Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 22 August 1963 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Ball Stale To Open Nursing Department MUNCIE, Ind. - Pr. Helen J. Berry, Fairborn, Ohio, who is completing he| doctor of education degree at Indiana University this month has been named the fjrst director of the new department of nursing at Ball State Teachers College. -' Announcement of her appointment, effective September 1, was made by President John R. Emens. He said that the state teachers coliege board, meeting at Ball State August 21, approved the new fquryear program which will lead to a bachelor of science degree. Students, he added, will be admitted to the Ball State program in September, 1964. They will have a clinical affiliation with Ball me~i ■ ■. .' —~ : ■ : — ATHLETE'S FOOT GERM HOW TO KILL IT. IN 3 DAYS. If not pleased with strong, instantdryinj T-4-b, -yeat" 48c back at any drug store. Watch Infected skin slough off. Watch healthy skin replace it. Itch and burning are gone. TODAY at Kohne Drug Store.

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mortal hospital. The Ball memorial hospital threayear program will be the fall class is admitted to the-last, three-year program in 1964, W&lter G. Ebert, administrator, announced. Ball State and Ball memorial hospital hayg had cooperative four and five-year nuking programs sinpe 198?. How : ever, the national trend toward a four-yea r degrep program in nursing education has prompted the hospital to discontinue the thrqeyear program. With the appointment of Dr. Berry to head the department of nursing. Ball State plans to build its curriciilum and secure qualified teaching staff so that it may be accredited by the natipnal league of nursing. Dr. Berry received her nursing education at the Miami Valley hospital school of nursing at Dayton, Ohio. She holds a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, where she studied on a music scholarship. She completed her master’s degree in nursing at Indiana Univercity in 1960. She has been the assistant campus coordinator of the Korea project which I. U. has had on a contract with the Korea government.

Courses Completed At Adgms Central Thirty-two students recently completed requirements to earn one credit in driver’s education during Adams Central high school’s summer session, according to Philip E. Souder, superintendent Also, 22 students successfully completed a first year course in typing, earn? ing two credits for the course. Both classes Jpstpd for 40 days of classroom and driving instruction. Edwin Bryan and Lee Hoopingarner were instructors for the driver training course, and Mrs. Wanda Archbold was the typing instructor. Souder explained that it is hoped that next summer additiopgl courses may be offered to the jtudents in the Adams Central area. Questionnaires To Dependent Parents Dependent parents of 4,819 deceased Indiana veterans receiving service-connected death compensation payments from the veterans administration will receive a special dependency questionnaire with their monthly checks on or about August 31, A. J. Bochicchio, Indianapolis regional office manager of the VA, anpounced today. At the same time, 209 veterans who are receiving additional serv-ice-connected disability compensation because of a dependent parent or parents will also receive the dependency questionnaire. At the time parents were placed on the compensation rolls, they were definitely determined to be dependent. The purpose of the questionnaire is to establish the fact that they have continued to be dependent and are still eligible for payments. Recipients of the questionnaire are expected to return them before October 31. The VA advises recipients that all questionnaires must be returned by the deadline date. Since the questionnaire cards will be handled by machinery recipients are requested not to fold, cut, mutilate or trim them in any manner, Bochicchio added.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Writer Finds Self Watching Less TV By DICK WBRf United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI)’ — More and more I found myself watching television less and less. And this worried me. Other people were watching television as much as ever. Why was I different? Was there something wrong with me? For weeks I went around r coding about this. Meanwhile, began losing weight, became pale and listless. Tongue coated. The wgy I glwgys get when I’m brooding about something. Finally I asked Dr. Swizzle about it. Dr. Swizzle said I should try to analyze what was estranging me from television. He said that if I understood the problem it migpt majre me feel better. I did and I feel better already. Not first rate yet, but better. The Trouble It seems that I got along fine as long as the networks were bringing television into the living room. The trouble started when they began bringing the living room into television. Looking back on it, I think the first symptoms occurred with a program called “Charade Party,” We were playing charades about five nights a week then. On the sixth night we would turn on the set and there would be people playing charades on television. ,1 have a mental block about what happened the seventh night. Perhaps that is just as well. After that came a program called “Open End.” People sitting around yakking, yakking, yakking. Spilling coffee and getting cigarette ashes all over everything. Like Neighbors It is true they were important people, but it wasn’t much different from the nights we had the neighbors in. I think that must have been when I began getting television confused with reality. Then the commercials changed. Or some of them did. They began using real live people ‘instead of actors. People just like the folks next door, which is saying a lot. Once or twice I thought I caught a glimpse of my wife standing by the washing machine and telling the announcer how good the soap igag. It was kind of eerie. i I might have survived all of that, might have stayed glued to the tube, except that this summer I tuned in oq a new program. Bless my soul if they weren’t showing home movies on television. Home movies, the scourge of civilization. Home movies being piped right into my own living room. I don’t trust television now except when there’s a ball game on. Fortunately, some of my best friends aren’t ball players. More Arrests Made For Train Robbery LONDON (UPl)—Scotland Yard appeared to be closing in today on the gang responsible for the great mail robbery that carried off history’s biggest cash theft exactly two weeks ago. A mysterious blonde was seized and charged in connection with the $7.3 million theft, a “wanted” bookie was picked up for questioning soon after his description was circulated, and descriptions of two other wanted* men were given nationwide publicity. Police refused to give the name of the woman arrested, but arranged for her to appear in Lin* slade' Court, near Aylesbury—the robbery investigation headquar-ters-later in the day. She was charged preliminarily at Aylesbury police station after being driven there from a London police station where she spent the night. About an hour after Scotland Yard issued descriptions of three men wanted for questioning in connection with the theft, it was learned one of the men had been found at a house in the London suburb of Clapham. TTie man, bookie Charles Frederick Wilson, 31, was interviewed by detectives and then taken to a London police station. A Scotland Yard statement said the two other men wanted were James E. White, 43,a case proprietor. and Bruce Richard Reynolds, 41, an antique dealer, “who may be able to assist us in our inquiries.”

