The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 September 1966 — Page 3
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Bince many of these Jobs are available to the energetic person, locate them by (1) watching “Want Ad’s” daily and following them up immediately; (2) visiting your State employ-
: ment agency; (3)
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Saturday, September 24, 1966
Fillmore Service
■ Club Meets
The September meeting of
letting your: the Fillmore Service Club met
program was
and Curriculum” and parents visited all the classrooms with
1
Northeast Teachers Held First Meeting
The Northeast Elementary teachers participated in the en-
school guidance office know yon Wednesday, Sept 21st with Mrs. j ^Tprog/r' w™
want to work, since high schools Mary Evans. Seven members
often receive job listings from answere< i roll ca n with a Bible ^ ^ ^ ^rhkLTaTet VerSe ‘ After mUCh discussion each^'teadier^teUing toe°p^ti-
th * C ° ntinUing °/cular curriculum and program
of emploj-ment, (5) researching our club Mrs. Ethel Barker read , .. . <. the pages of your classified tele- a tribute to Mrs. Huldah fnrt ,. nJ . t . _. rh 9 fi _. phone directory' for additional Wr ip.ht our oldest member and fortunate in h n? such a fme Taoww. ■ vvn?nt ’ our oiaest memoer ana teaching and administrative
ideas, and (6) mah.n_ sure f ounc i er of our club. staff that everyone you know is There is a world above 1, B ^ pnt .
aware that you want to work., where parting is unknown i ThC accepted bud ? et
.tsiaant 1 parung is unKnown | was ab i v p resen ted bv Treasur-
Finallj, keep your student Aunt Huldah ag she was known „ R d , job hunt on the go instead of at bv manv , er ’ Harr J Brad >- Mrs - Charle8 a standstill by reminding your- 1 ‘ Walgamuth directed the self daily that many tenacious. Was always a good friend and Thought of the Evening. The persevering students will get! neighbor, Northeast PTA unit will direct part-time work this year. ! . , . its stud y to 1116 national PTA Always helping wherever need- objective of “Education is Our
ed | Business:” as we unite educa-
1 tors and the general public to ! secure for every child the highBut doing the little things
worth while
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.4:' -- y. i(»’i J .■ c’”V-v ' * .'Air's - l&PSW
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Mexico Bars 'Relief Train'
Never seeking the limelight.
Buick’s popular Special four-door sedan for 1967 sports a new grille and front end design, styling refinements on the body and a full complement of product improvements in the areas of performance and safety, including better
braking systems. There are six models available in the Special and Special Deluxe series.
Teenage 'Senior' Citizen Yearns To Earn Wage
By ROBERTA ROESCH How can an 18-year-old high
Call Back Again
Make repeat visits to the places you have contacted be-
schooi senior find opportunities fore Agk an opening has
for after-school and weekend work when all the employers she contacts say they want ex-
perienced help?
occurred, and indicate that your visit is tied to your interest in the work. On one or two occasions, you may be fortunate
This is a question that comes enough - to find ^ at some of ^ to me at this time every year places mat p rese nted no opporfrom parents and students alike, | tunities on the firgt round have as evidenced by the following something on the secon(L letter. While you are making your “I have never worked in the repeat visitj est ablish new con-
tacts, too. Leave no shop door unopened, for example, since manj- of the stores in your area
past,” writes this young reader. “But it is necessary for me to work this year in order to
MEXICO CITY UPI —A Mexican government spokesman said today that a 10-car “relief train” from Louisiana, rolling toward the border with supplies for the Tarahumara Indians, wall not be allowed to enter. “Nobody has requested it and we will not permit it to enter,” the spokesman said. 'Hie people of South Louisiana donated the 10 cars of food medicine and equipment after a missionary priest who had worked among the Indians said they were starving at the rate of 100 a day because of a corn crop failure. The head of the Indian Affairs Center in the Tarahumara region arrived in Mexico city Thursday and denied any Indians were starving. The relief train left Lafayette, La., Thursday. “Not one Indian has died of hunger recently,” said a Chihuahua official Thursday. “I went to the Jesuit mission at Sisoguogi myself that day to check out these reports. Not only are the Tarahumara not starving to death, but crops have been es pecially abundant in the whole region.”
