Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 284, Decatur, Adams County, 2 December 1960 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Hartford Judging Team Rates Tops
>* ' wHB| BL MKW i wrf * 4~- ww '" * * GREGG LIECHTY, Paul Norr, Rita Spence, Kathryn Bischoff and Sandy Groe are shown here judging dairy cattle. All three girls are from Decatur while Liiechty is from Berne and Norr from Geneva. - w '"7»"" "t 1 *"' fe """""■*. «*■ • 1 *** ■’vSHJI -1 Jr K. JWE . "1 Mr. , _** Mi «■ ift&V-dr JWbU - — ■ 1 1(1 STARTING IN FRONT and going back are: Rita Spence, Decatur; Rem Yoder, Geneva; Kathryn Bischoff. Decatur; Gregg Liechty, Berne; Paul Butler, Decatur; Bob Fields, Hartford and Earl Kennel, Berne.
xumuci, oernc. The livestock judging team of Hartford high school has taken top honors in the county livestock judging contest held Thursday afternoon, it was announced by county agent Leo SeUeoright this noon. Adams Central, who had the high individual in Rene Brown, placed second to Hartford and these two teams will compete in the district contest to be held late in April, probably in Elkhart county. Seltenright stated a meeting is to be held next week to determine the date and site of the district contest. Decatur finished third, with Berne and Geneva following them in that order. The scores of coach Byron Bunker’s top four Hartford boys were: David Fox, 390; Jerry Alberson, 371; David Fields, 351: and Ronnie Habegger, 350. Rene Brown High , The Adams Central foursome,! under coach Martin Watson, and their scores were: Rene Brown,
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i 406; Gene Wolfe, 357; Gerald J Tonner, 348; Arlen Gerber, 339, ‘i Adams Central’s Brown led the r individuals with a high score of 406. Runner-up to Brown was Hailford’s David Fox, with a , tally of 3990, while Ken Gleeke of Decatur finished third wi h J 386. Other top individuals and t their scores were: Jerry Alber- J I son, Hartford. 371; Dale Sprung- ■ J er, Berne, 367; Dave Amstutz,' i Geneva. 365: Gene Wolfe, Adams • Central. 357; John Rumple, Berne l> 355; Arthur Crozier. Decatur, 354; and David Fields, Hartford, G 351 ’ i The county livestock and dairy | judging contest was held Thursi day on different Adams county farms. The results of the dairy judging wfil not be announced until the first of next week. Farms Are Sites Beef judging was done on the I Dan Kauffman farm, while the I sheep judging was on the farm of 1 Victor Baltzell and the hog judg-
.. . .-'’T kOgF JITOGING HOLSTEIN cattle on the Roger Koeneman farm are these .participants in toe county contest: Fred Lehrman, Decatur; Dean Beer, Berne; Denny Bollenbacher, Decatur; Dave Sommers, Adams Central; Chuck Bischoff, Decatur; Phil Wulliman, and Ted Toland of Geneva. I ■ MNMSMIKMsMuKiEsIS IK v w——— ' BEEF JUDGING is done here by three boys on the Dan Kauffman farm. The three are from left to right, David Fields, tenth high individual from Hartford; Ken Bleeke, third high from Decatur, and Dave Hyerly of Adams Central.
anu i>avr lfj rbuauxa wuu< ing on the Paul Kohne farm. The livestock judge was Eldon Holsapple. In the dairy division, Holstein judging was on the Roger Koeneman farm, Guernsey on the Dick Moses farm, and Brown Swiss on the Everett Singleton farm. Bill Daugherty was the dairy judge. The livestock judging was j judged on the basis of how the 35 ' boys who were entered in the ; contest, judged the breeding class >1 and the market class of sheep, , hogs, and cattie. Reasons why , they made their choices hi the breeding class in sheep and the ,; market class in hogs and cattle, . I also helped determine a contestant’s score. The results of the dairy judging will be listed as soon as announced next week. REP. ROUSH (Continued from page I) Chambers, of Anderson, challenged the House investigators’ I , authority and said he will go to Washington to be sworn in Jan. 3. O’Hare and Nunez said toeir recheck cut seven votes from the Chambers total and Roush claims he will pick up seven more in a court suit over alleged tabulating errors in Clinton and Huntington Counties. The two Washington men had to issue subpenas to obtain access to votes cast in the election at Upland. Grant Circuit Judge Robert T. Caine criticised them for ■taking the records back to Washington with them and barring newsmen from the ballpt recount. Chambers declined aft invitation : to watch the ballot check. He said i any contest of elections must be bandied by the House subcommittee on elections. However, Roush was present as O’Hare and Nunez opened the records. “In my opinion, I am the winner by two votes,” Roush said ; when it was over. 1 !
