The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 September 1966 — Page 6

i

mmm

USE

.... - ,-• - - - .

32353

TV? * - Si x Mtou -

t

Tht Daily Bannar, Graaneastl#/ Indiana Tuatday, Saptamber 13, 1966

International Exchange Broadens Youth Outlook

world affairt go, one out of five of our alumni finds a place in the field,” he added. “For example, Sargent Shriver, former Peace Crops director, was twice an Experimenter and once an Experiment leader. “Our goodwill ambassadors, who learn how to live with other people by living with

Meet Your Teachers

them, are people-centered per-

Bj ROBERTA ROESCH How does a summer of working, traveling or studying overseas affect a young person’s future career? That was the question I asked first, when at the end of the summer, I interviewed F. Gordon Boyce, president of the U. S. Experiment in International Living and Secretary General of the International Experiment, the oldest and largest international education institution of its kind in the world.

Based In Vermont Since 1932, this institution, with headquarters at Putney, Vt, has been preparing young adults to live in a world of international tensions and mutual dependence by conducting programs that expand understanding of other nations and cultures and prepare participants in the program for con-

structive careers of service at home and abroad. “The young people from 16 to 30 who become Outbound Experimenters live with a family overseas. Incoming Experimenters live in an American home,” Boyce told me, as he prepared to answer my first question. “And this kind of experience has an impact on alert young people that makes them think of careers in international fields,” he said.

International Endeavor "Actually, about 67 per cent | of our outbound alumni are identified with some kind of international endeavor whether it’s a full-fledged career or whether—say, for a girl who marries and has children—it’s a part-time participation in a world affairs organization or a part-time teaching project. "As far as actual careers in

The Lighter Side By Dick IVest

WASHINGTON UPI — Five days a week I am confronted with a new type of moral dilemma. As far as I know there is no precedent for resolving it.

Robert Bergman

f+i

Young Adults Learn More Of Other Nations And Cultures

ShWYOumi

LESTER Lk COLEMAN, MJ>.

Why Some Are Accident Prone

MY HUSBAND has been In moro accidents than I care to remember. If it isn't at home, then it is in his factory or in our automobile. I know that he is a tense person. Could this be

the reason?

Mrs. V.R., New Hampshire. Dear Mrs. R.: The term acci ; dent-prone was I once thought to !be an amusing description of ' I people who are | constantly havf^|ing accidents, ilt was Dr. Flanders Dunbar, jona of tho Sr. Coleman world’s leading authorltlee on psychosomatic medicine, who brought into focus the sharp relationship between the emotions acddentn Inter, insurance eompaniea and statisticians found the truth that the personality makeup wan an important cause in many of the accidents in the home in When the lives of men and women were closely examined

it was found that their inner emotions and conflicts were easily as responsible for accidents as were the external fac-

tors.

The susceptibility to accidents was distinctly traced to the stresses, strains and turbulence of daily living. The United States Army found that many of the casualties during training happened to young soldiers whose emotional stability was limited. This idea has led to the wide use of many complicated psychological tests In industry, in the armed services, in schools and in deciding on a career. Important conclusions can be arrived at that save untold lives in predictable jobs. Almost everyone has had the experience of driving an automobile with a jittery sensation after some unpleasantness. When you carry the remnant of anger or hostility the reflexes

and undoubtedly can cause accidents that otherwise would not have happened. When the mind is occupied with a serious problem the body coordination is never at its peak. Skilled workers using lathes, saws and drill presses were found to have a tremendous increase in accidents during a time when there was some family illness. When the emotional balance is disturbed the physical balance is changed. Dr. Dunbar called attention to the fact that accident-prone people used accident phrases more often than others. She called attention to expressions like: *Td rather have a broken leg than have this happen"; ‘T nearly broke my neck to catch the train"; ‘T almost broke my back getting the work done.’* She felt that then phrases had more than wee obvi-

ous.

Now, when physicians come across a person who has repeated accidents and even illnesses they* view them with a' special "psychosomatic attitude." Doctors know that there is no separation of the mind and body. There Is only the total person who is considered. Your husband has been fortunate that he has had only minor accidents. If he continues without a better understanding of the reasons for them he will be a threat to himself and the people who surround him. It is no shame for him to speak out the inner emotional problems to his doctor.

