1954

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too

March 7, 1954
March 1954
Book Review

A Classroom Tour: Sixth Graders Find Men Teach Too
Sixth graders at Garfield School are taught by one-third of the city's staff of male elementary teachers. Since the corps numbers no more than three, however, the boys and girls are receiving the normal volume of instruction. Their teacher J. W. Riley Saylor is a man and thus, through none of his own design, possesses traits that are peculiar in the overwhelingly female elementary teaching set-up...

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level

March 28, 1954
March 1954
Book Review

A Classroom Visit: Youngsters Learn On Their Level
Although the minds of men bounce on different levels, all walk and eat in the same physical world. The business of schools is to train youngsters to take the best places their abilities will allow in this world. Most of the information the public gleans from schools concerns the vast body of boys and girls who act in plays or debate important questions or learn stenography or star in basketball or lead cheers or run for office or pass and flunk courses...

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows

March 28, 1954
March 1954
Book Review

Keeping Up With State: City Teachers 'High' On Experience, Survey Shows
Middletown schools are staffed with teachers who have less training but more experience than the average faculty of city systems in Ohio. Differences however, between Middletown and the mean are slight. In fact, for cities with populations between 25,000 and 50,000 both Middletown's training and experience are a bit above average...

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory

April 4, 1954
April 1954
Book Review

Pugs Pushing To Regain Lost Glory
Fighting For Dog Domination - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Benge, 1236 Ellen Dr., are trying to shove a sturdy, little dog that ‘‘eats like a pig” high on the list of America's favorite canine cuties. The fellow whom they champion is the Pug Dog. At the turn of the century he was the darling of dog society. But the past 50 years have seen the Pomeranian and Pekinese pluck him off that perch in the toy dog or 15-puund class. The Pug last year was 28th in line behind the Beagle, America s favorite dog. That, the Benges believe, is too far back...

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors

May 2, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Cash For High Schoolers: Flood Of Grants Available To Seniors
Seniors at Middletown High and in fact, high schools all over the nation have more scholarship school opportunities than the boys and girls who went to school 10 years ago. Most of the additional funds, Miss Helen Hartman, supervisor of guidance at MHS, explains, comes from industries who are trying to fill the nation’s need for engineers, scientists and managers...

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"

May 2, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Ability Matched By Humor: Butler Calls Himself "Interim School Head"
Two elementary school principals recently sat young and stiff and bored at the final session of a Middletown conference of their southwestern Ohio colleagues. The usual atmosphere of such meetings drowsily seeped into the room, causing the fellows to puncture the speeches with comments that were nasty although set in a proper tone... Hugh Butler, acting superintendent of Middletown schools then was introduced to the crowd, which greeted his appearance with soft, fingertip applause...

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic

May 16, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

"Prince Valiant" Adventuresome Frolic
Knighthood in Flower in CinemaScope - Chalk up merrie olde englande as a spot that may soon replace the wilds of Wyoming as the center of celluloid popularity. Hollywood recently has dished out alongside a steady diet of westerns, “Ivanhoe ,” “Knights of the Round Table ," and now “Prince Valiant,” which in CinemaScope gains its play at the Colonial Theater this week. The ingredients are clear...

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy

May 16, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

New Techniques Can Make Films Crazy
The Movies in Perspective - II - (Second Of A Series) - "Gentes and laitymen , fullstoppers and semicolonials, hybreds lubberds! Eins within a space and a wearyside space it was ere wohned a Mookse” begins a section of a well-known book written in the 20th century. The selection is from James Joyce's Finnegan’s Wake.’’ Written in English, the book’s hundreds of pages are composed of a stream of these nearly unintelligible sentences. Joyce attempted to offer the world a picture of a man's mind while the fellow was asleep and dreaming. What would CinemaScope and 3D look like if movies tried to do the same thing that Joyce did about 20 years ago?‍

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools

May 18, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

No Immediate Change: Court Decision May Not Be Felt By City's Schools
The Supreme Court's decision yesterday to outlaw racial segregation in the nation's public schools probably will not affect Booker T. Washington School in Middletown, R.H. Snyder, president of the Board of Education, predicted this morning. 'I can't see how the decision would affect the school in any way, "the president stated. 'School boards in Ohio have a right to set districts. The problem is a districting one in Middletown..

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year

May 23, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Something Different: Kindergarten Classes To Thin Out Next Year
Middletown schools, unlike the overstuffed halls of learning all over the nation, are expected to have more vacant seats in September 1954 than at the beginning of the current school year. This local quirk does not mean that baby production in Middletown fell off greatly during 1949 while it was booming throughout the United States. Less five-year-olds than usual will enter kindergarten in 1954 because of a change in Board of Education bookkeeping...

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted

May 23, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Legion Committee Head Draws Up A Case: City Drive Against Horror Comic Books Hinted
A local American Legion committee is attempting to enlist public support for a drive that will keep “horror” comic books out of the hands of Middletown youngsters. Donald Alstaetter, chairman of Post 218’s youth activities committee, wants leaders of community organizations to join him in setting up a program that would not allow local merchants to sell juveniles these books...

Teachers Line Up For Community Course

Teachers Line Up For Community Course

Teachers Line Up For Community Course

Teachers Line Up For Community Course

Teachers Line Up For Community Course

May 30, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Teachers Line Up For Community Course
For the third consecutive year a group of area teachers will spend part of their summer vacation learning techniques of pushing schools closer to community life, especially the industrial segment. Twenty-seven Middletown and Lemon Township teachers have signed up for Miami University’s community resources workshop this year.

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools

May 30, 1954
May 1954
Book Review

Corporal Punishment “Out" In Schools
Corporal punishment in Middletown schools is strictly taboo - unless the little "monster" deserves it and his parents approve of the whacking. The school board's official policy on the matter states that bodily punishment can be used when discipline, in the opinion of both parent and teacher, can be secured in no other way. Only during the past year has that been a board policy. Before that, however, it was the practical method in the school system, Acting Superintendent of Schools Hugh Butler points out...

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue

June 6, 1954
June 1954
Book Review

What About Booker T. ? Court Ruling On Segregation Revives Issue
Booker T. Washington School, created in a spirit of goodwill about 36 years ago, has bloomed into a difficult spot in the social landscape of this community. The Supreme Court’s recent decision to outlaw racist segregation in public schools has prompted the local National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People to renew their effort to make the 17th Avenue building a mixed institution...

Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic

Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic

Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic

Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic

Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic

October 17, 1954
October 1954
Book Review

Asheville Citizen-Times (Asheville, North Carolina)
Graham Says Stringfellow Case Tragic
Evangelist Billy Graham today said he almost wept when he learned Rep. Douglas Stringfellow (R-Utah) for years told a false story of wartime service. "He lost his character. Now, he has lost his friends. How terrible! How tragic!” the North Carolina minister told 16,000 persons, the largest crowd to attend a crusade sermon here. Graham cited the example of Stringfellow in a sermon on "America's Greatest Sin." The Utah congressman last night tearfully repudiated his story of World War II experiences with the Office of Strategic Services. Stringfellow's admission substantiated an Army Times story that questioned his service record. “The great sin of America is we are putting all our emphasis on the material, the secular, the body and so little on the soul," the evangelist told the crowd that filled Pelican Stadium in the cool, sunny afternoon...