Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 262, Decatur, Adams County, 6 November 1962 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Life Os Feminine Campaigner Differs
By HORTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The three women seeking state office id today's election disagree on whether women will vote to any extent as a bloc. But they agree that the life of a feminine campaigner differs from that of the male candidate. Os the 24 nominees for Statehouse offices, three are women. They are Mrs. Dorothy Gardner, seeking re-election as state auditor, and Mrs. Jean Bond, nominee far clerk of the Supreme and Appellate courts, both Republicans, apd Mrs. Alice Whitecotton, incumbent clerk seeking re-election. She is a Democrat. Mrs. Whitecotton said she saw no issue this time in which women would vote as a bloc. never As A Bloc “I don’t feel women truly ever vote as a bloc,” she said.” If they did, we would have a woman governor and more women officials.” Mrs. Gardner said she felt that on the Cuba question, “women will tend to get together and vote as mothers protecting their chil-
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dren.” Mrs. Bond commented that “I think women should vote as a bloc, but I don’t know that they will.” She felt that the Cuban crisis had not presented an issue that would tend to send women toward one party or the other. But she said she thought there was a “pocketbook” pressure that would send women to voting as a group for the GOP. Mrs. Gardner, Mrs. Whitecotton and Mrs. Bond agreed, however, that a woman campaigning alone, as they often have done, runs into some funny situations. Mrs. Whitecotton and Mrs. Bond campaigned against each other, and Mrs. Gardner, the first woman ever to serve as Indiana auditor, was opposed by a man, Joseph A. Farina, a Democrat from LaPorte. Drive on Campaigns All three did much of their campaigning on their own, however, driving their own cars throughout the state, and returning to their homes to pick up their homemaking and career duties. Mrs. Gardner, former legislator
from Fort Wayne, and onetime superintendent of the Indiana Women’s Prison, continued her speech-making even into today. She addressed a group of New Castle women at noon. “This is a chew-your-fingernails-to-the-elbow day for me, anyway,” she explained. "I might as well give a talk. Maybe some of the women listening to me won’t have voted yet.” Her forte has been the distribution of paper sweet peas—2o,ooo of them. “They cost me $9.” she explained. “I don’t have a campaign fund so I had to be economical. I bought the materials and friends made them for me. Once Marian Adair, wife of Congressman Ross Adair, sat on them and we had a frantic time straightening the flowers out so we could give them away.” Cotton Blossoms Given Mrs. Whitecotton, who distributed boutonnieres made to resemble cotton blossoms, ended her campaigning on crutches. She fell and broke a bone in her foot while in South Bend for a speech. She expects to be able to have the cast removed from her injured foot Wednesday. Mrs. Bond, whose husband Clayton is Union-Franklin prosecutor and is campaigning for re-election, handed out match books to voters as she went about making speeches and visiting fairs. “I was very well received, even in Lake County” she laughed. Lake is a Democratic stronghold. Once Mrs. Bond met such an enthusiastic reception, she fled. “I had been handing out match books and ran out of them,” she said. “I had my head down, looking in my purse for some more matches, when I realized someone was standing in front of me. I held out my hand, and this stranger grabbed it and said, ‘let’s go get a drink’. I pulled my hand away and left in a hurry in the opposite direction.” I Modern Etiquette I By Roberta Lee I Q. Is it necessary for a brideelect to reply to notes of good wishes from friends who have seen her engagement announcement in the newspaper? A .While not necessary to write notes, she may telephone some of her friends and she certainly should thank all those whom she meets. Q. I had occasion recently to introduce a woman of about 25 to an elderly man, and I mentioned her name first instead of his. Was this proper? A. The woman’s name should be mentioned first/always, unless the man is a very important person. Q. Is it permissible to eat the skin of a baked potato, and also the parsley used as a garnish? A. If you enjoy these items, it is perfectly proper to eat them.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
fer TRAFFIC STOPPER—Enoch (Niekie) Johnson, 72, Red Wing, Minn,, sits in dream car he started to invent in 1913. The eight-wheeled “Niekie Special” is painted yellow with mahogany wood trim. It’s powered by 250-hp engine. /
New Round Os Legal Fencing Before Court WASHINGTON (UPD — Louisianna’s defense of criminal action against sit-in demonstrators promised another round of lively legal fencing today in the Supreme Court. State Atty. Gen. Jack P.F. Gremillion was ready to tell the court, as have legal officers for North Carolina and Maryland, that owners of private business establishments have a right to serve whom they please. Negroes contend that under the Constitution the states may not enforce, through trespass and other laws, discrimination policies of businesses otherwise open to the general public. Another standing room only audience was expected for arguments on what may prove to be the most important race decisions since the school segregation cases of 1954. Convicted of Trespass The court also heard appeals Monday by lunch-counter dem-
c yY >’’ S ' " ' < I y 'MW £ Or- 1 (m®®! '?**^tM*« WWMy; >. I’.®' - ** • 7 * &ts • * Sr '- ; i Ml ' - I- ■ THIS KIND — Marc Anderson, 4, shows the sailfish . sportsmen may expect to i catch during three international tournaments in the Florida Keys starting Nov. 24.
