Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 91, Number 3, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 13 July 1967 — Page 11
A Cfoseup Os Atterbury Corps For a clOseuip of Atterbury Job Corps 1 have turned So Robert J. Hadden, director of the Center. Wesbingihouse Management Services, a subsidiary of the Atomic, Defense and Space Center, Baltimore, Md., is operating tile Atterbury Corps, lock-stock-and-barr el for the Office of Economic Opportunity, j This is anew field for Westinghouse, one of the Nation’s greatest industrial concerns. PrivateJndustry was drafted by OEO to straighten out and, make the Job Corps program wor<c as a valuable source of skilled workmen. Here are highlights of what Hadden, the A'tterbuCy Diireotor, told me. Not long ago an eminent Russian educator criticized his country’s secondary school system (because it had a shocking 25 percent dropout. U. S. newspapers in bold type said one of every four Russian high school pupils does not complete his education. However, in a race to waste hum an resources, we are leading the Russians by 5 percent, our school dropout being 30 percent. During the decade of the 1960’5, it is estimated some 26 million young men and women will have entered 'the national labor force. Nearly eight million of them, almost one of three, will not have a high school education. It is estimated 2.5 million of these boys and girls will have attended only eight years of formal schooling, or less. Hundreds of thousands of these young people are out of school and out of work today, or working in low pay occupations that may disappear soon. Yet, every day hundreds of cities are begging for want of qualified applicants. This, basically, led to the National Job Corps program. The next 25 years will see the total number of persons working in education and allied fields double from a present level of 48 million. It 'is estimated one-half of our gross national product, by the end of the next quarter century, will be spent on education. .Nationally the Job Corps program deals with young men and women, 16 through 21 years of age, who are out of work and out of school. Their association with 116 Job Corps training centers of the nation is voluntary. Most of the centers are situated in federal forest lands. Fourteen centers are devoted !to the 'training of women Altlterbury is one of id men’s urban centers, largest and most complex of the centers. Atterburys tirst graduate is now an employee in the office of VicePresident Humphrey. The typical Atterbury enrollee has been in school nearly 10 years but reads at less than a fifth grade level; nine of each ten never held a job; the tenth was working for an average of 80 cents an hour; 63 percent never had a brush with the law; 27 percent have a record of minor anti-social behavior and less than 10 percent conviction of a serious juvenile offense. They come from 35 states and the District of Columbia; eight of 10 never saw doctor or dentist (before coming to Atterbury; half of them need emergency dental treatment; 47 percent were not eligible for military service due to age and physH&tl weaknesses; 45 percent are from 'broken homes where the head of the household is chronically jobless and one of two comes from a family living on some form of public welfare. They arrive at Atterbury with little else than the clothes on their 'back. We begin ito raise tire literary level at Aibteibory, We offer vocational courses including electronics, food service, building service and automotive services. At
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! AWARDED M.ACQUES . lit i at- vl w-jt . ui>_ jBSCv'OinitBCK HwOWw uowip3‘Hy j who furnished oat car and StahlyStiUson Motors who furnished two cars to Nappanee High School were awarded placques for their contribution to the iifesiaving efforts of the high school driver education program by Von Anderson, Assistant District Manager of 'the Chicago Motor Club. Today, 85 percent of the can used for the driver education program are loaned to the schools by local dealers. Thousands of students have been taught this safer way to drive. A recent study irnde by the Secretary of State’s Office points out that drivers who have received “Behind-the-wheel” driver education training have only half as many accidents as those .v..u have never been trained. In 1966, a total of 386 dealers were honored by the Chicago Motor Olub fer donating 786 cars' to 339 high schools in the Chijago Motor Club territory. Without their civic contribution, the progress of the driver education program would not have been possible. • • Two Attend Jaycee Convention In Baltimore Chuck McFall and Dick Conrad representing the Nappanee Jaybees recently attended the National Jaycee Convention