The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 July 1968 — Page 2
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Saturday, July 6, 1968
THK DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated '7f Haves For All'’ Business Phone: CL 3-5151 -0L 3 5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 508 South College Avenue. Greencastle, Indiana, 46135. Entered in the Post OHice at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of Match 7, 1878 United Press International lease wire service: Member Inland Daily Press Association. Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner Repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 50C per week, single copy 10C. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner Effective July 31. 1967-Put-nam County - 1 year. S12.00 - 6 months. $7.00 - 3 months. $4.50- Indiana other than Putnam County - 1 year, $14.00 - 6 months. $8.00 - 3 months. $5.00. Outside Indiana 1 year. $18.00 - 6 months. $10.00 - 3 months, $7.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Routes $2.15 per one month. Attend Kiwanis convention
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gooch, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Slaughter, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cooper, all of Greencastle are attending the fifty-third Annual Convention of Kiwanis International at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, Ontario. A total of 20,000 people - Kiwanians and their families - are on hand for the affair, the third in Toronto. They represent some 275,000 Kiwanians in 5,600 clubs
Engaged
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Lasley announce the engagement of their daughter, Sheryl Lee Lasley, to John Thomas Price. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Price, Cloverdale. The couple will be united in marriage July 14 at 2:30 p.m. in the Cloverdale Methodist Church. Miss Lasley was graduated from the Tuley School of Beauty Culture, Champaign, 111. The prospective bridegroom is employed by Link-Belt, Indianapolis. All friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend the wedding ceremony.
PU researchesTV
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI)— Researchers at Purdue University are undertaking a project to determine what formula makes a television show suecessful and what kind of video advertising sells the sponsor’s product. Profs. Frank M. Bass and Edgar A. Pessemier of the Purdue Krannert Graduate School of Industrial Administration will direct the project, funded by a two-year, $20,000 grant from the educational foundation of the American Association of AdverUsing Agencies. “In our previous research we have discovered that income and personality don’t have a very strong relationship to brand choice,” Bass said. “We feel it’s important to discover whether specific attributes of a product affect choice.” “Take toothpaste for example,” he said. “We might ask testers to rank the relative im-
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Bible thought
He that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness.—I John 2:11. Hate tears down and destroys. Love builds up and creates.
Personal and Local
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in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Caribbeans, Western Europe, the Far East, Central and South America, Australia and New Zealand. Work being accomplished at the convention includes the election of a president, president-elect two vice-presidents, a treasurer, and six trustees for 1968-69; recognition of the clubs and districts throughout the organization adjudged tops in community service work and over-all excellence; and the adoption of resolutions upon which the organization’s community service program for the coming year will be based.
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The Winsome Workers 4-H Club held its seventh meeting June 27. Donna Steele, vice-president, presided over the meeting.Carol Evens led the 4-H pledge and Debbie Alcorn led the Pledge to the American Flag. Roll call was answered by the qualifications to look for in a husband. Debbie Alcorn gave a health and safety report on deaths due to drugs. The business discussed consisted on setting a date for the annual club picnic. The picnic is to be held at Lafayette on July 23. Also discussed was the payment of dues to the club treasurer, Carol Robertson. The meeting ended after Debbie Alcorn led the club in singing.
Craft Club Maple Heights Craft Club will meet Tuesday, July 9, at 7:30 p.m. at the Club House, 71 Martinsville St. Mrs. Louise McKamey will be the leader and Mrs. Mayme McCullough will be the hostess. New arrival First Lt. and Mrs. Walter M. Haislip II, Heidelberg, Germany, announce the birth of a daughter. Mrs. Haislip is the former Marty McKeehan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank McKeehan. The father is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Haislio. Waterloo.Ind. Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Charles Douglas, 1015 South College, celebrated their 19th wedding anniversary, Friday, July 5. Goodwill truck The Goodwill truck will be in Greencastle Tuesday, July 9. Donars are asked to call OL36587 before 6 p.m., Monday, July 8, to notify the truck where to stop.
