Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 292, Decatur, Adams County, 12 December 1962 — Page 11

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11,

Reppert Auction Students To Graduate This Friday

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Guantanamo Base Returns To Normal

By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst Guantanamo is emerging slowly from its womanless, wifeless state. The simple return of domesticity seems to establish that the Cuban crisis is not a crisis any more. Castro’s Cuba also seemed to be returning to normal. Scarcely had the last Russian bomber departed in its crate from Cuban shores than the government set about confiscating more businesses and returning to its normal denunciations of the United States. If this seems like a light approach to a most serious problem, it is not intended so. Rather it

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

is a sigh of relief echoing in many another quarter that the world has managed to emerge relatively unscathed from what could have been its first, and perhaps its last nuclear wnar. No. Total Solution The fact that a firm hand, plus diplomacy, had turned an untenable situation into one '‘of some advantage to the United States did not, however, _ provide a total solution hortneiahswer'to" several" -remaining important questions. One of the most intriguing of these is, what now for Fidel Castro? If thef Soviet Union simply used the bearded leader as a means for placing their missiles and

bombers on Cuban bases and thereby gaining a military advantage over the United States, Castro’s usefulness to them now would seem to be considerably reduced. Despite the jovial appearance of Soviet First Deputy Anastas Mikoyan on his departure for Moscow after a 24-day Cuban visit, it also seemed obvious that Castro had proved a hard man to handle, thus iurther reducing his usefulness. There is no doubt also that he has / been» badly hurt in Latin America. ' When such a man as Brazil’s Leonel Brizola, anti-Yankee govCTiwr bTTCb' lashes out at him for ’“dishonoring” the Cuban revolution, it is apparent that the portrait of an idealistic champion of the people has been dimmed considerably. U.S. Opposes Invasion As for the United States, the

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

administration opposes now as it has in the past an invasion of Cuba, both for its high cost in lives and for the effect it would have on other American nations. But President Kennedy clearly made known an alternative when, in his announcement Oct. 22 of the Cuban quarantine, he told the Cuban people: “. . . Many times in the past the Cuban people have risen to throw out tyrants who destroyed their liberty. And I have no doubt that most Cubans today look forward to the time when they will be truly free. . . .” Altogether, Castro seems more alone now than he ever was, with more people having reason to wish he would disappear.' It is he will. But Castro’s own history is on© of violence and it seems his end also must be violent Whether the end comes from internal revolt or from the outside, the cost still will be high. Writer Tells His Daughter Os Bees By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — My wife..pointed. out...the . other ,„eve-_ ning that one of our daughters is nearing the age when she should be told about “the birds and the bees?’ r —“ Okay,” I said. “You tell her about the birds and I’ll tell her about the bees.” I had a reason for proposing this arrangement. That very day I had been reading a report on bees prepared for the Smithsonian Institution by James E. Hambleton. I don’t kgow whether Hambleton has any children, but he is a whiz when it comes to bees. For the first time since I became a parent I feel qualified to discuss this subject with my offspring. So climb upon my knee, dollink, and your wise old father will give you the scoop. Pollination Important When we think of the bee we ordinarily think of it in terms of honey and wax, although some of us may think of it in terms of getting stung. Actually, making honey and wax and stinging people is a relatively minor part of -a beers .job. What makes the bee important is his role in pollination. Where pollination is concerned, he is the king bee. It might even be said that he is the bee’s knees. According to Hambleton, there are about 50 crops in this country that require insect poHmation.. Insect pollination is necessary or desirable for such vegetables as carrots, onipnfc cabbage, cauliftower aau sprouts. At one were enough ..native injects around to take care of thTsi But -farming—operaiiQns. have greatly expanded while the pollinating insect population has declined. Prohibits Extinction As things now shape up, the bee is about all that stands between some crops and extinction. Bees get credit for an estimated 80 per cent of all pollination. Or, it might be said they, are to blame for 80 per cent of the pollinating, depending on how you feel about brussel sprouts. At any rate, Hambleton estimates Uieir contribution to agriculture at more than SSOO mrllrou

a year, not counting what they bring in byway of honey, wax and insect bite lotions. Until I read Hambleton’s report, I did not realize that the bee was so valuable. I can understand now why it is important to tell our children about them. I just hope my wife does as well with the birds. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a record of over five billion dollars worth of U.S. farm products was shipped to customers overseas last year. The average person last year spent SSO for dairy products.

