Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 54, Decatur, Adams County, 4 March 1964 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

Careful Selection For Volunteer Work By GAT PAULEY DPI Women's Editor NEW YORK (UPD — The volunteer worker, as much a part of Americana as the split level house and the income tax, should choose the agency to whom she will give of her time as carefully as the salaried woman selects her career. So advises one woman who is the administrative officer of the volunteer program for one leading New York agency. “The effective volunteer is not the one who think. ‘Well, I should be doing something for others,* and holds her nose to do it,” said Mrs. Sidney E. Pollack. “A volunteer should feel that each day she is contributing.” "The most important thing in becoming a volunteer is to fit the square peg into the square hole . . . Choose a volunteer job not only because there is a need, but in light of what you feel ■ qualified to do and whether you can carry it to fruition,” she said. Professional Worker Mrs. Pollack is not a volunteer. She for 30 years has been part of the professional staff of the New York Jewish Guild for the Blind, a non-sectarian group now in its 50th year of offering aid to all who have sight handicaps. "Our culture, she said of her job, "has absorbed* the fact that there are those of us who devote our lives and make our living in social service. And there are those who can offer only part of their lives.’ “Both are necessary,” she said. "Our volunteers include our fund-raisers. Our board is made up of volunteers. “The volunteer is a breath of fresh air to us. We professionals often get so meshed in our own problems . . . ’ In The Millions How many are there nationally of these hard-working, unsung volunteers who give of their time to help others in civic and religious organizations, in hospitals, community centers, to the underprivileged and handicapped of all faiths, races and financial backgrounds? Agencies to whom I talked said they had never seen an estimate of the grand total for the country. At the Guild, Mrs. Pollack said, there are some 450 volunteers. But the numbers and the hours volunteers give run into the millions when you consider, for instance, that the Girl Scouts of America figure that at least 3 million women volunteer during its fund- « raising campaigns. Or, consider that the Community Chests and Councils of America, Inc., has 3.85 million volunteers in its United Fund program. ■ II CUT-UP—The Beatle hair style is hitting the American scene with a ladylike bang. This is a sneaky version of the Beatle cut designed by Carl Pace in Cincinnati, Ohio. Nanette Van Fossen, who models it here, thinks the Beatle is the biggest since the poodle. Sr HI ■lk H i A SSI TESTIFIES —John Gates, a vice president of Pan American Airways, appeared before the Bobby Baker investigating committee in Washington. He told the senators that Baker went to bat for gambling casino operators who wanted to start operations on the Dutch island of Curacao where gambling is