‘Ivy Tech’ new Phase I unveiled
News of servicemen
FT. KNOX, KY.—Army Private John H. Hillis is assigned to Company B, 19th Battalion, 5th Brigade, here in the United States Army Training Center, Armor (USATCA). He will spend the next two months learning the fundamental skills of the soldier in today’s modern, action Army-fir-ing live ammunition under simulated combat situations, learning protective measures and first-aid for chemical, biological and radiological attacks, as well as being schooled in the use of modern arms. Interspaced with constant emphasis of proper physical conditioning, diet, rest and health habits, will be ample opportunity to utilize USATCA’s many and varied recreational and religious facilities. Following the completion of basic training, PVT Hillis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford R. Hillis, Greencastle Route 3, will receive at least an additional eight weeks of either advanced instruction or on-the-job training to qualify him in a specialized military skill.
portance they attach to prevention of decay, tooth whitening and taste.” Questionnaires will be distributed to about 3,000 persons, asking what qualities they look for in a product or on their television screen. They will be asked whether they most want action, suspense, sophistication in their television, along with preferred categories such as westerns, variety or educational shows. Their responses will be compared with their preferences among named television shows. The Purdue project also will use data compiled by the Brand Rating Research Corp., in random samplings of 13,000 persons. The information will be fed into computers, which the Purdue professors hope will come up with a definition of successful television shows and com. mercials. Handling the brand preference study will be Wayne Talarzyk, Evansville, who holds a master’s degree from Purdue. The television show survey will be handled by Donald R. Lehmann, Louisville, Ky., another master’s degree graduate of Purdue. Both majored in industrial administration. The first study should be completed within a year. The second year will be devoted to following through with tests on stability of attitudes and checks-
The architectural firm of Ewing Associates, Terre Haute, is completing plans and design for a permanent facility for the new Wabash Valley Regional Institute, the first of 13 regional technical training schools funded and operated by the state of Indiana. The announcement was made today by C. Huston Isaacs, executive director of the Institute. He said the new facility will be constructed on a 55-acre site near Terre Haute on U.S. 41 South at an estimated cost in excess of $1 million. Phase I of the facility will include a “power sources and control” building for instructional provisions for welding auto mechanics, auto body, engine test and repair, and parts distribution. The construction consists of a reinforced concrete structural system ( poured in place columns and beams), precast concrete roof deck and precast exterior wall panels, brick cavity walls, concrete block and poured concrete interior walls, and a concrete floor slab throughout. The total building includes 14, 500 sq. ft. on one level. The laboratory area occupies 12,000 sq. ft. of floor space with the remaining 2500 sq. ft. given to the mechanical room, receiving room, toilets and lockers, ana the corridor. The technical college will serve eight Indiana counties, in-, eluding Clay, Greene, Owen, Parke, Putnam, Sullivan, Vermillion, and Vigo counties. It will provide a vocational-tech-nical program which is not presently offered by high schools or colleges in the area. The Wabash Valley Regional Institute is now operating in temporary quarters in Terre Haute. Classes are scheduled to open in the new facility early in 1969. Funds were allocated to establish the 13 technical colleges
druing the 1963 and 1965 Indiana General Assemblies. The 1963 General Assembly created the Indiana Vocational Technical College as the overall governing body for the regional colleges. Although the other 12 schools have not yet been established in structures designed specifically for this purpose, the IVTC is currently directly operaing training schools in Indianapolis, South Bend and Versailles. The new Region VII technical college at Terre Haute will offer day and evening classes for fulland part-time students. Enrollment will be drawn from high school graduates and non-grad-uates, college graduates and nongraduates who wish to supplement their college training, and adults who need retraining or additional training. Tuition will be established on a basis similar to other state colleges and universities. The curriculum of the school will emphasize non- academic training in technical skills, designed to meet needs of industry, service firms and business in the eight-county area. Among the programs which are expected to be offered at Wabash Valley Technical Institute are agriculture, electricity and electronics, auto mechanics, nursing and health occupations, industrial physics and chemistry, data processing and communications, technical drafting, and graphic arts. Robert M. Miller, a partner of the architectural firm which is designing the new facility, said that the buildings, Phase I and Phase II , will initially comprise approximately 50,900 square feet of space, with provision for future expansion. The master plan calls for classrooms, laboratories, conference rooms, administrative offices, faculty offices and lounge, student center and food service area, library, bookstore and mechanical service areas.