Welsh Hopeful Os Report Soon On State Port INDIANAPOLIS (UPD-Gover-nor Welsh was hopeful tofiay that the Budget Bureau’s long-awaited report on the Indiana port at Burns Ditch would be released within the next 30 days. Following a conference Wednesday at the White House, Welsh said he had been told that it was “quite possible” the report would be made public within that time. Welsh conferred with Lee C. White, special assistant counsel to President Kennedy to ask for a speedup of the report. Following the meeting with White, Welsh conferred with members of the Indiana congressional delegation, including ailing Sen. Birch Bayh Jr., D-Ind. Welsh said he pointed out to White that the Indiana Port Commission has hired investment and engineering consultants to determine whether the Lake Michigan port would be economically feasible if built without the $25 million in federal funds which the Army Corps of Engineers recommended for the project. He said the consultants need to analyze the Army report, still being held by the Budget Bureau, before making their recommendations. “Their report is due by Dec. 1 so tomorrow wouldn’t be too soon for the bureau to act,” he said. Welsh said Indiana officials are confident the consultants’ report will permit the entire financing of the port through a bond issue without federal assistance. "But this does not mean we won’t continue to press for federal funds,” he said. “We do not believe that if we are successful in construction of the port on our own we should be deprived of the federal aid which is normally provided for other similar projects.” “We still want the $25 million and we intend to get it,” Welsh said. He said he and the Indiana delegation will develop a legislative history which will permit the state to obtain reimbursement from the government when, federal funds are available. The money would be used to retire the state bonds. Welsh was accompanied to Washington by Clinton Green, sec, retary-treasurer of the Indiana Pert Commission, and J. Manfred Core, state Democratic chairman. Police Station, City Hall Bids Received Bids for contracts for construction of a new city police station and renovation of city hall were scheduled for opening this afternoon. The city board of works and safety will open the sealed bids at 4 o’clock this afternoon, in the mayor’s office at city hall. This is the second time bids have been received for the two projects.

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TURING IN — Eli Graber, left, and his nephew Ked Graber, both of Berne, inspected the $650 color television set which their insurance agency recently won as a result of being named first place winner in a special two-month contest sponsored by the India na Farmers anti Town & Country Mutual insurance companies, which the agency has represented for several years. The contest was based on prize points awarded for maximum production of premium produced concerning all lines of coverage written by the two companies.

Report Progress In Ford Strike Talks CHICAGO (UPD—Negotiators, in almost continuous effqrts to settle a United Auto Workers strike against the Ford Motor Co. met today in an atmosphere of optimism. The 6-day-old walkout over safety conditions at Ford’s stamping plant in suburban Chicago Heights has idled 18,300 employes in 14 plants across the Midwest and East. The company laid off 3,500 workers at four plants Wednesday and said an additional 12,500 would be laid off by tonight if the dispute were not settled. Company and union officials huddled for one hour Wednesday night and a Ford spokesman said “considerable progress” was made on 74 health and safety grievances brought by the union. The mass layoffs followed the walkout Friday of more than 3,750 members of UAW Local 588 a* the Chicago Heights stamping plant. Union spokesmen, who said working conditions at the plant -wove .-not safe, said the walkout came shortly after a four-ton die fell out of a press and injured a workman. Union members staged a wildcat walkout in May, also over safety conditions. Wednesday’s layoffs affected workers at the, Monroe, Mich., parts plant and stamping plants at Buffalo, N.Y., Cleveland, Ohio, and Dearborn, Mich. .Ford Said the walkout had caused a shortage of primary auto parts and Jayoffs were necessary to “balance the stock of components which are being built up for the planned reopening of assembly plants for 1964 auto

production.” Nine Ford assembly plants were scheduled to begin 1964 production next Monday and six others were to start next month. The company said only a small supply of prototype and display automobiles of Ford’s most popular models was available. Youth For Christ At Berne Saturday Night An Adams county area Youth for Christ rally will be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, at the West Missionary church three miles west of Berne on highway 118. Dr. Bill Piper, Greenville, S.C., will speak at the rally.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1963

Muncie Boy Dies Os Accidental Wound MUNCIE, Ind. (UPD—Otjs Dean Vance, 13, wounded by his older brother in an accidential shooting at their home near here, died Wednesday night at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. The boy, shot above the right temple with a pistol, first was treated at Ball Memorial Hospital here and then rushed to Indianapolis Police said Charles Edward Vance, 21, was holding the pistol when it misfired They said he re-cocked the weapon and it fired accidentally,