• e e

SPEAKING OP YOUR HEALTH—Lead paints should not be used on the crib* of infants and young children. When eaten they can be poisonous. Dr. Colemon welcomes letters from readers, and, while he cannot undertake to answer each one, he will use questions in his column whenever jmssible and when they are of general interest. Address your letters to Dr. Coleman in care of this

newspaper.

sons rather than thing-center-ed,” Boyce said. “We select applicants who show evidence of initiative, curiosity and leadership in extracurricular activities. We are interested in those who have demonstrated a faculty for getting along well with others, and who have achieved a satisfactory academic record. “But we need Indians as well as chiefs. Youngsters’ Opportunities “A program such as the Experiment gives a young person an opportunity to wear another’s shoes for a while,” Boyce said. "For the youngster embark- ■ ing on one of our projects, the ; daylight at the far end of this | tunnel of opportunity gets brighter and brighter.’*

Robert Bergman is the Head Football Coach and Social Studies teacher at Greencastle High School. He received his MS degree from Indiana University in 1965. Before coming to Greencastle, he was football coach at Attica. Mr. Bergman is single and resides at the Colonial Apartments.

Oil Industry Might Solve Food Problem

Says Tax Money

Financed Trip

are not as rapid or as accurate, (O 1966, Ming Feature* Syndicate, Inc.)

WASHINGTON UPI — Rep. Richard L Roudebush, R-Ind., says his investigation showed a university professor whose trip through Europe was partially financed with tax funds had criticized U. S. policies in Viet Nam during a news conference in Moscow. "If he wanted to travel at personal expense we couldn’t officially object,” Roudebush said, “but taking $13,000 in tax money to visit Moscow and rap America is too much.” Roudebush identified the professor as Stephen Smale of the University of California whom the congressman quoted as telling North Vietnamese correspondents American actions in Viet Nam were horrible and brutal. Roudebush said he has requested a complete report from the National Science Foundation which supplied the funds through the university. The congressman said Smale was co-chairman of the Viet Nam Day Committee at the Berkley campus. He said the committee had attempted to halt troop train movement in California last year.

NEW YORK UPI — The answer to one of the world’s most pressing problems—how to feed its rapidly multiplying hordes of people—may be to nourish them in part with synthetic foods made from petroleum and natural gas. John E. Swearingen, chairman of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) indicated Monday the petroleum industry is close to technical readiness to undertake the task. He addressed a national meeting of the American Chemical Society. Chemically petroleum and natural gas are high in proteins. To be properly nourished, people and animals must have diets high in proteins. Impalatable oil-gas proteins have been converted in laboratories into proteins for eating but in small quantities and at prohibitive expense. Swearingen hinted that this converting has been made practical.

It came about from parking my car on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol under some large trees. About two years ago the car caught an incurable case of Dutch elm disease. The main symptom is a scaling of paint on the right front door. I took the car to a garage but it never got past the admitting room. “You don’t need a mechanic,” I was told, "You need a tree surgeon.” So I had it examined by a tree surgeon. The prognosis was not favorable. "There are only two things you can do,’ ’he said. “You can either have the door amputated or you can have the entire body repainted.” The car is getting pretty old and, frankly, I am not wild about spending all that money for a paint job. So I have been treating the condition myself. When the scaling breaks out in a new place, I buy a small can of spray paint and touch up

the afflicted spot. The fact that the touched up places do not match the rest of the car is not

my fault. I tried.

Originally the car was a bilious pink color. Now it is a

on the

By CARLO J. SALZANO

WASHINGTON UPI — The Foreign Agricultural Service has assured Rep. Anchor Nel-

The Man From

The BANNER

DO YOU WISH THE DRESS THAT YOU ARE WEARING WOULD BE THE STYLE TODAY?

"It now appears that a major contribution by the petroleum industry may be in the offing through the production of highprotein food supplements from petroleum, both for human and animal consumption.” Petroleum chemists familiar with successful laboratory experiments said privately food-from-oil was entirely palatable but "not exciting.” Laboratory samples have come in pellets but it could be produced in a number of forms and flavored to suit.

