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Page 28 text:
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Future Teachers of America gather in the Formal Lounge of the Student Union Building to discuss club business. FTA Oh, the problems of a teacher! They are many, as the Caleb Mills chapter of Future Teachers of America came to realize. With 379 members, our chapter was the largest in the state. Among its activi- ties were: helping to sponsor High School Senior Day, and acting as host for the Spring Workshop, an annual meeting of all FTA chapters in Indiana. Kappa Delta Pi Junior students who had an index of 3. in at least three education courses and a cumulative index of 3.2 and senior students who had an index of 3. in at least five education courses and a cumulative index of 3.2 or above were eligible for Kappa Delta Pi. This honorary fraternity promoted a better under- standing of the field of education. KAPPA DELTA PI — ROW 1: Patricia Lyon, Elinor Dunn, Luetta Fuhrman, Natalie Boksenberg, Susan Bush, Mary Ellen Schabel, Carolyn Lawson, Carolyn Crane, Mary K. Black, Cecelia Beuligmann, Donna Woodward, Esteline Bradley. ROW 2: Tom C. Venable, Marguerite Pesavento, Norma Alexander, Hilda Boatright, Richard E£. Thursfield, Catherine Scheid, Martha Petersen, Joann Lemke, Mary R. McBeth, Ruth J. Runke,, Phyllis Cash, Don Bailey, Terry Frederick, Jerry Hile, R. W. Howell, Jack Turner, Edwin Low, Roland Inskeep, Eugene Saxe, Joan Ball, Mary Manvel, Marcella Huebschman, Lloyd Smith.
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Page 27 text:
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1s Vea COMMERCE CLUB — ROW 1: Mary Anderson, Robert Harrington, Richard Becker, Shirley Wright (reporter), Ella Bury (secretary), Robert Haskin- son, Jerry Mihlbachler (president), Marcia Kelley (vice-president), Paul F. Muse, Ruthetta Krause, V. E. Breidenbaugh. ROW 2: Sharon Ayers, Mary Bradley, Sarann Owen, Phyllis Bates, Frances Dix, Reva Dee Ray, Kay Greenlee, Gwynne Cinotto, Myrna Myers, Simia Robinson, Gwen Steffy, Fred Wallace, Bob Chorak, Jim Horner, Dale Butler. ROW 3: Joe Alderson, Mary Anderson, Patricia Bitner, Marjorie Petry, Fauneil Richards, Ellen Cox, Helen Smith, Barbara Crist, Zelia Heiser, Evelyn Wright, Marlene Newton, William Rourke, Janet Rogers, Art Lehmann, Jack Vaught, Bill Reichert, Bill Osmon. ROW 4: Patricia Smith, Janet Butler, Sue Torr, Sharon Joiner, Shirley Creasey, Sharon Nicoson, Anita Browning, Norma Henerberg, Phyllis Greve, Sherry Bonham, Marilyn Sohn, Beverly Black, Joe Harrell, Delane Robinson, Merrill Bonebrake, Richard Dugdale. ROW 5: John Walker, Mary Bragg, Donald Wente, Charlene Pound, George Mattsey, William Weis, Ed Scott, Jon Cottrell, John Hintz, Bob Beall, Dale Newton, Ron Paige, Dick Alley. ROW 6: Susie Kerr, Robert Hinshaw, Jessie Von Leer, Ray Walton, Damian Macey, Richard Schroeder, Albert Vogel, Dick Ballinger, Miller Carbon, Dick Ouweneel. 3 Commerce Club As its primary purpose Commerce Club aimed at stimulating educational and professional growth in the field of commerce. This club also enabled busi- ness education students to become better acquainted with other students and with professors in the field. Pi Omega Pi, commerce honorary, provided a worthy goal for the commerce student with an ade- quate index. During the year the honorary sponsored such activities as a dinner at the spring Business Education Clinic and an annual award to the out- standing senior in the department of business. “Speedy” is the name — or, at least, this typing student hopes so! Pl OMEGA PI — ROW 1: Raleigh W. Holmstedt, Robert W. Harrington , Esteline Bradley, Ruth Wise, Ralph lee, John Walker, Mary G. Caughlin, Marcia Kelley, Don Bailey, Sue Mahan, Patty Foltz. ROW 2: George Eberhardt, Julius C. McKay, Bernard Piwkiewicz, Paul F. Muse, Richard Becker, Roy Hunter, V. E. Breiden- baugh, Nicholas Dopuch, Robert E. Hoskinson, Jeraldine Blackburn, Barbara Crist, Kay Greenlee, Charlyn Mar- shall, Richard Krumpeck, Hannah Purcell, Phyllis Bates, Marilyn Osborne, Carolyn Crane, Milan Evans.
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Page 29 text:
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ve rat + ” ses a ape 3 ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDHOOD EDUCATION — ROW 1: Marguerite Pesavento, Gerri Radecki, Tansy Reece, Mary Anne Surginer, Jo Ann Grimm, Dick Hidani (vice-president), Wanda Damm (president), Mary Small (secretary), Virginia Field (treasurer), Anne Carle (sponsor), Ruth J. Runke. ROW 2: Ruth Fuhrman, Anna Jo Clemens, Bette Lester, Phyllis Armstrong, Carol Shuster, Cecelia Beuligmann, Doris Stahl, Darlene Ellis, Rose Ann Beatty, Linda Thompson, Barbara Wilson, Sara Wilson, Jane Armstrong, Mardeka Willis, Helen Eikenberry. ROW 3: Joyce Avery, Zelia Heiser, Marlene Olson, Nula Purichia, Martha Petersen, Colleen Downham, Nancy Winkler, Mary Schultheis, Sandra Waggoner, Gail Irwin, James Courtney, Marion Leslie. ROW 4: Mary Ann Foster, Carley Kruzan, Anita Bloomenstock, Linda Tucker, Martha Mason, Sandy Miller, Cora Nolcox, J’nann Brammer, Adele Kurokawa, Charlene Pearl, Annabeth Horstman. ACE Geared primarily for elementary majors, the Asso- ciation for Childhood Education did much to en- hance education on the State campus. Members staged a Christmas party for children of Lab School and carried out various projects for nursery schools. They also presented an Honor Day Award to the outstanding faculty member. Karen Reed, Students in seminar watch and criticize one another as they learn proper “teacherly” behavior. Officers of the club were: president, Wanda Damm; vice-president, Richard Hidani; secretary, Mary Small; and treasurer, Virginia Field. Forms and more forms are the prerequisites for be- ginning a successful teaching career. Student Teaching The satisfaction of molding minds was reflected in the faces of the student teachers as they stepped cautiously forward on their first few days of in- struction. Teacher training at Indiana State is per- haps the most vital single phase of the majority of the college graduates.
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