Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 September 1974 — Page 6
Pag* 6
Banner-Graphic, Greencattle, Indiana
Friday, September 13, 1974
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Market Square Area Dedicated Tonight
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-The new $16 million downtown Market Square Arena, the fifthlargest sports arena in the country, will be formally dedicated here tonight. Ground was broken for the concrete and steel sports palace nearly three years ago. Special music for the hourlong official dedication ceremonies will be provided by more than 3,300 members of massed bands and choirs from area high schools. Following the ceremonies, tours for the public will be conducted. The official opening begins two months of entertaining and sports events christening the new arena, which will be the home of the Indiana Pacers of the American Basketball Association and the Indianapolis Racers of the World Hockey Association.
WORRY CLINIC G,., ge w
Debby penned an ideal tribute to her Great-Grandmother 2 years before the funeral! When my mother died earlier this year, just a day before her 96th birthday, we found Debby’s “poem” (as she called it). It shows my mother’s beneficent influence. CASE B-641: Debby R., was 10 during this visit at our summer home on an Indiana •farm. My mother, then 94, enjoyed having Debby stay with her during an afternoon. Debby thus served much as a diminutive Practical Nurse and companion to her Great - Grandmother. But Debby had a vivid imagination, so she would dress up in my mother's long skirt and pretend that she was a little old lady, aged 80, who was a kindly neighbor of my mother. Debby even called herself “Mrs. Bawton,” which was merely a pen name she concocted out of thin air. At the end of her summer vacation, when Debby had returned to her home in Chicagoland, and had finished her prayer, just before retiring, her mother looked into Debby's bedroom and found it empty. For Debby was out at the kitchen table, writing. “Debbv,” her mother protested, “what are you doing?'' "Mamma,” Debby replied, ‘ I can t tell you now but some dav you'll know.” My mother passed away earlier this year, just one day ahead of her 96th birthday, and we asked Dr John Kirkpatrick, noted pastor at Richmond, Indiana, to conduct the funeral It was only then that we found Debby's “poem” (as she described it) wherein she ad dressed herself as "Mrs Bawton.” Mrs Bawton," her note began, "vou may be discharged now because your patient has gone home, far past the cornfields, the meadows and the creek "Home to where her Father is. And where she will live etc t nails. Yes, Mrs. Bawton, she's gone home. Gone home to Heaven where she will walk with her Father. " T his jxiem is about GreatGiandma, the wisest woman I've ever met. " And by taking care of her this summer, I have matured and learned vers much.
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Watergate Jumps Back To Top
The first big name show will be Sunday, when singer Glen Campbell performs. The arena has more than 17,000 theater-type seats under the domed, 364-foot clear-span roof, measuring 150 feet from the arena floor to the top of the done. The arena was built at a cost of $16.4 million, including land purchase, with an additional $3.9 million in two parking garages and five levels of parking on the north and south sides, built by Market Square Associates, a group of private investors. The parking garages have 1,400 spaces, with an additional 6,600 parking spaces on streets and lots surrounding the arena. An additional $2 million in private investments has gone into equipment, furnishings and other amenities.
Crane, Ph.D., M.D.
T see why Jamie (her little brother who died when Debby was 6) saw so much in her. "I wish with all my might that I may someday be like her. .“I feel very sorry for those who have not understood her for they have missed a lot. “1 can never thank her enough, hut I am sure God w ill
tell her.
“God bless this great
woman!”
WISE CHILDREN "Out of the mouth of babes.” Jesus said, "thou hast perfected praise." Debby often read the Bible with her Great-Grandma, for my mother also launched me upon daily Bible reading when I was only 7.. She herself had completed the entire Bible (Genesis to Revelation) 72 times, even 20 years before her death In later years, when her eyes were poor, she "spot read" it, much as clergymen do when picking out special passages for their sermons. At the age of 6, Debby was the constant companion of little Jamie, who wasted away with a rare ailment for 2 years that no specialists in New York or Chicago or at Riley Children's Hospital at Indianapolis could
combat.
