The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 September 1968 — Page 8
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Tuesday, September 17, 1968
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Feminine horizon
By HORTENSE MYERS INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — A group of Indiana women will undertake to make the full architectural tour of Columbus which Mrs. Lyndon Johnson had to rush through on her publicized visit there. Some Hoosier newswomen, who got an eight-page itinerary of buildings to see in Columbus at the time the First Lady visited the famed little city and then found the tour cut to one page by her delayed arrival, expressed an interest in a return visit. That event now is scheduled for Sept. 28-29 with T. Randall Tucker, who had planned the Ladybird tour, as the guide. The tour has been expanded to include a weekend of workshops open to all news media under the sponsorship of the Woman’s Press Club of Indiana. Other Subjects Listed While the architectural program of Columbus, which brought such top architects as the late Eero Saarinen to the city of about 30,000 population, is to be a prime subject, other speakers will get into subjects such as what today’s journalism students think of the way adults run the profession. Several Indiana University journalism students and Indiana Daily Student editors will sound off on the way present news coverage looks to them. Miss Mary Benedict, Indianapolis, national “journalism teacher of the year,” will be moderator of the panel and another on whether there is an ethics gap between journalism, as colleges teach the subject, and as it functions in daily news cover, age. Members of that panel will be Stu Huffman, news editor of the Columbus Republic; Sarah Bence, Terre Haute Star reporter, and Marie Fraser, di.
rector of information services at Ball State University, Muncie. Others on Program Robert J. Marshall, editor of the Columbus Republic; Robert Terry, Indiana editor of the Cincinnati Post and Times Star; Ernest Wilkinson, state editor of the Indianapolis Star, and Richard Mayer, editor of the North Vernon Plain Dealer and Sun, will discuss state news stories the night of Sept. 28. Betty Canary, NEA columnist, New Albany, is the Sept. 29 noon speaker. Other speakers during the
two-day program will include: Ruth Burnett, Islamorada, Fla., author and regional director of the National Federation of Press Women; Betty Cull, photographer and reporter, North Vernon; Florence Stone, Hoosier Motorist editor, Indianapolis; Jane Shick, public information director, Indiana Legislative Council, Indianapolis; Jean Prather, woman’s editor of the Columbus Republic; Mary W a 1 d o n, Indianapolis Star; Mrs. John T. Windle, and Hortense Myers, Statehouse and general assignment reporter for United Press International, Indianapolis.
Coal for electricity heats Hoosier economy
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF-
Pouring on the coal to keep electric generators spinning at five Public Service Indiana generating plants is a full-time job for hundreds of Hoosiers. The state’s largest consumer of Indiana-mined coal will burn more than 5 million tons of coal this year at its five steam generating stations, including Wabash River Station north ofTerre Haute. By 1973, Public Service Indiana expects to consume more than 8 million tons of coal annually. Massive boilers at Wabash River Station, n< w biggest of the company’s five coal-fired gener-
ating plants, will burn some 2.3 million tons of Indiana coal a year. The new Unit 6 boiler alone will account for nearly 900,000 tons of the annual burn. The Indiana Coal Association estimates that about 150 miners will be employed to produce the coal used each year at just the Wabash River Station. These 150 mining jobs add more than $1 million in personal income and make nearly 100 more jobs in related fields. Production of more than 2 million tons of coal will generate about $500,000 in state tax revenue and require a multi-million dol-
Fraternities announce names of new DePauw pledges
Three Greencastle men were among 268 students pledged to fraternities following the completion of fall rush at DePauw University. They are Jay Frye, 9 Sunset Drive, Sigma Nu; Terry Ross, 802 Hillcrest, Sigma Nu; and Dan Mont, 715 HIghwood, Phi Delta Theta. Arranged by fraternity, the new pledges include: Alpha Tau Omega (26)-Steve Bellinger, Scott Tucker, George Purnell, Ed Wilhite, Jim Bur. roughs, Bill Brubeck, Stephen Blaine, Joseph Barrows, Stephan Bennett, William Bergman, James Carruthers, David Cummings, Scott Decker, Charles Freeman, James Galvin, William Hamilton, Charles Hunter, Thomas Klamer, Scott Mclloy, High McLeod, Bruce Niemi, James Palm, Lyle Pohly, John Sharp, Mark Stachel, and Thomas Werner. Beta Theta Pi (20)-William Dot.