Filins Are Available At Public Library Hie Decatur public library has 18 of the 16 mm films from the Indiana library film circuit on deposit for showing during March. Organizations, clubs, church groups, etc., are invited to make reservations for those films, which are as follows: AFRICA IN CHANGE — EAST AFRICA — 21-c — An informational film on the important aspects of East Africa. It rapidly reviews topography from the Indian Ocean to Mount Kilimanjaro; life among the African peoples such as the Masai; cities with emphasis on Nairobi; European, Indian, and Arab racial minorities; agricultural activities; and commerce, especially in the ports of Dares Salaam and Mombasa. (Encyclopaedia Britannica). CARL SANDBURG DISCUSSES LINCOLN — 11-b&w — In this interview with Edward R. Murrow. Carl Sandburg speaks of the Abraham Lincoln he has come to know so intimately. Sa n flburg tells how he used the personal recollections of others, of his having lived in the historic Illinois oounfryside where Lincoln spent his early years, and of his tremendous research on the monumental Pulitzer Prize - winning biography of Lincoln. (Coronet). DEADLINE FOR DANNY — 30-c-s — Tells the story of a boy whose cow is doomed because she can no longer give milk. It is a drama of the cycle of life and death as seen through the eyes of a small boy. (Loaned by United Israel Appeal). F. B. I. — 27-b&w — The history, training, laboratory methods and some of the historic criminal and espionage cases solved by the Federal Bureau of Investigation under the leadership of J. Edgar Hoover are treated in this film. (McGraw-Hill) . THE GOLDEN AGE — 29-b&w — Discusses the problems and attitudes of people facing retirement. Contrasts the idle routine way of life of one retired man with the active plans for retirement life proposed by another. Explains that chronological age is not always the proper yardstick to measure the abilities of people and that the feeling of independence, an occupation to fill time and the need to feel active are important to those approaching old age. (McGraw-Hill). JAPAN — 18-c — Tours principal cities of Japan and its picturesque countryside. (International Film Bureaah • V JOURNEY INTO SPRING — 29-c — Spring as it comes to the English countryside. Birds, butterflies, flowers and insects come alive in this truly poetic film. Excellent script narration, music and color. (Contemporary Films) . MUSICIANS IN THE WOODS — 13Vz-c —- Animanated puppets enact the Grimm fairy tale about the forsaken animals who set out to make their way in the world. The adventures in which the donkey, dog, cat and rooster outwit a band of thieves and Senate Seeks / To Speed Up Bill Action WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate leaders, already running behind their original timetable for taking up civil rights legislation moved to speed up action today on the wheat-cotton bill. They got the Senate to agree to -meet at 11 a.m., EST—an hour earlier than usual —and at 10 a.m., Wednesday. Voting was scheduled to begin on the first amendment to the administra-tion-backed farm measure today. Chairman Allen J. Ellender, • D-La., of the Senate Agriculture Committee said that the bill would be ' a dead duck’ unless it gets through the Senate this week. Ellender indicated he thought that pressure to bring the House-passed civil rights bill to the Senate floor would doom the farm measure if debate dragged cm too long. Hie first amendment to the farm bill, called up by Ellender, would replace the measure’s cotton provisions, which have been sharply attacked by him in the past. Other congressional news: Baker: The administration was reported to have assured Sen. Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev. that there would be no federal wire-tapping in his state even before the issue was raised in the Bobby Baker investigation. Las Vegas gambler-hotelman Edward Levinson, testifying before the Senate Rules Committee Monday, said his telephone had been “bugged” by federal agents. , Crisper Toast For crisp, evenly browned toast, use fine textured bread from one to three daiys old.

gain a fortune are told here in color and amusing fasion. (Coronet) . MY ISLAND HOME — 15-c-s — Your host is a farmer who knows his island with the intimacy of a native son. There is no aspect of Prince Edward Island that he is not proud to present — potatoes and lobster pots, the all - out sulky races of Charlottetown’s Old Home Week, a quiet saunter down that historic capital's leaf-shaded streets, and,’Of course. Green Gables, immortal-

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

ized in L. M. Montgomery’s novels, now a favorite haunt of golfers. (Loaned by the Canadian Travel Film Library). OPEN WINDOW — 18-c — Countryside of Belgium, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom as seen in 59 pictures by 43 work! famous painters. Covers 5 centuries of landscape painting. (International Film Bureau). PRINTING THROUGH THE AGES — 13-b&w — Traces the story of printing from ancient

times to the present day. (Encyclopaedia Britannica). SCANDINAVIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS—U-c —Presents a survey of the traditions and character of Scandinavian applied arts, and develops an appreciation of artisan production and the part it plays in Scandinavian life today. (Arthur Barr). THE STORY OF TWINE — 26-c-s — A trip through a sisal plantation in the West Indies to see native workers conduct farming operations. Local customs are

vividly and colorfully protrayed. From Haiti we follow the sisal to a great factory in New Orleans where it is turned into the finest binder twine in the world. (Loaned by the Farm Film Foundation). TAKE TIME FOR YOUR TEETH — 14-c-s — This film, prepared in cooperation with dental authorities and approved by the American Dental Association, tellsl of the important role TIME plays in care of the teeth. It provides the most recent and sci

entific information available on dental hygiene. (Loaned by Johnson). THE TEENS — 26-b&w — The three teen-age O’Connors presented in a film in the "Ages and Stages” series on normal presonality development are Tim, thirteen, and the fifteen-year-old twins, Joan and Barry. (McGrawHill). WATER BIRDS — 31-t — A beautiful film giving glimpses into the behavior, nest building, and mating, of seaside and marshland

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4,19 M

bird life in many parts of the world. (Walt Disney). WHITE THUNDER — 13-c — Color description of the natural beauty of Niagara Falls. Includes shots of Cave of the Winds, Horseshoe Falls, the Great Whirlpool and the famous tour boat Maid of the Mist. (Ford Motor Company). Xls: MAN INTO SPACE — 8c — Story of the first manned spacecraft which was used in the highest and fasest records set in 1960. (Color Service) .