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Lexicon Os Show Biz Terminology By VERNON SCOTT UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — It’s impossible to pick your way through the social and economic miasma of Movietown without an accurate lexicon of show biz terminology. Therefore the following scrutiny of Hollywood jargon is offered: Starlet — unemployed actress of undetermined age. Studio — collection of empty bui.ldings,„,,„w;hi.ch ...housed. .. movie

FOURTEEN STATES are represented among the students of the Reppert School of Auctioneering, whose graduation ceremonies will be held Friday, climaxing the intensivadjpiree-week course which opened Monday, Nov. 26. Students and instructors are pictured, left to right: Top row: Henry Wayne White, Bladenboro, North Carolina; Marshall Mike Spak, Pontiac, Michigan; Richard D. LaVine, DeKalb Junction, New York; J. M. Casey, Birmingham, Alabama; Robert McNabb, LaGrange, Indiana; Milo L. Hill, Hastings, Michigan; Don R. Bruns, Cincinnati, Ohio; Howard L. Langvardt, Chapman, Kansas; Clifford J, Hanchett, Standish, Michigan. Third row: Joseph P. Gimenez, Gary, Brighton, Pennsylvania; Dan Gori, Elkhart, Ohfo; Tom D/Jflesher, Ridgeville, Indiana; Donald C. Taylor, Hartford City, India nh;'Charles D. Plumb, Sr., Jackson, Michigan; Clair W. Archer, Cromwell, Indiana; Henry Allen Lewis, Letart, West Virginia; M. E. Stuck, Garrett, Indiana; Neil__L. Clever, Charlotte, Michigan; Stuart Huston Bates, Gadsden, Alabama. Second row: Arthur E. Stipp, Indianapolis, Indiana; Kenneth Bruner, Bemus Point, New York; Carroll R. Walker, Dayton, Ohio; Mike Young, Saint Joe, Michigan; Arthur J. Allen, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio; Richard D. Poffinbarger, Ravenna, Michigan; .Mahlon Larry Garner, Pulaski, Tennessee; Mike Vukich, Canton, Ohio; Kenneth L. Ratts, Bloomington, Indiana; Thomas E. Walter, Carey, Ohio; James Oliver Amos, Scio, Ohio. First row: Vern Paul Hough, Kaysville, Utah; W. Spears, St." Louis, Missouri; Thomas K. Carpenter, Wayzata, Minnesota; Clyde Arlo Larsen, North Salt Lake, Utah; Howard E. Parrish, Montpelier, Ohio/Everest H. Stiles, Hermon, New York; Richard A. Mead, Westfield, New York; Gordon Dale Scott, Gambler, Ohio; John Curtis Newman, Edon, Ohio; Charlie L. Murphy, Lexington, Kentucky; Robert L, Donica, Columbus, Indiana. Seated: Instructors: Rav Elliott, Robert S. Anderson, Homer Pollock, Roland Reppert, M. D., President and Owner; Q. R. Chaffee, dean; Clyde Wilson, Gene Slagle, Paul Z. Martin. Instructors not in picture: H. W. Sigrist, H. B. Miller, M. D., from Indiana; H. B. Sager, Bozeman, Montana; Clyde Drake, Missouri: H. D. Darnell, Kentucky; Walter Carlson, Minnesota; Earl Wright, Ohio.

companies before advent of television. ——•—- Leading man—actor who stamps foot in rage if denied top billing. Studio .commissary—restaurant where stars eat when black-listed by Mike Romanoff. “New face”—unknown replacement for star who quit picture. “Cleopatra”—Obscure Egyptian queen who tried to live like Elizabeth Taylor. Method actor —New York emigrant with incurable case of the twitch manifested by relentless scratching and muttering. Super-colossal—flop movie. Box office smash’ — medibcre movie. , Runaway, production — picture

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made in Europe which couldn’t get financing in Hollywood. TV pilot—sloo,ooo tax deduction for rich man who promised wife an acting career. Sunset strip—series of one-punch fight arenas for leading men. Marriage — Temporary design for living with casual acquaintance. “Mutiny on the Bounty”—Hollywood’s revenge for war of 1812. The Clan — Dormant Chowder and Marching Club led by Sinatra. Adults Only—Advance warning '1 u movie is a bomb. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads.— they get BIG results.