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ty, Charles Emerick, Dale Gresko, Thomas Jones, Steven Overman, Robert Schaeffer, Richard Tenksbury, Robert Wright, Charles Merriman, John Blanchard, Frederick Donaldson, Roger Geary, John Hamilton, Craig Hedin, Robert Hodgklnson, David Johnson, Robert Mollhagen, Charles Morgan, Richard Rodd, and Robert Shultz. Delta Chi (22)..William Watt, Marshall Kiel, Richard Schneider, Larry Trimmer, Ronnie Mayer, Ted Yoder, Michael Gay. lord, Neal Kltchell, Richard Lutes, John McFaddin, Christopher Rueggeberg, Thomas Schuck, Eric Smith , Kirk Smith, John Reid, Charles Wilkinson, Owen Wilson, Gerald Fitzgerald, Michael Meyer, David S. Williamson, Philip Heyde, Kenneth Hawkes. Delta Kappa Epsilon (19)-Gary Staley, James Jones, Michael Miller, David Anderson, Philip Harris, Richard Haug, Richard Hulse, Bryan Jost, James Keene, William Kiedaisch, Jeffrey Landon, Steven Meyerholtz, Dale Ross Edmond Siebert, John Skallerup, Scott Smith, Robert Sundlof, Mark Thomas, and Douglas Weimer. Delta Tau Delta (28)-Tim Englehart, Jim Lewis, John Lotka, John McDonough, Jim Schroder, Cliff Sellery, Asher Benrubi, James Ceaser, Robert Dedaker, Darwin Reedy, Jerome Smith, Charles Rush, Scott Norris, James Dill, Gary Gruca, Philip Humber, Eugene C. Jacobs, Kenneth Klatt, Kerry Kries, Bruce Lowstuter, Craig McDermott, John Macintosh, Douglas Maple, Frderick Meyer, Donald Nelson, Jerome Smith, Gary Sum my, Thomas Verhey. Delta Upsilon (22)-William Sad. ler, Kenneth Ritz, William Cary, Mark Dyer, Richard Eder, David Engle, Reinhold Friebertshauser, Michael Hamilton, James Kasper, Jeffrey MeDonald, David Mann, Dean Maragos, Christopher May, Thad Mikols, David Monier, Harry Page, John Pearce, Richard Pound, John Sayre, RonaldSikorski, Kent Ulerv. Stephen Winkler. Lambda Chi Alpha (21)-Gary Barth, Douglas Ball, John Frankel, Thomas Garber, Roger Karl, Steven Wilson, James Campbell, Robert Cowling, Wayne Fisher, Jeffrey Gruenert, Howard Roosa, Daniel Hegeman, John Isley,William Kroeger, Glenn Larson, James Marlowe, Donald C. Mead, Frederick Seitz, Ronald Tedrow, Robert Schmitt, Joseph Kacmar. Phi Delta Theta (19) Eric Heller, Steve Miller, Robert Douglass, John Scofield, Mike VanRensselaer, John Shade, Win. throp Morris, Tom Gibson, Mark Smith, James Aschmann, Thomas Bain, John Brebis, James Deasy,
Howard Helmers, Douglas MacMorran, David Switzer, Carl Wise, Robert Lott. Phi Gamma Delta (21)—Michael Bleck, James Koerner, Ralph Lowrey, John McFadden, Wade Nichols, John Tolle,William Arends, Robert Byrne, Harry Cangany, Gary Cousins, AldenCummins, Christopher Degraw, Stephen Doyle, Thomas Hartley, Louis Mascari, Richard Moore, Miguel Musa, Luke Ruane, John Smith, Curtis Stucky, Jeffrey Wright. Phi Kappa Psl (21)-Duane Lee Gipe, David Mellin, William Montgomery, James Sidebotham, Joseph Amy, James Boyle, James Gesler, David Hannah, John Jores, James Kilker, John Knutsson, David McCammack, John Metcalf, John Olson, Robert Pre680 pounds marijuana recovered BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)Bloomington and Monroe County authorities arrested five persons Saturday night at a rural home east of here and confiscated 680 pounds of green marijuana, valued at $180,000. Arrested and charged with illegal possession of marijuana were Mike Hannah, 22, Bloomington; Warren Deaton III, 21, Gary Puckett, 23, and his wife, Nangedale, 21, all of Denton, Tex. Also arrested was a 17-year-old Bloomington girl who was released to her parents. Police said the marijuana was apparently cut Friday near Nappanee and transported to Bloomington in a station wagon and car and rental trailer. The marijuana was discovered by Jay Ellis, landlord of the house where the arrests were made, police said. —Cliches of economics, who had led the antagonistic questioning at the dinner session, could not let this pass. Shouted he, “I have seen a dozen starve.” “Do you mean to tell me, professor, that you actually stood by and watched a human being starve to death?” The professor, of course, had never witnessed a human being starve to death, and the students were well aware of the fact. Even a gangster, who would murder a competitor, could not stand by and watch a kitten, let alone a human being, starve to death. Leonard E. Read
Pueblo members get fair treatment
The two Indiana crew members of the captured U.S.S. Pueblo apparently are being given “adequate” meals, but the father of one of the Hoosiers thinks an abundance of publicity is delaying their release from North Korea. Lloyd Marshal, an Austin truck driver and father of seven children, said he thinks his son, Larry, and the other members of the Pueblo crew would be released sooner if the news media cut down on the publicity.
