The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 January 1968 — Page 4
Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Thursday, January 25, 1968
Foreign News Commentary
&L > A M
By PHIL NEWSOM
Despite the animosities aroused by the war in Vietnam, the United States and the Soviet
rets. ; the Inspecting: agency. The compromise to which the j The agreement is not yet out Soviets also agreed made of the woods because other naEURATOM, the West European tions also have their reservaagency for development of tions. especially fearing that the
Union have demonstrated they c f atomic power, great powers were seeking an can deal with each other when —
each has something to gain. Latest example is the agree-i ment to limit the spread of nuclear weapons which the two | now have placed before the 17nation Geneva conference after nearly five years of trying. It is in the interest of both since some day the war in
Vietnam must end and each has Augusta,
a pressing need to cut back on particular lady vowed never to the astronomical cost of ar- join a women’s organization,
maments. In the latter stages it
atomic monopoly. However, the fact that the U.S. and Soviet Union could agree among themselves is a hopeful sign
1 ? ,
mm.
Former women s editor Mini hospital elected new PTA head 'oifeicS oL. NEW YORK UPI —When, three conferences abroad—all hospital of the future will be she was women’s editor of the concerned with child welfare snialler than its 20th century Ga., Chronicle, this and taking place In Vienna, predecessor because control of,
Germany and Ireland.
Cl C3
is interesting to note that it was the United States rather than the Soviet Union that did
the most foot-dragging.
This was because of the necessity that the United States keep Its allies closely informed on progress of the negotiations
and what they entailed.
But some decades later, a funny thing happened to Mrs. ]
"The PTA.” she said, "is an adult education organization, broader than schools and with
Irvin E. Hendryson. She was j many interests in child welfare, elected president of the 11- ■ “I think we need to promote
million member National Parent the realization that parents are, mine ^ size and gtvle Qf the Teachers Association PTA. the most Important factor in a medica i centers in the
There are many men in the i child’s education. They are the organization. She hasn’t broken! first teachers. The home is the her vow exactly. Also, women’s j an< ^ a continuing school.
communicable disease and increased out-patient care will mean fewer people will need to
be hospitalized.
Furthermore, automation and communication, plus political and social factors, will deter-
|g|* W
PROJECT DADAO—Donate a Dollar to America’s Olympians w T as officially launched as a project by the Greencastle Jaycees when Mayor Norman Peabody w’as the first to donate. Peabody is pictured above with project chairman Lloyd Wells.
Court hands down new ruling on compensation INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Peo- pay for services rendered by pie who do things for friends claimant, the elements of intent without indicating they expect to pay and expectation of comcompensation will have trouble pensation must be found to exgetting it after the friends die. ist.” the court wrote. That was the meat of a ruling. Manley testified that at the from the Indiana Appellate time he did the work he had Court in reversing the Madison not thought about being repaid Superior Court which awarded but changed his mind when Mc$7,000 to James P. Manley for Ginn’s relatives “never a* 3.120 hours of work on behalf much as sent me a thank you of an older friend. ’ or anything else.” Manley. 54. filed a claim for — work he said he performed for LUTHERAN SCHOOL Edward McGinn, who died at the age of 84. The work included driving him frequently to dent enrollments in Indianapolis and other Indiana seminaries, colleges.
ENROLLMENT HIGH NEW YORK UPI _ StuLutheran and high cities and occasionally to Flor- schools in the United States ida. paying bills, and other serv- and Canada have exceeded the
coming
years, predicts Mark Berke. director of Mt. Zion Hospital and Medical Center in San Fran-
Since France is boycotting the groups have changed . Geneva talks and is not ex- ‘‘1° * he d a y s >” s ^ e
ex-1
pected to sign the accord, the most interested Western allies were Italy and West Germany, both of them non-nuclear powers. As usual, the stumbling! block was the question of inspection and agreement finally was reached through compromise. The U.S. and the Soviets had agreed that inspection could be carried out through the international Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna. West Germany, and in a lesser way, Italy, balked at this because fears of possible “leaks” through the agency could result In a thievery of industrial sec-
“they had to be coaxed for a quote and coaxed to have their pictures taken. That era is
over”.
Mrs. Hendryson, now of Albuquerque. N.M., Is the wife of a doctor, the mother of a doctor and the mother-in-law of the editor of the Beverly, Mass.,
Times.
Since 1956, she has been an unpaid worker for the PTA, attending and leading conferences in 40 states. Her no-pay term of three years, Just | started, wall mean travel 80 per
cent of the time. Three Conferences
On the agenda this year are
Mrs. Hendryson would like to cisco.
said - j see a mini-school in every Increased government - suphome, beginning with concen- j ported hospital and medical trated reading aloud to children programs, such as Medicare, between the ages of two and an d man's becoming more
Astronauts want improvements CAPE KENNEDY UPI — A number of the nation’s 16 scientist astronauts are unhappy with the space program and some may quit in the near future.
INVESTIGATE FINANCES THE HAGUE UPI —The Dutch government appointed a three-man panel to investigate the financial position of the royal family and whether tax exemptions for Queen Juliana, Crown Princess Beatrix and their husbands should be continued, informed sources said.
ices. The Appellate Court held, however, that Manley should get nothing for the work because he did it as a friend and there was no evidence that Manley “at the time the services were performed expected payment.”
