverdale. Larry L. and Charlene C. Price and Linda S. Boyd to John H. Yandell et al, and Linda S. Boyd, warranty deed, Mill Springs Subdivision. Older workers may file job applications The Older Workers Employment Program (OWEP), a service of the Area Seven Agency on Aging, will be accepting applications from area seniors on a regular basis. Jo Ann Halbert, agency employment coordinator, has announced that she will take applications from interested persons age 55 and older from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on the second Monday of each month, beginning Jan. 14, at the Putnam County Senior Center. The program places income eligible older workers in a private business for a minimum of 20 hours a week and at a pay rate of at least minimum wage. OWEP places workers in positions suited to their interests and skills and also assists in employment seeking skills. For additional information concerning the program, persons may contact Halbert at 1-800-742-0804.
Patter
designed to keep her more socially acceptable and to quiet the apprehension of those who held her on their laps. Now, with age established, the salesperson pointed thataway to a department called “Infant Wear.” Great-grandma had suggested that a baby blanket could be a one-size-fits-all selection. I WAS NOW ON FIRMER ground. Raising four kids, I did know something about baby blankets. They come in two colors - blue for boy babies and pink for girls. That was the way folks could tell which was which. I also remembered that the “fuzz” from these blankets would shed and that it was better when holding a pink-clad girl baby not to be wearing my blue serge suit. After going through the whole line of baby blankets, I found out just how far this equal right thing has spread. There were no all blues on the rack and neither were there any all pinks. The assortment of rainbow colors were supposedly suitable and acceptable for either a little boy baby or a little girl baby. THUS CONFUSED, I MADE a mental note of what today’s babies are wearing and went back to great-grandma for further instructions. ,
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Congressman John Myers (R-7th Dist.) convened his 1984 Academy Screening Board in Terre Haute earlier this month to interview applicants seeking a Congressional appointment to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, the U.S. Naval Academy or the U.S. Air Force Academy. The board, which will recommend appointees to Myers, includes (front row, from left) Norval Dixon, president of the Rockville State Bank and a graduate of the Naval Academy; Dr. Cherry Kinney, associate professor of sociology at St. Mary-of-the-Woods College; Dr. Solomon Gartenhaus, professor of physics at Purdue University, and Professor Eliot Restrictions in budget package
Families with $30,000 incomes may be denied student loans
C.1984N.Y. Times WASHINGTON The administration’s proposed budget for next year would deny guaranteed student loans and certain education grants to any family with an income of more than $30,000 a year, administration officials said on Friday. Under current law, eligibility for the programs is based on what the family can afford, and there is no absolute limit on income. Many families earning more than $30,000 have qualified by showing financial need. The officials said the main purpose of the proposed limit was to focus student aid programs more on low-income families. Under current law, it is not unusual for students in middle- or upper-income families to get the federally guaranteed bank loans if they have several children attending expensive private colleges. The 1978 law that liberalized eligibility criteria was called the Middle Income Student Assistance Act. Some members of Congress, who are paid $72,600 a year, have said their own children are receiving guaranteed student loans. Details of the proposal were contained in documents sent this week to the Education Department by the Office of Management and Budget. President Reagan is expected to submit his budget in early February to Congress, which may pass or reject his proposals. The education grants are the largest of the federal student aid programs. They range from S2OO to $1,900; the average is about SI,OOO. The maximum will rise to $2,100 in July. The grants are intended to provide a base upon which other student aid is added. Under the guaranteed student loan program, private financial institutions made 3.3 million loans worth $7.6 billion last year. They are made at subsidized interest rates, and the government insures their repayment. The grant program, created under legislation introduced in 1972 by Sen.
Strenuous cold-weather activity may mean heart attack for some
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Middle-aged individuals who are not in good physical condition are a target for a heart attack when involved in strenuous activity in cold weather. “When it’s time to shovel snow, you should already be in good condition,” said Greencastle physician Dr. Greg Larkin, American Heart Association, Indiana Affiliate president. “SNOW IS HEAVY, AND puts a strain on your heart,” Larkin adds. “The day to get into condition is not the first snow of winter. Snow shoveling is strenuous. The fact that you are out in the cold means your heart is working overtime to help keep you warm.” Cold temperatures make the heart work Office closed for holidays The Employment Security Office, located at Crawfordsville, will be closed for the holidays on Dec. 24, 25 and 31 and Jan. 1. Persons who have appointments to sign up for unemployment benefits or to register for unemployment should come in on Jan. 3.
