The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 September 1966 — Page 8

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0 lh« Daily banner, Oreencasile, Indiana Tuesday, September 6, 1966 Modern Juggling 'Act' Mother With Home Job

By ROBERTA ROESCH Do you think I could handle a job at home at the same time I am responsible for four small children? I have a great urge to use my job training, so when I discussed this with a potential employer, he offered to give me work this fall that I can do at home. Worried Xow When I told him I would take it I was sure I could do it. But now that the time for starting it is literally around the corner, I am wondering if I can handle it with the children underfoot all day. Do you think I will be able to manage ? I would appreciate suggestions. Mr. K. H. Dear Mrs. K. H.: I think most of us can manage to do the things we want to do badly enough. And since I once had experience handling a job at home with a baby on my lap and two children underfoot, I know it is possible to do it if you are willing to roll with the punches and fit in the work when you can. However, it is hard to have regular working hours and plans that don’t go astray in homes where small children’s needs and demands have to take precedence. Night And Day Therefore, you usually find you bum the midnight oil and work by the dawn’s early light in order to handle everything and still do the things you said you could do when you took on a job. My personal advice, since you have small children, is to limit yourself to part-time work — say, no more than four hours a day. Then if you find you can handle the work, you can al-

ways agree to do more. Dear Roberta Roesch: I have never used my teacher’s training. I was married the day I finished college. Now I am unable to use it, because I have twin daughters. We could use some extra money, though, so I am wondering about the possibility of tutoring individual students who come to my home. What's the best way to get into this work and how much should I charge? M. G. Dear Mrs. M. G.: You can round up students who need tutoring by: (1) giving your name to the principals of local schools; (2) posting notices on bulletin boards and

Often Household Chores And Outside Work Just Pile Up (3) advertising in community publications. Slight Variations Rates very slightly from one part of the country to another, but $3.00 for a half-hour session is a fairly standard rate for individual lessons. $5.00 or $6.00 dollars is what many tutors get per hour. But check the rates in your area before you establish yours.

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On The Farm Front

By MARGUERITE DAVIS WASHINGTON UPI—Agriculture Department economists are predicting lower prices this fall and winter for broilers, eggs and turkeys. Smaller supplies of eggs and brisk demand so far have kept the prices to farmers well above last year’s. In mid-July they averaged 35.4 cents a dozen, compared with 32.9 cents the preceding month and 31.6 cents a year earlier. But the department's Economic Research Service expects the seasonal production rise to be faster this year, and the prices this fall to drop accordingly. By early 1967, they will average much below the relatively high 41.3 cents of February, 1965, it was said. Broiler prices averaged 16.4 cents a pound during the Jan-uary-July period, the highest in six years despite substantially larger supplies. This was the result of general prosperity plus smaller supplies of meat, according to the economists, who warn of a change. The service said supplies over the next several months would increase faster than demand and lower prices might be needed to tempt the shopper away from meats which are expected to be more plentiful. Live broiler prices in the fourth quarter of the year may average close to the 14.5 cents of the October-through-Decem-ber period of last year, and “little or no recovery from this level seems in prospect for early 1967." Turkey production is increasing for the fourth consecutive year. The economists predict a crop of 116 million birds, compared with 115.8 million last year. The holiday season demand for turkey is expected to reflect the rising consumer income, but the department says there will be stiff competition from the cheaper broilers and pork. As a result, the traditional Thanksgiving and Christmas birds are likely to bring 22.2 cents a pound, compared with the average 24.4 cents during the first four months of this year. INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION til STATE OFFICE BLDG. INDIANAPOLIS LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Putnam County, Indiana, will, at 11 a. m. on the 6th day of October, 1066 at the Clerk's Office, Court House, In the City (or town) of Greencastle, Indiana, In eald County, begin invesUgation of the application of the following named person. requesting the issue of the applicant at the location hereinafter set out. of the Alcoholic Beverage Permit of the class hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of said applicant, and the propriety of issuing the permit applied for to such applicant at the premises named: American Legion Post No. 58. by William Jones, Comdr., (Club) Beer, Liquor & Wine Retailer, 123 Walnut St., Greencastle, Indiana. Chairman Sept. 6-H SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOLC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By W. P. CONDON ExecuUve Secretary JOE A. HARRIS Chairman Sept. 3-lt

As 50 Million Pupils ReturnU.S. Education Chief Predicts Greater '66 Results from '65 Act

