Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 19 May 1960 — Page 10
PAGE TWO-A
Train Reserves In Guerrilla Warfare
(Utters Nate: T*a 11 teg story. wrlUra te >«» f Um with tor abases sac* at I | Armed Fwerr* »•» *•> tl. Mte •heal • iHtte hawwa Arar | i ■raert* argaatasMau aiadr W as physically m. guteh tetak teg Wrl«t»«l a»ra wte w*«M ! I to-ad gwrrriUs warfare mte*i*n* 1 If war ever cat** It waa writ tew by J. >»»wrrr Gray, a asrasbrr as toe FresMeat . I i ('•■■Hler m Youth Fttaraa aad editor aad psbtohrr of The Herald of Weateto-.Ur. While riatoa N.Y.I By J. SPKNC** GBAY llHalrtbsted by I ailed Frees IwteraaUaaal > He could be • man living next i door. You would think of him at a businessman as an executive or a professional man. Weekday*, he'd go to and from work in your town, or commuteto and from the neighboring city ’ just like you. But if a couple of little red glum mated buttons were pressed, indicating that war had arrived, be would suddenly vanish... He is a member of the moat elite U.S Army Reserve unit there j is. the scantly publicised Special ■ Forces iAirborne'— sometimes referred to in the armed services j as the dirty-work outfit—with a i mission of guerrilla warfare be-
FOR ANY RUG W II VISCOSE! ‘I.OO DELIVERS |V E5 TWFFDC " 12x11 Rayon tweed cut pile. SSO Fl 9xT2 Nyfcn*Tbopin’tweed 7.550 . 9x15 Nylon tweed 100 p.... SSO > ft*? CHffDC 9X12 Wool-nylon solid loop SSO 9x12 Rayon tweed cut pile SSO FZ 12x12 Nylon-wool solid color • 9x12 All wool twoed or solid 1 [/j JoS TWTffDCC P** • loop rug ....-- SSO loop rug SSO IZ IfcAIVAsJ ’ 9x12 Nylon tweed loop rug SSO 9x15 Rayon tweed loop rug SSO IZ a£ 5 A/I-.U.U/ 9x12 Nylon solid color loop SSO 12x12 Viscose tweed loop rug SSO firSi AH pCrtCCTt 12x15 Nylon tweed or solid r 9x12 Wool-nylon loop rug in SBi Certainly the greatest f, e J° lor lo °P ru « '• •' • ’ q x i s Vi^o^tweed loon rug 1 hfig mg values we’ve ever 9x15 Nylon solid color loop SSO 9x15 Viscose tweed loop rug, M* had! Big, BIG full f. *\TjL i y 9x15 Rayon loop rug in tweed, pebble sponge back... .SSO fata* room sizes at one un- -j, jgjliiyfr ITT - - .pebble sponge back... SSO 12x15 Viscose tweed loop rug SSO ftST? believable low price. — . - We y ■ We | jl solid colors f ■ Enjoy the luxury of real'wall so wall TEXTURE , B FUFF DELIVERY* carpeting in your home! Not just a 16 COLORS |gg J|f £IW ■ ■ lICC UCLIWtR I . room or two, but THREE rooms at # pcbblp Re . gc ■- TIKV PAYMENTS* ■ this remarkable low price! FREE • Sandalwood dB H tflU I Isl ■ Hllall ■Va I ) . • O Green Spray W ~JR ■ estimates (on your require- e ShpH y ■gß m ments). Motion. Act J e T ,„ d fc -- T RASE now! Larger or smaller areas carpet- • spice Beige Tweed >Elw* W^***""' ‘ ed at $8.99 per sq. yd. J S I — — • G ° ,d T '' ced j Blßw<B\■ H WE'LL COME TO YOUR HOME • Case Tweed /L /Mb O O B J B WsbTl I I lIJI NMS | Phone us. No obligation. We'll • TtZpez. /W O ■I B I wW/ | SF-eif come to your home and show » Cadet Blue So 'JjZ ■ B ■ HlB BB B m--T—---IV' .' l '- you samples. See it on the floor • Troubador Red Q| IBH■ IB INC* I \IB Feel the thick pile. No guess- •Hyacinth I ing- . Just let us know when! X I OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS till 9:00! 239 N. 2nd St. Decatur. Ind.___Phone -
hind rtiemy ilbrfl. »J SF mni arr'all highly quallftMS porarhulbrt*. raprrt markanw*. ealvitagt* and <<,mmunlc*toma <mpart* Because they w*r* phy»lc- i vlly fit •• young people, in later ywira they arhlrvrd the duuncttan of bring regarded ■• among the («iughr*t In the world. And they are nigged In a recent huah-huah refresher training earrclac, their mnocuvert Included. • A night lump Into a thick forest, a day and-night forced march through an alligator and snake inflated awamp. a hand-over-hand climb up a sheer cliff, leaping from landing craft into turbulent aurf of the Atlantic Ocean along the fhnithcasi coaatllnc Thd-ae men. who when on active duty wear the SF a coveted skyblue arrowhead sleeve insignia with gold lightning bolts, sign a unique contract which places them in SF for six years under these conditions: -Fully realizing that Special Forces teams will be deplet'd Immediately on outbreak of hostilities deep behind enemy lines to organize, train and exploit guerrilla forces, and to perform other missions ..” SF men must always be in top physical shape (they frequently I “work out” on weekendsi. have outstanding Army intelligence test
■ — pc u’rj 11 L Hamburg EAST X \ \ GEIMAMY <; < W£sT JW!;! & SXXWKOW I;!;! jSEßtrlin’l< J Si l , > ?;S' J T T ! ! ! ! ! , ! : !’ I Hannover QrJ9 USfwXX' 2Xj 1 11! 1 • .WMM GERMANY | S / _ / tiifi ■ S S'-' / b Frankluri DAGGER AT WEMT sources J" Parts is preparing drastic move against West Berl {'’ iuPwt-sti in West Berlin This newsmap