We all miss her handshake and
pleasant smile.
There is a place now lone and
empty,
WTiere Aunt Huldah used to sit. Still the memory of her words
physical, spiritual
put money aside for college ex- are apt to employ part-time
help. When you have knocked on the store doors, go to in-
est advantages in mental, social and
education.
The PTA Study Club will hold its first meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 9:00-2:30. The timely subject will be “The Creative Child and the Machine Age.” Mrs. John Anderson is
, , . , . serving on the Program Com-
6 jmittee and Mrs. Ned McPhail,
Registration. All PTA groups in the city and county will be
invited.
Officers for the year are; Mrs. J. L. Stamper, President; Mrs. Dale Shoup, Vice Presidert; Mrs. Don Cantone, Secretary; Harry Brady, Treasurer and Mrs. Charles Poe, Historian.
still.
Tribute” written Bernice Smith.
by Mrs.
The Man From The BANNER
Grade school students toured the Police and Fire Station . . . The Irish must have invaded Greencastle, by the number of green beanies seen. Next week is National 4-H week, and did you know there are over 23 million 4-H alumni in the U.S. . . . Over 500 St. Joe College football fans were expected for the football game . . . Two boxes containing televisions placed on the sidewalk' beside Wright’s Electric . . . Gravel truck making a flying stop at the stop sign at Jackson Street.
WHITAKER FUNERAL HOME
01 3-6511
penses for next year.
“I made the rounds after school began,” she went on to say, “but my job hunt is at a standstill because of this ‘ex-
perience’ angle.”
Frankly, if you are really
serious about wanting afterschool work you can’t give up till you have a spot at which
to report at that time. Here are some suggestions to keep you from giving up: Begin by changing your atti-
tude about the “experience” angle and refuse to let this stop you. Granted, some employers do want experience, but in some cases (naturally not in every case, though) you can wear down resistance if you surance companies, newspaper
School Senior Keeps Running Into A Wall Of “Experience”.
Featuring new sheet metal for the first time since its introduction in April of 1964, the Mustang for 1967 is sportier in appearance and livelier than ever before. The 2+2 Fastback model (above) has a new roof line and concave rear panel while the convertible (below) illustrates the thrusting new hood line and deeply inset grille. All Mustangs for 1967 have two-inch udder front and rear tread for improved handling. Options for 1967 include a 320-horsepower, 390 CID V-8 engine and Select Shift Cruise-O-Matic transmission for manual or automtaic gear shifting.
show sufficient interest and ambition. Employers know that many of the part-time jobs can be handled by bright, energetic
inexperienced people.
So. if you show an interest and make yourself available at the time an employer has a
need you can often climb over sonnel.
offices, printing firms and other offices that might have use for after-school or Saturday clerical help. Hospital and nursing homes are other possibilities. While you are about it, seek out opportunities for waitresses, car hops, cashiers or check-out per-
the experience obstacle.
Yugoslav Writer Must Serve Time ZADAR, Yugoslovia UFT — Yugoslav author Mihajlo Mihajlov was sentenced Friday to one year's imprisonment for defaming President Tito’s Communist
Mihajlov was sentenced to nine months in prison for spreading “lies” about the Tito regime in three articles published abroad this summer and espousing his goal of setting up a non-Communist magazine and
a political opposition.
Then the court re-imposed the five months of the pre-
Township leaders will soon be selected.
wgime. A hostile crowd shout- r^f tOT
violation of probation. This in turn was reduced by two
F. F. A. MEETING
CROP News
ed curses at Western newsmen and slapped one of them. The Zadar district court after a one-day trial also deprived the 32-year-old author of the right to publish his writings " and to speak in public. It ordered his foreign currency earnings on articles published
abroad confiscated.