By HAROLD HOWE II U.S. Commissioner of Education Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Written Especially for Central Press and This Newspaper FIFTY million American children are heading back to school. For some of these youngsters, summer was a pleasant interlude of baseball, surfing, and suntanning. But others return to school after a summer of unrelieved, sweltering city heat and perhaps after searing and dramatic experiences of ghetto disorder. Still others return from small family farms where they worked all summer to help piece out a living. The summer young America spends reflects the diversity our school teachers face in the fall. This year I hope that the children—whatever their summer experiences—overcome back-to-school inertia a little faster than usual. If they look around they will discover new excitement and promise in their schools. They will find that remarkable changes are taking place in their schools. * * * NEW PROGRAMS aided by federal funds will be underway again in the new school term. I mean particularly those made possible by the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. In the 1965-66 school year. Its first, the act financed 22,000 projects for seven million socially and economically deprived Children In schools throughout Ihe country. It helped nearly ftY^ g-hiki DftUl $J.OO IBiUiQB

Commissioner Harold Howa II worth of books and other instructional materials. It financed special cultural programs and research, and extended a helping hand to state educational agencies. This year this act and other federal education legislation will have even greater effect because school districts have had time enough to plan to use them fully and properly. All this excites the educators, but I’m not so sure about the kids. Try telling a teenager about a new law out of Washington and the politest reaction you can reasonably expect is a stiffled yawn. Billions of dollars, Title I, Title II. TiUe HI, innovation ... it really is a bore. But looking at the effects Uu’QLigb a filudeat'# e^es is

something else. Translate dollars, titles, and innovation into trips to zoos and museums, special classes for slow readers, perhaps a pair of glasses for the boy who has squinted his way through a couple of excruciatingly dull and profitless school years .. . and you’ll get attention. # * * IF THE STUDENT is a typical Navajo grade schooler in Kayenta, Ariz., he will be learning English as a second language in a brand new language labortory. If he is a Negfro pupil in an elementary school in Detroit’s inner city, he is learning English a new way, too— in special remedial reading centers. If he almost dropped out in Bloomington, Ind., last year because he was 'bored stiff, he may be enthusiastic this fall because Dyer Junior High School will teach him to make and sell furniture and will include practical, useful information on day-to-day living in his academic courses. There is more, much more happening to make our schools centers of hope for deprived children and better places of learning for all children. The federal-state-local partnership is improving curriculum, developing teaching aids, expanding libraries — using local initiative to improve educational opportunity throughout our educational system. Admittedly with 50 million children the problems are vast and we have only scratched the surface. But we have begun. And that’s the first thing tG do OB toad BBGBlteBfilb

Senators Take Up Civil Rights WASHINGTON UPI — The Senate returned from a weekend holiday today for the start of debate on what promised to be a bruising showdown on the session’s hottest issue—the 1966 civil rights bill. Neither supporters nor opponents were predicting the outcome. But the opposition, a coalition of Southern Democrats and Republicans, were brandishing the parliamentary minority’s timehonored weapon — the filibuster —and a talkathon seemed unavoidable. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield planned to dispose of a conference committee report on the compromise foreign aid bill shortly after the Senate convened, then move to call up the House-passed rights bill. At this point the opposition was expected to seize the floor and try to prevent the issue from reaching a vote by exercising its right to keep the floor as long as it can keep talking. Though many opponents find the House bill unacceptable in toto, Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen and some others are mainly against its open housing provision aimed at eliminating racial discrimination in some types of housing. This section, considered unconstitutional by Dirksen, would forbid discrimination in the sale or rental of homes in new developments or large apartment buildings, a ban estimated to af-

fect about «0 per cent of the nation’s housing. Exemptions primarily cover owner-occupied single family homes and small apartment buildings.

Plot By Ousted Moderates Fails BEIRUT, Lebanon UPI—The new leftist Syrian government has crushed a plot by ousted moderates of the Baath party to regain control, Damascus Radio said today. The plotters, supporters of the Baath party international command which was toppled in a coup led by incumbent strongman Salah Jedid in February, have been jailed and will be put

o& trial belqre a special national tribunal, the broadcast said. In a broadcast statement monitored here, Jedid’s leftwing government said the abortive coup was led by supporters of the ousted moderate government, backed by some members of the armed forces and imperialists. The Damascus Radio statement said the plotters, all of whom have confessed and will be dealt with harshly, were followers of former premier Salah Bitar, former party Secretary Michel Aflak and the secretary- : general of the international command. Dr. Mounif Brazzaz. ! Bitar recently escaped from a Damascus jail and fled to the Lebanon.

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE Inter. U.S. 36 8 State Road 43

CLOSED TUES., WED., THURS. OPEN AGAIN FRIDAY NIGHT

Maplecroft Theatre R.R. 1. Clayton CLOSED TUES., WED., TUIIPC OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN.

GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Fonmarly Midway) Jet. 40 & 43 TUESDAY Fetor Fonda — Nancy Sinatra "THE WILD ANGELS" PLUS James Garner — Melina Mercouri Sandra Dee in "A MAN COULD GET KILLED" PIUS INDIANAPOLIS 500 MILE RACE

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