Williams, former chairman of the science department at Wabash College. Standing (from left) are Mike Harmless, Greencastle, a graduate of West Point; Dr. William Maxam, professor of political science at Indiana State University; Dr. Robert Farber, Greencastle, former dean of DePauw University; Myers; John Mutchner, head basketball coach and assistant to the president at RoseHulman Institute of Technology; Haskell Schwartz, a colonel in the Indiana Air National Guard, and state Sen. Joseph W. Harrison, Attica, a graduate of the Nava! Academy.
Claiborne Pell, D-R.1., is expected to cost $3.3 billion this year, and the guaranteed loan program is expected to cost at least $2.9 billion. Together, the programs constitute more than a third of the Education Department’s $lB billion budget in the fiscal year 1985, which began Oct. 1. Administration officials said that Reagan would ask Congress to cancel at least S7OO million in education spending already approved for this fiscal year. Education Department officials said that they accepted the concept of an “absolute income cap” for eligibility in the programs but might urge the White House to raise it closer to $35,000. Patricia A. Smith, director of legislative analysis at the American Council on Education, said that educators would probably resist the proposal. Such an absolute limit, she said, takes no account of medical expenses, family farm losses, the number of college students in a family, or other factors now considered in the analysis of need. Data on the characteristics of people receiving guaranteed student loans and Pell grants are “distressingly scarce or unreliable,” according to the National Commission on Student Financial Assistance, which was established by Congress in 1980. The American Council on Education, an umbrella group representing 1,600 colleges and universities, has estimated that 300,000 undergraduate and graduate students at public colleges and universities come from families with annual incomes exceeding $30,000. Those students would not be eligible for guaranteed loans or Pell grants under the administration proposal. Experts on higher education said they had no immediate estimate of the number of students at private colleges who would be affected by the proposal. Edward M. Elmendorf, assistant secretary of education for postsecondary education, said 70 percent of the money awarded in Pell grants went to families
much harder. The body reacts to the cold by constricting the small arteries. Blood should flow away from the heart to various parts of the body through these arteries. SOME TIPS FOR GOING out in cold weather include: ‘Dress warmly, which includes wearing a hat. ‘Remember speed is not important when shoveling. Stay within your physical limitations. ‘Start a conditioning program with your physician’s permission. Help develop your cardiovascular system for the rigors of winter. ‘Try raking snow rather than shoveling.
Air Quality Travel 109 S. Vine will be CLOSED Dec. 25, 26, 27, 28, Jan. 1 Please call our Bloomington office: / 1-800-822-4764 for assistance Dec. 26 through
with annual incomes less than $12,000. Few families receiving such grants have incomes of more than $30,000 a year, he said. The administration budget for the fiscal year 1986 would also establish, for the first time, a limit on the aid that a college student could receive from all federally subsidized sources. The proposed limit is $4,000 a year. Mrs. Smith said this change would primarily affect graduate students because they tended to need large amounts of assistance to pay the high tuition charges at law, medical, and other professional schools. Under current law, an undergraduate may borrow up to $2,500 a year in the guaranteed student loan program; a graduate student may borrow up to $5,000. The $4,000 limit on all assistance would, in effect, reduce the maximum loan for graduate students by SI,OOO. Undergraduates are unlikely to exceed the $4,000 limit unless they are receiving Pell grants, guaranteed loans, and some other assistance such as supplemental educational opportunity grants, education officials said. The budget proposals developed by the Office of Management and Budget would also prevent students under the age of 22 from declaring themselves financially independent of their parents. Independent students are generally eligible for larger amounts of aid because their parents’ resources are not considered available to help pay college costs. Federal officials have complained that many students conveniently become “independent” a few months before they go off to college. The Office of Management and Budget estimated that its proposal would save sl6l million from projected spending in the fiscal year 1986, $1 billion in 1987, and S9BO million in 1988. Federal spending for student aid would go from $4.5 billion in 1986 to $3.7 billion in 1987 and $3.9 billion in 1988. the office estimated.
‘Know the warning signals of a heart attack. “BEING CAUTIOUS IS your best defense against the rigors of cold weather activity,” Dr. Larkin explained. “Take your time and stay healthy.” For more information on this subject, persons may contact the local American Heart Association chapter.