held in Baltimore, Maryland. The weeklong calendar of activities is designed to give' Jaycee leaders a better knowledge of and a greater in s ight to the Jaycee purposes. The convention was culminated with the election of National Jaycee Officers for ithe coming year. James B. Antell of Burlington, Vermont was elected National President. The election also saw a fellow “Hoosier”, Ralph Naragom of North Manchester, elected as one of the ten National Vice Presidents. Ffafftown, North Carolina was selected as the outstanding club in the nation. TAKES COURSE Glen J. Yoder of R.F.D. 2, Nappanee, an employee of Yoder Cabinet Company, 501 South Main Street, Nappanee, is taking a two weeks’ course in resilient flooring installation at the Armstrong Cork Company’s Installation School. Asa 'part of the Course, all students are conducted on a tour through the Lancaster Floor Plant to study the manufacture olf linoieorar-dheet Vinyl flooring and resilient tiles. Atterbury we 'have a Student population of 1550 and a total staff between 615 and 645 persons, including bus drivers, psychologists, carpenters, physicians, dentist, remedial reading instructors, professional counsellors and administrators. The average stay at Atterbury is seven months. The average cost to train an enrollee is $3,000 a year. This takes into account all costs under contract, including dollar loss in our own dropout rate. To date, Atterbury 'has graduated 1100 young men; 170 earned high school diplomas and 5 went to college. Many have been drafted into the armed forces. Nationally Job Corps has grad--4,600 returned to school and 3, 458 are in the armed services. Ouris is not an easy task, but it is the kind of a job Westinghouse has had foresight to tackle and we beMeve it will pay dividends in the future for the entire nation.
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Robert Cummings, editor of the Cdnnofton Nows, was elected Presidtnt of the Hoosier Stafo Press AssociafKWi if i meeting of m Board of Directors Friday, July 7, in Lebanon. Cummings -will serve a oneyear term ae head of the state's trade organization of daily and weekly newspapers of general, paid circulation. He succeeds Richard B. Thomas, publisher of the Marion Chronicle and Lead-er-Tribune. 4 • Other officers elected wore Jack K. Overmyer, publisher of the Rochester Sentinel, vicepresident; William D. Murray, Jr., editor of the Valley Newspapers, Inc. of Lawrenceburg and Aurora and publisher of the Rising Sun News and Recorder, secretary, and WiHiam A. Dyer, Jr., general manager of the Indianapolis Star and News, treasurer. Installed as new directors of the organization for three*year terms were Warren G. Wheeler, Jr., general manager of the South Bend Tribune; A| Moss, publisher of the Flora Hoosier Democrat'' and Delphi Journal-Citizen, and Rodger J. Grossman, business manager of the Salem Leader and Democrat. They, along with Overmyer, had previously been elected to the Board at the organization's annual convention in April. Overmyer was re-elected. The state press association, which is composed of more than 250 Indiana newspapers representing about 95 percent of the state's paid circulation, is entering its 35th year of operation. Its general counsel and manager is Richard W. Cardwell of Indianapolis. Cummings, who operates the 4,700-circulation Cannelton weekly, is a long-time leader in community journalism in Indiana. He began his newspaper career in 1929 in the mechanical department of The Tell City News and moved up through the ranks irt printing and as a sports editor prior to service in the U.S. Navy during World War 11. He later became editor of the News and advertising manager of both it and the Tell City newspaper published by his company. Long active in local civic affairs, he also is a member of the Masonic Lodge, Scottish Rite, Shrine, the American Legion, V.F.W., Sigma Delta Chi, Kiwanis and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Overmyer returned to Rochester in 1952 as general manager and editor of the 4300-circulation daily Sentinel after having been on the sports staff of the Indianapolis Star for seven years. Overmyer became publisher of the paper in 1961. The Sentinel is a consistent winner of community news awards. SENIOR CITIZENS The Senior Citizens met Thursday at tihe West Side 'Park Pavilion Ifor their regular meeting. Rev. Leonard Metzker, pastor of tihe First Mennonite Church gave devotions. The program chairman was Gertrude Young. Patriotic songs were sung. Mrs. Appleman 'gave a reading and Kenneth Tobias sang some solo numbers. After the program 'the group enjoyed some games. M travel abroad was as educational as many eljidm, then out congressmen ought to be the most intellectual people in ttlhe world.