100.000 mark, according to figures compiled for the current academic year. Dr. Ronald L. Johnstone, director of the Office of Research. Statistics and Archives in the U.S. Lutheran Council, said the total for 1967-68 was 100.795. an increase of 1.027
“To warrant a finding of an more than the 99,768 reported express or implied contract to last year.
four. “Not one in 10,000 parents knows how Important this is, she said. "You not only must read to the child but give him a chance to talk at length about his views. And you must listen attentively—not while watching television.”
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Failure to read to children | occurs on both sides of the tracks. Mrs. Hendryson said her one wish during her administration would be to see this mini school idea catch on in Ameri-
can homes.
Good Listener As the child becomes older, continue the practice of reading aloud together and discussing what you’ve read. Give the child, she suggested, chances to talk about what’s going on in school. Be a good listener. 'That’s one way of keeping the communication’s line open,” she said. ’’Parenta who do this won’t have to worry about a communication’s gap developing j when the child reaches the teen- j
age stage.”
She cautioned against feeling that you get the same kind of togethemesa by watching television as a family group. "Through reading,” she said, “you get the dynamic interaction between child and adult that you can’t get from televi-
sion.”
Mrs. Hendryson, a native of Pittsburgh, Pa., has more than a passing interest in the bene- : fits of reading. She holds a master’s degree in library science from Camegie-Melon Univer-
sity.
aware of the continuing need for a personal “preventive maintenance” program to guard his health were also cited as reasons for smaller hospitals at a seminar on medical centers of the 21st century. Such health precautions would decrease man’s susceptibility to severe illness and the necessity of h o s p i talization. said Dr. Alfred W. Childs of the School of Public Health at the University of Cali fornla at Berkeley. Helen Nahm, Dean of the University of California School of Nursing in San Francisco, said the nurse of the future would function more as an assistant to the physician in carrying out highly technical and complex medical procedures. These time-consuming services would leave the physician free for more specialized attention to his patients.
The scientists’ discontent springs from two sore points: —They feel the 75 percent of their time devoted to training in the arts of spaceflight hasj not left enough time for labora-
tory research and studies, cans- NEW YORK UPI—Descending them to fall behind former ants of the sporty types who colleagues outside the space loved to risk their lives riding program. j horses at breakneck speed
across fields, ditches and creeks
Amphibious vehicles go over big with America s outdoor types
i can get much the same thrill a ir cushion or ground effect sporting model this yaer.
today from a new breed of machine, which rides on land.
cross country motor vehicles. The breed includes three
—Cuts in the space budget have postponed or cancelled A m e rica’s science oriented spaceflights. These flights were the ones which attracted the
scientists to the astronaut corps species.
in the first place. | There's the amphibious auto“It’s a rather widespread mobile which travels on the thing among the experimenter highway like a car and looks types, who feel they’ve been let ver y conventional, but is sealed down—been led down the underneath and has a propeller, primrose path,” the source said. With a flick of a lever, it is
^ converted into a boat.
The National Aeronautics and
j made cats use a small air boat engine with an areial pusher propeller mounted on the stern. The most advanced species of cross country vehicles is the
made in the United States for several years and has been shown at boat and auto shows. A New Jersey Company will start making a two passenger
Presently, the chief weakness
water or mud on a cushion of 0 f the small versions of these
air created by a big fan. Vehicles of this type are made in very large sizes for miiltary use and by the British. Italians and Russians who also turn
vehicles is that they will not climb a grade of more than 10 per cent. The New Jersey company expects to overcome this in part by giving Its craft s
them out for commercial use. verticle elevation of 24 Inches The British have one that can above water or ground. It is
carry 20 passengers across the
channel to France.
A small one pasenger sport-
Space Administration (NASAl ' ° nl y one amphibian, a Ger- in & air cushion craft has been grades.
felt this will enable It to inch its way over many minor obstacles or up some fairly steep
Long arm of the law grabs legs BIRMINGHAM, England UPI —The long arm of the law has clamped down on the long stretches of leg exposed by three minisklrted girl employes of the 1 local courts. "The time has now arrived when I must forbid the wearing of miniskirts in the office . . .” court clerk Frank Howarth said In a letter to the trio. "Skirts have now become so short that comments are being made about them from all sources.”
has a total of 55 astronauts, 39 man-made car with a British of them pilots rather than Triumph engine, is being marscientist. None has flown in keted commercially at the mospace since 1966, and the next! ment. It performs quite well on maned spaceflight Is not ex- the water but 11 won,t with * pected until late this summer, stand a heavy seas and if it s
used in salt water, the paint
"If you think we’re anxious to finish requires regular attenget flying again, how do you tion. It sells for about $3,000.
think these guys feel?” one of
the veteran pilots asked recent- Next come the "cats.” One ly. "They’ve got a long wait j these is being made cornahead of them.” mercially and others are being All the scientist-spacement made a ^ home by do-it-your-hold doctoral degrees in sub- cross country fans, jects ranging from medicine to The “cat” is a buoyant sled physics and astronomy. Two made of metal or fiberglass groups have been picked six that rides on water, snow or men in 1965 and 11 others last land on sma11 wheels with balAugust. One member of the loon-like tires. first group dropped out of thei On the one being made com-
space program just after he was named.
mercially, the engine drives the wheels, but some of the home-
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