Banner Graphic, Volume 14, Number 214, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 May 1984 — Page 12

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May 15,1984

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Banner-Graphic "It Waves For All" USPS 142-020 Consolidation of Tha Daily Banner Established 1850 The Herald The Daily Graphic Established 1883 Telephone 653-5151 Published daily except Sundays and holidays by LuMar Newspapers, Inc. at 100 North Jackson St., Greencastle, Indiana 46135. Entered In the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as 2nd class mall matter under Act of March 7,1878. Subscription Rates Per Week, by carrier ’I.OO Per Month, by motor route ’4.55 mail Suoscriptlon Rates R.R. in Rest of Rest of Putnam County Indiana b.S.A. 3 Months *13.80 *14.15 *17.25 6 Months *27.60 *28.30 *34.50 1 Year *55.20 *56.60 *69.00 Mall subscriptions payable in advance . . . not accepted In town and where motor route service is available. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed In this newspaper.

Jukeboxes star at state museum

Special to the Banner-Graphic INDIANAPOLIS--Drive-in theatres, soda fountains and jukeboxes -- all part of American culture through the 1940 s and 1950 s - are celebrated in a new exhibition at the Indiana State Museum. “Jukebox Saturday Night” opened Monday and will continue through Sept. 23 on the museum’s lower level. A public “sock hop” introduced the exhibition Saturday night with a disc jockey from an Indianapolis radio station playing hits of the ’sos. “JUKEBOX Saturday Night” features a collection of eight colorful jukeboxes from the 1940 s and 1950 s from the new Sha-boom’s Restaurant, advertising art, old movie bills and still photos of movie stars, old vending machines and chrome from the tailfindomineted cars of the era. Old “Coke” machines from the Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Indianapolis, clothing from Modern Times, and auto accessories from Old Cars for Fun complete the exhibit. Originally, the jukebox was a “poor man’s entertainment,”

Lowly dandelion is abundant in vitamins, minerals, experts say

Special to the Banner-Graphic NEW YORK-The common dandelion is the bane of suburban gardeners, but it is so rich in nutrients and history that a move is under way in Ohio to make it the national flower. Lawnmower-pushers around the country might agree that the only good dandelion is a rootless dandelion. But this prolific wildflower, long a delicacy for deer, chipmunks and geese, is abundant in vitamins and minerals and is healthy for people, too. THE DANDELION blossom, leaf and dreaded root, reports the May issue of Sports Afield, can be used to make salads, pancakes, stews, tea, wine and decaffeinated coffee. The “weed” contains 14.1 mg. of iron per pound -- the same amount as spinach - and has six

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according to Ron Newlin, museum historian. It provided music in taverns and roadhouses that could not afford live performers. In the 19505, however, young people provided a new audience for low-cost entertainment, and jukeboxes with the latest hits sprang up in soda fountains and burger stands across the country. While today’s jukeboxes are designed to blend with their surroundings, the ones of the 40s and 50s were the colorful focal point of any room. “THE EXHIBIT evokes fond memories of the music and color of the 505,” said Lee Scott Theisen, executive director of the museum. “The artistic look changed from an art deco to the aggressive, metallic look we find in jukeboxes today, showing the changes in 20thcentury culture as well.” The Indiana State Museum is located one block north of Market Square Arena, 202 N. Alabama Street. There is free parking north of the museum, and no admission charge. Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., Monday through Saturday, noon t04:45 p.m. Sunday.

times the iron and four times the riboflavin of iceberg lettuce. Dieters should remember dandelion greens are low in calories, contain 85 per cent water, and boast sizeable portions of vitamins A and C, thiamine, calcium, sodium and potassium. WITH SO MANY unappredated virtues, it is perhaps not surprising that a group in Avon Lake, Ohio, has been formed to champion the dandelion’s cause: The Society for the Promotion of Dandelions. “There are so many good things to say about the dandelion that it should be our national flower,” Jeffrey A. Zullo, 17, president of the 75member group, told Sports Afield. “It is a misnomer to call it a weed because it is really a very good plant.” At the fair FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - Kemtune Inc., a small high-tech manufacturer here, is the only Indiana firm invited to the World’s Fair in New Orleans, says Robert General, Indiana director of the Small Business Administration. In fact, Kemtune is one of 20 companies nationwide selected to exhibit at the fair. Kemtune, maker of the Superior Water Conditioner, will exhibit various waterrelated products under the title of “Water As Inspiration for Innovation.”

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Larry Arndt plays electronic poker with a machine at The Lott, a legal gambling establishment in Bellevue, Neb., a suburb of Omaha. Legalized gambling - in the form of lotteries, bingo, horse racing and other activities -- is