marks and know or be willing to i acquire several specialities, which usually includes an intimate know-j ledge of one or more foreign lan-j guages and advanced judo.
TWlt DtCATUI DAH.T DMOUT. WATVI. WMANi
They are able to survive under i hazardous conditions, withstand i intense heat and cold and act and live like a native of the land or 1 j area of their particular assign-
ment. . Courage, of course, is a must. But brains count more than brawn. Os scores of men of high char-
atW* wt*e pert-dri •#, *909 * wrw toto meet ta fob «•*»*• way. «mt> a tow at group aft rhueaa AW they art WtoU * nape from any erty. •••**/ •** state ta the USA The rwarree toll* <Mm fU** «* wiuHi woo aeiieaie* at Fun ■ram N.C.. to May. UM* are divided tata leesns at about 11 to 16 me* xch, la charae at a oog> tOM Karli team, la evwst of war. would be railed opoe to ergaaue a command or regiment at underground frrodom fighter*—from |o| up to 1.600 guerrilla* Ttoy w«uM fight toe roam, aa the earmy's home grounds—or. if 1 thia nattoa were Invaded, they would be the bard cere ot resistance oa our own soil Eisenhower Stood Crisis Impact Well By WEBB IM AN SMITH ©FI White House Be*arter PARIS l UPl l —Backstairs ta the mins ot the summit conference i It is possible at this stage of the diplomatic inrss here to present something of a first-hand re- ! port on the mood, manner and general condition of President i Elsenhower under the impact of what must have been one of the more trying periods of his long public career. I From close-up but necessarily •eternal observation Eisenhower came through his exchange * lt h j Soviet Premier Nrkita 8 Khrushchev ta good shape. I Before he left Washington, the President knew be was In for a storm He knew the spirit of I Khrushchev’s smiling visit to Camp David was gone He was I convinced Khrushchev had gone sour on the whole idea of a summit after yelling for one for near|ly two years. Eisenhower, no stranger to cri- ' sis in his military days and having learned to adjust his life to I the every-day pressures of the I White House, approached his meeting with the Russian leader as a probably volatile necessity It turned out to be volatile, and history will have to decide the necessity. From the human standpoint. however, it is interesting to note that Elsenhower, the heart patient; the man who has to have, his rest; put in punishingly long hours and thus far seems unscathed. i. He may have taken some tough emotional jolts as Khrushchev blew the summit to bits, but there were no bumps showing. Tuesdav night, as he prepared to write finis to this unhappy attempt at East-West improvement, Eisenhower was in easy-going, affable spirits. He seemed to have detached himself from the immediate tension of a crisis that could well lead the world back down the dreary, frequently frightening path to an icy cold war. Notre Dame To Give II Honorary Degrees SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD — President Eisenhower will share honorary degrees with 10 other men. including a Roman Catholic archbishop from Italy and Dr. Thomas Dooley, the celebrated jungle physician," at the University of Notre Dame's commencement June 5. The university announced today that Dooley. His Eminence Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montini of Milan and Dr. Victor Andres Belaunde, Peruvian diplomat who is president of the United Nations General Assembly, will be among II persons receiving honoraries at the 115th annual commencement. Eisenhower will speak at the commencement, and receive a doctor of laws degree. Other honorary degree recipients are: Archbishop Martin J. O’Connor, rector of the North American College in Rome. Dr Laurence M. Gould, president of Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. J. Peter Grace Jr,; president of W. R. Grace & Co., New York, a member of the Notre Dame Associate Board of Lay Trustees. Dr- Kenneth Holland, president of the Institute of International Education in New York. Dr. Alan T. Waterman, director of the National Science Foundation in Washington. Christopher Dawson, English historian. Dr. Raymond Sontag, professor of history at the University of California. About 1,280 graduate and undergraduate degrees will be conferred during the commencement. Eisenhower will be the first American president to speak at a Notre Dame commencement and the second to become an honorary alumnus of the school. Franklin D Roosevelt received an honorary at a special convocation in 1935. , Dooley took his pre - medical studies at Notre Dame.
