Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 92, Decatur, Adams County, 18 April 1962 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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Legion Os Moose To Meet Saturday Night The Decatur Legion of Moose will hold a meeting Saturday at the Moose lodge. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m., and free lunch and refreshments will be served. Discuss Salaries At i Adams Central School The Adams Central school board win meet Thursday evening at the Adams Central school to discuss the question of teachers’ salaries for the coming year. Annual Rag Drive By Northwest PTA The Northwest PTA is sponsoring its annual rag drive which is in effect now until May 8. Those who have contributions can have them picked up by calling 3-4858. The committee has asked that contributors not include newspapers or magazines in their donations. All procedes from this rag drive will be used for equipment or supplies needed at the Northatpst school, f ~
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Elkhart County Wins Share-Fun Contest , 4 A group from Elkhart county is reported to have won the 12-coun-ty district share-thefun contest at Aagpla Tuesday night, Leo N Seltenright said this morning. Adams county had a group act and a curtain act entered in the contest. It is reported that the local groups made a very good showing, and competition was quite keen. Three honorable mentions were named, including an Allen county group. New York Stock Exchange Prices midday prices A. T. & T., DuPont, 236%: Ford, 98\; General Electric, General Motors, 55%; Gulf Oil, 43%; Standard Oil Ind., 52%; Standard Oil N. J., 54%; U. S Steel 64%. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 3,500 ; 25-50 higher; mostly No 1-2 190-225 lb 17.00-17.25; around 200 head 17.25; 57 head No 1-2 207 lb 17.50; mixed No 1-3 180-240 lb 16.50-17.00; 240-260 lb 16.00-16.50; No 2-3 250-280 lb 15.7516.25; 280-300 lb 15.25-15.75.
I Cattle 7,500, calves none; prime slaughter steers steady to 50 lowi er; other grade steers steady to 50 higher; heifers steady to 25 higher; other classes steady; load prime 1276 lb steers 31.75; load . prime 1250 lb 31.50; high choice and mixed choice and prime 11501300 lb 29.25-31.00; load prime 1025 lb yearlings 29.00; bulk choice 950-1300 lb 27.25-29.00; loadlots mixed good and choice 1150-1300 lb 26.25-27.00; goo d and choice 950-1150 lb 26.00-26.50; good 23.7526.00; two loads mostly 1000 and 1150 lb heifers 28.00; choice 26.2527.25; mixed good and choice 25.25-26.00; good 22.75-25.25; good and c hoice vealers 26.00-31.00; standard 21.00-25.00; i i Sheep 300: hardly enough any class for market test; few sales ! slaughter lambs steady: d ec k ; good and choice 90 lb shorn fed I lambs No 1 belts with 25 wooled I lambs included 18.50; package i good and choice 85 lb fresh shorn lambs 17.00.
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Husband Asks For Excommunication
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — Bernard J. Gaillot Jr., whose excommunicated wife dramatically knelt before a Roman Catholic archbishop Tuesday, said today he shared his wife’s views on segregation and should be excommunicated with her. Gaillot, 44-year-old parts clerk, expressed his views in a letter to Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel today. He asked the archbishop for a reply. Mrs. Gaillot and two other segregation leaders were excommunicated by Archbishop Rummel for what was called their disobedience to the church. Mrs. Gaillot, president of Save Our Nation, Inc.,’ which insists that the Bible demands segregation, broke into a pilgrimage on the Notre Dame Seminary campus Tuesday. She fell on her knees before the 86-year-old archbishop and asked God to “have mercy” on the prelate for his integration stand. She asked the archbishop to admit he erred in excommunicating her. Declines To Answer The archbishop did not answer. A group of women making the pilgrimage through the seminary began reciting the Rosary. The archbishop then walked to his residence. In his letter to Archbishop Rummel, Gaillot defended his wife’s segregation activities, which included picketing and publishing pamphlets against segregation in the public and parochial schools. Gaillot told United Press International that he too had picketed Coadjutor Archbishop John P. Cody’s residence. Segregationists have claimed that Archbishop Cody, recently sent here from Kansas City, is the real power behind the desegregation of parochial schools and the excommunication orders. Insisted On Witnesses Gaillot said he forbade his wife
New Purge Underway Now In Red China
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst A new purge may be under way < ■in Red China. The possibility is suggested in broadcast Peiping dispatches seeking a scapegoat for three disastrous years in Red Chinese agriculture and in much that is left unsaid in the communique which followed the secret threeweek meeting of the Red Chinese People’s Congress. The communique made no bones about the “natural calamities and economic difficulties” which had befallen Red China. But as a cure it suggested only greater hardships for China’s 650 million people already suffering the effects of forced labor, malnutrition and deprivation. As a document it was interesting chiefly as a study in Communist gymnastics with words. Even those could not disguise the atmosphere of general gloom. And the mere fact that for three weeks the Red Chinese ! leadership permitted no word of * the congress proceedings to reach the outside world suggests they | felt there was much to explain, n
to go into an audience with Archbishop Rummel without taking two witnesses along. Mrs. Gaillot’s insistence on two witnesses caused delays and finally the cancellation of a scheduled audience with the archbishop. , “I had then and do yet forbid my wife to go alone,” Gaillot said. In the letter which he read to United Press International, Gaillot said: “I do firmly believe every word of God’s Holy Bible as it Is written. Therefore my beliefs are in exact concurrence with my wife’s. If she is truly excommunicated from the Catholic Church then I too should be excommunicated, we being two people joined together by God, who have done no intentional wrong to our church.” Says Accusations False Gaillot said there were false accusations in which Archbishop Rummel warned Mrs. Gaillot that she faced “My wife did not and has never provoked anyone to violence against the church,” he said. Mrs. Gaillot said she was not planning any other efforts to contact the archbishop. She said the next move in her appeal for him to reconsider the excommunication order was up to him. She emphasized she did not kneel before him to lift the excommunication or to beg forgiveness for her prosegregation fight. Archbishop Rummel excommunicated Mrs. Gaillot, political leader Leander H. Perez Sr., and Jackson G. Ricau, executive director of the South Louisiana (White) Citizens Council, last Monday. All three publicly opposed the archbishop’s order desegregating 153 Catholic schools in southeast Louisiana next fall. They said they would appeal their excommunications to the Vatican.