SUPPORT YOUR / \: MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION

. dt/eatu/aActWo 4^t*1866

CQ n The discovery that was the foundation of the wealth of Alfred Bernhard Nobel was made in 1866, when he was thirty-three. A school drop-out because of ill health, his Swedish parents thoughtfully sent Alfred traveling to stimulate his education. An interest in chemistry and engineering was whetted by a year he spent in the United States. The slowness and laborkmaneas with which the frontier was being pushed bade made the perceptive youth aware of the need among land-clearers, canal-diggers, roadmakers, quarrymen for an efficient, relatively safe, explosive. On his return to Sweden, Nobel devoted himself to study of gunpowder and other means of blasting. Eventually, in experiments with nitroglycerin, he determined the chemical's potency could be increased and usage made less hazardous by combining it with an absorbent, inert substance into "sticks’* that could be detonated by remote control. Within a year Nobel obtained patents in the British Empire and the United States on the discovery named dynamite that was to enrich him. Nobel subsequently combined nitroglycerin with guncotton to produce "blasting gelatin,” and he evolved balliste, a smokeless powder that was precursor of cordite. However, a biographer stresses that key Nobel accomplishments were his inventions of detonators for explosives which could not be exploded by simple firing. "Without such detonators for setting Off nitroglycerin, guncotton, and their combinations, such explosives could not be used at all,” it is stated. Wealth from explosives was increased for Nobel by venturesome investments in petroleum enterprises, notably in the Baku field.

Nevertheless he was declared to have been an unhappy and lonely man in his last years. Along with physical ill health, realization of the evils wrought by his explosives was attended by mental distress. Unmarried and childless, he left most of his fortune for the substantial annual Nobel Prizes he provided for chemists, physicists, physiologists or physicians, novelists or poets, and promoters of peace. The first of these was awarded in 1901, five years after his death. CLARK K1NNAIRD

Nobel commemorative medal, senlptmed by F. Lind berg in 1902. Roman numerals are Nobel birth and death years.

Town Reported In 'Ugly Mood'

GRENADA, Miss. UPI—Negro children under the protection of 150 state troopers return today to an integrated high school where angry whites beat students and newsmen Monday. The northern Mississippi farm town was described as in "an ugly mood.” "You get the highway patrol out of here and in 24 hours there won't be a nigger left,” one man shouted to city Councilman L. D. Boone at a meeting of 500 whites at city hall Monday night. Several hours earlier, city Manager John McEachin had resigned because of the racial situation which flared into violence at the opening of Rundle High School Monday morning. A crowd of 200 whites surrounded the school and attacked Negro children as they tried to enter the building for the first time. Negro leaders said at least 33 persons were beaten. A 12-year-old boy’s leg was broken and UPI reporter Robert Gordon was severely beaten. Two news photographers also were attacked. Police stood by and watched while Gordon was kicked and ' beaten by a white mob. "You're damn lucky you didn't get killed,” one officer later told Gordon. Troopers were rushed in to escort the Negro children from the school. Aroused Negro leaders called a mass meeting Monday night to protest the violence, but state police officials persuaded them not to stage a planned march through the town because of the "ugly mood” of white*.

Mar jorie B u c h anan, Fillmore. “No, they are entirely too warm and it takes too much material t o make them. Most people that wore these dresses made their own.”

Ita. Ver- m non Heath, Greencastle. “I don’t mind the dress so | much as I do the high-lac-ed shoes. It takes too |f ^ long to get * the shoes on. I think the dress looks better than the hip length they are wearing today. It does leave a little to the imagination.”

faded bilious pink enamel. None sen ’ R ' Minn > that it keeps a had that color in stock. dail y watch on beef imports I personally do not mind even though the law requires

driving a faded bilious pink car

only publication of quarterly re-

with bright neurotic pink spots. In fact, I rather like it. But when I drive home in the evenings, the people next door wave their fists and shout, "There goes the neighborhood!” Now here is the moral dilemma mentioned above: Almost every day as I am driving to and from work I have several near misses in the traffic pattern. Some clown changes lanes without looking and only alert defensive work on my part prevents a collision. Suppose one day I stand my ground. Let one of these cowboys charge into me on the right side. It damages my car and is his fault. His insurance company has to pick up the tab for repairs and I get a new paint job.. I am sure I could get by with it legally. But would I be doing something morally wrong? Or at least unethical? Not even Solomon could judge this case. He never owned a Rambler.

ports.

The spokesman said daily report: are available to proper off! ials and that “prompt action can be taken if needed.” Nelsen had proposed that the agriculture Department make monthly instead of quarterly reports so it can act quickly if the import rate continues or increases. The spokesman disagreed with Nelsen’s statement that the June 10 estimate of 800 million pounds of imports this year did not reflect June imports of 100.2 million pounds of meat.

The spokesman said it did,

New Comet

Student Dies

CORDOBA. Argentina UPI— A 24-year-old engineering student shot in last week’s clashes between students and police died here Monday. His death was expected to trigger new disorders. The student, Santiago Pompillon, was shot in the head last Wednesday while police were battling students protesting government seizure of administration in eight state universities July 28.

