Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 91, Decatur, Adams County, 17 April 1962 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
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CHECKING IN —a smart separates ensemble with the popular Chanel-style jacket over a trim, tailored shirt and slim skirt. Talon’s new Zephyr zipper, used in shirt, is virtually snag-proof—-if thread or fabric catches in coils, new nylon coil makes it possible to release fabric. Printed Pattern 9481 in Half Sizes 12*4 to 22’4. Fifty Cents (50c) coins for each pattern. (Add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mail.) Send to Marian Martin, care of Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Department. 232 West 18th Street, New York 11, N. Y. Please pirnt plainly Your Name, Address with Zone. Size and Style Number.
Not Enough Cards, Used Wrong Fork By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — By no standards that I know of could Rep. John F. Baldwin be described as a bumpkin. He Is a graduate of the University of California; he was presiyears; he was a practicing attorney for five years, and he has served in Congress since 1954. You would think a person with this background would feel at home in almost any company. Yet there is something about a state dinner at the White House that makes ever, a relatively sophisticated congressman uncertain rbout his manners. Baldwin was one of the guests at the dinner that President Kennedy gave for the Shah of Iran last week, and I suppose it was the invitation that put him on edge. Nothing Taken for Granted As he related in a report on the affair to his constituents, the envelope contained no less than five, cars, which seemed to take nothing for granted. The first card told what the occasion was. The second one gave the time and place of the dinner. The third one told him what to wear. The fourths one told him where to respond. And the fifth one told him what gate to enter. When he and his wife arrived at the White House, they were handed still another card which told them where to sit. At the table, they found a seventh card which made it clear they had found file right place. It was at this point, apparentlv, that Baldwin’s confidence in his_ table etiquette was shattered. “I must confess that my main concern during the dinner was whether I was using the proper knife or the proper fork at the right time,” he said. "There were three different knives on the right, and three different forks on the left.”
CHICKEN OR FISH ALL YOU CAN EAT ’l»s 9:00 to 11:00 p.m. FAIRWAY IWtTAUItAHT
Used Wrong Fork Once I Expressing hope that he “represented you properly at this state dinner,” he said, “I think I only used the wrong fork once.” Well, gee, I don’t want to embarrass the congressman or anything, but I must point out that when you have three forks, it is ’ impossible to use the wrong fork '; only once. i Silverware errors are cumulaI five and cannot be rectified as the meal progresses. In other words, 'if Baldwin used his dinner fork on the salad, then he must have used his s?lad fork during the . main course of dessert. But Baldwin needn’t feel chagrined about it. for it was the fault of the White House staff. ; They should have provided r yet > another card showing which fork . to use. a ! Reserve Plan 1 Attacked By Congressmen : WASHINGTON (UPI) — House investigators today demanded to know why six - month trainees lacked the necessary skills to be , called un for active duty during i thf Berlin crisis, [ The controversy centered I around the men summoned to ac- | five duty as “fillers” to bring Nai tional Guard and reserve units up ! to strength for active duty last fall. [ Assistant Defense Secretary I Carlisle P. Runge old the House armed .service subcommittee Monday that only 14,573 of 54.000 sixij month trainees were qualified to meet Army needs in the Berlin i callup. He said that the Army was not looking for sheer numbers last 1 fall, but for men with certain , qualifications and skills. But Chairman F. Edward He- ; bert. D-La., called it an “indict- ,■ ment” of the six-month training program and said Congress should “give it another look.” I "If we can’t use reservists who ! have been in the six-month train- | ing program, why have it?” (echoed Rep. Frank J Becker. R,N.Y. The Pentagon announced that 20,000 of the Navy and Air Force men on prolonged duty because of ; the Berlin crisis will be released before July 1. Their terms normally would have ex pired between September of last year and June of this year. The release will involve 1,400 officers and 5,500 enlisted men of the Navy and Naval Reserve, and 12,300 airmen and 700 officers of the Air Force and reserve. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Derr.omat Want ads — they get BIG results.