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onst/ators from Durham, N.C., and by a group which refused to leave a merry-go-round in a Montgomery County, Md., amusement park. All were convicted of trespass. In the Louisiana case, four students were convicted of “criminal mischief” after they staged a sitin at McCrory’s five and ten cent store in New Orleans in 1960. Each drew 60 days in jail and a $250 fine. Gremillion told the court earlier in a written brief that “if the luiich counter owner has the right not to serve a customer because of that customer’s race or religion . . . then he has the incidental right to remove the wouldbe customer from his premises without undue force. “Unless the lunch counter owner also has the right to call the police to remove the offender for him, society is going to be faced with the problem of self-help in this area.” Denied Constitutional Rights Attorney John P. Nelson of New Orleans, who represents the students, had contended that they were denied the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of “the equal protection of the laws.” He said lunch counter owners in New Orleans have worked with local officials to perpetuate discrimination, although more recently some 60 eating places have been desegregated as a result of private conferences between businessmen and Negroes. Four more sit-in cases are scheduled to be heard. Two come from Birmingham, Ala.; one from Greenville, S.C.; and one from Savannah, Ga. U.S. Solicitor General Archibald ' Cox will argue on behalf of the demonstrators as a “friend of the court.”
Mikoyan Continues Talks With Castro HAVANA (UPD - Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan is expected today to continue efforts to iron out Russian "differences” with Fidel Castro's revolutionary regime arising; from the Cuban crisis. Mikoyan was closeted with Castro and other government leaders for about two hours Monday. It was his third and shortest meeting with officials of the regime since his arrival late last week. There has been no announcement of the subjects under discussion, nor any direct indication of progress toward agreement. A key issue is believed to be inspection to verify the dismantling of Soviet missile bases in Cuba, which has been approved by Russia but is opposed by the Castro regime. Mikoyan is expected to stay here for several more days.
Legislators Plunge Into Duties Early
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — The 124 men and women who gain election today to the Indiana Legislature will be plunged into their duties in just three weeks. The second biennial conference of the Indiana Legislative Advisory Commission Nov. 27-29 actually is a preliminary meeting of the 1963 Legislature. The 100 newly-elected representatives, the 26 new senators and the 24 holdover senators will assemble for those three'’ days in the legislative chambers at the Statehouse and be given an intensive schooling in the problems they face. They already 'know that reapportionment and taxes are the overpowering issues for 1963. But for the newcomers among the lawmakers there are thousands of non-partisan facts to be learned before they can hope to understand the mechanics of government. Briefing is New ‘“lndiana’s constitution limits its regular legislative sessions to 61 days in the odd-numbered years, so the idea of a three-day briefing between election and the opening of the Assembly in January first was initiated two years ago. It proved valuable, and had the effect of discouraging serious moves to revamp the constitution so more time would be given to legislating. Before the “little legislature” convenes Nov. 27, both parties presumably will hold meetings of their elected lawmakers -and determine leadership, and these individuals will participate in the three-day session, as well as the main 61-day grind. The cuief office at slake in the House is the Speaker, to be chosen by the majority party. While nothing definite can be said until the hopefuls are sure they are re-elected, lawmakers in both parties have already expressed interest. Included are the 1961 Speaker, Richard Guthrie, Indianapolis Republican; Dr. Otis Bowen. Bremen Republican, and Robert Rock, Anderson Democrat. Conrad, Bontrager Mentioned In the Senate, the president protem is the chief plum of the majority party. Sen. Roy Conrad, Monticello Republican; Russell Bontrager, Elkhart Republican; Marshall Kizer, Plymouth Democrat, and Robert O’Bannon, Corydon Democrat, are among those who have been mentioned as pos-
sibilities. The three-day preliminary session calls for Guthrie and Lt. Gov. Richard Ristine to preside on the opening day in the House and Senate, respectively. Governor Welsh is scheduled to make an address to a joint meeting of the senators and representatives. On the second day of the conference, the Speaker-elect and President Pro Tem-elect will ta'ke over presiding duties. Commissioner John Hatchett of the Indiana Department of Administration and Dr. James Kessler, director of the Commission on Tax and Financing Policy, are other major speakers. All legislative committees which were assigned studies on various governmental problems will report their conclusions. Heads of state departments and agencies also will have their requested legislation considered. The 1961 House was controlled overwhelmingly by the Republicans, and the Senate was Rarely Democratic,*26-24. Os the 24 hold" over senators, 14 are Republicans and IQ Democrats.
J- ~ ‘ •Si H t,; I ■ d st' WMfe- 7 SRW F, • .mH 3,71 1 COMING HOME — The body of Air Force Maj. Rudolph Anderson Jr., 35, Greenville, S.C., killed when his reconnaissance plane was lost over Cuba, will be shipped home by the Cuban government.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER CIM2
Union Chapel Church Dinner Wednesday The Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren church wil hold a congregational dinner and family meeting at the church Wednesday evening. The Rev. Kenneth Angle, pastor, announced that the dinner will be served promptly at 6:30 p.m. Table choruses will be in charge of Earl Chase, scripture lesson by Rolland Gilllom, and sentence prayers by some of the group, directed by John Frank, chief steward . A film, “New Faces in Africa,’ will be shown and also a film, "Ten to Twelve,” for the youngsters. Rev. Angle wil make the presentation of a “Mirror,” revealing many motives for giving to the Lord’s Church. A short report will then be given on time and talent cards, followed by the explanation of the procedure on the every member enlistment Sunday. The proposed budget for 1963 will be presented by Omer Merriman, and a period will be provided for questions. The meeting will close with the hymn, “Our Best,” and benediction by Mrs. Forrest Walters.
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