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. UPI—A new comet, named the IkeyaEverhart, has been discovered and confirmed, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory said Monday. The comet was named for its two discoverers, Kaoru Ikeya, 22, of Bentinjima, Japan, and Dr. Edgar Everhart of Mansfield Center, Conn., a physics teacher at the University of Connecticut.

and that imports would range around 60 million pounds for each of July, August and September, with the total for the year staying at about 800 million tons. The spokesman said Nelsen incorrectly assumed that the monthly import rate would continue at 100 million tons to raise the year’s total to just under the record 1.05 billion pounds for 1963. Under the law, if the quantity exceeds 980 million pounds, the President is directed to limit the imports admitted during that year. But the spokesman saw no problem here. He said foreign exporters "just don’t have the meat to ship this year.”

INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGB COMMISSION 911 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, 1966 at the Clerk’s Office, Court House, in the City (or town) of Greencastle, Indiam, in said County, begin investigation 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: Donald L. Carrington & Joseph A. Archer dba Double D. Tavern (Restaurant) Beer, Liquor & Wine Retailer, 15 West Franklin St., Greencastle. Indiana. SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOLC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By W. F. CONDON Executive Secretary JOE A. HARRIS Chairman. Sept. 13-lt

Newspaper Heir Is Bridegroom

Maxine Davis, R. 1, Fillmore. "I don’t think so as these kind of dresses are much too hard to iron.”

NEW YORK UPI—William Randolph Hearst II of the publishing family and Jennifer Erica Carolyn Gooch of Nantucket Island, Mass., were mar-

How to cut fuel bills

1. Weather stripping can reduce air flow up to 78 percent around poorly fitted windows.

2. Use a heating oil that helps keep your burner clean. In a well-adjusted, clean burner, Shell Heating Oil can reduce fuel consumption significantly.

ELLIS OIL Co Phone . .dnr OL 3o815 or O' 3-9084 Wayne Nelson OL 3-9523 Greencastle

COAL

INDIANA and EASTERN SUMMER PRICES

JIM COFFMAN Phone OL 3-3441 Call after 6:00 p.m.

ried Monday in Our Lady’s Chapel of St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The Very Rev. Msgr. Patrick V. Aheam performed the ceremony. The couple will live in San Francisco where the bridegroom is attending the University of San Francisco. Hearst, 23, is the son of Mrs. John R. Hearst and a grandson of the late William Randolph Hearst, founder of the Hearst newspaper and magazine empire. The bride, 23. is the daughter of Mrs. Genville F. Curtis and the late D. Herrick Gooch.

Closing Out Sale

RELIABLE TERMITE

EXTERMINATING COMPANY

Swanners indicate possible damage to your home. For Inspection and Estimates, call COAN PHARMACY

Having moved to town I will soli tho porsonal property located at my farm 114 miles east of Brick Chapel then 1 mile south te 2nd house on right, (Roy lewis farm) en

Sat., Sept. 17th at 12:30 p.m.

FARM MACHINERY 1936 John Deere Tractor on steel, 2 row cultivator for same, disc and tandem (1 tandem only), steel roller, cultipacker roller, 14" pull type bottom plow, spike tooth harrow, 2 wagons, buzz-saw (tractor mount) mowing machino, manuro sproader, slip scoop, 2 row planter, clover seeder, large bench vise and one lot of scrap iron. HOUSEHOLD GOODS living room suita, rocking chairs, upright piano, piano bench, tablet, 2 beds complete with springs and mattresses, dresser, vanity, large chest, sewing machine, bedding, 9x12 wool rug, 2—9x12 linoleum rugs, metal serving cart, round oak pedestal dining table, weed cabinets, Tappan gas range, coal and weed range, kerosene range, 11 cu. ft. G.E. refrigerator with freezer shelf, dishes, utensils and mite. There are several antique items in this sale.

ROY LEWIS, Owner

Sale Conducted by Clapp's Auction Service

Frazier S Clapp Auctioneers

Not responsible in case of accidents.

Terms: Cash

BLONDIE

By Chick Young

JOHNNY HAZARD

By Frank Robbins

r 6-GET ME OUT OP THESE TRAPPINGS, INSTANTLY/ STRIP THIS SEI7... NO TRACE OF MV PRESENCE MUST REMAIN.'

THE INCRIMINATING EVIDENCE IS SWIFTLY PROPPED DOWN A LAUNPRY CHUTE ANP...