To Publish Poems Os Local Students Decatur high school officials have been notified that poems written by six students at the school have been accepted for publication in the annual anthology of high school poetry, published by the national high school poetry asociation, Los Angeles, Calif. Composition of poems is done annually in English 11 and 12 classes at the Decatur high school, under the detection of Miss Catherine Weidler and Mrs -Opal Yeager. There is no monetary award for publication of these poems, but it is an honor of particular meaning to the English students. Special mention was awarded to David Swickard for his poem, “Purple and Green.” Swickard's poem was also accepted last fall, while entries of the other five students were their first ones accepted. Other acceptances are “The Sea,” by William Underwood; “Secrets of the Sea,” by Miss Cheryl Lobsiger, “Winter,” by Miss Monice Marklund, this year’s exchange student; “Abe Lincoln,” by Larry Affolder; and “A Dream,” by Dan Christen. Miss Marklund, Underwood and Christen are members of the senior class, while the others are juniors. New Dance May Turn Into National Fad By GAI PaULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPD—AII of you who gyrate to the twist may be a step behind the times. Another dance has moved into the reaches of teen-agers’ haunts, and at the rate it is catching on in some parts of the country, it may turn into a national fad. If it does, oil up the knee joints. You’ll need cooperative ones for this dance. It’s something called the “U-t,” originated in the South, and first demonstrated to this reporter by an 18-year-old brunette from Harlingen, Tex. She was Karen Frances McMillan, the Texas Junior Miss entry in the recent America’s Junior Miss Pageant at Mobile, Ala. When asked how the twist rated these days with teen-agers, notable for being first to pick up a fad. Miss Texas said: “We’re not doing the twist anymore. “We’re poppin’ our knees.” “You’re what?” “Poppin’ our knees,” she said. “We also call it the U-T.” It’s generally conceded, she said that the dance got a head start at the University of Tennessee. She explained it is danced in about one square foot for each foot.' Stand with one leg straight and the other bent at the knee, forward, as if you were going to take a step. Then, in a snappy motion, make the other leg straight, and the one that was straight, bent forward. Do all this without moving the feet more than a couple of inches. If you’re not out of joint by the time you’ve learned the basic, go onto the “meat” of the dance —the improvisations. In this, the dancers improvise with the hands, head, and body. Sort of charades to dance music. Fred Fields of the UPI Bureau in Knoxville said the U-T was not new to hta. part of the country—that “as close as can be figured out. it’s three to four years old.” He said many attributed its beginnings to Middle Tennessee
—- . - ~\ """ IF iw i 4 E 1 •• * Ili / : w -- ■ |./ r* • »>£».• '-^j < "W. ■iW ■ , ,|y CHECK. UK-I—Alstair Durney and Prof. H. Elliot make last minute adjustments on 132-pound, British-designed satellite, UK-1, at Cape Canaveral, Fla.
' THE DBCATOR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Cuba Reports One Opposition Leader Killed HAVANA (UPl)—Premier Fidel , Castro’s government announced Monday night that one opposition , leader has been shot and killed , and another wounded the captured in Las Villas Province. Authorities identified the dead man as Osvaldo Ramirez Garcia . and the prisoner as “his second-in-command, ’Congo’ Pacheco.” The date of the clash and other details were not clearly stated. “Ramirez headed the bandit and counter-revolutionary (antigovernment) element which tried unsuccessfully to organize counter revolutionary bands in the service of imperialism in Las Villas Province,” a release said. “After these bandits we r e cleared out of the Escambray Mountains (long a center of resistance to the Castro regime, where some sources say fighting still is going on), he continued to roam Las Villas, killing farmers and volunteer teachers.” The government said also that two other “counter-revolutionary leaders,” one identified only as Thorndike and the other as Baaulio Amador, were killed early this year. Both had been charged with killing young Castro supporters. Observers here regarded the announcement as a tacit admission that anti-Castro elements still'are active in various parts of Cuba. Earlier Monday, 15 persons in a bus that appeared to have been hijacked smashed through a wall into the Brazilian embassy grounds to seek asylum as political refugees. State College at Murfreesboro, but it went un-named until it reached the university. "Said Miss Weaver, ‘The U-T takes a lot of coordination. . .to bend ir the knees and then pop ’em out.” — Oak Stain Tc inake a good oak stain, mix one quart cf boiled linseed oil, three gills of turpentine, six tablespoons oi raw umber, and six tablespoon of whiting. BUSY BUNNiES-fhem New ! Zealand white rabbitg are contributing to the fight against high blood pressure in tests of new drugs at Cranbury, N.Y. Rabbits are used because they accept brief restraint with composure.