Dinner Tuesday The 4 Leaf Clover Club will meet Tuesday, July 9, at noon for a ham and bean dinner at the home of Mrs. William McElroy. Mrs. James Gilly will give a lesson in crafts. S.S. picnic The Sunday School Picnic of Beech Grove United Methodist Church will be held after the morning worship service Sunday. The picnic will be held in the picnic area of Estel and Mary Shonkwiler. Everyone is invited to attend. The Beech Grove Ladies Aid will meet at the church, July 11, for an all day meeting. Patriotic Theme The stated meeting of Cloverdale Chapter #369 Order of Eastern Star, will be held July 10 at 7:30 p.m. It will be a patriotic meeting, honoring Esther. All members and visitors are welcome. Family Together Mr. and Mrs. Charles Koch, West Palm Beach, Fla., are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Sheppard, Cloverdale Route 2, and other relatives and friends. The Sheppards had all their family home over the weekend: Mr. and Mrs. Koch; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sheppard, Vincennes; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sheppard, Bellbrook, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Connie Cress, Plainfield; Lee and Roy Sheppard; anc Mrs. Sheppard’s mother, Mrs. Fred Rush, Sun City Center, Fla. Island vacation Mr. and Mrs. Donald Holley and their two children, David and Janey, vacationed for a week at Mackinac Island, Mich. They were enroute home when they stopped in Chicago and visited with Mrs. Holley’s mother. They returned to Greencastle Sunday evening. Guest speaker The Rev. Kenneth Stafford will speak at Grace Baptist Church, July7, at both the 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. services. The Rev. Stafford is a missionary with the Conservative Baptist Home Mission Society. His field of service is in Chicago’s Inner City. Customers get royal treatment ATHENS «UPIi — Macy’s does not tell Gimbel's but Donna Ines Theodoli-Torlonia says she has absolutely no objection to discussing business with Princess Ira Fuerstenburg. Donna Ines. 26-year-old heiress in one of Italy’s wealthiest families, is opening a jewelry boutique next door to Princess Ira’s women’s wear shop on the Costa Esmeralda in Sardinia. The princess, a film actress when she is not behind the counter, is also a member of one of the richest families in Italy. Donna Ines this spring completed her studies here in ancient Greek jewelry and her shop. “Ines" in Porto Rotondo. one of the new tourist centers of Sardinia, will specialize in replicas of these pieces. Her venture into trade has the blessing of the Aga Khan who is one of the financiers of the development of the Costa Esmeralda in an area infested till recently with bandits Donna Ines and Princess Ira are likely to become tourist attractions. Few resorts anywhere can exhibit two millionaire beauties running adjoining shops.
Funeral Notices
Elza Almond, husband of Reba Shoemaker, formerly of Greencastle, died Thursday in Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Baker Funeral Home in Danville.
By HKLOISE ( ICI SE
Foreign
news
By WILBUR G. LANDREY BUENOS AIRES (UPI) - If there is a country in South America that can be said to be “sick,” it is Uruguay, caught up in an agony of devaluations, strikes, student problems and cabinet crises. President Jorge Pacheco Areco has called up army and police reserves and declared a virtual state of siege in a tough test of strength with the Communist-led unions trying to force wage increases in a climate of galloping inflation. Uruguay’s catalogue of troubles add up to what may be the worst crisis in the history of a country which once was a model social democracy hailed as South America’s “Switzerland.” Partial and general strikes regularly paralyze normal economic activity. In recent weeks, students have several times battled police in the streets. Inflation estimated at 48.7 per cent in the first five months of the year, and the Uruguayan peso has been devalued no less than five times in the past two years—from 80 pesos to 250 pesos for one U.S. dollar. On the black market, it is still slipping. The country owes $400 million in debts abroad and its budget deficit of $170 million equals its exports for one year. In the past 16 months, there have been seven cabinet crises, the latest last week. More than one-third of the 850.000 working force in Uruguay is on the public payroll. In its advanced welfare state, retirement comes at 55 or even earlier, and no fewer than 290.000 persons are drawing pensions. Heavy Burden For a country slightly smaller than the state of Tennessee with a population of only 2.8 million, that is quite a burden. So far no way out has appeared. Pacheco Areco, 48, who came to office by way of the vice presidency when the president died last December, has been trying to impose austerity. As yet, few observers think that the country’s institutions are in danger. The armed forces have a tradition of political neutrality, and the last coup occurred in 1942.
