Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1962 — Page 9
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER », 1968 ■■ ■ j"yy thom— * ■ *■*■■■■■—■» *■< ■
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA - “ —— - -'*■— 1 ■ . ■■ ,| M,, I„ , ~, ,
ARSON SUSPECTED— Fire believed to have been set by arsonists destroyed this elementary school in Kinloch, a predominantly Negro suburb of St. Louis, Mo. Three policemen and a bystander were shot and wounded.
Triumph, Tragedy To Two Frenchmen
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst In Hamburg, Germany, the cheers of thousands of Germans rolled over Gen- Charles de Gaulle in a great wave. Not since Napoleon, in that capacity, had a French chief of state visited Germany. And certainly never had one been met with such enthusiasm. In these days of nuclear tests, Geneva co nferences and recurring crises, there also are mordents of intense human drama, and also—tragedy. In Hamburg, where he pressed his personal campaign to seal a new era in Franco - German friendship after centuries of hostilities, De Gaulle was experiencing a moment ,of drama. ..i At almost the same hour and moment, in Italy, another Frenchman who also had served his country well, was experiencing his moment of humiliation. A Hunted Man That man was Georges Bidault, twice France’s premier and many times its foreign minister. A hunted man in France, Bidault was being deported from Italy and delivered by Italian police to the “border of his choice” —presumably either Austria or Switzerland. In their personal moments of triumph and tragedy not too many hundreds of miles separated these two men whose lives for many years had been intertwined. These were the years which contributed to the drama and pointed up the conflicts of a top-sy-turvy world. In 1944, when De Gaulle moved along Paris' Champs-Elysees on an August day to mark French liberation from Nazi captivity, Bidault was at his right hand side. Bidault served as De Gaulle’s foreign minister in the post-war French provisional government. In Italy, there were rumors that Bidault had come to meet Jacques Soustelle, another figure in the human drama. For Soustelle, like Bidault, had been one of the men closest to De Gaulle, and like Bidault had gone into exile this year because of violent differences with De Gaulle over 1 BAwi PRESCRIPTIONS! . . . are our main business. Trained pharmacists will fill your doctor’s prescription promptly! Bring your prescription here! KOHNE DRUG STORE
Algeria. Comes To Oppose De Gaulle Bidault became president of the National Council of Resistance, composed of De Gaulle’s bitterest enemies and regarded as a successor to the outlawed Secret Army Organization (OAS) which spread terror throughout Algeria and, in a lesser way, France. In France, there have been strong official suggestions that Bidault was one of the leaders who ordered the assassination attempt against De Gaulle last Aug. 22. In happier times, this correspondent has interviewed both Soustelle and Bidault. Soustelle is a short, stout dark man whose enemies, even in his heyday as a supporter of De Gaulle, called him the most dangerous man in France. He has an air of suppressed violence. Both Soustelle and Bidault have called De Gaulle a traitor to France. Bidault has the air his seven years in the Foreign Office would suggest—scholarly self-con-trol. Today both men are in exile while De Gaulle pursues his olympian course — impervious to hatred, unswayed by two assassination attempts, certain of his way. Getting Well NEW YORK (UPI) — With more than 25 million admissions to American hospitals each year one of every eight persons benefits from hospitals in a 12-month span, the American Hospital Association reports. Pain in the Pocketbook CHICAGO (UPl)—Higher wages for hospital workers and the cost of scientific breakthroughs are the main factors in the increase in hospital costs in recent years. American Hospital Association statistics show. Higher pay-rolls represented nearly two-thirds of the increase in U. S. general hospitals since 1956, an Association annalysis shows. Betwen 1956 and 1960 average hospital costs per patient day increased by SB.OB, from $24.15 to $32.23.
M W - - JHKy.- : - - - A«*jt3i : ENVOY OF MERCY—Army Nurse Ist Lt Rita Reinpold was one of the American group which responded to the jrecent earthquake emergency in Iran. LL Reinpold comes fmm Jamestown* NJ)>
If ■ ADAMS COUNTY NFO members attended the meet Jig Tuesday night at Ossian, voting overwhelmingly to include milk in the all-out holding action. Pictured here from left to right are Dallas L. Pursley, NFO field man for Adams and adjoining counties; Fred Kaehr, dairyman from near Craigville; Richard Kaehr, and Ezra Kaehr, NFO members from near Craigville, and Allen Spurgeon, NFO national board member from near St. James, Mo.
