The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 April 1966 — Page 8
Th« Daily Bannar, GraaneasHa, Indiana Friday, April 29, 1966
College Campus Teacher Rises To The Challenge
By ROBERTA ROESCH If you are thinking of a career in education, you might give some serious thought to the challenge and opportunity
FOREIGN AID TOO MUCH TO TOO MANY, SAYS TIPTON
ELDEN C. TIPTON In my travels throughout the World. I have seen our hard-earned U. S. tax dollars, aimed at aid to the needy, misdirected into the greedy hands of pip-squeak directors who thought that the money was supposed to buy marble palaces and jew-el-encrusted limousines. What particularly irks me are nations that use our peace-intended aid dollars to buy guns and missiles and show their gratitude by pointing the armament in our direction. I think our Foreign Aid policy is too much to too many.
VOTE FOR ELDEN C. TIPTON Candidatu For CONGRESS — 7th Dist. DEMOCRAT PRIMARY
Hear My Channel 10 Programs Friday, April 29 Monday, May 2 Roth Days — 5:55 p.m.
in becoming a college teacher. With more and more students going to college, the outlook for this field has never been brighter. And if you are a person like Sally Lo Ware you will soon discover that college teaching is an absorbing and satisfying career. An Assistant Professor “I sometimes feel that I learn more from my students than they do from me,” says Sally, who works as assistant professor of French at Rockford College, a 119-year-old liberal arts college near Rockford, Illinois. “I find that from each class that tackles Proust or Sartre or Camus, I get at least one fresh idea that makes me stop and look again at a long familiar book. Hus is what gives the excitement to teaching at the college level.” Sally, by her own admission, didn’t plan a career in teaching until she finished college. But her preparation for working with languages couldn’t have been better. “When I was about four, we had a French-speaking tutor,” i Sally said, “so I would rattle away with her. When I got a little older, my father took me on many trips into Canada and introduced me to French aa it is spoken there.
“Lator, I was uMs to study lit in Ftance, when, after my junior year at the University of Michigan, my parents sent ms to Europe for a year. “Because I knew the language," SaHy explained, “I could live cheaply. Sometimes I lived with french families who wanted an American tutor for their chihhren. Other tones I would take toort-term jobs with factory or farm operators who needed an interpretar for visiting technicians from abroad.” When SaHy went back to the University of Michigan, she was well prepared to wind up her study for a master’s degree. And, as a graduate student, toe
the past decade; the oral/aurai approach, the use of tape reoordinge and the like. Her Greatest Interest However, Sally Lo Ware has been most interested In the learning process and interaction between minds that make teaching so satisfying. “The zeal magic of teaching,” toe said, ‘to the realization that a student is thinking for himself and that you—as the teacher—may be responsible.”
Tape Recorder Is Used In Newer Ways To Study Language began the language-teaching toe now saw as a challenging career. In the years that toe has been teaching—and especially since toe has been at Rockford College—Sally has been particularly interested in all the new methods that have revolutionized language study over
SELECT WALDO E. SHOEMAKER
ftf * ^ 4 -
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE for Commissionor 2nd District PUTNAM COUNTY
Your Support Will Bo Approdatod
Heads ANPA NEW YORK UPI — J. Howard Wood, president of the Tribune Company and publisher of the Chicago Tribune, and who joined that paper as a police reporter 41 years ago, was elected president of the American Newspaper Publishers Association (ANPA). The 65-year-old, white-hair-ed former English teacher who became a cub reporter at 16 on his father’s Canton, Ohio, newspaper, succeeded Gene Robb of the Albany N. Y. Times- Union and Knickerbocker News. There were 1,425 newspaper executives of the United States and Canada registered for the fourday 80th annual ANPA convention.
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WASHINGTON UPI — Cash receipts from farm marketings this year probably will be about $2 billion higher than the 838.9 billion estimated for 1965, according to Agriculture Department economists. The economists said Marketings of livestock and livestock products likely will be up slightly in volume, and prices for the year are expected to average above 1965. This condition is likely to prevail even though lower average prices are in prospect for the last half of 1965, the economists said. The volume of crop marketings in 1966 is expected to show
a sizable increase, if the 1966 planting and growing seasons are normal. Crop prices in the first quarter were slightly below those of a year earlier, and for the year likely will average lower. There are lower price support loans for food crops, wheat, and cotton, and indicated lower prices for potatoes and citrus. The total cash income from crops, however, will be augmented by increased payments to farmers for participation in
. NOTICE OF ADMINI8TKATION In th« Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Truman W. McCammack was on the 11th day of April. 1M6, appointed Administrator of the estate of Melvin McCammack, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same in said court within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 12th day of April. IM6. Probate Cause No. Est. 66-30. Samuel M. Conner. Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County. Indiana. Attorneys Lyon A Boyd lS-22-2B-3t
DAVID L. TODD • Form Background • Lifelong Republican • Votoran of World War II • Graduate of Indiana Univarsity • Owner and manager of small business
Republican Candidate For JOINT SENATOR Putnam, Parke, Montgomery and Fountain Counties SUBJECT TO MAY PRIMARY
the 1966 feed grain, wheat, and cotton programs. The Agriculture Department said its scientists are testing a new process for making soybean flour which could supply protein to people on the borderline of starvation in many parts of the world. About 40 per cent protein and 20 per cent fat, the end product might be used in beverages, soups, and various cooked dishes, the department said. To produce the flour by hand, soybeans are soaked overnight, boiled 10 to 15 minutes, airdried, cracked, de-hulled, and ground. All this processing requires is human muscle and an open fire. Research on the product Is
under way at the Agricultural Research Service’s laboratory at Peoria, HI.
Bans Election ROCKVILLE, UPI — Judge Clarence Powell of Parke Circuit Court has issued a permanent injunction prohibiting the election of five members of the Metropolitan School District of Southwest Parke County in the May 3 primary. Powell granted a petition by two Parke County residents who objected to election of school board members before the legality of the school district, which is pending in toe Indiana Appellate Court, is established.
FOR CONGRESS New 7th Congressional District
Vote for Jin Kessler on May 3rd VOTE
And Will With Jim Kessler In November
JAAAES B. KESSLER REPUBLICAN!
Pali PoUfteal Air.
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT FOR PUTNAM COUNTY CAN BE ASSURED WITH A VOTE FOR VICTOR HURST SECOND DISTRICT COMMISSIONER ON THE DEMOCRATIC TICKET
Mobile Home Park at Van Bibber's
Proposed Little Walnut Recreation Area
Beach at Van Bibber Lake
MR. HURST’S RECORD AS A COMMISSIONER HAS PROVEH THAT HE BEUEVES IN AN AGGRESSIVE AND WELL PLANNED COMMUNITY FOR PUTNAM COUNTY. KEY ROADS LEADING TO PRESENT AND PROPOSED RECREATION AND LAKE FOREST DEVELOPMENTS SUCH AS THE BIG WALNUT RESERVOIR, UTTLE WALNUT WATERSHED RECREATION PARK AND LAKE, AND THE VAN BIBBER LAKE DEVELOPMENT HAVE BEEN IMPROVEB AND RESURFACED UNDER VICTOR HURST’S SUPERVISION. SO, ON MAY 3rd VOTE FOR VICTOR HURST
YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE APPRECIATED
Paid lor by • baKavar In Victor Nani