DEAR FOLKS: To all of you dolls who buy (-arpet with the rubberized backing and try to cut and fit it wall-to-wall in your bathrooms or anywhere else: Did you know the easiest way to cut it is not with a pair of scissors, but with a single-edge razor blade? Or If your husband has one of those cutting knives that hold replaceable razor sharp blades, they are even better. Just turn it over and cut from the BACK side. This means out through the backing. Want to know why? You are not cutting the nap on the carpet itself. Furriers cut sable and ermine furs from the back (skin) side. And that's where I got the idea. You still have kept all the nap along that cut edge, and it will fluff out against the wall. Heloise * * * DEAR HELOISE: I was having quite a bit of trouble trying to slice some ice cream after removing it from the carton. My son was watching and suggested using the electric knife. It worked beautifully. So easy and smooth. Mrs. Floyd Korb * * * LETTER OF LAUGHTER DEAR HELOISE: At home, my mother had a sign above our bathtub that said: I like most everybody. But there's one guy I snub. The guy who takes a bath And won’t wash out the tub! Helen Porter * * * DEAR HELOISE: I've been told my method of cleaning house is a crazy one. But I always say not to knock it 'til they've tried it. Instead of concentrating on one room at a time, I concentrate on all. Example . . . When I wash windows and framework. I do it in every room taking as much time as
needed. I tackle only one thing but do it in all rooms. The same goes for curtains, floors, closets, drawers, etc. By using what I call this cycle-method, no room is cleaner or dirtier than another. And I find it most rewarding. Mi*. E. L. G. * * * DEAR HELOISE: In our house we have closets with sliding doors that bang on the fiame at the end of the track. I placed adhesive-backed eye-glass nose pads on the vertical frame at each point where the doors strike. This sure quieted the problem for us in nothing flat. Leonard Hershoff * * * DEAR HELOISE: As do many people. I enjoy the comfort of traveling in shorts, but prefer to do my sightseeing and dining properly dressed. So I make my own outfits shorts with buttondown skirts to match. While driving, this gives me the comfort of shorts, with my skirt folded lengthwise over the back of the front seat. Before I alight I put on the skirt and a pair of heels, kept for this purpose on the floor cf the car. I'm ready for the nicest of restaurants or for sightseeing. Chris Schneider * * * DEAR HELOISE: While making grape jelly, I thought I'd save time by making a triple batch. Wow, when that stuff started its full rolling boil, it really spit! I grabbed a paper lunch bag, put my hand down into it and used it as a mitten to hold the spoon. No more splattered arms. Mrs. M. A. Lyon * * * DEAR HELOISE: When setting your hair in rollers, zig-zag the parts. Keeps permanent parts from forming at every place where you usually place a roller. “Former Hairdresser”
Dallas sorry once again
DALLAS (UPI)—The city of Dallas apologized officially today for the fact that some Negro delegates to the National Education Association convention, including a representative from an African nation, were denied service in a Dallas night club over the weekend. City Councilman Jack McKinney read a statement to the convention that said the city
Future shows bold planning
SINGAPORE 1 UPI) —Stand atop Mount Faber and you can see the Singapore that was, the bustling Singapore that is, and the Singapore that will be. To the southeast lies the long porkback island of Blakang Mali where General Archibald Percival found his shore guns pointing the wrong way «to seaward) in 1942, leading to the surrender of Singapore to the Japanese. The
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PERSPECTIVE OF administrative and student center to be
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built on campus ot Wabash Valley Regional Institute south of Terre Haute.
British have just returned the fortified island to the Republic of Singapore. To the west and to the north Singapore’s amazing housing developments poke their silhouettes into the sky. And in the immediate foreground to the north lies a small "kampong” or village which almost certainly will make way for yet another housing development. Probably no city in the free world can come close to matching Singapore’s public housing program where a new apartment unit is opened every 45 minutes. Today, half a million people —25 per cent of Singapore’s 2 million population—live in the 90.000 pleasant apartment units which have been completed. By the end of the housing and development board's second five-year plan, almost onethird of the population—630,000—will live in 126,000 apartment units. These public housing units are not built as future slums. They all are situated in parklike areas where there are playgrounds and all the facilities of a small city. What’s more, they are built under a program of what might be called “capitalistic socialism” and they make money even though some apartments rent for as low as $10 a month.
was “disappointed that any citizen should demonstrate any lack of hospitality to a visitor.” NEA officials said Mooki Vitus Molapo, first secretary of the embassy of the South African kingdom of Lesotho, was denied service at Jolly’s Bar, near the convention site in downtown Dallas. Other NEA delegates were with Molapo at the time and the NEA’s assistant executive secretary, also a Negro, said he got the same treatment. Blaiberg ill CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI)—Dr. PhiUp Blaiberg, the world’s longest surviving heart transplant patient, has developed lung troubles which are “giving rise to concern, it was announced today. Blaiberg, 59, is a patient at Groote Schuur Hospital where the transplant was performed Jan. 2. A medical bulletin released late this afternoon said the former dentist was suffering from “pulmonary (lung) complications.” Medical observers speculated this could mean pneumonia, the ailment which caused the death of the first transplant patient, Louis Washkansky, in the same hospital last year. At one point in his recuperation, Blaiberg was released from the hospital and his outlook for a relatively long life was considered quite good. Blaiberg took a sudden turn for the worse earlier this month, and was reported to have developed hepatitis, a liver ailment. But he had shown improvement after being readmitted to the Groote Schuur Hospital where Dr. Christiaan Barnard performed the transplant, using the heart of a 24-year-old colored man, Clive Haupt, who died of a stroke.
ARCHITECT'S CONCEPT of the various structures on the Wabash Valiev Regional Institute campus south of Terre
Haute. The first structure to be built is to the immediate left of the curved drive.
LONG TERM FARM LOANS
SEE OR CALL BOB WOLFE OL 3-4413 State Road 43 North