Excommunicates Three Segregation Leaders
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — The aging Roman Catholic archbishop of New Orleans invoked the church’s most severe penalty Mon day in his fight to integrate 153 parochial schools and excommuni cated three segregation leaders. Archbishop Joseph Francis Rum mel, 88, charged the three life long Catholics attempted to incite “disobedience or rebellion” to his recent order to desegregate all Catholic schools in the 10 parish (county) archdiocese of New Or leans. The three—Leander H. Perez Sr. Mrs. B. J. Gaillot and Jackson G. Ricau—denied the charge and said they would fight to have the excommunication lifted. Says Clergy Brainwashed Perez, 70, is generally regarded as Louisiana’s leading segrega tionist. He publicly urged Catho lies to “cut off the water” of the church by stopping contributions. He claimed church officials had been “brainwashed by subversive forces.” Mrs. Gaillot, 42, said she would appeal to the Vatican and confi dently predicted “Rome will backtrack.” She contends the Bible advocates segregation and that “God gave the law of segregation (and the Ten Commandments) to Moses on Mt. Sinai.” Ricau, 44, father of eight, called the excommunication a “cruel edict,” and announced he would continue to fight for “racial integrity.” He issued a long statement last week,, attacking Rummel’s school desegregation order. _ The archdiocese said the excomLabor Leaders Put Pressure On Solons WASHINGTON (UPI) — The AFL-CtO hds "begun a drive to apply home-town pressure on members of Congress during the Easter recess on behalf of its “hot list” of legislation. Union leaders across the coun- ! try have been asked to see their congressmen and concentrate on drumming up support for five major proposals. The Eastertime visits also were regarded as a chance to remind the lawmakers that they will be judged on their voting records when labor endorsements are made in this fall’s election. Four bills on the AFL-CIO “hot list”— indicating high priority from the labor group and probable action by Congress during the next two months—also have President Kennedy’s backing. The Chief Executive’s proposal to provide medical care for the aged uiider Social Security ranks at of the list. Other measures mentioned were a $2 billion standby program of public works and immediate spending of S6OO million on such projects; trade expansion and employment opportunities for youth. On the fifth measure, dealing with tax reform, the labor federation is trying to kill Kennedy’s proposal for an investment tax credit for business. It supports other presidential suggestions to subject interests, dividends and foreign income to greater taxation, however.
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, munication of the three was not a form of revenge or * condemnation td hell because "God alone j can do this.” The punishment would be lifted if the three demonstrated repentance, but the order said only the archbishop or his delegate could remove the church stigma. Denied the Sacraments There are two lands of excommunicafldh, tolefhtus'and vitandws. Toleratu§. or tolerated, was tue type Invoked against the three segregationists. They will be permitted to attend Mass, but technically have lost the “right” to do so. Vitandus is reserved for the most severe crimes, such as physical violence to the Pope. Mrs. Gaillot, Perez and Ricau will be denied the sacraments, including communion. They would not get Catholic burial if tney died while excommunicated. The archdiocese said all three were sent letters threatening excommunication if they did not stop their opposition to Rummel’s school integration order. Perez claimed he never got such a letter. The church said it was mailed to him four times and each time it was returned marked unclaimed. Archbishop Rummel, who said in a pastoral letter in 1956 that segregation was “sinful and morally wrong,” announced last month that Catholic schools in this sprawling, heavily Catholic south Louisiana archdiocese would be desegregated next fall through all 12 grades, including all»extra-cur-ricular activities. The AFL-CIO already has announced it will seek to change a House-approved tax bill in the Senate. 1 . - Fort Wayne Youth Killed In Accident By United Press International Two urban traffic fatalities, one in Indianapolis and the other in Fort Wayne, sent Indiana’s 1962 toll rising to at least 271 today. Jerry D. Logston, 21, Fort Wayne, was killed when a sports car left an avenue and flipped over when it hit a rut in the berm. Logston was thrown out. Wolf Opper, 19, Fort Wayne, wasj injured. A woman was killed when her! car crashed into a concrete abutment of an overpass on an Indianapolis expressway. Mrs. Bertha Key, 39, Indianapolis, died about an hour and a half after she arrived at a hospital where she was taken after the accident on the Madison Ave. Expressway. Cassin Fisher, 84, Indianapolis, died in a hospital Monday night from inuries suffered in a traffic accident at Indianapolis April 5. A year ago, 240 fatalities had been recorded by this date. Damp Shoes on shoes while they are damp, it will keep them from cracking later.