Over 300 Farmers At NFO Meeting A crowd of oyer 300 dairy farmers, local members of the NFO, attended a meeting at Ossian Tuesday night, and voted overwhelmingly to include milk in the all-out holding action now under way on livestock and grain. Allen Spurgeon, a national NFO board member, told the crowd that out of eleven such previous meetings, farmers in nine of them voted to include milk in the holding action. Spurgeon said that in one of the meetings the vote was so close that the members decided to vote on a county level and send their results to the national office. “Farmers voted in the other meeting to include milk in the holding action after they had organized awhile longer,” he added. When asked about the surplus of milk products, Spurgeon said that if the butterfat content on milk to the consumer was raised from the minimum of 3.2 to 3.3 there would be no surplus. He also stated that the reserve supply of milk on hand for the month of September has been onlj’ 26 hours. In explaining the policy of the NFO in regards to existing dairy cooperatives, Spurgeon said, “We have asked and will continue to ask existing dairy cooperatives to join with the NFO in establishing a marketing agency in common for the purpose of marketing and pricing milk products. Under a marketing agency in common, dairy cooperatives would continue to funtion under their present structure.” He stated that the NFO seeks and desires a united effort on the part of the dairy industry, and is willing to wage the battle to get a price for the dairy farmers. NFO seeks to establish long range contracts with processors that would stabilize prices and marketing ebpdftions for the future. r Dallas L. Pursley, representative for NFO and now working in this area, was master of ceremonies on the evening ptfbgram.
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Nation's System Os Education Deplored
Washington Window _ By LYLE C. WILSON .. United Press International WASHINGTON (UPD—This is an invitation to all parents of grade school children to do their kids a favor by informing themselves on the deplorable inefficiency of American schooling. The basic information can be obtained from Rep. Clarence Cannon, D-Mo., chairman of the House Appropriations CommitteeInterested parents should write to Cannon and request a printed copy of Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover’ committee testimony. It is a booklet of 333 pages. It is free. The supply is limited. Write soon or you won’t get a copy. “Education For All Children” is the title of the booklet. The admiral’s testimony compares the British system of education with the U.S. system. The comparison makes the U.S. system look bad, indeed, and Rickover warns that in this era of cold war a good system of education is basic and vital to national defense. States Judgment Clearly Rickover’s testimony states clearly his judgment of what is wrong with U.S. education, what should be done about it and who is responsible for the present situation. For what is wrong with U.S. education, interested parents of grade school children who may never learn to read should examine Rickover’s testimony- For what should be done about it, the same examination will suffice. As for who is responsible: Rickover begins with the late John Dewey, the sponsor and patron saint of what is called “progressive education.” Dewey established in Chicago a Laboratory Elementary School. His theory was that children should “learn by doing.” “For example,” Rickover told
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the committee, “Dewey had 10and 11-year-olds spend endless hours re-inventing such things as how to make cotton, flax and wool cloth, how to card wool and so on.” In a larger sense, Dewey’s theories of progressive education had this end result, ! in Rickover’s opinion: ‘(They) div er ted our schools from traditional objectives and methods into the dead end of life - adjustment, permissiveness and the use of schools as social levelers instead of developers of our children’s intellectual powers.” Manipulate, Not Educate U.S. educators, Rickover feels, seek to manipulate children rather than to educate them. The admiral wants * return to the basic three R’s, longer school dayi and longer school terms. But, basically, he urges that the ordinary American grade schooler should be assured of a basic education which would enable the child to read and to write the English language properly well before the seventh grade and to know his numbers. At the top of the Establishment resisting the basic education Rickover p r e s c r i b es are the UJS. Office of Education (OE) and the National Education Association (NEA). The first is a great bureaucracy staffed largely by members of NEA. The others in the resisting Establishment, as listed by Rickover, are “the school administrators who have never taught a class and who are not teachers, who wouldn t have their ’jobs if we copied the European system of putting well-educated, qualified teachers in charge of school systems; and the textbook publishers with a vested interest in the looksay method of teaching to read.” Address Rep. Cannon at the Capitol, Washington, D.C.