“All Communist countries thrive on propaganda and until the publicity surrounding the ship is minimized, the North Koreans will never release the boat or its crew,” Marshal said. Marshal said his son had never hinted at the Pueblo’s full activities, but only said the ship tested ocean temperatures and performed other oceanographic functions. Marshall said he was “shocked to find out in reality it was an intelligence vessel.”
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ston, RolandSchinbeckler,Steven Schmidt, Melvin Tracht, Robert Trottmann, John Umbaugh, Mark Werner Sigma Alpha Epsilon (15)-John Patten, David Abel, Charles Aker, Zack Bettis, William Braswell, Steven Jansen,Steven Kaniewski, Morgan Lefferdink, Geoffrey Marsh, Frederick Postlethwalte, Randy Steyer, Christopher Yanson, Wade Adams, Jack Leeth, James Meyer.'
Sigma Chi (15)-Don Clark, Bill Eberlle, Phil Kenney, Bob Kriscunas, Dick Laukitis, Dave Samuel, Denny Southerland, John Croley, Richard Curran, Christopher Douthett, William Geserick, Randall Johnson, Allan Martin, Randall Moskop, Daniel Williams. Sigma Nu (19)-Larry Hahula, Dennis Kelley, Pete O’Day, Randy Roth, Bill Tinnerman, Greg And. erson, Thomas Cook, Thomas Gudritz, Mark Hendrickson, George Kautz, Kim Klickna, Greory McGarvey, Christopher Penn, Robert Rastetter, Jay Schaefer, James Undersood, Robert Cowie.
lar investment in equipment by the utility’s two coal suppliers— Ayrshire Collieries Corp. and Peabody Coal Co. Ayrshire supplies about 600,000 tons of coal to Wabash River Station and Peabody will supply 1.7 million tons. Coal comes to Wabash River Station by unit trains, more than 100 cars long, from the Ayrshire and Peabody mines in southwestern Indiana. These trains, carrying 9,000 tons each, make the trip from mine to generating station six times each week. At the generating station, the coal passes through giant pulverizers where it is crushed and ground as fine as face powder. Powdered coal is blown into boilers under tremendous pressure and is ignited instantaneously, to provide the heat that turns water into steam to drive turbines and generators. Less glamorous, possibly, than nuclear fuels, coal remains the least expensive fuel for electric power production in most areas of the country. * * * Dandelion and bacon salad is a favorite dish in the Champagne section of France.
/~\NE OF THE highest salaried stars in TV and filmdon, maintains that in his commodious new home he has a dining room in which he eats breakfast and a breakfast room where he eats dinner. He explains, “I’m darned if I’m going to let any room tell me where to eat what in.”
Two middle-aged men opened a fancy retail clothing emporium in Miami Beach this year, but customers the first two weeks were conspicuous by their absence. “I’m getting very worried, Morris,’’ admitted one. “Do you still think this location will go?” “It ought to,” maintained the other stoutly. “It’s sixty per cent wood ’’
Here are three short, typical anecdotes from Oscar Levant’s sparkling new book. “The Unimportance of Being Oscar”1. Composer Rossini cut short his career when he was very ycung and in his prime. His wonderful reason: “When I began, the melodies chased me. Now, I have to chase them.’’ 2. At a reception, a Boston matron gushed to the great conductor Koussevitsky, “Maestro, you are a god to me.” “Oh, madam,” sighed Koussevitsky. “What a responsibility!’’ 3 Averell Harriman once complained to his friend, Sam Goldwyn, “My fate seems to be that I have to start from scratch with each new President." Goldwyn consoled him. "Don’t let it bother you. Don't even ignore it.” C 1968, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by Klnf Features Syndicate
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