U.S. Communists Still Are Strong By FRANK A. WHITE "In listing enemies boring within the U.S.A., J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau cf Investigation, said: “None of these enemies is more cunning or determined than the Communist Party, USA. R is a corps of traitorous turncoats who bask in the rights and privileges of life in the United States, while relentlessly conspiring to destroy our 'heritage of liberty and justice under God. > “Never has a stronger spirit of optimism prevailed than in the Communist Party today. This optimism is based not on wishful thinking but actual trends.” Hoover listed success of the Party in thwarting law and circumventing justice. Gus Hall, General Secretary of the Party USA, boasts continued victories against anti-subversive laws and regulations. He boosts of gams in key programs of the Party, designed to corrupt minds and to win support of American youth. He continued: “There are documented facts to show the fringe element that would convert the university campus into a sanctuary where those so inclined can counsel sedition, treason and other international violations with virtual impunity from law. The party is making elaborate plans to run Communist candidates for public office, local, state and national. They do not hope for a majority vote. Rather they would place candidates on the ballot merely to support their absolutely false and hollow claim ithat the Party is a legitimate political organization on the Ameriean scene. Today, we face the challenge of two international camps of Communism which dominate nearly one-third of the earth’s people. One of these facetiously speaks of “peaceful coexistence” while loudly rattling the sword of nuclear destruction. The other, more boisterous than crude, profanely plays the 20th Century
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Gengis Khan. Both are- vehemently anti-A-merican; and despite widely dramatized difference, they continue to cast' a shadow of blackmail and intimidation in West Berlin; the shadow of subversion and guerrila tactics in Latin America and other non-communist regions of the world. Today, arrogant, demanding legions of irresponsible youths have rallied behind the' banner of “Civil disobedience.” We find them in organizations of the self-proclaimed “New Left” such as Students for a Democratic Society, a militant group which receives support from the Communist plarty and in turn supports Communist objectives. Students tor a Democratic Society was formed at a national Convention in Michigan in 1962. It has been Characterized by Gus Hall, the Miosoow-trained General Secretary of the Communist Party USA, as a group which “we have going for us.” '. We find them in sickening abundance in such Communist directed and controlled organizations as tihe W. E. Dußods Clubs of America, a thiiniy disguised camp for the recruitment and education of future leaders of the Oammunast Party. Make no mistake about the communists in the USA. They represent a conspiracy of international treachery, and deceit
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one which is totally and un apologetically subservient to the dictates of Moscow. To the Communist aggressor in Vietnam and txf his Red fascist counterparts elsewhere around the earth, I would commend the ibrilliant prophecy of Thomas Jefferson when he wrote in 1821 .. the flames kindled on the Fourth of July, 1776, have spread over too much of the globe to be extinguished by the feeble engines of despotism; on the contrary, they will consume these engines and all who work lor them.” Flames of freedom lighted in Jefferson’s diay continue to burn. They have been fed by the spiritual fuel which abounds only in a land where an abiding faith in God and recognition of Him as the author of liberty prevail.” ' F. B. I. Ohiieffcain Hoover is the author of the most authoritative book on Communism in the TJSA ever written. It is called “Masters of Deceit” and can be bought in either hard covers or paper back, ft presents facts about Communists that it took the FBI 40 years to amass. The policy of Hipping a coin to decide something dates back to Julius Caesar. Roman coins had ihdjs likeness on one side, and he was right, always. If a flip of the coin brought has likeness, that settled it, and no one ever dared question the decision.
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