She was at our farm home with Jamie, when he finally passed away in the middle ol the night, so she was acquainted with leave-taking of a loved one en route to Heaven. My mother’s religious inspiration had infused both Jamie and Debby. So one good woman can thus imbue her descendants for generations with religious fervor and idealism, which are an ideal after-glow of our life here on Earth! (Always write to Dr Crane in core of this newspaper enclosing a long stamped addressed envelope and 25 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets }
By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - The malfunctioning economy may in theory be the nation’s No. 1 problem, as President Ford has indicated, but once again Watergate has pre-empted the No. 1 attention. For a month it seemed inflation, recession and related difficulties haunting every household would be exposed by enlightened discussion and eventually routed by decisive action. Those who held that view now aren’t so certain. Whereas the pardon of President Nixon was decisive and required no conference, the No. 1 problem, the economy, remains in the discussion stage. The President has indicatedit is now too late in the Congressional session for enacting anti-inflationary legislation. And the inflation battle is being fought with much the same attitudes as the former administration’s, led by a chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers chosen by Nixon. Alan Greenspan, the chairman, has reiterated his belief that the money supply must remain tight, despite the consensus of economisfe at a White House meeting Sept. 5 that the money supply should be eased. The Federal Reserve Board has responsibility for controlling the amount of money fed into the economy. It can cut the supply if it feels too many dollars are chasing too few goods or release more funds if the supply seems insufficient. The big controversy over tight money now is whether it might be strangling domestic industry while failing to hold down prices of oil and other imports. Opponents of tight money argue the nation is on the verge of a deep recession and the economy needs an injection of financial energy rather than a further restriction. At tpe White House meeting, economists of various leanings acknowledged a need for monetary restraint but agreed slightly easier money might now be in order. But they may not have b3en convincing. Greenspan stated at midweek that “inflation is essentially a financial problem, so if we are to bring inflation under control we have to strip out the financial bloat.” Financial bloat, in this context, means excess money. That leaves many people wondering about the psychological factors — for example, the failure of leadership that played so large a role in frustrating the Nixon administration’s attempts to control inflation. The most important psychological factor can be summarized in two questions:
Lugar Sets Campaign
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-Re-publican Senate candidate Richard G. Lugar announced today a three-day whistle-stop - tour of 18 northern and central Indiana counties early next month. The trip, reminiscent of a campaign technique of past years, will be Oct. 4-6 on the “Lugar Buckstopper Special,” designed to emphasize Lugar's economy program. “We will be taking this basic message to the Hoosiers we meet—either the buck stops inflating right here-in 1974 or not at all. We want to stop the buck from losing any more value,” Lugar said at a news conference. The train will leave Indianapolis Oct. 4, stop in Frankfort, Lafayette, Delphi, Logansport, Peru, Rochester, Plymouth and Bremen, where a nighttime rally will conclude the first day. Bremen is the hometown of Gov. Otis R. Bow-
en.
The train will go to South Bend, Elkhart, Goshen, Kendallville and Fort Wayne on Saturday, ending with a torchlight rally. The last day will include stops at Huntington, Wabash, Marion, Muncie and Anderson, where the three-day trip will be climaxed by a countywide ral-
ly-
The three-car private train will travel over Amtrak tracks on a 500-mile route, Lugar campaign aides said.
1. Do people believe the government will succeed in holding down prices? 2. Or will they conclude that the government doesn’t under-
stand the problem and will fail to control inflation? If the answer to the first is “yes,” then inflationary psychology might be defeated.
“Yes” to the second question would mean the “buy now because prices will be higher” syndrome prevails.
Air Force Hostess Welcomes Dignitaries
ANDREWS AFB, Md. (AP) — To a majority of people at Andrews Air Force Base, it is a little known room in the Air Terminal. But within the walls of the moderately yet stately furnished Distinguished Visitors Lounge, some of the most influential people in the world have gathered. One day the DV Lounge may be used as a transient waiting room for a foreign head of state; the next day, it may be the scene of a press conference for a cabinet member. “The DV Lounge is a place for full colonels and above to sit and relax with a cup of coffee or work at a desk while waiting for their flight," explained Lt. Col. Robert L. Thomas, Wing Protocol Officer. “It is also the location of special receptions or honor ceremonies, such as the arrival of a head of state.” Whatever the occasion — the arrival of a Code 1 such as Prime Minister Kirk of New Zealand or the routine passing through of a Code 7 (colonel) — TSgt. Wana Archer, assigned to the Protocol Office from the 2nd Composite Squadron, is usually on hand during the week to make them feel welcome. Whether it be serving coffee, coordinating messages or just talking to them, she makes their stay at Andrews a
little easier.
“We have to be resourceful and everyone in our office usually gets in on the act,” Thomas said. “You don’t always know what to expect. One minute you may be greeting the leader of a country, the next carrying the luggage for one of
his aides.”
“Before Brezhnev (Leonid I., General Secretary of the Soviet Union) arrived last year, we planned and replanned the arrival ceremony. However, we still remained flexible. We’ve learned to expect the unexpected and everything went
smoothly.”
The job of hostess-recep-tionist isn’t new to Sgt. .Archer. She cross-trained from the administration career field to that of stewardess when she reen-
DAILY DUTIES—As hostess-receptionist in the Distinguished Visitors Lounge at Andrews Air Force Base TSgt. Wana Archer prepares a table of refreshments.
listed for her second term. “I almost got out of the Air Force,” she recalled. “My job as an administration clerk at Tinker (AFB, Okla.) wasn’t too appealing because I wanted to travel and meet people. It was my supervisor who talked me into cross-training and staying in.” During an eight-year span, she accumulated 5000 flying hours and would have had more except that Air Force stewardesses were grounded because of the Vietnam War. “The only alternative for me to meet people after that was to become a recruiter,” she said. “That’s how I got to Washing-
ton, DC.” In addition to the many foreign dignitaries such as King Hussein of Jordan who have visited Andrews, Sgt. Archer has met several American statesmen. She has talked with Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona and Speaker of the House of Representatives Carl Albert. “Once last year, I served coffee to 70 congressmen Some of them were travelling overseas and the rest were seeing them off. I guess I’ve spoken to many congressmen at one time or another, but the most impressive statesman I ever met was Secretary ol State Henry Kissinger.”
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Greencastle
653-4102