Democracy In Latin America f Suffered Blow Foreign New* Commentary By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign New* Analyst On Martin Garcia Island in the River Plate, ousted president Arturo Frondizi of Argentina was reported suffering an illness generally attributable to shock and strain. - Also suffering shock and strain but with the sy m pt o m s more clearly defined was Argentina itself. What to do about them constituted a problem under study in capitals from Washington to Buenos Aires. It was clear that democracy in Latin America, which the United States is pledged,to support, suffered a blow when Argentine military leaders elected to interrupt democratic processes on March 29 and depose Frondizi by force. In only a little more than six months, military forces in South America’s two largest countries, Argentina and Brazil had stepped in to effect drastically the course of constitutional government. For Frondizi, the crisis which finally toppled him was his 36th. The military since the fall of the Peron dictatorship in 1955 have been especially watchful that there should be no return of the Peronistas to power. Almost from the start, Frondizi has been under their While denying any obligation to them, Frondizi was elected with the help of Peronistas acting upon the orders of Juan D. Peron in exile. Forces not unfriendly to Peron were known factors in the Frondizi regime. Frondizi was not alone in believing Peronistas should be returned to the national political scene. It was held that so long as the Peronistas remained outlawed, they constituted a “corrupting” element without responsibility. In October, 1961, the ban on Peronistas in politics was lifted. It and contributing factors proved Frondizi's undoing. In last month’s elections Peronistas won sweeping victories in 10 out of 14 provinces and out went Frondizi. The problem for the United States: Certainly it wanted no return of Peronism. But neither I could it approve a military coup i in a democratic state. For Argentina: To outlaw the Peronistas and call for new elections at the risk of civil war. The possibility: Martial law. Rubber Tile Removal You can remove old rubber tile that is embedded in waterproof cement by laying a damp cloth, over the tile and heating with a warm electric iron for a minute or two. Then free the tile with a spatula. Remove the remaining cement with 4-16 sandpaper on a rubber pad in a portable drill. Use a chisel and hammer near any remaining tiles to avoid scoring them If you have something to sell or trade - se the Democrat Wan* '.ds — they g*t BIG results.
TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1962
Tomatoes Bruised Easily Internally By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD—Friends, that tom ato you picked up, so fair, unblemished and seemingly in the pink of condition, could be a case of beauty being only skin deep. The poor thing may be suffering from internal injuries. The theory that tomatoes are highly susceptible to internal bruising has just been resoundingly confirmed in the research laboratories of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. A report on the study brings to light some of the most fascinating discoveries that I have seen in many a day. First of all, the researchers established various ways that toma toes can be bruised. They found that bruising can occur when tomatoes “are squeezed tightly together in a box,” when there'is “rough handling of the boxes,” and “from dropping individual tomatoes on hard -surfaces.” Not Previously Suspected As far as I know, nobody had previously suspected that dropping a tomato on a hard surface might cause it harm. The researchers then made some laboratory tests “to measure the amount of damage at various stages of ripeness when they were dropped distances ranging from 6 to 18 inches on a hard surface, and when dropped on a surface covered with a layer of foam rubber.”* This led to the startling revelation that “injury to those dropped on hard surfaces was much the more serious.” If I interpret that correctly, it means that tomatoes are more badly bruised when dropped on a hard surface than when droppe< on a soft surface. Eureka! And that isn’t all. Die researchers also found that — hold onto your hats! — “the ripest tomatoes were injured most” by the dropping. Stated As Fact That may be hard to believe, but the report states it as a fact. Furthermore, it says that injury from the dropping “was found to be cumulative; that is, when tomatoes were dropped two or more times, the damage was found to extend to more and more internal parts.” • That conclusion especially came as a shock to me. I had always believed that the more you dropped a tomato, the better. The tomato research, valuable though it may be, had what I regard as one serious shortcoming. Apparently, the tests did not establish whether the damage is greater when tomatoes are dropped at 6 inches or at 18 inches. , _ I trust that point will be cleared up in future experiments. And then I hope the researchers will do some comparable work on the effect that dropping has on eggs. Small-Item Container An ordinary muffin pan, slipped into your kitchen drawer or your desk drawer, makes an ideal container for small articles, such as rubber bands, tacks, paper clips, stamps, pins, and the like. The cups in the pan hold these small item separate and readily available.