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
LEU. Briefing Os Legislafors Valuable Aid INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The first .preliminary session of toe Indiana General Assembly was hailed today as a valuable aid in maintaining a “citizen legislature.” l The three-day preliminary briefing session ended Thursday with all but 10 of the 150 members of the 19611 Legislature in attendance. During the period, veterans among toe group advised the freshmen members on legislative procedures, and some of toe major issues were previewed. State Sen. Von A. Eichhorn, Uniondale, one of toe veterans, pointed out .that the three-day session as set up by the Legislative Advisory Commission “might be called a confession that 61 days isn’t enough time” to handle state law ma king. Indiana’s constitution limits regular sessions of .the assembly to i6l days every two years. • However, Eichhorn said that he personally doubted the 61-day limit would be changed. Instead, he said be felt that other devices, such as the preliminary session which .the lawmakers were paid to attend, would be worked out to permit toe 61 days to be utilized more efficiently. Eichhorn said that lengthening the duration of ithe assembly i would prevent many persons who now are members of toe assembly from seeking office. “We would develop professional legislators, such as some states now have, rather than toe representative citizens we have now,” he said. Another device to “lengthen" the 61-day limit also was set up by the LAC Thursday. Members of the Senate finance and House ways and means committees are to meet in .ad vance of the opening of .the assembly Jan. 5 to confer on the sl.l billion budget. Home Is Destroyed By Fire Thursday BATESVILLE, Ind. (UPI) —Two years ago, Delbert Hilton was rescued from a flooded creek and nearly drowned before grabbing a tree. Thursday. Hilton’s house was destroyed by fire with a loss estimated at SB,OOO. MkMMdHbMkfeWMt'in'iiß <».wl
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H Bfftr ▼ 1 JP 1 I J 8 |Jg K I “’HaH Mb' <x £ hHL\ v" -.< hI J| |Hhl Mb THE ACCUSED— Igor Y. Melekh, left, Soviet employ o in the U.N., and Willie Hirsch, right. German-born freelance medical illustrator, are scheduled to return to court Jan. 11 in Chicago. They were arrested by FBI agents in New York Oct. 27 on espionage and alien registration charges. They are accused erf seeking alleged bombing target maps and aerial photographs for transmission to Soviet authorities.
Ten Whites To School Today
NEW ORLEANS (UiPI) — Ten, white children went unharmed into an integrated school today j past angry housewives whose!' blockade appeared to be crumbling. The ten children came in three , oars to William Frantz elemen- ' tary school, and brought attend- ’ ance at the integrated school to its highest point in more than a' week—ll students, counting Ruby Nell Bridges, .the lone Negro girl ' in .the building. The “cheerleaders,” as police call the group of about 40 women leading the fight for a white boycott ait the school, had to split into four groups .to try to cover ail four entrances. But police held them across the street from the school, and made them stay on the corners ait least' 50 yards from .the gates leading into the school grounds. When the students arrived in cars and got i out at the gates, the women were ’ so far away that their insults were inaudible and they had to fall back upon loud, long boos. Their spirit seemed flagging in the face of near-freezing temperatures and tougher police restrictions. But at McDonogh 19 school, .the I three Negro girls were still all I alone in the building. A white boy-. cott by the 467 students attending McDonogh 19 has been complete for six days. Frantz has a normal enrollment of 576. Today an organization called ’ “Save our Schools,” dedicated to; keeping public schools open, start- ■ ed offering its services to drive | children to the school. Police, directed by Supt. Joseph Giarrusso, enforced the toughest restrictions on hecklers since the first week of integration when violence broke out. There were at least 50 officers around Frantz school today. The “cheerleaders” roughed up bystanders and newsmen Thurs-; day when a Baptist minister took his two children in to join those of the Rev. Andrew Foreman and Mrs. Daisy Gabrielle. Attendance Thursday at the school was six' whites and Ruby Nell. “I’m afraid all hell might break ] loose.” said a spokesman for the other group. Save Our Schools I (SOS), an organization made up! mostly of mothers of white schoolchildren throughout the city. But SOS pledged to help other parents run the “cheerleader” blockade. Break Car Window As one SOS woman drove Mrs. Daisy Gabrielle and her daughter home from Frantz Thursday, someone in the “Cheerleaders’'
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crowd throw a bnbken piece of 1 brick, cracking the car window | inches from the driver’s head. “We realized the danger when we offered .the?rides,” Mrs. Mary} Sand, SOS president, said. “We aren’t afraid and will find rides for any mother who needs one. “This may be all that many of them need to get their children back in school,” she said. ; The other integrated city school, i McDonogh 19. has been boycotted by white students this week and three Negro girls have had the building to themselves. Police were unable to prevent. the stoning of the car or other incidents, including the kicking and pummeling of a college student and the chasing of newsmen, three elderly women and bystanders the Cheerleaders said were inegratinnists. “I’ve never felt so much hatred directed toward me,” said an SOS women riding in the car with Mrs. Gabrielle and her 6-yearold daughter, Yolanda. - Many Volunteers , The woman, who asked that she and her friend driving the car not Ibe identified, said the brick hit ithe window as the Gabrielles I were going toward .the apartment house with two plainclothes policemen. Asked if she and her friend would continue driving parents to school, she said “as long as any--1 one wants to go we will take them.” She said there is no short-, I age of persons willing to risk their safety. “Peoole call up volunteering to do anything. They even want to go over there *to the school) in big groups. But that would be a terrible mistake. I’m afraid all hell might break loose." Three elderly SOS women and Louisiana Civil Liberties League President George Dreyfous, and ; elderly man, were forced to flee when someone identified them in the crowd outside the school. Police rushed to their aid as Cheerleaders shouting “commu- ' nists!” and “bigger lovers!” ! closed in. One woman spat at • Dreyfous and missed. Officers ushered them out of the vicinity I for their own safety. I The women also attacked New Orleans Times-Picayune reporter Jerry Hopkins. One woman claimed he hit her. Hopkins said later be bumped into someone while taking notes in the crowd. Makes Getaway He fled under a barrage of pummeling and kicking by the fui rious women and made a getaway ; in his car.
24 British Ships Lost During 1959 LONDON (UPD — The Ministry of Transport Thursday reported 24 British ships were lost at sea in 1959 compared with 161
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in 1958, but said the number of seamen’s deaths from accidents or disease, 363, w®s the lowest ever recorded. Trade in a good town — Decatur. ——*.— —»-r ~. ~ i