Gambling

Michigan State University, “gives the legislators a tax that people enjoy paying. And you can’t hardly find any of those anymore.” With experience, the operators of legalized gambling have become increasingly sophisticated in marketing new and different games to broaden its attractiveness. Many of the state lotteries have dropped the tickets that carry a printed number for the weekly prize in favor of one that lets the purchaser pick his own number, for a greater sense of participation. Prizes have also grown to multimillion-dollar levels, with many jackpots being rolled over to the next week if there is no winner. Installing computer outlets in numerous stores, many states, such as New York and Illinois, have followed the trend established a decade ago by New Jersey by offering daily numbers games for those who want to know the results fairly quickly in addition to instant scratch-off lotterv tickets for those who want to know immediately. Canadian governmental lotteries offer tickets from 50 cents to $lO with an added inducement: All prizes are taxfree. Many Indian reservations, buoyed by a favorable Supreme Court ruling, have promoted legal gambling in the past three years. In Wisconsin four bingo parlors on Indian reservations offer payoffs of SIO,OOO and more. In Minnesota, where gambling outside of a church basement has been illegal for 126 years, the new $1 million Prairie Island bingo hall near Minneapolis welcomes dozens of busloads of gamblers every night. The new hall, also on an I dian reservation, seats more than 1,000 players, or four times the size ofthe local Sioux tribe. “In one night,” said Paul Kelby, the manager, “we wiped out unemployment here.” Minnesota has become the 33d state to authorize betting on horse racing. The races are to begin next year, with some proceeds helping to launch a statewide horse breeding and horse racing industry. The Legislature is also considering a referendum on a state lottery this fall. Having seen several Missourians win large jackpots recently in the Illinois lottery, the Missouri Legislature is considering a constitutional amendment to establish a lottery with voter approval later this year. One poll showed 80 percent favoring the measure, which is also supported by Mayor Vincent Schoemehl of Et. Louis. He wants some proceeds ear-

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marked for urban problems, and Jerome B. Jones, superintendent of schools for St. Louis, wants some funds directed to education. “The general public,” said Bob Griffin, speaker of the state House of Representatives, “is under the impression that a lottery is an alternative to a tax increase.” For two months now subscribers to the Twin County Cable TV system around Bethlehem, Pa., have been able to buy $2 cards at retail stores and then play bingo by watching the numbers drawn on cable television. Winners have 60 seconds to claim their prize by phone. Ohio’s Legislature is considering a bill to legalize dog racing, with the state s cut going to pay for public extracurricular school activities, often the victim of budget trims. That state’s lottery is also posting record sales, while Gov. Richard Celeste, who opposed the lottery as a state representative, says he is pleased it will bring $165 million into state coffers this year. Connecticut, which received $137 million from legalized gambling last year, or 5 percent of its revenue, offers dog racing, daily, instant and weekly lotteries, jai alai, 15 off-track betting parlors and Teletrack, a large New Haven theater that carries horse races live from New York tracks. One promoter has talked with the city of Wallingford about building a race track there, but the state has imposed a moratorium on new forms of gambling. “I’m willing to look at anything that can give us additional revenues without imposing another tax,” said State Rep. Joseph Adamo. He mentioned as one possibility lottery subscriptions to residents of other states. Massachusetts, which earned S3B million on total horse racing revenue of $560 million last year, has seen its number of racing days increase dramatically from 800 in 1978 to 1,300 this year. The state Legislature is considering legalizing Teletrack theaters to boost tourism and better compete for the gambling dollar. “It could stimulate jobs and bring more business to the community,” said state Rep. Robert Ambler of Weymouth. “Government has a responsibility to keep looking for revenue without having to constantly tax people.” Voters in Hull, Mass., overwhelmingly approved a casino, but state legislation to permit one to open fails regularly. “Casinos are crime, corruption, compulsion and congestion,” said Carol Oteri, a leader there of Citizens Against Casino

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spreading to more states. The total amount bet annually in the United States in various forms of legalized gambling is estimated at $24 billion. (N.Y. Times photo)

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Gambling. lowa’s Legislature favors a lottery, while Florida, Colorado and Maryland are also considering casino gambling. In Colorado, which has a 14-month-old lottery supporting state parks, a syndicate has proposed a $1.5 billion casino and amusement park development on 4,312 acres of state land near Pueblo. Despite the opposition of Lamm, the group seeks to raise 43.000 signatures to put the proposal on the November ballot. Petitions are circulating, too, in Florida for a referendum on building seven casinos throughout the state. Last year people bet $1.75 billion at Florida’s existing 18 dog tracks, 10 jai alai frontons and five horse tracks. Every year now a state lottery proposal is made and income increases at the three Indian bingo parlors. Seminoles in Florida are even negotiating to help establish a bingo operation for Arizona’s Hopi Indians. Under the Supreme Court’s 1981 ruling, states may prohibit forms of gambling within their borders, and such prohibitions apply to reservations. But the ruling says that once states have legitimized a form of gambling, like bingo, they may not regulate it on reservations. Indian bingo operations have also been successful in Washington, which has horse racing and a new lottery, and in California, where two separate moves are under way to begin a state lottery. Montana has no lottery and has just outlawed poker machines. But poker card games are widespread and legal. “If the world had peace negotiations with as much passion for detail as it devotes to the matter of gambling,” said Marc Racicot, an assistant state attorney general, “then this would be a mighty happy world. ” “Everybody is doing very well these days,” said George Yarmin, a spokesman for the New York state lottery, which expects to gross SB4O million this year, $195 million over 1983. “People just like to take a chance.” Opposition seems muted these days, often asserting that lotteries hurt the poor or that odds against winning are so great that players are statistically more likely to be struck by lightning. Monsignor Joseph A. Dunne, president of the National Council on Compulsive Gambling, has had some success in persuading states to pay for gambling treatment centers with lottery revenues.