* . w - l_ Other . publications and broadcasts have been more outspoken. Among them was the theoretical journal “Red Flag” which was among the first Red Chinese publications to air Mao Tse-tung’s dispute with Nikita Khrushchev and is among the most authoritative of Red Chinese publications. The latest issue of “Red Flag” exonerated both the peoplp and the top leadership for Red China’s agricultural failures. Instead, it placed the blame on provincial and low-level leadership which it said became “infected” with bureaucrats who “estranged themselves from the masses,” and who showed themselves to be “irresponsible to the party and the people?’’ At the same time, an editorial in the Peiping People’s Daily condemned first secretaries and members of provincial and other committees for distorting party policy. These, it safely may be assumed, will not be allowed to go unpunished, whether by a course in brainwashing accompanied by manual labor or by execution.
ToPickMore Astronauts To Join Training WASHINGTON (UPI) — The space agency said today that 5 to 10 additional astronauts would be picked next fall to join the seven Mercury pilots in training for future flight programs, including trips to the moon. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) also said a third group of astronauts would be recruited some time after 1965. The new group may include civilian as well as military jet test pilots. Candidates have until June 1 to file their applications with Director Robert R. Gilruth of Nasa’s Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston, Tex. Under 35 Tears of Age NASA officials said candidates must be under 35 as of next fall and be no taller than six feet. In addition to being experienced jet test pilots, they mu st have degrees i n physical or biological sciences or in engineering. NASA officials said the qualifications demanded for the new space pilots automatically rule out woman candidates. They said no women now flying could meet all the specifications. The new astronauts will work with the seven pioneer astronauts in “support operations” for Project Mercury but will not participate in what is left of the Mercury program. Train for Gemini They will, however, join the Mercury, pilots in training for the next flight program, Project Gemini. In the Gemini program, expected to start in 1964, two-man spacecraft will fly in orbit around the earth for periods up to a week or more. After the Gemini flights, NASA said, some of the new astronauts “may act as spacecraft commanders on Apollo missions.” Apollo is the program to extend flights ever farther into space until, late in the 19605, American astronauts in teams of three are flying around the moon and making lunar landings.
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1962
Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Livestock: Hogs 4,000; 25-50 higher; 190-225 lb 17.00-17.50; bulk 180-240 lb 17.2517.00; 240-270 lb 15.75-16.75 ; 270-300 lb 15.25-16.00; 150-170 lb 14.5016.50; sows 300-400 lb 14.00-15.0; 4006 lb 13.25-14.25. Cattle 725; calves 75; unevenly steady to 5 higher; choice steers [ 27.00; good and mixed good and > choice 24.00-26.50; standard and > low good 20.50-23.50; choice heifers i 25.00-26.00; good 23.00-24.50; cows - steady, utility and co mmercial [ 14.50-16.50; canners and cutters 13.00-15.00; bulls strong, utility I and commercial 18.00-20.50; veal- > ers steady to 1.00 lower; good and > choice 28.00-33.00, few choice 34.00, - standard and low good 22.00-28.00. Sheep 100; not enough to test ■ market; few choice and prime t spring lambs 20.00; good a d • choice wooled 15.00-18.00. k
i ' aial 1 dl i ■fW' Ik ■ 1 ■ It'S- ? TONIGHT! 7:30 , DR. ARNOLD SCHULTZ will speak and show ( pictures on 3 "RUSSIA" I TOMORROW! 7:30 r I "ISRAEL" ■ First Baptist Church 221 S. 4th St.