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Dear Abby Secure, satisfied bachelor pestered by meddling mom
DEAR ABBY: I am a 38-year-old bachelor. I live alone, have a secure job that I enjoy, have a couple of hobbies that occupy much of my time and I am completely satisfied with my social life. So what’s the problem, right? The problem is my widowed mother, who thinks 1 need a wife and she needs grandchildren. In every letter, phone call and visit, Mother nags and harps on the subject. I’ve heard everything from, “Who will take care of you in your old age?” to “Who will you leave your money to when you die?” I have told her that I am quite happy with my lifestyle. I’ve tried ignoring her, changing the subject and trying to reason with her. So far nothing has worked. I’ve pointed out that I have no desire to have a wife or children. Everytime someone over 25 gets married or one of her friends has another grandchild, she calls to tell me. I love my mother dearly, but her constant nagging on this subject gets on my nerves so badly I find myself wanting to avoid her. I’ve even told her that, but it hasn’t discouraged her. Any suggestions, Abby? I’ve had about all I can take. MOTHER-RIDDEN DEAR RIDDEN: You can’t change anyone but yourself, so quit trying to change your mother. Give her all the respect due her, but don’t argue with her—tune her out. She may mean well, but her concern for your future has become an obsession, which is her problem. Don’t make it yours. * * * DEAR ABBY: I am getting married soon, but there is one thing we cannot agree on. I want my fiance to wear a wedding band after we are married. He says he will not wear one because he does not care for any kind of jewelry. I notice he always wears a wristwatch. He says he “needs” to wear one so he won’t be late for court or
Local students among DePauw Ambassadors
Six local students have been named charter members in the DePauw University Ambassadors Club, according to an announcement by Dr. Richard F. Rosser, president of the university. They are Christopher A. Milner, freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Milner, Route 3; Annemarie Napoli, freshman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Napoli, 32 Edgelea Drive; Eric E. Schoenfeld, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Schoenfeld, 200 Edgelea Drive; Carl P. Singer, junior, son of Dr. and Mrs. Carl P. Singer, 701 Terrance Lane; and Marcia A. Spencer, sophomore, Route 6, Box 392, all of Greencastle, and Todd M. Strader, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Strader, Route 1, Box 115, Roachdale. THE AMBASSADORS CLUB, which was
Ex-trooper sentenced for drug store theft
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) A former Indiana State Police trooper has received a suspended 30-day jail sentence, must pay S3OO in restitution, and serve 50 hours in community work for the theft of items from a drug store. Richard Jozwiak, who pleaded guilty last month stealing items from a Hook’s Drug Store in Lafayette, received the sentence Friday from Judge David J. Crouse of Tippecanoe County Court. Crouse
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business appointments. (He’s a lawyer.) I told him that he “needs” to wear a wedding band so women will know that he is a married man. Am 1 wrong to insist he wear one? ANONYMOUS BRIDE DEAR ANONYMOUS: You’re being unrealistic. A wedding ring will not stop your husband’s circulation —no matter how tight it is. Back off. A wedding band does not a faithful husband make. * * * DEAR ABBY: I’ve been a waitress for six years. My fellow waitresses and I drew up a list of people we hate to wait on the most: 1. businessmen 2. secretaries 3. single women 4. salesmen 5. truck drivers 6. drunks 7. lawyers These people made the list because they are rude, inconsiderate and cheap. Sign me ... BURNED UP DEAR BURNED UP: I have a tip for you. You could be burned out. You also have an attitude problem. Businessmen, secretaries, single women, salesmen, truck drivers, drunks and lawyers? Who’s left? * * * (Do you hate to write letters because you don’t know what to say? Thank-you notes, sympathy letters, congratulations, how to decline and accept invitations and how to write an interesting letter are included in Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” Send your name and address clearly printed with a check or money order for $2.50 (this includes postage) to: Dear Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.)
formed this semester, is a select group of students who will represent the university in a variety of ways. They will host prospective students as overnight guests, assist as hostesses and hosts during Student/Parent Day programs and visits by high school guidance counselors, provide campus tours and assist with certain fund-raising activities such as phonathons to alumni. Students who are Ambassadors will undergo a campus training session under the direction of the Office of Admissions. Ambassadors are all volunteers. They are selected for the program on the basis of nominations from the faculty, administration and the student body at DePauw.
placed him on one year probation and ordered him to continue to seek counseling. “If nothing else, people can learn a lesson in this,” the judge said. “Something like this can snowball and destroy a career.” Shelli Johnson of Lafayette, a Hook’s clerk charged with theft in connection with the case, pleaded innocent Dec. 12. She’s scheduled to go to trial Feb. 19.
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