The court found him innocent Rural Overseas Program, of the second charge in the Putnam County contributed indictment — that he allowed com commodities through our publication of the anti-Soviet ; local grain elevators this year, article “Moscow Summer — The 1966 CROP campaign will 1964” after its re-printing had be led by the Rev. Stanley been officially banned. The de- Nichol of the First Baptist fense counsel satisfied the court Church and the Rev. George that Mihajlov had deleted ban- Pyke of the First Christian
ned sections of the work before Church in Fillmore,
the criticism of the Soviet What is a CROP volunteer? Union was published. A CROP volunteer, adult or' Mihajlov indicated he would teenager for whom hunger is appeal the verdict and sentence more than a headline. As a to the Croatian Supreme Court, Christian they are happy to a tactic he applied successfully give time to help friends and m his first battle in Yugoslav neighbors share in the task courts. He was sentenced to of doing something for the 1 nine months in 1965 for writing hungry people of our world, in ‘Moscow Summer” that CROP is unique because It Russia, not Nazi Germany, es- : is primarily a food appeal, protablished the first death camps : viding not only food but tools for political prisoners. An ap- and equipment to increase food peal cut the sentence to five i production and community de-
tnonths. I velopment.
The year’s sentence was in County Directors are George two parts. j Murphy and Creed Hampton.
President Philip Clodfelter called to order the September meeting of the North Putnam Future Farmers of America at 7:30 Tuesday, Sept. 13th in the Ag. room at Bainbridge. State Fair awards were presented to the members of the judging
months because Mihajlov had ^ eams - The dues for the coming been held twice in investigative y ear were se t at $2.50. Assistcustody for a month. officers for the 1966-67
year were then elected. The authority to hire a combine for the combining of the chapter’s soybeans was given to the crops
T\ orld hunger finds partial committee. The meeting was answer in CROP—the Christian then adjourned by the president.
Members then went to the gym
for recreation activities. David Ferrand, News Reporter. N.P.F.F.A.
a fIGHT ® MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY
Ways To Find Them
metecem
roeeety
e-jf Ofya/eS ant/ ^^anat/tt takes pleasure in announcing the re-appointment for 1966 of Mason JEWELERS Harold Mason
A
MEMBER
AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
This coveted appointment is awarded to comparatively few jewelers in America. It is given only after strict examination of their gemological proficiency and unquestionable business ethics and practice. It must be re-won each year.
18 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
EVERGREENS We are digging a lot of nice evergreens now from $2.50 to $7.50. We deliver and set. MOORE’S ORCHARD Stata Rood 43 at Raccoon MONUMENTS of Select Barre Granite . . . whose everlasting, blue-gray beauty is guaranteed forever by 61 memorial manufacturers. Monuments (Monument CUoninf) KEN RAY MONUMENT COMPANY Brazil, Ind. Frank Busdi District Representative Cleverdale Phone 79&4031
NOTICE ANNOUNCING CHANGE IN HOURS lues, thru Thurs., 11.a m to 10 p.m. Fri., Sat.j 11 d.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. SATELLITE DRIVE-IN
The DePauw University Evening Division Program
Registration and Payment of Fees — Monday, September 26, from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. in the Administration Building
Course*
Course No.
Course Title
Course Credit
Instructor
Day**
Room
Art
255
Baginning Painting
V* or Vi
Meehan
Tu 1
101 Art Center
Art
453
Advanced Painting
V* or Vi
Meehan
Tu 1
101 Art Center
Economics
240
Intro. Accounting
}
Maloney
Th 5
212 Asbury Hall
Education
505
Resource Materials for Effective Teaching
1
MacPhail
Tu*
12 Asbury Hall
Education
513
Educational Measurements
1
Green
Th*
12 Asbury Hall
Education
531
Education Seminar
Vi
Staff
Arr.
12 Asbury Hall
Education
599
Thesis
1
Staff
Arr.
Arranged
Math
593
Modern Math for El. Ed. II
Vi
Anderson
Wed 4
Arranged
General Studies
111
Introduction to Digital
Vi
Staff
Wed*
Arranged
Computers
*See the current University Bulletin ter description* of course content. **No doss meetings November 23 te Nevember 2B and Decembar 21 to January 4. 1 Additional time required far '.'2 course credit. Claes meets 7:00-10:00 p.m.
-Class meets from 4:30 to 7:00 p.m. 3 Class meets from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. tClass meets from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. 5 Clase meets tram 7:00 te 9:00 p.m.
COST
The fee, for either credit or auditing, is $00.00 far 1 course; $40.00 for Ik course credit; $25.00 for Ik course credit.
