Speedway Flyer, Volume 26, Number 2, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1957 — Page 7

January IQ, IW7

Muscatatuck School Receives $35,000 Grant-In-Aid For School’s Program

MONEY TO BE USED TO ENLARGE FACILITIES Dr. Margaret E. Morgan, Commissioner of Mental Health, announces that notification was received by Mr. Alfred Sasser, Superintendent at Muscatatuck State School, that after careful evalution of Muscatatuck’s program and staff, federal authorities representing the office of Vocational Rehabilitation of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, approved a $35,000 Grant-in-Aid for the amplification of the State School’s Vocational Rehabilitation Program. This money will be used for the I enlargement of facilities and the addition of equipment which will measureably accelerate the restoration of patients to vocational utility. Complementary to this acquisition of federal funds Mr. ““Sasser announces that there has also been established an internship program in the area of vocational rehabilitation with the Texas Technological College of Lubbock, Texas. This intern arrangement will allow graduate students in vocational counselling to work at Muscatatuck, gaining valuable experience in this special area of handicap and simultaneously to accrue academic credit. With the initiation of these two projects, Muscatatuck State School will be the only institution of its kind in the United States to have inaugurated a vocational rehabilitation program of this dimension and scope. Major Aims One of the major aims of the rehabilitation team at Butlerville has been to up-grade the caliber of the curriculum and staff of the

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School’s special education unit As the result of unceasing efforts in this area the State Department of Public Instruction has recently granted a continuous certification in special instruction to the School, grades Kindergarten through Eight. This commission of certification now entitles the students of that unit to all of the rights and privileges under law that all of the children of the State enjoy in public school systems. The Psychology Department of Muscatatuck State School announces that after lengthy negotiations with both Indiana University and the American Psychological Association, there has been established with I.U. an accredited Psychological internship program which will allow graduate psychologists from that University to gain clinical experience with retardates during residential duty at Muscatatuck. Authorities Announce The School authorities further announce that within a few months there will be initiated an internship program in institutional chaplaincy as coordinated with and sponsored by the Indiana Council of Churches Institutional Chaplain Screening Committee.

University Life Students may complain or overcrowded colleges these days, but life for them is a bed of roses compared to students of a hundred years ago. The University of Wisconsin students even had to fill their own mattresses from nearby farmer’s straw-stacks. Many college beds of today are old and worn out, it is true, but at least there are good ones available.

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Retirement House Feature Of Home Show A retirement house is the problem in the 1957 architectural competition sponsored by the Indianapolis Home Show. Announcement of the forthcoming contest was mailed this week to architects, schools of architecture, all over the nation. This is the sixth year it has been held, with 4 of the prize winners erected as centerpieces for the Home Show at the State Fairgrounds. Richard C. Lennox, A.1.A., architectural advisor, said that any architect, architectural designer, draftsman or student in a recognized school of architecture is eligible to participate. Suburban House This year’s problem is a design for a midwestern suburban house for a retired sales manager in his early sixties who likes golf, photography and woodworking, and his wife who devotes her time to grandchildren, gardening, sewing and tjjidge. The house should be able to be left conveniently unoccupied for a month in winter and another in summer, with room for week-end guests, particularly a daughter and her husband and children seven and ten. Floor area is to be 2,000 square feet without basement, 1850 with. These limitations are mandatory —excess will mean immediate rejection of an entry, Mr. Lennox said. The prizes are: first, $1,000.00; second, $500.00; third, $200.00; and six honorable mentions of $50.00 each. The national president of the American Institute of Architects, Leon Chatelain, Jr. of Washington, D. C. will be chairman of judges, assisted by Raymond Thompson, A.1.A., president of the Indianapolis Section of the Indiana Society of Architects; Howard L. White, A.1A.., and O. C. Winters and Ben Olsen, Jr., builders.

Designs are to be evaluated on plan arrangement, appropriate use of space, structural practicability, external appearance, adequacy of equipment, effective presentation and suitability as an exposition centerpiece. April 26-May 5 The first fifty are to be published in a plan book which will be available to the public at the forthcoming Home Show to be held April 26 to May 5 in the State Fairgrounds. Applications must be filed by January 15, all drawings submitted by February 15. Announcement of awards is to be made on March 10. “This annual competition has done much to draw attention to the importance of attractive and efficiently designed homes to our society,” Mr. Lennox said, “and to arouse the public appreciation of good design as a part of daily life. Emphasis is on houses suitable to the climate and living conditions of a Midwestern suburban community.”

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RED CROSS RELIEF FOR HUNGARIANS Let's start the New Year right! Citizens of Indianapolis and Marion County can do their share in putting the special Red Cross Campaign for Hungarian Relief over the top by contributing now, announced Charles R. Weiss, chairman of the Indianapolis Red Cross. The goal of the Indianapolis Red Cross in the $5,000,000 nationwide campaign is $31,157. The goal has not yet been met. Mr. Weiss announced that the Red Cross has stepped up its feeding program for victims of the Hungarian revolution and Hungarian refugees. According to Mr. Weiss, the feeding program in Hungary is divided into three distribution operations: (1) Milk daily for 173,000 Hungaran children under six years of age. (2) Hot meals daily for 150,000 school children up to ten years of age. The program will be expanded gradually until all school children are included. (3) Weekly food parcels for some 100,000 Hungarians who are in need, including those whose dwellings have been destroyed, families deprived of their breadwinners, disabled and aged persons, and families with more than four children. People wishing to help the Hungarians should send contributions to Indianapolis Red Cross, 1126 North Meridian Street

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