0k bS®? ® '■'' '•w® :^^v^g&^'~': --
I ★ tDSON IN WAfHINOTQHjL, I Spending in Political Races ! Analyzed in New Book
■
Heard, profcm* eg political actance and *■* U* A .t Univarettf North Carolina. _ ~ |f TM result to • 600-puga, alx-dultasr took, "The Coata of ”It la the am WJUIpIMMIyg Mbdy of AlMriM poliMi ****** stow IMB - _ , --.-- -- *_ < ft to -must" readtag for gRH> 8 & J" j L It corert Iva meta phaeae at r.u>.;>o'iri < i{ • The offset of uiaglgii wix-n-kturee to etoewnm v ♦ • The soarosa of funds. _ t —wWwsWto , • Whet apeotal tatoreat groma-burinas* labto ths un-t . ™ —expeTO from caaapalto qg • How toe raooay is spent and lk- changing eftaraw* ; dituree. .. _ rroitritatotoA • nogntoM for altartag the |tlllM cMm of < with auggwttoae for ftituro toga* eoatreh HVAKD LWTB A numbs* of popular aatumptions tort to hto opinion do not hold up: tmward. The real costs at campaigning hew act eoared Meedily upward, he says. The long-run increese to no great* than rises in poc» parties here them, bat mny millions «t people DOW KR* «*> tend to toward more aatollar gifta He feels the labor movement to not db o **™" mlrn money. Important In some arrea. it to taripuflauto in myu 1 The toeffictency, confusion and mUtakee nt oampeign wansgo. are angling and costly. PotMoton* aren’t aa shruwd as they would haw you believe. . tow nakHnn And dually, American attempia at «*■ in* have not all been futile. They tail only when they attempt to dp the impossible j A UNTVERSITT OF NO*TM CAROLINA 1 llllHh.Mrf WM Mgned to find toe total coat of political activity to toe IMI camup with a figure of MO million doOan. This was spent 20 million dollars (14 per cent) et _toe natioe® level, n million (48 per cent) at the state level and 53 million (M per cent) in local elections. | ON* KKASON TH* TOTAL* mA high to that there are. mately 500,000 elective offices. Assuming at least two candidates for every office that would mean a million campaignws. U» tad. ot tta «1 miltaojoun* * ■» last two presidential races—would be around $2.5* eacn. to XE?i»d nroori. that in 1952 and 195®, candidates had 50 per cent more money to spend than Democrats. Despite this, he says that, “It cannot be argued ronymcmgly tta* the Democratic party has lost a single presidential election in the 20th century for lack of funds.” m The author contends, however, that "The effect or inongr m, politics to more certain in determining who the candidates will b». than in determining the outcome of elections.” i In other words, cash is most important in the primaries. If a i prospective candidate can't get the money to meat the costa oc A' campaign, be might as well get out of the race. ‘
HEAVY I I 1 I ■ i ■ fl I Crystal Glass ■l|l|l*|Bfl Ash Tray Set ONLY 68c I * i (Rea. 51.30 Valve) I to • with K Galkin* or more of I Jhaa SA66 new FleeKWing 270 Horse- I rflgfllr power gusolfne. I fam# ts NEW POWER! IffSEIWI ■ MSOUNE Beavers Oil Service, Ib< -
THUMDAY. MAT 9. HOO
